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6-letter words containing t, e

  • bestie — Your bestie is your best friend.
  • bestir — to cause (oneself, or, rarely, another person) to become active; rouse
  • bestow — To bestow something on someone means to give or present it to them.
  • bestud — to set with studs
  • betake — to apply (oneself) to
  • betcha — I bet you
  • beteem — to accord or allow
  • bethel — an ancient town in the West Bank, near Jerusalem: in the Old Testament, the place where the dream of Jacob occurred (Genesis 28:19)
  • betide — to happen or happen to; befall (often in the phrase woe betide (someone))
  • betime — to befall, happen
  • betise — folly or lack of perception
  • betoil — to worry
  • betony — a Eurasian plant, Stachys (or Betonica) officinalis, with a spike of reddish-purple flowers, formerly used in medicine and dyeing: family Lamiaceae (labiates)
  • betook — simple past tense of betake.
  • betoss — to toss about
  • betray — If you betray someone who loves or trusts you, your actions hurt and disappoint them.
  • betrim — to decorate or adorn
  • betted — a simple past tense and past participle of bet1 .
  • better — Better is the comparative of good.
  • bettor — a person who bets
  • bewept — to weep over (something): to beweep one's foolish mistakes.
  • bezant — a medieval Byzantine gold coin
  • bibtex — (text, tool)   A Tex extension package for bibliographic citations, distributed with LaTeX. BibTeX uses a style-independent bibliography database (.bib file) to produce a list of sources, in a customisable style, from citations in a Latex document. It also supports some other formats. BibTeX is a separate program from LaTeX. LaTeX writes information about citations and which .bib files to use in a ".aux" file. BibTeX reads this file and outputs a ".bbl" file containing LaTeX commands to produce the source list. You must then run LaTeX again to incorporate the source list in your document. In typeset documents, "BibTeX" is written in upper case, with the "IB" slightly smaller and with the "E" as a subscript. BibTeX is described in the LaTeX book by Lamport.
  • bident — an instrument with two prongs
  • bifter — a cannabis cigarette
  • billet — If members of the armed forces are billeted in a particular place, that place is provided for them to stay in for a period of time.
  • binate — occurring in two parts or in pairs
  • bisect — If something long and thin bisects an area or line, it divides the area or line in half.
  • bister — a yellowish-brown to dark-brown pigment made from the soot of burned wood
  • bistre — a transparent water-soluble brownish-yellow pigment made by boiling the soot of wood, used for pen and wash drawings
  • biters — a person or animal that bites, especially habitually or viciously: That dog is a biter.
  • bitnet — (networking)   /bit'net/ (Because It's Time NETwork) An academic and research computer network connecting approximately 2500 computers. BITNET provides interactive, electronic mail and file transfer services, using a store and forward protocol, based on IBM Network Job Entry protocols. Bitnet-II encapsulates the Bitnet protocol within IP packets and depends on the Internet to route them. BITNET traffic and Internet traffic are exchanged via several gateway hosts. BITNET is now operated by CREN. BITNET is everybody's least favourite piece of the network. The BITNET hosts are a collection of IBM dinosaurs, VAXen (with lobotomised communications hardware), and Prime Computer supermini computers. They communicate using 80-character EBCDIC card images (see eighty-column mind); thus, they tend to mangle the headers and text of third-party traffic from the rest of the ASCII/RFC 822 world with annoying regularity. BITNET is also notorious as the apparent home of BIFF.
  • bitser — a mongrel dog
  • bitted — Also called bollard. a strong post of wood or iron projecting, usually in pairs, above the deck of a ship, used for securing cables, lines for towing, etc.
  • bitten — Bitten is the past participle of bite.
  • bitter — In a bitter argument or conflict, people argue very angrily or fight very fiercely.
  • bittie — a little bit
  • bitzerGeorge William (Johann Gottlob Wilhelm Bitzer"Billy") 1872–1944, U.S. cinematographer.
  • biuret — a white crystalline substance, C 2 H 5 O 2 N 3 ⋅H 2 O, soluble in water and alcohol, used for the identification of urea, from which it is formed on heating.
  • blated — bleat.
  • blewit — an edible pale-bluish mushroom, Tricholoma personatum.
  • blithe — You use blithe to indicate that something is done casually, without serious or careful thought.
  • blivet — something annoying, ridiculous, or useless.
  • bluest — the pure color of a clear sky; the primary color between green and violet in the visible spectrum, an effect of light with a wavelength between 450 and 500 nm.
  • blythe — a female given name.
  • boatel — a waterside hotel catering for boating people
  • boater — A boater or a straw boater is a hard straw hat with a flat top and brim which is often worn for certain social occasions in the summer.
  • boatie — a boating enthusiast
  • boblet — a two-man bobsleigh
  • bolete — any fungus of the genus Boletus
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