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6-letter words containing p, t, e, r

  • -trope — indicating a turning towards, development in the direction of, or affinity to
  • arpent — a former French unit of length equal to 190 feet (approximately 58 metres)
  • carpet — A carpet is a thick covering of soft material which is laid over a floor or a staircase.
  • copter — A copter is a helicopter.
  • depart — When something or someone departs from a place, they leave it and start a journey to another place.
  • deport — If a government deports someone, usually someone who is not a citizen of that country, it sends them out of the country because they have committed a crime or because it believes they do not have the right to be there.
  • drapet — a cloth
  • drempt — Nonstandard spelling of dreamt.
  • enrapt — Fascinated; enthralled.
  • entrap — Catch (someone or something) in or as in a trap.
  • épater — to startle or shock, as out of complacency, conventionality, etc.
  • erupts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of erupt.
  • esprit — European Strategic Programme for Research in Information Technology
  • expert — A person who has a comprehensive and authoritative knowledge of or skill in a particular area.
  • export — A commodity, article, or service sold abroad.
  • extirp — to uproot (vegetation), to extirpate
  • forpet — a fourth part
  • nipter — a religious ceremony of foot washing
  • palter — to talk or act insincerely or deceitfully; lie or use trickery.
  • panter — of or relating to pants: pant cuffs.
  • parent — a father or a mother.
  • pareto — Vilfredo [veel-fre-daw] /vilˈfrɛ dɔ/ (Show IPA), 1848–1923, Italian sociologist and economist in Switzerland.
  • parget — any of various plasters or roughcasts for covering walls or other surfaces, especially a mortar of lime, hair, and cow dung for lining chimney flues.
  • parted — partial; of a part: part owner.
  • parter — a person or thing that parts; separator
  • paster — the time gone by: He could remember events far back in the past.
  • patera — a shallow ancient Roman bowl used in rituals
  • patier — (of a cross) having arms of equal length, each expanding outward from the center; formée: a cross paty.
  • patres — dead.
  • patter — to talk glibly or rapidly, especially with little regard to meaning; chatter.
  • patzer — a casual, amateurish chess player.
  • pelter — a person or thing that pelts.
  • peltry — fur skins; pelts collectively.
  • peretz — I(saac) L(oeb) or Yitzchok Leibush [yits-khawk ley-boo sh] /ˈyɪts xɔk ˈleɪ bʊʃ/ (Show IPA), 1852–1915, Polish author: writer of plays, poems, and short stories in Yiddish.
  • permit — to allow to do something: Permit me to explain.
  • perret — Auguste [oh-gyst] /oʊˈgüst/ (Show IPA), 1874–1954, French architect.
  • perrot — Nicolas [nik-uh-luh s;; French nee-kaw-lah] /ˈnɪk ə ləs;; French ni kɔˈlɑ/ (Show IPA), 1644–1717, North American fur trader and explorer in the Great Lakes region, born in France.
  • perter — boldly forward in speech or behavior; impertinent; saucy.
  • pertly — boldly forward in speech or behavior; impertinent; saucy.
  • perutzMax Ferdinand, 1914–2002, English chemist, born in Austria: Nobel prize 1962.
  • pester — to bother persistently with petty annoyances; trouble: Don't pester me with your trivial problems.
  • petara — (in India) a basket for clothes
  • petard — an explosive device formerly used in warfare to blow in a door or gate, form a breach in a wall, etc.
  • petary — a place where peat is excavated; peatary
  • petrel — any of numerous tube-nosed seabirds of the families Procellariidae, Hydrobatidae, and Pelecanoididae.
  • petrie — Sir (William Matthew) Flinders [flin-derz] /ˈflɪn dərz/ (Show IPA), 1853–1942, English Egyptologist and archaeologist.
  • petro- — indicating stone or rock
  • petrol — British. gasoline.
  • pewter — metal: tin alloy
  • phater — Slang. great; wonderful; terrific.

On this page, we collect all 6-letter words with P-T-E-R. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 6-letter word that contains in P-T-E-R to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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