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6-letter words that end in it

  • pinxit — he or she painted (it): formerly used on paintings as part of the artist's signature.
  • pirnit — woven with stripes or threads of varying colours or textures
  • planit — Programming LANguage for Interaction and Teaching. CAI language. "PLANIT - A Flexible Language Designed for Computer-Human Interaction", S.L. Feingold, Proc FJCC 31, AFIPS (Fall 1967) Sammet 1969, p.706.
  • pop-it — a usually plastic bead that can be connected to or detached from others of the same kind without hooks or clasps, used to form necklaces, bracelets, etc.
  • poppit — a usually plastic bead that can be connected to or detached from others of the same kind without hooks or clasps, used to form necklaces, bracelets, etc.
  • poukit — (of a bird or animal) plucked, moulted
  • probit — a normal equivalent deviate increased by five.
  • profit — Often, profits. pecuniary gain resulting from the employment of capital in any transaction. Compare gross profit, net profit. the ratio of such pecuniary gain to the amount of capital invested. returns, proceeds, or revenue, as from property or investments.
  • prosit — good health! cheers!
  • pulpit — a platform or raised structure in a church, from which the sermon is delivered or the service is conducted.
  • pundit — a learned person, expert, or authority.
  • rabbit — any of several soft-furred, large-eared, rodentlike burrowing mammals of the family Leporidae, allied with the hares and pikas in the order Lagomorpha, having a divided upper lip and long hind legs, usually smaller than the hares and mainly distinguished from them by bearing blind and furless young in nests rather than fully developed young in the open.
  • rebait — food, or some substitute, used as a lure in fishing, trapping, etc.
  • reduit — a military construction which troops use to defend themselves while holding out an attack
  • reedit — to supervise or direct the preparation of (a newspaper, magazine, book, etc.); serve as editor of; direct the editorial policies of.
  • reemit — to send forth (liquid, light, heat, sound, particles, etc.); discharge.
  • reknit — to make (a garment, fabric, etc.) by interlocking loops of one or more yarns either by hand with knitting needles or by machine.
  • requit — to quit or leave again
  • resuit — a set of clothing, armor, or the like, intended for wear together.
  • ribbit — (used to suggest) the croaking of a frog
  • schuit — a Dutch boat with a flat bottom
  • semmit — a vest
  • sendit — Systems Engineering for Network Debugging, Integration and Test. A two-year European Commission funded project to produce software tools for distributed applications running on networks of microcontrollers.
  • sennit — a flat, braided cordage, formed by plaiting strands of rope yarn or other fiber, used as small stuff aboard ships.
  • sobeit — provided that
  • sod it — expressing exasperation
  • soffit — the underside of an architectural feature, as a beam, arch, ceiling, vault, or cornice.
  • spirit — the principle of conscious life; the vital principle in humans, animating the body or mediating between body and soul.
  • spruit — (in southern Africa) a small stream.
  • strait — Often, straits. (used with a singular verb) a narrow passage of water connecting two large bodies of water.
  • submit — to give over or yield to the power or authority of another (often used reflexively).
  • summit — a city in NE New Jersey.
  • sumpit — in Malaysia, a long wooden blowpipe, from which poison-tipped or barbed darts are blown, used primarily for hunting
  • sunlit — lighted by the sun.
  • t-unit — a minimal unit constituting a complete sentence, consisting of one independent clause and any dependent clauses connected to it: used as a measure of the structural complexity of sentences.
  • tallit — a shawllike garment of wool, silk, or the like, with fringes, or zizith, at the four corners, worn around the shoulders by Orthodox and Conservative (sometimes also Reform) Jews, as during the morning service.
  • tappit — crested; topped
  • tarpit — seepage of natural tar or asphalt, especially an accumulation that has acted as a natural trap into which animals have fallen and sunk and had their bones preserved.
  • tautit — tangled
  • tickit — A software industry quality assessment scheme.
  • tidbit — a delicate bit or morsel of food.
  • tikrit — a town in N central Iraq on the River Tigris; birthplace of Saladin and Saddam Hussein. Pop: 28 900 (2002 est)
  • tilsit — former name of Sovetsk.
  • tirrit — a word used by Shakespeare to mean panic or scare
  • titbit — tidbit.
  • to witto wit, that is to say; namely: It was the time of the vernal equinox, to wit, the beginning of spring.
  • tomtit — a titmouse.
  • turbit — one of a breed of domestic pigeons having a stout, roundish body, a short head and beak, and a ruffled breast and neck.
  • twilit — lighted by or as by twilight: a twilit cathedral.
  • ugarit — an ancient city in Syria, N of Latakia, on the site of modern Ras Shamra: destroyed by an earthquake early in the 13th century b.c.; excavations have yielded tablets written in cuneiform and hieroglyphic script that reveal important information on Canaanite mythology.
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