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6-letter words containing t, o, e

  • touzle — to disorder or dishevel: The wind tousled our hair.
  • towage — the act of towing.
  • towery — having towers: a towery city.
  • towhee — any of several long-tailed North American finches of the genera Pipilo and Chlorura.
  • towner — a thickly populated area, usually smaller than a city and larger than a village, having fixed boundaries and certain local powers of government.
  • townesCharles Hard, 1915–2015, U.S. physicist and educator: Nobel Prize in physics 1964.
  • townie — a resident of a town, especially a nonstudent resident of a college town.
  • towser — a big dog.
  • tremor — involuntary shaking of the body or limbs, as from disease, fear, weakness, or excitement; a fit of trembling.
  • trento — Italian name of Trent.
  • trevorWilliam (William Trevor Cox) born 1928, Irish short-story writer and novelist.
  • triode — a vacuum tube containing three elements, usually anode, cathode, and control grid.
  • triose — a monosaccharide that has three atoms of carbon.
  • 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.
  • troked — truck2 (defs 4–7).
  • trompe — Metallurgy. a device formerly used for inducing a blast of air upon the hearth of a forge by means of a current of falling water.
  • tropes — Rhetoric. any literary or rhetorical device, as metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche, and irony, that consists in the use of words in other than their literal sense. an instance of this. Compare figure of speech.
  • troupe — a company, band, or group of singers, actors, or other performers, especially one that travels about.
  • trouse — close-fitting breeches worn in Ireland
  • trover — an action for the recovery of the value of personal property wrongfully converted by another to his or her own use.
  • trowel — any of various tools having a flat blade with a handle, used for depositing and working mortar, plaster, etc.
  • troyes — a river in N France, flowing NW to the Seine. 125 miles (200 km) long.
  • tuebor — I will defend: motto on the coat of arms of Michigan.
  • tupelo — any of several trees of the genus Nyssa, having ovate leaves, clusters of minute flowers, and purple, berrylike fruit, especially N. aquatica, of swampy regions of the eastern, southern, and midwestern U.S.
  • tuxedo — Also called dinner jacket. a man's jacket for semiformal evening dress, traditionally of black or dark-blue color and characteristically having satin or grosgrain facing on the lapels.
  • twofer — a card or ticket entitling the holder to purchase two tickets to a theatrical performance at a reduced price.
  • tylote — a knobbed sponge spicule
  • tyrone — a former administrative county in W Northern Ireland: replaced by several new districts 1973.
  • upvote — such a favorable vote: One of my posts is getting lots of upvotes.
  • utero- — uterus, uterus and
  • vector — Mathematics. a quantity possessing both magnitude and direction, represented by an arrow the direction of which indicates the direction of the quantity and the length of which is proportional to the magnitude. Compare scalar (def 4). such a quantity with the additional requirement that such quantities obey the parallelogram law of addition. such a quantity with the additional requirement that such quantities are to transform in a particular way under changes of the coordinate system. any generalization of the above quantities.
  • veneto — Also, Venetia. Also called Veneto [ve-ne-taw] /ˈvɛ nɛ tɔ/ (Show IPA). a region in NE Italy. 7095 sq. mi. (18,375 sq. km).
  • vetoed — the power or right vested in one branch of a government to cancel or postpone the decisions, enactments, etc., of another branch, especially the right of a president, governor, or other chief executive to reject bills passed by the legislature.
  • vetoes — the power or right vested in one branch of a government to cancel or postpone the decisions, enactments, etc., of another branch, especially the right of a president, governor, or other chief executive to reject bills passed by the legislature.
  • vietor — Wilhelm [vil-helm] /ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1850–1918, German philologist and phonetician.
  • violet — a female given name.
  • volute — a spiral or twisted formation or object.
  • vortex — a whirling mass of water, especially one in which a force of suction operates, as a whirlpool.
  • voteen — a devotee, esp of religion
  • votive — offered, given, dedicated, etc., in accordance with a vow: a votive offering.
  • westonEdward, 1886–1958, U.S. photographer.
  • wonted — accustomed; used (usually followed by an infinitive): He was wont to rise at dawn.
  • wortle — a plate with holes for drawing wire or lead pipe through in order to lengthen it and reduce its width
  • wroten — (archaic) Past participle of write; written.
  • zealot — a person who shows zeal.
  • zepto- — one sextillionth part of; the factor 10-21
  • zeroth — coming in a series before the first: the zeroth level of energy.
  • zoetic — (rare) Of or pertaining to life.
  • zonate — marked with zones, as of color, texture, or the like.
  • zonite — a body segment of a diplopod.
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