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6-letter words containing t, o, l

  • cloath — (obsolete) cloth.
  • cloeteStuart, 1897–1976, South African novelist, born in France.
  • cloots — a cloven hoof; one of the divisions of the cloven hoof of the swine, sheep, etc.
  • closet — A closet is a piece of furniture with doors at the front and shelves inside, which is used for storing things.
  • clothe — To clothe someone means to provide them with clothes to wear.
  • clotho — one of the three Fates, spinner of the thread of life
  • cloths — a fabric formed by weaving, felting, etc., from wool, hair, silk, flax, cotton, or other fiber, used for garments, upholstery, and many other items.
  • clotty — full of clots
  • clouet — François (frɑ̃swa), ?1515–72, and his father, Jean (ʒɑ̃), ?1485–?1540, French portrait painters
  • clouts — Plural form of clout.
  • cobalt — Cobalt is a hard silvery-white metal which is used to harden steel and for producing a blue dye.
  • coital — Coital means connected with or relating to sexual intercourse.
  • collet — (in a jewellery setting) a band or coronet-shaped claw that holds an individual stone
  • coltan — a metallic ore found esp in the E Congo, consisting of columbite and tantalite (a source of the element tantalum)
  • colter — a blade or disk on a plow, for forming the vertical wall of the furrow
  • colton — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • coolth — coolness
  • coplot — to plot together on the same graph
  • costal — of or near a rib or the ribs
  • costly — If you say that something is costly, you mean that it costs a lot of money, often more than you would want to pay.
  • cotula — (in prescriptions) a measure.
  • cotwal — (in India) a chief police officer
  • cotyle — a cavity that resembles a cup
  • coutil — a tightly-woven twill cloth used in corsetry
  • crotal — any of various lichens used in dyeing wool, esp for the manufacture of tweeds
  • dalton — John. 1766–1844, English chemist and physicist, who formulated the modern form of the atomic theory and the law of partial pressures for gases. He also gave the first accurate description of colour blindness, from which he suffered
  • diglot — bilingual.
  • 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
  • elliot — a masculine name
  • elutor — a vessel used for elution
  • entoil — to trap in toils or snares; ensnare
  • eolith — A roughly chipped flint found in Tertiary strata, originally thought to be an early artifact but probably of natural origin.
  • etalon — A device consisting of two reflecting plates for producing interfering light beams.
  • étoile — a star
  • extold — Lb obsolete Simple past tense and past participle of extol.
  • extoll — (transitive) alternative spelling of extol.
  • extols — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of extol.
  • firlot — one of two different Scottish units of measurement for grain, the first (for measuring commodities sold by level measure, such as wheat) roughly equal to an imperial bushel, the second (for measuring commodities sold by heaped measure, such as barley or corn) roughly half as large again
  • floats — to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant: The hollow ball floated.
  • floaty — able to float; buoyant.
  • floret — a small flower.
  • flotel — A ship converted to a permanently moored hotel.
  • flotow — Friedrich von [free-drikh fuh n] /ˈfri drɪx fən/ (Show IPA), 1812–83, German composer.
  • flotus — First Lady of the United States.
  • flouts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flout.
  • foetal — of, relating to, or having the character of a fetus.
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