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6-letter words containing t, l

  • dealth — (obsolete) A share dealt out.
  • deftly — dexterous; nimble; skillful; clever: deft hands; a deft mechanic.
  • delate — (formerly) to bring a charge against; denounce; impeach
  • delete — If you delete something that has been written down or stored in a computer, you cross it out or remove it.
  • delict — a wrongful act for which the person injured has the right to a civil remedy
  • delint — /dee-lint/ To modify code to remove problems detected when linting. Confusingly, this process is also referred to as "linting" code.
  • delist — If a company delists or if its shares are delisted, its shares are removed from the official list of shares that can be traded on the stock market.
  • deltas — Plural form of delta.
  • dental — pronounced or articulated with the tip of the tongue touching the backs of the upper teeth, as for t in French tout
  • dentel — Alternative form of dentil.
  • dentil — one of a set of small square or rectangular blocks evenly spaced to form an ornamental row, usually under a classical cornice on a building, piece of furniture, etc
  • desalt — to remove salt from (esp. sea water)
  • desilt — To remove suspended silt from the water.
  • detail — The details of something are its individual features or elements.
  • diglot — bilingual.
  • dilate — to make wider or larger; cause to expand.
  • dilute — to make (a liquid) thinner or weaker by the addition of water or the like.
  • distal — situated away from the point of origin or attachment, as of a limb or bone; terminal. Compare proximal.
  • distil — (transitive) Subject a substance to distillation; .
  • dolent — (archaic) Sad, sorrowful.
  • dolton — a city in NE Illinois, near Chicago.
  • dottel — the plug of half-smoked tobacco in the bottom of a pipe after smoking.
  • dottle — the plug of half-smoked tobacco in the bottom of a pipe after smoking.
  • drylot — a bare outdoor enclosure for livestock
  • dublet — Obsolete form of doublet.
  • ductal — (anatomy) Of, relating to, or originating in a duct.
  • dulcet — pleasant to the ear; melodious: the dulcet tones of the cello.
  • duluth — Daniel Greysolon [da-nyel gre-saw-lawn] /daˈnyɛl grɛ sɔˈlɔ̃/ (Show IPA), Sieur, 1636–1710, French trader and explorer in Canada and Great Lakes region.
  • duplet — Chemistry. two electrons occupying the same orbital in an atom or molecule; two electrons working together, especially forming a nonpolar covalent bond between atoms.
  • dystal — DYnamic STorage ALlocation. Adds lists, strings, sorting, statistics and matrix operations to Fortran. Sammet 1969, p.388. "DYSTAL: Dynamic Storage Allocation Language in FORTRAN", J.M. Sakoda, in Symbol Manipulation Languages and Techniques, D.G. Bobrow ed, N-H 1971, pp.302- 311.
  • e-tail — retail conducted via the internet
  • eaglet — a young eagle.
  • elanet — any of four species of diurnal bird of prey of the genus Elanus and of the family Accipitridae
  • elated — Extremely happy and excited; delighted; pleased.
  • elater — That which elates.
  • elates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elate.
  • elbert — Mountpeak of the Sawatch range, central Colo.: highest peak of the Rocky Mountains of the conterminous U.S.: 14,443 ft (4,402 m)
  • eldest — (of one out of a group of related or otherwise associated people) of the greatest age; oldest.
  • elects — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elect.
  • elegit — (archaic) A judicial writ ordering seizure of a debtor's property.
  • elicit — Evoke or draw out (a response, answer, or fact) from someone in reaction to one's own actions or questions.
  • elites — Plural form of elite.
  • elliot — a masculine name
  • ellipt — (linguistics) To omit (from an utterance) by ellipsis.
  • eluant — Alternative spelling of eluent.
  • eluate — A solution obtained by elution.
  • eluent — (analytical chemistry) In chromatography, a solvent used in order to effect separation by elution.
  • eluted — Simple past tense and past participle of elute.
  • elutor — a vessel used for elution
  • elytis — Odysseus, real name Odysseus Alepoudelis. 1912–96, Greek poet, author of the long poems To Axion Esti (1959) and Maria Nefeli (1978): Nobel prize for literature 1979
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