6-letter words containing t, r, o, e
- storey — story2 .
- storge — natural or instinctual affection, as of a parent for a child
- stover — coarse roughage used as feed for livestock.
- stower — a person who stows
- strobe — Also called strobe light. stroboscope (def 2a).
- strode — simple past tense of stride.
- stroke — a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court.
- strove — simple past tense of strive.
- tagore — Sir Rabindranath [ruh-been-druh-naht] /rəˈbin drəˌnɑt/ (Show IPA), 1861–1941, Indian poet: Nobel prize 1913.
- te reo — the Māori language
- tensor — Anatomy. a muscle that stretches or tightens some part of the body.
- tercio — a regiment of Spanish or Italian infantry
- teredo — a shipworm of the genus Teredo.
- termor — a person who has an estate for a term of years or for life.
- terror — intense, sharp, overmastering fear: to be frantic with terror.
- theory — a coherent group of tested general propositions, commonly regarded as correct, that can be used as principles of explanation and prediction for a class of phenomena: Einstein's theory of relativity. Synonyms: principle, law, doctrine.
- thermo — Thermo means using or relating to heat.
- theron — Charlize (ˈʃɑːlɪːz) born 1975, South African film actress; her films include The Cider House Rules (1999) and Monster (2003), which earned her an Academy Award
- thorez — Maurice [maw-rees] /mɔˈris/ (Show IPA), 1900–64, French Communist Party leader.
- thorpe — a hamlet; village.
- throes — a violent spasm or pang; paroxysm.
- throne — the chair or seat occupied by a sovereign, bishop, or other exalted personage on ceremonial occasions, usually raised on a dais and covered with a canopy.
- throve — a simple past tense of thrive.
- tocher — a dowry; marriage settlement given to the groom by the bride or her family.
- todger — a penis
- toerag — a contemptible or despicable person
- tofore — before
- togger — to play football
- toiler — hard and continuous work; exhausting labor or effort.
- toller — Ernst [urnst;; German ernst] /ɜrnst;; German ɛrnst/ (Show IPA), 1893–1939, German dramatist.
- tolter — to struggle or move with difficulty, as in mud
- tonger — tongs.
- tonier — high-toned; stylish: a tony nightclub.
- tonker — someone who tonks
- tonner — something having a specified weight in tons (used in combination): The sailboat was a twelve-tonner.
- tooler — an implement, especially one held in the hand, as a hammer, saw, or file, for performing or facilitating mechanical operations.
- toomer — Jean, 1894–1967, U.S. writer.
- toorie — a tassel or bobble on a bonnet
- tooter — (of a horn or whistle) to give forth its characteristic sound.
- topper — a person or thing that tops.
- torero — a bullfighter, especially a matador.
- tories — a member of the Conservative Party in Great Britain or Canada.
- torose — Botany. cylindrical, with swellings or constrictions at intervals; knobbed.
- torpex — (sometimes lowercase) a high explosive made of TNT, cyclonite, and aluminum powder and used especially in torpedoes, mines, and depth bombs.
- torque — Mechanics. something that produces or tends to produce torsion or rotation; the moment of a force or system of forces tending to cause rotation.
- torrey — John, 1796–1873, U.S. botanist and chemist.
- torsel — a beam or slab of wood, stone, iron, etc., laid on a masonry wall to receive and distribute the weight from one end of a beam.
- torten — a rich cake, especially one containing little or no flour, usually made with eggs and ground nuts or bread crumbs.
- tosher — a person who scavenged in the sewers in Victorian London
- tosser — to throw, pitch, or fling, especially to throw lightly or carelessly: to toss a piece of paper into the wastebasket.