Anagrams of T-group
Word T-group has
1 exact anagrams and 92 other words
that can be made by using the letters of T-group.
- 2,4,5-t
-
noun,
a light-tan, water-insoluble solid, C 8 H 5 Cl 3 O 3 , used chiefly for killing weeds.
- Prog.
-
- Prot.
-
- 30-30
-
- Port.
-
- trop-
-
- grout
-
noun,
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.
- group
-
noun,
any collection or assemblage of persons or things; cluster; aggregation:
- out-
-
- pot.
-
- pour
-
noun,
the act of pouring.
- pout
-
noun,
the act of pouting; a protrusion of the lips.
- pro-
-
- ptg.
-
- Prut
-
noun,
a river in E Europe, flowing SE from the Carpathian Mountains in Ukraine along the boundary between Moldavia (Moldova) and Romania into the Danube. 500 miles (800 km) long.
- OGPU
-
noun,
(in the U.S.S.R.) the government's secret-police organization (1923–1934).
- roup
-
noun,
any catarrhal inflammation of the eyes and nasal passages of poultry.
- rout
-
noun,
a defeat attended with disorderly flight; dispersal of a defeated force in complete disorder:
- rpt.
-
- top-
-
- Tour
-
noun,
a traveling around from place to place.
- trog
-
noun,
Chiefly British Slang. a hooligan; lout.
- trug
-
noun,
a shallow basket for carrying flowers, vegetables, etc., made from strips of wood.
- uro-
-
- org.
-
- 1080
-
- gout
-
noun,
an acute, recurrent disease characterized by painful inflammation of the joints, chiefly those in the feet and hands, and especially in the great toe, and by an excess of uric acid in the blood.
- gorp
-
noun,
a mixture of nuts, raisins, dried fruits, seeds, or the like eaten as a high-energy snack, as by hikers and climbers.
- gro.
-
- grot
-
noun,
a grotto.
- tog
-
noun,
a coat.
- ROT
-
noun,
the process of rotting.
- opt
-
Verb phrases,
opt out, to decide to leave or withdraw:
- Gor
-
interjection,
(used as a mild oath.)
- RPG
-
- RPO
-
- rt.
-
- rug
-
noun,
a thick fabric for covering part of a floor, often woven of wool and often having an oblong shape with a border design.
Compare carpet.
- rut
-
noun,
a furrow or track in the ground, especially one made by the passage of a vehicle or vehicles.
- GPU
-
- ROG
-
- Tor
-
noun,
a rocky pinnacle; a peak of a bare or rocky mountain or hill.
- GPO
-
noun,
the federal agency that prints and disseminates publications for other federal agencies. Abbreviation: G.P.O., GPO.
- Tpr
-
- tr.
-
- Tro
-
- GOP
-
- trp
-
- Tu.
-
- tug
-
noun,
an act or instance of tugging; pull; haul.
- tup
-
noun,
Chiefly British. a male sheep; ram.
- up-
-
- ur-
-
- ROP
-
- op.
-
- POR
-
- ot-
-
- Pr.
-
- pt.
-
- PTO
-
- Gut
-
noun,
the alimentary canal, especially between the pylorus and the anus, or some portion of it.
Compare foregut, midgut, hindgut.
- our
-
noun,
(used to denote the narrator of a literary work written in the first person singular).
- Gur
-
noun,
a branch of the Niger-Congo subfamily of languages, including Mossi and other languages spoken in Burkina Faso, Ghana, Togo, Ivory Coast, and Mali.
- Pg.
-
- GTO
-
- gt.
-
- Gr.
-
- got
-
noun,
an offspring or the total of the offspring, especially of a male animal:
- ORT
-
noun,
Usually, orts. a scrap or morsel of food left at a meal.
- pug
-
noun,
one of a breed of small, short-haired dogs having a tightly curled tail, a deeply wrinkled face, and a smooth coat that is black or silver and fawn with black markings.
- put
-
noun,
a throw or cast, especially one made with a forward motion of the hand when raised close to the shoulder.
- U.
-
- OU
-
noun,
a rare Hawaiian honeycreeper, Psittirostra psittacea, having an olive-green body, a parrotlike bill, and in the male a bright yellow head.
- GO
-
noun,
the act of going:
- OG
-
- O.
-
- P.
-
noun,
Paul (Johann von) [poul yoh-hahn fuh n] /paʊl ˈyoʊ hɑn fən/ (Show IPA), 1830–1914, German playwright, novelist, poet, and short-story writer: Nobel Prize 1910.
- G.
-
- GP
-
- RO
-
- PO
-
noun,
a chamber pot.
- TP
-
- rg
-
- T1
-
- TG
-
- t.
-
- RU
-
- GU
-
- RP
-
- PU
-
- R.
-
- UT
-
noun,
the syllable once generally used for the first tone or keynote of a scale and sometimes for the tone C: now commonly superseded by do.