5-letter words that end in t
- rebut — to refute by evidence or argument.
- recit — narrative
- recut — to penetrate with or as if with a sharp-edged instrument or object: He cut his finger.
- reest — to cure, smoke, or dry (meat or fish).
- refit — to fit, prepare, or equip again.
- reist — (of a horse) to stop or refuse to go; balk.
- remit — to transmit or send (money, a check, etc.) to a person or place, usually in payment.
- repot — to transfer (a plant) to another, especially larger, pot.
- resat — past and past participle of resit
- reset — to set again: to reset an alarm clock; to reset a broken bone.
- resht — Rasht.
- resit — a test or examination that is retaken.
- revet — to face, as an embankment, with masonry or other material.
- rewet — moistened, covered, or soaked with water or some other liquid: wet hands.
- riant — laughing; smiling; cheerful.
- ribat — a building housing a community of Sufis.
- right — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
- rivet — a metal pin for passing through holes in two or more plates or pieces to hold them together, usually made with a head at one end, the other end being hammered into a head after insertion.
- roast — to bake (meat or other food) uncovered, especially in an oven.
- robot — a machine that resembles a human and does mechanical, routine tasks on command.
- roget — Peter Mark, 1779–1869, English physician and author of a thesaurus.
- roost — a perch upon which birds or fowls rest at night.
- roset — resin; rosin.
- roust — to rout, as from a place: to roust someone out of bed.
- rstat — netstat
- rybat — a polished stone piece that forms the side of a window or door
- sabot — a shoe made of a single block of wood hollowed out, worn especially by farmers and workers in the Netherlands, France, Belgium, etc.
- sadat — Anwar el- [ahn-wahr el] /ˈɑn wɑr ɛl/ (Show IPA), 1918–81, Egyptian political leader: president 1970–81; Nobel Peace Prize 1978.
- saint — any of certain persons of exceptional holiness of life, formally recognized as such by the Christian Church, especially by canonization.
- salat — prayers, said five times a day: the second of the Pillars of Islam.
- sault — a waterfall or rapid.
- sayst — 2nd person singular of say1 .
- scant — barely sufficient in amount or quantity; not abundant; almost inadequate: to do scant justice.
- scart — to scratch or scrape
- scatt — (in the Shetland and Orkney Islands) a crown tax, as for use of common lands.
- sceat — a silver Anglo-Saxon coin of the 7th and 8th centuries, sometimes including an amount of gold.
- scent — a distinctive odor, especially when agreeable: the scent of roses.
- scoot — to go swiftly or hastily; dart.
- scott — Barbara Ann, 1928–2012, Canadian figure skater.
- scout — a soldier, warship, airplane, etc., employed in reconnoitering.
- scrat — to scratch
- scuft — the nape or back of the neck
- sergt — Sergeant
- shaft — a long pole forming the body of various weapons, as lances, halberds, or arrows.
- shalt — 2nd person singular of shall.
- sheet — Nautical. a rope or chain for extending the clews of a square sail along a yard. a rope for trimming a fore-and-aft sail. a rope or chain for extending the lee clew of a course.
- shent — to put to shame.
- shift — to put (something) aside and replace it by another or others; change or exchange: to shift friends; to shift ideas.
- shirt — a long- or short-sleeved garment for the upper part of the body, usually lightweight and having a collar and a front opening.
- shoat — Also, shote. a young, weaned pig.