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6-letter words containing n, t

  • basnet — basinet.
  • baston — (heraldry) Obsolete form of baton.
  • bataan — a peninsula in the Philippines, in W Luzon: scene of the surrender of US and Philippine forces to the Japanese during World War II, later retaken by American forces
  • bating — except for; excluding
  • batman — In the British armed forces, an officer's batman is his personal servant.
  • batmen — a soldier assigned to an officer as a servant.
  • batons — Plural form of baton.
  • batten — A batten is a long strip of wood that is fixed to something to strengthen it or to hold it firm.
  • batton — Alternative form of batten.
  • beaten — Beaten earth has been pressed down, often by people's feet, until it is hard.
  • beaton — Sir Cecil (Walter Hardy). 1904–80, British photographer, noted esp for his society portraits
  • beento — a person who has resided in Britain, esp during part of his or her education
  • beeton — Isabella Mary, known as Mrs Beeton. 1836–65, British cookery writer, author of The Book of Household Management (1861)
  • beknot — to tie a knot or knots in
  • belton — a town in W Missouri.
  • benita — a female given name.
  • bennet — herb bennet.
  • benoitPierre [pyer] /pyɛr/ (Show IPA), (or Peter) Léonard Léopold [ley-aw-nar ley-aw-pawld] /leɪ ɔˈnar leɪ ɔˈpɔld/ (Show IPA), 1834–1901, Belgian composer.
  • benton — Thomas Hart. 1889–1975, US painter of rural life; a leader of the American Regionalist painters in the 1930s
  • besant — Annie, née Wood. 1847–1933, British theosophist, writer, and political reformer in England and India
  • betony — a Eurasian plant, Stachys (or Betonica) officinalis, with a spike of reddish-purple flowers, formerly used in medicine and dyeing: family Lamiaceae (labiates)
  • bezant — a medieval Byzantine gold coin
  • bhutan — a kingdom in central Asia: disputed by Tibet, China, India, and Britain since the 18th century but most closely connected with India; contains inaccessible stretches of the E Himalayas in the north. Official language: Dzongka; Nepali is also spoken. Official religion: Mahayana Buddhist. Currencies: ngultrum and Indian rupee. Capital: Thimbu. Pop: 725 296 (2013 est). Area: about 46 600 sq km (18 000 sq miles)
  • bident — an instrument with two prongs
  • binate — occurring in two parts or in pairs
  • biotin — a vitamin of the B complex, abundant in egg yolk and liver, deficiency of which causes dermatitis and loss of hair. Formula: C10H16N2O3S
  • biting — Biting wind or cold is extremely cold.
  • bitnet — (networking)   /bit'net/ (Because It's Time NETwork) An academic and research computer network connecting approximately 2500 computers. BITNET provides interactive, electronic mail and file transfer services, using a store and forward protocol, based on IBM Network Job Entry protocols. Bitnet-II encapsulates the Bitnet protocol within IP packets and depends on the Internet to route them. BITNET traffic and Internet traffic are exchanged via several gateway hosts. BITNET is now operated by CREN. BITNET is everybody's least favourite piece of the network. The BITNET hosts are a collection of IBM dinosaurs, VAXen (with lobotomised communications hardware), and Prime Computer supermini computers. They communicate using 80-character EBCDIC card images (see eighty-column mind); thus, they tend to mangle the headers and text of third-party traffic from the rest of the ASCII/RFC 822 world with annoying regularity. BITNET is also notorious as the apparent home of BIFF.
  • bitten — Bitten is the past participle of bite.
  • blintz — a thin pancake folded over a filling usually of apple, cream cheese, or meat
  • blyton — Enid (Mary). 1897–1968, British writer of children's books; creator of Noddy and the Famous Five series of adventure stories
  • bolton — a town in NW England, in Bolton unitary authority, Greater Manchester: centre of the woollen trade since the 14th century; later important for cotton. Pop: 139 403 (2001)
  • bonita — a female given name.
  • bonito — any of various small tunny-like marine food fishes of the genus Sarda, of warm Atlantic and Pacific waters: family Scombridae (tunnies and mackerels)
  • bonnet — The bonnet of a car is the metal cover over the engine at the front.
  • bontoc — Bontok.
  • bontok — a member of a people who inhabit northern Luzon in the Philippines.
  • boston — a card game for four, played with two packs
  • botany — Botany is the scientific study of plants.
  • bothan — a hut or booth, esp one used as an illegal drinking house
  • botkinBenjamin Albert, 1901–75, U.S. folklorist, editor, and essayist.
  • botnet — a network of computers infected by a program that communicates with its creator in order to send unsolicited emails, attack websites, etc
  • botoné — terminating in three ornamental budlike lobes
  • botony — (of a cross) having arms terminating in the form of a trefoil: cross botonée.
  • bounty — You can refer to something that is provided in large amounts as bounty.
  • bouton — the enlarged part of a nerve fibre or cell which facilitates contact between nerves
  • brandt — Bill, full name William Brandt. 1905–83, British photographer. His photographic books include The English at Home (1936) and Perspectives of Nudes (1961)
  • breton — of, relating to, or characteristic of Brittany, its people, or their language
  • briton — A Briton is a person who comes from Great Britain.
  • bronte — Anne, pen name Acton Bell. 1820–49, English novelist; author of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1847)
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