6-letter words containing t, r, o, e
- retour — a report by a legal officer confirming someone as an heir
- retro- — Retro- is used to form adjectives and nouns which indicate that something goes back or goes backwards.
- revolt — to break away from or rise against constituted authority, as by open rebellion; cast off allegiance or subjection to those in authority; rebel; mutiny: to revolt against the present government.
- revote — a formal expression of opinion or choice, either positive or negative, made by an individual or body of individuals.
- rhetor — a master or teacher of rhetoric.
- rioted — a noisy, violent public disorder caused by a group or crowd of persons, as by a crowd protesting against another group, a government policy, etc., in the streets.
- rioter — a noisy, violent public disorder caused by a group or crowd of persons, as by a crowd protesting against another group, a government policy, etc., in the streets.
- robert — Arthur (Robert, Jr) 1943–93, U.S. tennis player.
- rochet — a vestment of linen or lawn, resembling a surplice, worn especially by bishops and abbots.
- rocket — Maurice [maw-rees;; French moh-rees] /mɔˈris;; French moʊˈris/ (Show IPA), ("Rocket") 1921–2000, Canadian hockey player.
- rodent — belonging or pertaining to the gnawing or nibbling mammals of the order Rodentia, including the mice, squirrels, beavers, etc.
- rooted — having roots.
- rooter — a person who roots for, supports, or encourages a team or contestant.
- rootle — root2 (sense 2) root2 (sense 3)
- roquet — to cause one's ball to strike (another player's ball).
- rorter — a small-scale confidence trickster
- rosets — resin; rosin.
- rosety — resinous
- rosten — Norman, 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.
- rotate — to cause to turn around an axis or center point; revolve.
- rotche — dovekie
- rotest — routine; a fixed, habitual, or mechanical course of procedure: the rote of daily living.
- rotted — to undergo decomposition; decay.
- rotten — decomposing or decaying; putrid; tainted, foul, or bad-smelling.
- rotter — a thoroughly bad, worthless, or objectionable person.
- rottes — rote2 .
- roupet — hoarse; croaky
- routed — a bellow.
- router — a person or thing that routes.
- scoter — any of the large diving ducks of the genus Melanitta, inhabiting northern parts of the Northern Hemisphere.
- scrote — a worthless fellow
- sderot — a city in the W Negev in S Israel, close to the border with Gaza; a target for sustained rocket attack by Hamas since 2001. Population: 19 800 (2006 est)
- sector — Geometry. a plane figure bounded by two radii and the included arc of a circle.
- sorbet — sherbet (defs 1, 3).
- sorest — physically painful or sensitive, as a wound, hurt, or diseased part: a sore arm.
- sorted — (of sedimentary particles) uniform in size.
- sorter — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
- sortes — divination by opening a book, esp the Bible, at random
- sortie — a rapid movement of troops from a besieged place to attack the besiegers.
- souter — David H. born 1939, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1990–2009.
- stereo — stereoscopic photography.
- sterno — inflammable hydrocarbon jelly in a small can, used for cooking
- sterol — any of a group of solid, mostly unsaturated, polycyclic alcohols, as cholesterol and ergosterol, derived from plants or animals.
- stoker — Bram [bram] /bræm/ (Show IPA), (Abraham Stoker) 1847–1912, British novelist, born in Ireland: creator of Dracula.
- stoner — Slang. a person who is habitually high on drugs, especially marijuana, or alcohol; a person who is usually stoned.
- stoper — a machine for drilling rock from below.
- stored — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
- storer — a person or thing that stores something
- stores — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.