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6-letter words containing t, r, e, s

  • preset — to set beforehand.
  • presto — quickly, rapidly, or immediately.
  • priest — a person whose office it is to perform religious rites, and especially to make sacrificial offerings.
  • proset — A derivative of SETL with Ada-like syntax developed at the University of Essen in 1990. Formerly known as SETL/E.
  • purest — free from anything of a different, inferior, or contaminating kind; free from extraneous matter: pure gold; pure water.
  • racest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of race.
  • ramets — an individual of a clone.
  • rarest — (of meat) cooked just slightly: He likes his steak rare.
  • raster — Television. a pattern of scanning lines covering the area upon which the image is projected in the cathode-ray tube or liquid-crystal display of a television set or other screen.
  • rawest — uncooked, as articles of food: a raw carrot.
  • reasty — rancid
  • recast — to cast again or anew.
  • recost — the price paid to acquire, produce, accomplish, or maintain anything: the high cost of a good meal.
  • rectus — any of several straight muscles, as of the abdomen, thigh, eye, etc.
  • regest — a register
  • relist — to list again
  • renest — to nest again or form a new nest
  • repast — a quantity of food taken or provided for one occasion of eating: to eat a light repast.
  • repost — a reposted message, resent via email or posted again on an internet chatboard etc
  • reseat — to provide with a new seat or new seats.
  • resect — to do a resection on.
  • resent — to send again.
  • resift — to sift again
  • resist — to withstand, strive against, or oppose: to resist infection; to resist temptation.
  • resita — an industrial city in the Banat, W Romania.
  • resite — the position or location of a town, building, etc., especially as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin.
  • resort — to have recourse for use, help, or accomplishing something, often as a final available option or resource: to resort to war.
  • respot — a rounded mark or stain made by foreign matter, as mud, blood, paint, ink, etc.; a blot or speck.
  • rested — the part that is left or remains; remainder: The rest of the students are in the corridor.
  • restem — to move or force back against a current
  • reston — James (Barrett) ("Scotty") 1909–1995, U.S. journalist, born in Scotland.
  • restow — Nautical. to put (cargo, provisions, etc.) in the places intended for them. to put (sails, spars, gear, etc.) in the proper place or condition when not in use.
  • resuit — a set of clothing, armor, or the like, intended for wear together.
  • result — to spring, arise, or proceed as a consequence of actions, circumstances, premises, etc.; be the outcome.
  • retest — test again
  • retuse — having an obtuse or rounded apex with a shallow notch, as leaves.
  • revest — to vest (a person) again, as with ownership or office; reinvest; reinstate.
  • ripest — having arrived at such a stage of growth or development as to be ready for reaping, gathering, eating, or use, as grain or fruit; completely matured.
  • rivets — a metal pin for passing through holes in two or more plates or pieces to hold them together, usually made with a head at one end, the other end being hammered into a head after insertion.
  • rosets — resin; rosin.
  • rosety — resinous
  • rostenNorman, 1914–1995, U.S. poet and playwright.
  • roster — a list of persons or groups, as of military personnel or units with their turns or periods of duty.
  • rotest — routine; a fixed, habitual, or mechanical course of procedure: the rote of daily living.
  • rottes — rote2 .
  • rudest — discourteous or impolite, especially in a deliberate way: a rude reply.
  • russet — yellowish brown, light brown, or reddish brown.
  • rusted — Also called iron rust. the red or orange coating that forms on the surface of iron when exposed to air and moisture, consisting chiefly of ferric hydroxide and ferric oxide formed by oxidation.
  • ruster — Also called iron rust. the red or orange coating that forms on the surface of iron when exposed to air and moisture, consisting chiefly of ferric hydroxide and ferric oxide formed by oxidation.
  • rustle — to make a succession of slight, soft sounds, as of parts rubbing gently one on another, as leaves, silks, or papers.
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