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5-letter words that end in t

  • tryst — an appointment to meet at a certain time and place, especially one made somewhat secretly by lovers.
  • tuart — a eucalyptus tree, Eucalyptus gomphocephala, of Australia, yielding a very durable light-coloured timber
  • tweet — a weak chirping sound, as of a young or small bird.
  • twist — to combine, as two or more strands or threads, by winding together; intertwine.
  • twixt — contraction of betwixt.
  • ucatt — Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians
  • umist — University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology
  • unapt — not appropriate; unfit; unsuitable: an unapt answer.
  • uncut — not cut.
  • unfit — not fit; not adapted or suited; unsuitable: He was unfit for his office.
  • unget — to get rid of
  • unhat — to doff one's hat
  • uniat — a member of an Eastern church that is in union with the Roman Catholic Church, acknowledges the Roman pope as supreme in matters of faith, but maintains its own liturgy, discipline, and rite.
  • unlet — (of a property, room, etc) not rented
  • unlit — not illuminated
  • unmet — simple past tense and past participle of meet1 .
  • unset — not set; not solidified or made firm, as concrete or asphalt.
  • unwet — not wet; dry as opposed to being wet
  • unwit — Obsolete. to render devoid of wit; derange.
  • upjet — to stream upwards
  • upset — to overturn: to upset a pitcher of milk.
  • urent — burning
  • uwist — University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology
  • valet — a male servant who attends to the personal needs of his male employer, as by taking care of clothing or the like; manservant.
  • vault — the act of vaulting.
  • vaunt — to speak vaingloriously of; boast of: to vaunt one's achievements.
  • veldt — the open country, bearing grass, bushes, or shrubs, or thinly forested, characteristic of parts of southern Africa.
  • verst — a Russian measure of distance equivalent to 3500 feet or 0.6629 mile or 1.067 kilometers.
  • visct — Viscount or Viscountess
  • visit — to go to and stay with (a person or family) or at (a place) for a short time for reasons of sociability, politeness, business, curiosity, etc.: to visit a friend; to visit clients; to visit Paris.
  • vivat — an expression of acclamation
  • volet — a veil worn at the back of the heaad
  • vomit — to eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; regurgitate; throw up.
  • waadt — German name of Vaud.
  • waift — Obsolete form of waif.
  • waist — the part of the body in humans between the ribs and the hips, usually the narrowest part of the torso.
  • wanst — (archaic) once.
  • wasnt — (informal, nonstandard) Alternative form of wasn't.
  • wecht — (Scotland) weight.
  • weest — little; very small.
  • welkt — twisted
  • werst — Obsolete spelling of verst.
  • wheat — the grain of any cereal grass of the genus Triticum, especially T. aestivum, used in the form of flour for making bread, cakes, etc., and for other culinary and nutritional purposes.
  • whift — a brief emission of air
  • whint — Wheelers Hill Indoor National Tournament
  • whipt — to beat with a strap, lash, rod, or the like, especially by way of punishment or chastisement; flog; thrash: Criminals used to be whipped for minor offenses.
  • whist — Chiefly Irish. silence: Hold your whist.
  • whort — the whortleberry.
  • wightIsle of, an island off the S coast of England, forming an administrative division of Hampshire. 147 sq. mi. (381 sq. km). County seat: Newport.
  • wisht — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of wish.
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