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4-letter words that end in i

  • reti — Richard. 1889–1929, Hungarian chess player and theorist; influential in enunciating the theories of the hypermodern school
  • rigi — a mountain in central Switzerland, near the Lake of Lucerne. 5906 feet (1800 meters).
  • rnli — Royal National Lifeboat Institution
  • rodi — Italian name of Rhodes.
  • roji — a Japanese tea garden or the path of stones which leads to the tea room
  • roti — roast.
  • rubi — furigana
  • rumi — Jalal ud-din [Persian jah-lahl ood-deen,, oo d-,, ja-] /Persian dʒɑˈlɑl udˈdin,, ʊd-,, dʒæ-/ (Show IPA), Jalal ud-din Rumi.
  • sadi — (Muslih ud-Din) 1184?–1291? Persian poet.
  • safi — a seaport in W central Morocco, on the Atlantic Ocean coast.
  • saki — Alice (Laidlaw) [leyd-law] /ˈleɪdˌlɔ/ (Show IPA), born 1931, Canadian short-story writer.
  • sami — Lapp.
  • sapi — 1.   (programming)   Speech Application Programming Interface. 2.   (programming)   Scheduling Application Programming Interface. 3.   (networking)   Service Access Point Identifier.
  • sari — a garment worn by Hindu women, consisting of a long piece of cotton or silk wrapped around the body with one end draped over the head or over one shoulder.
  • sasi — Small Computer System Interface
  • sati — the wife of Rudra, who immolated herself following a quarrel between her father and her husband.
  • scpi — Standard Commands for Programmable Instruments
  • scsi — Small Computer System Interface
  • semi — semitrailer (def 1).
  • seri — a member of an American Indian people of western Sonora state, Mexico, on the Gulf of California.
  • seti — Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence; the attempt to detect signals, esp radio waves or light, from an intelligent extraterrestrial source
  • sfbi — Shared Frame Buffer Interconnect (Intel)
  • simi — an East African short sword
  • siri — An object-oriented constraint language using a single abstraction mechanism developed by Bruce Horn of CMU in 1991. Siri is a conceptual blend of BETA and Bertrand. It is similar to Kaleidoscope.
  • soli — a musical composition or a passage or section in a musical composition written for performance by one singer or instrumentalist, with or without accompaniment: She sang a solo.
  • sori — plural of sorus.
  • ssri — selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; any of a class of drugs, including fluvoxamine, paroxetine, fluoxetine (Prozac), and Lustral, that increase concentrations of serotonin in the brain: used in the treatment of depression
  • sssi — site of special scientific interest: an area identified by the Nature Conservancy Council or its successors as having flora, fauna, or geological features of special interest
  • sufi — a member of an ascetic, mystical Muslim sect.
  • sugi — Japan cedar.
  • sumi — black ink made from a mixture of plant soot and glue solidified into sticks or cakes the ends of which are scraped or ground into water on an ink slab, much used by calligraphers and painters.
  • suni — a small South African antelope, Neotragus moschatus
  • syli — an aluminum coin and monetary unit of Guinea, equal to 100 cauris: replaced the franc in 1972.
  • tabi — a covering for the foot, similar to a sock, having a separate pouchlike stall for the large toe, worn especially in Japan, often with zoris.
  • tali — the uppermost bone of the proximal row of bones of the tarsus; anklebone.
  • tapi — Telephony Application Programming Interface
  • tati — Jacques (ʒak), real name Jacques Tatischeff. 1908–82, French film director, pantomimist, and comic actor, creator of the character Monsieur Hulot
  • taxi — a taxicab.
  • thai — Also called Thailander [tahy-lan-der, -luh n-] /ˈtaɪˌlæn dər, -lən-/ (Show IPA). a native or descendant of a native of Thailand.
  • tiki — (initial capital letter) (in Polynesian mythology) the first man on earth.
  • tipi — tepee.
  • titi — any of various small reddish or grayish monkeys of the genus Callicebus, of South America.
  • toni — Anton [ahn-tohn] /ˈɑn toʊn/ (Show IPA), ("Toni") 1935–2009, Austrian skier.
  • topi — topee.
  • tori — plural of torus.
  • tshi — Twi.
  • tuki — An intermediate code for functional languages. "Another Implementation Technique for Applicative Languages", H. Glaser et al, ESOP86, LNCS 213, Springer 1986.
  • tupi — a member of any of several related Indian peoples living in the valleys of various Brazilian rivers, especially the Amazon.
  • tusi — Tutsi.
  • tvei — technical and vocational educational initiative: a national educational scheme in which pupils gain practical experience in technology and industry often through work placement
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