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6-letter words containing t, i, l, e

  • lettie — a female given name, form of Laetitia.
  • levite — a member of the tribe of Levi.
  • levity — lightness of mind, character, or behavior; lack of appropriate seriousness or earnestness.
  • libate — to pour out (a liquid, esp wine) in honour of a deity
  • lie to — to be in a horizontal, recumbent, or prostrate position, as on a bed or the ground; recline. Antonyms: stand.
  • lieut. — Lieut. is a written abbreviation for lieutenant when it is a person's title.
  • lifted — to move or bring (something) upward from the ground or other support to a higher position; hoist.
  • lifter — a person or thing that lifts.
  • ligate — to bind with or as if with a ligature; tie up (a bleeding artery or the like).
  • ligeti — György Sándor [jawr-jee shahn-dawr,, dyawr-] /ˈdʒɔr dʒi ˈʃɑn dɔr,, ˈdyɔr-/ (Show IPA), 1923–2006, Austrian composer, born in Hungary.
  • likest — Digital Technology. (sometimes initial capital letter) noting or pertaining to a feature used to like specific website content: a Like button; like boxes.
  • lilted — rhythmic swing or cadence.
  • limpet — any of various marine gastropods with a low conical shell open beneath, often browsing on rocks at the shoreline and adhering when disturbed.
  • linget — An ingot; a lingot.
  • linnet — a small Old World finch, Carduelis cannabina.
  • linted — having or containing lint
  • lintel — a horizontal architectural member supporting the weight above an opening, as a window or a door.
  • linterlinters, short cotton fibers that stick to seeds after a first ginning.
  • lintie — (archaic, Scotland) A linnet.
  • lionet — a young or small lion.
  • listed — made of selvages or strips of cloth.
  • listee — a person, business, etc., that is included in a list or directory.
  • listel — a narrow list or fillet.
  • listen — to give attention with the ear; attend closely for the purpose of hearing; give ear.
  • lister — a border or bordering strip, usually of cloth.
  • litate — (botany) forked, with the points slightly curved outward.
  • liters — Plural form of liter.
  • litest — noting a commercial product that is low in calories or low in any substance considered undesirable, as compared with a product of the same type: used especially in labeling or advertising commercial products: lite beer.
  • lithed — Simple past tense and past participle of lithe.
  • lither — bending readily; pliant; limber; supple; flexible: the lithe body of a ballerina.
  • litote — (perhaps nonstandard) An instance of litotes.
  • litres — Plural form of litre.
  • litten — lighted1 .
  • litter — objects strewn or scattered about; scattered rubbish.
  • little — small in size; not big; not large; tiny: a little desk in the corner of the room.
  • littre — Maximilien Paul Émile [mak-see-mee-lyan pawl ey-meel] /mak si miˈlyɛ̃ pɔl eɪˈmil/ (Show IPA), 1801–88, French lexicographer and philosopher.
  • livest — being alive; living; alive: live animals.
  • liveth — Archaic third-person singular form of live.
  • loiret — a department in central France. 2630 sq. mi. (6810 sq. km). Capital: Orléans.
  • loiter — to linger aimlessly or as if aimless in or about a place: to loiter around the bus terminal.
  • lottie — a female given name, form of Charlotte.
  • lucite — Alternative capitalization of Lucite.
  • luetic — syphilitic.
  • lutein — Also called xanthophyll. a yellow-red, water-insoluble, crystalline, carotenoid alcohol, C 40 H 56 O 2 , found in the petals of marigold and certain other flowers, egg yolk, algae, and corpora lutea: used chiefly in the biochemical study of the carotenoids.
  • milletFrancis Davis, 1846–1912, U.S. painter, illustrator, and journalist.
  • milnet — Military Network. Part of the Defense Data Network (DDN) and of the Internet. Managed by the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA).
  • milted — Simple past tense and past participle of milt.
  • milter — a male fish in breeding time.
  • mistle — (obsolete) mistletoe.
  • motile — Biology. moving or capable of moving spontaneously: motile cells; motile spores.
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