| BELITTLED | • belittled v. Simple past tense and past participle of belittle. • BELITTLE v. to disparage. |
| BELITTLER | • belittler n. One who belittles. • BELITTLER n. one who belittles. |
| BELITTLES | • belittles v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of belittle. • BELITTLE v. to disparage. |
| BRITTLELY | • brittlely adv. In a brittle way. • BRITTLE adv. frail. |
| BRITTLEST | • brittlest adj. Superlative form of brittle: most brittle. • BRITTLE adj. frail. |
| BRITTLING | • brittling v. Present participle of brittle. • BRITTLE v. to become fragile. |
| CUITTLING | • CUITTLE v. (Scots) to coax, to cajole. |
| EMBRITTLE | • embrittle v. (Intransitive) To become brittle. • embrittle v. (Transitive) To make (something) brittle. • EMBRITTLE v. (archaic) to make or become brittle. |
| KITTLIEST | • KITTLY adj. (Scots) ticklish, delicate. |
| LITTLINGS | • littlings n. Plural of littling. • LITTLING n. (Scots) a child, also LITTLIE, LITTLIN. |
| SKITTLING | • skittling v. Present participle of skittle. • SKITTLE v. to knock down. |
| SPITTLIER | • SPITTLY adj. like or covered with spittle. |
| TITTLEBAT | • tittlebat n. (UK, dialect, archaic) The three-spined stickleback. • TITTLEBAT n. the three-spined stickleback. |
| WHITTLERS | • whittlers n. Plural of whittler. • WHITTLER n. one who whittles. |
| WHITTLING | • whittling v. Present participle of whittle. • whittling n. (Usually in the plural) A chip or shaving whittled from some larger substance. • whittling n. The art of carving shapes out of raw wood using a knife. |