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4-letter words containing to

  • 6to4 — (networking)   A protocol for transitioning from IPv4 to IPv6. Networks may use 6to4 (or other transitioning protocols) until they support native dual-stack. Because 6to4 is a form of tunnelling, it requires encapsulation by a protocol converter. This can cause performance problems due to increased latency and decreased MTU sizes, as described in RFC 6343.
  • acto — a short, realistic play, usually in Spanish, that dramatizes the social and economic problems of Chicanos.
  • alto — An alto is a woman who has a low singing voice.
  • atob — (tool)   /A too B/ Utility software that converts ASCII to binary. The reverse process is btoa.
  • atoc — a variety of skunk
  • atom — An atom is the smallest amount of a substance that can take part in a chemical reaction.
  • aton — a solar deity declared by Amenhotep IV to be the only god, represented as a solar disk with rays ending in human hands.
  • atop — If something is atop something else, it is on top of it.
  • auto — an automobile
  • bito — a small tree found growing in Africa and Asia
  • boto — a freshwater South American dolphin, Inia geoffrensis, having a long snout and fluctuating in color between pink and gray: inhabits the Amazon and Orinoco river systems.
  • btoa — (tool, messaging, algorithm, file format)   /B too A/ A binary to ASCII conversion utility. btoa is a uuencode or base 64 equivalent which addresses some of the problems with the uuencode standard but not as many as the base 64 standard. It avoids problems that some hosts have with spaces (e.g. conversion of groups of spaces to tabs) by not including them in its character set, but may still have problems on non-ASCII systems (e.g. EBCDIC). btoa is primarily used to transfer binary files between systems across connections which are not eight-bit clean, e.g. electronic mail. btoa takes adjacent sets of four binary octets and encodes them as five ASCII octets using ASCII characters '!' through to 'u'. Special characters are also used: 'x' marks the beginning or end of the archive; 'z' marks four consecutive zeros and 'y' (version 5.2) four consecutive spaces. Each group of four octets is processed as a 32-bit integer. Call this 'I'. Let 'D' = 85^4. Divide I by D. Call this result 'R'. Make I = I - (R * D) to avoid overflow on the next step. Repeat, for values of D = 85^3, 85^2, 85 and 1. At each step, to convert R to the output character add decimal 33 (output octet = R + ASCII value for '!'). Five output octets are produced. btoa provides some integrity checking in the form of a line checksum, and facilities for patching corrupted downloads. The algorithm used by btoa is more efficient than uuencode or base 64. ASCII files are encoded to about 120% the size of their binary sources. This compares with 135% for uuencode or base 64. Pre-compiled MS-DOS versions are also available.
  • btos — Convergent Technologies Operating System
  • buto — a contemporary expressionist dance form that originated in postwar Japan, first called Ankoku Butoh, or Dance of Utter Darkness.
  • cato — Marcus Porcius (ˈmɑːkəsˈpɔːʃɪəs), known as Cato the Elder or the Censor. 234–149 bc, Roman statesman and writer, noted for his relentless opposition to Carthage
  • cito — swiftly
  • ctos — 1.   (operating system)   Computerised Tomography Operating System. 2.   (operating system)   Convergent Technologies Operating System.
  • dato — the chief of any of certain Muslim tribes in the Philippine Islands
  • dtor — (computing) abbreviation of destructor.
  • eton — a town in S England, in Windsor and Maidenhead unitary authority, Berkshire, near the River Thames: site of Eton College, a public school for boys founded in 1440. Pop: 3821 (2001 est)
  • foto — (informal) photo.
  • goto — being a person who can be turned to for expert knowledge, advice, or reliable performance, especially in a crucial situation: He's our go-to guy in a budget crisis.
  • into — to the inside of; in toward: He walked into the room. The train chugged into the station.
  • jato — a jet-assisted takeoff, especially one using auxiliary rocket motors that are jettisoned at the completion of the takeoff.
  • keto — of or derived from a ketone.
  • koto — a Japanese musical instrument having numerous strings, usually seven or thirteen, that are stretched over a convex wooden sounding board and are plucked with three plectra, worn on the thumb, index finger, and middle finger of one hand.
  • leto — the mother by Zeus of Apollo and Artemis, called Latona by the Romans.
  • loto — Archaic form of lotto.
  • mito — a city in Ibaraki prefecture, E central Honshu, Japan.
  • moto — one of the heats in a motocross.
  • mtos — 1.   (operating system)   A family of real-time operating systems for use in embedded systems. It is developed and marketed by Industrial Programming, Inc.. 2.   (operating system)   MultiTOS
  • nato — an organization formed in Washington, D.C. (1949), comprising the 12 nations of the Atlantic Pact together with Greece, Turkey, and the Federal Republic of Germany, for the purpose of collective defense against aggression.
  • onto — surjection
  • oto- — indicating the ear
  • otoe — Oto.
  • otoh — (chat)   On the other hand.
  • otto — c1175–1218, king of Germany 1208–15; emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1209–15.
  • pato — an Argentine game played by two teams of four on horseback, resembling a cross between polo and basketball, using a ball with six large leather handles, the object of which is to place or throw the ball through the opponent's net that hangs from a 9 feet (2.7 meters) high pole.
  • peto — wahoo3 .
  • rato — rocket-assisted takeoff.
  • roto — rotogravure.
  • rtos — Real-Time Operating System
  • sato — Eisaku [ey-sah-koo;; Japanese ey-sah-koo] /eɪˈsɑ ku;; Japanese ˈeɪ sɑˌku/ (Show IPA), 1901–75, Japanese political leader: prime minister 1964–72; Nobel Peace Prize 1974.
  • soto — Hernando [her-nan-doh;; Spanish er-nahn-daw] /hərˈnæn doʊ;; Spanish ɛrˈnɑn dɔ/ (Show IPA), or Fernando [fer-nan-doh;; Spanish fer-nahn-daw] /fərˈnæn doʊ;; Spanish fɛrˈnɑn dɔ/ (Show IPA), c1500–42, Spanish soldier and explorer in America.
  • 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.
  • stol — a convertiplane that can become airborne after a short takeoff run and has forward speeds comparable to those of conventional aircraft.
  • stop — to cease from, leave off, or discontinue: to stop running.
  • stot — a springing gait of certain bovids, as gazelles and antelopes, used especially when running in alarm from a predator.
  • stow — Nautical. to put (cargo, provisions, etc.) in the places intended for them. to put (sails, spars, gear, etc.) in the proper place or condition when not in use.

On this page, we collect all 4-letter words with TO. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 4-letter word that contains TO to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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