6-letter words containing r, e, t, u
- t-rule — transformational rule.
- tauber — Richard, 1892–1948, Austrian tenor, in England after 1940.
- tauter — tightly drawn; tense; not slack.
- tenure — the holding or possessing of anything: the tenure of an office.
- tereus — a Thracian prince, the husband of Procne, who raped his sister-in-law Philomela and was changed into a hoopoe as a punishment.
- tergum — the dorsal surface of a body segment of an arthropod.
- teruel — a city in E central Spain: 15th-century cathedral; scene of fierce fighting during the Spanish Civil War. Pop: 32 304 (2003 est)
- teucer — a Cretan leader, who founded Troy
- torque — Mechanics. something that produces or tends to produce torsion or rotation; the moment of a force or system of forces tending to cause rotation.
- toured — a traveling around from place to place.
- tourer — a large open car with a folding top, usually seating a driver and four passengers
- touser — someone who touses
- touter — a tout.
- triune — three in one; constituting a trinity in unity, as the Godhead.
- troupe — a company, band, or group of singers, actors, or other performers, especially one that travels about.
- trouse — close-fitting breeches worn in Ireland
- trudge — to walk, especially laboriously or wearily: to trudge up a long flight of steps.
- truest — being in accordance with the actual state or conditions; conforming to reality or fact; not false: a true story.
- truffe — truffle.
- tuareg — a Berber or Hamitic-speaking member of the Muslim nomads of the Sahara.
- tucker — Richard, 1915–75, U.S. operatic tenor.
- tuebor — I will defend: motto on the coat of arms of Michigan.
- tuffer — tough (def 13).
- tugger — to pull at with force, vigor, or effort.
- tulare — a city in central California.
- tulear — a city on SW Madagascar.
- tunker — Dunker.
- tupper — Sir Charles, 1821–1915, Canadian statesman: prime minister 1896.
- tureck — Rosalyn [roz-uh-lin] /ˈrɒz ə lɪn/ (Show IPA), 1914–2003, U.S. pianist.
- tureen — a large, deep, covered dish for serving soup, stew, or other foods.
- turfen — made of turf or covered with turf
- turkey — a large, gallinaceous bird of the family Meleagrididae, especially Meleagris gallopavo, of America, that typically has green, reddish-brown, and yellowish-brown plumage of a metallic luster and that is domesticated in most parts of the world.
- turned — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
- turner — Frederick Jackson, 1861–1932, U.S. historian.
- turret — a small tower, usually one forming part of a larger structure.
- turtle — any reptile of the order Testudines, comprising aquatic and terrestrial species having the trunk enclosed in a shell consisting of a dorsal carapace and a ventral plastron.
- turves — plural of turf.
- tusker — an animal with tusks, as an elephant or a wild boar.
- tuyere — an opening through which the blast of air enters a blast furnace, cupola, forge, or the like, to facilitate combustion.
- tuyers — an opening through which the blast of air enters a blast furnace, cupola, forge, or the like, to facilitate combustion.
- uberty — abundance; fruitfulness
- ulster — a former province in Ireland, now comprising Northern Ireland and a part of the Republic of Ireland.
- uniter — to join, combine, or incorporate so as to form a single whole or unit.
- unrent — not rent; not torn, disturbed, pained, or the like: unrent garments; unrent silence; unrent feelings.
- unrest — lack of rest; a restless, troubled, or uneasy state; disquiet: the unrest within himself.
- untrue — not true, as to a person or a cause, to fact, or to a standard.
- uprate — to raise in rate, power, size, classification, etc.; upgrade: to uprate a rocket engine.
- uprest — an uprising
- uptear — to wrench or tear out by or as if by the roots or foundations; destroy.
- ureter — a muscular duct or tube conveying the urine from a kidney to the bladder or cloaca.