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5-letter words that end in st

  • frost — Robert (Lee) 1874–1963, U.S. poet.
  • frust — a fragment
  • furst — Eye dialect of first.
  • geest — an area of sandy heathland in N Germany and adjacent areas
  • geist — Ghost, apparition.
  • ghast — ghastly.
  • ghost — the soul of a dead person, a disembodied spirit imagined, usually as a vague, shadowy or evanescent form, as wandering among or haunting living persons.
  • glost — Of or pertaining to lead glazing, or the kiln firing process for this glaze.
  • goest — (archaic-verb-form) Archaic second-person singular form of go.
  • goost — Obsolete form of ghost.
  • grist — grain to be ground.
  • guest — Edgar A(lbert) 1881–1959, U.S. journalist and writer of verse, born in England.
  • guist — Obsolete form of joust.
  • hadst — a 2nd person singular simple past tense of have.
  • heast — Obsolete form of hest.
  • heist — a robbery or holdup: Four men were involved in the armored car heist.
  • hiest — an informal, simplified spelling of high: hi fidelity.
  • hirst — Damien. born 1965, British artist, noted esp for his works featuring dead animals preserved in tanks of formaldehyde, and for his 2007 sculpture, For the Love of God, a human skull encrusted with flawless diamonds
  • hoast — (dialectal) A cough.
  • hoist — to hoist.
  • holst — Gustav Theodore [goo s-tahv] /ˈgʊs tɑv/ (Show IPA), 1874–1934, English composer.
  • horst — a portion of the earth's crust, bounded on at least two sides by faults, that has risen in relation to adjacent portions.
  • hurstFannie, 1889–1968, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • inust — burnt in
  • joist — any of a number of small, parallel beams of timber, steel, reinforced concrete, etc., for supporting floors, ceilings, or the like.
  • joust — a combat in which two knights on horseback attempted to unhorse each other with blunted lances.
  • karst — an area of limestone terrane characterized by sinks, ravines, and underground streams.
  • kerstDonald William, 1911–1994, U.S. physicist.
  • least — small in size; not big; not large; tiny: a little desk in the corner of the room.
  • liest — (archaic) Second-person singular present simple form of 'lie'.
  • maist — (Geordie) most.
  • mayst — 2nd person singular present indicative of may1 .
  • mcdst — Microsoft Certified Desktop Support Technician
  • midst — the position of anything surrounded by other things or parts, or occurring in the middle of a period of time, course of action, etc. (usually preceded by the): a familiar face in the midst of the crowd; in the midst of the performance.
  • moist — moderately or slightly wet; damp.
  • neist — Alternative form of next.
  • nllst — National Lending Library for Science and Technology
  • odist — a person who composes odes
  • onest — being or amounting to a single unit or individual or entire thing, item, or object rather than two or more; a single: one woman; one nation; one piece of cake.
  • ovist — (formerly) a person who believes that the ovum contains all material required for development of the embryo
  • pabst — G(eorge) W(ilhelm). 1885–1967, German film director, whose films include Joyless Street (1925), Pandora's Box (1929), and The Last Act (1954)
  • perst — perished
  • prest — ready.
  • prost — Alain (alɛ̃). born 1955, French motor-racing driver: Formula One world champion 1985, 1986, 1989, and 1993
  • quest — a search or pursuit made in order to find or obtain something: a quest for uranium mines; a quest for knowledge.
  • quist — (Midlands) the woodpigeon, Columba palumbus.
  • reest — to cure, smoke, or dry (meat or fish).
  • reist — (of a horse) to stop or refuse to go; balk.
  • roast — to bake (meat or other food) uncovered, especially in an oven.
  • roost — a perch upon which birds or fowls rest at night.
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