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6-letter words containing t, r, i

  • grivet — a small Abyssinian monkey, Cercopithecus aethiops, with a grayish back, gray tail, black face, and dark extremities.
  • guitar — a stringed musical instrument with a long, fretted neck, a flat, somewhat violinlike body, and typically six strings, which are plucked with the fingers or with a plectrum.
  • guitry — Sacha [sah-shuh;; French sa-sha] /ˈsɑ ʃə;; French saˈʃa/ (Show IPA), 1885–1957, French actor and dramatist, born in Russia.
  • heriot — a feudal service or tribute, originally of borrowed military equipment and later of a chattel, due to the lord on the death of a tenant.
  • hermit — a person who has withdrawn to a solitary place for a life of religious seclusion.
  • hinter — an indirect, covert, or helpful suggestion; clue: Give me a hint as to his identity.
  • hither — to or toward this place: to come hither.
  • hitler — Adolf [ad-olf,, ey-dolf;; German ah-dawlf] /ˈæd ɒlf,, ˈeɪ dɒlf;; German ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), (Adolf Schicklgruber"der Führer") 1889–1945, Nazi dictator of Germany, born in Austria: Chancellor 1933–45; dictator 1934–45.
  • hitter — to deal a blow or stroke to: Hit the nail with the hammer.
  • horite — an ancient people of Edom living in the region of the Dead Sea, possibly identical with the Hurrians.
  • iatric — of or relating to a physician or medicine; medical.
  • iatro- — medicine, medical, medicinal
  • igorot — a member of a people of the Malay stock in northern Luzon in the Philippines, comprising various tribes, some noted as headhunters.
  • iitran — Simple PL/I-like language for students, on IBM 360.
  • imaret — (in Turkey) a hospice for pilgrims, travelers, etc.
  • immort — (internet, informal) An immortal; an administrator of a multi-user dungeon.
  • impart — to make known; tell; relate; disclose: to impart a secret.
  • import — to bring in (merchandise, commodities, workers, etc.) from a foreign country for use, sale, processing, reexport, or services.
  • indart — to dart in
  • ingirt — (obsolete) surrounded, encircled.
  • insert — to put or place in: to insert a key in a lock.
  • instar — an insect in any one of its periods of postembryonic growth between molts.
  • inter- — Inter- combines with adjectives and nouns to form adjectives indicating that something connects two or more places, things, or groups of people. For example, inter-governmental relations are relations between governments.
  • interj — Interjection.
  • intern — to restrict to or confine within prescribed limits, as prisoners of war, enemy aliens, or combat troops who take refuge in a neutral country.
  • inters — to place (a dead body) in a grave or tomb; bury.
  • intire — Obsolete spelling of entire.
  • intort — To twist in and out; to twine; to wreathe, wind, or wring.
  • intra- — within; inside
  • intro- — in, into, or inward
  • intron — a noncoding segment in a length of DNA that interrupts a gene-coding sequence or nontranslated sequence, the corresponding segment being removed from the RNA copy before transcription.
  • intros — Plural form of intro.
  • inturn — an inward turn or curve around an axis or fixed point.
  • invert — to turn upside down.
  • irdata — (robotics)   Industrial Robot DATA. A standardised robot control code. "IRDATA, Industrial Robot Data", DIN 66313, Beuth-Verlag 1991.
  • ireton — Henry. 1611–51, English Parliamentarian general in the Civil War; son-in-law of Oliver Cromwell. His plan for a constitutional monarchy was rejected by Charles I (1647), whose death warrant he signed; lord deputy of Ireland (1650–51)
  • iritic — inflammation of the iris of the eye.
  • iritis — inflammation of the iris of the eye.
  • irrupt — to break or burst in suddenly.
  • irtysh — a river in central Asia, flowing NW from the Altai Mountains in China through NE Kazakhstan and the Russian Federation to the Ob River. About 1840 miles (2960 km) long.
  • ishtar — the Assyrian and Babylonian goddess of love and war, identified with the Phoenician Astarte, the Semitic Ashtoreth, and the Sumerian Inanna.
  • istria — a peninsula at the N end of the Adriatic, in SW Slovenia and W Croatia.
  • iterum — again or afresh
  • iturbi — José, 1895–1980, U.S. pianist, conductor, and composer; born in Spain.
  • ivtran — Parallel Fortran for the Illiac IV. 1966.
  • jictar — Joint Industry Committee for Television Advertising Research
  • jilter — to reject or cast aside (a lover or sweetheart), especially abruptly or unfeelingly.
  • jitterjitters, nervousness; a feeling of fright or uneasiness (usually preceded by the): Every time I have to make a speech, I get the jitters.
  • jurist — a person versed in the law, as a judge, lawyer, or scholar.
  • karait — Alternative spelling of krait.
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