0%

5-letter words that end in t

  • colet — John. ?1467–1519, English humanist and theologian; founder of St Paul's School, London (1509)
  • comdt — Commandant
  • comet — A comet is a bright object with a long tail that travels around the sun.
  • comit — (language)   The first string-handling and pattern-matching language, designed in 1957-8 for applications in natural language translation. The user has a workspace organised into shelves. Strings are made of constituents (words), accessed by subscript. A program is a set of rules, each of which has a pattern, a replacement and goto another rule.
  • const — (programming) A variable whose value cannot be changed directly.
  • coopt — to add (someone) to a committee, board, etc, by the agreement of the existing members
  • copht — a member of the Coptic Church.
  • corot — Jean Baptiste Camille (ʒɑ̃ batist kamij). 1796–1875, French landscape and portrait painter
  • coset — one of several sets that form a larger set
  • count — A Count is a European nobleman with the same rank as an English earl.
  • court — A court is a place where legal matters are decided by a judge and jury or by a magistrate.
  • covet — If you covet something, you strongly want to have it for yourself.
  • craft — You can refer to a boat, a spacecraft, or an aircraft as a craft.
  • creat — An usher to a riding master.
  • crept — Crept is the past tense and past participle of creep.
  • crest — The crest of a hill or a wave is the top of it.
  • croat — a native or inhabitant of Croatia
  • croft — In Scotland, a croft is a small piece of land which is owned and farmed by one family and which provides them with food.
  • cropt — a simple past tense and past participle of crop.
  • crost — Eye dialect of cross.
  • crout — (archaic) sauerkraut.
  • cruet — A cruet is a small container, or set of containers, for salt, pepper, or mustard which is used at meals.
  • cruft — Charles. 1852–1938, British dog breeder, who organized the first (1886) of the annual dog shows known as Cruft's
  • crust — The crust on a loaf of bread is the outside part.
  • crypt — A crypt is an underground room underneath a church or cathedral.
  • csnet — Computers and Science Network, operated by CREN for US computer science institutes. It provides electronic mail service via dial-up lines, X.25 and Internet services.
  • cubit — an ancient measure of length based on the length of the forearm
  • culet — the flat face at the bottom of a gem
  • curet — a spoon-shaped surgical instrument for the removal of tissue from the walls of body cavities
  • curst — a simple past tense and past participle of curse.
  • d out — (in sport) to prevent an opponent from attacking by using successful defence techniques
  • daint — dainty
  • dalet — The fourth letter of many Semitic alphabets (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others).
  • dalit — a member of the lowest class in India, whom those of the four main castes were formerly forbidden to touch
  • dault — a child who is brought up in a family to which he or she has no blood connection
  • daunt — If something daunts you, it makes you feel slightly afraid or worried about dealing with it.
  • davit — a cranelike device, usually one of a pair, fitted with a tackle for suspending or lowering equipment, esp a lifeboat
  • daynt — a thing or condition that is extravagant or best
  • dealt — Dealt is the past tense and past participle of deal2.
  • debit — When your bank debits your account, money is taken from it and paid to someone else.
  • debut — The debut of a performer or sports player is their first public performance, appearance, or recording.
  • defat — to remove the fat from (a substance)
  • degut — to remove the entrails of; disembowel; gut.
  • deist — a believer in deism
  • delft — a town in the SW Netherlands, in South Holland province. Pop: 97 000 (2003 est)
  • demit — to resign (an office, position, etc)
  • denet — (formerly, in Britain) to sell (a book) at a lower price than that specified by the Net Book Agreement
  • depot — A depot is a place where large amounts of raw materials, equipment, arms, or other supplies are kept until they are needed.
  • derat — (transitive) To remove the rats from something.
  • diact — an abbreviation of diactine
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?