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6-letter words containing t, a, e

  • dative — In the grammar of some languages, for example Latin, the dative, or the dative case, is the case used for a noun when it is the indirect object of a verb, or when it comes after some prepositions.
  • daudet — Alphonse (alfɔ̃s). 1840–97, French novelist, short-story writer, and dramatist: noted particularly for his humorous sketches of Provençal life, as in Lettres de mon moulin (1866)
  • dauted — to caress.
  • dautie — a beloved person who is petted or pampered
  • dawted — Simple past tense and past participle of dawt.
  • de-rat — to remove rats from (a place)
  • dealth — (obsolete) A share dealt out.
  • dearth — If there is a dearth of something, there is not enough of it.
  • deaths — Plural form of death.
  • deathy — (obsolete) Relating to death.
  • debate — A debate is a discussion about a subject on which people have different views.
  • decant — If you decant a liquid into another container, you put it into another container.
  • defast — defaced or blemished
  • defeat — If you defeat someone, you win a victory over them in a battle, game, or contest.
  • deheat — (nonstandard,rare) To cool.
  • delate — (formerly) to bring a charge against; denounce; impeach
  • deltas — Plural form of delta.
  • demast — to remove the mast from (a boat)
  • demate — (transitive, aerospace) To move (a space shuttle orbiter) off the back of an aircraft that can carry it.
  • dental — pronounced or articulated with the tip of the tongue touching the backs of the upper teeth, as for t in French tout
  • depart — When something or someone departs from a place, they leave it and start a journey to another place.
  • derate — to assess the value of (some types of property, such as agricultural land) at a lower rate than others for local taxation
  • desalt — to remove salt from (esp. sea water)
  • desart — Obsolete spelling of desert.
  • detach — If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it.
  • detail — The details of something are its individual features or elements.
  • detain — When people such as the police detain someone, they keep them in a place under their control.
  • devast — (obsolete) To devastate.
  • dilate — to make wider or larger; cause to expand.
  • dimate — (language)   Depot Installed Maintenance Automatic Test Equipment. A language for programming automatic test equipment. It Runs on the RCA 301.
  • doated — dote.
  • doater — a fully mature harp seal.
  • dogate — the office of a doge
  • donate — to present as a gift, grant, or contribution; make a donation of, as to a fund or cause: to donate used clothes to the Salvation Army.
  • dotage — a decline of mental faculties, especially as associated with old age; senility.
  • drapet — a cloth
  • dreamt — a simple past tense and past participle of dream.
  • duarte — a city in SW California.
  • e-boat — (in World War II) a fast German boat carrying guns and torpedoes
  • e-tail — retail conducted via the internet
  • eaglet — a young eagle.
  • earset — A set of earphones.
  • eartha — a female given name.
  • earths — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of earth.
  • earthy — of the nature of or consisting of earth or soil.
  • easter — an annual Christian festival in commemoration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, observed on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox, as calculated according to tables based in Western churches on the Gregorian calendar and in Orthodox churches on the Julian calendar.
  • easton — a city in E Pennsylvania, on the Delaware River.
  • eat in — to take into the mouth and swallow for nourishment; chew and swallow (food).
  • eat up — to take into the mouth and swallow for nourishment; chew and swallow (food).
  • eatage — grazing rights
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