6-letter words containing s, t, o
- stolid — not easily stirred or moved mentally; unemotional; impassive.
- stolon — Botany. a prostrate stem, at or just below the surface of the ground, that produces new plants from buds at its tips or nodes.
- stomal — of, pertaining to, or near a stoma or opening on a plant or animal
- stone- — very; completely
- stoned — made of or pertaining to stone.
- stonen — of or comprising stone
- stoner — Slang. a person who is habitually high on drugs, especially marijuana, or alcohol; a person who is usually stoned.
- stones — the hard substance, formed of mineral matter, of which rocks consist.
- stoney — full of or abounding in stones or rock: a stony beach.
- stooge — an entertainer who feeds lines to the main comedian and usually serves as the butt of his or her jokes.
- stooly — Slang. stool pigeon (def 2).
- stooze — to borrow money at low interest for investment in a high-interest account
- stoped — any excavation made in a mine, especially from a steeply inclined vein, to remove the ore that has been rendered accessible by the shafts and drifts.
- stoper — a machine for drilling rock from below.
- stopes — any excavation made in a mine, especially from a steeply inclined vein, to remove the ore that has been rendered accessible by the shafts and drifts.
- storax — a solid resin with a vanillalike odor, obtained from a small tree, Styrax officinalis: formerly used in medicine and perfumery.
- stored — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
- storer — a person or thing that stores something
- stores — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
- storey — story2 .
- storge — natural or instinctual affection, as of a parent for a child
- stormy — affected, characterized by, or subject to storms; tempestuous: a stormy sea.
- storrs — a town in NE Connecticut.
- stotin — a monetary unit of Slovenia until the euro was adopted, the 100th part of a tolar.
- stotty — type of flat, round loaf made in NE England
- stound — Archaic. a short time; short while.
- stoury — dusty
- stoush — stonker (defs 1, 2).
- stouth — a theft
- stover — coarse roughage used as feed for livestock.
- stow's — a city in NE Ohio.
- stowed — Nautical. to put (cargo, provisions, etc.) in the places intended for them. to put (sails, spars, gear, etc.) in the proper place or condition when not in use.
- stower — a person who stows
- strabo — 63? b.c.–a.d. 21? Greek geographer and historian.
- stroam — to wander idly or to stride
- strobe — Also called strobe light. stroboscope (def 2a).
- strode — simple past tense of stride.
- stroke — a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court.
- stroll — to walk leisurely as inclination directs; ramble; saunter; take a walk: to stroll along the beach.
- stroma — Cell Biology. the supporting framework or matrix of a cell.
- stromb — a shellfish similar to a whelk
- strong — having, showing, or able to exert great bodily or muscular power; physically vigorous or robust: a strong boy.
- strook — a simple past tense and past participle of strike.
- stroud — a coarse woolen cloth, blanket, or garment formerly used by the British in bartering with the North American Indians.
- strout — to bulge
- strove — simple past tense of strive.
- strown — strew.
- stucco — an exterior finish for masonry or frame walls, usually composed of cement, sand, and hydrated lime mixed with water and laid on wet.
- studio — the workroom or atelier of an artist, as a painter or sculptor.
- stupor — suspension or great diminution of sensibility, as in disease or as caused by narcotics, intoxicants, etc.: He lay there in a drunken stupor.