0%

6-letter words containing t, r, i

  • tricks — a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile.
  • tricky — given to or characterized by deceitful tricks; crafty; wily.
  • tricot — a warp-knit fabric of various natural or synthetic fibers, as wool, silk, or nylon, having fine vertical ribs on the face and horizontal ribs on the back, used especially for making garments.
  • triene — any compound containing three double bonds.
  • triens — a copper coin of ancient Rome, issued during the Republic, a third part of an as.
  • trifid — cleft into three parts or lobes.
  • trifle — an article or thing of very little value.
  • trigon — a triangle.
  • trijet — an airplane powered by three jet engines.
  • trilby — a hat of soft felt with an indented crown.
  • trimer — a molecule composed of three identical, simpler molecules.
  • trimix — a mixture of nitrogen, helium, and oxygen used for breathing by divers
  • trinal — threefold; triple; trine.
  • triode — a vacuum tube containing three elements, usually anode, cathode, and control grid.
  • triose — a monosaccharide that has three atoms of carbon.
  • tripes — the first and second divisions of the stomach of a ruminant, especially oxen, sheep, or goats, used as food. Compare honeycomb tripe, plain tripe.
  • tripey — characteristic of tripe; worthless
  • triple — threefold; consisting of three parts: a triple knot.
  • triply — to a triple number, measure, or degree.
  • tripod — a stool, table, pedestal, etc., with three legs.
  • tripos — (at Cambridge University, England) any of various final honors examinations.
  • trippy — suggestive of or resembling the effect produced by a hallucinogenic drug
  • triste — sad; sorrowful; melancholy.
  • trisul — the trident symbol of the Hindu God Siva
  • triton — Classical Mythology. a son of Poseidon and Amphitrite, represented as having the head and trunk of a man and the tail of a fish, and as using a conch-shell trumpet.
  • triune — three in one; constituting a trinity in unity, as the Godhead.
  • trivet — a special knife for cutting pile loops, as of velvet or carpets.
  • trivia — (in Roman religion) Hecate: so called because she was the goddess of the crossroads.
  • trixie — a female given name, form of Beatrix.
  • troika — a Russian carriage, wagon, or sleigh drawn by a team of three horses abreast.
  • trophi — the mandibles or other parts of an insect's mouth
  • tropic — Geography. either of two corresponding parallels of latitude on the terrestrial globe, one (tropic of Cancer) about 23½° N, and the other (tropic of Capricorn) about 23½° S of the equator, being the boundaries of the Torrid Zone. the tropics, the regions lying between and near these parallels of latitude; the Torrid Zone and neighboring regions.
  • tropin — a hormone released in the body by a certain gland and which produces a response in other glands, stimulating the release of other hormones
  • truing — being in accordance with the actual state or conditions; conforming to reality or fact; not false: a true story.
  • truism — a self-evident, obvious truth.
  • trying — extremely annoying, difficult, or the like; straining one's patience and goodwill to the limit: a trying day; a trying experience.
  • tsoris — trouble, distress, woe, misery, etc.
  • tsuris — trouble; woe.
  • tugrik — an aluminum-bronze or cupronickel coin and monetary unit of the Mongolian People's Republic, equal to 100 mongo.
  • turbid — not clear or transparent because of stirred-up sediment or the like; clouded; opaque; obscured: the turbid waters near the waterfall.
  • turbit — one of a breed of domestic pigeons having a stout, roundish body, a short head and beak, and a ruffled breast and neck.
  • turgid — swollen; distended; tumid.
  • turing — Alan Mathison [math-uh-suh n] /ˈmæθ ə sən/ (Show IPA), 1912–54, English mathematician, logician, and pioneer in computer theory.
  • turion — a small shoot, as of asparagus or certain aquatic plants, from which a new plant can develop.
  • turiya — the fourth state of consciousness, beyond thought, love, and will, and beyond the awareness of variety, duality, and unity.
  • turkic — a family of closely related languages of southwest, central, and northern Asia and eastern Europe, including Turkish, Azerbaijani, Turkmen, Uzbek, Kirghiz, and Yakut.
  • turnip — the thick, fleshy, edible root of either of two plants of the mustard family, the white-fleshed Brassica rapa rapifera or the yellow-fleshed rutabaga.
  • turpinBen, 1874–1940, U.S. silent-film comedian.
  • tutrix — a female tutor or guardian
  • twicer — Slang. a two-time loser.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?