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6-letter words containing t, e, o

  • bootle — a port in NW England, in Sefton unitary authority, Merseyside; on the River Mersey adjoining Liverpool. Pop: 59 123 (2001)
  • borate — a salt or ester of boric acid. Salts of boric acid consist of BO3 and BO4 units linked together
  • bordet — Jules (Jean Baptiste Vincent) (ʒyl). 1870–1961, Belgian bacteriologist and immunologist, who discovered complement. Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1919
  • bosket — a clump of small trees or bushes; thicket
  • bosset — either of the rudimentary antlers found in young deer
  • bother — If you do not bother to do something or if you do not bother with it, you do not do it, consider it, or use it because you think it is unnecessary or because you are too lazy.
  • botnet — a network of computers infected by a program that communicates with its creator in order to send unsolicited emails, attack websites, etc
  • botoné — terminating in three ornamental budlike lobes
  • bottle — A bottle is a glass or plastic container in which drinks and other liquids are kept. Bottles are usually round with straight sides and a narrow top.
  • bouget — a representation of a water-carrying vessel consisting of a yoke with a bucket at either end
  • boutel — boltel (def 1).
  • bovate — an oxgang
  • bowtel — boltel (def 1).
  • bowtie — a small necktie tied in a bow at the collar.
  • breton — of, relating to, or characteristic of Brittany, its people, or their language
  • broket — (character)   /broh'k*t/ or /broh'ket/ (From broken bracket) Either of the characters "<" or ">" when used as paired enclosing delimiters (angle brackets).
  • bronte — Anne, pen name Acton Bell. 1820–49, English novelist; author of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1847)
  • c-note — a one-hundred-dollar bill
  • camote — a sweet potato
  • capote — a long cloak or soldier's coat, usually with a hood
  • cenote — (esp in the Yucatán peninsula) a natural well formed by the collapse of an overlying limestone crust: often used as a sacrificial site by the Mayas
  • centos — Plural form of cento.
  • centro — a city in S California.
  • choate — Rufus1799-1859; U.S. lawyer
  • citole — cittern
  • cloeteStuart, 1897–1976, South African novelist, born in France.
  • closet — A closet is a piece of furniture with doors at the front and shelves inside, which is used for storing things.
  • clothe — To clothe someone means to provide them with clothes to wear.
  • clouet — François (frɑ̃swa), ?1515–72, and his father, Jean (ʒɑ̃), ?1485–?1540, French portrait painters
  • coated — covered with an outer layer, film, etc
  • coatee — a short coat, esp for a baby
  • coater — a machine that applies a coating to something
  • coates — Joseph Gordon. 1878–1943, New Zealand statesman; prime minister of New Zealand (1925–28)
  • cocket — a document issued by a customs officer
  • coedit — to edit (a book, newspaper, etc) jointly
  • coempt — to buy up (something) in its entirety
  • coetus — Rare spelling of coitus.
  • cogent — A cogent reason, argument, or example is strong and convincing.
  • collet — (in a jewellery setting) a band or coronet-shaped claw that holds an individual stone
  • colter — a blade or disk on a plow, for forming the vertical wall of the furrow
  • comate — having tufts of hair
  • comest — Archaic second-person singular form of come.
  • cometh — 3rd person singular present indicative of come.
  • comets — Plural form of comet.
  • comnet — (simulation, networking)   A simulation tool from CACI for analysing wide-area voice or data networks, based on SIMSCRIPT.
  • contex — (obsolete, transitive) To context.
  • cooter — a large freshwater turtle, Pseudemus concinna, found in southern USA and northern Mexico
  • cootie — Cooties are the same as lice.
  • copter — A copter is a helicopter.
  • coquet — to behave flirtatiously
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