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6-letter words starting with st

  • stigma — a mark of disgrace or infamy; a stain or reproach, as on one's reputation.
  • stills — remaining in place or at rest; motionless; stationary: to stand still.
  • stilly — quietly; silently.
  • stilty — relating to or resembling stilts
  • stingo — strong beer.
  • stingy — having a sting.
  • stinko — drunk.
  • stinky — foul smelling; stinking.
  • stints — to be frugal; get along on a scanty allowance: Don't stint on the food. They stinted for years in order to save money.
  • stinty — inadequate, limited, stinted
  • stipel — a secondary stipule situated at the base of a leaflet of a compound leaf.
  • stipes — Zoology. the second joint in a maxilla of crustaceans and insects.
  • stirps — a stock; family or branch of a family; line of descent.
  • stitch — one complete movement of a threaded needle through a fabric or material such as to leave behind it a single loop or portion of thread, as in sewing, embroidery, or the surgical closing of wounds.
  • stithy — an anvil.
  • stiver — Also, stuiver. a former nickel coin of the Netherlands, equal to five Dutch cents.
  • stocks — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
  • stocky — of solid and sturdy form or build; thick-set and, usually, short.
  • stodge — to stuff full, especially with food or drink; gorge.
  • stodgy — heavy, dull, or uninteresting; tediously commonplace; boring: a stodgy Victorian novel.
  • stogie — a long, slender, roughly made, inexpensive cigar.
  • stoiip — STOIIP is a method of estimating how much oil in a reservoir can be economically brought to the surface.
  • stoked — exhilarated; excited.
  • stokerBram [bram] /bræm/ (Show IPA), (Abraham Stoker) 1847–1912, British novelist, born in Ireland: creator of Dracula.
  • stokes — a unit of kinematic viscosity, equal to the viscosity of a fluid in poises divided by the density of the fluid in grams per cubic centimeter.
  • stoled — having or clothed in a stole
  • stolen — past participle of steal.
  • stoles — an ecclesiastical vestment consisting of a narrow strip of silk or other material worn over the shoulders or, by deacons, over the left shoulder only, and arranged to hang down in front to the knee or below. Compare tippet (def 2).
  • stolid — not easily stirred or moved mentally; unemotional; impassive.
  • stolon — Botany. a prostrate stem, at or just below the surface of the ground, that produces new plants from buds at its tips or nodes.
  • stomal — of, pertaining to, or near a stoma or opening on a plant or animal
  • stone- — very; completely
  • stoned — made of or pertaining to stone.
  • stonen — of or comprising stone
  • stoner — Slang. a person who is habitually high on drugs, especially marijuana, or alcohol; a person who is usually stoned.
  • stones — the hard substance, formed of mineral matter, of which rocks consist.
  • stoney — full of or abounding in stones or rock: a stony beach.
  • stooge — an entertainer who feeds lines to the main comedian and usually serves as the butt of his or her jokes.
  • stooly — Slang. stool pigeon (def 2).
  • stooze — to borrow money at low interest for investment in a high-interest account
  • stoped — any excavation made in a mine, especially from a steeply inclined vein, to remove the ore that has been rendered accessible by the shafts and drifts.
  • stoper — a machine for drilling rock from below.
  • stopes — any excavation made in a mine, especially from a steeply inclined vein, to remove the ore that has been rendered accessible by the shafts and drifts.
  • storax — a solid resin with a vanillalike odor, obtained from a small tree, Styrax officinalis: formerly used in medicine and perfumery.
  • stored — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
  • storer — a person or thing that stores something
  • stores — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
  • storey — story2 .
  • storge — natural or instinctual affection, as of a parent for a child
  • stormy — affected, characterized by, or subject to storms; tempestuous: a stormy sea.
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