5-letter words that end in t
- go at — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- go it — to do something or move energetically
- gobat — Albert [French al-ber] /French alˈbɛr/ (Show IPA), 1843–1914, Swiss lawyer and statesman: Nobel Peace Prize 1902.
- godet — a triangular piece of fabric, often rounded at the top, inserted in a garment to give fullness. Compare gore3 (def 1), gusset (def 1).
- goest — (archaic-verb-form) Archaic second-person singular form of go.
- goost — Obsolete form of ghost.
- gosht — Mutton (or sometimes goat), normally as part of a Pakistani curry.
- graft — the acquisition of money, gain, or advantage by dishonest, unfair, or illegal means, especially through the abuse of one's position or influence in politics, business, etc.
- grant — to bestow or confer, especially by a formal act: to grant a charter.
- great — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
- greet — to lament; bewail.
- grift — (sometimes used with a plural verb) a group of methods for obtaining money falsely through the use of swindles, frauds, dishonest gambling, etc.
- griot — a member of a hereditary caste among the peoples of western Africa whose function is to keep an oral history of the tribe or village and to entertain with stories, poems, songs, dances, etc.
- gript — a past participle and simple past tense of grip.
- grist — grain to be ground.
- groat — a silver coin of England, equal to four pennies, issued from 1279 to 1662.
- groot — Huig [hœikh] /hœɪx/ (Show IPA), Hugo Grotius.
- grout — a thin, coarse mortar poured into various narrow cavities, as masonry joints or rock fissures, to fill them and consolidate the adjoining objects into a solid mass.
- gruft — (dialect) the particles of soil that are spattered up onto grass by the rain.
- grunt — to utter the deep, guttural sound characteristic of a hog.
- guest — Edgar A(lbert) 1881–1959, U.S. journalist and writer of verse, born in England.
- guilt — the fact or state of having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; culpability: He admitted his guilt.
- guist — Obsolete form of joust.
- gulet — Alternative form of goelette.
- guyot — a flat-topped seamount, found chiefly in the Pacific Ocean.
- gwent — a county in S Wales. 531 sq. mi. (1376 sq. km).
- habit — an acquired behavior pattern regularly followed until it has become almost involuntary: the habit of looking both ways before crossing the street.
- hadst — a 2nd person singular simple past tense of have.
- haint — (US, dialectal) Alternative form of haunt.
- hault — (obsolete) Lofty; haughty.
- haunt — to visit habitually or appear to frequently as a spirit or ghost: to haunt a house; to haunt a person.
- heart — Anatomy. a hollow, pumplike organ of blood circulation, composed mainly of rhythmically contractile smooth muscle, located in the chest between the lungs and slightly to the left and consisting of four chambers: a right atrium that receives blood returning from the body via the superior and inferior vena cavae, a right ventricle that pumps the blood through the pulmonary artery to the lungs for oxygenation, a left atrium that receives the oxygenated blood via the pulmonary veins and passes it through the mitral valve, and a left ventricle that pumps the oxygenated blood, via the aorta, throughout the body.
- heast — Obsolete form of hest.
- hecht — Ben, 1894–1964, U.S. novelist and dramatist.
- heist — a robbery or holdup: Four men were involved in the armored car heist.
- helot — a member of the lowest class in ancient Laconia, constituting a body of serfs who were bound to the land and were owned by the state. Compare Perioeci, Spartiate.
- helpt — Simple past tense and past participle of help.
- hemet — a city in SW California.
- herat — a city in NW Afghanistan.
- hexit — (jargon) /hek'sit/ A hexadecimal digit (0-9, and A-F or a-f). Used by people who claim that there are only *ten* digits, sixteen-fingered human beings being rather rare, despite what some keyboard designs might seem to imply (see space-cadet keyboard).
- hiant — gaping, wide
- hiest — an informal, simplified spelling of high: hi fidelity.
- hight — Archaic. called or named: Childe Harold was he hight.
- 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.
- hobit — (military, historical) A small mortar on a gun carriage, in use before the howitzer.
- hoist — to hoist.
- holst — Gustav Theodore [goo s-tahv] /ˈgʊs tɑv/ (Show IPA), 1874–1934, English composer.
- hooft — Pieter Corneliszoon (ˈpiːtər kɔrˈnɛːlisoːn). 1581–1647, Dutch poet, historian, and writer: noted esp for his love poetry and his 27-volume History of the Netherlands (1626–47)
- horst — a portion of the earth's crust, bounded on at least two sides by faults, that has risen in relation to adjacent portions.