5-letter words that end in t
- flirt — to court triflingly or act amorously without serious intentions; play at love; coquet.
- float — to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant: The hollow ball floated.
- flout — to treat with disdain, scorn, or contempt; scoff at; mock: to flout the rules of propriety.
- flurt — Alternative spelling of flirt.
- fluyt — a Dutch type of cargo ship, originating in the 16th century
- foist — to force upon or impose fraudulently or unjustifiably (usually followed by on or upon): to foist inferior merchandise on a customer.
- fouat — a succulent pink-flowered plant
- fouet — a whip
- fount — font2 .
- fract — (obsolete) To break; to violate.
- freat — Alternative form of freet.
- freet — A superstitious notion or belief with respect to any action or event as a good or a bad omen; a superstition.
- freit — (Scotland) A superstitious object or obvservance; a charm, an omen.
- frett — A vitreous compound, used by potters in glazing, consisting of lime, silica, borax, lead, and soda.
- frist — (obsolete) A certain space or period of time; respite.
- fritt — Ceramics. a fused or partially fused material used as a basis for glazes or enamels. the composition from which artificial soft porcelain is made.
- front — the foremost part or surface of anything.
- frost — Robert (Lee) 1874–1963, U.S. poet.
- fruit — any product of plant growth useful to humans or animals.
- frust — a fragment
- fugit — (finance) The optimal date to exercise an American option (or a Bermudan option).
- fumet — a stock made by simmering fish, chicken, game, etc., in water, wine, or in both, often boiled down to concentrate the flavor and used as a flavoring.
- furst — Eye dialect of first.
- galet — to fill (a mortar joint) with gallets.
- galut — the forced exile of Jews, especially from countries where they were most persecuted.
- gamut — the entire scale or range: the gamut of dramatic emotion from grief to joy.
- gaspt — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of gasp.
- gault — A type of stiff, blue clay, sometimes used for making bricks.
- gaunt — extremely thin and bony; haggard and drawn, as from great hunger, weariness, or torture; emaciated.
- gavot — an old French dance in moderately quick quadruple meter.
- gazet — (obsolete) An old Venetian coin.
- geant — A simulation, tracking and drawing package for HEP.
- geest — an area of sandy heathland in N Germany and adjacent areas
- geist — Ghost, apparition.
- gemot — (in Anglo-Saxon England) a legislative or judicial assembly.
- genet — Janet (Genêt) 1892–1978, U.S. journalist: long based in Paris.
- ghast — ghastly.
- ghaut — a wide set of steps descending to a river, especially a river used for bathing.
- ghent — a province in W Belgium. 1150 sq. mi. (2980 sq. km). Capital: Ghent.
- 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.
- giant — (in folklore) a being with human form but superhuman size, strength, etc.
- gigot — a leg-of-mutton sleeve.
- gilet — A light sleeveless padded jacket.
- glatt — (Yinglish, of an animal, Judaism) Having none of a particular kind of adhesion on the outside of its lungs; only meat from a glatt animal can be kosher.
- gleet — Pathology. a thin, morbid discharge, as from a wound. persistent or chronic gonorrhea.
- glift — a moment
- glint — a tiny, quick flash of light.
- gloat — to look at or think about with great or excessive, often smug or malicious, satisfaction: The opposing team gloated over our bad luck.
- glost — Of or pertaining to lead glazing, or the kiln firing process for this glaze.
- glout — to scowl or frown.