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6-letter words containing at

  • batley — a town in N England, in Kirklees unitary authority, West Yorkshire. Pop: 49 448 (2001)
  • batman — In the British armed forces, an officer's batman is his personal servant.
  • batmen — a soldier assigned to an officer as a servant.
  • batons — Plural form of baton.
  • batted — Sports. the wooden club used in certain games, as baseball and cricket, to strike the ball. a racket, especially one used in badminton or table tennis. a whip used by a jockey. the act of using a club or racket in a game. the right or turn to use a club or racket.
  • battel — fertile; nourishing
  • batten — A batten is a long strip of wood that is fixed to something to strengthen it or to hold it firm.
  • batter — If someone is battered, they are regularly hit and badly hurt by a member of their family or by their partner.
  • battik — to hand-dye (material) using the technique of batik.
  • battle — A battle is a violent fight between groups of people, especially one between military forces during a war.
  • batton — Alternative form of batten.
  • battue — the beating of woodland or cover to force game to flee in the direction of hunters
  • batumi — seaport in Georgia, on the Black Sea, near the Turkish border: pop. 136,000
  • beated — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of beat.
  • beaten — Beaten earth has been pressed down, often by people's feet, until it is hard.
  • beater — A beater is a tool or part of a machine which is used for beating things like eggs and cream.
  • beaton — Sir Cecil (Walter Hardy). 1904–80, British photographer, noted esp for his society portraits
  • beatty — David, 1st Earl Beatty. 1871–1936, British admiral of the fleet in World War I
  • belate — to cause to be late
  • berate — If you berate someone, you speak to them angrily about something they have done wrong.
  • bharat — India (the republic)
  • bichat — Marie François Xavier [ma-ree frahn-swa gza-vyey] /maˈri frɑ̃ˈswa gzaˈvyeɪ/ (Show IPA), 1771–1802, French physician.
  • binate — occurring in two parts or in pairs
  • blated — bleat.
  • boatel — a waterside hotel catering for boating people
  • boater — A boater or a straw boater is a hard straw hat with a flat top and brim which is often worn for certain social occasions in the summer.
  • boatie — a boating enthusiast
  • bobcat — A bobcat is an animal in the cat family which has reddish-brown fur with dark spots or stripes and a short tail. Bobcats live in North America.
  • borate — a salt or ester of boric acid. Salts of boric acid consist of BO3 and BO4 units linked together
  • bovate — an oxgang
  • braata — a small portion added to a purchase of food by a market vendor, to encourage the customer to return
  • bratsk — city in SC Siberian Russia, on the Angara River: pop. 258,000
  • bratty — behaving like a brat
  • breath — Your breath is the air that you let out through your mouth when you breathe. If someone has bad breath, their breath smells unpleasant.
  • buriat — Buryat.
  • buryat — a member of a Mongoloid people living chiefly in the Buryat Republic
  • bypath — a little-used path or track, esp in the country
  • carats — Plural form of carat.
  • catalo — a normally sterile hybrid developed from crossing the American bison with domestic cattle
  • catano — a city in NE Puerto Rico, SW of San Juan.
  • catchy — If you describe a tune, name, or advertisement as catchy, you mean that it is attractive and easy to remember.
  • catena — a connected series, esp of patristic comments on the Bible
  • caters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cater.
  • catery — (obsolete) The place where provisions are deposited.
  • catgut — a strong cord made from the dried intestines of sheep and other animals that is used for stringing certain musical instruments and sports rackets, and, when sterilized, as surgical ligatures
  • cathar — a member of a Christian sect in Provence in the 12th and 13th centuries who believed the material world was evil and only the spiritual was good
  • cathay — China
  • cathed — Past participle of cath.
  • cather — Willa (Sibert). 1873–1947, US novelist, whose works include O Pioneers! (1913) and My Ántonia (1918)
  • cathie — a female given name, form of Catherine.
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