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6-letter words containing s, e, i, t

  • lister — a border or bordering strip, usually of cloth.
  • liters — Plural form of liter.
  • litest — noting a commercial product that is low in calories or low in any substance considered undesirable, as compared with a product of the same type: used especially in labeling or advertising commercial products: lite beer.
  • litres — Plural form of litre.
  • livest — being alive; living; alive: live animals.
  • maties — Plural form of maty.
  • merits — claim to respect and praise; excellence; worth.
  • metics — Plural form of metic.
  • midest — Obsolete form of midst.
  • miseat — to eat unhealthily or improperly
  • misset — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • misted — Simple past tense and past participle of mist.
  • mister — a spray, nozzle, or similar device for misting plants.
  • mistle — (obsolete) mistletoe.
  • miters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of miter.
  • nesbit — E(dith) 1858–1924, English children's author, novelist, and poet.
  • nicest — pleasing; agreeable; delightful: a nice visit.
  • oecist — a person who colonizes, particularly in Ancient Greece
  • onsite — accomplished or located at the site of a particular activity or concern: on-site medical treatment for accident victims.
  • otiose — being at leisure; idle; indolent.
  • pastie — /pay'stee/ An adhesive label designed to be attached to a key on a keyboard to indicate some non-standard character which can be accessed through that key. Pasties are likely to be used in APL environments, where almost every key is associated with a special character. A pastie on the R key, for example, might remind the user that it is used to generate the rho character. The term properly refers to nipple-concealing devices formerly worn by strippers in concession to indecent-exposure laws; compare tits on a keyboard.
  • pietas — a representation of the Virgin Mary mourning over the body of the dead Christ, usually shown held on her lap.
  • pisted — marked off into pistes
  • pities — sympathetic or kindly sorrow evoked by the suffering, distress, or misfortune of another, often leading one to give relief or aid or to show mercy: to feel pity for astarving child.
  • postie — A postie is a postman.
  • priest — a person whose office it is to perform religious rites, and especially to make sacrificial offerings.
  • quiets — making no noise or sound, especially no disturbing sound: quiet neighbors.
  • relist — to list again
  • resift — to sift again
  • resist — to withstand, strive against, or oppose: to resist infection; to resist temptation.
  • resita — an industrial city in the Banat, W Romania.
  • resite — the position or location of a town, building, etc., especially as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin.
  • resuit — a set of clothing, armor, or the like, intended for wear together.
  • ripest — having arrived at such a stage of growth or development as to be ready for reaping, gathering, eating, or use, as grain or fruit; completely matured.
  • rivets — a metal pin for passing through holes in two or more plates or pieces to hold them together, usually made with a head at one end, the other end being hammered into a head after insertion.
  • saithe — pollock.
  • saltie — an ocean-going sailor.
  • samite — a heavy silk fabric, sometimes interwoven with gold, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • satire — the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc.
  • sative — cultivated or sown as opposed to wild
  • scient — an old word meaning scientific
  • seitan — a chewy, neutral-flavored, protein-rich food made of wheat gluten, used as a meat substitute in vegetarian dishes.
  • seiten — gluten from wheat
  • semite — a member of any of various ancient and modern peoples originating in southwestern Asia, including the Akkadians, Canaanites, Phoenicians, Hebrews, and Arabs.
  • semmit — a vest
  • sendit — Systems Engineering for Network Debugging, Integration and Test. A two-year European Commission funded project to produce software tools for distributed applications running on networks of microcontrollers.
  • seniti — a bronze or brass coin and monetary unit of Tonga, the 100th part of a pa'anga.
  • sennit — a flat, braided cordage, formed by plaiting strands of rope yarn or other fiber, used as small stuff aboard ships.
  • septi- — seven
  • septic — pertaining to or of the nature of sepsis; infected.
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