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English 3 letter words - Containing letters eht - page 1

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eth

eth

noun

  1. A letter (capital Ð, small ð) introduced into Old English to represent its dental fricative, then not distinguished from the letter thorn, no longer used in English but still in modern use in Icelandic, the IPA and other phonetic alphabets to represent the voiced dental fricative "th" sound as in the English word then. The letter is also used in Faroese, but is generally silent in that language.

het

het

adj

  1. (dialect) Heated.
  2. (slang) Heterosexual.
  3. heterozygous

noun

  1. (countable, slang) A heterosexual person.
  2. (uncountable, fandom slang) Fan fiction based on celebrities or fictional characters involved in an opposite-sex romantic and/or sexual relationship.
  3. Alternative form of heth (“Semitic letter”)
  4. heterozygote

verb

  1. (dialect) simple past tense and past participle of heat

teh

teh

article

  1. (Internet slang, dated) Deliberate misspelling of the, for humorous, sarcastic, or facetious effect.

the

the

adv

  1. With a comparative or with more and a verb phrase, establishes a correlation with one or more other such comparatives.
  2. With a comparative, and often with for it, indicates a result more like said comparative. This can be negated with none.

article

  1. Added to a superlative or an ordinal number to make it into a substantive.
  2. Definite grammatical article that implies necessarily that an entity it hints at is presupposed; something already mentioned, or completely specified later in that same sentence, or assumed already completely specified.
  3. Introducing a singular term to be taken generically preceding a name of something standing for a whole class.
  4. Used before a body part (especially of someone previously mentioned), as an alternative to a possessive pronoun.
  5. Used before a noun modified by a restrictive relative clause, indicating that the noun refers to a single referent defined by the relative clause.
  6. Used before a superlative or an ordinal number modifying a noun, to indicate that the noun refers to a single item.
  7. Used before an adjective, indicating all things (especially persons) described by that adjective.
  8. Used before an object considered to be unique, or of which there is only one at a time.
  9. Used to indicate a certain example of (a noun) which is usually of most concern or most common or familiar.
  10. When stressed, indicates that it describes an object which is considered to be best or exclusively worthy of attention.

prep

  1. For each; per.