6-letter words containing t, m
- autumn — Autumn is the season between summer and winter when the weather becomes cooler and the leaves fall off the trees.
- bampot — an idiot; a fool
- bantam — A bantam is a breed of small chicken.
- batman — In the British armed forces, an officer's batman is his personal servant.
- batmen — a soldier assigned to an officer as a servant.
- batumi — seaport in Georgia, on the Black Sea, near the Turkish border: pop. 136,000
- bemete — to measure
- bemist — to cloud with mist
- besmut — to blacken with smut
- beteem — to accord or allow
- betime — to befall, happen
- betrim — to decorate or adorn
- bitmap — A bitmap is a type of graphics file on a computer.
- botham — Sir Ian (Terence). born 1955, English cricketer: an all-rounder, he played in 102 test matches (1977–1992) taking 383 wickets
- bottom — The bottom of something is the lowest or deepest part of it.
- camest — (archaic) second-person singular simple past of come.
- cameth — (hypercorrect, archaic) alternative third person singular past tense form of come.
- camlet — a tough waterproof cloth
- camote — a sweet potato
- cement — Cement is a grey powder which is mixed with sand and water in order to make concrete.
- centum — denoting or belonging to the Indo-European languages in which original velar stops (k) were not palatalized, namely languages of the Hellenic, Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Anatolian, and Tocharian branches
- cermet — any of several materials consisting of a metal matrix with ceramic particles disseminated through it. They are hard and resistant to high temperatures
- coempt — to buy up (something) in its entirety
- comart — a binding agreement
- comate — having tufts of hair
- combat — Combat is fighting that takes place in a war.
- comest — Archaic second-person singular form of come.
- cometh — 3rd person singular present indicative of come.
- comets — Plural form of comet.
- comfit — a sugar-coated sweet containing a nut or seed
- comint — the gathering of political or military intelligence by interception of wire or radio communications.
- comity — mutual civility; courtesy
- commit — If someone commits a crime or a sin, they do something illegal or bad.
- commot — (in medieval Wales) a division of land, usually consisting of around 30 to 50 small villages
- comnet — (simulation, networking) A simulation tool from CACI for analysing wide-area voice or data networks, based on SIMSCRIPT.
- comsat — any of various communications satellites for relaying microwave transmissions, as of telephone and television signals
- cotman — John Sell. 1782–1842, English landscape watercolourist and etcher
- custom — A custom is an activity, a way of behaving, or an event which is usual or traditional in a particular society or in particular circumstances.
- dammit — a contracted form of damn it
- damnit — (especially, southern US) misspelling of dammit.
- datums — Plural form of datum.
- demast — to remove the mast from (a boat)
- demate — (transitive, aerospace) To move (a space shuttle orbiter) off the back of an aircraft that can carry it.
- dement — to deteriorate mentally, esp because of old age
- demist — to free or become free of condensation through evaporation produced by a heater and/or blower
- demote — If someone demotes you, they give you a lower rank or a less important position than you already have, often as a punishment.
- demuth — Charles, 1883–1935, U.S. painter and illustrator.
- destem — to remove the stem from (a fruit or vegetable); stem.
- diatom — any microscopic unicellular alga of the phylum Bacillariophyta, occurring in marine or fresh water singly or in colonies, each cell having a cell wall made of two halves and impregnated with silica
- dictum — A dictum is a formal statement made by someone who has authority.