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6-letter words containing t, e, r

  • rarest — (of meat) cooked just slightly: He likes his steak rare.
  • raster — Television. a pattern of scanning lines covering the area upon which the image is projected in the cathode-ray tube or liquid-crystal display of a television set or other screen.
  • rather — in a measure; to a certain extent; somewhat: rather good.
  • ratine — a loosely woven fabric made with nubby or knotty yarns.
  • ratite — having a flat, unkeeled sternum, as an ostrich, cassowary, emu, or moa.
  • ratted — any of several long-tailed rodents of the family Muridae, of the genus Rattus and related genera, distinguished from the mouse by being larger.
  • ratten — to sabotage or steal (tools), or harass in order to disrupt workers
  • ratter — a person, animal, or thing that catches rats, as a terrier or a cat.
  • rattle — to give out or cause a rapid succession of short, sharp sounds, as in consequence of agitation and repeated concussions: The windows rattled in their frames.
  • rawest — uncooked, as articles of food: a raw carrot.
  • raylet — a small ray
  • re-act — to act or perform again.
  • re-hat — to assign a new designation to (a soldier), for example when installing a national army as UN peacekeepers
  • re-let — to make (land or property) available for letting again after the previous tenants have vacated it
  • realty — real property or real estate.
  • reasty — rancid
  • reated — to mix or merge so as to make a combination; blend; unite; combine: to amalgamate two companies.
  • rebait — food, or some substitute, used as a lure in fishing, trapping, etc.
  • rebate — a return of part of the original payment for some service or merchandise; partial refund.
  • rebato — rabato.
  • rebite — to give (a printing plate or a particular area of a printing plate) another application of acid in order to cause further cutting
  • reboot — to restart (a computer) by loading the operating system; boot again.
  • rebote — the rear wall of a cancha or jai alai court. Compare frontis.
  • recant — to withdraw or disavow (a statement, opinion, etc.), especially formally; retract.
  • recast — to cast again or anew.
  • recent — of late occurrence, appearance, or origin; lately happening, done, made, etc.: recent events; a recent trip.
  • recept — an idea formed by the repetition of similar percepts, as successive percepts of the same object.
  • recite — to repeat the words of, as from memory, especially in a formal manner: to recite a lesson.
  • recoat — to coat (something) again or with a new coat of paint, varnish, etc
  • recost — the price paid to acquire, produce, accomplish, or maintain anything: the high cost of a good meal.
  • rectal — of, relating to, or for the rectum.
  • recti- — straight or right
  • recto- — rectum, rectum and
  • rector — a member of the clergy in charge of a parish in the Protestant Episcopal Church.
  • rectum — the comparatively straight, terminal section of the intestine, ending in the anus.
  • rectus — any of several straight muscles, as of the abdomen, thigh, eye, etc.
  • redact — to put into suitable literary form; revise; edit.
  • redate — to change the date of (something)
  • redout — a condition experienced by pilots and astronauts in which blood is forced to the head and results in a reddening of the field of vision during rapid deceleration or in maneuvers that produce a negative gravity force.
  • redtop — any of several grasses of the genus Agrostis having reddish panicles, as A. gigantea, widely cultivated for lawns and pasturage.
  • reduct — to reduce.
  • reduit — a military construction which troops use to defend themselves while holding out an attack
  • reedit — to supervise or direct the preparation of (a newspaper, magazine, book, etc.); serve as editor of; direct the editorial policies of.
  • reemit — to send forth (liquid, light, heat, sound, particles, etc.); discharge.
  • refect — to refresh, especially with food or drink.
  • refelt — to perceive or examine by touch.
  • reflet — an effect of brilliance or luster due to the reflection of light on a surface, especially of pottery; iridescence.
  • refoot — to replace the foot of (a built structure)
  • refute — to prove to be false or erroneous, as an opinion or charge.
  • regent — a person who exercises the ruling power in a kingdom during the minority, absence, or disability of the sovereign.
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