6-letter words containing s, e, t, l
- ostler — hostler.
- palest — light-colored or lacking in color: a pale complexion; his pale face; a pale child. lacking the usual intensity of color due to fear, illness, stress, etc.: She looked pale and unwell when we visited her in the nursing home.
- pastel — the woad plant.
- pestle — a tool for pounding or grinding substances in a mortar.
- relist — to list again
- result — to spring, arise, or proceed as a consequence of actions, circumstances, premises, etc.; be the outcome.
- rustle — to make a succession of slight, soft sounds, as of parts rubbing gently one on another, as leaves, silks, or papers.
- sallet — a light medieval helmet, usually with a vision slit or a movable visor.
- salted — containing salt; having the taste of salt: salt water.
- salten — Felix [fee-liks;; German fey-liks] /ˈfi lɪks;; German ˈfeɪ lɪks/ (Show IPA), (Siegmund Salzman) 1869–1945, Austrian novelist, in Switzerland after 1938.
- salter — a crystalline compound, sodium chloride, NaCl, occurring as a mineral, a constituent of seawater, etc., and used for seasoning food, as a preservative, etc.
- saltie — an ocean-going sailor.
- salute — Military. to pay respect to or honor by some formal act, as by raising the right hand to the side of the headgear, presenting arms, firing cannon, dipping colors, etc.
- samlet — a young salmon.
- sclate — slate
- sclent — to move or lie on a slant.
- select — to choose in preference to another or others; pick out.
- septal — of or relating to a septum.
- settle — to appoint, fix, or resolve definitely and conclusively; agree upon (as time, price, or conditions).
- setula — a short, blunt seta.
- setule — a small bristle or spine on seta
- shelta — a private language, based in part on Irish, used among Travelers in the British Isles.
- shelty — Shetland pony.
- shtetl — (formerly) a Jewish village or small-town community in eastern Europe.
- silent — making no sound; quiet; still: a silent motor.
- silted — earthy matter, fine sand, or the like carried by moving or running water and deposited as a sediment.
- sklent — any slanting surface, as a slope.
- slated — a fine-grained rock formed by the metamorphosis of clay, shale, etc., that tends to split along parallel cleavage planes, usually at an angle to the planes of stratification.
- slater — Samuel, 1768–1835, U.S. industrialist, born in England.
- slatey — slightly mad; crazy
- sleety — of, relating to, or like sleet.
- sleuth — a detective. Synonyms: investigator, private investigator; private eye, gumshoe, shamus.
- sliest — a superlative of sly.
- sluter — Claus (klaʊs). ?1345–1406, Dutch sculptor, working in Burgundy, whose realism influenced many sculptors and painters in 15th-century Europe. He is best known for the portal sculptures and the Well of Moses in the Carthusian monastery at Champnol
- slyest — cunning or wily: sly as a fox.
- smilet — a little smile
- solate — to change from a gel to a sol.
- solent — The, a channel between the Isle of Wight and the mainland of S England. 2–5 miles (3.2–8 km) wide.
- solute — the substance dissolved in a given solution.
- speltz — a wheat variety
- stable — a building for the lodging and feeding of horses, cattle, etc.
- stadle — staddle.
- staled — not fresh; vapid or flat, as beverages; dry or hardened, as bread.
- staple — a principal raw material or commodity grown or manufactured in a locality.
- steale — a handle
- steele — Sir Richard, 1672–1729, English essayist, journalist, dramatist, and political leader; born in Ireland.
- steels — any of various modified forms of iron, artificially produced, having a carbon content less than that of pig iron and more than that of wrought iron, and having qualities of hardness, elasticity, and strength varying according to composition and heat treatment: generally categorized as having a high, medium, or low-carbon content.
- steely — consisting or made of steel.
- stelae — stele (defs 1–3).
- stelai — an upright stone slab or pillar bearing an inscription or design and serving as a monument, marker, or the like.