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6-letter words containing t, h, e

  • therme — any of several units of heat, as one equivalent to 1000 large calories or 100,000 British thermal units.
  • thermo — Thermo means using or relating to heat.
  • theron — Charlize (ˈʃɑːlɪːz) born 1975, South African film actress; her films include The Cider House Rules (1999) and Monster (2003), which earned her an Academy Award
  • theses — a proposition stated or put forward for consideration, especially one to be discussed and proved or to be maintained against objections: He vigorously defended his thesis on the causes of war.
  • thesis — a proposition stated or put forward for consideration, especially one to be discussed and proved or to be maintained against objections: He vigorously defended his thesis on the causes of war.
  • thess. — Thessalonians
  • thetic — positive; dogmatic.
  • thetis — a Nereid, the wife of Peleus and the mother of Achilles.
  • thewed — having muscles or thews
  • they'd — They'd is a spoken form of 'they had', especially when 'had' is an auxiliary verb.
  • thibet — Tibet (def 1).
  • thible — a smooth stick for stirring porridge, broth or anything else made in a pot
  • thiers — Louis Adolphe [lwee a-dawlf] /lwi aˈdɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1797–1877, French statesman: president 1871–73.
  • thieve — to take by theft; steal.
  • thisbe — Pyramus and Thisbe.
  • thorez — Maurice [maw-rees] /mɔˈris/ (Show IPA), 1900–64, French Communist Party leader.
  • thorpe — a hamlet; village.
  • thoued — to address as “thou.”.
  • thrace — an ancient region of varying extent in the E part of the Balkan Peninsula: later a Roman province; now in Bulgaria, Turkey, and Greece.
  • thraleHester Lynch (Hester Lynch Piozzi) 1741–1821, Welsh writer and friend of Samuel Johnson.
  • thrave — twenty-four sheaves of corn
  • thread — a fine cord of flax, cotton, or other fibrous material spun out to considerable length, especially when composed of two or more filaments twisted together.
  • threap — an argument; quarrel.
  • threat — a declaration of an intention or determination to inflict punishment, injury, etc., in retaliation for, or conditionally upon, some action or course; menace: He confessed under the threat of imprisonment.
  • thresh — to separate the grain or seeds from (a cereal plant or the like) by some mechanical means, as by beating with a flail or by the action of a threshing machine.
  • thrice — three times, as in succession; on three occasions or in three ways.
  • thrive — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
  • throes — a violent spasm or pang; paroxysm.
  • throne — the chair or seat occupied by a sovereign, bishop, or other exalted personage on ceremonial occasions, usually raised on a dais and covered with a canopy.
  • throve — a simple past tense of thrive.
  • thunen — Johann Heinrich von [yoh-hahn hahyn-rikh fuh n] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈhaɪn rɪx fən/ (Show IPA), 1783–1850, German economic theorist.
  • thyine — of or relating to the sandarac tree
  • thyone — Semele, as named by her son Dionysus when he took her from the underworld to Olympus.
  • thyrse — a compact branching inflorescence, as of the lilac, in which the main axis is indeterminate and the lateral axes are determinate.
  • tither — a person who gives or pays tithes, as to a church.
  • tocher — a dowry; marriage settlement given to the groom by the bride or her family.
  • tophet — a place in the valley of Hinnom, near Jerusalem, where, contrary to the law, children were offered as sacrifices, especially to Moloch. It was later used as a dumping ground for refuse.
  • tosher — a person who scavenged in the sewers in Victorian London
  • tother — the other
  • touche — fencing: hit
  • towhee — any of several long-tailed North American finches of the genera Pipilo and Chlorura.
  • trench — Richard Chenevix [shen-uh-vee] /ˈʃɛn ə vi/ (Show IPA), 1807–86, English clergyman and scholar, born in Ireland.
  • troche — a small tablet or lozenge, usually a circular one, made of medicinal substance worked into a paste with sugar and mucilage or the like, and dried.
  • tusche — a greaselike liquid used in lithography as a medium receptive to lithographic ink, and in etching and silkscreen as a resist.
  • tushes — tushie.
  • tushie — the buttocks.
  • tythed — Sometimes, tithes. the tenth part of agricultural produce or personal income set apart as an offering to God or for works of mercy, or the same amount regarded as an obligation or tax for the support of the church, priesthood, or the like.
  • uneath — not easily
  • veight — noting an internal-combustion engine having two opposed banks of four cylinders, each inclined so that the axes of the cylinders form a V -shaped angle as seen from the end of the engine.
  • vetchy — consisting of vetches
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