6-letter words containing t, h, e
- hutted — Simple past tense and past participle of hut.
- hutter — Someone who lives in a hut.
- hyetal — of or relating to rain or rainfall.
- hyeto- — indicating rain
- hypate — (on the ancient Greek lyre) the highest placed string, producing the lowest tone
- hytime — Hypermedia/Time-based Structuring Language: an emerging ANSI/ISO Standard from the SGML Users' Group's Special Interest Group on Hypertext and Multimedia (SIGhyper). A hypermedia extension of SGML.
- itched — Simple past tense and past participle of itch.
- itches — Plural form of itch.
- ithome — Mount, a mountain in SW Greece, in SW Peloponnesus. 2630 feet (802 meters).
- jethro — the father-in-law of Moses. Ex. 3:1.
- khelat — a region in S Baluchistan, in SW Pakistan.
- kitteh — (Internet, neologism) A cat, chiefly in a lolcat type picture.
- klepht — a Greek or Albanian brigand, exalted in the war of Greek independence as a patriotic robber; guerrilla.
- kvetch — to complain, especially chronically.
- lathed — a thin, narrow strip of wood, used with other strips to form latticework, a backing for plaster or stucco, a support for slates and other roofing materials, etc.
- lathen — made of lath or laths
- lather — a worker who puts up laths.
- lathes — Plural form of lathe.
- length — the longest extent of anything as measured from end to end: the length of a river.
- letcha — (slang) Let you.
- letchy — Alternative form of lechy.
- lethal — of, relating to, or causing death; deadly; fatal: a lethal weapon; a lethal dose.
- lethee — lifeblood
- lhotse — a mountain peak in the Himalayas, on the Nepal-Tibet border: fourth highest peak in the world. 27,890 feet (8501 meters).
- lithed — Simple past tense and past participle of lithe.
- lither — bending readily; pliant; limber; supple; flexible: the lithe body of a ballerina.
- liveth — Archaic third-person singular form of live.
- loathe — to feel disgust or intense aversion for; abhor: I loathe people who spread malicious gossip.
- lother — unwilling; reluctant; disinclined; averse: to be loath to admit a mistake.
- loveth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of love.
- luther — Martin [mahr-tn;; German mahr-teen] /ˈmɑr tn;; German ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), 1483–1546, German theologian and author: leader, in Germany, of the Protestant Reformation.
- lyghte — Obsolete spelling of light.
- maketh — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of make.
- mather — Cotton, 1663–1728, American clergyman and author.
- mentha — (botany) Any of the mint genus Mentha, mints and similar species.
- metaph — metaphor
- mether — (dialect) Four in the old counting system of Northern England.
- metho- — methyl
- method — a procedure, technique, or way of doing something, especially in accordance with a definite plan: There are three possible methods of repairing this motor.
- methyl — containing the methyl group.
- minthe — a nymph who was changed into a mint plant by Persephone to protect her from Hades.
- mither — mother1 .
- moneth — Obsolete spelling of month.
- mothed — Simple past tense and past participle of moth.
- mother — parent
- mouthe — Obsolete spelling of mouth.
- moveth — Archaic third-person singular form of move.
- natfhe — National Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education
- nether — lying or believed to lie beneath the earth's surface; infernal: the nether regions.
- nethou — Pic de [French peek duh] /French pik də/ (Show IPA) a mountain in NE Spain: highest peak of the Pyrenees. 11,165 feet (3400 meters).