5-letter words that end in th
- helth — Obsolete form of health.
- illth — a condition of poverty or misery
- keith — Sir Arthur, 1866–1955, Scottish anthropologist.
- kheth — het
- knuth — /knooth/ 1. Donald Knuth. 2. ["The Art of Computer Programming", Donald E. Knuth] Mythically, the reference that answers all questions about data structures or algorithms. A safe answer when you do not know: "I think you can find that in Knuth." Contrast literature. See also bible.
- laith — loath.
- leith — a seaport in SE Scotland, on the Firth of Forth: now part of Edinburgh.
- lieth — Archaic third-person singular form of lie.
- loath — unwilling; reluctant; disinclined; averse: to be loath to admit a mistake.
- louth — a county in Leinster province, in the NE Republic of Ireland. 317 sq. mi. (820 sq. km). County seat: Dunkalk.
- lowth — (UK dialectal, Northern England) Lowness.
- lyeth — Archaic third-person singular form of lye.
- meath — a county in Leinster, in the E Republic of Ireland. 902 sq. mi. (2335 sq. km). County seat: Trim.
- meith — a landmark or boundary marker
- mirth — gaiety or jollity, especially when accompanied by laughter: the excitement and mirth of the holiday season.
- month — Also called calendar month. any of the twelve parts, as January or February, into which the calendar year is divided.
- mouth — Anatomy, Zoology. the opening through which an animal or human takes in food. the cavity containing the structures used in mastication. the structures enclosing or being within this cavity, considered as a whole.
- ms-th — mesothorium
- musth — a state or condition of violent, destructive frenzy occurring with the rutting season in male elephants, accompanied by the exudation of an oily substance from glands between the eyes and mouth.
- neath — beneath.
- ninth — next after the eighth; being the ordinal number for nine.
- north — Christopher, pen name of John Wilson.
- panth — the Sikh community
- perth — a state in W Australia. 975,920 sq. mi. (2,527,635 sq. km). Capital: Perth.
- plath — Sylvia, 1932–63, U.S. poet.
- quoth — said (used with nouns, and with first- and third-person pronouns, and always placed before the subject): Quoth the raven, “Nevermore.”.
- reith — John (Charles Walsham), 1st Baron. 1889–1971, British public servant: first general manager (1922–27) and first director general (1927–38) of the BBC
- routh — abundance; plenty.
- saith — third person singular present of say1 .
- sixth — next after the fifth; being the ordinal number for six.
- sloth — habitual disinclination to exertion; indolence; laziness.
- smith — Adam, 1723–90, Scottish economist.
- smyth — Dame Ethel Mary, 1858–1944, English writer, composer, and suffragist.
- snath — the shaft or handle of a scythe.
- sooth — truth, reality, or fact.
- south — a cardinal point of the compass lying directly opposite north. Abbreviation: S.
- sowth — a sheep
- swath — the space covered by the stroke of a scythe or the cut of a mowing machine.
- swith — Chiefly British Dialect. immediately; quickly.
- synth — Informal. synthesizer (def 2).
- teeth — plural of tooth.
- tenth — next after ninth; being the ordinal number for ten.
- thoth — the god of wisdom, learning, and magic represented as a man with the head either of an ibis or of a baboon.
- tilth — the act or operation of tilling land; tillage.
- tooth — (in most vertebrates) one of the hard bodies or processes usually attached in a row to each jaw, serving for the prehension and mastication of food, as weapons of attack or defense, etc., and in mammals typically composed chiefly of dentin surrounding a sensitive pulp and covered on the crown with enamel.
- troth — faithfulness, fidelity, or loyalty: by my troth.
- truth — the true or actual state of a matter: He tried to find out the truth.
- tuath — (in Irish history) the territory of an ancient Irish tribe
- whith — Obsolete form of with.
- width — extent from side to side; breadth; wideness.