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6-letter words containing t, s

  • ditzes — Plural form of ditz.
  • divest — to strip of clothing, ornament, etc.: The wind divested the trees of their leaves.
  • divots — Plural form of divot.
  • dnestr — Russian name of Dniester.
  • doesnt — Misspelling of doesn't.
  • donets — a river rising in the SW Russian Federation near Belgorod, flowing SE through Ukraine to the Don River. About 650 miles (1045 km) long.
  • donuts — Plural form of donut.
  • dopest — Superlative form of dope.
  • dorset — an Eskimo culture that flourished from a.d. 100–1000 in the central and eastern regions of arctic North America.
  • dotish — (archaic) foolish; weak; imbecile.
  • doubts — Plural form of doubt.
  • dowset — Obsolete form of doucet.
  • drafts — Plural form of draft.
  • driest — free from moisture or excess moisture; not moist; not wet: a dry towel; dry air.
  • drifts — Plural form of drift.
  • dryest — Superlative form of dry.
  • ducats — Plural form of ducat.
  • ductus — A duct.
  • dusted — earth or other matter in fine, dry particles.
  • duster — a person or thing that removes or applies dust.
  • dustin — a male given name.
  • dustup — a quarrel; argument; row.
  • duties — something that one is expected or required to do by moral or legal obligation.
  • duvets — Plural form of duvet.
  • dynast — A member of a powerful family, especially a hereditary ruler.
  • dystal — DYnamic STorage ALlocation. Adds lists, strings, sorting, statistics and matrix operations to Fortran. Sammet 1969, p.388. "DYSTAL: Dynamic Storage Allocation Language in FORTRAN", J.M. Sakoda, in Symbol Manipulation Languages and Techniques, D.G. Bobrow ed, N-H 1971, pp.302- 311.
  • e postCharles William, 1854–1914, U.S. businessman: developed breakfast foods.
  • earset — A set of earphones.
  • earths — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of earth.
  • easter — an annual Christian festival in commemoration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, observed on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox, as calculated according to tables based in Western churches on the Gregorian calendar and in Orthodox churches on the Julian calendar.
  • easton — a city in E Pennsylvania, on the Delaware River.
  • eaters — Plural form of eater.
  • edicts — Plural form of edict.
  • eftest — nearest or soonest
  • eftpos — Electronic Funds Transfer Point of Sale
  • egesta — matter egested from the body, as excrement or other waste.
  • egests — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of egest.
  • egoist — An advocate of egoism.
  • egrets — Plural form of egret.
  • eights — Plural form of eight.
  • ejects — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of eject.
  • elates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elate.
  • eldest — (of one out of a group of related or otherwise associated people) of the greatest age; oldest.
  • elects — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elect.
  • elites — Plural form of elite.
  • elytis — Odysseus, real name Odysseus Alepoudelis. 1912–96, Greek poet, author of the long poems To Axion Esti (1959) and Maria Nefeli (1978): Nobel prize for literature 1979
  • emmets — Plural form of emmet.
  • emotes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of emote.
  • enacts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enact.
  • enates — Plural form of enate.
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