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6-letter words containing tr

  • stride — to walk with long steps, as with vigor, haste, impatience, or arrogance.
  • strife — vigorous or bitter conflict, discord, or antagonism: to be at strife.
  • strift — a struggle
  • strike — to deal a blow or stroke to (a person or thing), as with the fist, a weapon, or a hammer; hit.
  • strine — Australian English.
  • string — a slender cord or thick thread used for binding or tying; line.
  • stripe — a stroke with a whip, rod, etc., as in punishment.
  • stript — a simple past tense and past participle of strip1 .
  • stripy — having or marked with stripes.
  • strive — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
  • stroam — to wander idly or to stride
  • strobe — Also called strobe light. stroboscope (def 2a).
  • strode — simple past tense of stride.
  • stroke — a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court.
  • stroll — to walk leisurely as inclination directs; ramble; saunter; take a walk: to stroll along the beach.
  • stroma — Cell Biology. the supporting framework or matrix of a cell.
  • stromb — a shellfish similar to a whelk
  • strong — having, showing, or able to exert great bodily or muscular power; physically vigorous or robust: a strong boy.
  • strook — a simple past tense and past participle of strike.
  • stroud — a coarse woolen cloth, blanket, or garment formerly used by the British in bartering with the North American Indians.
  • strout — to bulge
  • strove — simple past tense of strive.
  • strown — strew.
  • struck — simple past tense and a past participle of strike.
  • strudl — STRUctured Design Language. Dynamic and finite-element analysis, steel and concrete structures. Subsystem of ICES. ["ICES STRUDL-II Engineering User's Manual", R68-91, CE Dept MIT (Nov 1968) Sammet 1969, p.613].
  • struma — Pathology. goiter.
  • strung — simple past tense and past participle of string.
  • strunt — the fleshy part or stump of a tail, especially of a horse's tail.
  • struve — Friedrich Georg Wilhelm von [free-drikh gey-awrk vil-helm fuh n] /ˈfri drɪx geɪˈɔrk ˈvɪl hɛlm fən/ (Show IPA), 1793–1864, Russian astronomer, born in Germany.
  • sultry — oppressively hot and close or moist; sweltering: a sultry day.
  • tantra — (italics) Hinduism. any of several books of esoteric doctrine regarding rituals, disciplines, meditation, etc., composed in the form of dialogues between Shiva and his Shakti; Agama.
  • tetra- — four
  • tetrad — a group of four.
  • tetryl — a yellow, crystalline, water-insoluble solid, C 7 H 5 N 5 O 8 , used as a chemical indicator and as a detonator and bursting charge in small-caliber shells.
  • tra-la — nonsense syllables sung as a refrain, expressing gaiety.
  • traced — a surviving mark, sign, or evidence of the former existence, influence, or action of some agent or event; vestige: traces of an advanced civilization among the ruins.
  • tracer — a person or thing that traces.
  • traces — either of the two straps, ropes, or chains by which a carriage, wagon, or the like is drawn by a harnessed horse or other draft animal.
  • tracks — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • trader — a person who trades; a merchant or businessperson.
  • tragic — characteristic or suggestive of tragedy: tragic solemnity.
  • tragus — a fleshy prominence at the front of the external opening of the ear.
  • trajan — (Marcus Ulpius Nerva Trajanus) a.d. 53?–117, Roman emperor 98–117.
  • tralee — a city in and the county seat of Kerry, in the SW Republic of Ireland.
  • trampy — (of a woman) disreputable, promiscuous
  • trance — a passageway, as a hallway, alley, or the like.
  • tranks — the piece of leather from which one glove is cut.
  • tranny — a vehicle's transmission.
  • trans- — trans- is used to form adjectives which indicate that something involves or enables travel from one side of an area to the other. For example, a trans-continental journey is a journey across a continent.
  • trans. — trans. is a written abbreviation for 'translated by'.
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