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6-letter words containing t, l

  • luting — a paving tool for spreading and smoothing concrete, consisting of a straightedge mounted transversely on a long handle.
  • lutist — a lute player; lutenist.
  • lutose — covered with a powdery substance resembling mud, as certain insects.
  • lutuli — Albert (John Mvumbi)1898-1967; South African political leader, born in Zimbabwe
  • lutzen — a town in E Germany, WSW of Leipzig: site of Gustavus Adolphus' victory over Wallenstein in 1632 and Napoleon's victory over the Russians in 1813.
  • lutzes — Plural form of lutz.
  • luxate — to put out of joint; dislocate: The accident luxated the left shoulder.
  • lyghte — Obsolete spelling of light.
  • lyrate — Botany. (of a pinnate leaf) divided transversely into several lobes, the smallest at the base.
  • lyrist — a person who plays the lyre or who sings and accompanies himself or herself on the lyre.
  • lysate — the mixture of substances formed by the lysis of cells.
  • lytton — Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-, 1st Baron Lytton of Knebworth [neb-wert] /ˈnɛb wərt/ (Show IPA), 1803–73, English novelist, dramatist, and politician.
  • malate — a salt or ester of malic acid.
  • malest — a person bearing an X and Y chromosome pair in the cell nuclei and normally having a penis, scrotum, and testicles, and developing hair on the face at adolescence; a boy or man.
  • mallet — a hammerlike tool with a head commonly of wood but occasionally of rawhide, plastic, etc., used for driving any tool with a wooden handle, as a chisel, or for striking a surface.
  • maloti — plural of loti.
  • malted — germinated grain, usually barley, used in brewing and distilling.
  • malter — (dated) A person who makes malt; a maltster.
  • maltha — a liquid bitumen used in ancient times as a mortar or waterproofing agent.
  • maltol — a crystalline compound, C 6 H 6 O 3 , obtained from larch bark, pine needles, chicory, or roasted malt, used for enhancing flavors and aromas, as in foods, wines, and perfumes.
  • mantel — a construction framing the opening of a fireplace and usually covering part of the chimney breast in a more or less decorative manner.
  • mantle — a construction framing the opening of a fireplace and usually covering part of the chimney breast in a more or less decorative manner.
  • martelCharles, Charles Martel.
  • matily — in a matey manner
  • matlab — (mathematics, language, application)   A high-level language and interactive program from The MathWorks for numeric computation and visualisation. MATLAB supports numerical analysis, matrix computation, signal processing, linear algebra, statistics, Fourier analysis, filtering, optimisation and numerical integration. It can output two and three dimensional graphics and can be integrated with C, C++, Fortran, Java, COM and Microsoft Excel.
  • meatal — an opening or foramen, especially in a bone or bony structure, as the opening of the ear or nose.
  • meetly — suitably; fittingly; properly; in a seemly manner.
  • melete — one of the original three Muses, the Muse of meditation. Compare Aoede, mneme (def 2).
  • melted — Simple past tense and past participle of melt.
  • melter — a person or thing that melts.
  • melton — a heavily fulled cloth, often of wool, tightly constructed and finished with a smooth face concealing the weave, used for overcoats, hunting jackets, etc.
  • mental — of or relating to the chin.
  • merlot — a dark-blue grape used in winemaking, especially in the Bordeaux region of France and in areas of Italy, Switzerland, and California.
  • metals — Plural form of metal.
  • metely — (obsolete) According to measure or proportion.
  • methyl — containing the methyl group.
  • mettle — courage and fortitude: a man of mettle.
  • 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.
  • miltonJohn, 1608–74, English poet.
  • mistal — a cow shed; byre
  • mistle — (obsolete) mistletoe.
  • mitral — of or resembling a miter.
  • ml kit — The ML Kit is a straight translation of the Definition of Standard ML into a collection of Standard ML modules. For example, every inference rule in the Definition is translated into a small piece of Standard ML code which implements it. The translation has been done with as little originality as possible - even variable conventions from the Definition are carried straight over to the Kit. The Kit is intended as a tool box for those people in the programming language community who may want a self-contained parser or type checker for full Standard ML but do not want to understand the clever bits of a high-performance compiler. We have tried to write simple code and modular interfaces. Version 1 interpreter, documentation Nick Rothwell, David N. Turner, Mads Tofte <[email protected]>, and Lars Birkedal at Edinburgh and Copenhagen Universities.
  • molest — to bother, interfere with, or annoy.
  • molletGuy [gahy;; French gee] /gaɪ;; French gi/ (Show IPA), 1905–75, French political leader.
  • molted — (of birds, insects, reptiles, etc.) to cast or shed the feathers, skin, or the like, that will be replaced by a new growth.
  • molten — a past participle of melt1 .
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