5-letter ladders often require uncommon words to change consonants.
Here's one using bight and revet:
(22 steps) tight bight bigot begot beget beset reset revet rivet river rider wider wader wades wares cares cores corps coups coupe loupe louse loose
Slightly shorter are:
(21 steps) tight bight bigot begot beget beset reset revet rivet river rider rides sides sires sores cores corps coups coupe loupe louse loose
(18 steps) tight bight bigot begot beget beset reset revet rivet civet covet coves cores corps coups coupe loupe louse loose
You misspelled the word "lose." "Loose" is the opposite of "tight."
loose, or open "that jar isn't tight enough, its loose." or "he had a tight grip, but her hand had a loose grip."
The noun form for the adjective 'tight' is tightness.A related noun form is tights, an uncountable noun with no singular form; a word for a type tight fitting clothing.
No, tight and loose are not examples of homonyms. Homonyms are words that sound the same but have different meanings, like "pear" and "pair." Tight and loose have different meanings and sound different.
There are many slang terms for sexual innuendos. A person being tight or loose refers to the idea that a woman's vagina can be tight or loose.
u want them more tight than loose
loose when its around your finger but tight when you pull it :)
Tie him tight, but not so tight that if you needed to get him loose you couldn't.
A tight pack is were they are on there side and a loose pack is where they are not on there side. :)
Tagalog Translation of LADDER: hagdan
As long as it isn't tight enough to give you a headache a tight helmet is better than a loose one.
If you're talking about the adjective, tight. If you're talking about the way a person acts, unchaste.