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5-letter words containing s, t, o

  • shote — shoat (def 1).
  • shott — a shallow brackish or saline marsh or lake in N Africa, usually dry during the summer.
  • shout — to call or cry out loudly and vigorously.
  • sito- — food
  • skort — a women's garment resembling a short skirt but having individual leg sections usually covered by a flap in front.
  • sloot — a ditch for irrigation or drainage
  • sloth — habitual disinclination to exertion; indolence; laziness.
  • smolt — a young, silvery salmon in the stage of its first migration to the sea.
  • smoot — to do casual work as a printer
  • smote — a simple past tense of smite.
  • smout — a child or undersized person
  • snoot — Slang. the nose.
  • snort — (of animals) to force the breath violently through the nostrils with a loud, harsh sound: The spirited horse snorted and shied at the train.
  • snout — the part of an animal's head projecting forward and containing the nose and jaws; muzzle.
  • softa — a Turkish Muslim theological student.
  • softs — yielding readily to touch or pressure; easily penetrated, divided, or changed in shape; not hard or stiff: a soft pillow.
  • softy — a person easily stirred to sentiment or tender emotion.
  • sogat — Society of Graphical and Allied Trades
  • solti — Sir Georg [gey-awrg,, jawrj] /ˈgeɪ ɔrg,, dʒɔrdʒ/ (Show IPA), 1912–97, British orchestra conductor, born in Hungary.
  • sonet — Synchronous Optical NETwork
  • soote — sweet
  • sooth — truth, reality, or fact.
  • sooty — covered, blackened, or smirched with soot.
  • sorta — sort of; somewhat: I'm sorta nervous about asking for a date.
  • soter — (Soter) king of Pergamum 241–197 b.c.
  • sotho — a group of closely related Bantu languages spoken in Lesotho and South Africa.
  • sotie — a satirical and topical comedy employing actors dressed in traditional fool's costume, popular in France during the late Middle Ages, and often used as a curtain raiser to mystery and morality plays.
  • sotol — any of several plants belonging to the genus Dasylirion, of the agave family, native to the southwestern U.S. and northern Mexico, resembling the yucca.
  • soult — Nicolas Jean de Dieu [nee-kaw-lah zhahn duh dyœ] /ni kɔˈlɑ ʒɑ̃ də dyœ/ (Show IPA), (Duke of Dalmatia) 1769–1851, French marshal.
  • south — a cardinal point of the compass lying directly opposite north. Abbreviation: S.
  • sowth — a sheep
  • spoot — a razor-shell, a type of shellfish
  • sport — an athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and often of a competitive nature, as racing, baseball, tennis, golf, bowling, wrestling, boxing, hunting, fishing, etc.
  • spout — to emit or discharge forcibly (a liquid, granulated substance, etc.) in a stream or jet.
  • steno — a stenographer.
  • stipo — a tall, ornate, Italian desk with a drop lid.
  • stoai — Greek Architecture. a portico, usually a detached portico of considerable length, that is used as a promenade or meeting place.
  • stoat — the ermine, Mustela erminea, especially when in brown summer pelage.
  • stock — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
  • stoep — a veranda
  • stogy — a long, slender, roughly made, inexpensive cigar.
  • stoic — STring Oriented Interactive Compiler
  • stoit — an uncontrolled movement, a lurch
  • stoke — to poke, stir up, and feed (a fire).
  • stola — a long, loose tunic or robe, with or without sleeves, worn by women of ancient Rome.
  • stole — simple past tense of steal.
  • stoma — Also, stomate. Botany. any of various small apertures, especially one of the minute orifices or slits in the epidermis of leaves, stems, etc., through which gases are exchanged.
  • stomp — stamp (defs 1–3).
  • stone — the hard substance, formed of mineral matter, of which rocks consist.
  • stonk — to bombard (soldiers, buildings, etc) with artillery
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