Cabaret
ET
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern -PP-ET. That is, six letter words with 2nd letter P and 3rd letter P and 5th letter E and 6th letter T. In alphabetical order, they are: applet
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern J-G-ET. That is, six letter words with 1st letter J and 3rd letter G and 5th letter E and 6th letter T. In alphabetical order, they are: juglet
He painted Verre et Pichet in 1944 to symbolize the nourishment of life and living.
ET is a gazillion light years away from Earth and scientists are unable to find the source of the flying shopping trolley
Here are a few of them :)BetGetJetLetMetNetPetSetTetVetWetYet
Most of the 5-letter words ending in ETS are four letter words ending in ET. If you think of any 4-letter word matching this pattern you'll soon discover plenty of 5-letter words: BEETS DIETS DUETS FRETS And more!
ferret
bet, fet, get, het, jet, let, met, net, pet, ret, set, tet, vet, wet, yet15 words
The French word for "and" is "et". It is pronounced like you would pronounce the letter "a".and = et
2-letter wordseh, et, ex, he, hi, it, ti, xi3-letter wordseth, het, hex, hie, hit, the, tie4-letter wordsexit16 words found.
buffet ballet
The difference between 'et noc cedamus amori' and 'et nos cedamus amori' is a misprint or misspelling. The ending letter needs to be 's', not 'c', in 'nos'. The sentence means 'We yield ourselves to love'. In the word-by-word translation, the conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The personal pronoun 'nos' means 'ourselves'. The verb 'cedamus' means '[we] are yielding, do yield, yield'. The noun 'amori' means 'to love'.
The musical score for ET was written by John Williams (the composer-conductor, not the classical guitarist of the same name).
According to "scrabble web" sites. ET is acceptable as a two letter word.
etch, etui
Lucien David has written: 'Le rythme verbal et musical dans le chant romain' -- subject(s): Gregorian chants, History and criticism, Musical meter and rhythm