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6-letter words containing r, t, c

  • procto — proctosigmoidoscopy.
  • racest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of race.
  • rachet — flashy, unrefined, etc.; low-class: ratchet girls wearing too much makeup.
  • racist — a person who believes in racism, the doctrine that one's own racial group is superior or that a particular racial group is inferior to the others.
  • racket — a light bat having a netting of catgut or nylon stretched in a more or less oval frame and used for striking the ball in tennis, the shuttlecock in badminton, etc.
  • raetic — an extinct language of uncertain affinities that was spoken in Rhaetia and written with the Etruscan alphabet.
  • ramcat — a male cat
  • re-act — to act or perform again.
  • recant — to withdraw or disavow (a statement, opinion, etc.), especially formally; retract.
  • recast — to cast again or anew.
  • recent — of late occurrence, appearance, or origin; lately happening, done, made, etc.: recent events; a recent trip.
  • recept — an idea formed by the repetition of similar percepts, as successive percepts of the same object.
  • recite — to repeat the words of, as from memory, especially in a formal manner: to recite a lesson.
  • recoat — to coat (something) again or with a new coat of paint, varnish, etc
  • recost — the price paid to acquire, produce, accomplish, or maintain anything: the high cost of a good meal.
  • rectal — of, relating to, or for the rectum.
  • recti- — straight or right
  • recto- — rectum, rectum and
  • rector — a member of the clergy in charge of a parish in the Protestant Episcopal Church.
  • rectum — the comparatively straight, terminal section of the intestine, ending in the anus.
  • rectus — any of several straight muscles, as of the abdomen, thigh, eye, etc.
  • redact — to put into suitable literary form; revise; edit.
  • reduct — to reduce.
  • refect — to refresh, especially with food or drink.
  • reject — to refuse to have, take, recognize, etc.: to reject the offer of a better job.
  • relict — Ecology. a species or community living in an environment that has changed from that which is typical for it.
  • reluct — to struggle (against something); rebel.
  • resect — to do a resection on.
  • retack — to tack again
  • retcon — a subsequent revision of an established story in film, TV, video games, or comics: In an awkward retcon of his origin story, the hero’s parents survived the attack but suffered complete memory loss.
  • rhotic — of or relating to a dialect of English in which the r is pronounced at the end of a syllable or before a consonant: Midwestern American English is rhotic, while Southern British English is not.
  • richet — Charles Robert [sharl raw-ber] /ʃarl rɔˈbɛr/ (Show IPA), 1850–1935, French physician: Nobel prize 1913.
  • ricket — a mistake
  • rictus — the gape of the mouth of a bird.
  • rochet — a vestment of linen or lawn, resembling a surplice, worn especially by bishops and abbots.
  • rocket — Maurice [maw-rees;; French moh-rees] /mɔˈris;; French moʊˈris/ (Show IPA), ("Rocket") 1921–2000, Canadian hockey player.
  • rotche — dovekie
  • rt-cdl — Real-Time Common Design Language
  • rustic — of, relating to, or living in the country, as distinguished from towns or cities; rural.
  • scoter — any of the large diving ducks of the genus Melanitta, inhabiting northern parts of the Northern Hemisphere.
  • screet — to shed tears; weep
  • script — the letters or characters used in writing by hand; handwriting, especially cursive writing.
  • scrota — the pouch of skin that contains the testes.
  • scrote — a worthless fellow
  • scrunt — a stunted thing
  • scruto — the trapdoor of a stage
  • secret — done, made, or conducted without the knowledge of others: secret negotiations.
  • sector — Geometry. a plane figure bounded by two radii and the included arc of a circle.
  • starch — a white, tasteless, solid carbohydrate, (C 6 H 1 0 O 5) n , occurring in the form of minute granules in the seeds, tubers, and other parts of plants, and forming an important constituent of rice, corn, wheat, beans, potatoes, and many other vegetable foods.
  • steric — of or relating to the spatial relationships of atoms in a molecule.
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