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6-letter words containing o, n, t

  • confit — Confit is meat such as goose or duck which has been cooked and preserved in its own fat.
  • const. — constant
  • constr — construction
  • contex — (obsolete, transitive) To context.
  • contig — (genetics) A set of overlapping DNA segments, derived from a single source of genetic material, from which the complete sequence may be deduced.
  • contra — against
  • corant — A coranto (kind of dance).
  • cornet — A cornet is a musical instrument of the brass family that looks like a small trumpet.
  • cortin — an adrenal cortex extract containing cortisone and other hormones
  • costen — (transitive, obsolete) To try; tempt.
  • coting — to pass by; outstrip; surpass.
  • cotman — John Sell. 1782–1842, English landscape watercolourist and etcher
  • cotton — Cotton is a type of cloth made from soft fibres from a particular plant.
  • counts — Plural form of count.
  • county — A county is a region of Britain, Ireland, or the USA which has its own local government.
  • covent — (obsolete) convent.
  • craton — a stable part of the earth's continental crust or lithosphere that has not been deformed significantly for many millions, even hundreds of millions, of years
  • cronet — the coronet of a horse's hoof or the hair which grows over this area
  • cronut — A pastry which combines characteristics of a croissant and a doughnut.
  • croton — any shrub or tree of the chiefly tropical euphorbiaceous genus Croton, esp C. tiglium, the seeds of which yield croton oil
  • cteno- — ctenoid scales, teeth, etc.
  • dalton — John. 1766–1844, English chemist and physicist, who formulated the modern form of the atomic theory and the law of partial pressures for gases. He also gave the first accurate description of colour blindness, from which he suffered
  • danton — Georges Jacques (ʒɔrʒ ʒɑk). 1759–94, French revolutionary leader: a founder member of the Committee of Public Safety (1793) and minister of justice (1792–94). He was overthrown by Robespierre and guillotined
  • dation — (rare, legal) The act of giving, granting or conferring (e.g. an office) but not liberal as a donation or gift.
  • datong — a city in N Shanxi province, in NE China.
  • dayton — an industrial city in SW Ohio: aviation research centre. Pop: 161 696 (2003 est)
  • denote — If one thing denotes another, it is a sign or indication of it.
  • dento- — denti-
  • denton — a town in NW England, in Tameside unitary authority, Greater Manchester. Pop: 26 866 (2001)
  • dentro — (demoscene, rare) A production that is classified somewhere between a demo and an intro.
  • deuton — deuteron.
  • ditone — (obsolete, music) An interval of two tones.
  • docent — privatdocent.
  • doesnt — Misspelling of doesn't.
  • dolent — (archaic) Sad, sorrowful.
  • dolton — a city in NE Illinois, near Chicago.
  • donate — to present as a gift, grant, or contribution; make a donation of, as to a fund or cause: to donate used clothes to the Salvation Army.
  • donets — a river rising in the SW Russian Federation near Belgorod, flowing SE through Ukraine to the Don River. About 650 miles (1045 km) long.
  • donitzKarl [kahrl] /kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1891–1980, German naval officer and head of state (1945).
  • donnot — a person that does very little or nothing; a lazy person
  • donted — contraction of do not.
  • donuts — Plural form of donut.
  • dopant — an impurity added intentionally in a very small, controlled amount to a pure semiconductor to change its electrical properties: Arsenic is a dopant for silicon.
  • dothan — a city in SE Alabama.
  • doting — showing a decline of mental faculties, especially associated with old age; weak-minded; senile.
  • downto — Misspelling of down to.
  • dumont — a city in NE New Jersey.
  • dupont — Eleuthère Irénée [e-lœ-ter ee-rey-ney] /ɛ lœˈtɛr i reɪˈneɪ/ (Show IPA), 1771–1834, U.S. industrialist, born in France.
  • dutton — Clarence Edward. 1841–1912, American geologist who first developed the theory of isostasy
  • easton — a city in E Pennsylvania, on the Delaware River.
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