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4-letter words containing st

  • lost — no longer possessed or retained: lost friends.
  • lust — intense sexual desire or appetite.
  • mast — the fruit of the oak and beech or other forest trees, used as food for hogs and other animals.
  • mest — of or involving an obsessive interest in one's own satisfaction: the me decade.
  • mist — a cloudlike aggregation of minute globules of water suspended in the atmosphere at or near the earth's surface, reducing visibility to a lesser degree than fog.
  • most — great in quantity, measure, or degree: too much cake.
  • must — to be obliged; be compelled: Do I have to go? I must, I suppose.
  • nastThomas, 1840–1902, U.S. illustrator and cartoonist.
  • nest — a pocketlike, usually more or less circular structure of twigs, grass, mud, etc., formed by a bird, often high in a tree, as a place in which to lay and incubate its eggs and rear its young; any protected place used by a bird for these purposes.
  • nist — National Institute of Standards and Technology
  • nstu — Nova Scotia Teachers Union (Canada)
  • oast — a kiln for drying hops or malt.
  • oost — Jacob van [yah-kawp vahn] /ˈyɑ kɔp vɑn/ (Show IPA), 1600?–71, and his son, Jacob van, 1639?–1713, Flemish painters.
  • osta — Optical Storage Technology Association
  • oust — to expel or remove from a place or position occupied: The bouncer ousted the drunk; to oust the prime minister in the next election.
  • past — gone by or elapsed in time: It was a bad time, but it's all past now.
  • pest — a city in and the capital of Hungary, in the central part, on the Danube River: formed 1873 from two cities on the W bank of the Danube (Buda and Obuda) and one on the E bank (Pest)
  • post — power-on self-test
  • psst — used to attract attention
  • pstn — Public Switched Telephone Network
  • rest — a support for a lance; lance rest.
  • rust — Also called iron rust. the red or orange coating that forms on the surface of iron when exposed to air and moisture, consisting chiefly of ferric hydroxide and ferric oxide formed by oxidation.
  • sist — a court order stopping or suspending proceedings
  • ssta — Scottish Secondary Teachers' Association
  • stab — to pierce or wound with or as if with a pointed weapon: She stabbed a piece of chicken with her fork.
  • stac — 1.   (language)   Storage Allocation and Coding Program. 2.   (company)   The company responsible for Stacker and stac compression.
  • stag — an adult male deer.
  • stan — a male given name, form of Stanley.
  • star — any of the heavenly bodies, except the moon, appearing as fixed luminous points in the sky at night.
  • stat — statistic.
  • stay — (of a ship) to change to the other tack.
  • stbd — starboard
  • stbm — Simchat Torah Beit Midrash
  • stdm — statistical time division multiplexing
  • stem — science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, considered as a group of academic or career fields (often used attributively): degree programs in STEM disciplines; teaching STEM in high school.
  • sten — a British light submachine gun.
  • step — Standard for the exchange of product model data
  • ster — sterling
  • stet — let it stand (used imperatively as a direction on a printer's proof, manuscript, or the like, to retain material previously cancelled, usually accompanied by a row of dots under or beside the material).
  • stew — to cook (food) by simmering or slow boiling.
  • stey — a ladder
  • stfu — (chat)   Shut the fuck up.
  • stfw — Search The Fucking Web
  • stge — storage
  • stil — STatistical Interpretive Language.
  • stim — a very small amount
  • stir — to move one's hand or an implement continuously or repeatedly through (a liquid or other substance) in order to cool, mix, agitate, dissolve, etc., any or all of the component parts: to stir one's coffee with a spoon.
  • stmp — Did you mean SMTP?
  • stoa — Greek Architecture. a portico, usually a detached portico of considerable length, that is used as a promenade or meeting place.
  • stob — a post, stump, or stake.
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