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5-letter words containing t, s

  • scuft — the nape or back of the neck
  • scuta — plural of scutum.
  • scute — a dermal bony plate, as on an armadillo, or a large horny plate, as on a turtle.
  • seato — an organization formed in Manila (1954), comprising Australia, Great Britain, France, New Zealand, Pakistan, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States, for collective defense against aggression in southeastern Asia and the southwestern Pacific: abolished in 1977.
  • seity — selfhood, personal identity, or something unique to oneself
  • sente — a nickel-brass coin and monetary unit of Lesotho, the 100th part of a loti.
  • senti — a monetary unit of Tanzania, the 100th part of a shilling; cent.
  • sents — a coin of Estonia until the euro was adopted, the 100th part of a kroon.
  • sept- — septi-1
  • sept. — Sept. is a written abbreviation for September.
  • septa — plural of septum.
  • sergt — Sergeant
  • setae — a stiff hair; bristle or bristlelike part.
  • setal — a stiff hair; bristle or bristlelike part.
  • seti- — bristle
  • setl2 — SETL with more conventional Ada-like syntax, lexical scope, full block structure, first-class functions and a package and library system. Ported to OS/2, MS-DOS (3.1 up), Extended MS-DOS (80286 and higher processors with extended memory), Macintosh (with the MPW environment), Sun-3 (SunOS 4), Sun-4 (SunOS 4), IBM RS/6000 (AIX 3.1), DEC RISC product line (Ultrix 4.0), DEC Vaxen (Mt. Xinu Unix or VMS).
  • seton — Saint Elizabeth Ann (Bayley) ("Mother Seton") 1774–1821, U.S. educator, social-welfare reformer, and religious leader: first native-born American to be canonized (1975).
  • setto — a usually brief, sharp fight or argument.
  • setup — Surveying. station (def 14a). a surveying instrument precisely positioned for observations from a station. a gap between the end of a chain or tape being used for a measurement and the point toward which it is laid.
  • shaft — a long pole forming the body of various weapons, as lances, halberds, or arrows.
  • shalt — 2nd person singular of shall.
  • sheet — Nautical. a rope or chain for extending the clews of a square sail along a yard. a rope for trimming a fore-and-aft sail. a rope or chain for extending the lee clew of a course.
  • shent — to put to shame.
  • shift — to put (something) aside and replace it by another or others; change or exchange: to shift friends; to shift ideas.
  • shirt — a long- or short-sleeved garment for the upper part of the body, usually lightweight and having a collar and a front opening.
  • shite — If someone describes something as shite, they do not like it or think that it is very poor quality.
  • shoat — Also, shote. a young, weaned pig.
  • shoot — to hit, wound, damage, kill, or destroy with a missile discharged from a weapon.
  • short — having little length; not long.
  • shote — shoat (def 1).
  • shott — a shallow brackish or saline marsh or lake in N Africa, usually dry during the summer.
  • shout — to call or cry out loudly and vigorously.
  • shtup — to have sexual intercourse with.
  • shunt — to shove or turn (someone or something) aside or out of the way.
  • shuteNevil (Nevil Shute Norway) 1899–1960, British novelist and aeronautical engineer.
  • sight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • siirt — a city in SE Turkey, E of Diyarbekir.
  • silty — earthy matter, fine sand, or the like carried by moving or running water and deposited as a sediment.
  • siret — a river in SE Europe, flowing SE from the Carpathian Mountains in Ukraine, through E Romania to the Danube. 270 miles (435 km) long.
  • sirts — Single Image Random Text Stereogram. (Or ASCII stereogram).
  • sitar — a lute of India with a small, pear-shaped body and a long, broad, fretted neck.
  • sited — the position or location of a town, building, etc., especially as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin.
  • sites — the position or location of a town, building, etc., especially as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin.
  • sithe — to sigh
  • sitka — a town in SE Alaska, on an island in the Alexander Archipelago: the capital of former Russian America.
  • sito- — food
  • situs — position; situation.
  • sixte — the sixth of eight defensive positions.
  • sixth — next after the fifth; being the ordinal number for six.
  • sixty — a cardinal number, ten times six.
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