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6-letter words containing ti

  • maties — Plural form of maty.
  • matily — in a matey manner
  • mating — a partner in marriage; spouse.
  • matins — (often initial capital letter) matins, Also, especially British, mattins. (usually used with a singular verb) Ecclesiastical. the first of the seven canonical hours. the service for it, properly beginning at midnight, but sometimes beginning at daybreak. Also called Morning Prayer. the service of public prayer, said in the morning, in the Anglican Church.
  • matipo — any of several shrubs and small trees, native to New Zealand, of the genera Myrsine and Pittosporum
  • mattie — a young herring with undeveloped roe
  • metics — Plural form of metic.
  • metier — a field of work; occupation, trade, or profession.
  • meting — to distribute or apportion by measure; allot; dole (usually followed by out): to mete out punishment.
  • mettie — a female given name, form of Matilda or Martha.
  • miotic — pertaining to or producing miosis.
  • miriti — any of several palms of the genus Mauritia, which are native to South America and Trinidad and which have pinnate leaves
  • mistic — A kind of small sailing vessel used in the Mediterranean, rigged partly like a xebec and partly like a felucca.
  • motifs — a recurring subject, theme, idea, etc., especially in a literary, artistic, or musical work.
  • motile — Biology. moving or capable of moving spontaneously: motile cells; motile spores.
  • motion — the action or process of moving or of changing place or position; movement.
  • motive — something that causes a person to act in a certain way, do a certain thing, etc.; incentive.
  • motivo — (music) A motif.
  • muftis — Plural form of mufti.
  • multi- — Multi- is used to form adjectives indicating that something consists of many things of a particular kind.
  • multic — (language)   A data-parallel version of C from Wavetracer.
  • muntin — Also called sash bar. a bar for holding the edges of window panes within a sash.
  • mutina — a city in N Italy, in Emilia-Romagna: ruled by the Este family (18th–19th century); university (1678). Pop: 175 502 (2001)
  • mutine — a rebel; mutineer
  • muting — silent; refraining from speech or utterance.
  • mutiny — revolt or rebellion against constituted authority, especially by sailors against their officers.
  • mutism — an inability to speak, due to a physical defect, conscious refusal, or psychogenic inhibition.
  • myotic — pertaining to or producing miosis.
  • myotis — An insectivorous bat with mouselike ears, a slender muzzle, and a flight membrane that extends between the hind legs and the tip of the tail.
  • mystic — involving or characterized by esoteric, otherworldly, or symbolic practices or content, as certain religious ceremonies and art; spiritually significant; ethereal.
  • n-tier — three-tier
  • nastic — of or showing sufficiently greater cellular force or growth on one side of an axis to change the form or position of the axis.
  • natick — a town in E Massachusetts, W of Boston.
  • nation — Carry or Carrie (Amelia Moore) 1846–1911, U.S. temperance leader.
  • native — being the place or environment in which a person was born or a thing came into being: one's native land.
  • nautic — Alternative form of nautical.
  • nettie — (Tyneside, and, Wearside) toilet.
  • nocti- — night
  • noctis — (in prescriptions) of the night.
  • noetic — of or relating to the mind.
  • notice — an announcement or intimation of something impending; warning: a day's notice.
  • notify — to inform (someone) or give notice to: to notify the police of a crime.
  • noting — a brief record of something written down to assist the memory or for future reference.
  • notion — a general understanding; vague or imperfect conception or idea of something: a notion of how something should be done.
  • notist — (obsolete) An annotator.
  • nycti- — night
  • octile — (statistics) Any of the quantiles which divide an ordered sample population into eight equally numerous subsets.
  • omotic — a proposed branch of the Afroasiatic family comprising a group of languages spoken in Ethiopia and often included within the Cushitic branch.
  • onetti — Juan Carlos [wahn kahr-lohs,, -luh s;; Spanish hwahn kahr-laws] /wɑn ˈkɑr loʊs,, -ləs;; Spanish ʰwɑn ˈkɑr lɔs/ (Show IPA), 1909–94, Uruguayan novelist and short-story writer.
  • ootids — Plural form of ootid.
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