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5-letter words containing t, e, m

  • meted — to distribute or apportion by measure; allot; dole (usually followed by out): to mete out punishment.
  • meter — an instrument for measuring, especially one that automatically measures and records the quantity of something, as of gas, water, miles, or time, when it is activated.
  • metes — to distribute or apportion by measure; allot; dole (usually followed by out): to mete out punishment.
  • meth- — indicating a chemical compound derived from methane or containing methyl groups
  • methi — In Indian cooking, fenugreek.
  • metho — (Australia, colloquial) Methylated spirits.
  • meths — methamphetamine; Methedrine.
  • methy — (US, Canada, dated) The burbot.
  • metic — an alien resident of an ancient Greek city who paid a tax for the right to live there.
  • metif — Alternative form of metis (person of mixed parentage).
  • metis — any person of mixed ancestry.
  • metol — a colourless soluble organic substance used, in the form of its sulphate, as a photographic developer; p-methylaminophenol
  • metr- — metro-2
  • metra — (medicine) The uterus.
  • metre — an instrument for measuring, especially one that automatically measures and records the quantity of something, as of gas, water, miles, or time, when it is activated.
  • metro — the underground electric railway of Paris, France, Montreal, Canada, Washington, D.C., and other cities.
  • metta — (in Theravada Buddhism) meditation focused on the development of unconditional love for all beings.
  • metts — Plural form of mett.
  • metty — a female given name, form of Matilda or Martha.
  • miter — the official headdress of a bishop in the Western Church, in its modern form a tall cap with a top deeply cleft crosswise, the outline of the front and back resembling that of a pointed arch.
  • mites — Plural form of mite.
  • mitre — to bestow a miter upon, or raise to a rank entitled to it.
  • mixte — (mostly, attributive) A kind of bicycle frame where the top tube of the traditional diamond frame is replaced with a pair of smaller lateral tubes running from the top of the head tube all the way back to the rear axle, connecting at the seat tube on the way.
  • molet — mullet2 .
  • monetClaude [klawd;; French klohd] /klɔd;; French kloʊd/ (Show IPA), 1840–1926, French painter.
  • monte — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • moste — Obsolete spelling of most.
  • moted — Filled with motes, or fine floating dust.
  • motel — a hotel providing travelers with lodging and free parking facilities, typically a roadside hotel having rooms adjacent to an outside parking area or an urban hotel offering parking within the building.
  • motes — Plural form of mote.
  • motet — a vocal composition in polyphonic style, on a Biblical or similar prose text, intended for use in a church service.
  • motey — full of moits.
  • motte — a grove or clump of trees in prairie land or open country.
  • motze — (Mo Ti) flourished 5th century b.c, Chinese philosopher.
  • mpret — a ruler or monarch
  • mtech — Master of Technology
  • muted — silent; refraining from speech or utterance.
  • muter — silent; refraining from speech or utterance.
  • mutes — Plural form of mute.
  • mutex — (tool, music)   An extension of TeX for typesetting music.
  • ramet — an individual of a clone.
  • remit — to transmit or send (money, a check, etc.) to a person or place, usually in payment.
  • retem — a shrub, Retama raetam, of Syria and Arabia, having white flowers: said to be the juniper of the Old Testament.
  • satem — belonging to or consisting of those branches of the Indo-European family in which alveolar or palatal fricatives, as the sounds (s) or (sh), developed in ancient times from Proto-Indo-European palatal stops: the satem branches are Indo-Iranian, Armenian, Slavic, Baltic, and Albanian.
  • smelt — to perceive the odor or scent of through the nose by means of the olfactory nerves; inhale the odor of: I smell something burning.
  • smite — to strike or hit hard, with or as with the hand, a stick, or other weapon: She smote him on the back with her umbrella.
  • smote — a simple past tense of smite.
  • steam — water in the form of an invisible gas or vapor.
  • stems — science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, considered as a group of academic or career fields (often used attributively): degree programs in STEM disciplines; teaching STEM in high school.
  • stime — the smallest bit; a drop, taste, or glimpse.
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