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6-letter words containing t, a, e

  • astore — (transitive) To store; to furnish with stores.[https://www.wordnik.com/words/astore The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, via Wordnik.com] (accessed 19 March 2016).
  • astute — If you describe someone as astute, you think they show an understanding of behaviour and situations, and are skilful at using this knowledge to their own advantage.
  • at one — in a state of agreement or harmony
  • at sea — At sea means on or under the sea, far away from land.
  • atabeg — a Turkish leader who had a lower status than the ruler of the country and who acted as teacher and guardian to the male heir apparent
  • atabek — Turkish ruler
  • atelic — showing an action or happening as being unfinished
  • ateste — ancient name of Este.
  • athame — (in Wicca) a witch's ceremonial knife, usually with a black handle, used in rituals rather than for cutting or carving
  • athena — a virgin goddess of wisdom, practical skills, and prudent warfare. She was born, fully armed, from the head of Zeus
  • athene — Also, Athene [uh-thee-nee] /əˈθi ni/ (Show IPA). Also called Pallas, Pallas Athena. the virgin deity of the ancient Greeks worshiped as the goddess of wisdom, fertility, the useful arts, and prudent warfare. At her birth she sprang forth fully armed from the head of her father, Zeus. Compare Minerva.
  • athens — the capital of Greece, in the southeast near the Saronic Gulf: became capital after independence in 1834; ancient city-state, most powerful in the 5th century bc; contains the hill citadel of the Acropolis. Pop: 3 238 000 (2005 est)
  • atoned — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
  • atoner — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
  • atones — to make amends or reparation, as for an offense or a crime, or for an offender (usually followed by for): to atone for one's sins.
  • atpase — adenosine triphosphatase; an enzyme that converts ATP to ADP
  • atreus — a king of Mycenae, son of Pelops, father of Agamemnon and Menelaus, and member of the family known as the Atreids (ˈeɪtrɪɪdz )
  • attend — If you attend a meeting or other event, you are present at it.
  • attent — attentive; intent.
  • attest — To attest something or attest to something means to say, show, or prove that it is true.
  • attire — Your attire is the clothes you are wearing.
  • attlee — Clement Richard, 1st Earl Attlee. 1883–1967, British statesman; prime minister (1945–51); leader of the Labour party (1935–55). His government instituted the welfare state, with extensive nationalization
  • attone — to appease or pacify
  • attune — to adjust or accustom (a person or thing); acclimatize
  • atweel — surely.
  • atween — (archaic) between.
  • augite — a black or greenish-black mineral of the pyroxene group, found in igneous rocks. Composition: calcium magnesium iron aluminium silicate. General formula: (Ca,Mg,Fe,Al)(Si,Al)2O6. Crystal structure: monoclinic
  • auklet — any of various small auks of the genera Aethia and Ptychoramphus
  • auntie — Someone's auntie is their aunt.
  • aurate — any salt of auric acid
  • austen — Jane. 1775–1817, English novelist, noted particularly for the insight and delicate irony of her portrayal of middle-class families. Her completed novels are Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), Emma (1816), Northanger Abbey (1818), and Persuasion (1818)
  • auster — the south wind
  • auteur — You can refer to a film director as an auteur when they have a very strong artistic influence on the films they make.
  • averts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of avert.
  • avesta — a collection of sacred writings of Zoroastrianism, including the Songs of Zoroaster
  • aviate — to pilot or fly in an aircraft
  • avocet — any of several long-legged shore birds of the genus Recurvirostra, such as the European R. avosetta, having black-and-white plumage and a long upward-curving bill: family Recurvirostridae, order Charadriiformes
  • azerty — QWERTY
  • aztecs — a member of a Nahuatl-speaking state in central Mexico that was conquered by Cortés in 1521.
  • backet — a shallow box, typically one used for carrying substances such as ashes, coal or salt
  • badest — (archaic) Simple past form of bid (second person).
  • baetyl — a meteoric stone thought in antiquity to be of divine origin, and sometimes worshipped
  • baguet — (architecture, zoology) Alternative form of baguette.
  • baited — food, or some substitute, used as a lure in fishing, trapping, etc.
  • baiter — someone who baits or teases
  • ballet — Ballet is a type of very skilled and artistic dancing with carefully planned movements.
  • balter — (intransitive) To tumble; dance clumsily.
  • banket — a gold-bearing conglomerate found in South Africa
  • bannet — a bonnet
  • banted — to lose weight by practicing Bantingism.
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