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4-letter words containing t, e

  • netx — (company)   A LukeCo Company that designs web pages and web software. Not to be confused with Net:X.
  • neut — Neuter.
  • newt — any of several brilliantly colored salamanders of the family Salamandridae, especially those of the genera Triturus and Notophthalmus, of North America, Europe, and northern Asia.
  • next — immediately following in time, order, importance, etc.: the next day; the next person in line.
  • nite — an informal, simplified spelling of night.
  • note — a brief record of something written down to assist the memory or for future reference.
  • nteu — National Treasury Employees Union
  • nyet — (slang, Russian) A Russian no; a negative response.
  • ot&e — operational test and evaluation
  • otec — a solar energy conversion system for producing electricity, using warm and cold ocean layers to vaporize and condense a fluid that drives a turbine
  • otoe — Oto.
  • oute — Obsolete spelling of out.
  • pate — porcelain paste used in ceramic work.
  • pcte — Portable Common Tool Environment
  • peat — a merry young girl; darling (used as a term of endearment).
  • pelt — to attack or assail with repeated blows or with missiles.
  • pent — a simple past tense and past participle of pen2 .
  • pert — Program Evaluation and Review Technique
  • pest — a city in and the capital of Hungary, in the central part, on the Danube River: formed 1873 from two cities on the W bank of the Danube (Buda and Obuda) and one on the E bank (Pest)
  • peta — People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
  • peteCharles, Jr ("Pete") 1930–1999, U.S. astronaut.
  • petn — a white, crystalline, water-insoluble, explosive solid, C 5 H 8 N 4 O 1 2 , used chiefly as a high explosive and as a vasodilator in treating angina pectoris.
  • peto — wahoo3 .
  • piet — Scot. a magpie.
  • poet — a person who composes poetry.
  • pote — to push, thrust
  • pret — preterit
  • ptfe — polytetrafluoroethylene
  • rate — the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans.
  • rect — receipt
  • reft — a simple past tense and past participle of reave1 .
  • regt — Regent
  • reit — real-estate investment trust.
  • rent — an opening made by rending or tearing; slit; fissure.
  • rept — receipt
  • rest — a support for a lance; lance rest.
  • retd — retd is a written abbreviation for retired. It is used after someone's name to indicate that they have retired from the army, navy, or air force.
  • rete — a pierced plate on an astrolabe, having projections whose points correspond to the fixed stars.
  • reti — Richard. 1889–1929, Hungarian chess player and theorist; influential in enunciating the theories of the hypermodern school
  • retz — Gilles de Laval [zheel duh la-val] /ʒil də laˈval/ (Show IPA), Baron de, 1404?–40, French marshal: executed for child murder.
  • rhet — rhetoric
  • rite — a formal or ceremonial act or procedure prescribed or customary in religious or other solemn use: rites of baptism; sacrificial rites.
  • rote — the sound of waves breaking on the shore.
  • rte. — Rte. is used in front of a number in the names of main roads between major cities. Rte. is a written abbreviation for route.
  • rtee — Real Time Engineering Environment: a set of CASE tools produced by Westmount Technology B.V.
  • sate — to cause to sit; seat (often followed by down): Sit yourself down. He sat me near him.
  • seat — something designed to support a person in a sitting position, as a chair, bench, or pew; a place on or in which one sits.
  • sect — a body of persons adhering to a particular religious faith; a religious denomination.
  • sekt — sparkling wine; champagne.
  • sent — simple past tense and past participle of send1 .
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