6-letter words containing u, t, i
- dictum — A dictum is a formal statement made by someone who has authority.
- dilute — to make (a liquid) thinner or weaker by the addition of water or the like.
- dimout — a dimming or reduction of the night lighting, as in a city, to make it less easily visible, as to enemy aircraft
- diquat — a yellow crystalline substance, C 12 H 12 Br 2 N 2 , used as a selective postemergence herbicide to control weeds on noncrop land and for aquatic weed control.
- dugite — A highly venomous snake found in SW Australia, similar to the related brown snakes.
- dunite — a coarse-grained igneous rock composed almost entirely of olivine.
- dustin — a male given name.
- dutied — having a liability for duty to be applied
- duties — something that one is expected or required to do by moral or legal obligation.
- equipt — Equipment.
- equity — The quality of being fair and impartial.
- erudit — (rare) An erudite person, a scholar, especially in French contexts.
- fiaunt — a warrant issued to the Court of Chancery in Ireland in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
- fit up — adapted or suited; appropriate: This water isn't fit for drinking. A long-necked giraffe is fit for browsing treetops.
- fitful — coming, appearing, acting, etc., in fits or by spells; recurring irregularly.
- fruits — any product of plant growth useful to humans or animals.
- fruity — resembling fruit; having the taste or smell of fruit.
- fudgit — A double-precision multi-purpose fitting program by Thomas Koenig <[email protected]>. It can manipulate complete columns of numbers in the form of vector arithmetic. FUDGIT is also an expression language interpreter understanding most of C grammar except pointers. Morever, FUDGIT is a front end for any plotting program supporting commands from stdin, e.g. Gnuplot. Version 2.27 runs on AIX, HP-UX, Linux, IRIX, NeXT, SunOS, Ultrix.
- fustic — the wood of a large, tropical American tree, Chlorophora tinctoria, of the mulberry family, yielding a light-yellow dye.
- futile — incapable of producing any result; ineffective; useless; not successful: Attempting to force-feed the sick horse was futile.
- g-suit — anti-G suit.
- giusto — to be observed strictly
- glutei — any of several muscles of the buttocks, especially the gluteus maximus.
- glutin — Gliadin.
- gomuti — Also called gomuti palm, sugar palm. a sago palm, Arenga pinnata, of the East Indies, yielding palm sugar.
- guilts — the fact or state of having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; culpability: He admitted his guilt.
- guilty — having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; justly subject to a certain accusation or penalty; culpable: The jury found her guilty of murder.
- 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.
- guizot — François Pierre Guillaume [frahn-swa pyer gee-yohm] /frɑ̃ˈswa pyɛr giˈyoʊm/ (Show IPA), 1787–1874, French historian and statesman.
- gunite — a mixture of cement, sand or crushed slag, and water, sprayed over reinforcement as a lightweight concrete construction.
- gustie — tasty or savoury
- hiatus — a break or interruption in the continuity of a work, series, action, etc.
- hit up — to deal a blow or stroke to: Hit the nail with the hammer.
- hitout — Alternative form of hit-out.
- humint — the gathering of political or military intelligence through secret agents.
- humite — a mineral, transparent vitreous brown to orange in colour, found in the volcanic matter on Vesuvius
- illust — Abbreviation of illustration.
- immute — (obsolete, transitive) To change or alter.
- impute — to attribute or ascribe: The children imputed magical powers to the old woman.
- incult — wild; rude; unrefined.
- induct — to install in an office, benefice, position, etc., especially with formal ceremonies: The committee inducted her as president.
- indult — a dispensation granted often temporarily by the pope, permitting a deviation from church law.
- injust — (archaic) Unjust, unfair.
- inlaut — medial position in a word, especially as a conditioning environment in sound change.
- innuit — Inuit.
- inputs — Plural form of input.
- insult — to treat or speak to insolently or with contemptuous rudeness; affront.
- intuit — Understand or work out by instinct.
- intune — To intone.