4 Letter 9 Letter 10 Letter Boggle Words Ending With D

15,727 words found — all lengths, ending with D

Use this list of 4 Letter 9 Letter 10 Letter Boggle Words Ending With D to find your next winning play. Click any word to unscramble it and see all possible words from those letters.
Starting With D Ending With D Containing D
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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

3-Letter Words (60)

ADD (5) [noun] An act or instance of adding. | [noun] An additional enemy that joins a fight after the primary target. | [verb] To join or unite (e.g. one thing to another, or as several particulars) so as to increase the number, augment the quantity or enlarge the magnitude, or so as to form into one aggregate. AID (4) [noun] Help; assistance; succor, relief. | [noun] A helper; an assistant. | [noun] Something which helps; a material source of help. | [verb] To provide support to; to further the progress of; to help; to assist. AND (4) [noun] In rhythm, the second half of a divided beat. | [conjunction] As a coordinating conjunction; expressing two elements to be taken together or in addition to each other. | [conjunction] (heading) Expressing a condition. | [noun] Breath. | [verb] To breathe; whisper; devise; imagine. BAD (6) [noun] Error, mistake. | [noun] An item (or kind of item) of merchandise with negative value; an unwanted good. | [adjective] Unfavorable; negative; not good. | [adjective] Fantastic. | [verb] To issue a command; to tell. | [verb] To shell (a walnut). BED (6) [noun] A piece of furniture, usually flat and soft, on which to rest or sleep. | [noun] A place, or flat surface or layer, on which something else rests or is laid. | [noun] (heading) A layer or surface. BID (6) [verb] To issue a command; to tell. | [verb] To invite; to summon. | [verb] To utter a greeting or salutation. | [verb] To issue a command; to tell. BOD (6) [noun] The body. | [noun] A person. BUD (6) [noun] A newly sprouted leaf or blossom that has not yet unfolded. | [noun] Something that has begun to develop. | [noun] A small rounded body in the process of splitting from an organism, which may grow into a genetically identical new organism. | [noun] Buddy, friend. CAD (6) [noun] A low-bred, presuming person; a mean, vulgar fellow. | [noun] A person who stands at the door of an omnibus to open and shut it, and to receive fares; an idle hanger-on about innyards. COD (6) [noun] A small bag or pouch. | [noun] A husk or integument; a pod. | [noun] The scrotum (also in plural). | [noun] The Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua. | [noun] A joke or an imitation. CUD (6) [noun] The portion of food which is brought back into the mouth by ruminating animals from their first stomach, to be chewed a second time. | [verb] To bring back into the mouth and chew a second time. DAD (5) [noun] A father, a male parent. | [noun] (familiar) Used to address one's father | [noun] Used to address an older adult male | [noun] A lump or piece. DID (5) [verb] (auxiliary) A syntactic marker. | [verb] To perform; to execute. | [verb] To cause, make (someone) (do something). DUD (5) [noun] A device or machine that is useless because it does not work properly or has failed to work, such as a bomb, or explosive projectile. | [noun] A failure of any kind. | [noun] Clothes, now always used in plural form duds. ELD (4) [noun] One's age, age in years, period of life. | [noun] Old age, senility; an old person. | [noun] Time; an age, an indefinitely long period of time. END (4) [noun] The terminal point of something in space or time. | [noun] (by extension) The cessation of an effort, activity, state, or motion. | [noun] (by extension) Death. FAD (7) [noun] A phenomenon that becomes popular for a very short time. FED (7) [noun] A federal government officer or official, especially FBI, CIA, NSA, ATF, and DEA agents. | [noun] A police officer. | [noun] A “federation” in which powerlifters organize to compete. | [verb] (ditransitive) To give (someone or something) food to eat. FID (7) [noun] A pointed tool without any sharp edges, used in weaving or knotwork to tighten and form up weaves or complex knots; used in sailing ships to open the strands of a rope before splicing. Compare marlinespike. | [noun] A square bar of wood or iron, with a shoulder at one end, to support the weight of the topmast (on a ship). | [noun] A plug of oakum for the vent of a gun. FUD (7) GAD (5) [interjection] An exclamatory interjection roughly equivalent to by God, goodness gracious, for goodness' sake. | [noun] One who roams about idly; a gadabout. | [verb] To move from one location to another in an apparently random and frivolous manner. | [noun] A greedy and/or stupid person. | [noun] A sharp-pointed object; a goad. GED (5) [noun] The pike or luce. | [noun] A greedy person GID (5) [noun] A disease of sheep caused by tapeworm. | [noun] A fiddle. GOD (5) [noun] A being such as a monotheistic God: a single divine creator and ruler of the universe. | [proper noun] The single deity of various monotheistic religions, especially the deity of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. | [proper noun] The single male deity of various bitheistic or duotheistic religions. HAD (7) [verb] To possess, own. | [verb] To hold, as something at someone's disposal. | [verb] Used to state the existence or presence of someone in a specified relationship with the subject. HID (7) [verb] To put (something) in a place where it will be harder to discover or out of sight. | [verb] To put oneself in a place where one will be harder to find or out of sight. HOD (7) [verb] To bob up and down on horseback; jog. | [noun] A three-sided box for carrying bricks or other construction materials, often mortar. It bears a long handle and is carried over the shoulder. | [noun] A receptacle for carrying coal, particularly one designed to facilitate loading coal or coke through the door of a firebox. KID (8) [noun] A young goat. | [noun] Of a female goat, the state of being pregnant: in kid. | [noun] Kidskin. | [noun] A fagot; a bundle of heath and furze. LAD (4) [noun] A boy or young man. | [noun] A Jack the lad; a boyo. | [noun] A familiar term of address for a young man. LED (4) [verb] (heading) To guide or conduct. | [verb] To guide or conduct, as by accompanying, going before, showing, influencing, directing with authority, etc.; to have precedence or preeminence; to be first or chief; — used in most of the senses of the transitive verb. | [verb] (heading) To begin, to be ahead. LID (4) [noun] A thin skin membrane that covers and moves over an eye. | [noun] The top or cover of a container. | [noun] A cap or hat. MAD (6) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. | [adjective] Insane; crazy, mentally deranged. MED (6) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Medications, especially prescribed psychoactive medications. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the practice of medicine. | [adjective] Intended to have a therapeutic effect; medicinal. | [verb] May; might MID (6) [adjective] Denoting the middle part. | [adjective] Occupying a middle position; middle. | [adjective] Made with a somewhat elevated position of some certain part of the tongue, in relation to the palate; midway between the high and the low; said of certain vowel sounds, such as, /e o ɛ ɔ/. | [noun] Middle | [noun] A mid-range. | [preposition] (in representations of German-accented English) With. MOD (6) [noun] An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses. | [noun] A 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker. | [noun] A modification. | [noun] A festival of Scottish Gaelic song, arts and culture, akin to the Welsh eisteddfod. MUD (6) [noun] A mixture of water and soil or fine grained sediment. | [noun] A plaster-like mixture used to texture or smooth drywall. | [noun] (construction industry slang) Wet concrete as it is being mixed, delivered and poured. | [verb] To participate in a MUD or multi-user dungeon. NOD (4) [noun] An instance of inclining the head up and down, as to indicate agreement, or as a cursory greeting. | [noun] A reference or allusion to something. | [noun] A nomination. ODD (5) [noun] (diminutive) An odd number. | [noun] Something left over, not forming part of a set. | [adjective] Differing from what is usual, ordinary or expected. OLD (4) [noun] (with the, invariable plural only) People who are old; old beings; the older generation, taken as a group. | [noun] (in combination) One of a specified age. | [noun] A person older than oneself, especially an adult in relation to a teenager. OUD (4) [noun] A short-necked and fretless plucked stringed instrument of the lute family, of Arab and Turkish origin. | [noun] (perfume) Agarwood. PAD (6) [noun] A flattened mass of anything soft, to sit or lie on. | [noun] A cushion used as a saddle without a tree or frame. | [noun] A soft, or small, cushion. | [noun] A toad. | [noun] A footpath, particularly one unformed or unmaintained; a road or track. See footpad. | [noun] A type of wickerwork basket, especially as used as a measure of fish or other goods. | [verb] To travel along (a road, path etc.). | [noun] The sound of soft footsteps, or a similar noise made by an animal etc. PED (6) [noun] (on traffic signs) A pedestrian. | [noun] A pedestal. | [noun] A basket; a hamper; a pannier. | [noun] A soil particle. | [noun] Motorcycle POD (6) [noun] A seed case for legumes (e.g. peas, beans, peppers); a seedpod. | [noun] A small vehicle, especially used in emergency situations. | [noun] A bag; a pouch. PUD (6) [noun] Pudding (either sweet or savoury). | [noun] Penis. | [noun] Child's hand; child's fist. | [noun] An obsolete Russian unit of mass, equal to 40 Russian funt, or about 16.38 kg (approximately 36.11 pounds). RAD (4) [noun] A non-SI unit of absorbed dose of radiation, equal to 0.01 gray. | [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of plane angular measure of angle equal to the angle subtended at the centre of a circle by an arc of its circumference equal in length to the radius of the circle. Symbol: rad | [noun] Anything which radiates or emits rays. RED (4) [noun] Any of a range of colours having the longest wavelengths, 670 nm, of the visible spectrum; a primary additive colour for transmitted light: the colour obtained by subtracting green and blue from white light using magenta and yellow filters; the colour of blood, ripe strawberries, etc. | [noun] A revolutionary socialist or (most commonly) a Communist; (usually capitalized) a Bolshevik, a supporter of the Bolsheviks in the Russian Civil War. | [noun] One of the 15 red balls used in snooker, distinguished from the colours. | [verb] To govern, protect. | [verb] To free from entanglement. RID (4) [verb] To free (something) from a hindrance or annoyance. | [verb] To banish. | [verb] To kill. | [verb] To transport oneself by sitting on and directing a horse, later also a bicycle etc. ROD (4) [noun] A straight, round stick, shaft, bar, cane, or staff. | [noun] A longitudinal pole used for forming part of a framework such as an awning or tent. | [noun] A long slender usually tapering pole used for angling; fishing rod. SAD (4) [verb] To make melancholy; to sadden or grieve (someone). | [adjective] (heading) Emotionally negative. | [adjective] Sated, having had one's fill; satisfied, weary. | [noun] The letter ص in the Arabic script. SOD (4) [noun] That stratum of the surface of the soil which is filled with the roots of grass, or any portion of that surface; turf; sward. | [noun] Turf grown and cut specifically for the establishment of lawns. | [verb] To cover with sod. | [noun] Sodomite; bugger. | [verb] To boil. | [noun] The rock dove. TAD (4) [noun] A small amount; a little bit. | [noun] A street boy; an urchin. TED (4) [noun] A teddy boy. | [verb] To spread hay for drying. TOD (4) [noun] A fox. | [noun] Someone like a fox; a crafty person. | [noun] A bush, especially of ivy. URD (4) WAD (7) [noun] An amorphous, compact mass. | [noun] A substantial pile (normally of money). | [noun] A soft plug or seal, particularly as used between the powder and pellets in a shotgun cartridge, or earlier on the charge of a muzzleloader or cannon. | [noun] Plumbago, graphite. WED (7) [verb] To perform the marriage ceremony for; to join in matrimony. | [verb] To take as one's spouse. | [verb] To take a spouse. WUD (7) YID (7) [noun] (among Jews) a Jew | [noun] A Jew | [noun] A supporter or club member of Tottenham Hotspur F.C. YOD (7) [noun] A palatal approximant, /j/. | [noun] The tenth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others). | [noun] A tool used to read a torah. | [noun] A small, usually uncultivated area adjoining or (now especially) within the precincts of a house or other building. ZED (13) [noun] The name of the Latin-script letter Z. | [noun] (in combination) Something Z-shaped. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Sleep.

4-Letter Words (211)

ABED (7) [adverb] In bed, or on the bed; confined to bed. | [adverb] To childbed ACED (7) [verb] (US) To pass (a test, interviews etc.) perfectly. | [verb] To win a point by an ace. | [verb] To make an ace (hole in one). ACID (7) [noun] A sour substance. | [noun] Any of several classes of compound having the following properties: | [noun] Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) AGED (6) [verb] To cause to grow old; to impart the characteristics of age to. | [verb] To postpone an action that would extinguish something, as a debt. | [verb] To categorize by age. AMID (7) [preposition] In the middle of; in the center of; surrounded by. APED (7) [verb] To behave like an ape. | [verb] To imitate or mimic, particularly to imitate poorly. APOD (7) ARID (5) [adjective] Very dry. | [adjective] Describing a very dry climate. Typically defined as less than 25 cm or 10 inches of rainfall annually. | [adjective] Devoid of value. AULD (5) [adjective] Old AVID (8) [adjective] Enthusiastic; keen; eager; showing great interest in something or desire to do something AWED (8) [verb] To inspire fear and reverence in. | [verb] To control by inspiring dread. | [adjective] Filled with awe. AXED (12) [verb] To request (information, or an answer to a question). | [verb] To put forward (a question) to be answered. | [verb] To interrogate or enquire of (a person). BALD (7) [noun] A mountain summit or crest that lacks forest growth despite a warm climate conducive to such, as is found in many places in the Southern Appalachian Mountains. | [verb] To become bald. | [adjective] Having no hair, fur or feathers. BAND (7) [noun] A strip of material used for strengthening or coupling. | [noun] A long strip of material, color, etc, that is different from the surrounding area. | [noun] A strip of decoration. | [noun] A group of musicians who perform together as an ensemble, usually for a professional recording artist. | [verb] To tie; to confine by any ligature. BARD (7) [noun] A professional poet and singer, like among the ancient Celts, whose occupation was to compose and sing verses in honor of the heroic achievements of princes and brave men. | [noun] (by extension) A poet. | [noun] A piece of defensive (or, sometimes, ornamental) armor for a horse's neck, breast, and flanks; a barb. (Often in the plural.) BAUD (7) [noun] A unit of data transmission symbol rate; the number of signalling events per second. | [noun] Bps (bits per second), regardless of how many bits are represented by each symbol. BAWD (10) [noun] A person who keeps a house of prostitution, or procures women for prostitution; a procurer, a madame. | [noun] A lewd person. | [verb] To procure women for lewd purposes. BEAD (7) [noun] Prayer, later especially with a rosary. | [noun] Each in a string of small balls making up the rosary or paternoster. | [noun] A small, round object. BEND (7) [noun] A curve. | [noun] Any of the various knots which join the ends of two lines. | [noun] (in the plural, underwater diving, with the) A severe condition caused by excessively quick decompression, causing bubbles of nitrogen to form in the blood; decompression sickness. BIND (7) [noun] That which binds or ties. | [noun] A troublesome situation; a problem; a predicament or quandary. | [noun] Any twining or climbing plant or stem, especially a hop vine; a bine. BIRD (7) [noun] A member of the class of animals Aves in the phylum Chordata, characterized by being warm-blooded, having feathers and wings usually capable of flight, and laying eggs. | [noun] A man, fellow. | [noun] A girl or woman, especially one considered sexually attractive. | [noun] A prison sentence. | [noun] The vulgar hand gesture in which the middle finger is extended. BLED (7) [verb] (of a person or animal) To lose blood through an injured blood vessel. | [verb] To let or draw blood from. | [verb] To take large amounts of money from. | [noun] (in parts of French North Africa) Hinterland, field. BOLD (7) [noun] A dwelling; habitation; building. | [adjective] Courageous, daring. | [adjective] Visually striking; conspicuous. | [verb] To make (a font or some text) bold. BOND (7) [noun] Evidence of a long-term debt, by which the bond issuer (the borrower) is obliged to pay interest when due, and repay the principal at maturity, as specified on the face of the bond certificate. The rights of the holder are specified in the bond indenture, which contains the legal terms and conditions under which the bond was issued. Bonds are available in two forms: registered bonds, and bearer bonds. | [noun] A documentary obligation to pay a sum or to perform a contract; a debenture. | [noun] A partial payment made to show a provider that the customer is sincere about buying a product or a service. If the product or service is not purchased the customer then forfeits the bond. | [noun] A peasant; churl. BRAD (7) [noun] A thin, small nail, with a slight projection at the top on one side instead of a head, or occasionally with a small domed head, similar to that of an escutcheon pin. | [noun] (elementary school usage) A paper fastener, a fastening device formed of thin, soft metal, such as shim brass, with a round head and a flat, split shank, which is spread after insertion in a hole in a stack of pages, in much the same way as a cotter pin or a split rivet. | [verb] To attach using a brad. BRED (7) [verb] To produce offspring sexually; to bear young. | [verb] To give birth to; to be the native place of. | [verb] Of animals, to mate. BUND (7) [noun] A league or confederacy; especially the confederation of German states. | [noun] A secondary enclosure, typically consisting of a wall or berm, which surrounds a tank or fluid-handling mechanism, intended to contain any spills or leaks. | [noun] A perennial ("wet") or seasonal ("dry") pond constructed in a depression and in which fish are stored, typically for breeding. BURD (7) CAID (7) [noun] A Muslim judge or leader in North Africa and the Middle East. CARD (7) [noun] A playing card. | [noun] (in the plural) Any game using playing cards; a card game. | [noun] A resource or an argument, used to achieve a purpose. | [noun] Material with embedded short wire bristles. | [noun] One of the officials appointed by the pope in the Roman Catholic Church, ranking only below the pope and the patriarchs, constituting the special college which elects the pope. (See Wikipedia article on Catholic cardinals.) CHAD (10) [noun] Small pieces of paper punched out from the edges of continuous stationery, or from ballot papers, paper tape, punched cards, etc. | [noun] One of these pieces of paper. | [noun] (pickup community) A very handsome, usually tall, man whom women find sexually attractive; at times seen as an alpha male of a group. CHID (10) [verb] To admonish in blame; to reproach angrily. | [verb] To utter words of disapprobation and displeasure; to find fault; to contend angrily. | [verb] To make a clamorous noise; to chafe. CLAD (7) [verb] (past tense clad) To clothe. | [verb] (past tense clad or cladded) To cover (with insulation or another material); to surround, envelop. | [verb] (figuratively) To imbue (with a specified quality) CLOD (7) [noun] A lump of something, especially of earth or clay. | [noun] The ground; the earth; a spot of earth or turf. | [noun] A stupid person; a dolt. COED (7) [noun] A young woman who attends college. | [noun] A (generally young) woman, especially on the campus of a college or other educational institute. | [adjective] Of an educational institution, that teaches both males and females. COLD (7) [adjective] (of a thing) Having a low temperature. | [adjective] (of the weather) Causing the air to be cold. | [adjective] (of a person or animal) Feeling the sensation of coldness, especially to the point of discomfort. | [noun] A condition of low temperature. | [adverb] While at low temperature. CORD (7) [noun] A harmonic set of three or more notes that is heard as if sounding simultaneously. | [noun] A straight line between two points of a curve. | [noun] A horizontal member of a truss. CRUD (7) [noun] Dirt, filth or refuse. | [noun] (by extension) Something of poor quality. | [noun] A contemptible person. CUED (7) [verb] Past tense of "cue," meaning to give a signal or prompt to someone. | [verb] To strike a ball with a cue stick in billiards or pool. CURD (7) [noun] The part of milk that coagulates when it sours or is treated with enzymes; used to make cottage cheese, dahi, etc. | [noun] The coagulated part of any liquid. | [noun] The edible flower head of certain brassicaceous plants. DEAD (6) [noun] (with "the", a demonstrative, or a possessive) Those who have died. | [noun] (often with "the") Time when coldness, darkness, or stillness is most intense. | [noun] (usually plural) Sterile mining waste, often present as many large rocks stacked inside the workings. DEED (6) [noun] An action or act; something that is done. | [noun] A brave or noteworthy action; a feat or exploit. | [noun] Action or fact, as opposed to rhetoric or deliberation. DIED (6) [verb] To stop living; to become dead; to undergo death. | [verb] To (stop living and) undergo (a specified death). | [verb] To yearn intensely. DUAD (6) [noun] A pair or couple. | [noun] Dwadasama. | [noun] An unordered pair. DYAD (9) [noun] A set of two elements treated as one; a pair. | [noun] Any set of two different pitch classes. | [noun] A pair of things standing in particular relation; dyadic relation. DYED (9) [verb] To colour with dye, or as if with dye. | [adjective] Coloured or tinted with dye, or as though therewith. EGAD (6) [interjection] A mild exclamation of surprise, contempt, outrage, etc. EKED (9) [verb] Chiefly in the form eke out: to add to, to augment; to increase; to lengthen. EMYD (10) EYED (8) [verb] To observe carefully or appraisingly. | [verb] To appear; to look. | [adjective] Having eyes. FARD (8) [noun] Colour or paint, especially white paint, used on the face; makeup, war-paint. | [verb] To paint, as the cheeks or face. | [verb] To embellish or gloss over. | [noun] Force of movement, impetus, rush; hence, a violent onset. | [noun] A commandment from Allah that a Muslim has to fulfil; a religious duty or obligation. FEED (8) [noun] Food given to (especially herbivorous) animals. | [noun] Something supplied continuously. | [noun] The part of a machine that supplies the material to be operated upon. | [verb] To reward for services performed, or to be performed; to recompense; to hire or keep in hire; hence, to bribe. FEND (8) [noun] Self-support; taking care of one's own well-being. | [verb] To take care of oneself; to take responsibility for one's own well-being. | [verb] (except as "fend for oneself") To defend, to take care of (typically construed with for); to block or push away (typically construed with off). | [noun] An enemy; fiend; the Devil. FEOD (8) FEUD (8) [noun] A state of long-standing mutual hostility. | [noun] A staged rivalry between wrestlers. | [noun] A combination of kindred to avenge injuries or affronts, done or offered to any of their blood, on the offender and all his race. | [noun] An estate granted to a vassal by a feudal lord in exchange for service. FIND (8) [noun] Anything that is found (usually valuable), as objects on an archeological site or a person with talent. | [noun] The act of finding. | [verb] To encounter or discover by accident; to happen upon. FLED (8) [verb] To run away; to escape. | [verb] To escape from. | [verb] To disappear quickly; to vanish. FOLD (8) [noun] An act of folding. | [noun] A bend or crease. | [noun] Any correct move in origami. | [noun] A pen or enclosure for sheep or other domestic animals. | [noun] The Earth; earth; land, country. FOND (8) [verb] To have a foolish affection for, to be fond of. | [verb] To caress; to fondle. | [adjective] (chiefly with of) Having a liking or affection (for). | [noun] The background design in lace-making. FOOD (8) [noun] Any solid substance that can be consumed by living organisms, especially by eating, in order to sustain life. | [noun] A foodstuff. | [noun] Anything that nourishes or sustains. FORD (8) [noun] A location where a stream is shallow and the bottom has good footing, making it possible to cross from one side to the other with no bridge, by walking, riding, or driving through the water; a crossing. | [noun] A stream; a current. | [verb] To cross a stream using a ford. FUND (8) [noun] A sum or source of money. | [noun] An organization managing such money. | [noun] A money-management operation, such as a mutual fund. GAED (6) GAUD (6) [noun] A cheap showy trinket | [noun] Trick; jest; sport | [noun] Deceit; fraud; artifice | [verb] To sport or keep festival. GEED (6) [verb] Of a horse, pack animal, etc.: to move forward; go faster; or turn in a direction away from the driver, typically to the right. | [verb] To cause an animal to move in this way. | [verb] To agree; to harmonize. GELD (6) [noun] Money. | [noun] A female animal, such as a ewe or cow, that is not pregnant. | [verb] To castrate a male (usually an animal). GIED (6) GILD (6) [verb] To cover with a thin layer of gold; to cover with gold leaf. | [verb] To adorn. | [verb] To decorate with a golden surface appearance. | [noun] A group or association mainly of tradespeople made up of merchants, craftspeople, or artisans for mutual aid, particularly in the Middle Ages. GIRD (6) [verb] To bind with a flexible rope or cord. | [verb] To encircle with, or as if with a belt. | [verb] To prepare oneself for an action. | [noun] A sarcastic remark. GLAD (6) [verb] To make glad | [adjective] Pleased, happy, gratified. | [adjective] Having a bright or cheerful appearance; expressing or exciting joy; producing gladness. GLED (6) GOAD (6) [noun] A long, pointed stick used to prod animals. | [noun] That which goads or incites; a stimulus. | [verb] To prod with a goad. GOLD (6) [noun] A heavy yellow elemental metal of great value, with atomic number 79 and symbol Au. | [noun] A coin or coinage made of this material, or supposedly so. | [noun] A deep yellow colour, resembling the metal gold. | [adjective] (of software) In a finished state, ready for manufacturing. GOOD (6) [adjective] (of people) | [adjective] (of capabilities) | [adjective] (properties and qualities) | [adverb] Well; satisfactorily or thoroughly. | [noun] The forces or behaviours that are the enemy of evil. Usually consists of helping others and general benevolence. | [verb] To thrive; fatten; prosper; improve. | [verb] To furnish with dung; manure; fatten with manure; fertilise. GOWD (9) GRAD (6) [noun] A unit of angle equal to 0.9 degrees, so that there are 100 gradians in a right angle. | [noun] A person who is recognized by a university as having completed the requirements of a degree studied at the institution. | [noun] A person who is recognized by a high school as having completed the requirements of a course of study at the school. | [noun] A type of Soviet artillery multiple rocket launcher, or a rocket fired by this. GRID (6) [noun] A rectangular array of squares or rectangles of equal size, such as in a crossword puzzle. | [noun] A system for delivery of electricity, consisting of various substations, transformers and generators, connected by wire. | [noun] A system or structure of distributed computers working mostly on a peer-to-peer basis, used mainly to solve single and complex scientific or technical problems or to process data at high speeds (as in clusters). GUID (6) HAED (8) HAND (8) [noun] The part of the forelimb below the forearm or wrist in a human, and the corresponding part in many other animals. | [noun] That which resembles, or to some extent performs the office of, a human hand. | [noun] In linear measurement: HARD (8) [noun] A firm or paved beach or slope convenient for hauling vessels out of the water. | [noun] A tyre whose compound is softer than superhards, and harder than mediums. | [noun] Crack cocaine. HEAD (8) [noun] The part of the body of an animal or human which contains the brain, mouth and main sense organs. | [noun] The topmost, foremost, or leading part. | [noun] (social, metonymy) A leader or expert. | [adjective] Foremost in rank or importance. HEED (8) [noun] Careful attention. | [verb] To guard, protect. | [verb] To mind; to regard with care; to take notice of; to attend to; to observe. HELD (8) [verb] To grasp or grip. | [verb] To contain or store. | [verb] (heading) To maintain or keep to a position or state. HERD (8) [noun] A number of domestic animals assembled together under the watch or ownership of a keeper. | [noun] Any collection of animals gathered or travelling in a company. | [noun] (now usually derogatory) A crowd, a mass of people; now usually pejorative: a rabble. | [noun] Someone who keeps a group of domestic animals; a herdsman. HIED (8) [verb] To hasten; to go quickly, to hurry. | [verb] To hurry (oneself). HIND (8) [adjective] Located at the rear (most often said of animals' body parts). | [noun] A female deer, especially a red deer at least two years old. | [noun] A spotted food fish of the genus Epinephelus. | [noun] A servant, especially an agricultural labourer. HOED (8) [verb] To care, be anxious, long. | [verb] To cut, dig, scrape, turn, arrange, or clean, with this tool. | [verb] To clear from weeds, or to loosen or arrange the earth about, with a hoe. HOLD (8) [noun] A grasp or grip. | [noun] An act or instance of holding. | [noun] A place where animals are held for safety | [noun] The cargo area of a ship or aircraft (often holds or cargo hold). | [adjective] Gracious; friendly; faithful; true. HOOD (8) [noun] A covering for the head attached to a larger garment such as a jacket or cloak. | [noun] A distinctively coloured fold of material, representing a university degree. | [noun] An enclosure that protects something, especially from above. | [noun] Gangster, thug. | [noun] Neighborhood. | [noun] Person wearing a hoodie. HUED (8) [adjective] Coloured; having a hue. ICED (7) [adjective] With ice added. | [adjective] Very cold, but not necessarily containing ice. | [adjective] Covered with icing. | [verb] To cool with ice, as a beverage. IMID (7) IRED (5) IRID (5) JEED (12) KIND (9) [noun] A type, race or category; a group of entities that have common characteristics such that they may be grouped together. | [noun] A makeshift or otherwise atypical specimen. | [noun] One's inherent nature; character, natural disposition. | [adjective] Having a benevolent, courteous, friendly, generous, gentle, liberal, sympathetic, or warm-hearted nature or disposition, marked by consideration for – and service to – others. LAID (5) [adjective] (of paper) Marked with parallel lines, as if ribbed, from wires in the mould. | [verb] To place down in a position of rest, or in a horizontal position. | [verb] To cause to subside or abate. LAND (5) [noun] The part of Earth which is not covered by oceans or other bodies of water. | [noun] Real estate or landed property; a partitioned and measurable area which is owned and on which buildings can be erected. | [noun] A country or region. | [noun] Lant; urine LARD (5) [noun] Fat from the abdomen of a pig, especially as prepared for use in cooking or pharmacy. | [noun] Fatty meat from a pig; bacon, pork. | [verb] To stuff (meat) with bacon or pork before cooking. LAUD (5) [noun] Praise or glorification. | [noun] Hymn of praise. | [noun] (in the plural, also Lauds) A prayer service following matins. LEAD (5) [noun] A heavy, pliable, inelastic metal element, having a bright, bluish color, but easily tarnished; both malleable and ductile, though with little tenacity. It is easily fusible, forms alloys with other metals, and is an ingredient of solder and type metal. Atomic number 82, symbol Pb (from Latin plumbum). | [noun] A plummet or mass of lead attached to a line, used in sounding depth at sea or to estimate velocity in knots. | [noun] A thin strip of type metal, used to separate lines of type in printing. | [noun] The act of leading or conducting; guidance; direction, course LEND (5) [noun] The lumbar region; loin. | [noun] (of a person or animal) The loins; flank; buttocks. | [verb] To allow to be used by someone temporarily, on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned. LEUD (5) LEWD (8) [verb] To get high on quaalude. | [verb] To express lust; to behave in a lewd manner. | [adjective] Lascivious, sexually promiscuous, rude. LIED (5) [noun] An art song, sung in German and accompanied on the piano. | [verb] To give false information intentionally with intent to deceive. | [verb] To convey a false image or impression. LOAD (5) [noun] A burden; a weight to be carried. | [noun] A worry or concern to be endured, especially in the phrase a load off one's mind. | [noun] A certain number of articles or quantity of material that can be transported or processed at one time. LORD (5) [noun] The master of the servants of a household; the master of a feudal manor | [noun] One possessing similar mastery over others; any feudal superior generally; any nobleman or aristocrat; any chief, prince, or sovereign ruler; in Scotland, a male member of the lowest rank of nobility (the equivalent rank in England is baron) | [noun] One possessing similar mastery in figurative senses (esp. as lord of ~) LOUD (5) [noun] A loud sound or part of a sound. | [noun] High-quality marijuana. | [adjective] (of a sound) Of great intensity. | [adverb] Loudly. MAID (7) [noun] A girl or an unmarried young woman; maiden. | [noun] A female servant or cleaner (short for maidservant). | [noun] A virgin, now female but originally one of either gender. MAUD (7) [noun] A grey plaid once worn by shepherds in Scotland and Northumbria. MEAD (7) [noun] An alcoholic drink fermented from honey and water. | [noun] A drink composed of syrup of sarsaparilla or other flavouring extract, and water, and sometimes charged with carbon dioxide. | [noun] A meadow. MEED (7) [noun] A payment or recompense made for services rendered or in recognition of some achievement; reward, deserts; award. | [noun] A gift; bribe. | [noun] Merit or desert; worth. | [verb] To reward; bribe. MELD (7) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [noun] A combination of cards which is melded. | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MEND (7) [noun] A place, as in clothing, which has been repaired by mending. | [noun] The act of repairing. | [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. MILD (7) [noun] A relatively low-gravity beer, often with a dark colour; mild ale | [adjective] Gentle and not easily angered. | [adjective] (of a rule or punishment) Of only moderate severity; not strict. MIND (7) [noun] The ability for rational thought. | [noun] The ability to be aware of things. | [noun] The ability to remember things. MOLD (7) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. | [noun] A natural substance in the form of a woolly or furry growth of tiny fungi that appears when organic material lies for a long time exposed to (usually warm and moist) air. | [noun] Loose friable soil, rich in humus and fit for planting. MOOD (7) [noun] A mental or emotional state, composure. | [noun] Emotional character (of a work of music, literature, or other art). | [noun] A sullen, gloomy or angry mental state; a bad mood. | [noun] (grammar) A verb form that depends on how its containing clause relates to the speaker’s or writer’s wish, intent, or assertion about reality. NARD (5) [noun] Nardostachys jatamansi, a flowering plant of the valerian family that grows in the Himalayas, used as a perfume, an incense, a sedative, and an herbal medicine. | [noun] A fragrant oil from the plant, formerly much prized. | [noun] American spikenard (Aralia racemosa), a North American perennial herb with an aromatic root. | [noun] (1980s, usually plural) Testicles. NEED (5) [noun] A requirement for something; something needed. | [noun] Lack of means of subsistence; poverty; indigence; destitution. | [verb] To have an absolute requirement for. NERD (5) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A person who is intellectual but generally introverted | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) One who has an intense, obsessive interest in something. | [noun] An unattractive, socially awkward, annoying, undesirable, and/or boring, person; a dork. NURD (5) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A person who is intellectual but generally introverted | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) One who has an intense, obsessive interest in something. | [noun] An unattractive, socially awkward, annoying, undesirable, and/or boring, person; a dork. OHED (8) OPED (7) [verb] To open. ORAD (5) OWED (8) [verb] To be under an obligation to give something back to someone or to perform some action for someone. | [verb] To have debt; to be in debt. | [adjective] That owes. OXID (12) PAID (7) [verb] To give money or other compensation to in exchange for goods or services. | [verb] To discharge, as a debt or other obligation, by giving or doing what is due or required. | [verb] To be profitable for. | [adjective] That is not free of charge; that costs money. PARD (7) [noun] A leopard; a panther. | [noun] Partner; fellow; Used as a friendly appellation PEED (7) [verb] To urinate. | [verb] (mildly vulgar) To drizzle. PEND (7) PIED (7) [adjective] Having two or more colors, especially black and white. | [adjective] Decorated or colored in blotches. | [verb] To spill or mix printing type. | [verb] To hit in the face with a pie, either for comic effect or as a means of protest (see also pieing). PLED (7) [verb] To present (an argument or a plea), especially in a legal case. | [verb] To beg, beseech, or implore. | [verb] To offer by way of excuse. PLOD (7) [noun] A slow or labored walk or other motion or activity. | [verb] To walk or move slowly and heavily or laboriously (+ on, through, over). | [verb] To trudge over or through. | [noun] A puddle. | [noun] (mildly, usually with "the") the police, police officers POND (7) [noun] An inland body of standing water, either natural or man-made, that is smaller than a lake. | [noun] An inland body of standing water of any size that is fed by springs rather than by a river. | [noun] The Atlantic Ocean. Especially in across the pond. | [verb] To ponder. POOD (7) PROD (7) [noun] A device (now often electrical) used to goad livestock into moving. | [noun] A prick or stab with such a pointed instrument. | [noun] A poke. | [noun] A production. QAID (14) QUAD (14) [noun] Four shots of espresso. | [noun] A kind of round-robin tournament between four players, where each participant plays every other participant once. | [noun] The Bible, Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price bound in a single volume. | [noun] A quadrangle (courtyard). | [noun] A quad bike (from quadricycle) | [noun] A blank metal block used to fill short lines of type. QUID (14) [noun] The inherent nature of something. | [noun] A section of the Democratic-Republican Party between 1805 and 1811 (from tertium quid). | [noun] A sovereign or guinea. | [noun] A piece of chewing tobacco. QUOD (14) [noun] A quadrangle or court, as of a prison; a prison. | [noun] Confinement in a prison. RAID (5) [noun] A quick hostile or predatory incursion or invasion in a battle. | [noun] An attack or invasion for the purpose of making arrests, seizing property, or plundering | [noun] An attacking movement. RAND (5) [noun] The border of an area of land, especially marshland. | [noun] A strip of meat; a long fleshy piece of beef, cut from the flank or leg; a sort of steak. | [noun] A border, edge or rim. | [noun] A rocky slope, especially the area over a river valley; specifically, the Rand | [verb] To rant; to storm. READ (5) [noun] A reading or an act of reading, especially an actor's part of a play. | [noun] (in combination) Something to be read; a written work. | [noun] A person's interpretation or impression of something. | [verb] To look at and interpret letters or other information that is written. REDD (6) [verb] To free from entanglement. | [verb] To free from embarrassment. | [verb] To fix boundaries. | [verb] To clean, tidy up, to put in order. | [noun] A spawning nest made by a fish. | [verb] To look at and interpret letters or other information that is written. REED (5) [noun] Any of various types of tall stiff perennial grass-like plants growing together in groups near water. | [noun] The hollow stem of these plants. | [noun] Part of the mouthpiece of certain woodwind instruments, comprising a thin piece of wood or metal which shakes very quickly to produce sound when a musician blows over it. | [verb] To thatch. | [verb] To become extremely excited; fly into a rage. | [noun] The fourth stomach of a ruminant; rennet. REND (5) [noun] A violent separation of parts. | [verb] To separate into parts with force or sudden violence; to split; to burst | [verb] To part or tear off forcibly; to take away by force; to amputate. RIND (5) [noun] Tree bark | [noun] A hard, tough outer layer, particularly on food such as fruit, cheese, etc | [noun] (usually "the") The gall, the crust, the insolence; often as "the immortal rind" | [noun] An iron support fitting used on the upper millstone of a grist mill. ROAD (5) [noun] A way used for travelling between places, originally one wide enough to allow foot passengers and horses to travel, now (US) usually one surfaced with asphalt or concrete and designed to accommodate many vehicles travelling in both directions. In the UK both senses are heard: a country road is the same as a country lane. | [noun] A road; or particularly a car, as a means of transportation. | [noun] A path chosen in life or career. ROOD (5) [noun] A crucifix, cross, especially in a church. | [noun] A measure of land area, equal to a quarter of an acre. | [noun] A measure of five and a half yards in length. RUDD (6) [noun] Any species of the freshwater game fishes of genus Scardinius RUED (5) [verb] To cause to repent of sin or regret some past action. | [verb] To cause to feel sorrow or pity. | [verb] To repent of or regret (some past action or event); to wish that a past action or event had not taken place. RYND (8) SAID (5) [adjective] Mentioned earlier; aforesaid. | [verb] To pronounce. | [verb] To recite. SAND (5) [noun] Rock that is ground more finely than gravel, but is not as fine as silt (more formally, see grain sizes chart), forming beaches and deserts and also used in construction. | [noun] (often in the plural) A beach or other expanse of sand. | [noun] (circa 1920) Personal courage. | [verb] To abrade the surface of (something) with sand or sandpaper in order to smooth or clean it. | [noun] A sandpiper. SARD (5) [noun] A variety of carnelian, of a rich reddish yellow or brownish red color. | [noun] Any of various brownish red earth pigments formerly used in cosmetics and painting; has more yellow, hardly any blue (see puce), is lighter than russet and darker than traditional carnelian. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with (a woman). SCAD (7) [noun] Any of several fish, of the family Carangidae, from the western Atlantic. | [noun] (in the plural) A large number or quantity. SCUD (7) [noun] The act of scudding. | [noun] Clouds or rain driven by the wind. | [noun] A loose formation of small ragged cloud fragments (or fog) not attached to a larger higher cloud layer. SEED (5) [noun] A fertilized and ripened ovule, containing an embryonic plant. | [noun] Any small seed-like fruit. | [noun] Any propagative portion of a plant which may be sown, such as true seeds, seed-like fruits, tubers, or bulbs. | [verb] (stative) To perceive or detect with the eyes, or as if by sight. SEND (5) [noun] The rising motion of water as a wave passes; a surge; the upward angular displacement of a vessel, opposed to pitch, the correlative downward movement. | [noun] An operation in which data is transmitted. | [noun] A messenger, especially one sent to fetch the bride. SHAD (8) [noun] Any one of several species of food fishes that make up the genus Alosa in the family Clupeidae, to which the herrings also belong; river herring. | [noun] The bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix). SHED (8) [verb] To part, separate or divide. | [verb] To part with, separate from, leave off; cast off, let fall, be divested of. | [verb] To pour; to make flow. | [noun] An area between upper and lower warp yarns through which the weft is woven. | [noun] A slight or temporary structure built to shade or shelter something; a structure usually open in front; an outbuilding; a hut. SHOD (8) [adjective] Wearing shoes. | [adjective] Having tires equipped. | [verb] To put shoes on one's feet. SILD (5) [noun] Any young herring (other than a sprat), especially if canned and processed in Scandinavia for sale as a sardine. SKID (9) [noun] An out-of-control sliding motion as would result from applying the brakes too hard in a car. | [noun] A shoe or clog, as of iron, attached to a chain, and placed under the wheel of a wagon to prevent its turning when descending a steep hill; a drag; a skidpan. | [noun] (by extension) A hook attached to a chain, used for the same purpose. | [noun] A stepchild. SLED (5) [noun] A small, light vehicle with runners, used recreationally, mostly by children, for sliding down snow-covered hills. (A "sled" in this sense is not pulled by an animal as a "sleigh" is.) | [noun] A vehicle on runners, used for conveying loads over the snow or ice. (contrast "sleigh", which is larger) | [noun] A snowmobile. SLID (5) [verb] To (cause to) move in continuous contact with a surface | [verb] To move on a low-friction surface. | [verb] To drop down and skid into a base. SNED (5) [verb] To lop. SOLD (5) [verb] (ditransitive) To transfer goods or provide services in exchange for money. | [verb] To be sold. | [verb] To promote a product or service. | [noun] Salary; military pay SORD (5) [noun] A flock of mallards | [noun] A layer of earth into which grass has grown; turf; sod. | [noun] An expanse of land covered in grass; a lawn or meadow. SPED (7) [verb] To succeed; to prosper, be lucky. | [verb] To help someone, to give them fortune; to aid or favour. | [verb] To go fast. SPUD (7) [noun] A potato. | [noun] A hole in a sock. | [noun] A type of short nut (fastener) threaded on both ends. STUD (5) [noun] A male animal, especially a stud horse (stallion), kept for breeding. | [noun] A female animal, especially a studmare (broodmare), kept for breeding. | [noun] (also by extension) A group of such animals. | [noun] A small object that protrudes from something; an ornamental knob. | [noun] A person who studies or learns about a particular subject. SUDD (6) [noun] (Central Africa) A floating mass of plant matter, such as reeds, which obstructs the passage of boats. SUED (5) [verb] To file a legal action against someone, generally a non-criminal action. | [verb] To seek by request; to make application; to petition; to entreat; to plead. | [verb] (of a hawk) To clean (the beak, etc.). SURD (5) [noun] An irrational number, especially one expressed using the √ symbol. | [noun] A voiceless consonant. | [adjective] Lacking the sense of hearing; deaf. TEED (5) [verb] To draw; lead. | [verb] To draw away; go; proceed. | [verb] To place a ball on a tee TEND (5) [verb] (Old English law) To make a tender of; to offer or tender. | [verb] (followed by a to-infinitive) To be likely, or probable to do something, or to have a certain habit or leaning. | [verb] To contribute to or toward some outcome. | [verb] (with to) To look after (e.g. an ill person.) | [verb] To kindle; ignite; set on fire; light; inflame; burn. THUD (8) [noun] The sound of a dull impact. | [noun] Republic F-105 Thunderchief jet ground attack fighter. | [verb] To make the sound of a dull impact. TIED (5) [verb] To twist (a string, rope, or the like) around itself securely. | [verb] To form (a knot or the like) in a string or the like. | [verb] To attach or fasten (one thing to another) by string or the like. TOAD (5) [noun] An amphibian, a kind of frog (order Anura) with shorter hindlegs and a drier, wartier skin, many in family Bufonidae. | [noun] A contemptible or unpleasant person. | [noun] An ugly person. TOED (5) [adjective] (chiefly in combination) Having (a specified number or type of) toes. | [verb] To furnish (a stocking, etc.) with a toe. | [verb] To touch, tap or kick with the toes. TOLD (5) [verb] (archaic outside of idioms) To count, reckon, or enumerate. | [verb] To narrate. | [verb] To convey by speech; to say. TRAD (5) [noun] Traditional climbing. | [noun] Irish traditional music | [noun] A traditionalist. TROD (5) [verb] To step or walk (on or over something); to trample. | [verb] To step or walk upon. | [verb] To beat or press with the feet. | [verb] To walk heavily or laboriously; plod; tread | [noun] A track or pathway. TURD (5) [noun] (mildly) A piece of solid animal or human feces. | [noun] A worthless person or thing. USED (5) [verb] To utilize or employ. | [verb] To accustom; to habituate. (Now common only in participial form. Uses the same pronunciation as the noun; see usage notes.) | [verb] (except in past tense) To habitually do; to be wont to do. (Now chiefly in past-tense forms; see used to.) VELD (8) [noun] The open pasture land or grassland of South Africa and neighboring countries. VEND (8) [noun] The act of vending or selling; a sale. | [noun] The total sales of coal from a colliery. | [verb] To hawk or to peddle merchandise. | [noun] The letter Ꝩ/ꝩ, used in Old Norse, related to the rune wynn (ᚹ, whence also Latin-script Ƿ/ƿ) but with the bowl open at the top, like a y. VIED (8) [verb] To fight for superiority; to contend; to compete eagerly so as to gain something. | [verb] To rival (something), etc. | [verb] To do or produce in emulation, competition, or rivalry; to put in competition; to bandy. VOID (8) [noun] An empty space; a vacuum. | [noun] An extended region of space containing no galaxies | [noun] A collection of adjacent vacancies inside a crystal lattice. | [noun] A voidee. WAND (8) [noun] A hand-held narrow rod, usually used for pointing or instructing, or as a traditional emblem of authority. | [noun] (by extension) An instrument shaped like a wand, such as a curling wand. | [noun] A magic wand. WARD (8) [noun] A warden; a guard; a guardian or watchman. | [noun] Protection, defence. | [noun] A protected place, and by extension, a type of subdivision. | [verb] To keep in safety, to watch over, to guard. WEED (8) [noun] Any plant regarded as unwanted at the place where, and at the time when it is growing. | [noun] Short for duckweed. | [noun] Underbrush; low shrubs. | [verb] To remove unwanted vegetation from a cultivated area. | [noun] A garment or piece of clothing. | [noun] A sudden illness or relapse, often attended with fever, which befalls those who are about to give birth, are giving birth, or have recently given birth or miscarried or aborted. | [verb] To urinate. WELD (8) [noun] A herb (Reseda luteola) related to mignonette, growing in Europe, and to some extent in America, used to make a yellow dye. | [noun] The yellow coloring matter or dye extracted from this plant. | [noun] The joint made by welding. | [verb] To wield. WEND (8) [noun] A large extent of ground; a perambulation; a circuit. | [verb] To turn; change. | [verb] To direct (one's way or course); pursue one's way; proceed upon some course or way. WHID (11) WILD (8) [noun] The undomesticated state of a wild animal | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) a wilderness | [verb] To commit random acts of assault, robbery, and rape in an urban setting, especially as a gang. | [noun] A wood or forest WIND (8) [noun] Real or perceived movement of atmospheric air usually caused by convection or differences in air pressure. | [noun] Air artificially put in motion by any force or action. | [noun] The ability to breathe easily. | [noun] The act of winding or turning; a turn; a bend; a twist. WOAD (8) [noun] The plant Isatis tinctoria. | [noun] The blue dye made from the leaves of the plant. | [verb] To plant or cultivate woad. WOLD (8) [noun] An unforested or deforested plain, a grassland, a moor. | [noun] A wood or forest, especially a wooded upland. | [adjective] Old. WOOD (8) [noun] The substance making up the central part of the trunk and branches of a tree. Used as a material for construction, to manufacture various items, etc. or as fuel. | [noun] The wood of a particular species of tree. | [noun] A forested or wooded area. | [adjective] Mad, insane, crazed. | [noun] (sometimes offensive, of a person) A peckerwood. WORD (8) [noun] The smallest unit of language that has a particular meaning and can be expressed by itself; the smallest discrete, meaningful unit of language. (contrast morpheme.) | [noun] Something like such a unit of language: | [noun] The fact or act of speaking, as opposed to taking action. . | [verb] (except in set phrases) To be, become, betide. WYND (11) [noun] A narrow lane, alley or path, especially one between houses. | [noun] A stack of hay. YALD (8) YARD (8) [noun] A small, usually uncultivated area adjoining or (now especially) within the precincts of a house or other building. | [noun] The property surrounding one's house, typically dominated by one's lawn. | [noun] An enclosed area designated for a specific purpose, e.g. on farms, railways etc. | [noun] A unit of length equal to 3 feet in the US customary and British imperial systems of measurement, equal to precisely 0.9144 m since 1959 (US) or 1963 (UK). | [noun] 109, A short scale billion; a long scale thousand millions or milliard. YAUD (8) YELD (8) YIRD (8) YOND (8) [adjective] Further; more distant | [adjective] Yonder | [adverb] Yonder | [adjective] Furious; mad; angry; fierce.

5-Letter Words (582)

AAHED (9) ACHED (11) [verb] To suffer pain; to be the source of, or be in, pain, especially continued dull pain; to be distressed. | [verb] To cause someone or something to suffer pain. ACNED (8) ACOLD (8) [adjective] Chilled or cold; affected by cold. | [adverb] In a cold manner; coldly. ACRED (8) [adjective] Having acres; measured or valued in acres. ACRID (8) [adjective] Sharp and harsh, or bitter and not to the taste. | [adjective] Causing heat and irritation. | [adjective] Caustic; bitter; bitterly irritating. ACTED (8) [verb] To do something. | [verb] To do (something); to perform. | [verb] To perform a theatrical role. ADDED (8) [verb] To join or unite (e.g. one thing to another, or as several particulars) so as to increase the number, augment the quantity or enlarge the magnitude, or so as to form into one aggregate. | [verb] To sum up; to put together mentally. | [verb] To combine elements of (something) into one quantity. AHEAD (9) [adverb] In or to the front; in advance; onward. | [adverb] In the direction one is facing or moving. | [adverb] In or for the future. AHOLD (9) [verb] To grasp or hold onto something. | [noun] A grip or hold on something. AIDED (7) [verb] To provide support to; to further the progress of; to help; to assist. | [verb] To climb with the use of aids such as pitons. AILED (6) [verb] To cause to suffer; to trouble, afflict. (Now chiefly in interrogative or indefinite constructions.) | [verb] To be ill; to suffer; to be troubled. AIMED (8) [verb] To point or direct a missile, or a weapon which propels as missile, towards an object or spot with the intent of hitting it | [verb] To direct the intention or purpose; to attempt the accomplishment of a purpose; to try to gain; to endeavor;—followed by at, or by an infinitive | [verb] To direct or point (e.g. a weapon), at a particular object; to direct, as a missile, an act, or a proceeding, at, to, or against an object AIRED (6) [verb] To bring (something) into contact with the air, so as to freshen or dry it. | [verb] To let fresh air into a room or a building, to ventilate. | [verb] To discuss varying viewpoints on a given topic. ALAND (6) ALCID (8) [noun] A bird of the family Alcidae, including auks, auklets, razorbills, dovekies, guillemots, and puffins. ALGID (7) ALKYD (13) [noun] A synthetic resin derived from a reaction between alcohol and certain acids, used as a base for many laminates, paints and coatings. ALLOD (6) [noun] Allodium ALMUD (8) ALOUD (6) [adjective] Spoken out loud. | [adverb] With a loud voice, or great noise; loudly; audibly. | [adverb] Audibly, as opposed to silently/quietly. AMEND (8) [noun] (usually in the plural) An act of righting a wrong; compensation. | [verb] To make better; improve. | [verb] To become better. ANTED (6) [verb] To pay the ante in poker. Often used as ante up. | [verb] To make an investment in money, effort, or time before knowing one's chances. | [verb] To rub insects, especially ants, on one's body, perhaps to control parasites or clean feathers. APHID (11) [noun] Sapsucking pest insect of the superfamily Aphidoidea; an aphidian. ARCED (8) [verb] To move following a curved path. | [verb] To shape into an arc; to hold in the form of an arc. | [verb] To form an electrical arc. ARMED (8) [verb] To take by the arm; to take up in one's arms. | [verb] To supply with armour or (later especially) weapons. | [verb] To prepare a tool or a weapon for action; to activate. | [adjective] (chiefly in combination) Having an arm or arms, often of a specified number or type. AROID (6) [noun] Any plant of the family Araceae, found chiefly in the tropics. ASHED (9) [verb] Past tense of ash, meaning to cover with ash or to reduce to ash. | [verb] To remove ash from something, such as a cigarette. ASKED (10) [verb] To request (information, or an answer to a question). | [verb] To put forward (a question) to be answered. | [verb] To interrogate or enquire of (a person). AUDAD (7) AVOID (9) [verb] To try not to meet or communicate with (a person); to shun | [verb] To keep away from; to keep clear of; to stay away from | [verb] To try not to do something or to have something happen AWARD (9) [noun] A judgment, sentence, or final decision. Specifically: The decision of arbitrators in a case submitted. | [noun] The paper containing the decision of arbitrators; that which is warded. | [noun] A trophy or medal; something that denotes an accomplishment, especially in a competition. A prize or honor based on merit. AWNED (9) [adjective] Having awns; furnished with awns (bristle-like appendages on grain or grass). AXLED (13) [adjective] Having an axle or axles; equipped with an axle. BAAED (8) [verb] To make the characteristic cry of a sheep. BAKED (12) [verb] (with person as subject) To cook (something) in an oven. | [verb] (with baked thing as subject) To be cooked in an oven. | [verb] To be warmed to drying and hardening. BALED (8) [verb] To remove water from a boat with buckets etc. BANED (8) [verb] Past tense of bane, meaning to cause harm, ruin, or distress to something or someone. BARED (8) [verb] To uncover; to reveal. BASED (8) [verb] To give as its foundation or starting point; to lay the foundation of. | [verb] To be located (at a particular place). | [verb] (acrobatics, cheerleading) To act as a base; to be the person supporting the flyer. | [adjective] (of a person) Not caring what others think about one's personality, style, or behavior; focused on maintaining individuality. BATED (8) [verb] To reduce the force of something; to abate. | [verb] To restrain, usually with the sense of being in anticipation | [verb] (sometimes figurative) To cut off, remove, take away. BAYED (11) [verb] To howl. | [verb] To bark at; hence, to follow with barking; to bring or drive to bay. | [verb] To pursue noisily, like a pack of hounds. BEARD (8) [noun] Facial hair on the chin, cheeks, jaw and neck. | [noun] The cluster of small feathers at the base of the beak in some birds. | [noun] The appendages to the jaw in some cetaceans, and to the mouth or jaws of some fishes. BIDED (9) [verb] To bear; to endure; to tolerate. | [verb] To dwell or reside in a location; to abide. | [verb] To wait; to be in expectation; to stay; to remain. BIELD (8) [noun] Shelter or protection from wind or weather. | [verb] To shelter or protect from the elements. BIFID (11) [adjective] Cleft; divided into two lobes. BIKED (12) [verb] To ride a bike. | [verb] To travel by bike. | [verb] To transport by bicycle BIPED (10) [noun] An animal, being or construction that goes about on two feet (or two legs). BIPOD (10) [noun] A two-legged stand. BLAND (8) [adjective] Having a soothing effect; not irritating or stimulating. | [adjective] Lacking in taste, flavor, or vigor. | [adjective] Lacking interest; boring; dull. | [verb] To mix; blend; mingle. | [noun] Mixture; union. BLEED (8) [noun] An incident of bleeding, as in haemophilia. | [noun] A narrow edge around a page layout, to be printed but cut off afterwards (added to allow for slight misalignment, especially with pictures that should run to the edge of the finished sheet). | [noun] (sound recording) The situation where sound is picked up by a microphone from a source other than that which is intended. BLEND (8) [noun] A mixture of two or more things. | [noun] A word formed by combining two other words; a grammatical contamination, portmanteau word. | [verb] To mingle; to mix; to unite intimately; to pass or shade insensibly into each other. BLIND (8) [noun] A covering for a window to keep out light. The covering may be made of cloth or of narrow slats that can block light or allow it to pass. | [noun] A destination sign mounted on a public transport vehicle displaying the route destination, number, name and/or via points, etc. | [noun] Any device intended to conceal or hide. BLOND (8) [noun] A pale yellowish (golden brown) color, especially said of hair color. | [noun] A person with this hair color. | [verb] To color or dye blond BLOOD (8) [noun] A member of the Los Angeles gang The Bloods. | [noun] A vital liquid flowing in the bodies of many types of animals that usually conveys nutrients and oxygen. In vertebrates, it is colored red by hemoglobin, is conveyed by arteries and veins, is pumped by the heart and is usually generated in bone marrow. | [noun] A family relationship due to birth, such as that between siblings; contrasted with relationships due to marriage or adoption (see blood relative, blood relation, by blood). BLUED (8) [verb] To make or become blue. | [verb] To treat the surface of steel so that it is passivated chemically and becomes more resistant to rust. | [verb] (laundry) To brighten by treating with blue (laundry aid) BOARD (8) [noun] A relatively long, wide and thin piece of any material, usually wood or similar, often for use in construction or furniture-making. | [noun] A device (e.g., switchboard) containing electrical switches and other controls and designed to control lights, sound, telephone connections, etc. | [noun] A flat surface with markings for playing a board game. | [noun] A rebound. BODED (9) [verb] To indicate by signs, as future events; to be an omen of; to portend or foretell. | [verb] (followed by "well", "ill", "no good", etc.) To betoken or augur something good or bad that will happen in the future. BONED (8) [verb] To prepare (meat, etc) by removing the bone or bones from. | [verb] To fertilize with bone. | [verb] To put whalebone into. BOOED (8) [verb] To shout extended boos derisively. | [verb] To shout extended boos at, as a form of derision. BORED (8) [verb] To inspire boredom in somebody. | [verb] To make a hole through something. | [verb] To make a hole with, or as if with, a boring instrument; to cut a circular hole by the rotary motion of a tool. BOUND (8) [verb] To tie; to confine by any ligature. | [verb] To cohere or stick together in a mass. | [verb] To be restrained from motion, or from customary or natural action, as by friction. | [adjective] Ready, prepared. | [noun] (often used in plural) A boundary, the border which one must cross in order to enter or leave a territory. | [verb] To surround a territory or other geographical entity. | [noun] A sizeable jump, great leap. BOVID (11) [noun] An animal of the family Bovidae (such as the antelope, gazelle, goat, and sheep). BOWED (11) [verb] To play music on (a stringed) instrument using a bow. | [verb] To become bent or curved. | [verb] To make something bend or curve. | [verb] To play music on (a stringed) instrument using a bow. BOXED (15) [verb] To place inside a box; to pack in one or more boxes. | [verb] Usually followed by in: to surround and enclose in a way that restricts movement; to corner, to hem in. | [verb] To mix two containers of paint of similar colour to ensure that the color is identical. BRAID (8) [noun] A sudden movement; a jerk, a wrench. | [noun] A weave of three or more strands of fibers, ribbons, cords or hair often for decoration. | [noun] A stranded wire composed of a number of smaller wires twisted together | [adjective] Deceitful. BRAND (8) [noun] A conflagration; a flame. | [noun] A piece of burning wood or peat, or a glowing cinder. | [noun] A torch used for signaling. BREAD (8) [noun] A foodstuff made by baking dough made from cereals. | [noun] Any variety of bread. | [noun] Money. | [noun] Breadth. | [verb] To make broad; spread. | [noun] A piece of embroidery; a braid. BREED (8) [noun] All animals or plants of the same species or subspecies. | [noun] A race or lineage; offspring or issue. | [noun] A group of people with shared characteristics. BROAD (8) [noun] A shallow lake, one of a number of bodies of water in eastern Norfolk and Suffolk. | [noun] A lathe tool for turning down the insides and bottoms of cylinders. | [noun] A British gold coin worth 20 shillings, issued by the Commonwealth of England in 1656. | [noun] A prostitute, a woman of loose morals. BROOD (8) [noun] The young of certain animals, especially a group of young birds or fowl hatched at one time by the same mother. | [noun] The young of any egg-laying creature, especially if produced at the same time. | [noun] The eggs and larvae of social insects such as bees, ants and some wasps, especially when gathered together in special brood chambers or combs within the colony. BUILD (8) [noun] The physique of a human body; constitution or structure of a human body. | [noun] Any of various versions of a software product as it is being developed for release to users. | [noun] Any structure, such as a building, statue, pool or forest, created by the player. BUSED (8) [verb] To transport via a motor bus. | [verb] To transport students to school, often to a more distant school for the purposes of achieving racial integration. | [verb] To travel by bus. CAGED (9) [verb] To confine in a cage; to put into and keep in a cage. | [verb] To restrict someone's movement or creativity. | [verb] To track individual responses to direct mail, either to maintain and develop mailing lists or to identify people who are not eligible to vote because they do not reside at the registered addresses. CAIRD (8) [noun] A person of low social status or a beggar, particularly in Scotland. | [noun] A tinker or traveling mender in Scotland. CAKED (12) [verb] Coat (something) with a crust of solid material. | [verb] To form into a cake, or mass. | [verb] To cackle like a goose. CANED (8) [verb] To strike or beat with a cane or similar implement | [verb] To destroy; to comprehensively defeat | [verb] To do something well, in a competent fashion | [adjective] Filled with white flakes; mothery; said of vinegar when containing mother. CANID (8) [noun] Any member of the family Canidae, including dogs, wolves, foxes, coyotes and jackals. CAPED (10) [adjective] Wearing a cape or capes. | [adjective] (in compounds) Wearing a cape of a specified kind. | [adjective] Cancelled CARED (8) [verb] To be concerned (about), to have an interest (in); to feel concern (about). | [verb] (polite) To want, to desire; to like; to be inclined towards. | [verb] (with for) To look after or look out for. CASED (8) [verb] To propose hypothetical cases. | [verb] To place (an item or items of manufacture) into a box, as in preparation for shipment. | [verb] To cover or protect with, or as if with, a case; to enclose. CAULD (8) [noun] A cauldron or large pot, especially one used for cooking or heating water. | [adjective] Cold (Scottish dialect). CAVED (11) [verb] To surrender. | [verb] To collapse. | [verb] To hollow out or undermine. CAWED (11) [verb] To make the harsh cry of a crow, rook, or raven. CEBID (10) [noun] Any member of the Cebidae. CEDED (9) [verb] To give up; yield to another. | [verb] To give way. CERED (8) [verb] Past tense of "cere," meaning to wrap in a cerecloth or to cover with wax. CHARD (11) [noun] An edible leafy vegetable, Beta vulgaris subsp. cicla, with a slightly bitter taste. | [noun] Artichoke leaves and shoots, blanched to eat. CHILD (11) [noun] A person who has not yet reached adulthood, whether natural (puberty), cultural (initiation), or legal (majority) | [noun] (specifically) A female child, a girl. | [noun] (with possessive) One's direct descendant by birth, regardless of age; a son or daughter. | [verb] To give birth; to beget or procreate. CHORD (11) [noun] A harmonic set of three or more notes that is heard as if sounding simultaneously. | [noun] A straight line between two points of a curve. | [noun] A horizontal member of a truss. CITED (8) [verb] To quote; to repeat, as a passage from a book, or the words of another. | [verb] To list the source(s) from which one took information, words or literary or verbal context. | [verb] To summon officially or authoritatively to appear in court. CLOUD (8) [noun] A rock; boulder; a hill. | [noun] A visible mass of water droplets suspended in the air. | [noun] Any mass of dust, steam or smoke resembling such a mass. CLUED (8) [verb] To provide with a clue. | [verb] To provide someone with information which he or she lacks (often used with "in" or "up"). CODED (9) [verb] To write software programs. | [verb] To add codes to a dataset. | [verb] To categorise by assigning identifiers from a schedule, for example CPT coding for medical insurance purposes. COKED (12) [verb] To produce coke from coal. | [verb] To turn into coke. | [verb] To add deleterious carbon deposits as a byproduct of combustion. COLED (8) CONED (8) [verb] To fashion into the shape of a cone. | [verb] To form a cone shape. | [verb] (frequently followed by "off") To segregate or delineate an area using traffic cones COOED (8) [verb] To make a soft murmuring sound, as a pigeon. | [verb] To speak in an admiring fashion, to be enthusiastic about. COPED (10) [verb] To deal effectively with something, especially if difficult. | [verb] To cut and form a mitred joint in wood or metal. | [verb] To clip the beak or talons of a bird. CORED (8) [verb] To remove the core of an apple or other fruit. | [verb] To extract a sample with a drill. COTED (8) [verb] Past tense of "cote," meaning to pass by or overtake. | [verb] Past tense of "cote," meaning to go along the side of. COULD (8) [verb] (auxiliary verb, defective) To know how to; to be able to. | [verb] (modal auxiliary verb, defective) May; to be permitted or enabled to. | [verb] (modal auxiliary verb, defective) To have the potential to; be possible. COVED (11) [verb] To arch over; to build in a hollow concave form; to make in the form of a cove. | [verb] To brood, cover, over, or sit over, as birds their eggs. COWED (11) [verb] (chiefly in the passive voice) To intimidate; to daunt the spirits or courage of. | [adjective] Frightened into submission. COXED (15) [verb] To act as coxswain for. | [adjective] Having a cox COYED (11) CREED (8) [noun] That which is believed; accepted doctrine, especially religious doctrine; a particular set of beliefs; any summary of principles or opinions professed or adhered to. | [noun] (specifically) A reading or statement of belief that summarizes the faith it represents; a confession of faith for public use, especially one which is brief and comprehensive. | [noun] The fact of believing; belief, faith. CRIED (8) [verb] To shed tears; to weep. | [verb] To utter loudly; to call out; to declare publicly. | [verb] To shout, scream, yell. CROWD (11) [noun] A group of people congregated or collected into a close body without order. | [noun] Several things collected or closely pressed together; also, some things adjacent to each other. | [noun] (with definite article) The so-called lower orders of people; the populace, vulgar. | [noun] (now dialectal) A fiddle. CUBED (10) [verb] To raise to the third power; to determine the result of multiplying by itself twice. | [verb] To form into the shape of a cube. | [verb] To cut into cubes. CUPID (10) [noun] The Roman god of love, typically depicted as a winged boy with a bow and arrows. | [noun] A representation of this god used as a decorative motif. | [noun] A cherub or small angelic figure. CURED (8) [verb] To restore to health. | [verb] To bring (a disease or its bad effects) to an end. | [verb] To cause to be rid of (a defect). CYCAD (13) [noun] Any plant of the division Cycadophyta, having a stout and woody trunk with a crown of large, hard and stiff, evergreen leaves. DARED (7) [verb] To have enough courage (to do something). | [verb] To defy or challenge (someone to do something) | [verb] To have enough courage to meet or do something, go somewhere, etc.; to face up to DATED (7) [verb] To note the time or place of writing or executing; to express in an instrument the time of its execution. | [verb] To note or fix the time of (an event); to give the date of. | [verb] To determine the age of something. DAWED (10) DAZED (16) [verb] To stun or stupefy, for example with bright light, with a blow, with cold, or with fear | [adjective] In a state of shock or confusion. | [adjective] Stunned. DEKED (11) [verb] To avoid, go around, or dodge an object, person, or conversation topic; often by using trickery. | [verb] To execute a deke in ice hockey or other sports. DELED (7) [verb] (usually imperative) to delete DEWED (10) [verb] To wet with, or as if with, dew; to moisten. DICED (9) [verb] To play dice. | [verb] To cut into small cubes. | [verb] To ornament with squares, diamonds, or cubes. DIKED (11) [verb] Alternative form of dyke: to dig a ditch; to raise an earthwork; etc. | [verb] To be well dressed. DINED (7) [verb] To eat; to eat dinner or supper. | [verb] To give a dinner to; to furnish with the chief meal; to feed. | [verb] To dine upon; to have to eat. DIVED (10) [verb] To swim under water. | [verb] To jump into water head-first. | [verb] To jump headfirst toward the ground or into another substance. DOLED (7) [verb] To distribute in small amounts; to share out small portions of a meager resource. DOMED (9) [adjective] In the form of a dome. DOPED (9) [verb] To affect with drugs. | [verb] To treat with dope (lubricant, etc.). | [verb] To add a dopant such as arsenic to (a pure semiconductor such as silicon). DOSED (7) DOTED (7) [verb] (usually with on) To be weakly or foolishly fond of somebody. | [verb] To act in a foolish manner; to be senile. | [adjective] Stupid; foolish DOWED (10) DOZED (16) [verb] To sleep lightly or briefly; to nap, snooze. | [verb] To make dull; to stupefy. | [verb] To bulldoze. DREAD (7) [noun] Great fear in view of impending evil; fearful apprehension of danger; anticipatory terror. | [noun] Reverential or respectful fear; awe. | [noun] Somebody or something dreaded. DREED (7) [verb] (North England and Scotland) To suffer; bear; endure; put up with; undergo. | [verb] (North England and Scotland) To endure; brook; be able to do or continue. DRIED (7) [adjective] Without water or moisture, said of something that has previously been wet or moist; resulting from the process of drying. | [adjective] Usually of foods: cured, preserved by drying. | [adjective] Sold raw and unprocessed. DRUID (7) [noun] One of an order of priests among certain groups of Celts before the adoption of Abrahamic religions. DRYAD (10) [noun] In Greek myth, a female tree spirit. DUDED (8) [verb] To address someone as dude. | [verb] To take a vacation in a dude ranch. | [verb] Usually followed by up: to dress up, to wear smart or special clothes. DUKED (11) DUPED (9) [verb] To swindle, deceive, or trick. | [verb] To duplicate. DURED (7) DYKED (14) [adjective] Containing a dyke (ditch) EARED (6) EASED (6) [verb] To free (something) from pain, worry, agitation, etc. | [verb] To alleviate, assuage or lessen (pain). | [verb] To give respite to (someone). EAVED (9) EBBED (10) [verb] To flow back or recede | [verb] To fall away or decline | [verb] To fish with stakes and nets that serve to prevent the fish from getting back into the sea with the ebb ECHED (11) EDGED (8) [verb] To move an object slowly and carefully in a particular direction. | [verb] To move slowly and carefully in a particular direction. | [verb] (usually in the form 'just edge') To win by a small margin. EGGED (8) [verb] To throw eggs at. | [verb] To dip in or coat with beaten egg. | [verb] To distort a circular cross-section (as in a tube) to an elliptical or oval shape, either inadvertently or intentionally. ELAND (6) [noun] A genus of large South African antelope (Taurotragus), valued both for its hide and flesh. EMBED (10) [noun] An embedded reporter or journalist, such as a war reporter assigned to and travelling with a military unit, or a political reporter assigned to follow and report on the campaign of a candidate. | [noun] An element of an advertisement, etc. serving as a subliminal message. | [noun] An item embedded in another document. EMEND (8) [verb] To correct and revise (text or a document). ENDED (7) [verb] To come to an end | [verb] To finish, terminate. | [adjective] (in combination) Having (a specified kind or number of) ends. EPHOD (11) [noun] A priestly apron, or breastplate, described in the Bible in Exodus 28: vi - xxx, which only the chief priest of ancient Israel was allowed to wear. EQUID (15) [noun] Any animal of the taxonomic family Equidae, including any equine (horse, zebra, ass, mule, etc.) ERRED (6) [verb] To make a mistake. | [verb] To sin. | [verb] To stray. | [verb] To utter the word "er" when hesitating in speech, found in the phrase um and er. FACED (11) [verb] (of a person or animal) To position oneself or itself so as to have one's face closest to (something). | [verb] (of an object) To have its front closest to, or in the direction of (something else). | [verb] To cause (something) to turn or present a face or front, as in a particular direction. | [adjective] Drunk FADED (10) [verb] To grow weak; to lose strength; to decay; to perish gradually; to wither, as a plant. | [verb] To lose freshness, color, or brightness; to become faint in hue or tint; hence, to be wanting in color. | [verb] To sink away; to disappear gradually; to grow dim; to vanish. FAKED (13) [verb] To cheat; to swindle; to steal; to rob. | [verb] To modify fraudulently, so as to make an object appear better or other than it really is | [verb] To make a counterfeit, to counterfeit, to forge, to falsify. FAMED (11) [adjective] Having fame; famous or noted. FARAD (9) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical capacitance; the capacitance of a capacitor in which one coulomb of charge causes a potential difference of one volt across the capacitor. Symbol: F FARED (9) [verb] To go, travel. | [verb] To get along, succeed (well or badly); to be in any state, or pass through any experience, good or bad; to be attended with any circumstances or train of events. | [verb] To eat, dine. FATED (9) [verb] To foreordain or predetermine, to make inevitable. | [adjective] Foreordained, predetermined, established in advance by fate. FAULD (9) FAXED (16) [adjective] Having a head of hair; hairy. | [verb] To send a document via a fax machine. FAYED (12) FAZED (18) [verb] To frighten or cause hesitation; to daunt, put off (usually used in the negative); to disconcert, to perturb. | [adjective] Hesitant, frightened; daunted, disconcerted; perturbed, put off (usually used in the negative). FELID (9) [noun] Any member of the cat family (Felidae). FETED (9) [verb] (usually in the passive) To celebrate (a person). | [adjective] Honoured; celebrated. FETID (9) [noun] The foul-smelling asafoetida plant, or its extracts. | [adjective] Foul-smelling, stinking. FEUED (9) [verb] To bring (land) under the system of feudal tenure. FIELD (9) [noun] A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; open country. | [noun] A wide, open space that is usually used to grow crops or to hold farm animals. | [noun] A place where competitive matches are carried out. FIEND (9) [noun] A devil or demon; a malignant or diabolical being; an evil spirit. | [noun] A very evil person. | [noun] An enemy; a foe. FIFED (12) [verb] To play this instrument. FILED (9) [verb] To commit (official papers) to some office. | [verb] To place in an archive in a logical place and order | [verb] To store a file (aggregation of data) on a storage medium such as a disc or another computer. FINED (9) [verb] To make finer, purer, or cleaner; to purify or clarify. | [verb] To become finer, purer, or cleaner. | [verb] To make finer, or less coarse, as in bulk, texture, etc. FIORD (9) [noun] A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs. FIRED (9) [verb] To set (something, often a building) on fire. | [verb] To heat as with fire, but without setting on fire, as ceramic, metal objects, etc. | [verb] To drive away by setting a fire. FIXED (16) [verb] To pierce; now generally replaced by transfix. | [verb] To attach; to affix; to hold in place or at a particular time. | [verb] To mend, to repair. FJELD (16) FJORD (16) [noun] A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs. FLIED (9) [verb] To hit a fly ball; to hit a fly ball that is caught for an out. Compare ground (verb) and line (verb). FLOOD (9) [noun] A (usually disastrous) overflow of water from a lake or other body of water due to excessive rainfall or other input of water. | [noun] A large number or quantity of anything appearing more rapidly than can easily be dealt with. | [noun] The flowing in of the tide, opposed to the ebb. FLUED (9) FLUID (9) [noun] Any substance which can flow with relative ease, tends to assume the shape of its container, and obeys Bernoulli's principle; a liquid, gas or plasma. | [noun] A liquid (as opposed to a solid or gas). | [noun] (specifically, typically in the plural) Intravenous fluids. FOUND (9) [verb] To encounter or discover by accident; to happen upon. | [verb] To encounter or discover something being searched for; to locate. | [verb] (ditransitive) To discover by study or experiment direct to an object or end. | [verb] To start (an institution or organization). | [verb] To melt, especially of metal in an industrial setting. | [noun] A thin, single-cut file for comb-makers. FOXED (16) [verb] To trick, fool or outwit (someone) by cunning or ingenuity. | [verb] To confuse or baffle (someone). | [verb] To act slyly or craftily. FRAUD (9) [noun] The crime of stealing or otherwise illegally obtaining money by use of deception tactics. | [noun] Any act of deception carried out for the purpose of unfair, undeserved and/or unlawful gain. | [noun] The assumption of a false identity to such deceptive end. FREED (9) [verb] To make free; set at liberty; release. | [verb] To rid of something that confines or oppresses. FREMD (11) FRIED (9) [adjective] Cooked by frying. | [adjective] (specifically, of an egg) Fried with the yolk unbroken. | [adjective] Cooked in a deep fryer or pressure fryer or the like after being coated (breaded) in batter; compare deep-fried. FROND (9) [noun] The leaf of a fern, especially a compound leaf. | [noun] Any fern-like leaf or other object resembling a fern leaf. FUMED (11) [verb] To expose (something) to fumes; specifically, to expose wood, etc., to ammonia in order to produce dark tints. | [verb] To apply or offer incense to. | [verb] To emit fumes. FUSED (9) [verb] To melt together; to blend; to mix indistinguishably. | [verb] To melt together. | [verb] To furnish with or install a fuse. FUZED (18) [verb] (professional usage) To attach a fuze to. | [adjective] Being equipped with a fuze GADID (8) [noun] Any member of the family Gadidae of fish such as cod and pollack. GAGED (8) [verb] To give or deposit as a pledge or security; to pawn. | [verb] To wager, to bet. | [verb] To bind by pledge, or security; to engage. GAMED (9) [verb] To gamble. | [verb] To play card games, board games, or video games. | [verb] To exploit loopholes in a system or bureaucracy in a way which defeats or nullifies the spirit of the rules in effect, usually to obtain a result which otherwise would be unobtainable. GAPED (9) [verb] To open the mouth wide, especially involuntarily, as in a yawn, anger, or surprise. | [verb] To stare in wonder. | [verb] To open wide; to display a gap. GATED (7) [verb] To keep something inside by means of a closed gate. | [verb] To punish, especially a child or teenager, by not allowing them to go out. | [verb] To open a closed ion channel. GAZED (16) [verb] To stare intently or earnestly. | [verb] To stare at. GELID (7) [adjective] Very cold; icy or frosty. GEOID (7) [noun] (geodesy) The shape that the surface of the oceans of the Earth would take under the influence of the Earth's gravity and rotation alone, extending also through the continents, disregarding other factors such as winds and tides; that is, a surface of constant gravitational potential at zero elevation. GIBED (9) [verb] Alternative spelling of gybe | [verb] Alternative spelling of jibe GLAND (7) [noun] An organ that synthesizes a substance, such as hormones or breast milk, and releases it, often into the bloodstream (endocrine gland) or into cavities inside the body or its outer surface (exocrine gland). | [noun] A secretory structure on the surface of an organ. | [noun] A compressable cylindrical case and its contents around a shaft where it passes through a barrier, intended to prevent the passage of a fluid past the barrier, such as: GLEED (7) GLUED (7) [verb] To join or attach something using glue. | [verb] To cause something to adhere closely to; to follow attentively. GONAD (7) [noun] A sex organ that produces gametes; specifically, a testicle or ovary. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The testicles. GORED (7) [verb] (of an animal) To pierce with the horn. | [verb] To pierce with anything pointed, such as a spear. | [verb] To cut in a triangular form. GOURD (7) [noun] Any of the trailing or climbing vines producing fruit with a hard rind or shell, from the genera Lagenaria and Cucurbita (in Cucurbitaceae). | [noun] A hard-shelled fruit from a plant in Lagenaria or Cucurbita. | [noun] The dried and hardened shell of such fruit, made into a drinking vessel, bowl, spoon, or other objects designed for use or decoration. GRAND (7) [noun] (plural "grand") A thousand of some unit of currency, such as dollars or pounds. (Compare G.) | [noun] (plural "grands") A grand piano | [adjective] Of a large size or extent; great. | [noun] A grandparent or grandchild. GREED (7) [noun] A selfish or excessive desire for more than is needed or deserved, especially of money, wealth, food, or other possessions. | [verb] To desire in a greedy manner, or to act on such a desire. GRIND (7) [noun] The act of reducing to powder, or of sharpening, by friction. | [noun] Something that has been reduced to powder, something that has been ground. | [noun] A specific degree of pulverization of coffee beans. | [noun] A traditional communal pilot whale hunt in the Faroe Islands. GUARD (7) [noun] A person who, or thing that, protects or watches over something. | [noun] A garda; a police officer. | [noun] A squad responsible for protecting something. GUILD (7) [noun] A group or association mainly of tradespeople made up of merchants, craftspeople, or artisans for mutual aid, particularly in the Middle Ages. | [noun] A corporation. | [noun] A group of diverse species that share common characteristics or habits. GUYED (10) [adjective] Fitted with or attached to a guy. | [adjective] Fitted to serve as a guy. | [verb] To exhibit an effigy of Guy Fawkes around the 5th November. GYBED (12) [verb] To shift a fore-and-aft sail from one side of a sailing vessel to the other, while sailing before the wind. | [verb] Of a fore-and-aft sail or its boom: to shift, often forcefully and suddenly, from one side of a sailing vessel to the other. | [verb] Generally of a small sailing vessel: to change tack with the wind crossing behind the vessel. GYRED (10) [verb] To whirl GYVED (13) HADED (10) [verb] To slope or incline from the vertical. HALED (9) [verb] To drag or pull, especially forcibly. HALID (9) HARED (9) [verb] To move swiftly. | [verb] To excite; to tease, or worry; to harry. HATED (9) [verb] To dislike intensely or greatly. | [verb] To experience hatred. | [adjective] Disliked; odious; reviled. HAWED (12) HAYED (12) HAZED (18) [verb] To be or become hazy, or thick with haze. | [verb] To perform an unpleasant initiation ritual upon a usually non-consenting individual, especially freshmen to a closed community such as a college or military unit. | [verb] To oppress or harass by forcing to do hard and unnecessary work. HEARD (9) [verb] (stative) To perceive sounds through the ear. | [verb] (stative) To perceive (a sound, or something producing a sound) with the ear, to recognize (something) in an auditory way. | [verb] To exercise this faculty intentionally; to listen to. HEWED (12) [verb] To chop away at; to whittle down; to mow down. | [verb] To shape; to form. | [verb] To act according to, to conform to; usually construed with to. HEXAD (16) [noun] A group of six. | [noun] An element or radical with the combining power of six units, i.e. six atoms of hydrogen. HEXED (16) [verb] To cast a spell on (specifically an evil spell), to bewitch. | [adjective] Cursed; afflicted with bad luck. HIDED (10) HIKED (13) [verb] To take a long walk for pleasure or exercise. | [verb] To unfairly or suddenly raise a price. | [verb] To snap the ball to start a play. HIRED (9) [verb] To obtain the services of in return for fixed payment. | [verb] To employ; to obtain the services of (a person) in exchange for remuneration; to give someone a job. | [verb] To exchange the services of for remuneration. HIVED (12) [verb] To enter or possess a hive. | [verb] To form a hive-like entity. | [verb] To collect into a hive. HOARD (9) [noun] A hidden supply or fund. | [noun] A cache of valuable objects or artefacts; a trove. | [verb] To amass, usually for one's own private collection. | [noun] A hoarding (temporary structure used during construction). HODAD (10) HOKED (13) [verb] To ascribe a false or artificial quality to; to pretend falsely to have some quality or to be doing something, etc. | [verb] To scrounge, to grub. HOLED (9) [verb] To make holes in (an object or surface). | [verb] (by extension) To destroy. | [verb] To go into a hole. HOMED (11) [verb] (of animals) To return to its owner. | [verb] (always with "in on") To seek or aim for something. HONED (9) [verb] To sharpen with a hone; to whet. | [verb] To use a hone to produce a precision bore. | [verb] To refine or master (a skill). HOPED (11) [verb] To want something to happen, with a sense of expectation that it might. | [verb] To be optimistic; be full of hope; have hopes. | [verb] To place confidence; to trust with confident expectation of good; usually followed by in. HOSED (9) [verb] To water or spray with a hose. | [verb] To deliver using a hose. | [verb] To provide with hose (garment) HOUND (9) [noun] A dog, particularly a breed with a good sense of smell developed for hunting other animals. | [noun] Any canine animal. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who seeks something. | [verb] To persistently harass. | [noun] (in the plural) Projections at the masthead, serving as a support for the trestletrees and top to rest on. HUMID (11) [adjective] Containing perceptible moisture (usually describing air or atmosphere); damp; moist; somewhat wet or watery. HYOID (12) [noun] The hyoid bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a U, or like the letter upsilon; specifically, designating a bone or group of bones supporting the tongue. HYPED (14) [verb] To throw (an opponent) using this technique. | [verb] To promote heavily; to advertise or build up. | [adjective] Having been subject to propaganda and promotion; promoted beyond what is reasonable or appropriate. IDLED (7) [verb] To spend in idleness; to waste; to consume. | [verb] To lose or spend time doing nothing, or without being employed in business. | [verb] Of an engine: to run at a slow speed, or out of gear; to tick over. ILIAD (6) IMBED (10) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. IMPED (10) [noun] A creature without feet | [adjective] Engrafted, eked, implanted; supplemented by imping. | [verb] To plant or engraft. INKED (10) [adjective] Having a tattoo or tattoos. | [verb] To apply ink to; to cover or smear with ink. | [verb] To sign (a contract or similar document). INNED (6) IODID (7) IRKED (10) [verb] To irritate; annoy; bother | [adjective] Annoyed. ISLED (6) IVIED (9) [adjective] Overgrown with ivy or another climbing plant. JADED (14) [verb] To tire, weary or fatigue | [verb] To treat like a jade; to spurn. | [verb] To make ridiculous and contemptible. JAPED (15) [verb] To jest; play tricks. | [verb] To mock; deride. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. JAWED (16) [verb] To assail or abuse by scolding. | [verb] To scold; to clamor. | [verb] To talk; to converse. JEHAD (16) [noun] A holy war undertaken by Muslims. | [noun] An aggressive campaign for an idea. | [noun] A personal spiritual struggle for self-improvement and/or against evil. JERID (13) JEWED (16) JIBED (15) [verb] To reproach with contemptuous words; to deride, to mock, to taunt. | [verb] To say in a mocking or taunting manner. | [verb] To make a mocking remark or remarks; to jeer. JIHAD (16) [noun] A holy war undertaken by Muslims. | [noun] An aggressive campaign for an idea. | [noun] A personal spiritual struggle for self-improvement and/or against evil. JIVED (16) [verb] To reproach with contemptuous words; to deride, to mock, to taunt. | [verb] To say in a mocking or taunting manner. | [verb] To make a mocking remark or remarks; to jeer. JOKED (17) [verb] To do or say something for amusement rather than seriously. | [verb] (intransitive, followed by with) To dupe in a friendly manner for amusement; to mess with, play with. | [verb] To make merry with; to make jokes upon; to rally. JOWED (16) JOYED (16) [verb] To feel joy, to rejoice. | [verb] To enjoy. | [verb] To give joy to; to congratulate. JUKED (17) [verb] To play dance music, or to dance, in a juke | [verb] To hit | [verb] To stab KEYED (13) [verb] To fit (a lock) with a key. | [verb] To fit (pieces of a mechanical assembly) with a key to maintain the orientation between them. | [verb] To mark or indicate with a symbol indicating membership in a class. KITED (10) KNEAD (10) [noun] The act of kneading something. | [verb] To work and press into a mass, usually with the hands; especially, to work, as by repeated pressure with the knuckles, into a well mixed mass, the materials of bread, cake, etc. | [verb] To treat or form as if by kneading; to beat. KNEED (10) [verb] To kneel to. | [verb] To poke or strike with the knee. | [verb] To move on the knees; to use the knees to move. LACED (8) [verb] To fasten (something) with laces. | [verb] To add alcohol, poison, a drug or anything else potentially harmful to (food or drink). | [verb] To interweave items. LADED (7) [verb] To fill or load (related to cargo or a shipment). | [verb] To weigh down, oppress, or burden. | [verb] To use a ladle or dipper to remove something (generally water). LAIRD (6) [noun] The owner of a Scottish estate; a member of the landed gentry, a landowner. | [noun] Often in the form Laird of, followed by a patronymic: a Scottish clan chief. | [verb] Chiefly as laird it over: to behave like a laird, particularly to act haughtily or to domineer; to lord (it over). LAKED (10) LAMED (8) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to become lame. | [verb] To shine. | [noun] The twelfth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others). LASED (6) [verb] To use a laser beam on, as for cutting. | [verb] To operate as a laser, to release coherent light due to stimulation. LATED (6) LAVED (9) [verb] To pour or throw out, as water; lade out; bail; bail out. | [verb] To draw, as water; drink in. | [verb] To give bountifully; lavish. LAWED (9) LAYED (9) LAZED (15) [verb] To be lazy, waste time. | [verb] To pass time relaxing; to relax, lounge. LIARD (6) [noun] A small French coin, equivalent to a quarter of a sou. LIKED (10) [verb] To enjoy, be pleased by; favor; be in favor of. | [verb] To please. | [verb] To derive pleasure of, by or with someone or something. LIMED (8) [verb] To treat with calcium hydroxide or calcium oxide (lime). | [verb] To smear with birdlime. | [verb] To apply limewash. LINED (6) [verb] To place (objects) into a line (usually used with "up"); to form into a line; to align. | [verb] To place persons or things along the side of for security or defense; to strengthen by adding; to fortify. | [verb] To form a line along. LIPID (8) [noun] Any of a group of organic compounds including the fats, oils, waxes, sterols, and triglycerides. Lipids are characterized by being insoluble in water, and account for most of the fat present in the human body. LIVED (9) [verb] To be alive; to have life. | [verb] To have permanent residence somewhere, to inhabit, to reside. | [verb] To survive; to persevere; to continue. LIVID (9) [adjective] Having a dark, bluish appearance. | [adjective] Pale, pallid. | [adjective] So angry that one turns pale; very angry; furious. LOBED (8) LOOED (6) LOPED (8) [verb] To travel an easy pace with long strides. | [verb] To jump, leap. LOVED (9) [verb] (usually transitive, sometimes intransitive, stative) To have a strong affection for (someone or something). | [verb] To need, thrive on. | [verb] To be strongly inclined towards something; an emphatic form of like. LOWED (9) [verb] To depress; to lower. | [verb] To moo. | [verb] To burn; to blaze. LOXED (13) LUCID (8) [noun] A lucid dream. | [adjective] Clear; easily understood | [adjective] Mentally rational; sane LUGED (7) [verb] To travel by luge; to ride a luge. LURED (6) [verb] To attract by temptation etc.; to entice | [verb] To recall a hawk with a lure LURID (6) [adjective] Shocking, horrifying. | [adjective] Melodramatic. | [adjective] Ghastly, pale, wan in appearance. LUTED (6) [verb] To play on a lute, or as if on a lute. | [verb] To fix or fasten something with lute. LYARD (9) LYSED (9) [verb] To burst or cut a cell or cell structure; to induce lysis. | [verb] To break down molecularly into smaller molecules; to induce lysis. MACED (10) [verb] To hit someone or something with a mace. | [verb] To spray in defense or attack with mace (pepper spray or tear gas) using a hand-held device. | [verb] To spray a similar noxious chemical in defense or attack using an available hand-held device such as an aerosol spray can. MANED (8) MATED (8) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. | [verb] To match, fit together without space between. MAUND (8) [noun] A wicker basket. | [noun] A unit of capacity with various specific local values. | [noun] A handbasket with two lids. | [noun] A unit of weight in southern and western Asia, whose value varied widely by location. Two maunds made one chest of opium in East India. One maund equalled 136 pounds of opium in Turkey. | [noun] Begging MAWED (11) MAYED (11) MAZED (17) [verb] To amaze, astonish, bewilder | [verb] To daze, stupefy, or confuse MENAD (8) METED (8) [verb] To measure. | [verb] (usually with “out”) To dispense, measure (out), allot (especially punishment, reward etc.). MEWED (11) [verb] To shut away, confine, lock up. | [verb] (of a bird) To moult. | [verb] (of a bird) To cause to moult. MIKED (12) [verb] To microphone; to place one or more microphones (mikes) on. | [verb] To measure using a micrometer. MIMED (10) [verb] To mimic. | [verb] To act without words. | [verb] To represent an action or object through gesture, without the use of sound. MINED (8) [verb] To remove (ore) from the ground. | [verb] To dig into, for ore or metal. | [verb] To sow mines (the explosive devices) in (an area). MIRED (8) [verb] To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud. | [verb] To sink into mud. | [verb] To weigh down. | [noun] A unit of measurement for color temperature. MIXED (15) [verb] To stir together. | [verb] To combine (items from two or more sources normally kept separate). | [verb] To form by mingling; to produce by the stirring together of ingredients; to concoct from different parts. MONAD (8) [noun] An ultimate atom, or simple, unextended point; something ultimate and indivisible. | [noun] A single individual (such as a pollen grain) that is free from others, not united in a group. | [noun] A monoid object in the category of endofunctors of a fixed category. MOOED (8) [verb] Of a cow or bull, to make its characteristic lowing sound. MOPED (10) [verb] To carry oneself in a depressed, lackadaisical manner; to give oneself up to low spirits; to pout, sulk. | [verb] To make spiritless and stupid. | [adjective] Melancholic, dejected. | [noun] A lightweight, two-wheeled vehicle equipped with a small motor and pedals, designed to go no faster than some specified speed limit. MOULD (8) [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. | [noun] A frame or model around or on which something is formed or shaped. | [noun] Something that is made in or shaped on a mold. | [noun] A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance. MOUND (8) [noun] An artificial hill or elevation of earth; a raised bank; an embankment thrown up for defense | [noun] A natural elevation appearing as if thrown up artificially; a regular and isolated hill, hillock, or knoll. | [noun] Elevated area of dirt upon which the pitcher stands to pitch. MOVED (11) [verb] To change place or posture; to go, in any manner, from one place or position to another. | [verb] To act; to take action; to begin to act | [verb] To change residence, for example from one house, town, or state, to another; to go and live at another place. See also move out and move in. MOWED (11) [verb] To cut down grass or crops. | [verb] To cut down or slaughter in great numbers. | [verb] To make grimaces, mock. MUCID (10) [adjective] Musty; mouldy; slimy; mucous MULED (8) MURED (8) [verb] To wall in or fortify | [verb] To enclose or imprison within walls. MURID (8) [noun] Any rodent in the family Muridae. MUSED (8) [verb] To become lost in thought, to ponder. | [verb] To say (something) with due consideration or thought. | [verb] To think on; to meditate on. MUTED (8) [verb] To silence, to make quiet. | [verb] To turn off the sound of. | [verb] Of a bird: to defecate. MYOID (11) MYSID (11) [noun] Any crustacean of the family Mysidae. NAIAD (6) [noun] A female deity (nymph) associated with water, especially a spring, stream, or other fresh water. | [noun] The aquatic larva (nymph) of a dragonfly or damselfly. | [noun] Any of various aquatic plants of the genus Najas. NAKED (10) [adjective] Bare, not covered by clothing. | [adjective] Lacking some clothing; clothed only in underwear. | [adjective] Glib, without decoration, put bluntly. | [verb] To make naked; to bare. NALED (6) NAMED (8) [verb] (ditransitive) To give a name to. | [verb] To mention, specify. | [verb] To identify as relevant or important NICAD (8) [noun] Rechargeable nickel-cadmium battery NIDED (7) NITID (6) [adjective] Bright; lustrous; shining. | [adjective] (of a person) Festively or smartly dressed; spruce; fine. NIXED (13) [verb] To make something become nothing; to reject or cancel. | [verb] To destroy or eradicate. NOMAD (8) [noun] A member of a society or class who herd animals from pasture to pasture with no fixed home. | [noun] A person who changes residence frequently. | [noun] A player who changes teams frequently. NOSED (6) [verb] To move cautiously by advancing its front end. | [verb] To snoop. | [verb] To detect by smell or as if by smell. NOTED (6) [verb] To notice with care; to observe; to remark; to heed. | [verb] To record in writing; to make a memorandum of. | [verb] To denote; to designate. NUKED (10) [verb] To use a nuclear weapon on a target. | [verb] To destroy or erase completely. | [verb] (by extension) To carry out a denial-of-service attack against (an IRC user). OARED (6) [adjective] Having oars. | [verb] To row; to travel with, or as if with, oars. OCTAD (8) [noun] A group of eight things. | [noun] Hundred million = myriad myriad; 100,000,000 = 108 OFFED (12) [verb] To kill. | [verb] To switch off. OGLED (7) [verb] To stare at (someone or something), especially impertinently, amorously, or covetously. OILED (6) [verb] To lubricate with oil. | [verb] To grease with oil for cooking. | [adjective] Covered in, or supplied with, oil. OOHED (9) [verb] To exclaim ooh. OOTID (6) [noun] The haploid cell, produced by meiotic division of a secondary oocyte, that is a nearly mature ovum. OOZED (15) [verb] To be secreted or slowly leak. | [verb] To give off a strong sense of (something); to exude. OPTED (8) [verb] To choose; select. ORBED (8) OREAD (6) [noun] A mountain nymph; an anthropomorphic appearance of the spirit of a mountain. OUTED (6) [verb] To eject; to expel. | [verb] To reveal (a person) as LGBT+ (gay, trans, etc). | [verb] To reveal (a person or organization) as having a certain secret, such as a being a secret agent or undercover detective. OVOID (9) [noun] Something that is oval in shape. | [adjective] Shaped like an oval. | [adjective] Egg-shaped; shaped like an oval, but more tapered at one end; ovate. OWNED (9) [verb] To have rightful possession of (property, goods or capital); to have legal title to. | [verb] To have recognized political sovereignty over a place, territory, as distinct from the ordinary connotation of property ownership. | [verb] To defeat or embarrass; to overwhelm. PACED (10) [verb] To walk back and forth in a small distance. | [verb] To set the speed in a race. | [verb] To measure by walking. PAGED (9) [verb] To mark or number the pages of, as a book or manuscript. | [verb] (often with “through”) To turn several pages of a publication. | [verb] To furnish with folios. PAGOD (9) PALED (8) [verb] To turn pale; to lose colour. | [verb] To become insignificant. | [verb] To make pale; to diminish the brightness of. PANED (8) PARED (8) [verb] To remove the outer covering or skin of something with a cutting device, typically a knife | [verb] (often with down or back) to reduce, diminish or trim gradually something as if by cutting off | [verb] To trim the hoof of a horse PATED (8) PAVED (11) [verb] To cover something with paving slabs. | [verb] To cover with stone, concrete, blacktop or other solid covering, especially to aid travel. | [verb] To pave the way for; to make easy and smooth. PAVID (11) PAWED (11) [verb] (of an animal) To go through something (such as a garbage can) with paws. | [verb] (of an animal) To gently push on something with a paw. | [verb] (of an animal) To draw the forefoot along the ground; to beat or scrape with the forefoot. PAYED (11) [verb] To give money or other compensation to in exchange for goods or services. | [verb] To discharge, as a debt or other obligation, by giving or doing what is due or required. | [verb] To be profitable for. PIKED (12) [verb] To prod, attack, or injure someone with a pike. | [verb] To assume a pike position. | [verb] To bet or gamble with only small amounts of money. PILED (8) [verb] (often used with the preposition "up") To lay or throw into a pile or heap; to heap up; to collect into a mass; to accumulate | [verb] To cover with heaps; or in great abundance; to fill or overfill; to load. | [verb] To add something to a great number. PINED (8) [verb] To languish; to lose flesh or wear away through distress. | [verb] To long, to yearn so much that it causes suffering. | [verb] To grieve or mourn for. PIPED (10) [verb] To play (music) on a pipe instrument, such as a bagpipe or a flute. | [verb] To shout loudly and at high pitch. | [verb] To emit or have a shrill sound like that of a pipe; to whistle. PLAID (8) [noun] A type of twilled woollen cloth, often with a tartan or chequered pattern. | [noun] A length of such material used as a piece of clothing, formerly worn in the Scottish Highlands and other parts of northern Britain and remaining as an item of ceremonial dress worn by members of Scottish pipe bands. | [noun] The typical chequered pattern of a plaid; tartan. | [verb] To act in a manner such that one has fun; to engage in activities expressly for the purpose of recreation or entertainment. PLEAD (8) [verb] To present (an argument or a plea), especially in a legal case. | [verb] To beg, beseech, or implore. | [verb] To offer by way of excuse. PLIED (8) [verb] To bend; to fold; to mould; to adapt, to modify; to change (a person's) mind, to cause (a person) to submit. | [verb] To bend, to flex; to be bent by something, to give way or yield (to a force, etc.). | [verb] To work at (something) diligently. POIND (8) [noun] A seizure of property etc in lieu of a debt; the animal or property so seized | [verb] To seize property in this manner POKED (12) [verb] To prod or jab with an object such as a finger or a stick. | [verb] To stir up a fire to remove ash or promote burning. | [verb] To rummage; to feel or grope around. POLED (8) [verb] To propel by pushing with poles, to push with a pole. | [verb] To identify something quite precisely using a telescope. | [verb] To furnish with poles for support. PORED (8) [verb] To study meticulously; to go over again and again. | [verb] To meditate or reflect in a steady way. | [adjective] Having or furnished with pores POSED (8) [verb] To place in an attitude or fixed position, for the sake of effect. | [verb] To ask; to set (a test, quiz, riddle, etc.). | [verb] To constitute (a danger, a threat, a risk, etc.). POUND (8) [noun] A unit of mass equal to 16 avoirdupois ounces (= 453.592 37 g). Today this value is the most common meaning of "pound" as a unit of weight. | [noun] A unit of mass equal to 12 troy ounces (≈ 373.242 g). Today, this is a common unit of weight when measuring precious metals, and is little used elsewhere. | [noun] The symbol # (octothorpe, hash) | [noun] A place for the detention of stray or wandering animals. An animal shelter. | [noun] A hard blow. POXED (15) PREED (8) PRIED (8) [verb] To look where one is not welcome; to be nosy. | [verb] To keep asking about something that does not concern one. | [verb] To look closely and curiously at (something closed or not public). PROUD (8) [adjective] Feeling honoured (by something); feeling happy or satisfied about an event or fact; gratified. | [adjective] Possessed of a due sense of what one deserves or is worth. | [adjective] Having too high an opinion of oneself; arrogant, supercilious. PSEUD (8) [noun] An intellectually pretentious person; a poseur | [noun] Pseudomonas bacteria. | [noun] A pseudonym. PUKED (12) [verb] To vomit; to throw up; to eject from the stomach. | [verb] To sell securities or investments at a loss, often under duress or pressure, in order to satisfy liquidity or margin requirements, or out of a desire to exit a deteriorating market. PULED (8) [verb] To whimper or whine. | [verb] To pipe or chirp. PYOID (11) RABID (8) [noun] A human or animal infected with rabies. | [noun] Someone who is fanatical in opinion. | [adjective] Affected with rabies. RACED (8) [verb] To take part in a race (in the sense of a contest). | [verb] To compete against in such a race. | [verb] To move or drive at high speed; to hurry or speed. RAGED (7) [verb] To act or speak in heightened anger. | [verb] (sometimes figurative) To move with great violence, as a storm etc. | [verb] To enrage. RAKED (10) [verb] To walk; to roam, to wander. | [verb] Of animals (especially sheep): to graze. | [verb] To roam or wander through (somewhere). RANID (6) RAPED (8) RAPID (8) [noun] (often in the plural) a rough section of a river or stream which is difficult to navigate due to the swift and turbulent motion of the water. | [noun] A burst of rapid fire. | [adjective] Very swift or quick. RARED (6) RASED (6) [verb] To rub along the surface of; to graze | [verb] To rub or scratch out; to erase | [verb] To level with the ground; to overthrow; to destroy; to raze RATED (6) [verb] To assign or be assigned a particular rank or level. | [verb] To evaluate or estimate the value of. | [verb] To consider or regard. RAVED (9) [verb] To wander in mind or intellect; to be delirious; to talk or act irrationally; to be wild, furious, or raging. | [verb] To speak or write wildly or incoherently. | [verb] To talk with unreasonable enthusiasm or excessive passion or excitement; followed by about, of, or (formerly) on. RAXED (13) RAYED (9) [verb] To emit something as if in rays. | [verb] To radiate as if in rays. | [verb] To arrange. RAZED (15) [verb] To demolish; to level to the ground. | [verb] To scrape as if with a razor. | [adjective] Slashed or striped in patterns. READD (7) REBID (8) [noun] A second or subsequent (normally higher) bid. | [verb] To bid again on something. | [verb] To require a new set of bids for. REDED (7) REDID (7) [verb] To do again. REFED (9) RESID (6) RESOD (6) REWED (9) RICED (8) [verb] To squeeze through a ricer; to mash or make into rice-sized pieces (especially potatoes). | [verb] To harvest wild rice (Zizania sp.) | [verb] To throw rice at a person (usually at a wedding). RIGID (7) [noun] A bicycle with no suspension system. | [adjective] Stiff, rather than flexible. | [adjective] Fixed, rather than moving. RILED (6) [verb] To make angry | [verb] To stir or move from a state of calm or order RIMED (8) [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [verb] (followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end. | [verb] Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each. RIPED (8) RIVED (9) [verb] To tear apart by force; to rend; to split; to cleave. | [verb] To pierce or cleave with a weapon. ROBED (8) [verb] To clothe; to dress. | [verb] To put on official vestments. | [adjective] Wearing a robe. ROPED (8) [verb] To tie (something) with rope. | [verb] To throw a rope (or something similar, e.g. a lasso, cable, wire, etc.) around (something). | [verb] To be formed into rope; to draw out or extend into a filament or thread. ROSED (6) [verb] To make rose-coloured; to redden or flush. | [verb] To perfume, as with roses. | [adjective] Having taken on a crimson colour. ROUND (6) [adverb] So as to form a circle or trace a circular path, or approximation thereof. | [adverb] So as to surround or be near. | [adverb] Nearly; approximately; about. | [verb] To speak in a low tone; whisper; speak secretly; take counsel. | [noun] A whisper; whispering. ROVED (9) [verb] To shoot with arrows (at). | [verb] To roam, or wander about at random, especially over a wide area. | [verb] To roam or wander through. ROWED (9) [verb] To propel (a boat or other craft) over water using oars. | [verb] To transport in a boat propelled with oars. | [verb] To be moved by oars. | [adjective] Formed into a row, or rows; having a specified number of rows. RULED (6) [verb] To regulate, be in charge of, make decisions for, reign over. | [verb] To excel. | [verb] To mark (paper or the like) with rules (lines). RYKED (13) SABED (8) SALAD (6) [noun] A food made primarily of a mixture of raw or cold ingredients, typically vegetables, usually served with a dressing such as vinegar or mayonnaise. | [noun] A raw vegetable of the kind used in salads. SANED (6) SAPID (8) [adjective] Tasty, flavoursome or savoury SAROD (6) [noun] A fretless string instrument used mainly in Indian classical music. SATED (6) [verb] To satisfy the appetite or desire of; to fill up. | [adjective] In a state of complete and thorough satisfaction; having ones appetite fully satisfied, by having enough of something. | [adjective] Quelled of thirst or hunger. SAVED (9) [verb] To prevent harm or difficulty. | [verb] To put aside, to avoid. | [adjective] Rescued from the consequences of sin. SAWED (9) [verb] To cut (something) with a saw. | [verb] To make a motion back and forth similar to cutting something with a saw. | [verb] To be cut with a saw. SAYID (9) SCALD (8) [noun] A burn, or injury to the skin or flesh, by hot liquid or steam. | [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. | [noun] Scaliness; a scabby skin disease. | [noun] A Nordic poet of the Viking Age SCEND (8) [noun] The rising motion of water as a wave passes; a surge; the upward angular displacement of a vessel, opposed to pitch, the correlative downward movement. | [verb] To heave upward. SCOLD (8) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. | [noun] A person who habitually scolds, in particular a troublesome and angry woman. SCROD (8) [noun] (sometimes New York) Any cod, pollock, haddock, or other whitefish. | [verb] To shred. SERED (6) SEWED (9) [verb] To use a needle to pass thread repeatedly through (pieces of fabric) in order to join them together. | [verb] To use a needle to pass thread repeatedly through pieces of fabric in order to join them together. | [verb] Followed by into: to enclose by sewing. SEXED (13) [verb] To determine the sex of an animal. | [verb] To have sex with. | [adjective] Having a sex; being male or female. SHARD (9) [noun] A piece of broken glass or pottery, especially one found in an archaeological dig. | [noun] (by extension) A piece of material, especially rock and similar materials, reminding of a broken piece of glass or pottery. | [noun] A tough scale, sheath, or shell; especially an elytron of a beetle. | [noun] The plant chard. SHEND (9) SHERD (9) [noun] A piece of broken glass or pottery, especially one found in an archaeological dig. | [noun] (by extension) A piece of material, especially rock and similar materials, reminding of a broken piece of glass or pottery. | [noun] A tough scale, sheath, or shell; especially an elytron of a beetle. SHIED (9) [verb] To avoid due to timidness or caution. | [verb] To jump back in fear. | [verb] To throw sideways with a jerk; to fling SHOED (9) SHRED (9) [noun] A long, narrow piece cut or torn off; a strip. | [noun] In general, a fragment; a piece; a particle; a very small amount. | [verb] To cut or tear into narrow and long pieces or strips. SIDED (7) [verb] To ally oneself, be in an alliance, usually with "with" or rarely "in with" | [verb] To lean on one side. | [verb] To be or stand at the side of; to be on the side toward. SIPED (8) SIRED (6) [verb] (of a male) to procreate; to father, beget, impregnate. SITED (6) [verb] To situate or place a building. SIZED (15) [verb] To adjust the size of; to make a certain size. | [verb] To classify or arrange by size. | [verb] To approximate the dimensions, estimate the size of. SKALD (10) [noun] A Nordic poet of the Viking Age SKEED (10) SKIED (10) [verb] To move on skis | [verb] To travel over (a slope etc.) on skis; to travel on skis at (a place), (especially as a sport) | [verb] To hit, kick or throw (a ball) extremely high. SKYED (13) SLOID (6) SLOJD (13) SLOYD (9) SLUED (6) [adjective] Somewhat drunk; tipsy. | [verb] To rotate something on an axis. | [verb] To turn something sharply. SNOOD (6) [noun] A band or ribbon for keeping the hair in place, including the hair-band formerly worn in Scotland and northern England by young unmarried women. | [noun] A small hairnet or cap worn by women to keep their hair in place. | [noun] The flap of erectile red skin on the beak of a male turkey. SOLED (6) [verb] To pull by the ears; to pull about; haul; lug. | [verb] To put a sole on (a shoe or boot) | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified kind of sole. SOLID (6) [noun] A substance in the fundamental state of matter that retains its size and shape without need of a container (as opposed to a liquid or gas). | [noun] A three-dimensional figure (as opposed to a surface, an area, or a curve). | [noun] A favor. SOUND (6) [adjective] Healthy. | [adjective] Complete, solid, or secure. | [adjective] Having the property of soundness. | [noun] A sensation perceived by the ear caused by the vibration of air or some other medium. | [noun] A long narrow inlet, or a strait between the mainland and an island; also, a strait connecting two seas, or connecting a sea or lake with the ocean. | [noun] An instrument for probing or dilating; a sonde. SOWED (9) [verb] To scatter, disperse, or plant (seeds). | [verb] To spread abroad; to propagate. | [verb] To scatter over; to besprinkle. SPAED (8) [verb] To divine; foretell SPEED (8) [noun] The state of moving quickly or the capacity for rapid motion; rapidity. | [noun] The rate of motion or action, specifically / the magnitude of the velocity; the rate distance is traversed in a given time. | [noun] The sensitivity to light of film, plates or sensor. | [verb] To succeed; to prosper, be lucky. SPEND (8) [noun] Amount of money spent (during a period); expenditure. | [noun] (in the plural) Expenditures; money or pocket money. | [noun] Discharged semen. SPIED (8) [verb] To act as a spy. | [verb] To spot; to catch sight of. | [verb] To search narrowly; to scrutinize. SPUED (8) [verb] To eject forcibly and in a stream | [verb] To speak or write quickly and voluminously, especially words that are not worth listening to or reading. | [verb] To vomit SQUAD (15) [noun] A group of people organized for some common purpose, usually of about ten members. | [noun] One's friend group, taken collectively; one's peeps. | [verb] To act as part of, or on behalf of, a squad. | [noun] Sloppy mud. SQUID (15) [noun] Any of several carnivorous marine cephalopod mollusks, of the order Teuthida, having a mantle, eight arms, and a pair of tentacles | [noun] A fishhook with a piece of bright lead, bone, or other substance fastened on its shank to imitate a squid. | [noun] (mildly) A sailor in the Navy. | [noun] A motorcyclist, especially a sport biker, characterized by reckless riding and lack of protective gear. STAID (6) [adjective] Not capricious or impulsive; sedate, serious, sober. | [adjective] Always fixed in the same location; stationary. STAND (6) [noun] The act of standing. | [noun] A defensive position or effort. | [noun] A resolute, unwavering position; firm opinion; action for a purpose in the face of opposition. STEAD (6) [noun] A place, or spot, in general. | [noun] A place where a person normally rests; a seat. | [noun] An inhabited place; a settlement, city, town etc. | [noun] One's partner in a romantic relationship. STEED (6) [noun] A stallion, especially in the sense of mount. | [noun] A bicycle. STIED (6) [verb] To place in, or as if in, a sty | [verb] To live in a sty, or any messy or dirty place | [verb] To ascend, rise up, climb. STOOD (6) [verb] (heading) To position or be positioned physically. | [verb] (heading) To position or be positioned mentally. | [verb] (heading) To position or be positioned socially. STYED (9) SWARD (9) [noun] A layer of earth into which grass has grown; turf; sod. | [noun] An expanse of land covered in grass; a lawn or meadow. | [noun] Skin; covering. | [noun] A homosexual man. SWORD (9) [noun] A long-bladed weapon with a hilt, and usually a pommel and cross-guard, which is designed to stab, slash, and/or hack. | [noun] A suit in the minor arcana in tarot. | [noun] A card of this suit. SYNOD (9) [noun] An ecclesiastic council or meeting to consult on church matters. | [noun] An administrative division of churches, either the entire denomination, as in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, or a mid-level division (middle judicatory, district) as in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America | [noun] An assembly or council having civil authority; a legislative body. TABID (8) TAMED (8) [verb] To make (an animal) tame; to domesticate. | [verb] To become tame or domesticated. | [verb] To make gentle or meek. TAPED (8) [verb] To bind with adhesive tape. | [verb] To record, particularly onto magnetic tape. | [verb] (passive) To understand, figure out. TARED (6) TAWED (9) [verb] To prepare or dress, as hemp, by beating; to tew. | [verb] (by extension) To beat; to scourge. | [verb] To dress and prepare, as the skins of sheep, lambs, goats, and kids, for gloves, etc., by imbuing them with alum, salt, and other agents, for softening and bleaching them. TAXED (13) [verb] To impose and collect a tax from (a person or company). | [verb] To impose and collect a tax on (something). | [verb] To make excessive demands on. TEIID (6) TEIND (6) TEPID (8) [adjective] Lukewarm; neither warm nor cool. | [adjective] Uninterested; exhibiting little passion or eagerness. TEWED (9) THIRD (9) [noun] The person or thing in the third position. | [noun] One of three equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The third gear of a gearbox. TIDED (7) [verb] To cause to float with the tide; to drive or carry with the tide or stream. | [verb] To pour a tide or flood. | [verb] To work into or out of a river or harbor by drifting with the tide and anchoring when it becomes adverse. TILED (6) [verb] To cover with tiles. | [verb] To arrange in a regular pattern, with adjoining edges (applied to tile-like objects, graphics, windows in a computer interface). | [verb] To optimize (a loop in program code) by means of the tiling technique. TIMED (8) [verb] To measure or record the time, duration, or rate of. | [verb] To choose when something begins or how long it lasts. | [verb] To keep or beat time; to proceed or move in time. TIMID (8) [adjective] Lacking in courage or confidence. TINED (6) TIRED (6) [verb] To become sleepy or weary. | [verb] To make sleepy or weary. | [verb] To become bored or impatient (with). TOKED (10) [verb] To give a gratuity to. | [verb] To smoke marijuana. | [verb] To inhale a puff of marijuana TOLED (6) TONED (6) [verb] To give a particular tone to | [verb] To change the colour of | [verb] To make (something) firmer TOPED (8) [verb] To drink excessively; to get drunk. TOTED (6) [verb] To carry or bear. | [verb] To add up; to calculate a total. TOWED (9) TOYED (9) [verb] To play (with) in an idle or desultory way. | [verb] To ponder or consider. | [verb] To stimulate with a sex toy. TREAD (6) [verb] To step or walk (on or over something); to trample. | [verb] To step or walk upon. | [verb] To beat or press with the feet. | [noun] A step taken with the foot. TREED (6) [verb] To chase (an animal or person) up a tree. | [verb] To place in a tree. | [verb] To place upon a tree; to fit with a tree; to stretch upon a tree. TREND (6) [noun] An inclination in a particular direction. | [noun] A tendency. | [noun] A fad or fashion style. | [noun] Clean wool. TRIAD (6) [noun] A grouping of three. | [noun] A word of three syllables. | [noun] A branch of a Chinese underground criminal society, mostly based in Hong Kong. TRIED (6) [adjective] Tested, hence, proven to be firm or reliable. | [adjective] Put on trial, taken before a lawcourt. | [verb] To attempt; to endeavour. Followed by infinitive. TRUED (6) [verb] To straighten. | [verb] To make even, level, symmetrical, or accurate, align; adjust. TSKED (10) TUBED (8) [verb] To supply with, or enclose in, a tube. | [verb] To ride an inner tube. | [verb] To intubate. TUMID (8) [adjective] Swollen, enlarged, bulging | [adjective] Cancerous, unhealthy | [adjective] Pompous, bombastic TUNED (6) [verb] To adjust (a musical instrument) so that it produces the correct pitches. | [verb] To adjust or modify (esp. a mechanical or electrical device) so that it functions optimally. | [verb] To adjust the frequency on a radio or TV set, so as to receive the desired channel. TWEED (9) [noun] A coarse woolen fabric used for clothing. TYNED (9) TYPED (11) [verb] To put text on paper using a typewriter. | [verb] To enter text or commands into a computer using a keyboard. | [verb] To determine the blood type of. TYRED (9) ULNAD (6) UMPED (10) [verb] To act as an umpire. UNBID (8) UNDID (7) [verb] To reverse the effects of an action. | [verb] To unfasten. | [verb] To impoverish or ruin, as in reputation; to cause the downfall of. UNFED (9) [noun] A mosquito that has not had a blood meal. | [adjective] Not fed. | [adjective] Unsupported. UNLED (6) UNWED (9) [noun] One who is not married; a bachelor or a spinster. | [verb] To annul the marriage of. | [verb] To separate. UPEND (8) [verb] To end up; to set on end. | [verb] To tip or turn over. | [verb] To destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat. UPPED (10) [verb] To increase or raise. | [verb] To promote. | [verb] (usually in combination with another verb) To act suddenly. URGED (7) [verb] To press; to push; to drive; to impel; to force onward. | [verb] To press the mind or will of; to ply with motives, arguments, persuasion, or importunity. | [verb] To provoke; to exasperate. VALID (9) [adjective] Well grounded or justifiable, pertinent. | [adjective] Acceptable, proper or correct; in accordance with the rules. | [adjective] Related to the current topic, or presented within context, relevant. VANED (9) VAPID (11) [adjective] Offering nothing that is stimulating or challenging. | [adjective] Lifeless, dull, or banal. | [adjective] Tasteless, bland, or insipid. VEXED (16) [verb] To trouble aggressively, to harass. | [verb] To annoy, irritate. | [verb] To cause (mental) suffering to; to distress. VIAND (9) [noun] An item of food eaten with rice. VICED (11) VINED (9) VIRID (9) VISED (9) VIVID (12) [noun] A felt-tipped permanent marker. | [adjective] (of perception) Clear, detailed or powerful. | [adjective] (of an image) Bright, intense or colourful. VOLED (9) VOTED (9) [verb] To cast a vote; to assert a formalized choice in an election | [verb] To choose or grant by means of a vote, or by general consent VOWED (12) [verb] To make a vow; to promise. | [verb] To make a vow regarding (something). | [verb] To declare publicly that one has made a vow, usually to show one's determination or to announce an act of retaliation. WADED (10) [verb] To walk through water or something that impedes progress. | [verb] To progress with difficulty | [verb] To walk through (water or similar impediment); to pass through by wading WAGED (10) [verb] To wager, bet. | [verb] To expose oneself to, as a risk; to incur, as a danger; to venture; to hazard. | [verb] To employ for wages; to hire. WAKED (13) [verb] (often followed by up) To stop sleeping. | [verb] (often followed by up) To make somebody stop sleeping; to rouse from sleep. | [verb] To put in motion or action; to arouse; to excite. WALED (9) WANED (9) [verb] To progressively lose its splendor, value, ardor, power, intensity etc.; to decline. | [verb] Said of light that dims or diminishes in strength. | [verb] Said of the Moon as it passes through the phases of its monthly cycle where its surface is less and less visible. WARED (9) [verb] To be ware or mindful of something. | [verb] To protect or guard (especially oneself); to be on guard, be wary. | [verb] To wear, or veer. WAVED (12) [verb] To relinquish (a right etc.); to give up claim to; to forego. | [verb] To put aside, avoid. | [verb] To outlaw (someone). WAXED (16) [verb] To apply wax to (something, such as a shoe, a floor, a car, or an apple), usually to make it shiny. | [verb] To remove hair at the roots from (a part of the body) by coating the skin with a film of wax that is then pulled away sharply. | [verb] To defeat utterly. WEALD (9) WEIRD (9) [noun] Fate; destiny; luck. | [noun] A prediction. | [noun] A spell or charm. WIELD (9) [verb] To command, rule over; to possess or own. | [verb] To control, to guide or manage. | [verb] To handle with skill and ease, especially a weapon or tool. WIFED (12) WILED (9) [verb] To pass (time) idly. | [verb] To occupy or entertain (someone) in order to let time pass. | [verb] To loiter. WINED (9) [verb] To entertain with wine. | [verb] To drink wine. WIPED (11) [verb] To move an object over, maintaining contact, with the intention of removing some substance from the surface. (Compare rub.) | [verb] To remove by rubbing; to rub off; to obliterate; usually followed by away, off, or out. | [verb] To cheat; to defraud; to trick; usually followed by out. WIRED (9) [verb] To fasten with wire, especially with reference to wine bottles, corks, or fencing. | [verb] To string on a wire. | [verb] To equip with wires for use with electricity. WISED (9) [verb] To become wise. | [verb] Usually with "up", to inform or learn. | [verb] To instruct. WITED (9) WIVED (12) [verb] To marry (a woman). | [verb] To provide (someone) with a wife. WOALD (9) WOOED (9) [verb] To endeavor to gain someone's support. | [verb] (often of a man) To try to persuade (someone) to be in an amorous relationship with | [verb] To court solicitously; to invite with importunity. WORLD (9) [noun] (with "the") Human collective existence; existence in general. | [noun] The Universe. | [noun] (with "the") The Earth. WOULD (9) [noun] Something that would happen, or would be the case, under different circumstances; a potentiality. WOUND (9) [noun] An injury, such as a cut, stab, or tear, to a (usually external) part of the body. | [noun] A hurt to a person's feelings, reputation, prospects, etc. | [noun] An injury to a person by which the skin is divided or its continuity broken. | [verb] To blow air through a wind instrument or horn to make a sound. WOWED (12) [verb] To amaze or awe. WRIED (9) WYLED (12) WYTED (12) YAIRD (9) YAULD (9) YAWED (12) [verb] To turn about the vertical axis while maintaining course. | [verb] To swerve off course to port or starboard. | [verb] To steer badly, zigzagging back and forth across the intended course of a boat; to go out of the line of course. YIELD (9) [verb] To pay, give in payment; repay, recompense; reward; requite. | [verb] To furnish; to afford; to render; to give forth. | [verb] To give way; to allow another to pass first. | [noun] Payment; tribute. YOKED (13) [verb] To link or to join. | [verb] To unite, to connect. | [verb] To enslave; to bring into bondage; to restrain; to confine. YOWED (12) ZONED (15) [verb] To divide into or assign sections or areas. | [verb] To define the property use classification of an area. | [verb] To enter a daydream state temporarily, for instance as a result of boredom, fatigue, or intoxication; to doze off. ZOOID (15) [noun] An organic body or cell having locomotion, as a spermatic cell or spermatozoid. | [noun] An animal in one of its inferior or early stages of development, as one of the intermediate forms in alternate generation. | [noun] One of the individual animals in a composite group, as of Anthozoa, Hydrozoa, and Bryozoa; — sometimes restricted to those individuals in which the mouth and digestive organs are not developed.

6-Letter Words (1808)

ABASED (9) [verb] To lower, as in condition in life, office, rank, etc., so as to cause pain or hurt feelings; to degrade, to depress, to humble, to humiliate. | [verb] To lower physically; to depress; to cast or throw down; to stoop. | [verb] To lower in value, in particular by altering the content of alloys in coins; to debase. ABATED (9) [verb] (obsolete outside law) To put an end to; to cause to cease. | [verb] To become null and void. | [verb] To nullify; make void. ABIDED (10) [verb] To endure without yielding; to withstand; await defiantly; to encounter; to persevere. | [verb] To bear patiently; to tolerate; to put up with; stand. | [verb] To pay for; to stand the consequences of; to answer for; to suffer for; to atone for. ABOARD (9) [adverb] On board; into or within a ship or boat; hence, into or within a railway car. | [adverb] On or onto a horse, a camel, etc. | [adverb] On base. ABODED (10) ABOUND (9) [verb] To be full to overflowing. | [verb] To be wealthy. | [verb] To be highly productive. ABROAD (9) [noun] Countries or lands abroad. | [adverb] Beyond the bounds of a country; in foreign countries. | [adverb] At large; widely; broadly; over a wide space. ABSURD (9) [noun] An absurdity. | [noun] (often preceded by the) The opposition between the human search for meaning in life and the inability to find any; the state or condition in which man exists in an irrational universe and his life has no meaning outside of his existence. | [adjective] Contrary to reason or propriety; obviously and flatly opposed to manifest truth; inconsistent with the plain dictates of common sense; logically contradictory; nonsensical; ridiculous; silly. ABUSED (9) [verb] To put to a wrong use; to misapply; to use improperly; to misuse; to use for a wrong purpose or end; to pervert | [verb] To injure; to maltreat; to hurt; to treat with cruelty, especially repeatedly. | [verb] To attack with coarse language; to insult; to revile; malign; to speak in an offensive manner to or about someone; to disparage. ACARID (9) [noun] A member of the family Acaridae, which includes mites and ticks. | [noun] Any mite or tick belonging to the order Acarina. ACCORD (11) [noun] Agreement or concurrence of opinion, will, or action. | [noun] A harmony in sound, pitch and tone; concord. | [noun] Agreement or harmony of things in general. ADDEND (9) [noun] Any one of two or more numbers or other terms that are to be added together. | [noun] A moiety added to another molecule. | [verb] To furnish with an addendum. ADDLED (9) [verb] (provincial) To earn, earn by labor; earn money or one's living. | [verb] (provincial) To thrive or grow; to ripen. | [verb] To make addle; to grow addle; to muddle ADORED (8) [verb] To worship. | [verb] To love with one's entire heart and soul; regard with deep respect and affection. | [verb] To be very fond of. AERIED (7) [verb] Past tense of "aery," meaning to nest or build an aerie (eagle's nest). | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of an aerie; located high up. AFEARD (10) [adjective] Afraid AFFORD (13) [verb] To incur, stand, or bear without serious detriment, as an act which might under other circumstances be injurious;—with an auxiliary, as can, could, might, etc.; to be able or rich enough. | [verb] To offer, provide, or supply, as in selling, granting, expending, with profit, or without loss or too great injury. | [verb] To give forth; to supply, yield, or produce as the natural result, fruit, or issue. AFIELD (10) [adverb] Away (from the home or starting point, physical or conceptual); usually preceded by far (or farther, further). | [adverb] On the field. | [adverb] Out in the open. AFRAID (10) [adjective] (usually used predicatively, not attributively, be afraid) Impressed with fear or apprehension; in fear. | [adjective] Regretful, sorry. | [adjective] (used with for) Worried about, feeling concern for, fearing for (someone or something). AGREED (8) [verb] To harmonize in opinion, statement, or action; to be in unison or concord; to be or become united or consistent; to concur. | [verb] To yield assent; to accede;—followed by to. | [verb] To yield assent to; to approve. AIRTED (7) AISLED (7) [adjective] Having an aisle or aisles; arranged with aisles. ALATED (7) ALGOID (8) ALIDAD (8) ALINED (7) ALIPED (9) ALLIED (7) [adjective] Joined as allies. | [adjective] Related. | [verb] To unite, or form a connection between, as between families by marriage, or between princes and states by treaty, league, or confederacy. ALMOND (9) [noun] A type of tree nut. | [noun] A small deciduous tree in family Rosaceae, Prunus dulcis, that produces predominantly sweet almonds. | [noun] Other plants that produce almond-like nuts: AMAZED (18) [verb] To fill with wonder and surprise; to astonish, astound, surprise or perplex. | [verb] To undergo amazement; to be astounded. | [verb] To stupefy; to knock unconscious. AMBLED (11) [verb] To stroll or walk slowly and leisurely. | [verb] Of a quadruped: to move along by using both legs on one side, and then the other. AMUSED (9) [verb] To entertain or occupy in a pleasant manner; to stir with pleasing emotions. | [verb] To cause laughter or amusement; to be funny. | [verb] To keep in expectation; to beguile; to delude. ANELED (7) [verb] To anoint; to give extreme unction with oil. ANGLED (8) [verb] (often in the passive) To place (something) at an angle. | [verb] To change direction rapidly. | [verb] To present or argue something in a particular way or from a particular viewpoint. ANKLED (11) [verb] To walk. | [verb] To cyclically angle the foot at the ankle while pedaling, to maximize the amount of work applied to the pedal during each revolution. | [adjective] (in combination) Having some specific type of ankle. ANTEED (7) [verb] Past tense of "ante," meaning to put up a stake or payment, especially in poker or other games. AOUDAD (8) [noun] The Barbary sheep, Ammotragus lervia. APPEND (11) [noun] An instance of writing more data to the end of an existing file. | [verb] To hang or attach to, as by a string, so that the thing is suspended | [verb] To add, as an accessory to the principal thing; to annex ARAMID (9) [noun] Any of a class of strong, heat-resistant synthetic fibres, used in aerospace and military applications. ARCHED (12) [verb] To form into an arch shape | [verb] To cover with an arch or arches. | [adjective] Curved. ARCKED (13) ARGLED (8) [verb] Past tense of "argle," meaning to argue or dispute, particularly in a petty or prolonged manner. ARGUED (8) [verb] To show grounds for concluding (that); to indicate, imply. | [verb] To debate, disagree or discuss opposing or differing viewpoints. | [verb] To have an argument, a quarrel. ARILED (7) [adjective] Having an aril; equipped with an aril (a seed covering or appendage). AROUND (7) [adjective] (with the verb "to be") Present in the vicinity. | [adjective] (with the verb "to be") Alive; existing. | [adverb] So as to form a circle or trace a circular path, or approximation thereof. ASCEND (9) [verb] To move upward, to fly, to soar. | [verb] To slope in an upward direction. | [verb] To go up. ATONED (7) [verb] To make reparation, compensation, amends or satisfaction for an offence, crime, mistake or deficiency. | [verb] To bring at one or at concordance; to reconcile; to suffer appeasement. | [verb] To agree or accord; to be in accordance or harmony. ATTEND (7) [verb] To listen to (something or someone); to pay attention to; regard; heed. | [verb] To listen (to, unto). | [verb] To turn one's consideration (to); to deal with (a task, problem, concern etc.), to look after. | [verb] To set on fire; kindle. AUGEND (8) [noun] A quantity to which another is added. AUTOED (7) AVOWED (13) [verb] To declare openly and boldly, as something believed to be right; to own, acknowledge or confess frankly. | [verb] To bind or devote by a vow. | [verb] To acknowledge and justify, as an act done. See avowry. AWAKED (14) [verb] Past tense of awake; to wake up or become conscious. | [verb] To rouse from sleep or inactivity. AXISED (14) AXSEED (14) AZOTED (16) [adjective] Containing nitrogen or combined with nitrogen. BABIED (11) [adjective] Spoiled or coddled. | [verb] To coddle; to pamper somebody like an infant. | [verb] To tend (something) with care; to be overly attentive to (something), fuss over. BACHED (14) [verb] To live apart from women, as during the period when a divorce is in progress. (Compare bachelor pad.) BACKED (15) [verb] To go in the reverse direction. | [verb] To support. | [verb] (of the wind) To change direction contrary to the normal pattern; that is, to shift anticlockwise in the northern hemisphere, or clockwise in the southern hemisphere. | [adjective] Put on one's back; killed; rendered dead. BADGED (11) [verb] To mark or distinguish with a badge. | [verb] To show a badge to. | [verb] To enter a restricted area by showing one's badge. BAFFED (15) [verb] Past tense of baff, to strike a golf ball with the sole of the club. | [verb] Past tense of baff, to strike or hit something. BAGGED (11) [verb] To put into a bag. | [verb] To catch or kill, especially when fishing or hunting. | [verb] To gain possession of something, or to make first claim on something. BAILED (9) [verb] To secure the release of an arrested person by providing bail. | [verb] To release a person under such guarantee. | [verb] To hand over personal property to be held temporarily by another as a bailment. BAITED (9) [verb] To attract with bait; to entice. | [verb] To affix bait to a trap or a fishing hook or fishing line. | [verb] To set dogs on (an animal etc.) to bite or worry; to attack with dogs, especially for sport. BALDED (10) [verb] Past tense of bald; to make bald or to become bald. | [adjective] Having become bald or made bald. BALKED (13) [verb] To pass over or by. | [verb] To omit, miss or overlook by chance. | [verb] To miss intentionally; to avoid. BALLAD (9) [noun] A kind of narrative poem, adapted for recitation or singing; especially, a sentimental or romantic poem in short stanzas. | [noun] A slow romantic song. | [verb] To make mention of in ballads. BALLED (9) [verb] To form or wind into a ball. | [verb] To heat in a furnace and form into balls for rolling. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. BAMMED (13) BANDED (10) [verb] To fasten with a band. | [verb] To fasten an identifying band around the leg of (a bird). | [verb] To group together for a common purpose; to confederate. BANGED (10) [verb] To make sudden loud noises, and often repeatedly, especially by exploding or hitting something. | [verb] To hit hard. | [verb] To engage in sexual intercourse. BANKED (13) [verb] To deal with a bank or financial institution, or for an institution to provide financial services to a client. | [verb] To put into a bank. | [verb] To conceal in the rectum for use in prison. BANNED (9) [verb] To summon; to call out. | [verb] To anathematize; to pronounce an ecclesiastical curse upon; to place under a ban. | [verb] To curse; to execrate. BARBED (11) [verb] To furnish with barbs, or with that which will hold or hurt like barbs, as an arrow, fishhook, spear, etc. | [verb] To cover a horse in armor, corrupted from bard. | [verb] To cut (hair). BARDED (10) [adjective] (of a horse) Accoutered with defensive armor | [adjective] Wearing rich caparisons. BARFED (12) [verb] To vomit. | [verb] Of a system: to fail. BARGED (10) [verb] To intrude or break through, particularly in an unwelcome or clumsy manner. | [verb] To push someone. BARKED (13) [verb] To make a short, loud, explosive noise with the vocal organs (said of animals, especially dogs). | [verb] To make a clamor; to make importunate outcries. | [verb] To speak sharply. BARRED (9) [verb] To obstruct the passage of (someone or something). | [verb] To prohibit. | [verb] To lock or bolt with a bar. BASHED (12) [verb] To strike heavily. | [verb] To collide. | [verb] To criticize harshly. BASKED (13) [verb] To bathe in warmth; to be exposed to pleasant heat. | [verb] To take great pleasure or satisfaction; to feel warmth or happiness. (This verb is usually followed by "in"). BASTED (9) [verb] To sew with long or loose stitches, as for temporary use, or in preparation for gathering the fabric. | [verb] To sprinkle flour and salt and drip butter or fat on, as on meat in roasting. | [verb] (by extension) To coat over something. BATHED (12) [verb] To clean oneself by immersion in water or using water; to take a bath, have a bath. | [verb] To immerse oneself, or part of the body, in water for pleasure or refreshment; to swim. | [verb] To clean a person by immersion in water or using water; to give someone a bath. | [verb] To wash a person or animal in a bath BATTED (9) [verb] To hit with a bat or (figuratively) as if with a bat. | [verb] To take a turn at hitting a ball with a bat in sports like cricket, baseball and softball, as opposed to fielding. | [verb] To strike or swipe as though with a bat. BAWLED (12) [verb] To shout or utter in a loud and intense manner. | [verb] To wail; to give out a blaring cry. BAYARD (12) [noun] A horse, especially a bay-colored horse. | [noun] A man of courage and integrity; a knight or gallant person. BEADED (10) [verb] To form into a bead. | [verb] To apply beads to. | [verb] To form into a bead. BEAKED (13) [adjective] Having a beak or beak-like projection. | [verb] Past tense of beak, to strike or peck with a beak. BEAMED (11) [verb] To emit beams of light; shine; radiate. | [verb] To smile broadly or especially cheerfully. | [verb] To furnish or supply with beams BEANED (9) [verb] To hit deliberately with a projectile, especially in the head. BECKED (15) BEDDED (11) [verb] Senses relating to a bed as a place for resting or sleeping. | [verb] Senses relating to a bed as a place or layer on which something else rests or is laid. BEDRID (10) [adjective] Confined to bed by illness or infirmity; bedridden. BEEFED (12) [verb] To complain. | [verb] To add weight or strength to; to beef up. | [verb] To fart; break wind. BEEPED (11) [verb] To sound (something that makes a beep). | [verb] To have sexual intercourse (with) - referring to the bleep tone used to censor obscene words in broadcasts | [verb] To produce a beep. BEGGED (11) [verb] To request the help of someone, often in the form of money. | [verb] To plead with someone for help, a favor, etc.; to entreat. | [verb] In the phrase beg the question: to assume. BEGIRD (10) [verb] To encircle or gird about; to surround or bind with a belt or band. BEGLAD (10) BEHEAD (12) [verb] To remove the head of; to cut someone's head off. BEHELD (12) [verb] To see or look at, esp. appreciatively; to descry, look upon. | [verb] To look. | [verb] To contemplate. BEHIND (12) [noun] The rear, back-end | [noun] Butt, the buttocks, bottom | [noun] A one-point score. BEHOLD (12) [verb] To see or look at, esp. appreciatively; to descry, look upon. | [verb] To look. | [verb] To contemplate. BELAUD (9) BELIED (9) [verb] To tell lies about. | [verb] To give a false representation of. | [verb] To contradict, to show (something) to be false. BELLED (9) [verb] To attach a bell to. | [verb] To shape so that it flares out like a bell. | [verb] To telephone. BELTED (9) [verb] To encircle. | [verb] To fasten a belt on. | [verb] To invest (a person) with a belt as part of a formal ceremony such as knighthood. BENDED (10) [verb] Past tense and past participle of bend, meaning to curve or flex something. | [adjective] Curved or formed into a bend. BESTED (9) [verb] To surpass in skill or achievement. | [verb] To beat in a contest BESTUD (9) [verb] To set or decorate with studs; to be studded with something. BETTED (9) [verb] To stake or pledge upon the outcome of an event; to wager. | [verb] To be sure of something; to be able to count on something. | [verb] To place money into the pot in order to require others do the same, usually only used for the first person to place money in the pot on each round. BEYOND (12) [noun] The unknown. | [noun] The hereafter. | [noun] Something that is far beyond. BIASED (9) [verb] To place bias upon; to influence. | [adjective] Exhibiting bias; prejudiced. | [adjective] Angled at a slant. BIBBED (13) [verb] To dress (somebody) in a bib. | [verb] To drink heartily; to tipple. | [verb] To beep (e.g. a car horn). BIFFED (15) [verb] To punch or hit. | [verb] To discard; to throw out; to throw away. | [verb] To wipe out; to faceplant; to fall. BIFOLD (12) [noun] A door, window, shutter, or divider consisting of two equal panels hinged together so that it opens by folding the panels against each other. | [noun] A sheet of paper or cardboard folded in half along a crease down the center. | [noun] A wallet, billfold, or carrying case with a single fold, so that it opens like a book. BILGED (10) [verb] To spring a leak in the bilge. | [verb] To bulge or swell. | [verb] To break open the bilge(s) of. BILKED (13) [verb] To spoil the score of (someone) in cribbage. | [verb] To do someone out of their due; to deceive or defraud, to cheat (someone). | [verb] To evade, elude. BILLED (9) [verb] To dig, chop, etc., with a bill. | [verb] To peck | [verb] To stroke bill against bill, with reference to doves; to caress in fondness BINGED (10) [verb] To go; walk; come; run | [verb] Making the sound of a bounce | [verb] To bounce BINNED (9) [verb] To dispose of (something) by putting it into a bin, or as if putting it into a bin. | [verb] To throw away, reject, give up. | [verb] To convert continuous data into discrete groups. BIRDED (10) [verb] Scored one stroke under par on a golf hole. | [verb] Past tense of bird, meaning to hunt for or observe birds. BIRLED (9) [verb] To pour a drink (for). | [verb] To drink deeply or excessively; carouse. BIRRED (9) [verb] Past tense of "birr," meaning to make a whirring sound or to move with a whirring noise. BITTED (9) [verb] To put a bridle upon; to put the bit in the mouth of (a horse). | [verb] To put round the bitts. BLADED (10) [verb] To skate on rollerblades. | [verb] To furnish with a blade. | [verb] To put forth or have a blade. BLAMED (11) [verb] To censure (someone or something); to criticize. | [verb] To bring into disrepute. | [verb] (usually followed by "for") To assert or consider that someone is the cause of something negative; to place blame, to attribute responsibility (for something negative or for doing something negative). BLARED (9) [verb] To make a loud sound. | [verb] To cause to sound like the blare of a trumpet; to proclaim loudly. BLAWED (12) [verb] Past tense of "blaw," a Scottish dialect word meaning to blow. BLAZED (18) [verb] To be on fire, especially producing bright flames. | [verb] To send forth or reflect a bright light; shine like a flame. | [verb] To be conspicuous; shine brightly a brilliancy (of talents, deeds, etc.). BLOWED (12) [verb] Past tense and past participle of blow, used in some dialects or informal speech (non-standard form of "blew"). BLUMED (11) BOATED (9) [verb] To travel by boat. | [verb] To transport in a boat. | [verb] To place in a boat. BOBBED (13) [verb] To move gently and vertically, in either a single motion or repeatedly up and down, at or near the surface of a body of water, or similar medium. | [verb] To move (something) as though it were bobbing in water. | [verb] To curtsy. BODIED (10) [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified form of body. | [adjective] Having a bodily form; corporeal or incarnate. | [verb] To give body or shape to something. BOGGED (11) [verb] (now often with "down") To sink or submerge someone or something into bogland. | [verb] To prevent or slow someone or something from making progress. | [verb] (now often with "down") To sink and stick in bogland. BOILED (9) [verb] (of liquids) To heat to the point where it begins to turn into a gas. | [verb] To cook in boiling water. | [verb] (of liquids) To begin to turn into a gas, seethe. BOLLED (9) [verb] Past tense of "boll," meaning to form a seed pod or to swell into a rounded shape, as cotton does when it develops its fluffy seed pod. | [adjective] Having formed into a boll or seed pod. BOLTED (9) [verb] To connect or assemble pieces using a bolt. | [verb] To secure a door by locking or barring it. | [verb] To flee, to depart, to accelerate suddenly. BOMBED (13) [verb] To attack using one or more bombs; to bombard. | [verb] To fail dismally. | [verb] To jump into water in a squatting position, with the arms wrapped around the legs. BONDED (10) [verb] To connect, secure or tie with a bond; to bind. | [verb] To cause to adhere (one material with another). | [verb] To form a chemical compound with. BONGED (10) [verb] To pull a bell. | [verb] To ring a doorbell. BONKED (13) [verb] To strike or collide with something. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse. | [verb] To hit something with the front of the board, especially in midair. BOOBED (11) [verb] To behave stupidly; to act like a boob. | [verb] To make a mistake | [adjective] (in composition) Having boobs (breasts) of a specified kind. BOOKED (13) [verb] To reserve (something) for future use. | [verb] To write down, to register or record in a book or as in a book. | [verb] (law enforcement) To record the name and other details of a suspected offender and the offence for later judicial action. BOOMED (11) [verb] To make a loud, hollow, resonant sound. | [verb] (of speech) To exclaim with force, to shout, to thunder. | [verb] To make something boom. BOOTED (9) [verb] To kick. | [verb] To put boots on, especially for riding. | [verb] To apply corporal punishment (compare slippering). BOOZED (18) [verb] To drink alcohol. BOPPED (13) [verb] To strike gently or playfully. | [verb] To dance to this music, or any sort of popular music with a strong beat. | [verb] To have sex. BOSSED (9) [verb] To exercise authoritative control over; to tell (someone) what to do, often repeatedly. | [verb] To decorate with bosses; to emboss. BOUSED (9) [verb] Past tense of bouse; to drink heavily or excessively. | [verb] To haul or pull with tackle, especially in nautical contexts. BOWLED (12) [verb] To roll or throw (a ball) in the correct manner in cricket and similar games and sports. | [verb] To throw the ball (in cricket and similar games and sports). | [verb] To roll or carry smoothly on, or as on, wheels. BOWSED (12) [verb] Past tense of bowse, meaning to haul or pull with a rope, especially in nautical contexts. | [adjective] Drunk or intoxicated (archaic slang). BOYARD (12) [noun] A member of the old Russian aristocracy or landowning class. BRACED (11) [verb] To prepare for something bad, such as an impact or blow. | [verb] To place in a position for resisting pressure; to hold firmly. | [verb] To swing round the yards of a square rigged ship, using braces, to present a more efficient sail surface to the direction of the wind. | [adjective] Having braces or similar supports. BRAKED (13) [verb] To bruise and crush; to knead | [verb] To pulverise with a harrow | [verb] To operate (a) brake(s). BRAVED (12) [verb] To encounter with courage and fortitude, to defy, to provoke. | [verb] To adorn; to make fine or showy. BRAYED (12) [verb] Of an animal (now chiefly of animals related to the ass or donkey, and the camel): to make its cry. | [verb] (by extension) To make a harsh, discordant sound like a donkey's bray. | [verb] To make or utter (a shout, sound, etc.) discordantly, loudly, or in a harsh and grating manner. BRAZED (18) [verb] To join two metal pieces, without melting them, using heat and diffusion of a jointing alloy of capillary thickness. | [verb] To burn or temper in fire. BREWED (12) [verb] To make tea or coffee by mixing tea leaves or coffee beans with hot water. | [verb] To heat wine, infusing it with spices; to mull. | [verb] To make a hot soup by combining ingredients and boiling them in water. BRIARD (9) [noun] A large French sheepdog with a long, shaggy coat, originally bred for herding sheep. BRIBED (11) [verb] To give a bribe to; specifically, to ask a person to do something, usually against his/her will, in exchange for some type of reward or relief from potential trouble. | [verb] To gain by a bribe; to induce as by a bribe. BRINED (9) [verb] To preserve food in a salt solution. | [verb] To prepare and flavor food (especially meat) for cooking by soaking in a salt solution. BROMID (11) [noun] A hackneyed or trite saying; a platitude. | [noun] A chemical compound of bromine with another element or radical. BROWED (12) [adjective] (in combination) Having a brow. BRUTED (9) [verb] Past tense of brute, meaning to shape a diamond by grinding it against another diamond. | [verb] To spread rumors or gossip about someone. BUBOED (11) [adjective] Affected with or having buboes (swollen lymph nodes, especially in the groin, characteristic of bubonic plague). BUCKED (15) [verb] To copulate, as bucks and does. | [verb] To bend; buckle. | [verb] (of a horse or similar saddle or pack animal) To leap upward arching its back, coming down with head low and forelegs stiff, forcefully kicking its hind legs upward, often in an attempt to dislodge or throw a rider or pack. BUDDED (11) [verb] To form buds. | [verb] To reproduce by splitting off buds. | [verb] To begin to grow, or to issue from a stock in the manner of a bud, as a horn. BUDGED (11) [verb] To move. | [verb] To move. | [verb] To yield in one’s opinions or beliefs. BUFFED (15) [verb] To polish and make shiny by rubbing. | [verb] To make a character or an item stronger. | [verb] To modify a medical chart, especially in a dishonest manner. BUGGED (11) [verb] To annoy. | [verb] To install an electronic listening device or devices in. | [adjective] (on one's person or of a telephone line, dwelling, room, etc.) Containing a bug (interceptive listening device). BUGLED (10) [verb] To announce, sing, or cry in the manner of a musical bugle | [adjective] Ornamented with bugles. | [adjective] Played by a bugle. BULBED (11) [adjective] Having a bulb or bulb-like shape; swollen or rounded at one end. | [verb] Past tense of bulb, meaning to swell or form into a bulb shape. BULGED (10) [verb] To stick out from (a surface). | [verb] To bilge, as a ship; to founder. BULKED (13) [verb] To appear or seem to be, as to bulk or extent. | [verb] To grow in size; to swell or expand. | [verb] To gain body mass by means of diet, exercise, etc. BULLED (9) [verb] To force oneself (in a particular direction). | [verb] To lie, to tell untruths. | [verb] To be in heat; to manifest sexual desire as cows do. BUMMED (13) [verb] To sodomize; to engage in anal sex. | [verb] To ask someone to give one (something) for free; to beg for something. | [verb] To stay idle and unproductive, like a hobo or vagabond; to loiter. BUMPED (13) [verb] To knock against or run into with a jolt. | [verb] To move up or down by a step; displace. | [verb] To post in an Internet forum thread in order to raise the thread's profile by returning it to the top of the list of active threads. BUNGED (10) [verb] To plug, as with a bung. | [verb] To put or throw somewhere without care; to chuck. | [verb] To batter, bruise; to cause to bulge or swell. BUNKED (13) [verb] To occupy a bunk. | [verb] To provide a bunk. | [verb] To fail to attend school or work without permission; to play truant (usually as in 'to bunk off'). BUNTED (9) [verb] To push with the horns; to butt. | [verb] To spring or rear up. | [verb] To intentionally hit softly with a hands-spread batting stance. BUOYED (12) [verb] To keep afloat or aloft; used with up. | [verb] To support or maintain at a high level. | [verb] To mark with a buoy. BURIED (9) [adjective] Placed in a grave at a burial. | [adjective] Concealed, hidden. | [verb] To ritualistically inter in a grave or tomb. BURKED (13) [verb] To suppress or smother something, especially a scandal or unwanted information. | [verb] To murder someone by suffocation, especially for the purpose of selling the body for dissection. BURLED (9) [verb] Past tense of burl; to remove burls (knotty growths) from cloth or wood. | [verb] To throw or hurl with force. BURNED (9) [verb] To cause to be consumed by fire. | [verb] To be consumed by fire, or in flames. | [verb] To overheat so as to make unusable. BURPED (11) [verb] To emit a burp. | [verb] To cause someone (such as a baby) to burp. BURRED (9) [verb] To pronounce with a uvular "r". | [verb] To make a rough humming sound. BUSHED (12) [adjective] Very tired; exhausted. | [adjective] Mentally unwell due to isolation, especially due to working in a remote mine or camp; experiencing cabin fever. | [adjective] Incorporating a bush, a mechanical part. BUSIED (9) [verb] To make somebody busy or active; to occupy. | [verb] To rush somebody. BUSKED (13) [verb] To prepare; to make ready; to array; to dress. | [verb] To go; to direct one's course. | [verb] To solicit money by entertaining the public in the street or in public transport BUSSED (9) [verb] To transport via a motor bus. | [verb] To transport students to school, often to a more distant school for the purposes of achieving racial integration. | [verb] To travel by bus. BUSTED (9) [adjective] (often used in combination with an adjective) Having a certain type of bust (breasts; cleavage). | [verb] To break. | [verb] To arrest (someone) for a crime. BUTLED (9) [verb] To serve as or perform the duties of a butler. BUTTED (9) [verb] To join at the butt, end, or outward extremity; to terminate; to be bounded; to abut. | [verb] To strike bluntly, particularly with the head. | [verb] To strike bluntly with the head. | [verb] Use the word "but". BUZZED (27) [verb] To make a low, continuous, humming or sibilant sound, like that made by bees with their wings. | [verb] To show a high level of activity and haste (alluding to the common simile "busy as a bee"). Often in the colloquial imperative "Buzz off!" | [verb] To whisper; to communicate, as tales, in an undertone; to spread, as a report, by whispers or secretly. BYRLED (12) BYROAD (12) [noun] A road less frequented than a highway; a byway. BYWORD (15) [noun] A proverb or proverbial expression, common saying; a frequently used word or phrase. | [noun] A characteristic word or expression; a word or phrase associated with a person or group. | [noun] Someone or something that stands as an example (i.e. metonymically) for something else, by having some of that something's characteristic traits. CABBED (13) [verb] To travel by taxicab. CABLED (11) [verb] To provide with cable(s) | [verb] To fasten (as if) with cable(s) | [verb] To wrap wires to form a cable CACHED (14) [verb] To place in a cache. CADGED (11) [verb] To beg. | [verb] To obtain something by wit or guile; to convince people to do something they might not normally do. | [verb] To carry hawks and other birds of prey. CALKED (13) [verb] To make an indentation in the edge of a metal plate, as along a seam in a steam boiler or an iron ship, to force the edge of the upper plate hard against the lower and so fill the crevice. | [verb] To drive oakum into the seams of a ship's wooden deck or hull to make it watertight. | [verb] To apply caulking to joints, cracks, or a juncture of different materials. CALLED (9) [verb] (heading) To use one's voice. | [verb] (heading) To visit. | [verb] (heading) To name, identify or describe. CALMED (11) [verb] To make calm. | [verb] To become calm. CALVED (12) [verb] To give birth to a calf | [verb] To assist in a cow's giving birth to a calf | [verb] To give birth to (a calf) CAMPED (13) [verb] To live in a tent or similar temporary accommodation. | [verb] To set up a camp. | [verb] To afford rest or lodging for. CANARD (9) [noun] A false or misleading report or story, especially if deliberately so. | [noun] A type of aircraft in which the primary horizontal control and stabilization surfaces are in front of the main wing. | [noun] Any small winglike structure on a vehicle, usually used for stabilization. CANDID (10) [noun] A spontaneous or unposed photograph. | [adjective] Impartial and free from prejudice. | [adjective] Straightforward, open and sincere. CANNED (9) [verb] To seal in a can. | [verb] To preserve by heating and sealing in a jar or can. | [verb] To discard, scrap or terminate (an idea, project, etc.). CANOED (9) [verb] To ride or paddle a canoe. CANTED (9) [verb] To speak with the jargon of a class or subgroup. | [verb] To speak in set phrases. | [verb] To preach in a singsong fashion, especially in a false or empty manner. CAPPED (13) [verb] To cover or seal with a cap. | [verb] To award a cap as a mark of distinction. | [verb] To lie over or on top of something. CAPSID (11) [noun] The outer protein shell of a virus CARDED (10) [verb] To check IDs, especially against a minimum age requirement. | [verb] To play cards. | [verb] To make (a stated score), as recorded on a scoring card. CARIED (9) CARKED (13) [verb] To be filled with worry, solicitude, or troubles. | [verb] To bring worry, vexation, or anxiety. | [verb] To labor anxiously. CARPED (11) [verb] To complain about a fault; to harp on. | [verb] To say; to tell. | [verb] To find fault with; to censure. CARTED (9) [verb] To carry goods. | [verb] To carry or convey in a cart. | [verb] To remove, especially involuntarily or for disposal. CARVED (12) [verb] To cut. | [verb] To cut meat in order to serve it. | [verb] To shape to sculptural effect; to produce (a work) by cutting, or to cut (a material) into a finished work. CASHED (12) [verb] To exchange (a check/cheque) for money in the form of notes/bills. | [verb] To obtain a payout from a tournament. | [verb] To disband. To do away with, kill CASKED (13) [verb] Past tense of cask, meaning to put or store in a cask. | [adjective] Confined or stored in a cask. CATTED (9) [verb] To hoist (the anchor) by its ring so that it hangs at the cathead. | [verb] To flog with a cat-o'-nine-tails. | [verb] To vomit. CAUDAD (10) [adverb] Toward the tail or posterior end of the body. CAUSED (9) [verb] To set off an event or action. | [verb] (ditransitive) To actively produce as a result, by means of force or authority. | [verb] To assign or show cause; to give a reason; to make excuse. CEASED (9) [verb] To stop. | [verb] To stop doing (something). | [verb] To be wanting; to fail; to pass away. CEBOID (11) [noun] A member of Ceboidea, a family of New World monkeys including capuchins and squirrel monkeys. CEILED (9) [verb] To line or finish (a surface, such as a wall), with plaster, stucco, thin boards, or similar. | [verb] To set a higher bound. | [adjective] (in combination) Having some specified type of ceiling CELLED (9) [adjective] Having cells or compartments; divided into cells. | [verb] Past tense of "cell," meaning to confine in a cell or to furnish with cells. CENSED (9) [verb] To perfume with incense. CERVID (12) [noun] Any animal (such as the deer) of the family Cervidae. CESSED (9) [verb] Past tense of "cess," meaning to assess or levy a tax or rate. | [verb] Past tense of "cess," meaning to stop or cease (archaic). CHAFED (15) [verb] To excite heat in by friction; to rub in order to stimulate and make warm. | [verb] To excite passion or anger in; to fret; to irritate. | [verb] To fret and wear by rubbing. CHARED (12) [verb] Past tense of "char," meaning to burn or scorch the surface of something. | [verb] To cook food quickly over high heat until the surface is blackened. CHASED (12) [verb] To pursue. | [verb] To consume another beverage immediately after drinking hard liquor, typically something better tasting or less harsh such as soda or beer; to use a drink as a chaser | [verb] To attempt to win by scoring the required number of runs in the final innings. CHAWED (15) [verb] To chew; to grind with one's teeth; to masticate (food, or the cud) | [verb] To ruminate (about) in thought; to ponder; to consider | [verb] To steal. CHEWED (15) [verb] To crush with the teeth by repeated closing and opening of the jaws; done to food to soften it and break it down by the action of saliva before it is swallowed. | [verb] To grind, tear, or otherwise degrade or demolish something with teeth or as with teeth. | [verb] To think about something; to ponder; to chew over. CHIDED (13) [verb] To admonish in blame; to reproach angrily. | [verb] To utter words of disapprobation and displeasure; to find fault; to contend angrily. | [verb] To make a clamorous noise; to chafe. CHIELD (12) [noun] A Scottish or dialectal word for a child or young man. CHIMED (14) [verb] To make the sound of a chime. | [verb] To cause to sound in harmony; to play a tune, as upon a set of bells; to move or strike in harmony. | [verb] To utter harmoniously; to recite rhythmically. CHINED (12) [adjective] Pertaining to, or having, a chine, or backbone; used in composition. | [adjective] Broken in the back. CHOKED (16) [verb] To be unable to breathe because of obstruction of the windpipe (for instance food or other objects that go down the wrong way, or fumes or particles in the air that cause the throat to constrict). | [verb] To prevent (someone) from breathing or talking by strangling or filling the windpipe. | [verb] To obstruct (a passage, etc.) by filling it up or clogging it. CHORED (12) [verb] Past tense of "chore," meaning to do chores or assign chores to someone. CHOWED (15) [verb] To eat. | [verb] To call a discarded tile to produce a chow. CHUTED (12) [verb] Past tense of chute, meaning to convey or transport through a chute. | [adjective] Equipped with or having a chute or chutes. CITIED (9) [adjective] Having cities or urban characteristics; characterized by the presence of cities. CLAWED (12) [verb] To scratch or to tear at. | [verb] To use the claws to seize, to grip. | [verb] To use the claws to climb. CLAYED (12) [verb] Past tense of clay, meaning to coat, cover, or treat with clay. CLEPED (11) [verb] To give a call; cry out; appeal. | [verb] To call; call upon; cry out to. | [verb] To call to oneself; invite; summon. CLERID (9) CLEWED (12) [verb] To roll into a ball | [verb] (transitive and intransitive) to raise the lower corner(s) of (a sail) CLONED (9) [verb] To create a clone of. CLOSED (9) [verb] (physical) To remove a gap. | [verb] (social) To finish, to terminate. | [verb] To come or gather around; to enclose; to encompass; to confine. CLOYED (12) [verb] To fill up or choke up; to stop up. | [verb] To clog, to glut, or satisfy, as the appetite; to satiate. | [verb] To fill to loathing; to surfeit. COALED (9) [verb] To take on a supply of coal (usually of steam ships). | [verb] To supply with coal. | [verb] To be converted to charcoal. COATED (9) [verb] To cover with a coating of some material. | [verb] To cover like a coat. | [verb] To clothe. COAXED (16) [verb] To fondle, kid, pet, tease. | [verb] To wheedle, persuade (a person, organisation, animal etc.) gradually or by use of flattery to do something. | [verb] To carefully manipulate into a particular desired state, situation or position. COCCID (13) [noun] A small insect of the family Coccidae, which includes scale insects and mealybugs that feed on plant sap. COCKED (15) [verb] To lift the cock of a firearm or crossbow; to prepare (a gun or crossbow) to be fired. | [verb] To be prepared to be triggered by having the cock lifted. | [verb] To erect; to turn up. CODDED (11) [verb] To attempt to deceive or confuse. COGGED (11) [verb] To furnish with a cog or cogs. | [verb] To load (a die) so that it can be used to cheat. | [verb] To cheat; to play or gamble fraudulently. COHEAD (12) COIFED (12) [verb] To style or arrange hair. COILED (9) [verb] To wind or reel e.g. a wire or rope into regular rings, often around a centerpiece. | [verb] To wind into loops (roughly) around a common center. | [verb] To wind cylindrically or spirally. COINED (9) [verb] To make of a definite fineness, and convert into coins, as a mass of metal. | [verb] (by extension) To make or fabricate. | [verb] To acquire rapidly, as money; to make. COLEAD (9) [verb] To lead jointly with another person; to share leadership responsibilities with a co-leader. COMBED (13) [verb] (especially of hair or fur) To groom with a toothed implement; chiefly with a comb. | [verb] To separate choice cotton fibers from worsted cloth fibers. | [verb] To search thoroughly as if raking over an area with a comb. | [adjective] Having a comb or crest COMPED (13) [verb] To accompany, in music. | [verb] To compose (a visual design); to make a composite. | [verb] To provide someone with (a complimentary item, such as a ticket). CONKED (13) [verb] To hit, especially on the head. | [verb] To chemically straighten tightly curled hair. | [verb] (often with out) To fail or show signs of failing, cease operating, break down, become unconscious. CONNED (9) [verb] To study or examine carefully, especially in order to gain knowledge of; to learn, or learn by heart. | [verb] To know, understand, acknowledge. | [verb] To trick or defraud, usually for personal gain. CONOID (9) [noun] Anything shaped like a cone. | [noun] A Catalan surface all of whose rulings intersect some fixed line. | [noun] A solid formed by the revolution of a conic section about its axis. COOEED (9) [verb] To make such a call. COOKED (13) [verb] To prepare (food) for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients. | [verb] To prepare (unspecified) food for eating by heating it, often by combining it with other ingredients. | [verb] To be cooked. COOLED (9) [verb] To lose heat, to get colder. | [verb] To make cooler, less warm. | [verb] To become less intense, e.g. less amicable or passionate. COOPED (11) [verb] To keep in a coop. | [verb] To shut up or confine in a narrow space; to cramp. | [verb] To unlawfully confine one or more voters to prevent them from casting their ballots in an election. COPIED (11) [verb] To produce an object identical to a given object. | [verb] To give or transmit a copy to (a person). | [verb] To place a copy of an object in memory for later use. COPPED (13) [verb] To obtain, to purchase (as in drugs), to get hold of, to take. | [verb] To (be forced to) take; to receive; to shoulder; to bear, especially blame or punishment for a particular instance of wrongdoing. | [verb] (trainspotting) To see and record a railway locomotive for the first time. CORDED (10) [verb] To furnish with cords | [verb] To tie or fasten with cords | [verb] To flatten a book during binding CORKED (13) [verb] To seal or stop up, especially with a cork stopper. | [verb] To blacken (as) with a burnt cork | [verb] To leave the cork in a bottle after attempting to uncork it. CORNED (9) [verb] To granulate; to form a substance into grains | [verb] To preserve using coarse salt, e.g. corned beef | [verb] To provide with corn (typically maize; or, in Scotland, oats) for feed COSHED (12) [verb] To strike with a weapon of this kind. COSIED (9) [verb] To become snug and comfortable. | [verb] To become friendly with. COSTED (9) [verb] To incur a charge of; to require payment of a (specified) price. | [verb] To cause something to be lost; to cause the expenditure or relinquishment of. | [verb] To require to be borne or suffered; to cause. COUPED (11) [adjective] Cut off smoothly, as distinguished from erased; -- used especially for the head or limb of an animal. COWARD (12) [noun] A person who lacks courage. | [verb] To intimidate. | [adjective] Cowardly. COWLED (12) [adjective] Wearing or covered with a cowl; having a hood-like covering. COZIED (18) [verb] To become snug and comfortable. | [verb] To become friendly with. CRANED (9) [verb] To extend (one's neck). | [verb] To raise or lower with, or as if with, a crane. | [verb] To pull up before a jump. CRAPED (11) [verb] Past tense of crape, meaning to cover or drape with crape fabric, or to form into wrinkles or folds. | [verb] Past tense of crape, meaning to curl or crimp hair. CRATED (9) [verb] To put into a crate. | [verb] To keep in a crate. CRAVED (12) [verb] To desire strongly, so as to satisfy an appetite; to long or yearn for. | [verb] To ask for earnestly; to beg; to claim. | [verb] To call for; to require as a course of action. CRAZED (18) [verb] To weaken; to impair; to render decrepit. | [verb] To derange the intellect of; to render insane. | [verb] To be crazed, or to act or appear as one that is crazed; to rave; to become insane. CREPED (11) [verb] Past tense of crepe, meaning to make crepe fabric or to cook in the manner of crepes. | [adjective] Having a wrinkled or crinkled texture like crepe fabric. CREWED (12) [adjective] Having a crew; manned; piloted. CROWED (12) [verb] To make the shrill sound characteristic of a rooster; to make a sound in this manner, either in gaiety, joy, pleasure, or defiance. | [verb] To shout in exultation or defiance; to brag. | [verb] To test the reed of a double reed instrument by placing the reed alone in the mouth and blowing it. CUBOID (11) [noun] The cuboid bone. | [noun] A parallelepiped having six rectangular faces. | [adjective] Of the shape of a cube. CUFFED (15) [verb] To furnish with cuffs. | [verb] To handcuff. | [verb] To hit, as a reproach, particularly with the open palm to the head; to slap. CULLED (9) [verb] To pick or take someone or something (from a larger group). | [verb] To gather, collect. | [verb] To select animals from a group and then kill them in order to reduce the numbers of the group in a controlled manner. CULMED (11) CUPPED (13) [verb] To form into the shape of a cup, particularly of the hands. | [verb] To hold something in cupped hands. | [verb] To pour (a liquid, drink, etc.) into a cup. CURBED (11) [verb] To check, restrain or control. | [verb] To rein in. | [verb] To furnish with a curb, as a well; to restrain by a curb, as a bank of earth. CURDED (10) CURLED (9) [verb] To cause to move in a curve. | [verb] To make into a curl or spiral. | [verb] To assume the shape of a curl or spiral. CURRED (9) CURSED (9) [verb] To place a curse upon (a person or object). | [verb] To call upon divine or supernatural power to send injury upon; to imprecate evil upon; to execrate. | [verb] To speak or shout a vulgar curse or epithet. CURVED (12) [verb] To bend; to crook. | [verb] To cause to swerve from a straight course. | [verb] To bend or turn gradually from a given direction. CUSPED (11) CUSPID (11) [noun] A tooth with a single cusp; a canine. CUSSED (9) [verb] To use cursing, to use bad language, to speak profanely. | [adjective] Ill-tempered, nasty, obstinate. | [adverb] (degree) Very, cussedly, accursedly. CYANID (12) CYCLED (14) [verb] To ride a bicycle or other cycle. | [verb] To go through a cycle or to put through a cycle. | [verb] To turn power off and back on CYMOID (14) DABBED (12) [verb] To press lightly in a repetitive motion with a soft object without rubbing. | [verb] To apply a substance in this way. | [verb] To strike by a thrust; to hit with a sudden blow or thrust. DADOED (9) DAFFED (14) DAMMED (12) [verb] To block the flow of water. DAMNED (10) [verb] To condemn to hell. | [verb] To condemn; to declare guilty; to doom; to adjudge to punishment. | [verb] To put out of favor; to ruin; to label negatively. DAMPED (12) [verb] To dampen; to make moderately wet | [verb] To put out, as fire; to weaken, restrain, or make dull. | [verb] To suppress vibrations (mechanical) or oscillations (electrical) by converting energy to heat (or some other form of energy). DANCED (10) [verb] To move with rhythmic steps or movements, especially in time to music. | [verb] To leap or move lightly and rapidly. | [verb] To perform the steps to. DANGED (9) [verb] Damn. | [verb] To dash. | [adjective] Damned; accursed; objectionable DAPPED (12) [verb] To greet with a dap. DARKED (12) DARNED (8) [verb] Euphemism of damn. | [verb] To repair by stitching with thread or yarn, particularly by using a needle to construct a weave across a damaged area of fabric. | [adjective] A minced oath for damned. DARTED (8) [verb] To throw with a sudden effort or thrust; to hurl or launch. | [verb] To send forth suddenly or rapidly; to emit; to shoot | [verb] To shoot with a dart, especially a tranquilizer dart DASHED (11) [verb] To run quickly or for a short distance. | [verb] To leave or depart. | [verb] To destroy by striking (against). DAUBED (10) [verb] To apply (something) to a surface in hasty or crude strokes. | [verb] To paint (a picture, etc.) in a coarse or unskilful manner. | [verb] To cover with a specious or deceitful exterior; to disguise; to conceal. DAUTED (8) DAWNED (11) [verb] To begin to brighten with daylight. | [verb] To start to appear or be realized. | [verb] To begin to give promise; to begin to appear or to expand. DAWTED (11) DAYBED (13) [noun] A couch that can be used as a sofa by day and a bed by night. | [noun] A long chair for reclining. DEANED (8) DEAVED (11) DECKED (14) [verb] To furnish with a deck, as a vessel. | [verb] To knock someone to the floor, especially with a single punch. | [verb] To cause a player to run out of cards to draw and usually lose the game as a result. DEEDED (9) [verb] To transfer real property by deed. DEEMED (10) [verb] To judge, to pass judgment on; to doom, to sentence. | [verb] To adjudge, to decree. | [verb] To dispense (justice); to administer (law). DEFEND (11) [verb] To ward off attacks against; to fight to protect; to guard. | [verb] To support by words or writing; to vindicate, talk in favour of. | [verb] To make legal defence of; to represent (the accused). DEFIED (11) [verb] To challenge (someone) or brave (a hazard or opposition). | [verb] To refuse to obey. | [verb] To not conform to or follow a pattern, set of rules or expectations. DEFUND (11) [verb] To cancel funding for. DEICED (10) DELEAD (8) DELVED (11) [verb] To dig the ground, especially with a shovel. | [verb] To search thoroughly and carefully for information, research, dig into, penetrate, fathom, trace out | [verb] To dig, to excavate. DEMAND (10) [noun] The desire to purchase goods and services. | [noun] The amount of a good or service that consumers are willing to buy at a particular price. | [noun] A forceful claim for something. DENIED (8) [verb] To disallow or reject. | [verb] To assert that something is not true. | [verb] (ditransitive) To refuse to give or grant something to someone. DENNED (8) [verb] To ensconce or hide oneself in (or as in) a den. DENTED (8) [verb] To impact something, producing a dent. | [verb] To develop a dent or dents. DEPEND (10) [verb] (followed by on or upon, formerly also by of) To be contingent or conditioned; to have something as a necessary condition; to hinge on. | [verb] (followed by on or upon) To trust; to have confidence; to rely. | [verb] To hang down; to be sustained by being fastened or attached to something above. DESAND (8) DESMID (10) [noun] Any of about 5000 species of mostly unicellular freshwater green algae belonging to the order Desmidiales. DEUCED (10) [adjective] Damned. | [adverb] (degree) Damned. DEVOID (11) [verb] To empty out; to remove. | [adjective] Empty; having none of; completely without DIACID (10) DIALED (8) [verb] To control or select something with a dial, or (figuratively) as if with a dial. | [verb] To select a number, or to call someone, on a telephone. | [verb] To use a dial or a telephone. DIBBED (12) [verb] To dig a hole by poking; especially, to dig a small hole in soil for the purpose of planting a bulb or seed | [verb] To move in a rapid, cautious manner; especially, with movement like a mouse or rat. | [verb] (sometimes humorous) In the scouting movement, to chant dyb, meaning "do your best" (to follow the scouting laws). DICKED (14) [verb] To mistreat or take advantage of somebody (often with around or up). | [verb] (of a man) To have sexual intercourse with. | [adjective] Having a specified kind of penis. DIETED (8) [verb] To regulate the food of (someone); to put on a diet. | [verb] To modify one's food and beverage intake so as to decrease or increase body weight or influence health. | [verb] To eat; to take one's meals. DIGGED (10) DILLED (8) DIMMED (12) [verb] To make something less bright. | [verb] To become darker. | [verb] To render dim, obscure, or dark; to make less bright or distinct DINGED (9) [verb] To hit or strike. | [verb] To dash; to throw violently. | [verb] To inflict minor damage upon, especially by hitting or striking. DINKED (12) [verb] To play a soft drop shot. | [verb] To chip lightly, to play a light chip shot. | [verb] To carry someone on a pushbike: behind, on the crossbar or on the handlebar. DINNED (8) [verb] To make a din, to resound. | [verb] (of a place) To be filled with sound, to resound. | [verb] To assail (a person, the ears) with loud noise. DINTED (8) [verb] To dent. DIOXID (15) DIPPED (12) [verb] To lower into a liquid. | [verb] To immerse oneself; to become plunged in a liquid; to sink. | [verb] (of a value or rate) To decrease slightly. DIRKED (12) DIRLED (8) DISBUD (10) [verb] To remove buds from a plant in order to promote growth and health in the remaining buds. | [verb] To remove horn-buds from a young calf, lamb or goat kid, to prevent growth of horns. DISCED (10) DISHED (11) [verb] To put in a dish or dishes; serve, usually food. | [verb] To gossip; to relay information about the personal situation of another. | [verb] To make concave, or depress in the middle, like a dish. DISKED (12) DISSED (8) [verb] To put (someone) down, or show disrespect by the use of insulting language or dismissive behaviour. DOATED (8) DOCKED (14) [verb] To cut off a section of an animal's tail, to practise a caudectomy. | [verb] To reduce (wages); to deduct from. | [verb] To cut off, bar, or destroy. DODGED (10) [verb] To avoid (something) by moving suddenly out of the way. | [verb] To avoid; to sidestep. | [verb] To go hither and thither. DOFFED (14) [verb] (clothing) To remove or take off, especially of clothing. | [verb] To remove or tip a hat, as in greeting, salutation or as a mark of respect. | [verb] To get rid of, to throw off. DOGGED (10) [verb] To pursue with the intent to catch. | [verb] To follow in an annoying or harassing way. | [verb] To fasten a hatch securely. | [adjective] Stubbornly persevering, steadfast DOILED (8) DOITED (8) [adjective] Afflicted with weak-mindedness, usually caused by senility DOLLED (8) DONNED (8) [verb] (clothing) To put on, to dress in. DOODAD (9) [noun] A thing (used in a vague way to refer to something whose name one cannot recall); especially an unspecified gadget, device, or part. DOOMED (10) [verb] To pronounce sentence or judgment on; to condemn. | [verb] To destine; to fix irrevocably the ill fate of. | [verb] To judge; to estimate or determine as a judge. DORSAD (8) DOSSED (8) [verb] To avoid work, shirk, etc. | [verb] To sleep in the open or in a derelict building because one is homeless DOTARD (8) [noun] An old person with impaired intellect; one in his or her dotage. | [noun] One who dotes on another, showing excessive fondness. DOTTED (8) [verb] To cover with small spots (of some liquid). | [verb] To add a dot (the symbol) or dots to. | [verb] To mark by means of dots or small spots. DOUSED (8) [verb] To plunge suddenly into water; to duck; to immerse. | [verb] To fall suddenly into water. | [verb] To put out; to extinguish. DOWNED (11) [verb] To knock (someone or something) down; to cause to come down, to fell. | [verb] To lower; to put (something) down. | [verb] To defeat; to overpower. DOWSED (11) [verb] To plunge suddenly into water; to duck; to immerse. | [verb] To fall suddenly into water. | [verb] To put out; to extinguish. DRAPED (10) [verb] To cover or adorn with drapery or folds of cloth, or as with drapery | [verb] To spread over, cover. | [verb] To rail at; to banter. DRAYED (11) DRONED (8) [verb] To kill with a missile fired by unmanned aircraft. | [verb] To produce a low-pitched hum or buzz. | [verb] To speak in a monotone way. DROVED (11) [verb] To herd cattle; particularly over a long distance. | [verb] To finish (stone) with a drove chisel. DROWND (11) DUBBED (12) [verb] To confer knighthood; the conclusion of the ceremony was marked by a tap on the shoulder with a sword. | [verb] To name, to entitle, to call. | [verb] To deem. DUCKED (14) [verb] To quickly lower the head or body in order to prevent it from being struck by something. | [verb] To quickly lower (the head) in order to prevent it from being struck by something. | [verb] To lower (something) into water; to thrust or plunge under liquid and suddenly withdraw. DUCTED (10) [verb] To channel something through a duct (or series of ducts). | [adjective] Fitted with a duct DUELED (8) [verb] To engage in a battle. DULLED (8) [verb] To render dull; to remove or blunt an edge or something that was sharp. | [verb] To soften, moderate or blunt; to make dull, stupid, or sluggish; to stupefy. | [verb] To lose a sharp edge; to become dull. DUMBED (12) [verb] To silence. | [verb] To make stupid. | [verb] To represent as stupid. DUMPED (12) [verb] To release, especially in large quantities and chaotic manner. | [verb] To discard; to get rid of something one does not want anymore. | [verb] To sell below cost or very cheaply; to engage in dumping. DUNGED (9) [verb] To fertilize with dung. | [verb] (calico printing) To immerse or steep, as calico, in a bath of hot water containing cow dung, done to remove the superfluous mordant. | [verb] To release dung: to defecate. DUNKED (12) DUNNED (8) [verb] To ask or beset a debtor for payment. | [verb] To harass by continually repeating e.g. a request. | [verb] To cure, as codfish, by laying them, after salting, in a pile in a dark place, covered with saltgrass or a similar substance. DUNTED (8) [verb] To strike; give a blow to; knock. DUPPED (12) DURNED (8) [adjective] Darned. DUSKED (12) [verb] To begin to lose light or whiteness; to grow dusk. | [verb] To make dusk. DUSTED (8) [verb] To remove dust from. | [verb] To remove dust; to clean by removing dust. | [verb] Of a bird, to cover itself in sand or dry, dusty earth. DWINED (11) EARNED (7) [verb] To gain (success, reward, recognition) through applied effort or work. | [verb] To receive payment for work. | [verb] To receive payment for work. ECHARD (12) ECHOED (12) [verb] (of a sound or sound waves) To reflect off a surface and return. | [verb] To reflect back (a sound). | [verb] (by extension) To repeat (another's speech, opinion etc.). EDDIED (9) [verb] To form an eddy; to move in, or as if in, an eddy; to move in a circle. EDITED (8) [verb] To change a text, or a document. | [verb] To be the editor of a publication. | [verb] To change the contents of a file, website, etc. EDUCED (10) [verb] To direct the course of (a flow, journey etc.); to lead in a particular direction. | [verb] To infer or deduce (a result, theory etc.) from existing data or premises. | [verb] To draw out or bring forth from some basic or potential state; to elicit, to develop. ELAPID (9) ELATED (7) [verb] To make joyful or proud. | [verb] To lift up; raise; elevate. | [adjective] Extremely happy and excited; delighted; pleased, euphoric. ELIDED (8) [verb] To leave out or omit (something). | [verb] To cut off, as a vowel or a syllable. | [verb] To conflate; to smear together; to blur the distinction between. ELOPED (9) [verb] (of a married person) To run away from home with a paramour. | [verb] (of an unmarried person) To run away secretly for the purpose of getting married with one's intended spouse; to marry in a quick or private fashion, especially without a public period of engagement. | [verb] To run away from home (for any reason). ELUDED (8) [verb] To evade, or escape from someone or something, especially by using cunning or skill | [verb] To shake off a pursuer; to give someone the slip | [verb] To escape understanding of; to be incomprehensible to ELUTED (7) [verb] To separate one substance from another by means of a solvent; to wash; to cleanse. EMCEED (11) [verb] To act as the master of ceremonies (for). | [verb] To rap as part of a hip-hop performance. EMEROD (9) EMOTED (9) [verb] To display emotions openly, especially while acting. | [verb] To induce an emotion in. | [verb] To perform a virtual action, presented to other users as reported speech, rather than sending a direct message. ENDUED (8) [verb] To pass food into the stomach; to digest; also figuratively, to take on, absorb. | [verb] To take on, to take the form of. | [verb] To put on (a piece of clothing); to clothe (someone with something). ENFOLD (10) [verb] To fold something around; to envelop | [verb] To embrace ENGILD (8) ENGIRD (8) [verb] To gird around; to ingirt. ENNEAD (7) [noun] The number nine. | [noun] Any grouping or system containing nine objects. ENSUED (7) [verb] To follow (a leader, inclination etc.). | [verb] To follow (in time), to be subsequent to. | [verb] To occur afterwards, as a result or effect. ENURED (7) [verb] To inure; to make accustomed or desensitized to something unpleasant due to constant exposure. | [verb] To take effect, to be operative; used with to. ENVIED (10) [adjective] That is the object of envy. | [verb] To feel displeasure or hatred towards (someone) for their good fortune or possessions. | [verb] To have envious feelings (at). ENWIND (10) ERASED (7) [verb] To remove markings or information | [verb] To obliterate information from (a storage medium), such as to clear or (with magnetic storage) to demagnetize. | [verb] To obliterate (information) from a storage medium, such as to clear or to overwrite. ERODED (8) [verb] To wear away by abrasion, corrosion or chemical reaction. | [verb] To destroy gradually by an ongoing process. | [adjective] Worn down or worn away. ERRAND (7) [noun] A journey undertaken to accomplish some task. | [noun] The purpose of such a journey. | [noun] An oral message trusted to a person for delivery. ESPIED (9) [verb] To catch sight of; to see; to spot (said especially of something not easy to see) | [verb] To examine and keep watch upon; to watch; to observe. | [verb] To look or search narrowly; to look about; to watch; to take notice; to spy. ETCHED (12) [verb] To cut into a surface with an acid or other corrosive substance in order to make a pattern. Best known as a technique for creating printing plates, but also used for decoration on metal, and, in modern industry, to make circuit boards. | [verb] To engrave a surface. | [verb] To make a lasting impression. EVADED (11) [verb] To get away from by cunning; to avoid by dexterity, subterfuge, address, or ingenuity; to elude; to cleverly escape from | [verb] To escape; to slip away; — sometimes with from. | [verb] To attempt to escape; to practice artifice or sophistry, for the purpose of eluding. EVENED (10) [verb] To make flat and level. | [verb] To equal. | [verb] To be equal. | [verb] To occur; to happen; to come to pass. EVITED (10) [verb] To avoid. EVOKED (14) [verb] To call out; to draw out or bring forth. | [verb] To cause the manifestation of something (emotion, picture, etc.) in someone's mind or imagination. | [verb] To elicit a response. EXCEED (16) [verb] To be larger, greater than (something). | [verb] To be better than (something). | [verb] To go beyond (some limit); to surpass; to be longer than. EXILED (14) [verb] To send into exile. EXITED (14) [verb] To go out or go away from a place or situation; to depart, to leave. | [verb] To depart from life; to die. | [verb] To end or terminate (a program, subroutine, etc.) EXPAND (16) [verb] To change (something) from a smaller form and/or size to a larger one; to spread out or lay open. | [verb] To increase the extent, number, volume or scope of (something). | [verb] To express (something) at length and/or in detail. EXPEND (16) [verb] To consume, exhaust (some resource) | [verb] (of money) to spend, disburse EXTEND (14) [verb] To increase in extent. | [verb] To possess a certain extent; to cover an amount of space. | [verb] To cause to increase in extent. EXUDED (15) [verb] To discharge through pores or incisions, as moisture or other liquid matter; to give out. | [verb] To flow out through the pores. EYELID (10) [noun] A thin skin membrane that covers and moves over an eye. FABLED (12) [verb] To compose fables; hence, to write or speak fiction; to write or utter what is not true. | [verb] To make up; to devise, and speak of, as true or real; to tell of falsely; to recount in the form of a fable. | [adjective] Known only in fables; fictitious. FADGED (12) FAGGED (12) [verb] (used mainly in passive form) To make exhausted, tired out. | [verb] To droop; to tire. | [verb] For a younger student to act as a servant for senior students in many British boarding schools. FAILED (10) [verb] To be unsuccessful. | [verb] Not to achieve a particular stated goal. (Usage note: The direct object of this word is usually an infinitive.) | [verb] To neglect. FAIRED (10) [verb] To smoothen or even a surface (especially a connection or junction on a surface). | [verb] To bring into perfect alignment (especially about rivet holes when connecting structural members). | [verb] To construct or design a structure whose primary function is to produce a smooth outline or reduce air drag or water resistance. FANGED (11) [verb] To strike or attack with the fangs. | [verb] To enable to catch or tear; to furnish with fangs. | [verb] To catch, capture; seize; grip; clutch; lay hold of. FANNED (10) [verb] To blow air on (something) by means of a fan (hand-held, mechanical or electrical) or otherwise. | [verb] To slap (a behind, especially). | [verb] (usually to fan out) To move or spread in multiple directions from one point, in the shape of a hand-held fan. FANTOD (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A state of worry or nervous anxiety, irritability. | [noun] An irritable outburst. FARCED (12) FARDED (11) FARMED (12) [verb] To work on a farm, especially in the growing and harvesting of crops. | [verb] To devote (land) to farming. | [verb] To grow (a particular crop). FARTED (10) [verb] (impolite) To emit digestive gases from the anus; to flatulate. | [verb] (usually as "fart around") To waste time with idle and inconsequential tasks; to go about one's activities in a lackadaisical manner; to be lazy or over-relaxed in one's manner or bearing. | [verb] To emit (fumes, gases, etc.). FASHED (13) [verb] To worry; to bother, annoy. | [verb] To trouble oneself; to take pains. FASTED (10) [verb] To restrict one’s personal consumption, generally of food, but sometimes other things, in various manners (totally, temporally, by avoiding particular items), often for religious or medical reasons. FATTED (10) [adjective] Made fat; fattened. FAWNED (13) [verb] To give birth to a fawn. | [verb] To exhibit affection or attempt to please. | [verb] To seek favour by flattery and obsequious behaviour (with on or upon). FEARED (10) [verb] To feel fear about (something or someone); to be afraid of; to consider or expect with alarm. | [verb] To feel fear (about something). | [verb] (used with for) To worry about, to feel concern for, to be afraid for. FEASED (10) FEAZED (19) FECUND (12) [adjective] Highly fertile; able to produce offspring. | [adjective] Leading to new ideas or innovation. FEEZED (19) FELLED (10) [verb] To make something fall; especially to chop down a tree. | [verb] To strike down, kill, destroy. | [verb] To stitch down a protruding flap of fabric, as a seam allowance, or pleat. FELTED (10) [verb] To make into felt, or a feltlike substance; to cause to adhere and mat together. | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, felt. | [verb] To cause a player to lose all their chips. FENCED (12) [verb] To enclose, contain or separate by building fence. | [verb] To defend or guard. | [verb] To engage in the selling or buying of stolen goods. FENDED (11) [verb] To take care of oneself; to take responsibility for one's own well-being. | [verb] (except as "fend for oneself") To defend, to take care of (typically construed with for); to block or push away (typically construed with off). FERVID (13) [adjective] Intensely hot, emotional, or zealous. FESSED (10) [verb] To confess; to admit. FETTED (10) FEUDED (11) [verb] To carry on a feud. FEZZED (28) FIBBED (14) [verb] To lie, especially more or less inconsequentially. | [verb] (thieves cant) To punch, especially a series of punches in rapid succession; to beat; to hit; to strike. FIDGED (12) FIGGED (12) [verb] To insult with a fico, or contemptuous motion. | [verb] To put into the head of, as something useless or contemptible. | [verb] (soap-making) To develop, or cause (a soap) to develop, white streaks or granulations. FILLED (10) [verb] To occupy fully, to take up all of. | [verb] To add contents to (a container, cavity or the like) so that it is full. | [verb] To enter (something), making it full. FILMED (12) [verb] To record (activity, or a motion picture) on photographic film. | [verb] To cover or become covered with a thin skin or pellicle. | [adjective] Covered with a film. FINKED (14) [verb] To betray a trust; to inform on. FINNED (10) [verb] To cut the fins from a fish, shark, etc. | [verb] (Of a fish) to swim with the dorsal fin above the surface of the water. | [verb] To swim in the manner of a fish. FIRMED (12) [verb] To make firm or strong; fix securely. | [verb] To make compact or resistant to pressure; solidify. | [verb] To become firm; stabilise. FISHED (13) [verb] To hunt fish or other aquatic animals. | [verb] To search (a body of water) for something other than fish. | [verb] To use as bait when fishing. FISTED (10) [verb] To strike with the fist. | [verb] To close (the hand) into a fist. | [verb] To grip with a fist. FITTED (10) [verb] To be suitable for. | [verb] To conform to in size and shape. | [verb] To be of the right size and shape FIZZED (28) [verb] To emit bubbles. | [verb] To make a rapid hissing or bubbling sound. | [verb] To shoot or project something moving at great velocity. FLAKED (14) [verb] To break or chip off in a flake. | [verb] To prove unreliable or impractical; to abandon or desert, to fail to follow through. | [verb] To store an item such as rope or sail in layers FLAMED (12) [verb] To produce flames; to burn with a flame or blaze. | [verb] To burst forth like flame; to break out in violence of passion; to be kindled with zeal or ardour. | [verb] To post a destructively critical or abusive message (to somebody). FLARED (10) [verb] To cause to burn. | [verb] To cause inflammation; to inflame. | [verb] To open outward in shape. FLAWED (13) [adjective] Having a flaw or imperfection. FLAYED (13) [verb] To cause to fly; put to flight; drive off (by frightening). | [verb] To frighten; scare; terrify. | [verb] To be fear-stricken. FLEXED (17) [verb] To bend something. | [verb] To repeatedly bend one of one's joints. | [verb] To move part of the body using one's muscles. FLEYED (13) FLITED (10) FLORID (10) [adjective] Having a rosy or pale red colour; ruddy. | [adjective] Elaborately ornate; flowery. | [adjective] (of a disorder, especially mental) In a blatant, vivid, or highly disorganized state. FLOWED (13) [verb] To move as a fluid from one position to another. | [verb] To proceed; to issue forth. | [verb] To move or match smoothly, gracefully, or continuously. FLUKED (14) [verb] To obtain a successful outcome by pure chance. | [verb] To fortuitously pot a ball in an unintended way. | [adjective] Having flukes. FLUMED (12) FLUTED (10) [verb] To play on a flute. | [verb] To make a flutelike sound. | [verb] To utter with a flutelike sound. FLUXED (17) [verb] To use flux on. | [verb] To melt. | [verb] To flow as a liquid. FLYTED (13) FOALED (10) [verb] To give birth to (a foal); to bear offspring. FOAMED (12) [verb] To form or emit foam. | [verb] To spew saliva as foam, to foam at the mouth. FOBBED (14) [verb] To cheat, to deceive, to trick, to take in, to impose upon someone. | [verb] To beat; to maul. FOETID (10) [adjective] Foul-smelling, stinking. FOGGED (12) [verb] To become covered with or as if with fog. | [verb] To become obscured in condensation or water. | [verb] To become dim or obscure. FOILED (10) [verb] To cover or wrap with foil. | [verb] To prevent (something) from being accomplished. | [verb] To prevent (someone) from accomplishing something. FOINED (10) FOLDED (11) [verb] To bend (any thin material, such as paper) over so that it comes in contact with itself. | [verb] To make the proper arrangement (in a thin material) by bending. | [verb] To become folded; to form folds. FONDED (11) FOOLED (10) [verb] To trick; to deceive | [verb] To act in an idiotic manner; to act foolishly FOOTED (10) [verb] To use the foot to kick (usually a ball). | [verb] To pay (a bill). | [verb] To tread to measure or music; to dance; to trip; to skip. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified form or type of foot or number of feet. FOPPED (14) FORBAD (12) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORBID (12) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORCED (12) [verb] To violate (a woman); to rape. | [verb] To exert oneself, to do one's utmost. | [verb] To compel (someone or something) to do something. FORDED (11) [verb] To cross a stream using a ford. FORDID (11) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FORGED (11) [verb] To shape a metal by heating and hammering. | [verb] To form or create with concerted effort. | [verb] To create a forgery of; to make a counterfeit item of; to copy or imitate unlawfully. FORKED (14) [verb] To divide into two or more branches. | [verb] To move with a fork (as hay or food). | [verb] To spawn a new child process in some sense duplicating the existing process. FORMED (12) [verb] To assume (a certain shape or visible structure). | [verb] To give (a shape or visible structure) to a thing or person. | [verb] To take shape. FOULED (10) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To besmirch. | [verb] To clog or obstruct. FOWLED (13) FRAMED (12) [verb] To fit, as for a specific end or purpose; make suitable or comfortable; adapt; adjust. | [verb] To construct by fitting or uniting together various parts; fabricate by union of constituent parts. | [verb] To bring or put into form or order; adjust the parts or elements of; compose; contrive; plan; devise. FRAYED (13) [verb] To (cause to) unravel; used particularly for the edge of something made of cloth, or the end of a rope. | [verb] To cause exhaustion, wear out (a person's mental strength). | [verb] Frighten; alarm FRIEND (10) [noun] A person other than a family member, spouse or lover whose company one enjoys and towards whom one feels affection. | [noun] An associate who provides assistance. | [noun] A person with whom one is vaguely or indirectly acquainted. FRIGID (11) [adjective] Very cold; lacking warmth; icy. | [adjective] Chilly in manner; lacking affection or zeal; impassive. | [adjective] Sexually unresponsive, especially of a woman. FRIZED (19) FUBBED (14) FUCKED (16) [verb] To have sexual intercourse, to copulate. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. | [verb] To insert one’s penis, a dildo or other phallic object, into a specified orifice or cleft. FUCOID (12) [noun] A fucoid seaweed. | [adjective] Resembling or relating to seaweeds of the genus Fucus. | [adjective] Of sandstone: bearing seaweed-like markings. FUDGED (12) [verb] To try to avoid giving a direct answer. | [verb] To alter something from its true state, as to hide a flaw or uncertainty. Always deliberate, but not necessarily dishonest or immoral. | [verb] To botch or bungle something. FUELED (10) [verb] To provide with fuel. | [verb] To exacerbate, to cause to grow or become greater. FUGGED (12) FUGLED (11) FUGUED (11) FULGID (11) FULLED (10) [verb] (of the moon) To become full or wholly illuminated. | [verb] To baptise. | [verb] To make cloth denser and firmer by soaking, beating and pressing, to waulk, walk FUNDED (11) [verb] To pay for. | [verb] To place (money) in a fund. | [verb] To form a debt into a stock charged with interest. FUNKED (14) [verb] To emit an offensive smell; to stink. | [verb] To envelop with an offensive smell or smoke. | [verb] To shrink from, or avoid something because of fear. FUNNED (10) [verb] To tease, kid, poke fun at, make fun of. FURLED (10) [verb] To lower, roll up and secure (something, such as a sail or flag) FURRED (10) [verb] To cover with fur or a fur-like coating. | [verb] To become covered with fur or a fur-like coating. | [verb] To level a surface by applying furring to it. FUSSED (10) [verb] To be very worried or excited about something, often too much. | [verb] To fiddle; fidget; wiggle, or adjust | [verb] (especially of babies) To cry or be ill-humoured. FUTZED (19) [verb] To be frivolous and waste time | [verb] To experiment by trial and error FUZZED (28) [verb] To make fuzzy. | [verb] To become fuzzy. | [verb] To make drunk. GABBED (12) [verb] To jest; to tell lies in jest; exaggerate; lie. | [verb] To talk or chatter a lot, usually on trivial subjects. | [verb] To speak or tell falsely. GABLED (10) GADDED (10) [verb] To move from one location to another in an apparently random and frivolous manner. GADOID (9) [noun] Any fish of the family Gadidae | [adjective] Of or pertaining to cod or to the Gadidae family of related fish. GAFFED (14) [verb] To use a gaff, especially to land a fish. | [verb] To cheat or hoax. | [verb] To gamble. GAGGED (10) [verb] To experience the vomiting reflex. | [verb] To cause to heave with nausea. | [verb] To restrain someone's speech by blocking his or her mouth. GAINED (8) [verb] To acquire possession of. | [verb] To have or receive advantage or profit; to acquire gain; to grow rich; to advance in interest, health, or happiness; to make progress. | [verb] To come off winner or victor in; to be successful in; to obtain by competition. GAITED (8) GALLED (8) [verb] To bother or trouble. | [verb] To harass, to harry, often with the intent to cause injury. | [verb] To chafe, to rub or subject to friction; to create a sore on the skin. GAMMED (12) GANGED (9) [verb] To go; walk; proceed. | [verb] To attach similar items together to form a larger unit. | [verb] To participate in a gangbang. GANOID (8) [noun] One of the Ganoidei, a disused taxonomic grouping of fishes, including the bowfin, gars, and sturgeons. | [adjective] Having a smooth, shining surface, as if polished or enameled: specifically applied to those scales or plates of fishes which are generally of an angular form and composed of a bony or hard horny tissue overlaid with enamel. | [adjective] Having ganoid scales or plates, as a fish; specifically, of or pertaining to the Ganoidei. GAOLED (8) [verb] To imprison. GAPPED (12) GARBED (10) [verb] To dress in garb. GARRED (8) GASHED (11) [verb] To make a deep, long cut; to slash. | [adjective] Having gashes; slashed. GASPED (10) [verb] To draw in the breath suddenly, as if from a shock. | [verb] To breathe laboriously or convulsively. | [verb] To speak in a breathless manner. GASSED (8) [verb] To kill with poisonous gas. | [verb] To talk in a boastful or vapid way; chatter. | [verb] To impose upon by talking boastfully. GASTED (8) GAUGED (9) [verb] To measure or determine with a gauge; to measure the capacity of. | [verb] To estimate. | [verb] To appraise the character or ability of; to judge of. GAUMED (10) GAWKED (15) [verb] To stare or gape stupidly. | [verb] To stare conspicuously. GAWPED (13) [verb] To stare stupidly or rudely; to gawk. GEARED (8) [verb] To provide with gearing; to fit with gears in order to achieve a desired gear ratio. | [verb] To be in, or come into, gear. | [verb] To dress; to put gear on; to harness. GECKED (14) GELDED (9) [verb] To castrate a male (usually an animal). | [verb] To deprive of anything essential; to weaken. | [adjective] Castrated. GELLED (8) [verb] To apply (cosmetic) gel to (the hair, etc). | [verb] To become a gel. | [verb] To develop a rapport. GEMMED (12) [verb] To adorn with, or as if with, gems. GERUND (8) [noun] (grammar) A verbal form that functions as a verbal noun. (In English, a gerund has the same spelling as a present participle, but functions differently; however, this distinction may be ambiguous or unclear and so is no longer made in some modern texts such as A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language and The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language) | [noun] (grammar) In some languages such as Dutch, Italian or Russian, a verbal form similar to a present participle, but functioning as an adverb to form adverbial phrases or continuous tense. These constructions have various names besides gerund, depending on the language, such as conjunctive participles, active participles, adverbial participles, transgressives, etc. GIBBED (12) [verb] To fasten in place with a gib. | [verb] To blast an enemy or opponent into gibs. | [verb] To install plasterboard. GIFTED (11) [verb] To give as a gift or donation. | [verb] To give away, to concede easily. | [adjective] Endowed with special, in particular intellectual, abilities. GIGGED (10) [verb] To fish or catch with a gig, or fish spear. | [verb] To engage in musical performances. | [verb] To make fun of; to make a joke at someone's expense, often condescending. GILDED (9) [verb] To cover with a thin layer of gold; to cover with gold leaf. | [verb] To adorn. | [verb] To decorate with a golden surface appearance. GILLED (8) [adjective] Having gills GIMPED (12) [verb] (of yarn, cord, thread, etc.) To wrap or wind (surround) with another length of yarn or wire in a tight spiral, often by means of a gimping machine, creating 'gimped yarn', etc. Also, generally, to wrap or twist with string or wire. See gimped. | [verb] To notch or indent; to jag or make jagged; to edge with serrations or grooves. | [verb] To limp; to hobble. GINNED (8) [verb] To remove the seeds from cotton with a cotton gin. | [verb] To trap something in a gin. | [adjective] Drunk GIPPED (12) GIRDED (9) [verb] To bind with a flexible rope or cord. | [verb] To encircle with, or as if with a belt. | [verb] To prepare oneself for an action. GIRNED (8) [verb] To grimace; to snarl. | [verb] To whinge, moan, complain. | [verb] To make elaborate unnatural and distorted faces as a form of amusement or in a girning competition. GIRTED (8) GLARED (8) [verb] To stare angrily. | [verb] To shine brightly. | [verb] To be bright and intense, or ostentatiously splendid. GLAZED (17) [verb] To install windows. | [verb] To apply a thin, transparent layer of coating. | [verb] To become glazed or glassy. GLEYED (11) GLIDED (9) [verb] To move softly, smoothly, or effortlessly. | [verb] To fly unpowered, as of an aircraft. Also relates to gliding birds and flying fish. | [verb] To cause to glide. GLIMED (10) GLOBED (10) [verb] To become spherical. | [verb] To make spherical. GLOVED (11) [verb] To catch the ball in a baseball mitt. | [verb] To put a glove or gloves on. | [verb] To touch a delivery with one's glove while the gloved hand is on the bat. Under the rules of cricket, the batsman is deemed to have hit the ball. GLOWED (11) [verb] To give off light from heat or to emit light as if heated. | [verb] To radiate some emotional quality like light. | [verb] To gaze especially passionately at something. GLOZED (17) [verb] To extenuate, explain away, gloss over. | [verb] To use flattering language. | [verb] To smooth over; to palliate by specious explanation. GNAWED (11) [verb] To bite something persistently, especially something tough. | [verb] To produce excessive anxiety or worry. | [verb] To corrode; to fret away; to waste. GOADED (9) [verb] To prod with a goad. | [verb] To encourage or stimulate. | [verb] To incite or provoke. GOALED (8) GOBBED (12) [verb] To gather into a lump. | [verb] To spit, especially to spit phlegm. | [verb] To pack away waste material in order to support the walls of the mine. GODDED (10) GOLFED (11) [verb] To play the game of golf. | [verb] To write something in as few characters as possible (e.g. in code golf, regex golf) | [adjective] Having had its source code made as short as possible, as in code golf. GONGED (9) [verb] To make the sound of a gong; to ring a gong. | [verb] To send a signal to, using a gong or similar device. | [verb] To give an award or medal to. GOOFED (11) [verb] To make a mistake. | [verb] To engage in mischief. GOOSED (8) [verb] To sharply poke or pinch someone's buttocks. Derived from a goose's inclination to bite at a retreating intruder's hindquarters. | [verb] To stimulate, to spur. | [verb] To gently accelerate an automobile or machine, or give repeated small taps on the accelerator. GORGED (9) [adjective] With a stomach stuffed full of food. | [adjective] With the neck collared or encircled by an object. | [adjective] Having a gorge or throat. GOUGED (9) [verb] To make a groove, hole, or mark in by scooping with or as if with a gouge. | [verb] To cheat or impose upon; in particular, to charge an unfairly or unreasonably high price. | [verb] To dig or scoop (something) out with or as if with a gouge; in particular, to use a thumb to push or try to push the eye (of a person) out of its socket. GOWNED (11) [verb] To dress in a gown, to don or garb with a gown. GRACED (10) [verb] To adorn; to decorate; to embellish and dignify. | [verb] To dignify or raise by an act of favour; to honour. | [verb] To supply with heavenly grace. GRADED (9) [verb] To assign scores to the components of an academic test. | [verb] To assign a score to overall academic performance. | [verb] To organize in grades. GRATED (8) [verb] To furnish with grates; to protect with a grating or crossbars | [verb] To shred (things, usually foodstuffs), by rubbing across a grater | [verb] To make an unpleasant rasping sound, often as the result of rubbing against something GRAVED (11) [verb] To dig. | [verb] To carve or cut, as letters or figures, on some hard substance; to engrave. | [verb] To carve out or give shape to, by cutting with a chisel; to sculpture. GRAVID (11) [adjective] Pregnant; now used chiefly of egg-laying animals, or metaphorically. GRAYED (11) [verb] To become gray. | [verb] To cause to become gray. | [verb] To turn progressively older, alluding to graying of hair through aging (used in context of the population of a geographic region) GRAZED (17) [verb] To feed or supply (cattle, sheep, etc.) with grass; to furnish pasture for. | [verb] To feed on; to eat (growing herbage); to eat grass from (a pasture) | [verb] To tend (cattle, etc.) while grazing. GREYED (11) [verb] To become grey. | [verb] To cause to become grey. | [verb] To turn progressively older, in the context of the population of a geographic region. GRIDED (9) GRIMED (10) [verb] To begrime; to cake with dirt. GRIPED (10) [verb] To complain; to whine. | [verb] To annoy or bother. | [verb] To tend to come up into the wind, as a ship which, when sailing close-hauled, requires constant labour at the helm. GROPED (10) [verb] To feel with or use the hands; to handle. | [verb] To search or attempt to find something in the dark, or, as a blind person, by feeling; to move about hesitatingly, as in darkness or obscurity; to feel one's way, as with the hands, when one can not see. | [verb] To touch (another person) closely and (especially) sexually. GROUND (8) [noun] The surface of the Earth, as opposed to the sky or water or underground. | [noun] Terrain. | [noun] Soil, earth. | [verb] To reduce to smaller pieces by crushing with lateral motion. GROVED (11) GUIDED (9) [verb] To serve as a guide for someone or something; to lead or direct in a way; to conduct in a course or path. | [verb] To steer or navigate, especially a ship or as a pilot. | [verb] To exert control or influence over someone or something. GUILED (8) GUISED (8) GULFED (11) GULLED (8) [verb] To deceive or cheat. | [verb] To mislead. | [verb] To trick and defraud. GULPED (10) [verb] To swallow eagerly, or in large draughts; to swallow up; to take down in one swallow. | [verb] To react nervously by swallowing. GUMMED (12) [verb] To chew, especially of a toothless person or animal. | [verb] To deepen and enlarge the spaces between the teeth of (a worn saw), as with a gummer. | [verb] (sometimes with up) To apply an adhesive or gum to; to make sticky by applying a sticky substance to. GUNNED (8) [verb] (with “down”) To shoot someone or something, usually with a firearm. | [verb] To speed something up. | [verb] To offer vigorous support to a person or cause. GURGED (9) GUSHED (11) [verb] To flow forth suddenly, in great volume. | [verb] To send (something) flowing forth suddenly in great volume. | [verb] (especially of a woman) To ejaculate during orgasm. GUSTED (8) [verb] To blow in gusts. | [verb] To taste. | [verb] To have a relish for. GUTTED (8) [verb] To eviscerate. | [verb] To remove or destroy the most important parts of. | [adjective] Eviscerated. GYPPED (15) [verb] (sometimes offensive) To cheat or swindle someone or something inappropriately. HACKED (16) [verb] To chop or cut down in a rough manner. | [verb] To cough noisily. | [verb] To withstand or put up with a difficult situation. HAFTED (13) [verb] To fit a handle to (a tool or weapon); to grip by the handle HAGGED (12) HAILED (10) [verb] Of hail, to fall from the sky. | [verb] To send or release hail. | [verb] To pour down in rapid succession. HAIRED (10) [verb] To remove the hair from. | [verb] To grow hair (where there was a bald spot). | [verb] To cause to have hair; to provide with hair HALOED (10) [verb] To encircle with a halo. | [adjective] Encircled with a halo HALOID (10) HALTED (10) [verb] To limp; move with a limping gait. | [verb] To stand in doubt whether to proceed, or what to do; hesitate; be uncertain; linger; delay; mammer. | [verb] To be lame, faulty, or defective, as in connection with ideas, or in measure, or in versification. HALVED (13) [verb] To reduce to half the original amount. | [verb] To divide into two halves. | [verb] To make up half of. HAMMED (14) [verb] To overact; to act with exaggerated emotions. HANDED (11) [verb] To give, pass, or transmit with the hand, literally or figuratively. | [verb] To lead, guide, or assist with the hand; to conduct. | [verb] To manage. HANGED (11) [verb] To be or remain suspended. | [verb] To float, as if suspended. | [verb] (of a ball in cricket, tennis, etc.) To rebound unexpectedly or unusually slowly, due to backward spin on the ball or imperfections of the ground. HANKED (14) HANTED (10) HAPPED (14) [verb] To happen; to befall; to chance. | [verb] To happen to. | [verb] To wrap, clothe. HARKED (14) [verb] To listen attentively; often used in the imperative. HARMED (12) [verb] To cause injury to another; to hurt; to cause damage to something. HARPED (12) [verb] (usually with on) To repeatedly mention a subject. | [verb] To play on (a harp or similar instrument) | [verb] To play (a tune) on the harp. HASHED (13) [verb] To chop into small pieces, to make into a hash. | [verb] To make a quick, rough version | [verb] To transform according to a hash function. HASPED (12) [verb] To shut or fasten with a hasp. | [adjective] Fitted with a hasp. HASTED (10) [verb] To urge onward; to hasten. | [verb] To move with haste. HATRED (10) [noun] Strong aversion; intense dislike HATTED (10) [verb] To place a hat on. | [verb] To appoint as cardinal. | [adjective] (often in combination) Wearing a hat; wearing a specified type of hat. HAULED (10) [verb] To transport by drawing or pulling, as with horses or oxen, or a motor vehicle. | [verb] To draw or pull something heavy. | [verb] To carry or transport something, with a connotation that the item is heavy or otherwise difficult to move. HAWKED (17) [verb] To hunt with a hawk. | [verb] To make an attack while on the wing; to soar and strike like a hawk. | [verb] To sell; to offer for sale by outcry in the street; to carry (merchandise) about from place to place for sale; to peddle. HAZARD (19) [noun] The chance of suffering harm; danger, peril, risk of loss. | [noun] An obstacle or other feature which causes risk or danger; originally in sports, and now applied more generally. | [noun] (in driving a vehicle) An obstacle or other feature that presents a risk or danger that justifies the driver in taking action to avoid it. HEADED (11) [adjective] Of a sheet of paper: having the sender's name, address, etc. pre-printed at the top. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a head with specified characteristics. | [adjective] (in combination) Heading in a certain direction. | [verb] To be in command of. (See also head up.) HEALED (10) [verb] To make better from a disease, wound, etc.; to revive or cure. | [verb] To become better or healthy again. | [verb] To reconcile, as a breach or difference; to make whole; to free from guilt. HEAPED (12) [verb] To pile in a heap. | [verb] To form or round into a heap, as in measuring. | [verb] To supply in great quantity. HEATED (10) [verb] To cause an increase in temperature of (an object or space); to cause to become hot (often with "up"). | [verb] To become hotter. | [verb] To excite or make hot by action or emotion; to make feverish. HEAVED (13) [verb] To lift with difficulty; to raise with some effort; to lift (a heavy thing). | [verb] To throw, cast. | [verb] To rise and fall. HEDGED (12) [verb] To enclose with a hedge or hedges. | [verb] To obstruct or surround. | [verb] To offset the risk associated with. HEEDED (11) [verb] To guard, protect. | [verb] To mind; to regard with care; to take notice of; to attend to; to observe. | [verb] To pay attention, care. HEELED (10) [verb] To make better from a disease, wound, etc.; to revive or cure. | [verb] To become better or healthy again. | [verb] To reconcile, as a breach or difference; to make whole; to free from guilt. HEEZED (19) HEFTED (13) [verb] To lift up; especially, to lift something heavy. | [verb] To test the weight of something by lifting it. | [verb] (Northern England and Scotland) To make (a farm animal, especially a flock of sheep) accustomed and attached to an area of mountain pasture. HEILED (10) HEIRED (10) HELLED (10) HELMED (12) [verb] To be a helmsman or a member of the helm; to be in charge of steering the boat. | [verb] (by extension) To lead (a project, etc.). | [adjective] Wearing a helm. HELPED (12) [verb] To provide assistance to (someone or something). | [verb] To assist (a person) in getting something, especially food or drink at table; used with to. | [verb] To contribute in some way to. HELVED (13) HEMMED (14) [verb] To make the sound expressed by the word hem; to hesitate in speaking. | [verb] (in sewing) To make a hem. | [verb] : To put hem on an article of clothing, to edge or put a border on something. HEMOID (12) HENTED (10) HEPTAD (12) [noun] A group of seven things. | [noun] A sequence of seven bases. HERALD (10) [noun] A messenger, especially one bringing important news. | [noun] A harbinger, giving signs of things to come. | [noun] An official whose speciality is heraldry, especially one between the ranks of pursuivant and king-of-arms. | [noun] The long-tailed duck, or oldsquaw. HERBED (12) [adjective] Seasoned with herbs | [noun] A Zoroastrian priest of a minor order. HERDED (11) [verb] To unite or associate in a herd; to feed or run together, or in company. | [verb] To unite or associate in a herd | [verb] To associate; to ally oneself with, or place oneself among, a group or company. HILLED (10) [verb] To form into a heap or mound. | [verb] To heap or draw earth around plants. | [adjective] Having hills. HILTED (10) HINGED (11) [verb] To attach by, or equip with a hinge. | [verb] (with on or upon) To depend on something. | [verb] The breaking off of the distal end of a knapped stone flake whose presumed course across the face of the stone core was truncated prematurely, leaving not a feathered distal end but instead the scar of a nearly perpendicular break. HINTED (10) [verb] To suggest tacitly without a direct statement; to provide a clue. | [verb] To bring to mind by a slight mention or remote allusion; to suggest in an indirect manner. | [verb] To develop and add hints to a font. HIPPED (14) [adjective] Having hips or a feature resembling hips. | [verb] To use one's hips to bump into someone. | [verb] To throw (one's adversary) over one's hip ("cross-buttock"). | [verb] To use one's hips to bump into someone. | [adjective] Depressed. HISPID (12) [adjective] (obsolete outside biology) Covered in short, stiff hairs; bristly. HISSED (10) [verb] To make a hissing sound. | [verb] To condemn or express contempt (for someone or something) by hissing. | [verb] To utter (something) with a hissing sound. HISTED (10) HOAXED (17) [verb] To deceive (someone) by making them believe something that has been maliciously or mischievously fabricated. HOBBED (14) HOBOED (12) HOCKED (16) [verb] To disable by cutting the tendons of the hock; to hamstring; to hough. | [verb] To leave with a pawnbroker as security for a loan. | [verb] To bother; to pester; to annoy incessantly HOGGED (12) [verb] To greedily take more than one's share, to take precedence at the expense of another or others. | [verb] To clip the mane of a horse, making it short and bristly. | [verb] To scrub with a hog, or scrubbing broom. HOISED (10) HOLARD (10) HOLKED (14) HONIED (10) [adjective] Sweetened, with, or as if with, honey. | [adjective] Sugary, syrupy. | [adjective] Dulcet or mellifluous. HONKED (14) [verb] To use a car horn. | [verb] To make a loud, harsh sound like a car horn. | [verb] To make the vocal sound of a goose. HOODED (11) [verb] To cover something with a hood. | [adjective] Wearing a hood. | [adjective] Covered with a hood. HOOFED (13) [verb] To trample with hooves. | [verb] To walk. | [verb] To dance, especially as a professional. HOOKED (14) [verb] To attach a hook to. | [verb] To catch with a hook (hook a fish). | [verb] To work yarn into a fabric using a hook; to crochet. HOOPED (12) [verb] To bind or fasten using a hoop. | [verb] To clasp; to encircle; to surround. | [verb] To utter a loud cry, or a sound imitative of the word, by way of call or pursuit; to shout. HOOTED (10) [verb] To cry out or shout in contempt. | [verb] To make the cry of an owl, a hoo. | [verb] To assail with contemptuous cries or shouts; to follow with derisive shouts. HOOVED (13) HOPPED (14) [verb] To jump a short distance. | [verb] To jump on one foot. | [verb] To be in state of energetic activity. HORDED (11) HORNED (10) [adjective] Having horns. | [adjective] Cuckolded | [verb] (of an animal) To assault with the horns. HORRID (10) [adjective] Bristling, rough, rugged. | [adjective] Causing horror or dread. | [adjective] Offensive, disagreeable, abominable, execrable. HORSED (10) [verb] To frolic, to act mischievously. (Usually followed by "around".) | [verb] To provide with a horse; supply horses for. | [verb] To get on horseback. | [adjective] Mounted on a horse. HOSTED (10) [verb] To perform the role of a host. | [verb] To lodge at an inn. | [verb] To run software made available to a remote user or process. HOTBED (12) [noun] A low bed of earth covered with glass, and heated with rotting manure, used for the germination of seeds and the growth of tender plants, like a miniature hothouse. | [noun] (by extension) An environment that is ideal for the growth or development of something, especially of something undesirable. | [noun] An iron platform in a rolling mill, on which hot bars, rails, etc., are laid to cool. HOTROD (10) [noun] Typically a passenger vehicle modified to run and/or accelerate faster. The term may be used generically to apply to any car, truck, or motorcycle (et al.) modified for increased speed and/or performance. It may also be used to specifically describe and refer to modified cars from the original (or traditional) era of "hot rods", post World War II and prior to 1960. | [noun] (sexuality) The penis. HOTTED (10) [verb] (with up) To heat; to make or become hot. | [verb] (with up) To become lively or exciting. HOUSED (10) [verb] To keep within a structure or container. | [verb] To admit to residence; to harbor/harbour. | [verb] To take shelter or lodging; to abide; to lodge. HOWKED (17) HOWLED (13) [verb] To utter a loud, protracted, mournful sound or cry, as dogs and wolves often do. | [verb] To utter a sound expressive of pain or distress; to cry aloud and mournfully; to lament; to wail. | [verb] To make a noise resembling the cry of a wild beast. HUFFED (16) [verb] To breathe heavily. | [verb] To say in a huffy manner. | [verb] To enlarge; to swell up. HUGGED (12) [verb] To crouch; huddle as with cold. | [verb] To cling closely together. | [verb] To embrace by holding closely, especially in the arms. HULKED (14) HULLED (10) [verb] To remove the outer covering of a fruit or seed. | [verb] To drift; to be carried by the impetus of wind or water on the ship's hull alone, with sails furled. | [verb] To hit (a ship) in the hull with cannon fire etc. HUMMED (14) [verb] To make a sound from the vocal chords without pronouncing any real words, with one's lips closed. | [verb] To express by humming. | [verb] To drone like certain insects naturally do in motion, or sounding similarly HUMPED (14) [verb] To bend something into a hump. | [verb] To carry (something), especially with some exertion. | [verb] To rhythmically thrust the pelvis in a manner conducive to sexual intercourse HUNTED (10) [verb] To find or search for an animal in the wild with the intention of killing the animal for its meat or for sport. | [verb] To try to find something; search (for). | [verb] To drive; to chase; with down, from, away, etc. HURLED (10) [verb] To throw (something) with force. | [verb] To utter (harsh or derogatory speech), especially at its target. | [verb] To participate in the sport of hurling. HUSHED (13) [verb] To become quiet. | [verb] To make quiet. | [verb] To appease; to allay; to soothe. HUSKED (14) [verb] To remove husks from. | [verb] To cough, clear one's throat. | [verb] To say huskily, to utter in a husky voice. HUTTED (10) [verb] To provide (someone) with shelter in a hut. | [verb] To take shelter in a hut. | [verb] To stack (sheaves of grain). HYBRID (15) [noun] Offspring resulting from cross-breeding different entities, e.g. two different species or two purebred parent strains. | [noun] Something of mixed origin or composition; often, a tool or technology that combines the benefits of formerly separate tools or technologies. | [adjective] Consisting of diverse 'hybridized' components. HYDRID (14) HYMNED (15) [verb] To sing a hymn. | [verb] To praise or extol in hymns. HYPOED (15) IMAGED (10) [verb] To represent by an image or symbol; to portray. | [verb] To reflect, mirror. | [verb] To create an image of. IMBUED (11) [verb] To wet or stain an object completely with some physical quality. | [verb] In general, to act in a way which results in an object becoming completely permeated or impregnated by some quality. IMPEND (11) [verb] To hang or be suspended over (something); to overhang. | [verb] Figuratively to hang over (someone) as a threat or danger. | [verb] To threaten to happen; to be about to happen, to be imminent. INBRED (9) [noun] An inbred individual. | [adjective] Bred within; innate. | [adjective] Having an ancestry characterized by inbreeding. INCHED (12) [verb] (followed by a preposition) To advance very slowly, or by a small amount (in a particular direction). | [verb] To drive by inches, or small degrees. | [verb] To deal out by inches; to give sparingly. INDEED (8) [adverb] (modal) Truly; in fact; actually. | [adverb] (degree, after the adjective modified) In fact. | [interjection] Indicates emphatic agreement. INDUED (8) [verb] To pass food into the stomach; to digest; also figuratively, to take on, absorb. | [verb] To take on, to take the form of. | [verb] To put on (a piece of clothing); to clothe (someone with something). INFOLD (10) [verb] To fold inwards. | [verb] To wrap up or inwrap; involve; inclose; enfold or envelop. | [verb] To clasp with the arms; embrace. INLAID (7) [adjective] (of a design) Set into a surface in a decorative pattern. | [adjective] (of the surface of an item) Having an inset decorative pattern. | [verb] To place (pieces of a foreign material) within another material to form a decorative design. INLAND (7) [noun] The interior part of a country. | [adjective] Within the land; relatively remote from the ocean or from open water; interior | [adjective] Limited to the land, or to inland routes; within the seashore boundary; not passing on, or over, the sea INROAD (7) [noun] An advance into enemy territory, an incursion, an attempted invasion | [noun] (usually plural) progress made toward accomplishing a goal or solving a problem | [verb] To make an inroad into; to invade. INTEND (7) [verb] (usually followed by the particle "to") To hope; to wish (something, or something to be accomplished); be intent upon | [verb] To fix the mind on; attend to; take care of; superintend; regard. | [verb] To stretch to extend; distend. INURED (7) [verb] To cause someone to become accustomed to something (usually) unpleasant. | [verb] To take effect, to be operative. | [verb] To commit. INWARD (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) That which is inward or within; the inner parts or organs of the body; the viscera. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The mental faculties. | [noun] A familiar friend or acquaintance. INWIND (10) IRISED (7) [verb] (of an aperture, lens or door) To open or close in the manner of an iris. | [adjective] Having colors like those of the rainbow; iridescent. IRONED (7) [verb] To pass an iron over (clothing or some other item made of cloth) in order to remove creases. | [verb] To shackle with irons; to fetter or handcuff. | [verb] To furnish or arm with iron. ISLAND (7) [noun] A contiguous area of land, smaller than a continent, totally surrounded by water. | [noun] An entity surrounded by other entities that are very different from itself. | [noun] A superstructure on an aircraft carrier's deck. ISOPOD (9) [noun] Any of very many crustaceans, of the order Isopoda, that have a flattened body and no carapace. ISSUED (7) [verb] To flow out, to proceed from, to come out or from. | [verb] To rush out, to sally forth. | [verb] To extend into, to open onto. ITCHED (12) [verb] To feel itchy; to feel a need to be scratched. | [verb] To have a constant, teasing urge; to feel strongly motivated; to want or desire something. | [verb] To cause to feel an itch. ITEMED (9) IXODID (15) IZZARD (25) JABBED (18) [verb] To poke or thrust abruptly, or to make such a motion. | [verb] To deliver a quick punch. | [verb] To give someone an injection JACKED (20) [verb] To raise using a jack. | [verb] To raise or increase. | [verb] To produce by freeze distillation; to distil (an alcoholic beverage) by freezing it and removing the ice (which is water), leaving the alcohol (which remains liquid). JAGGED (16) [verb] To cut unevenly. | [verb] To tease. | [adjective] Unevenly cut; having the texture of something so cut. JAILED (14) [verb] To imprison. JAMBED (18) JAMMED (18) [verb] To get something stuck in a confined space. | [verb] To brusquely force something into a space; cram, squeeze. | [verb] To cause congestion or blockage. Often used with "up" JARRED (14) [verb] To preserve (food) in a jar. | [verb] To knock, shake, or strike sharply, especially causing a quivering or vibrating movement. | [verb] To harm or injure by such action. JASSID (14) JAUKED (18) JAUPED (16) JAZZED (32) [verb] To destroy. | [verb] To play (jazz music). | [verb] To dance to the tunes of jazz music. JEEPED (16) JEERED (14) [verb] (jeer at) To utter sarcastic or mocking comments; to speak with mockery or derision; to use taunting language. JELLED (14) [verb] To gel JEREED (14) JERKED (18) [verb] To make a sudden uncontrolled movement. | [verb] To give a quick, often unpleasant tug or shake. | [verb] To masturbate. JERRID (14) JESSED (14) [adjective] Having jesses on, as a hawk. JESTED (14) [verb] To tell a joke; to talk in a playful manner; to make fun of something or someone. JETTED (14) [verb] To spray out of a container. | [verb] To spray with liquid from a container. | [verb] To travel on a jet aircraft or otherwise by jet propulsion JIBBED (18) [verb] To shift, or swing around, as a sail, boom, yard, etc., as in tacking. | [verb] To stop and refuse to go forward (usually of a horse). | [verb] To stop doing something, to become reluctant to proceed with an activity. JIGGED (16) [verb] To move briskly, especially as a dance. | [verb] To move with a skip or rhythm; to move with vibrations or jerks. | [verb] To fish with a jig. JILTED (14) [verb] To cast off capriciously or unfeelingly, as a lover; to deceive in love. JINKED (18) [verb] To make a quick evasive turn. | [verb] To cause a vehicle to make a quick evasive turn. | [verb] In the games of spoilfive and forty-five, to win the game by taking all five tricks; also, to attempt to win all five tricks, losing what has been already won if unsuccessful. JINXED (21) [verb] To cast a spell on. | [verb] To bring bad luck to. | [verb] To cause something to happen by mentioning it, usually sarcastically. JOBBED (18) [verb] To do odd jobs or occasional work for hire. | [verb] To work as a jobber. | [verb] To take the loss. JOCUND (16) [adjective] Jovial; exuberant; lighthearted; merry and in high spirits; exhibiting happiness. JOGGED (16) [verb] To push slightly; to move or shake with a push or jerk, as to gain the attention of; to jolt. | [verb] To shake, stir or rouse. | [verb] To walk or ride forward with a jolting pace; to move at a heavy pace, trudge; to move on or along. JOINED (14) [verb] To connect or combine into one; to put together. | [verb] To come together; to meet. | [verb] To come into the company of. JOLTED (14) [verb] To push or shake abruptly and roughly. | [verb] To knock sharply | [verb] To shock (someone) into taking action or being alert JOSHED (17) [verb] To tease someone in a kindly or friendly fashion. | [verb] To make or exchange good-natured jokes. JOTTED (14) [verb] (usually with "down") To write quickly. JOUKED (18) [verb] To play dance music, or to dance, in a juke | [verb] To hit | [verb] To stab JOWLED (17) JUDGED (16) [verb] To sit in judgment on; to pass sentence on. | [verb] To sit in judgment, to act as judge. | [verb] To form an opinion on. JUGGED (16) [verb] To stew in an earthenware jug etc. | [verb] To put into jail. | [verb] To utter a sound like "jug", as certain birds do, especially the nightingale. JUICED (16) [verb] To extract the juice from something. | [verb] To energize or stimulate something. | [adjective] (of a fruit etc) That has had the juice extracted. JUMPED (18) [verb] To propel oneself rapidly upward, downward and/or in any horizontal direction such that momentum causes the body to become airborne. | [verb] To cause oneself to leave an elevated location and fall downward. | [verb] To pass by a spring or leap; to overleap. JUNKED (18) [verb] To throw away. | [verb] To find something for very little money (meaning derived from the term junk shop) JURIED (14) [adjective] (of a competition) Overseen by a jury JUSTED (14) JUTTED (14) [verb] To stick out. | [verb] To butt. KAYOED (14) [verb] To knock someone out, or render them unconscious or senseless. KECKED (17) [verb] To retch or heave as if to vomit. KEDGED (13) [verb] To warp (a vessel) by carrying out a kedge in a boat, dropping it overboard, and hauling the vessel up to it. | [verb] (of a vessel) To move with the help of a kedge, as described above. KEEKED (15) [verb] To peek; peep. KEELED (11) [verb] To mark with ruddle. | [adjective] Furnished with a keel, especially a keel of a specified type | [verb] To put to death; to extinguish the life of. KEENED (11) [verb] To make cold, to sharpen. | [verb] To utter a keen. | [verb] To utter with a loud wailing voice or wordless cry. KELOID (11) [noun] A hard raised growth of scar tissue at the site of an injury. | [verb] To form a keloid. KELPED (13) KENNED (11) [verb] To give birth, conceive, beget, be born; to develop (as a fetus); to nourish, sustain (as life). | [verb] To know, perceive or understand. | [verb] To discover by sight; to catch sight of; to descry. KEPPED (15) KERBED (13) KERFED (14) KERNED (11) [adjective] Having part of the face projecting beyond the body or shank; -- said of type. | [verb] (chiefly proportional font printing) To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters (characters or glyphs); to perform such adjustments to a portion of text, according to preset rules. KEYPAD (16) [noun] A small board with keys primarily used for tactile input into a machine. KICKED (17) [verb] To strike or hit with the foot or other extremity of the leg. | [verb] To make a sharp jerking movement of the leg, as to strike something. | [verb] To direct to a particular place by a blow with the foot or leg. KIDDED (13) [verb] To make a fool of (someone). | [verb] To dupe or deceive (someone). | [verb] To make a joke with (someone). KIDVID (15) [noun] Video material produced for children. KILLED (11) [verb] To put to death; to extinguish the life of. | [verb] To render inoperative. | [verb] To stop, cease or render void; to terminate. KILNED (11) KILTED (11) [adjective] Having on a kilt. | [adjective] Plaited after the manner of kilting. | [adjective] Tucked or fastened up; said of petticoats, etc. KINGED (12) [verb] To crown king, to make (a person) king. | [verb] To rule over as king. | [verb] To perform the duties of a king. KINKED (15) [verb] To laugh loudly. | [verb] To gasp for breath as in a severe fit of coughing. | [verb] To form a kink or twist. KIPPED (15) [verb] (chiefly UK) To sleep; often with the connotation of a temporary or charitable situation, or one borne out of necessity. | [verb] To snatch; take up hastily; filch | [verb] To hold or keep (together) KIRNED (11) KISSED (11) [verb] To touch with the lips or press the lips against, usually to show love or affection or passion, or as part of a greeting. | [verb] To (cause to) touch lightly or slightly; to come into contact. | [verb] Of two or more people, to touch each other's lips together, usually to express love or affection or passion. KITHED (14) KITTED (11) [verb] To assemble or collect something into kits or sets or to give somebody a kit. See also kit out and other derived phrases. KNIFED (14) [verb] To cut with a knife. | [verb] To use a knife to injure or kill by stabbing, slashing, or otherwise using the sharp edge of the knife as a weapon. | [verb] To cut through as if with a knife. KOBOLD (13) [noun] (German mythology) An ambivalent, sometimes vindictive, spirit that is capable of materialising as an object or human, often a child; a sprite. | [noun] (German folklore) A mischievous elf or goblin, or one connected (and helpful) to a family or household. | [noun] (fantasy literature) One of a diminutive and usually malevolent race of beings. KONKED (15) KYTHED (17) LACKED (13) [verb] To be without, to need, to require. | [verb] To be short (of or for something). | [verb] To be in want. LADLED (8) [verb] To pour or serve something with a ladle. LAGEND (8) LAGGED (9) [verb] To fail to keep up (the pace), to fall behind | [verb] To cover (for example, pipes) with felt strips or similar material (referring to a time lag effect in thermal transfer) | [verb] To transport as a punishment for crime. LAIRED (7) [verb] To rest; to dwell. | [verb] To lay down. | [verb] To bury. LALLED (7) LAMBED (11) [verb] Of a sheep, to give birth. | [verb] To assist (sheep) to give birth. LAMMED (11) [verb] To beat or thrash. | [verb] To flee or run away. LAMPAD (11) LAMPED (11) [verb] To hit, clout, belt, wallop. | [verb] To hunt at night using a lamp; see lamping. | [verb] To hang out or chill; to do nothing in particular. LANCED (9) [verb] To pierce with a lance, or with any similar weapon. | [verb] To open with a lancet; to pierce | [verb] To throw in the manner of a lance; to lanch. LANDED (8) [verb] To descend to a surface, especially from the air. | [verb] To alight, to descend from a vehicle. | [verb] To come into rest. LAPPED (11) [verb] To enfold; to hold as in one's lap; to cherish. | [verb] To rest or recline in a lap, or as in a lap. | [verb] To fold; to bend and lay over or on something. LAPSED (9) [verb] To fall away gradually; to subside. | [verb] To fall into error or heresy. | [verb] To slip into a bad habit that one is trying to avoid. LARDED (8) [verb] To stuff (meat) with bacon or pork before cooking. | [verb] To smear with fat or lard. | [verb] To garnish or strew, especially with reference to words or phrases in speech and writing. LARKED (11) [verb] To catch larks (type of bird). | [verb] To sport, engage in harmless pranking. | [verb] To frolic, engage in carefree adventure. LASHED (10) [verb] To strike with a lash; to whip or scourge with a lash, or with something like one. | [verb] To strike forcibly and quickly, as with a lash; to beat, or beat upon, with a motion like that of a lash. | [verb] To throw out with a jerk or quickly. LASTED (7) [verb] To perform, carry out. | [verb] To endure, continue over time. | [verb] To hold out, continue undefeated or entire. LATHED (10) [verb] To invite; bid; ask. | [verb] To shape with a lathe. | [verb] To produce a three-dimensional model by rotating a set of points around a fixed axis. LAUDED (8) [verb] To praise, to glorify LAZIED (16) LEADED (8) [verb] To cover, fill, or affect with lead | [verb] To place leads between the lines of. | [adjective] Held in place by strips of lead. LEAFED (10) [verb] To produce leaves; put forth foliage. | [verb] To divide (a vegetable) into separate leaves. | [adjective] (chiefly in combination) Having a leaf or leaves (of the specified kind). LEAKED (11) [verb] To allow fluid or gas to pass through an opening that should be sealed. | [verb] (of a fluid or gas) To pass through an opening that should be sealed. | [verb] To disclose secret information surreptitiously or anonymously. LEANED (7) [verb] To incline, deviate, or bend, from a vertical position; to be in a position thus inclining or deviating. | [verb] To incline in opinion or desire; to conform in conduct; often with to, toward, etc. | [verb] Followed by against, on, or upon: to rest or rely, for support, comfort, etc. LEAPED (9) [verb] To jump. | [verb] To pass over by a leap or jump. | [verb] To copulate with (a female beast); to cover. LEASED (7) [verb] (chiefly dialectal) To gather. | [verb] (chiefly dialectal) To pick, select, pick out; to pick up. | [verb] (chiefly dialectal) To glean. LEAVED (10) [verb] To give leave to; allow; permit; let; grant. | [verb] To produce leaves or foliage. | [verb] To raise; to levy. LECHED (12) [verb] To behave lecherously LEERED (7) [verb] To look sideways or obliquely; now especially with sexual desire or malicious intent. | [verb] To entice with a leer or leers. | [verb] To teach. LEGEND (8) [noun] An unrealistic story depicting past events. | [noun] A person related to a legend or legends. | [noun] A key to the symbols and color codes on a map, chart, etc. LEGGED (9) [noun] (in combinations) Someone or something having a certain number or type of legs | [adjective] Having legs, or a certain type or number of legs | [verb] To remove the legs from an animal carcass. LENSED (7) LETTED (7) [verb] To hinder, prevent, impede, hamper, cumber; to obstruct (someone or something). | [verb] To prevent someone from doing something; also to prevent something from happening. | [verb] To tarry or delay. LEVEED (10) LEVIED (10) [verb] To impose (a tax or fine) to collect monies due, or to confiscate property. | [verb] To raise or collect by assessment; to exact by authority. | [verb] To draft someone into military service. LICKED (13) [verb] To stroke with the tongue. | [verb] To lap; to take in with the tongue. | [verb] To beat with repeated blows. LIDDED (9) LIFTED (10) [verb] To raise or rise. | [verb] To steal. | [verb] To source directly without acknowledgement; to plagiarise. LIGAND (8) [noun] An ion, molecule, or functional group that binds to another chemical entity to form a larger complex. | [noun] A letter that orthography requires to be ligated with one or more other letters. LILIED (7) LILTED (7) [verb] To do something rhythmically, with animation and quickness, usually of music. | [verb] To sing cheerfully, especially in Gaelic. | [verb] To utter with spirit, animation, or gaiety; to sing with spirit and liveliness. LIMBED (11) LIMNED (9) [verb] To draw or paint; to delineate. | [verb] To illuminate, as a manuscript; to decorate with gold or some other bright colour. | [adjective] Described or represented in a lifelike manner LIMPED (11) [verb] To walk lamely, as if favouring one leg. | [verb] (of a vehicle) To travel with a malfunctioning system of propulsion. | [verb] To move or proceed irregularly. LIMPID (11) [adjective] Clear, transparent or bright. LINKED (11) [verb] To connect two or more things. | [verb] (of a Web page) To contain a hyperlink to another page. | [verb] To supply (somebody) with a hyperlink; to direct by means of a link. LIPOID (9) [noun] A lipid or other substance resembling fat | [adjective] Of pertaining to fat. LIPPED (11) [verb] To touch or grasp with the lips; to kiss; to lap the lips against (something). | [verb] (of something inanimate) To touch lightly. | [verb] To wash against a surface, lap. LIQUID (16) [noun] A substance that is flowing, and keeping no shape, such as water; a substance of which the molecules, while not tending to separate from one another like those of a gas, readily change their relative position, and which therefore retains no definite shape, except that determined by the containing receptacle; an inelastic fluid. | [noun] A class of consonant sounds that includes l and r. | [adjective] Flowing freely like water; fluid; not solid and not gaseous; composed of particles that move freely among each other on the slightest pressure. LISPED (9) [verb] To pronounce the consonant ‘s’ imperfectly; to give ‘s’ and ‘z’ the sounds of ‘th’ (/θ/). This is a speech impediment common among children. | [verb] To speak with imperfect articulation; to mispronounce, such as a child learning to talk. | [verb] To speak hesitatingly and with a low voice, as if afraid. LISTED (7) [verb] To create or recite a list. | [verb] To place in listings. | [verb] To sew together, as strips of cloth, so as to make a show of colours, or to form a border. LIZARD (16) [noun] Any reptile of the order Squamata that is not a snake, usually having four legs, external ear openings, movable eyelids and a long slender body and tail. | [noun] (chiefly in attributive use) Lizard skin, the skin of these reptiles. | [noun] An unctuous person. LOADED (8) [verb] To put a load on or in (a means of conveyance or a place of storage). | [verb] To place in or on a conveyance or a place of storage. | [verb] To put a load on something. LOAFED (10) [verb] To do nothing, to be idle. | [verb] (Cockney rhyming slang) To headbutt, (from loaf of bread) LOAMED (9) LOANED (7) [verb] To lend (something) to (someone). LOBBED (11) [verb] To throw or hit a ball into the air in a high arch. | [verb] To throw. | [verb] To put, place LOCKED (13) [verb] To become fastened in place. | [verb] To fasten with a lock. | [verb] To be capable of becoming fastened in place. LOCOED (9) LODGED (9) [verb] To be firmly fixed in a specified position. | [verb] To stay in a boarding-house, paying rent to the resident landlord or landlady. | [verb] To stay in any place or shelter. LOFTED (10) [verb] To propel high into the air. | [verb] To fly or travel through the air, as though propelled | [verb] To throw the ball erroneously through the air instead of releasing it on the lane's surface. LOGGED (9) [verb] To cut trees into logs. | [verb] To cut down (trees). | [verb] To cut down trees in an area, harvesting and transporting the logs as wood. LOLLED (7) [verb] To laugh out loud. | [verb] To act lazily or indolently while reclining; to lean; to lie at ease. | [verb] To hang extended from the mouth, like the tongue of an animal heated from exertion. LONGED (8) [verb] To take a long position in. | [verb] To await, aspire, desire greatly (something to occur or to be true) | [verb] To be appropriate to, to pertain or belong to. LOOKED (11) LOOMED (9) [verb] To appear indistinctly, eg. when seen on the horizon or through the murk. | [verb] To appear in an exaggerated or threatening form; to be imminent. | [verb] To rise and to be eminent; to be elevated or ennobled, in a moral sense. LOOPED (9) [verb] To form something into a loop. | [verb] To fasten or encircle something with a loop. | [verb] To fly an aircraft in a loop. LOOSED (7) [verb] To let loose, to free from restraints. | [verb] To unfasten, to loosen. | [verb] To make less tight, to loosen. LOOTED (7) [verb] To steal, especially as part of war, riot or other group violence. | [verb] To steal from. | [verb] To examine the corpse of a fallen enemy for loot. LOPPED (11) [verb] (usually with off) To cut off as the top or extreme part of anything, especially to prune a small limb off a shrub or tree, or sometimes to behead someone. | [verb] To hang downward; to be pendent; to lean to one side. | [verb] To allow to hang down. LORDED (8) [verb] Domineer or act like a lord. | [verb] To invest with the dignity, power, and privileges of a lord; to grant the title of lord. LOTTED (7) [verb] To allot; to sort; to apportion. | [verb] To count or reckon (on or upon). | [adjective] Apportioned or decided by lot; allotted. LOUPED (9) LOURED (7) [verb] To frown; to look sullen. | [verb] To be dark, gloomy, and threatening, as clouds; of the sky: to be covered with dark and threatening clouds; to show threatening signs of approach, as a tempest. LOUSED (7) [verb] To remove lice from. LOUTED (7) LUCKED (13) [verb] To succeed by chance. | [verb] To rely on luck. | [verb] To carry out relying on luck. LUFFED (13) [verb] (of a sail) To shake due to being trimmed improperly. | [verb] (of a boat) To alter course to windward so that the sails luff. (Alternatively luff up) | [verb] To let out (a sail) so that it luffs. LUGGED (9) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To haul or drag along (especially something heavy); to carry; to pull. | [verb] To run at too slow a speed. | [verb] To carry an excessive amount of sail for the conditions prevailing. LULLED (7) [verb] To cause to rest by soothing influences; to compose; to calm | [verb] To become gradually calm; to subside; to cease or abate. LUMPED (11) [verb] To treat as a single unit; to group together in a casual or chaotic manner (as if forming an ill-defined lump of the items). | [verb] To bear a heavy or awkward burden; to carry something unwieldy from one place to another. | [verb] To hit or strike (a person). LUNGED (8) [verb] To (cause to make) a sudden forward movement (present participle: lunging). | [verb] To longe or work a horse in a circle around a handler (present participle: lunging or lungeing). | [adjective] Having lungs (breathing organs). LUNTED (7) LURKED (11) [verb] To remain concealed in order to ambush. | [verb] To remain unobserved. | [verb] To hang out or wait around a location, preferably without drawing attention to oneself. LUSHED (10) [verb] To drink (liquor) to excess. LUSTED (7) [verb] (usually in the phrase "lust after") To look at or watch with a strong desire, especially of a sexual nature. MACLED (11) MADDED (11) [verb] To be or become mad. | [verb] To madden, to anger, to frustrate. MAENAD (9) [noun] A female follower of Dionysus, associated with intense reveling. | [noun] An excessively wild or emotional woman. MAILED (9) [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send by electronic mail. | [verb] To contact (a person) by electronic mail. | [verb] (ditransitive) To send (a letter, parcel, etc.) through the mail. MAIMED (11) [verb] To wound seriously; to cause permanent loss of function of a limb or part of the body. MALFED (12) MALLED (9) MALTED (9) [verb] To convert a cereal grain into malt by causing it to sprout (by soaking in water) and then halting germination (by drying with hot air) in order to develop enzymes that can break down starches and proteins in the grain. | [verb] To become malt. | [verb] To drink malt liquor. MANNED (9) [verb] To supply (something) with staff or crew (of either sex). | [verb] To take up position in order to operate (something). | [verb] (possibly obsolete) To brace (oneself), to fortify or steel (oneself) in a manly way. (Compare man up.) MANTID (9) [noun] Mantis (insect) MAPPED (13) [verb] To create a visual representation of a territory, etc. via cartography. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To act as a function on something, taking it to something else. | [verb] (followed by a "to" phrase) To have a direct relationship; to correspond. MARAUD (9) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARKED (13) [adjective] Having a visible or identifying mark. | [adjective] Clearly evident; noticeable; conspicuous. | [adjective] (of a word, form, or phoneme) Distinguished by a positive feature. | [verb] To put a mark on (something); to make (something) recognizable by a mark; to label or write on (something). MARLED (9) [adjective] Mottled, streaked, multicoloured. | [verb] To cover with the earthy substance called marl. | [verb] To cover, as part of a rope, with marline, marking a peculiar hitch at each turn to prevent unwinding. MARRED (9) [verb] To spoil; to ruin; to scathe; to damage. | [adjective] Of a person, perplexed or troubled | [adjective] Of a child, spoilt, cosseted, overly indulged MARTED (9) MASHED (12) [verb] To convert into a mash; to reduce to a soft pulpy state by beating or pressure | [verb] In brewing, to convert (for example malt, or malt and meal) into the mash which makes wort. | [verb] To press down hard (on). MASJID (16) [noun] A mosque. MASKED (13) [verb] To cover (the face or something else), in order to conceal the identity or protect against injury; to cover with a mask or visor. | [verb] To disguise; to cover; to hide. | [verb] To conceal; also, to intervene in the line of. MASSED (9) [verb] To form or collect into a mass; to form into a collective body; to bring together into masses; to assemble. | [verb] To have a certain mass. | [verb] To celebrate mass. MASTED (9) [verb] To supply and fit a mast to (a ship). | [verb] (of swine and other animals) To feed on forest seed or fruit. | [verb] (of a population of plants) To vary fruit and seed production in multi-year cycles. MATTED (9) [verb] To cover, protect or decorate with mats. | [verb] To form a thick, tangled mess; to interweave into, or like, a mat; to entangle. | [adjective] Forming a thick tangled mess MAULED (9) [verb] To handle someone or something in a rough way. | [verb] To savage; to cause serious physical wounds (usually used of an animal). | [verb] To criticise harshly. MAZARD (18) MEATED (9) MEDIAD (10) MELDED (10) [verb] To combine multiple similar objects into one | [verb] In card games, especially of the rummy family, to announce or display a combination of cards. MELLED (9) MELOID (9) MELTED (9) [verb] To change (or to be changed) from a solid state to a liquid state, usually by a gradual heat. | [verb] To dissolve, disperse, vanish. | [verb] To soften, as by a warming or kindly influence; to relax; to render gentle or susceptible to mild influences; sometimes, in a bad sense, to take away the firmness of; to weaken. MENDED (10) [verb] To repair, as anything that is torn, broken, defaced, decayed, or the like; to restore from partial decay, injury, or defacement. | [verb] To alter for the better; to set right; to reform; hence, to quicken; as, to mend one's manners or pace. | [verb] To help, to advance, to further; to add to. MENSED (9) MEOUED (9) MEOWED (12) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MERGED (10) [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To combine into a whole. | [verb] To blend gradually into something else. MESHED (12) [verb] To connect together by interlocking, as gears do. | [verb] (by extension) To fit in; to come together harmoniously. | [verb] To catch in a mesh. MESSED (9) [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To make untidy or dirty. | [verb] (transitive, often used with "up") To throw into disorder or to ruin. | [verb] To interfere. METHOD (12) [noun] A process by which a task is completed; a way of doing something (followed by the adposition of, to or for before the purpose of the process): | [noun] (often "the method") A technique for acting based on the ideas articulated by Constantin Stanislavski and focusing on authentically experiencing the inner life of the character being portrayed. | [noun] A subroutine or function belonging to a class or object, synonym of member function | [noun] A trick where the boarder grabs the heel edge of the board with their back hand, between their feet, and then pulls the board towards their back, while arching their back and bending knees. METRED (9) MEWLED (12) [verb] To cry weakly with a soft, high-pitched sound; to whimper; to whine. MICHED (14) MIFFED (15) [verb] (usually used in the passive) To offend slightly. | [verb] To become slightly offended. | [adjective] Somewhat indignant, irritated, angry, put out or annoyed. MILKED (13) [verb] To express milk from (a mammal, especially a cow). | [verb] To draw (milk) from the breasts or udder. | [verb] To express any liquid (from any creature). MILLED (9) [verb] To grind or otherwise process in a mill or other machine. | [verb] To shape, polish, dress or finish using a machine. | [verb] To engrave one or more grooves or a pattern around the edge of (a cylindrical object such as a coin). MILORD (9) [noun] An English nobleman, especially one traveling Europe in grand style; a wealthy British gentleman. | [noun] My Lord (used to address peers temporal, judges, etc). MILTED (9) MINCED (11) [adjective] Finely chopped. | [adjective] Minutely subdivided. | [adjective] Weakened, extenuated. | [verb] To make less; make small. MINDED (10) [verb] (originally and chiefly in negative or interrogative constructions) To dislike, to object to; to be bothered by. | [verb] To look after, to take care of, especially for a short period of time. | [verb] (chiefly in the imperative) To make sure, to take care (that). MINTED (9) [verb] To reproduce (coins), usually en masse, under licence. | [verb] To invent; to forge; to fabricate; to fashion. | [verb] (provincial) To try, attempt; take aim. MISADD (10) MISDID (10) MISLED (9) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. | [verb] To rain in fine drops; to mizzle. MISSED (9) [verb] To fail to hit. | [verb] To fail to achieve or attain. | [verb] To avoid; to escape. MISTED (9) [verb] To form mist. | [verb] To spray fine droplets on, particularly of water. | [verb] To cover with a mist. MITRED (9) [adjective] Relating to an abbot's or bishop's mitre; wearing a mitre. | [adjective] Having a mitre joint. MOANED (9) [verb] To complain about; to bemoan, to bewail; to mourn. | [verb] To grieve. | [verb] To distress (someone); to sadden. MOATED (9) [adjective] Surrounded with a moat MOBBED (13) [verb] To crowd around (someone), sometimes with hostility. | [verb] To crowd into or around a place. | [verb] To wrap up in, or cover with, a cowl. MOBLED (11) MOCKED (15) [verb] To mimic, to simulate. | [verb] To create an artistic representation of. | [verb] To make fun of by mimicking, to taunt. MOGGED (11) MOILED (9) [verb] To toil, to work hard. | [verb] To churn continually; to swirl. | [verb] To defile or dirty. MOLDED (10) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOLTED (9) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MONIED (9) [adjective] Affluent; rich | [adjective] Paid for; funded MOONED (9) [verb] To display one's buttocks to, typically as a jest, insult, or protest. | [verb] (usually followed by over or after) To fuss over something adoringly; to be infatuated with someone. | [verb] To spend time idly, absent-mindedly. MOORED (9) [verb] To cast anchor or become fastened. | [verb] To fix or secure (e.g. a vessel) in a particular place by casting anchor, or by fastening with ropes, cables or chains or the like | [verb] To secure or fix firmly. MOOTED (9) [verb] To bring up as a subject for debate, to propose. | [verb] To discuss or debate. | [verb] To make or declare irrelevant. MOPPED (13) [verb] To rub, scrub, clean or wipe with a mop, or as if with a mop. | [verb] To make a wry expression with the mouth. MORBID (11) [adjective] Of, or relating to disease. | [adjective] (by extension) Taking an interest in unhealthy or unwholesome subjects such as death, decay, disease. | [adjective] Suggesting the horror of death; macabre or ghoulish MOSSED (9) [verb] To become covered with moss. | [verb] To cover (something) with moss. MOUSED (9) [verb] To move cautiously or furtively, in the manner of a mouse (the rodent) (frequently used in the phrasal verb to mouse around). | [verb] To hunt or catch mice (the rodents), usually of cats. | [verb] To close the mouth of a hook by a careful binding of marline or wire. MUCKED (15) [verb] To shovel muck. | [verb] To manure with muck. | [verb] To do a dirty job. MUCOID (11) [adjective] Pertaining to or resembling mucus; mucous. | [noun] Any of a class of mucin-like substances yielding on decomposition a reducing carbohydrate together with some form of proteinaceous matter. MUDDED (11) MUFFED (15) [verb] To drop or mishandle (the ball, a catch etc.); to play badly. | [verb] To mishandle; to bungle. | [adjective] Wearing a muff. MUGGED (11) [verb] To strike in the face. | [verb] To assault for the purpose of robbery. | [verb] To exaggerate a facial expression for communicative emphasis; to make a face, to pose, as for photographs or in a performance, in an exaggerated or affected manner. MULLED (9) [verb] (usually with over) To work (over) mentally; to cogitate; to ruminate. | [verb] To powder; to pulverize. | [verb] To chop marijuana so that it becomes a smokable form. MUMMED (13) [verb] To act in a pantomime or dumb show. MUMPED (13) MUSCID (11) [noun] Any fly of the family Muscidae of insects. | [adjective] Pertaining to or related to the Muscidae family of insects. MUSHED (12) [verb] To squish so as to break into smaller pieces or to combine with something else. | [verb] To walk, especially across the snow with dogs. | [verb] To drive dogs, usually pulling a sled, across the snow. MUSJID (16) MUSSED (9) [verb] To rumple, tousle or make (something) untidy. MUSTED (9) MYRIAD (12) [noun] Ten thousand; 10,000 | [noun] A countless number or multitude (of specified things) | [adjective] (modifying a singular noun) Multifaceted, having innumerable elements MYXOID (19) NABBED (11) [verb] To seize, arrest or take into custody (a criminal or fugitive). | [verb] To grab or snatch something. NACRED (9) NAGGED (9) [verb] To continuously remind or complain to (someone) in an annoying way, often about insignificant or unnecessary matters. | [verb] To bother with persistent thoughts or memories. | [verb] To bother or disturb persistently in any way. NAILED (7) [verb] To fix (an object) to another object using a nail. | [verb] To drive a nail. | [verb] To stud or boss with nails, or as if with nails. NAPPED (11) [verb] To have a nap; to sleep for a short period of time, especially during the day. | [verb] To be off one's guard. | [verb] To form or raise a soft or fuzzy surface on (fabric or leather). NARKED (11) [verb] To watch; to observe. | [verb] To serve or behave as a spy or informer. | [verb] To annoy or irritate. NAVAID (10) [noun] Any form of aid to navigation, particularly applying to shipping and aviation. Examples: lighthouse, or ILS (instrument landing system) NEARED (7) [verb] To come closer to; to approach. NECKED (13) [verb] To hang by the neck; strangle; kill, eliminate | [verb] To make love; to intently kiss or cuddle; to canoodle. | [verb] To drink rapidly. NEEDED (8) [verb] To have an absolute requirement for. | [verb] To want strongly; to feel that one must have something. | [verb] (modal verb) To be obliged or required (to do something). NEONED (7) NEREID (7) [noun] One of 50 sea nymphs who were attendants upon Poseidon (Neptune), and were represented as riding on sea horses, sometimes in human form and sometimes with the tail of a fish. | [noun] A worm of the genus Nereis, having sharp retractable jaws and an annelid body. NERVED (10) [verb] To give courage. | [verb] To give strength; to supply energy or vigour. | [adjective] Vigorous, strong; courageous. NESTED (7) [verb] (of animals) To build or settle into a nest. | [verb] To settle into a home. | [verb] To successively neatly fit inside another. NETTED (7) [verb] To catch by means of a net. | [verb] To catch in a trap, or by stratagem. | [verb] To enclose or cover with a net. NEVOID (10) NIBBED (11) NICHED (12) [adjective] In a niche. NICKED (13) [verb] To make a nick or notch in; to cut or scratch in a minor way. | [verb] To fit into or suit, as by a correspondence of nicks; to tally with. | [verb] To make a cut at the side of the face. NIGHED (11) NILLED (7) NIMMED (11) NIMROD (9) [noun] A foolish person; an idiot. NIPPED (11) [verb] To catch and enclose or compress tightly between two surfaces, or points which are brought together or closed; to pinch; to close in upon. | [verb] To remove by pinching, biting, or cutting with two meeting edges of anything; to clip. | [verb] To blast, as by frost; to check the growth or vigor of; to destroy. NITRID (7) NOCKED (13) [verb] To fit an arrow against the bowstring of a bow or crossbow. (See also notch.) | [verb] To cut a nock in (usually in an arrow's base or the tips of a bow). NODDED (9) [verb] To incline the head up and down, as to indicate agreement. | [verb] To briefly incline the head downwards as a cursory greeting. | [verb] To sway, move up and down. NOGGED (9) NOISED (7) [verb] To make a noise; to sound. | [verb] To spread news of; to spread as rumor or gossip. NOOSED (7) [verb] To tie or catch in a noose; to entrap or ensnare. | [adjective] (of rope) having a noose NORMED (9) [adjective] Of a mathematical structure, endowed with a norm. | [adjective] Of a data set that has been adjusted to a norm. NOSHED (10) [verb] (usually with on) To eat a snack or light meal. | [verb] To perform fellatio (on); to blow. NUDGED (9) [verb] To push against gently, especially in order to gain attention or give a signal. | [verb] To near or come close to something. NULLED (7) [verb] To nullify; to annul. | [verb] To form nulls, or into nulls, as in a lathe. | [verb] To crack; to remove restrictions or limitations in (software). NUMBED (11) [verb] To cause to become numb (physically or emotionally). | [verb] To cause (a feeling) to be less intense. | [verb] To cause (the mind, faculties, etc.) to be less acute. NURLED (7) NURSED (7) [verb] To breastfeed: to feed (a baby) at the breast; to suckle. | [verb] To breastfeed: to be fed at the breast. | [verb] To care for (someone), especially in sickness; to tend to. NUTTED (7) [verb] (mostly in the form "nutting") To gather nuts. | [verb] To hit deliberately with the head; to headbutt. | [verb] (mildly) To orgasm; to ejaculate. OBEYED (12) [verb] To do as ordered by (a person, institution etc), to act according to the bidding of. | [verb] To do as one is told. | [verb] To be obedient, compliant (to a given law, restriction etc.). OBTUND (9) [verb] To reduce the edge or effects of; to mitigate; to dull. OCHRED (12) ODORED (8) OFFEND (13) [verb] To hurt the feelings of; to displease; to make angry; to insult. | [verb] To feel or become offended; to take insult. | [verb] To physically harm, pain. OGDOAD (9) [noun] A thing made up of eight parts. OINKED (11) [verb] Of a pig or in imitation thereof, to make its characteristic sound. OKAYED (14) [verb] To approve. | [verb] To confirm by activating a button marked OK. OMENED (9) ONWARD (10) [verb] To keep going; to progress or persevere. | [adjective] Moving forward. | [adjective] Advanced in a forward direction or toward an end. OPENED (9) [verb] To make something accessible or allow for passage by moving from a shut position. | [verb] To make (an open space, etc.) by clearing away an obstacle or obstacles, in order to allow for passage, access, or visibility. | [verb] To bring up, broach. OPINED (9) [verb] To have or express an opinion; to state as an opinion; to suppose, consider (that). | [verb] To give one's formal opinion (on or upon something). OPIOID (9) [noun] A substance that has effects similar to opium. | [noun] Any of the natural substances, such as an endorphin, released in the body in response to pain. | [noun] Any of a group of synthetic compounds that exhibit similarities to the opium alkaloids that occur in nature. ORATED (7) [verb] To speak formally; to give a speech. | [verb] To speak passionately; to preach for or against something. ORCHID (12) [noun] A plant of the orchid family (Orchidaceae), bearing unusually-shaped flowers of beautiful colours. | [noun] A light bluish-red, violet-red or purple colour. | [adjective] (colour) having a light purple colour. OSMUND (9) OUCHED (12) OUSTED (7) [verb] To expel; to remove. OUTADD (8) OUTBID (9) [verb] To bid more than (somebody else) in an auction. OUTDID (8) [verb] To excel; go beyond in performance; surpass. OVERED (10) OXFORD (17) [noun] A variety of shoe, typically made of heavy leather. | [noun] (by ellipsis) An Oxford Dictionary. PACKED (15) [verb] (physical) To put or bring things together in a limited or confined space, especially for storage or transport. | [verb] (social) To cheat. | [verb] To load with a pack PADDED (11) [verb] To stuff. | [verb] To furnish with a pad or padding. | [verb] To increase the size of, especially by adding undesirable filler. PAIKED (13) PAINED (9) [verb] To hurt; to put to bodily uneasiness or anguish; to afflict with uneasy sensations of any degree of intensity; to torment; to torture. | [verb] To render uneasy in mind; to disquiet; to distress; to grieve. | [verb] To inflict suffering upon as a penalty; to punish. PAIRED (9) [verb] To group into one or more sets of two. | [verb] To bring two (animals, notably dogs) together for mating. | [verb] To engage (oneself) with another of opposite opinions not to vote on a particular question or class of questions. PALLED (9) [verb] To cloak or cover with, or as if with, a pall. | [verb] To make vapid or insipid; to make lifeless or spiritless; to dull, to weaken. | [verb] To become dull, insipid, tasteless, or vapid; to lose life, spirit, strength, or taste. | [verb] Be friends with, hang around with. PALLID (9) [adjective] Appearing weak, pale or wan. PALMED (11) [verb] To hold or conceal something in the palm of the hand, e.g, for an act of sleight of hand or to steal something. | [verb] To hold something without bending the fingers significantly. | [verb] To move something with the palm of the hand. PANGED (10) PANNED (9) [verb] To wash in a pan (of earth, sand etc. when searching for gold). | [verb] To disparage; to belittle; to put down; to criticise severely. | [verb] With "out" (to pan out), to turn out well; to be successful. PANTED (9) [verb] To breathe quickly or in a labored manner, as after exertion or from eagerness or excitement; to respire with heaving of the breast; to gasp. | [verb] To long eagerly; to desire earnestly. | [verb] To long for (something); to be eager for (something). PARGED (10) [verb] To apply a parge on to a surface. PARKED (13) [verb] To bring (something such as a vehicle) to a halt or store in a specified place. | [verb] To defer (a matter) until a later date. | [verb] To bring together in a park, or compact body. PARLED (9) PARRED (9) [verb] To reach the hole in the allotted number of strokes. PARSED (9) [verb] To resolve (a sentence, etc.) into its elements, pointing out the several parts of speech, and their relation to each other by agreement or government; to analyze and describe grammatically. | [verb] To examine closely; to scrutinize. | [verb] To split (a file or other input) into pieces of data that can be easily manipulated or stored. PARTED (9) [verb] To leave the company of. | [verb] To cut hair with a parting; shed. | [verb] To divide in two. PASHED (12) [verb] To snog, to make out, to kiss. | [verb] To throw (or be thrown) and break. | [verb] To strike; to crush; to smash; to dash into pieces. PASSED (9) [verb] To change place. | [verb] To change in state or status | [verb] To move through time. PASTED (9) [verb] To stick with paste; to cause to adhere by or as if by paste. | [verb] To insert a piece of media (e.g. text, picture, audio, video) previously copied or cut from somewhere else. | [verb] To strike or beat someone or something. PATTED (9) [verb] To (gently) tap the flat of one's hand on a person or thing. | [verb] To hit lightly and repeatedly with the flat of the hand to make smooth or flat | [verb] To stroke or fondle (an animal). PAUSED (9) [verb] To take a temporary rest, take a break for a short period after an effort. | [verb] To interrupt an activity and wait. | [verb] To hesitate; to hold back; to delay. PAVEED (12) PAWNED (12) [verb] To pledge; to stake or wager. | [verb] To give as security on a loan of money; especially, to deposit (something) at a pawn shop. | [verb] (originally leet) To own, to defeat or dominate (someone or something, especially a game or someone playing a game). PEACED (11) [verb] To make peace; to put at peace; to be at peace. | [verb] To peace out. PEAKED (13) [adjective] Having a peak or peaks. | [adjective] Sickly-looking, peaky. | [verb] To reach a highest degree or maximum. PEALED (9) [verb] To sound with a peal or peals. | [verb] To utter or sound loudly. | [verb] To assail with noise. PECHED (14) [verb] To pant, to struggle for breath. | [adjective] Tired, out of breath, worn out. PECKED (15) [verb] To strike or pierce with the beak or bill (of a bird). | [verb] To form by striking with the beak or a pointed instrument. | [verb] To strike, pick, thrust against, or dig into, with a pointed instrument, especially with repeated quick movements. PEEKED (13) [verb] To look slyly, or with the eyes half closed, or through a crevice; to peep. | [verb] To be only slightly, partially visible, as if peering out from a hiding place. | [verb] To retrieve (a value) from a memory address. PEELED (9) [verb] To remove the skin or outer covering of. | [verb] To remove something from the outer or top layer of. | [verb] To become detached, come away, especially in flakes or strips; to shed skin in such a way. PEENED (9) [verb] To shape metal by striking it, especially with a peen. PEEPED (11) [verb] To make a soft, shrill noise like a baby bird. | [verb] To speak briefly with a quiet voice. | [verb] To look, especially through a narrow opening, or while trying not to be seen or noticed. PEERED (9) [verb] To look with difficulty, or as if searching for something. | [verb] To come in sight; to appear. | [verb] To make equal in rank. PEEVED (12) [verb] To annoy; vex. PEGGED (11) [verb] To fasten using a peg. | [verb] To affix or pin. | [verb] To fix a value or price. PEINED (9) [verb] To shape metal by striking it, especially with a peen. PEISED (9) PELTED (9) [verb] To bombard, as with missiles. | [verb] To throw; to use as a missile. | [verb] To rain or hail heavily. PENDED (10) PENNED (9) [verb] To enclose in a pen. | [verb] To write (an article, a book, etc.). | [adjective] Winged; having plumes PENTAD (9) [noun] A group or series of five things. | [noun] A mean average value of temperature, etc., taken every five days. | [noun] Any element, atom, or radical having a valence of five, or which can be combined with, substituted for, or compared with, five atoms of hydrogen or other monad. PEPPED (13) [verb] To inject with energy and enthusiasm. PEPTID (11) PERIOD (9) [noun] A length of time. | [noun] A period of time in history seen as a single coherent entity; an epoch, era. | [noun] The punctuation mark “.” (indicating the ending of a sentence or marking an abbreviation). PERKED (13) [verb] To make (coffee) in a percolator or a drip coffeemaker. | [verb] Of coffee: to be produced by heated water seeping (“percolating”) through coffee grounds. | [verb] To make trim or smart; to straighten up; to erect; to make a jaunty or saucy display of. PERMED (11) [verb] To give hair a perm, using heat, chemicals etc. | [adjective] That has been given a permanent wave PETARD (9) [noun] A small, hat-shaped explosive device, used to breach a door or wall. | [noun] Anything potentially explosive, in a non-literal sense. | [noun] A loud firecracker. PETTED (9) [verb] To stroke or fondle (an animal). | [verb] To stroke or fondle (another person) amorously. | [verb] Of two or more people, to stroke and fondle one another amorously. PHASED (12) [adjective] Organized or structured chronologically in phases PHONED (12) [verb] To call (someone) using a telephone. PHYSED (15) PICKED (15) [verb] To grasp and pull with the fingers or fingernails. | [verb] To harvest a fruit or vegetable for consumption by removing it from the plant to which it is attached; to harvest an entire plant by removing it from the ground. | [verb] To pull apart or away, especially with the fingers; to pluck. PIECED (11) [verb] (usually with together) To assemble (something real or figurative). | [verb] To make, enlarge, or repair, by the addition of a piece or pieces; to patch; often with out. | [verb] To produce a work of graffiti more complex than a tag. PIGGED (11) [verb] (of swine) to give birth. | [verb] To greedily consume (especially food). | [verb] To huddle or lie together like pigs, in one bed. PILLED (9) [verb] Of a woven fabric surface, to form small matted balls of fiber. | [verb] To form into the shape of a pill. | [verb] To medicate with pills. PIMPED (13) [verb] To act as a procurer of prostitutes; to pander. | [verb] To prostitute someone. | [verb] To excessively customize something, especially a vehicle, according to ghetto standards (also pimp out). PINGED (10) [verb] To make a high-pitched, short and somewhat sharp sound. | [verb] (submarine navigation) To emit a signal and then listen for its echo in order to detect objects. | [verb] To send a packet in order to determine whether a host is present, particularly by use of the ping utility. PINKED (13) [verb] To decorate a piece of clothing or fabric by adding holes or by scalloping the fringe. | [verb] To prick with a sword. | [verb] To wound by irony, criticism, or ridicule. PINNED (9) [verb] To shape metal by striking it, especially with a peen. | [verb] (often followed by a preposition such as "to" or "on") To fasten or attach (something) with a pin. | [verb] (usually in the passive) To cause (a piece) to be in a pin. PIPPED (13) [verb] To get the better of; to defeat by a narrow margin | [verb] To hit with a gunshot | [verb] To peep, to chirp PIQUED (18) [verb] To wound the pride of; to excite to anger. | [verb] To take pride in; to pride oneself on. | [verb] To stimulate (a feeling, emotion); to offend by slighting; to excite (someone) to action by causing resentment or jealousy. PISHED (12) PISSED (9) [verb] To urinate. | [verb] To discharge as or with the urine. | [adjective] Drunk. PITHED (12) [verb] To extract the pith from (a plant stem or tree). | [verb] To kill (especially cattle or laboratory animals) by cutting or piercing the spinal cord. PITIED (9) [verb] To feel pity for (someone or something). | [verb] To make (someone) feel pity; to provoke the sympathy or compassion of. PITTED (9) [verb] To make pits in; to mark with little hollows. | [verb] To put (an animal) into a pit for fighting. | [verb] To bring (something) into opposition with something else. PLACED (11) [verb] To put (an object or person) in a specific location. | [verb] To earn a given spot in a competition. | [verb] To remember where and when (an object or person) has been previously encountered. PLACID (11) [adjective] Calm and quiet; peaceful; tranquil PLANED (9) [verb] To smooth (wood) with a plane. | [verb] To move in a way that lifts the bow of a boat out of the water. | [verb] To glide or soar. PLATED (9) [verb] To cover the surface material of an object with a thin coat of another material, usually a metal. | [verb] To place the various elements of a meal on the diner's plate prior to serving. | [verb] To score a run. PLAYED (12) [verb] To act in a manner such that one has fun; to engage in activities expressly for the purpose of recreation or entertainment. | [verb] To perform in (a sport); to participate in (a game). | [verb] To take part in amorous activity; to make love. PLEIAD (9) [noun] A group of illustrious or talented people, especially one with seven members. PLOWED (12) [verb] To use a plough on to prepare for planting. | [verb] To use a plough. | [verb] To have sex with, penetrate. PLOYED (12) PLUMED (11) [verb] To adorn, cover, or furnish with feathers or plumes, or as if with feathers or plumes. | [verb] Chiefly of a bird: to arrange and preen the feathers of, specifically in preparation for flight; hence , to prepare for (something). | [verb] (by extension) To congratulate (oneself) proudly, especially concerning something unimportant or when taking credit for another person's effort; to self-congratulate. POCKED (15) PODDED (11) [verb] To bear or produce pods | [verb] To remove peas from their case. | [verb] To put into a pod or to enter a pod. POISED (9) [verb] To hang in equilibrium; to be balanced or suspended; hence, to be in suspense or doubt. | [verb] To counterpoise; to counterbalance. | [verb] To be of a given weight; to weigh. POLLED (9) [verb] To take, record the votes of (an electorate). | [verb] To solicit mock votes from (a person or group). | [verb] To vote at an election. PONCED (11) [verb] To act as a pimp. | [verb] Hence, to try to get rid of or proactively sell something. | [verb] To behave in a posh or effeminate manner. PONDED (10) [verb] To block the flow of water so that it can escape only through evaporation or seepage; to dam. | [verb] To make into a pond; to collect, as water, in a pond by damming. | [verb] To form a pond; to pool. PONGED (10) [verb] To stink, to smell bad. | [verb] To deliver a line of a play in an arch, suggestive or unnatural way, so as to draw undue attention to it. PONGID (10) [noun] Any primate once considered to belong in the family Pongidae; the great apes excluding humans PONIED (9) [verb] To lead (a horse) from another horse. | [verb] To use a crib or cheat-sheet in translating. POOHED (12) [verb] To defecate. | [verb] To dirty something with feces. | [verb] To say "pooh". POOLED (9) [verb] (of a liquid) To form a pool. | [verb] To put together; contribute to a common fund, on the basis of a mutual division of profits or losses; to make a common interest of. | [verb] To combine or contribute with others, as for a commercial, speculative, or gambling transaction. POOPED (11) [verb] To make a short blast on a horn | [verb] To break wind. | [verb] To defecate. POPPED (13) [verb] To make a pop, or sharp, quick sound. | [verb] To burst (something) with a popping sound. | [verb] (with in, out, upon, etc.) To enter, or issue forth, with a quick, sudden movement; to move from place to place suddenly; to dart. PORTED (9) [verb] To turn or put to the left or larboard side of a ship; said of the helm. | [verb] To carry, bear, or transport. See porter. | [verb] To hold or carry (a weapon) with both hands so that it lays diagonally across the front of the body, with the barrel or similar part near the left shoulder and the right hand grasping the small of the stock; or, to throw (the weapon) into this position on command. POSTED (9) [verb] To hang (a notice) in a conspicuous manner for general review. | [verb] To hold up to public blame or reproach; to advertise opprobriously; to denounce by public proclamation. | [verb] To carry (an account) from the journal to the ledger. POTTED (9) [verb] To put (something) into a pot. | [verb] To preserve by bottling or canning. | [verb] To cause a ball to fall into a pocket. POUFED (12) POURED (9) [verb] To cause (liquid, or liquid-like substance) to flow in a stream, either out of a container or into it. | [verb] To send out as in a stream or a flood; to cause (an emotion) to come out; to cause to escape. | [verb] To send forth from, as in a stream; to discharge uninterruptedly. POUTED (9) [verb] To push out one's lips. | [verb] To thrust itself outward; to be prominent. | [verb] To be or pretend to be ill-tempered; to sulk. PRATED (9) [verb] To talk much and to little purpose; to be loquacious; to speak foolishly. PRAYED (12) [verb] To direct words and/or thoughts to God or any higher being, for the sake of adoration, thanks, petition for help, etc. | [verb] To humbly beg a person for aid or their time. | [verb] To ask earnestly for; to seek to obtain by supplication; to entreat for. PREMED (11) [noun] An undergraduate college academic program, typically in biochemistry or related sciences, that prepares a student to pursue graduate or post-graduate studies in medicine. | [noun] A premedication. PREYED (12) [verb] To act as a predator. PRICED (11) [verb] To determine the monetary value of (an item); to put a price on. | [verb] To pay the price of; to make reparation for. | [verb] To set a price on; to value; to prize. PRIDED (10) [verb] To take or experience pride in something; to be proud of it. PRIMED (11) [verb] To prepare a mechanism for its main work. | [verb] To apply a coat of primer paint to. | [verb] To be renewed. PRISED (9) [verb] To force (open) with a lever; to pry. PRIZED (18) [verb] To consider highly valuable; to esteem. | [verb] To set or estimate the value of; to appraise; to price; to rate. | [verb] To move with a lever; to force up or open; to prise or pry. PROBED (11) [verb] To explore, investigate, or question | [verb] To insert a probe into. PROSED (9) [verb] To write or repeat in a dull, tedious, or prosy way. PROVED (12) [verb] To proofread. | [verb] To make resistant, especially to water. | [verb] To allow yeast-containing dough to rise. PRUNED (9) [verb] To become wrinkled like a dried plum, as the fingers and toes do when kept submerged in water. | [verb] To remove excess material from a tree or shrub; to trim, especially to make more healthy or productive. | [verb] To cut down or shorten (by the removal of unnecessary material). PSOCID (11) [noun] Any insect of the order Psocoptera. PUFFED (15) [verb] To emit smoke, gas, etc., in puffs. | [verb] To pant. | [verb] To advertise. | [adjective] Panting because of having exercised. PUGGED (11) [verb] To mix and stir when wet. | [verb] To fill or stop with clay by tamping; to fill in or spread with mortar, as a floor or partition, for the purpose of deadening sound. PULLED (9) [verb] To apply a force to (an object) so that it comes toward the person or thing applying the force. | [verb] To gather with the hand, or by drawing toward oneself; to pluck. | [verb] To attract or net; to pull in. PULPED (11) [verb] To make or be made into pulp. | [verb] To beat to a pulp. | [verb] To deprive of pulp; to separate the pulp from. PULSED (9) [verb] To beat, to throb, to flash. | [verb] To flow, particularly of blood. | [verb] To emit in discrete quantities. PUMPED (13) [verb] To use a pump to move (liquid or gas). | [verb] (often followed by up) To fill with air. | [verb] To move rhythmically, as the motion of a pump. PUNNED (9) [verb] To beat; strike with force; to ram; to pound, as in a mortar; reduce to powder, to pulverize. | [verb] To make or tell a pun; to make a play on words. PUNTED (9) [verb] To propel a punt or similar craft by means of a pole. | [verb] To dropkick; to kick something a considerable distance. | [verb] To equivocate and delay or put off (answering a question, addressing an issue, etc). PUPPED (13) [verb] To give birth to pups. PUREED (9) [verb] To crush or grind food into a puree. PURGED (10) [verb] To clean thoroughly; to cleanse; to rid of impurities. | [verb] To free from sin, guilt, or the burden or responsibility of misdeeds | [verb] To remove by cleansing; to wash away. PURLED (9) [verb] To decorate with fringe or embroidered edge | [verb] An inverted stitch producing ribbing etc | [verb] To upset, to spin, capsize, fall heavily, fall headlong. PURRED (9) [verb] Of a cat, to make a vibrating sound in its throat when contented. | [verb] To say (something) in a throaty, seductive manner. | [verb] To make a vibrating throaty sound, as from pleasure. PURSED (9) [verb] To press (one's lips) in and together so that they protrude. | [verb] To draw up or contract into folds or wrinkles; to pucker; to knit. | [verb] To put into a purse. PUSHED (12) [verb] To apply a force to (an object) such that it moves away from the person or thing applying the force. | [verb] To continually attempt to persuade (a person) into a particular course of action. | [verb] To press or urge forward; to drive. PUTRID (9) [adjective] Rotting, rotten, being in a state of putrefaction. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or characteristic of putrefaction, especially having a bad smell, like that of rotting flesh. | [adjective] Vile, disgusting. PUTTED (9) [verb] To lightly strike a golf ball with a putter. | [verb] To make a putting sound. | [verb] To ride one's motorcycle, to go for a motorcycle ride. PUTZED (18) [verb] Waste time. | [verb] (Pennsylvania Dutch) To go around viewing the putzes in the neighborhood. QUAKED (20) [verb] To tremble or shake. | [verb] To be in a state of fear, shock, amazement, etc., such as might cause one to tremble. QUEUED (16) [verb] To put oneself or itself at the end of a waiting line. | [verb] To arrange themselves into a physical waiting queue. | [verb] To add to a queue data structure. QUIRED (16) QUOTED (16) [verb] To repeat the exact words of (a person). | [verb] To repeat (the exact words of a person). | [verb] To prepare a summary of work to be done and set a price. RACKED (13) [verb] To place in or hang on a rack. | [verb] To torture (someone) on the rack. | [verb] To cause (someone) to suffer pain. RADDED (9) RAFTED (10) [verb] To convey on a raft. | [verb] To make into a raft. | [verb] To travel by raft. RAGGED (9) [adjective] In tatters, having the texture broken. | [adjective] Having rough edges; jagged or uneven | [adjective] Harsh-sounding; having an unpleasant noise | [verb] To decorate (a wall, etc.) by applying paint with a rag. RAIDED (8) [verb] To engage in a raid against. | [verb] To lure from another; to entice away from. | [verb] To indulge oneself by taking from. RAILED (7) [verb] To travel by railway. | [verb] To enclose with rails or a railing. | [verb] To range in a line. RAINED (7) [verb] To have rain fall from the sky. | [verb] To fall as or like rain. | [verb] To issue (something) in large quantities. RAISED (7) [verb] (physical) To cause to rise; to lift or elevate. | [verb] To create, increase or develop. | [verb] To establish contact with (e.g., by telephone or radio). RAMMED (11) [verb] To collide with (an object), usually with the intention of damaging it or disabling its function. | [verb] To strike (something) hard, especially with an implement. | [verb] To fill or compact by pounding or driving. RAMPED (11) [verb] To behave violently; to rage. | [verb] To spring; to leap; to bound, rear, or prance; to move swiftly or violently. | [verb] To climb, like a plant; to creep up. RAMROD (9) [noun] Device used with muzzleloaders to push the projectile up against the propellant. | [noun] Ranch or trail foreman, usually the first or second person in charge. The person responsible for getting the work done. | [noun] An erect penis. RANCID (9) [adjective] Rank in taste or smell. | [adjective] Offensive. RANGED (8) [verb] To travel over (an area, etc); to roam, wander. | [verb] To rove over or through. | [verb] To exercise the power of something over something else; to cause to submit to, over. RANKED (11) [verb] To place abreast, or in a line. | [verb] To have a ranking. | [verb] To assign a suitable place in a class or order; to classify. RANTED (7) [verb] To speak or shout at length in uncontrollable anger. | [verb] To criticize by ranting. | [verb] To speak extravagantly, as in merriment. RAPPED (11) [verb] To strike something sharply with one's knuckles; knock. | [verb] To strike with a quick blow; to knock on. | [verb] To free (a pattern) in a mould by light blows on the pattern, so as to facilitate its removal. RASPED (9) [verb] To use a rasp. | [verb] To make a noise similar to the one a rasp makes in use; to utter rasps. | [verb] To work something with a rasp. RATTED (7) [verb] (usually with “on” or “out”) To betray a person or party, especially by telling their secret to an authority or an enemy; to turn someone in. | [verb] To work as a scab, going against trade union policies. | [verb] (of a dog, etc.) To kill rats. | [adjective] Intoxicated RAZEED (16) RAZZED (25) [verb] To tease playfully; to heckle. | [verb] To drive an automobile around. | [adjective] Full of energy or enthusiasm. REAMED (9) [verb] To cream; mantle; foam; froth. | [verb] To enlarge a hole, especially using a reamer; to bore a hole wider. | [verb] To shape or form, especially using a reamer. REAPED (9) [verb] To cut (for example a grain) with a sickle, scythe, or reaping machine | [verb] To gather (e.g. a harvest) by cutting. | [verb] To obtain or receive as a reward, in a good or a bad sense. REARED (7) [verb] To bring up to maturity, as offspring; to educate; to instruct; to foster. | [verb] (said of people towards animals) To breed and raise. | [verb] To rise up on the hind legs REAVED (10) REBIND (9) [verb] To bind again. | [verb] To associate a command with a different key. REBRED (9) RECKED (13) [verb] To make account of; to care for; to heed, regard, consider. | [verb] To concern, to be important or earnest. | [verb] To think. RECLAD (9) RECORD (9) [noun] A disk, usually made of a polymer, used to record sound for playback on a phonograph. | [noun] An item of information put into a temporary or permanent physical medium. | [noun] Any instance of a physical medium on which information was put for the purpose of preserving it and making it available for future reference. | [verb] To make a record of information. REDBUD (10) [noun] Any of several small trees, of the genus Cercis, having purple-pink flowers that appear before the leaves; the Judas tree. REDDED (9) REDYED (11) REEDED (8) [adjective] Covered with reeds; reedy. | [adjective] Formed with channels and ridges like reeds, as the edge of a coin. | [verb] To thatch. REEFED (10) [verb] To take in part of a sail in order to adapt the size of the sail to the force of the wind. | [verb] To pull or yank strongly, especially in relation to horse riding. | [verb] (of paddles) To move the floats of a paddle wheel toward its center so that they will not dip so deeply. REEKED (11) [verb] To have or give off a strong, unpleasant smell. | [verb] To be evidently associated with something unpleasant. | [verb] To be emitted or exhaled, emanate, as of vapour or perfume. REELED (7) [verb] To wind on a reel. | [verb] To spin or revolve repeatedly. | [verb] To unwind, to bring or acquire something by spinning or winding something else. REEVED (10) [verb] To pass (a rope) through a hole or opening, especially so as to fasten it. | [adjective] Of a rope, passed through a hole, ring or pulley. REFEED (10) REFFED (13) [verb] To referee; to act as a referee in a sport or game. REFIND (10) REFOLD (10) [verb] To fold again. REFUND (10) [noun] An amount of money returned. | [verb] To return (money) to (someone); to reimburse. | [verb] To supply again with funds. REGARD (8) [noun] A steady look, a gaze. | [noun] One's concern for another; esteem; relation, reference. | [noun] (preceded by “in” or “with”) A particular aspect or detail; respect, sense. | [verb] To look at; to observe. REGILD (8) [verb] To gild again. REINED (7) [verb] To direct or stop a horse by using reins. | [verb] To restrain; to control; to check. | [verb] To obey directions given with the reins. REIVED (10) [verb] To plunder, pillage, rob, pirate, or remove. | [verb] To deprive (a person) of something through theft or violence. | [verb] To split, tear, break apart. RELAID (7) [verb] To lay (for example, flooring or railroad track) again. RELEND (7) RELIED (7) [verb] (with on or upon, formerly also with in) to trust; to have confidence in; to depend. RELOAD (7) [noun] The process by which something is reloaded. | [verb] To load (something) again | [verb] To refresh a copy of a program etc. in memory or of a web page etc. on screen REMAND (9) [noun] The act of sending an accused person back into custody whilst awaiting trial. | [noun] The act of an appellate court sending a matter back to a lower court for review or disposal. | [verb] To send a prisoner back to custody. REMEND (9) REMIND (9) [verb] To cause one to experience a memory (of someone or something); to bring to the notice or consideration (of a person). REMOLD (9) [verb] Mold again, apply a new mold to RENDED (8) RENTED (7) [verb] To occupy premises in exchange for rent. | [verb] To grant occupation in return for rent. | [verb] To obtain or have temporary possession of an object (e.g. a movie) in exchange for money. REPAID (9) [verb] To pay back. REPAND (9) REPLED (9) REPPED (11) [verb] To represent; to act as a representative for. | [verb] Repeat | [adjective] Corded transversely, like the fabric called rep REREAD (7) [noun] The act of reading something again. | [verb] To read again. RESAID (7) RESEED (7) [verb] To sow seeds again; to resow or replant. | [verb] Of a non-perennial plant, to produce seeds to ensure the following generation without human intervention; to self-sow. | [verb] To reset the input of an algorithm so as to ensure different results. RESEND (7) [noun] The act of sending again. | [verb] To send again. | [verb] To send back. RESHOD (10) RESOLD (7) [verb] To sell again. RESTED (7) [verb] To cease from action, motion, work, or performance of any kind; stop; desist; be without motion. | [verb] To come to a pause or an end; end. | [verb] To be free from that which harasses or disturbs; be quiet or still; be undisturbed. RETARD (7) [noun] Retardation; delay. | [noun] A slowing down of the tempo; a ritardando. | [noun] A person with mental retardation. RETIED (7) [verb] To tie again; to tie something that has already been tied or was tied before. RETOLD (7) [verb] To tell again, often differently, what one has read or heard; to paraphrase. RETTED (7) [adjective] Moistened or soaked to soften. REUSED (7) [verb] To use again something that is considered past its usefulness (usually for something else). | [verb] To use again, or in another place. REVVED (13) [verb] To increase the speed of a motor, or to operate at a higher speed. REWARD (10) [noun] Something of value given in return for an act. | [noun] A prize promised for a certain deed or catch | [noun] The result of an action, whether good or bad. | [verb] To give a reward to or for. REWELD (10) REWIND (10) [noun] The act of rewinding. | [noun] A button or other mechanism for rewinding. | [verb] To wind (something) again. REWORD (10) [verb] To change the wording of; to restate using different words. RHYMED (15) [verb] To compose or treat in verse; versify. | [verb] (followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end. | [verb] Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each. RIBALD (9) [noun] An individual who is filthy or vulgar in nature. | [adjective] Coarsely, vulgarly, or lewdly amusing; referring to sexual matters in a rude or irreverent way. RIBAND (9) [noun] A narrow diminutive of the bend, thinner than a bendlet. | [noun] A long, narrow strip of timber bent and bolted longitudinally to the ribs of a vessel, to hold them in position and give rigidity to the framework. | [noun] A ribbon. RIBBED (11) [verb] To shape, support, or provide something with a rib or ribs. | [verb] To tease or make fun of someone in a good-natured way. | [verb] To enclose, as if with ribs, and protect; to shut in. RICKED (13) [verb] To heap up (hay, etc.) in ricks. | [verb] To slightly sprain or strain the neck, back, ankle etc. RIDDED (9) [verb] To free (something) from a hindrance or annoyance. | [verb] To banish. | [verb] To kill. RIDGED (9) [verb] To form into a ridge | [verb] To extend in ridges | [adjective] Having ridges. RIFFED (13) [verb] To lay off from work due to a reduction in force. | [verb] To improvise in the performance or practice of an art, especially by expanding on or making novel use of traditional themes. | [verb] To riffle. RIFLED (10) [verb] To quickly search through many items (such as papers, the contents of a drawer, a pile of clothing). (See also rifflehttp//verbmall.blogspot.com/2008/05/riffle-or-rifle.html) | [verb] To commit robbery or theft. | [verb] To search with intent to steal; to ransack, pillage or plunder. RIFTED (10) [verb] To form a rift; to split open. | [verb] To cleave; to rive; to split. | [verb] (obsolete outside Scotland and northern Britain) To belch. RIGGED (9) [verb] To fit out with a harness or other equipment. | [verb] To equip and fit (a ship) with sails, shrouds, and yards. | [verb] To dress or clothe in some costume. RILLED (7) [verb] To trickle, pour, or run like a small stream. RIMMED (11) [verb] To form a rim on. | [verb] To follow the contours, possibly creating a circuit. | [verb] (of a ball) To roll around a rim. RINDED (8) [verb] To remove the rind from. | [adjective] Having a rind (hard, tough outer layer) RINGED (8) [verb] To enclose or surround. | [verb] To make an incision around; to girdle. | [verb] To attach a ring to, especially for identification. RINSED (7) [verb] To wash (something) quickly using water and no soap. | [verb] To remove soap from (something) using water. | [verb] To thoroughly defeat in an argument, fight or other competition. RIOTED (7) [verb] To create or take part in a riot; to raise an uproar or sedition. | [verb] To act in an unrestrained or wanton manner; to indulge in excess of feasting, luxury, etc. | [verb] To cause to riot; to throw into a tumult. RIPPED (11) [verb] To divide or separate the parts of (especially something flimsy such as paper or fabric), by cutting or tearing; to tear off or out by violence. | [verb] To tear apart; to rapidly become two parts. | [verb] To get by, or as if by, cutting or tearing. RISKED (11) [verb] To incur risk of (something). | [verb] To incur risk of harming or jeopardizing. | [verb] To incur risk as a result of (doing something). RITARD (7) ROAMED (9) [verb] To wander or travel freely and with no specific destination. | [verb] To use a network or service from different locations or devices. | [verb] To transmit (resources) between different locations or devices, to allow comparable usage from any of them. ROARED (7) [verb] To make a loud, deep cry, especially from pain, anger, or other strong emotion. | [verb] To laugh in a particularly loud manner. | [verb] Of animals (especially the lion), to make a loud deep noise. ROBAND (9) ROBBED (11) [verb] To steal from, especially using force or violence. | [verb] To deprive of, or withhold from, unjustly or injuriously; to defraud. | [verb] (used with "of") To deprive (of). ROCKED (13) [verb] To move gently back and forth. | [verb] To cause to shake or sway violently. | [verb] To sway or tilt violently back and forth. RODDED (9) ROGUED (8) [verb] To cull; to destroy plants not meeting a required standard, especially when saving seed, rogue or unwanted plants are removed before pollination. | [verb] To cheat. | [verb] To give the name or designation of rogue to; to decry. ROILED (7) [verb] To render turbid by stirring up the dregs or sediment of. | [verb] To annoy; to make someone angry. | [verb] To bubble, seethe. ROLFED (10) [verb] To apply the Rolfing massage technique to. ROLLED (7) [verb] To cause to revolve by turning over and over; to move by turning on an axis; to impel forward by causing to turn over and over on a supporting surface. | [verb] To turn over and over. | [verb] To tumble in gymnastics; to do a somersault. ROMPED (11) [verb] To play about roughly, energetically or boisterously. | [verb] (Often used with down) To press forcefully, to encourage vehemently, to oppress. | [verb] To win easily. ROOFED (10) [verb] To cover or furnish with a roof. | [verb] To traverse buildings by walking or climbing across their roofs. | [verb] To put into prison, to bird. ROOKED (11) [verb] To cheat or swindle. | [verb] To squat; to ruck. | [verb] Pronunciation spelling of look. ROOMED (9) [verb] To reside, especially as a boarder or tenant. | [verb] To assign to a room; to allocate a room to. ROOSED (7) ROOTED (7) [verb] To grow roots; to enter the earth, as roots; to take root and begin to grow. | [verb] To prepare, oversee, or otherwise cause the rooting of cuttings | [verb] To be firmly fixed; to be established. ROTTED (7) [verb] To suffer decomposition due to biological action, especially by fungi or bacteria. | [verb] To decline in function or utility. | [verb] To (cause to) deteriorate in any way, as in morals; to corrupt. ROTUND (7) [adjective] Having a round or spherical shape; circular; orbicular. | [adjective] Having a round body shape; portly or plump; podgy. | [adjective] (of a sound) Full and rich; orotund; sonorous; full-toned. ROUGED (8) [verb] To apply rouge (makeup). ROUPED (9) [verb] To cry or shout. | [verb] To sell by auction. | [adjective] Affected with roup; roupy. ROUSED (7) [verb] To wake (someone) or be awoken from sleep, or from apathy. | [verb] To cause, stir up, excite (a feeling, thought, etc.). | [verb] To provoke (someone) to action or anger. ROUTED (7) [verb] To direct or divert along a particular course. | [verb] To connect two local area networks, thereby forming an internet. | [verb] To send (information) through a router. | [verb] To make a noise; roar; bellow; snort. RUBBED (11) [verb] To move (one object) while maintaining contact with another object over some area, with pressure and friction. | [verb] To rub something against (a second thing). | [verb] To be rubbed against something. RUBIED (9) RUCHED (12) RUCKED (13) [verb] To act as a ruck in a stoppage in Australian rules football. | [verb] To contest the possession of the ball in a ruck. | [verb] To crease or fold. RUFFED (13) [verb] To shape (fabric, etc.) into a ruff; to adorn (a garment, etc.) with a ruff. | [verb] Of a falcon, hawk, etc.: to hit (the prey) without fixing or grabbing hold of it. | [verb] To ruffle; to disorder. RUGGED (9) [adjective] Broken into sharp or irregular points; uneven; not smooth; rough. | [adjective] Not neat or regular; irregular, uneven. | [adjective] Rough with bristles or hair; shaggy. | [verb] To pull roughly or hastily; to plunder; to spoil; to tear. RUINED (7) [verb] To cause the fiscal ruin of. | [verb] To destroy or make something no longer usable. | [verb] To cause severe financial loss to; to bankrupt or drive out of business. RUSHED (10) [verb] To hurry; to perform a task with great haste. | [verb] To flow or move forward rapidly or noisily. | [verb] To dribble rapidly. RUSTED (7) [verb] To oxidize, especially of iron or steel. | [verb] To cause to oxidize. | [verb] To be affected with the parasitic fungus called rust. RUTTED (7) [verb] To be in the annual rut or mating season. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. SABBED (11) [verb] To sabotage, especially fox hunts in opposition to blood sports. SABRED (9) [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. | [adjective] Equipped with a sabre or sabres. SACKED (13) [verb] (games) To sacrifice. | [verb] To put in a sack or sacks. | [verb] To bear or carry in a sack upon the back or the shoulders. SACRED (9) [adjective] Characterized by solemn religious ceremony or religious use, especially, in a positive sense; consecrated, made holy. | [adjective] Religious; relating to religion, or to the services of religion; not secular | [adjective] Spiritual; concerned with metaphysics. | [verb] To consecrate SAGGED (9) [verb] To sink, in the middle, by its weight or under applied pressure, below a horizontal line or plane. | [verb] (by extension) To lean, give way, or settle from a vertical position. | [verb] To lose firmness, elasticity, vigor, or a thriving state; to sink; to droop; to flag; to bend; to yield, as the mind or spirits, under the pressure of care, trouble, doubt, or the like; to be unsettled or unbalanced. SAILED (7) [verb] To be impelled or driven forward by the action of wind upon sails, as a ship on water; to be impelled on a body of water by steam or other power. | [verb] To move through or on the water; to swim, as a fish or a waterfowl. | [verb] To ride in a boat, especially a sailboat. SAINED (7) SAIYID (10) SALPID (9) SALTED (7) [verb] To add salt to. | [verb] To deposit salt as a saline solution. | [verb] To fill with salt between the timbers and planks, as a ship, for the preservation of the timber. SALVED (10) [verb] To calm or assuage. | [verb] To heal by applications or medicaments; to apply salve to; to anoint. | [verb] To heal; to remedy; to cure; to make good. SANDED (8) [verb] To abrade the surface of (something) with sand or sandpaper in order to smooth or clean it. | [verb] To cover with sand. | [verb] To blot ink using sand. SAPPED (11) [verb] To drain, suck or absorb from (tree, etc.). | [verb] To exhaust the vitality of. | [verb] To strike with a sap (with a blackjack). SASHED (10) SASSED (7) [verb] To talk, to talk back. | [verb] To speak insolently to. SAUCED (9) [verb] To add sauce to; to season. | [verb] To cause to relish anything, as if with a sauce; to tickle or gratify, as the palate; to please; to stimulate. | [verb] To make poignant; to give zest, flavour or interest to; to set off; to vary and render attractive. SAUTED (7) SAYYID (13) SCALED (9) [verb] To change the size of something whilst maintaining proportion; especially to change a process in order to produce much larger amounts of the final product. | [verb] To climb to the top of. | [verb] To tolerate significant increases in throughput or other potentially limiting factors. SCAPED (11) SCARED (9) [verb] To frighten, terrify, startle, especially in a minor way. | [adjective] Feeling fear; afraid, frightened. SCHROD (12) SCOPED (11) [verb] To perform a cursory investigation of; scope out. | [verb] To perform any medical procedure that ends in the suffix -scopy, such as endoscopy, colonoscopy, bronchoscopy, etc. | [verb] To limit (an object or variable) to a certain region of program source code. SCORED (9) [verb] To cut a notch or a groove in a surface. | [verb] To record the tally of points for a game, a match, or an examination. | [verb] To obtain something desired. SCOWED (12) SCREED (9) [noun] A piece or narrow strip cut or torn off from a larger whole; a shred. | [noun] A piece of land, especially one that is narrow. | [noun] A rent, a tear. | [verb] To rend, to shred, to tear. | [noun] A (discordant) sound or tune played on bagpipes, a fiddle, or a pipe. | [adjective] Strewn with scree. SCRIED (9) [verb] To predict the future using crystal balls or other objects. | [verb] To descry; to see. | [verb] To proclaim. SEABED (9) [noun] The floor or bottom of the sea or ocean. SEALED (7) [verb] To hunt seals. | [verb] To place a seal on (a document). | [verb] To mark with a stamp, as an evidence of standard exactness, legal size, or merchantable quality. SEAMED (9) [adjective] Having or furnished with seams. | [verb] To put together with a seam. | [verb] To make the appearance of a seam in, as in knitting a stocking; hence, to knit with a certain stitch, like that in such knitting. | [adjective] (of a hawk) Out of condition; not in good condition. SEARED (7) [verb] To char, scorch, or burn the surface of (something) with a hot instrument. | [verb] To wither; to dry up. | [verb] To make callous or insensible. SEATED (7) [verb] To put an object into a place where it will rest; to fix; to set firm. | [verb] To provide with places to sit. | [verb] To request or direct one or more persons to sit. SECOND (9) [noun] Something that is number two in a series. | [noun] Something that is next in rank, quality, precedence, position, status, or authority. | [noun] The place that is next below or after first in a race or contest. | [noun] One-sixtieth of a minute; the SI unit of time, defined as the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of caesium-133 in a ground state at a temperature of absolute zero and at rest. | [noun] One who supports another in a contest or combat, such as a dueller's assistant. SECUND (9) [adjective] Arranged on one side only, as flowers or leaves on a stalk; unilateral. SEEDED (8) [verb] To plant or sow an area with seeds. | [verb] To cover thinly with something scattered; to ornament with seedlike decorations. | [verb] To start; to provide, assign or determine the initial resources for, position of, state of. SEELED (7) [verb] To sew together the eyes of a young hawk. | [verb] (by extension) To blind. | [verb] (of a ship) To roll on the waves in a storm. SEEMED (9) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. SEEPED (9) [verb] To ooze or pass slowly through pores or other small openings, and in overly small quantities; said of liquids, etc. | [verb] To enter or penetrate slowly; to spread or diffuse. | [verb] To diminish or wane away slowly. SEGUED (8) [verb] To move smoothly from one state or subject to another. | [verb] To make a smooth transition from one theme to another. | [verb] (of a disk jockey) To play a sequence of records with no talk between them. SEINED (7) [verb] To use a seine, to fish with a seine. SEISED (7) [verb] To vest ownership of a freehold estate in (someone). | [verb] (with of) To put in possession. | [verb] To seize. SEIZED (16) [verb] To deliberately take hold of; to grab or capture. | [verb] To take advantage of (an opportunity or circumstance). | [verb] To take possession of (by force, law etc.). SELFED (10) [adjective] Produced by vegetative propagation | [adjective] Produced by self-pollination SENDED (8) SENSED (7) [verb] To use biological senses: to either see, hear, smell, taste, or feel. | [verb] To instinctively be aware. | [verb] To comprehend. SERVED (10) [verb] (personal) To provide a service (or, by extension, a product, especially food or drink). | [verb] To treat (someone) in a given manner. | [verb] To be suitor to; to be the lover of. SHADED (11) [verb] To shield from light. | [verb] To alter slightly. | [verb] To vary or approach something slightly, particularly in color. SHAIRD (10) SHALED (10) SHAMED (12) [verb] To cause to feel shame. | [verb] To cover with reproach or ignominy; to dishonor; to disgrace. | [verb] To drive or compel by shame. SHAPED (12) [verb] To create or make. | [verb] To give something a shape and definition. | [verb] To form or manipulate something into a certain shape. SHARED (10) [verb] To give part of what one has to somebody else to use or consume. | [verb] To have or use in common. | [verb] To divide and distribute. SHAVED (13) [verb] To make bald or shorter by using a tool such as a razor or pair of electric clippers to cut the hair close to the skin. | [verb] To cut anything in this fashion. | [verb] To remove hair from one's face by this means. SHAWED (13) SHEWED (13) [verb] To display, to have somebody see (something). | [verb] To bestow; to confer. | [verb] To indicate (a fact) to be true; to demonstrate. SHIELD (10) [noun] Anything that protects or defends; defense; shelter; protection. | [noun] A shape like that of a shield; usually, an inverted triangle with sides that curve inward to form a pointed bottom, commonly used for police identifications and company logos. | [noun] A large expanse of exposed stable Precambrian rock. | [verb] To protect, to defend. SHINED (10) [verb] To emit light. | [verb] To reflect light. | [verb] To distinguish oneself; to excel. SHOOED (10) [verb] To induce someone or something to leave. | [verb] To leave under inducement. | [verb] To usher someone. SHORED (10) [adjective] Having a shore, often one of a specified type. | [verb] To set on shore. | [verb] (without up) To provide with support. SHOULD (10) [verb] (modal, auxiliary verb, defective) Used before a verb to indicate the simple future tense in the first person singular or plural. | [verb] Used similarly to indicate determination or obligation in the second and third persons singular or plural. | [verb] Used in questions with the first person singular or plural to suggest a possible future action. SHOVED (13) [verb] To push, especially roughly or with force. | [verb] To move off or along by an act of pushing, as with an oar or pole used in a boat; sometimes with off. | [verb] (by ellipsis) To make an all-in bet. SHOWED (13) [verb] To display, to have somebody see (something). | [verb] To bestow; to confer. | [verb] To indicate (a fact) to be true; to demonstrate. SHREWD (13) [adjective] Showing clever resourcefulness in practical matters. | [adjective] Artful, tricky or cunning. | [adjective] Streetwise. SHROUD (10) [noun] That which clothes, covers, conceals, or protects; a garment. | [noun] Especially, the dress for the dead; a winding sheet. | [noun] That which covers or shelters like a shroud. | [verb] To cover with a shroud. | [noun] The branching top of a tree; foliage. SHUTED (10) SIALID (7) SICCED (11) [verb] To mark with a bracketed sic. | [verb] To incite an attack by, especially a dog or dogs. | [verb] To set upon; to chase; to attack. SICKED (13) [verb] To incite an attack by, especially a dog or dogs. | [verb] To set upon; to chase; to attack. | [verb] To vomit. SIDLED (8) [verb] To (cause something to) move sideways. | [verb] In the intransitive sense often followed by up: to (cause something to) advance in a coy, furtive, or unobtrusive manner. SIEGED (8) SIEVED (10) [verb] To strain, sift or sort using a sieve. | [verb] To concede; let in | [adjective] Passed through a sieve. SIFTED (10) [adjective] Having undergone sifting. SIGHED (11) [verb] To inhale a larger quantity of air than usual, and immediately expel it; to make a deep single audible respiration, especially as the result or involuntary expression of fatigue, exhaustion, grief, sorrow, frustration, or the like. | [verb] To lament; to grieve. | [verb] To utter sighs over; to lament or mourn over. SIGNED (8) [verb] To make a mark | [verb] To make the sign of the cross | [verb] To indicate SILKED (11) SILOED (7) [verb] To store in a silo. | [adjective] Pertaining to silos (stored in silos; separated apart; not connected;) SILTED (7) [verb] To clog or fill with silt. | [verb] To become clogged with silt. | [verb] To flow through crevices; to percolate. SINGED (8) [verb] To burn slightly. | [verb] To remove the nap of (cloth), by passing it rapidly over a red-hot bar, or over a flame, preliminary to dyeing it. | [verb] To remove the hair or down from (a plucked chicken, etc.) by passing it over a flame. SINNED (7) [verb] To commit a sin. SIPPED (11) [verb] To ooze or pass slowly through pores or other small openings, and in overly small quantities; said of liquids, etc. | [verb] To enter or penetrate slowly; to spread or diffuse. | [verb] To diminish or wane away slowly. SKATED (11) [verb] To move along a surface (ice or ground) using skates. | [verb] To skateboard | [verb] To use the skating technique. SKEWED (14) [verb] To form or shape in an oblique way; to cause to take an oblique position. | [verb] To bias or distort in a particular direction. | [verb] To hurl or throw. SKITED (11) [verb] To boast. | [verb] To skim or slide along a surface. | [verb] To slip, such as on ice. SKIVED (14) [verb] To avoid one's lessons or work (chiefly at school or university); shirk. | [verb] To pare or shave off the rough or thick parts of. SLAKED (11) [verb] To satisfy (thirst, or other desires). | [verb] To cool (something) with water or another liquid. | [verb] To become mixed with water, so that a true chemical combination takes place. SLATED (7) [verb] To cover with slate. | [verb] To criticise harshly. | [verb] To schedule. SLAVED (10) [verb] To work as a slaver, to enslave people. | [verb] To work hard. | [verb] To place a device under the control of another. SLAYED (10) [verb] To kill, murder. | [verb] To eradicate or stamp out. | [verb] (by extension) To defeat, overcome (in a competition or contest). SLEWED (10) [verb] To rotate or turn something about its axis. | [verb] To veer a vehicle. | [verb] To insert extra ticks or skip some ticks of a clock to slowly correct its time. SLICED (9) [verb] To cut into slices. | [verb] To cut with an edge utilizing a drawing motion. | [verb] To clear (e.g. a fire, or the grate bars of a furnace) by means of a slice bar. SLIMED (9) [verb] To coat with slime. | [verb] To besmirch or disparage. | [verb] To carve (fish), removing the offal. SLIPED (9) SLOPED (9) [verb] To tend steadily upward or downward. | [verb] To form with a slope; to give an oblique or slanting direction to; to incline or slant. | [verb] (usually followed by a preposition) To try to move surreptitiously. SLOWED (10) [verb] To make (something) run, move, etc. less quickly; to reduce the speed of. | [verb] To keep from going quickly; to hinder the progress of. | [verb] To become slow; to slacken in speed; to decelerate. SMILED (9) [verb] To have (a smile) on one's face. | [verb] To express by smiling. | [verb] To express amusement, pleasure, or love and kindness. SMOKED (13) [adjective] Of food, preserved by treatment with smoke. | [adjective] Of glass, tinted. | [verb] To inhale and exhale the smoke from a burning cigarette, cigar, pipe, etc. SNAKED (11) [verb] To follow or move in a winding route. | [verb] To steal slyly. | [verb] To clean using a plumbing snake. SNARED (7) [verb] To catch or hold, especially with a loop. | [verb] To ensnare. SNAWED (10) SNIPED (9) [verb] To hunt snipe. | [verb] To shoot at individuals from a concealed place. | [verb] (by extension) To shoot with a sniper rifle. SNORED (7) [verb] To breathe during sleep with harsh, snorting noises caused by vibration of the soft palate. SNOWED (10) [verb] To have snow fall from the sky. | [verb] To hoodwink someone, especially by presenting confusing information. | [verb] To bluff in draw poker by refusing to draw any cards. SOAKED (11) [verb] To be saturated with liquid by being immersed in it. | [verb] To immerse in liquid to the point of saturation or thorough permeation. | [verb] To penetrate or permeate by saturation. SOAPED (9) [verb] To apply soap to in washing. | [verb] To cover, lather or in any other form treat with soap, often as a prank. | [verb] To be discreet about (a topic). SOARED (7) [verb] To fly high with little effort, like a bird. | [verb] To mount upward on wings, or as on wings. | [verb] To remain aloft by means of a glider or other unpowered aircraft. SOBBED (11) [verb] To weep with convulsive gasps. | [verb] To say (something) while sobbing. | [verb] To soak. SOCKED (13) [verb] To hit or strike violently; to deliver a blow to. | [verb] To throw. SODDED (9) [verb] To cover with sod. | [verb] Bugger; sodomize. | [verb] Damn, curse, confound. SOGGED (9) SOILED (7) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To become dirty or soiled. | [verb] To stain or mar, as with infamy or disgrace; to tarnish; to sully. SOLAND (7) SOLOED (7) [verb] To perform a solo. | [verb] To perform something in the absence of anyone else. | [verb] To drop the ball and then toe-kick it upward into the hands. SOLVED (10) [verb] To find an answer or solution to a problem or question; to work out. | [verb] To find the values of variables that satisfy a system of equations and/or inequalities. | [verb] To algebraically manipulate an equation or inequality into a form that isolates a chosen variable on one side, so that the other side consists of an expression that may be used to generate solutions. SOOTED (7) [adjective] Stained or marked with soot SOPPED (11) [verb] To steep or dip in any liquid. | [verb] To soak in, or be soaked; to percolate. SORBED (9) SORDID (8) [adjective] Distasteful, ignoble, vile, or contemptible. | [adjective] Dirty or squalid. | [adjective] Morally degrading. SORNED (7) SORTED (7) [verb] To separate items into different categories according to certain criteria that determine their sorts. | [verb] To arrange into some sequence, usually numerically, alphabetically or chronologically. | [verb] To conjoin; to put together in distribution; to class. SOTTED (7) [adjective] Stupefied, especially with liquor. SOULED (7) SOUPED (9) [verb] To feed: to provide with soup or a meal. | [verb] To develop (film) in a (chemical) developing solution. | [verb] Alternative form of sup SOURED (7) [verb] To make sour. | [verb] To become sour. | [verb] To spoil or mar; to make disenchanted. SOUSED (7) [verb] To immerse in liquid; to steep or drench. | [verb] To steep in brine; to pickle. | [verb] To strike, beat. SPACED (11) [verb] To roam, walk, wander. | [verb] To set some distance apart. | [verb] To insert or utilise spaces in a written text. SPADED (10) [verb] To turn over soil with a spade to loosen the ground for planting. SPARED (9) [verb] To show mercy. | [verb] To keep. | [verb] To give up To deprive oneself of, as by being frugal; to do without; to dispense with; to give up; to part with. SPARID (9) [noun] Any of several perciform fishes of the family Sparidae SPAYED (12) [verb] To divine; foretell | [verb] To remove or destroy the ovaries (of an animal) so that it cannot become pregnant. SPEWED (12) [verb] To eject forcibly and in a stream | [verb] To speak or write quickly and voluminously, especially words that are not worth listening to or reading. | [verb] To vomit SPICED (11) [verb] To add spice or spices to; season. | [verb] To spice up. | [adjective] Having spice added, spicy. SPIKED (13) [verb] To fasten with spikes, or long, large nails. | [verb] To set or furnish with spikes. | [verb] To embed nails into (a tree) so that any attempt to cut it down will damage equipment or injure people. SPILED (9) [verb] To plug (a hole) with a spile. | [verb] To draw off (a liquid) using a spile. | [verb] To provide (a barrel, tree etc.) with a spile. SPINED (9) SPIRED (9) SPITED (9) [verb] To treat maliciously; to try to injure or thwart. | [verb] To be angry at; to hate. | [verb] To fill with spite; to offend; to vex. SPOKED (13) SPORED (9) SPREAD (9) [noun] The act of spreading. | [noun] Something that has been spread. | [noun] A layout, pattern or design of cards arranged for a reading. SPUMED (11) [verb] To froth. STAGED (8) [verb] To produce on a stage, to perform a play. | [verb] To demonstrate in a deceptive manner. | [verb] To orchestrate; to carry out. STAKED (11) [verb] To fasten, support, defend, or delineate with stakes. | [verb] To pierce or wound with a stake. | [verb] To put at risk upon success in competition, or upon a future contingency. STALED (7) [verb] (of alcohol) To make stale; to age in order to clear and strengthen (a drink, especially beer). | [verb] To make stale; to cause to go out of fashion or currency; to diminish the novelty or interest of, particularly by excessive exposure or consumption. | [verb] To become stale; to grow odious from excessive exposure or consumption. STANED (7) STARED (7) [verb] (construed with at) To look fixedly (at something). | [verb] To influence in some way by looking fixedly. | [verb] To be very conspicuous on account of size, prominence, colour, or brilliancy. STATED (7) [verb] To declare to be a fact. | [verb] To make known. | [adjective] Expressed in a statement; uttered or written. STAVED (10) [verb] To fit or furnish with staves or rundles. | [verb] (usually with 'in') To break in the staves of; to break a hole in; to burst. | [verb] (with 'off') To push, or keep off, as with a staff. STAYED (10) [verb] To prop; support; sustain; hold up; steady. | [verb] To support from sinking; to sustain with strength; to satisfy in part or for the time. | [verb] To stop; detain; keep back; delay; hinder. STEWED (10) [verb] To cook (food) by slowly boiling or simmering. | [verb] To brew (tea) for too long, so that the flavour becomes too strong. | [verb] To suffer under uncomfortably hot conditions. STIPED (9) STOKED (11) [verb] To poke, pierce, thrust. | [verb] To feed, stir up, especially, a fire or furnace. | [verb] (by extension) To encourage a behavior or emotion. STOLED (7) STOLID (7) [adjective] Having or revealing little emotion or sensibility; dully or heavily stupid. STONED (7) [verb] To pelt with stones, especially to kill by pelting with stones. | [verb] To wall with stones. | [verb] To remove a stone from (fruit etc.). STOPED (9) [verb] To excavate in the form of stopes. | [verb] To fill in with rubbish, as a space from which the ore has been worked out. STORED (7) [verb] To keep (something) while not in use, generally in a place meant for that purpose. | [verb] To write (something) into memory or registers. STOUND (7) STOWED (10) [verb] To put something away in a compact and tidy manner, in its proper place, or in a suitable place. | [verb] To store or pack something in a space-saving manner and over a long time. | [verb] To arrange, pack, or fill something tightly or closely. STRAND (7) [noun] The shore or beach of the sea or ocean; shore; beach. | [noun] The shore or beach of a lake or river. | [noun] A small brook or rivulet. | [noun] Each of the strings which, twisted together, make up a yarn, rope or cord. STROUD (7) [noun] A kind of coarse wool used in blankets or for garment by Native Americans. STUPID (9) [noun] A stupid person; a fool. | [noun] The state or condition of being stupid. | [adjective] Lacking in intelligence or exhibiting the quality of having been done by someone lacking in intelligence. STYLED (10) [verb] To design, fashion, make, or arrange in a certain way or form (style) | [verb] To call or give a name or title to. | [verb] To create for, or give to, someone a style, fashion, or image, particularly one which is regarded as attractive, tasteful, or trendy. SUBBED (11) [verb] To substitute for. | [verb] To work as a substitute teacher, especially in primary and secondary education. | [verb] To replace (a player) with a substitute. SUCKED (13) [verb] To use the mouth and lips to pull in (a liquid, especially milk from the breast). | [verb] To perform such an action; to feed from a breast or teat. | [verb] To put the mouth or lips to (a breast, a mother etc.) to draw in milk. SUDSED (8) [verb] To cover with, or as if with, soapsuds. SUEDED (8) SUGHED (11) SUITED (7) [verb] To make proper or suitable; to adapt or fit. | [verb] (said of clothes, hairstyle or other fashion item) To be suitable or apt for one's image. | [verb] To be appropriate or apt for. SULFID (10) SULKED (11) [verb] To express ill humor or offence by remaining sullenly silent or withdrawn. SUMMED (11) [verb] To add together. | [verb] To give a summary of. SUNNED (7) [verb] To expose to the warmth and radiation of the sun. | [verb] To warm or dry in the sunshine. | [verb] To be exposed to the sun. SUPPED (11) [verb] To sip; to take a small amount of food or drink into the mouth, especially with a spoon. | [verb] To take supper. SURFED (10) [verb] To ride a wave, usually on a surfboard. | [verb] To browse the Internet, television, etc. SURGED (8) [verb] To rush, flood, or increase suddenly. | [verb] To accelerate forwards, particularly suddenly. | [verb] To slack off a line. SUSSED (7) [verb] To arrest for suspicious behaviour. | [verb] (often with "out") To discover, infer or figure out. | [verb] To study or size up, to check out (examine). SWAGED (11) [verb] To lessen the intensity of, to mitigate or relieve (hunger, emotion, pain etc.). | [verb] To pacify or soothe (someone). | [verb] To calm down, become less violent (of passion, hunger etc.); to subside, to abate. SWAYED (13) [verb] To move or swing from side to side; or backward and forward; to rock. | [verb] To move or wield with the hand; to swing; to wield. | [verb] To influence or direct by power, authority, persuasion, or by moral force; to rule; to govern; to guide. Compare persuade. SWIPED (12) [verb] To grab or bat quickly. | [verb] To strike with a strong blow in a sweeping motion. | [verb] To scan or register by sliding (a swipecard etc.) through a reader. SWIVED (13) [verb] To copulate with (a woman). | [verb] To cut a crop in a sweeping or rambling manner, hence to reap; cut for harvest. SWOUND (10) SYNCED (12) [verb] To synchronize, especially in the senses of data synchronization, time synchronization, or synchronizing music with video. | [verb] To flush all pending I/O operations to disk. TABARD (9) [noun] A silk banner attached to a bugle or trumpet. | [noun] A woman's or girl's sleeveless jerkin or loose overgarment. | [noun] A sleeveless garment made of coarse cloth formerly worn outdoors by the common people. TABBED (11) [verb] To affix with tabs; to label. | [verb] To use the Tab key on a computer to advance the cursor or move the input focus, or on a typewriter to advance the carriage. | [adjective] Having a tab (protruding strip of material). TABLED (9) [verb] To tabulate; to put into a table or grid. | [verb] To supply (a guest, client etc.) with food at a table; to feed. | [verb] To delineate; to represent, as in a picture; to depict. TABUED (9) [adjective] Forbidden; prohibited. TACKED (13) [verb] To nail with a tack (small nail with a flat head). | [verb] To sew/stich with a tack (loose seam used to temporarily fasten pieces of cloth). | [verb] To maneuver a sailing vessel so that its bow turns through the wind, i.e. the wind changes from one side of the vessel to the other. TAGGED (9) [verb] To label (something). | [verb] (graffiti) To mark (something) with one’s tag. | [verb] To remove dung tags from a sheep. TAILED (7) [verb] To follow and observe surreptitiously. | [verb] To hold by the end; said of a timber when it rests upon a wall or other support; with in or into | [verb] To swing with the stern in a certain direction; said of a vessel at anchor. TALCED (9) [verb] To apply talc to. TALKED (11) [verb] To communicate, usually by means of speech. | [verb] To discuss; to talk about. | [verb] To speak (a certain language). TAMPED (11) [verb] (blasting) To plug up with clay, earth, dry sand, sod, or other material, as a hole bored in a rock. | [verb] To drive in or pack down by frequent gentle strokes | [verb] To reduce the intensity of. TANGED (8) [verb] To strike two metal objects together loudly in order to persuade a swarm of honeybees to land so it may be captured by the beekeeper. | [verb] To make a ringing sound; to ring. | [adjective] Having a tang. TANKED (11) [verb] To fail or fall (often used in describing the economy or the stock market); to degenerate or decline rapidly; to plummet. | [verb] To attract the attacks of an enemy target in cooperative team-based combat, so that one's teammates can defeat the enemy in question more efficiently. | [verb] To put (fuel, etc.) into a tank. TANNED (7) [verb] To change to a tan colour due to exposure to the sun. | [verb] To change an animal hide into leather by soaking it in tannic acid. To work as a tanner. | [verb] To spank or beat. TAPPED (11) [verb] To furnish with taps. | [verb] To draw off liquid from a vessel. | [verb] To deplete, especially of a liquid via a tap; to tap out. TARRED (7) [verb] To coat with tar. | [verb] To besmirch. | [verb] To create a tar archive. TARTED (7) [verb] To practice prostitution | [verb] To practice promiscuous sex | [verb] To dress garishly, ostentatiously, whorishly, or sluttily TASKED (11) [verb] To assign a task to, or impose a task on. | [verb] To oppress with severe or excessive burdens; to tax. | [verb] To charge, as with a fault. TASTED (7) [verb] To sample the flavor of something orally. | [verb] To have a taste; to excite a particular sensation by which flavour is distinguished. | [verb] To experience. TATTED (7) [verb] To make (something by) tatting. | [verb] To apply a tattoo. | [adjective] Tattooed. TAUTED (7) TAWSED (10) TAXIED (14) [verb] To move an aircraft on the ground under its own power. | [verb] To travel by taxicab. TEAMED (9) [verb] To form a group, as for sports or work. | [verb] (by extension) To go together well; to harmonize. | [verb] To convey or haul with a team. TEARED (7) [verb] To produce tears. | [verb] To produce tears. TEASED (7) [verb] To separate the fibres of a fibrous material. | [verb] To comb (originally with teasels) so that the fibres all lie in one direction. | [verb] To back-comb. TEATED (7) TECHED (12) TEDDED (9) [verb] To spread hay for drying. TEEMED (9) [verb] To be stocked to overflowing. | [verb] To be prolific; to abound; to be rife. | [verb] To bring forth young, as an animal; to produce fruit, as a plant; to bear; to be pregnant; to conceive; to multiply. TEMPED (11) [verb] To work as a temporary employee. TENDED (8) [verb] (Old English law) To make a tender of; to offer or tender. | [verb] (followed by a to-infinitive) To be likely, or probable to do something, or to have a certain habit or leaning. | [verb] To contribute to or toward some outcome. TENSED (7) [verb] (grammar) To apply a tense to. | [verb] To make or become tense. TENTED (7) [verb] To go camping. | [verb] To prop up aluminum foil in an inverted "V" (reminiscent of a pop-up tent) over food to reduce splatter, before putting it in the oven. | [verb] To form into a tent-like shape. TERMED (9) [verb] To phrase a certain way; to name or call. | [verb] To terminate one's employment TESTED (7) [verb] To challenge. | [verb] To refine (gold, silver, etc.) in a test or cupel; to subject to cupellation. | [verb] To put to the proof; to prove the truth, genuineness, or quality of by experiment, or by some principle or standard; to try. TETRAD (7) [noun] A group of four things. | [noun] Two pairs of sister chromatids (a dyad pair) aligned in a certain way and often on the equatorial plane during the meiosis process. | [noun] A group of four haploid and immature pollen grains in tetrahedral fashion produced by meiotic microsporogenesis. THAWED (13) [verb] To gradually melt, dissolve, or become fluid; to soften from frozen | [verb] To become so warm as to melt ice and snow — said in reference to the weather, and used impersonally. | [verb] To grow gentle or genial. THEMED (12) [verb] To give a theme to. | [verb] To apply a theme to; to change the visual appearance and/or layout of (software). | [adjective] (often in combination) Having a particular theme or topic THOLED (10) [verb] To suffer. | [verb] To endure, to put up with, to tolerate. THOUED (10) THREAD (10) [noun] A long, thin and flexible form of material, generally with a round cross-section, used in sewing, weaving or in the construction of string. | [noun] A continued theme or idea. | [noun] A screw thread. TICKED (13) [verb] To make a clicking noise similar to the movement of the hands in an analog clock. | [verb] To make a tick or checkmark. | [verb] To work or operate, especially mechanically. TIDIED (8) [verb] To make tidy; to neaten. TIERED (7) [verb] To arrange in layers. | [verb] To cascade in an overlapping sequence. | [verb] To move (data) from one storage medium to another as an optimization, based on how frequently it is accessed. TIFFED (13) TILLED (7) [verb] To develop so as to improve or prepare for usage; to cultivate (said of knowledge, virtue, mind etc.). | [verb] To work or cultivate or plough (soil); to prepare for growing vegetation and crops. | [verb] To cultivate soil. TILTED (7) [verb] To slope or incline (something); to slant. | [verb] (jousting) To charge (at someone) with a lance. | [verb] To be at an angle. TINEID (7) TINGED (8) [verb] To add a small amount of colour; to tint; (by extension) to add a small amount of some other thing. | [verb] To affect or alter slightly, particularly due to the actual or metaphorical influence of some element or thing. | [verb] To change slightly in shade due to the addition of colour; (by extension) to change slightly in quality due to the addition of some other thing. | [verb] To make a high sharp sound like a small bell being struck. TINNED (7) [verb] To place into a tin in order to preserve. | [verb] To cover with tin. | [verb] To coat with solder in preparation for soldering. TINTED (7) [verb] To shade, to color. | [adjective] Slightly colored, having tint. TIPPED (11) [verb] To provide with a tip; to cover the tip of. | [verb] (To cause) to become knocked over, fall down or overturn. | [verb] (To cause) to be, or come to be, in a tilted or sloping position; (to cause) to become unbalanced. TIRLED (7) TITHED (10) [verb] To give one-tenth or a tithe of something, particularly: | [verb] To take one-tenth or a tithe of something, particularly: | [verb] To compose the tenth part of something. TITLED (7) [verb] To assign a title to; to entitle. | [adjective] Bearing a title. TOGAED (8) TOGGED (9) [adjective] Dressed; clothed. TOILED (7) [verb] To labour; work. | [verb] To struggle. | [verb] To work (something); often with out. TOITED (7) TOLLED (7) [verb] To impose a fee for the use of. | [verb] To levy a toll on (someone or something). | [verb] To take as a toll. TOLUID (7) TOMBED (11) TOMCOD (11) [noun] A species of edible cod found in the Atlantic, Microgadus tomcod. | [noun] Microgadus proximus, found in the Pacific. | [noun] A kingfish. TOMMED (11) [verb] (of a black person) To act in an obsequiously servile manner toward white authority. | [verb] To dig out a hole below the hatch cover of a bulker and fill it with cargo or weights to aid stability. TONGED (8) [verb] To use tongs. | [verb] To grab, manipulate or transport something using tongs. TOOLED (7) [verb] To work on or shape with tools, e.g., hand-tooled leather. | [verb] To equip with tools. | [verb] To work very hard. TOOTED (7) [verb] To stand out, or be prominent. | [verb] To peep; to look narrowly. | [verb] To see; to spy. TOPPED (11) [verb] To cover on the top or with a top. | [verb] To cut or remove the top (as of a tree) | [verb] To excel, to surpass, to beat. TOROID (7) [noun] A surface generated by a closed curve (especially a circle) rotating about, but not intersecting or containing, an axis in its own plane. | [noun] A ring-shaped object whose surface is a torus. TORPID (9) [noun] (Oxford University slang) An inferior racing boat, or one who rows in such a boat. | [adjective] Unmoving | [adjective] Dormant or hibernating TORRID (7) [adjective] Very hot and dry. | [adjective] Full of intense emotions arising from sexual love; ardent and passionate. | [adjective] Full of difficulty. TOSSED (7) [verb] To throw with an initial upward direction. | [verb] To lift with a sudden or violent motion. | [verb] To agitate; to make restless. TOTTED (7) [verb] To sum or total. | [verb] To mark (a debt) with the word tot (Latin for "so much"), indicating that it was good or collectible for the amount specified. TOURED (7) [verb] To make a journey | [verb] To make a circuit of a place | [verb] To toot a horn. TOUSED (7) TOUTED (7) [verb] To flaunt, to publicize/publicise; to boast or brag; to promote. | [verb] To look upon or watch. | [verb] To spy out information about (a horse, a racing stable, etc.). TOWARD (10) [adjective] Yielding, pliant; docile; ready or apt to learn; not froward. | [adjective] Future; to-come. | [adjective] Approaching, coming near; impending; present, at hand. TOXOID (14) [noun] A toxin that has had its toxic properties removed, but retains its ability to generate an immune response. TRACED (9) [verb] To follow the trail of. | [verb] To follow the history of. | [verb] To draw or sketch lightly or with care. TRADED (8) [verb] To engage in trade. | [verb] To be traded at a certain price or under certain conditions. | [verb] To give (something) in exchange for. TREPID (9) TRICED (9) TRIFID (10) [adjective] Divided into three lobes. TRINED (7) [verb] To put in the aspect of a trine. | [verb] To hang; To execute (someone) by suspension from the neck. | [verb] To go. TRIPOD (9) [noun] A three-legged stand or mount. | [noun] A man with macrophallism. | [verb] To enter the tripod position showing signs of exhaustion or distress. TROKED (11) TROWED (10) [verb] To trust or believe. | [verb] To have confidence in, or to give credence to. TRUCED (9) TUBBED (11) [verb] To plant, set, or store in a tub. | [verb] To bathe in a tub. TUCKED (13) [verb] To pull or gather up (an item of fabric). | [verb] To push into a snug position; to place somewhere safe or somewhat hidden. | [verb] (often with "in" or "into") To eat; to consume. TUFTED (10) [verb] To provide or decorate with a tuft or tufts. | [verb] To form into tufts. | [verb] To secure and strengthen (a mattress, quilt, etc.) with tufts. TUGGED (9) [verb] To pull or drag with great effort | [verb] To pull hard repeatedly | [verb] To tow by tugboat TUMPED (11) TUNNED (7) [verb] To put into tuns, or casks. TUPPED (11) [verb] To mate; used of a ram mating with a ewe. | [verb] To have sex with, to bonk, etc. | [verb] (regional English) To butt: said of a ram. TURBID (9) [adjective] (of a liquid) Having the lees or sediment disturbed; not clear. | [adjective] Smoky or misty. | [adjective] Unclear; confused; obscure. TURFED (10) [verb] To cover with turf; to create a lawn by laying turfs. | [verb] (Ultimate Frisbee) To throw a frisbee well short of its intended target, usually causing it to hit the ground within 10 yards of its release. | [verb] To fire from a job or dismiss from a task. TURGID (8) [adjective] Distended beyond the natural state by some internal agent, especially fluid, or expansive force. | [adjective] (of language or style) Overly complex and difficult to understand; grandiloquent; bombastic. TURNED (7) [verb] (heading) to make a non-linear physical movement. | [verb] (heading) To change condition or attitude. | [verb] To change one's course of action; to take a new approach. TUSHED (10) TUSKED (11) TUTTED (7) [verb] To make a tut tut sound of disapproval. | [verb] To work by the piece; to carry out tut-work. TWINED (10) [verb] (obsolete outside Scotland) To separate, divide. | [verb] (obsolete outside Scotland) To split, part; to go away, depart. | [verb] (usually in the passive) To join, unite; to form links between (now especially of two places in different countries). TYTHED (13) UNAGED (8) UNAWED (10) [adjective] Not awed; not afraid, impressed or in awe. UNBEND (9) [verb] To remove a bend so as to make, or allow to become, straight | [verb] To release (a load) from a strain or from exertion; to set at ease for a time; to relax. | [verb] To unfasten sails from the spars or stays to which are attached for use. UNBIND (9) [verb] To take bindings off. | [verb] To set free from a debt, contract or promise. | [verb] To disable some kind of connection in software, such as a key binding. UNBRED (9) UNCLAD (9) [adjective] Without clothing or other covering. UNDEAD (8) [noun] (horror fiction) A creature that is undead; that is, dead but still animate. | [noun] (horror fiction) Those creatures which are undead; that is, dead yet still animate. | [adjective] Pertaining to a corpse, though having qualities of life. UNDYED (11) [verb] To remove dye from. | [adjective] Not dyed; in its natural colour UNFOLD (10) [noun] In functional programming, a kind of higher-order function that is the opposite of a fold. | [verb] To undo a folding. | [verb] To turn out; to happen; to develop. UNFOND (10) UNGIRD (8) [verb] To loosen the girdle or band of. | [verb] To unbind or unload. UNHAND (10) [verb] To release from the hand; to let go. UNHOOD (10) [verb] To remove the hood from. UNIPOD (9) [noun] Monopod UNITED (7) [verb] To bring together as one. | [verb] To come together as one. | [adjective] Joined into a single entity. UNKEND (11) UNKIND (11) [adjective] Lacking kindness, sympathy, benevolence, gratitude, or similar; cruel, harsh or unjust; ungrateful. | [adjective] Not kind; contrary to nature or type; unnatural. | [adjective] Having no race or kindred; childless. UNLAID (7) [adjective] Not laid, not placed | [adjective] Not laid by exorcism | [adjective] (of a person) not having had sexual intercourse UNLEAD (7) UNLOAD (7) [verb] To remove the load or cargo from (a vehicle, etc.). | [verb] To remove (the load or cargo) from a vehicle, etc. | [verb] To deposit one's load or cargo. UNMOLD (9) UNPAID (9) [adjective] Not paid for. | [adjective] Of work: done without agreed payment, usually voluntarily. UNREAD (7) [verb] To undo the process of reading. | [verb] To flag (a previously read e-mail or similar message) as not having been read. | [adjective] Not having been read. UNSAID (7) [adjective] Unspoken. | [verb] To withdraw, retract (something said). | [verb] To not have said (since this is physically impossible, usually in the subjunctive). UNSHED (10) [adjective] That has not been shed. UNSHOD (10) [adjective] Not shod; without shoes. | [adjective] Of a vehicle, not fitted with tyres on the wheels. | [verb] To remove a shoe (especially a horseshoe) from. UNSOLD (7) [adjective] Not sold UNTIED (7) [adjective] Not tied; undone | [verb] To loosen, as something interlaced or knotted; to disengage the parts of. | [verb] To free from fastening or from restraint; to let loose; to unbind. UNTOLD (7) [adjective] Not told; not related; not revealed; secret. | [adjective] Not numbered or counted. | [adjective] Not able to be counted, measured, told, expressed in words, or described; extremely large in scale, number, quantity, suffering, damage, etc.; uncountable, unmeasurable, immeasurable, indescribable, inexpressible. UNTROD (7) UNUSED (7) [adjective] Not used. | [adjective] Not accustomed (to), unfamiliar with. UNWIND (10) [noun] Any mechanism or operation that unwinds something. | [verb] To separate (something that is wound up) | [verb] To disentangle UPBIND (11) UPFOLD (12) [noun] An anticline. | [verb] To fold up. | [verb] To create a raised fold. UPGIRD (10) UPHELD (12) [verb] To hold up; to lift on high; to elevate. | [verb] To keep erect; to support; to sustain; to keep from falling | [verb] To support by approval or encouragement, to confirm (something which has been questioned) UPHOLD (12) [verb] To hold up; to lift on high; to elevate. | [verb] To keep erect; to support; to sustain; to keep from falling | [verb] To support by approval or encouragement, to confirm (something which has been questioned) UPLAND (9) [noun] The area in the interior of a country with a generally higher elevation; often hilly, but not generally mountainous (compare highlands). | [noun] The country, as against the town. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or situated in the uplands. UPLOAD (9) [noun] Such a file transfer. | [verb] To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet. UPSEND (9) UPWARD (12) [noun] The upper part; the top. | [adjective] Directed toward a higher place. | [adverb] In a direction from lower to higher; toward a higher place; in a course toward the source or origin UPWIND (12) [adjective] Exposed to the wind | [adverb] In the direction from which the wind is blowing | [verb] To wind upwards. UROPOD (9) [noun] Either of the two posterior abdominal appendages of the lobster, shrimp and some other crustaceans | [noun] The hind part of polarized leukocytes, mostly involved in cell-to-cell interaction, cell activation and apoptosis VAILED (10) [verb] To pay homage, bow, submit, defer (to someone or something); to yield, give way (to something). | [verb] To remove as a sign of deference, as a hat. | [verb] To lower, let fall; to allow or cause to sink. VALUED (10) [verb] To estimate the value of; judge the worth of something. | [verb] To fix or determine the value of; assign a value to, as of jewelry or art work. | [verb] To regard highly; think much of; place importance upon. VALVED (13) VAMPED (14) [verb] To patch, repair, or refurbish. | [verb] Often as vamp up: to fabricate or put together (something) from existing material, or by adding new material to something existing. | [verb] To cobble together, to extemporize, to improvise. VANNED (10) VARIED (10) [adjective] Diverse or miscellaneous | [adjective] Having been changed or modified | [adjective] Variegated VARVED (13) VATTED (10) [verb] To put into a vat. | [verb] To blend (wines or spirits) in a vat; figuratively, to mix or blend elements as if with wines or spirits. VAWARD (13) VEALED (10) VEERED (10) [verb] To let out (a sail-line), to allow (a sheet) to run out. | [verb] To change direction or course suddenly; to swerve. | [verb] (of the wind) To shift in a clockwise direction (if in the Northern Hemisphere, or in a counterclockwise direction if in the Southern Hemisphere). VEILED (10) [verb] To dress in, or decorate with, a veil. | [verb] To conceal as with a veil. | [adjective] Covered by a veil. VEINED (10) [verb] To mark with veins or a vein-like pattern. | [adjective] (sometimes in combination) Having veins or veinlike markings. VENDED (11) [verb] To hawk or to peddle merchandise. | [verb] To sell wares through a vending machine. VENGED (11) VENTED (10) [verb] To allow gases to escape. | [verb] To allow to escape through a vent. | [verb] To express a strong emotion. VERBID (12) VERGED (11) [verb] To be or come very close; to border; to approach. | [verb] To bend or incline; to tend downward; to slope. VERSED (10) [verb] To compose verses. | [verb] To tell in verse, or poetry. | [verb] To educate about, to teach about. VESPID (12) VESTED (10) [verb] To clothe with, or as with, a vestment, or garment; to dress; to robe; to cover, surround, or encompass closely. | [verb] To clothe with authority, power, etc.; to put in possession; to invest; to furnish; to endow; followed by with and the thing conferred. | [verb] To place or give into the possession or discretion of some person or authority; to commit to another; with in before the possessor. VETOED (10) [verb] To use a veto against. VETTED (10) [verb] To thoroughly check or investigate particularly with regard to providing formal approval. | [adjective] Having undergone an investigation and been approved. VIALED (10) VIEWED (13) [verb] To look at. | [verb] To regard in a stated way. | [adjective] Having been viewed; having been seen, watched or witnessed. VIROID (10) [noun] A short section of RNA but without the protein coat typical of viruses, that are plant pathogens | [noun] Certain defective viruses, such as hepatitis D, a human pathogen. VISAED (10) VISARD (10) VISCID (12) [adjective] Viscous; having a high viscosity. | [adjective] Sticky, slimy, or glutinous. | [adjective] Covered with a viscid layer. VISEED (10) VIZARD (19) [noun] A mask (cover for the face, used for disguise, protection, etc.) | [noun] A visor (part of a helmet covering the face). | [noun] Outward appearance; pretense. VOGUED (11) [verb] To dance in the vogue dance style. | [verb] To light a cigarette. VOICED (12) [verb] To give utterance or expression to; to utter; to publish; to announce | [verb] To utter audibly, with tone and not just breath. | [verb] To fit for producing the proper sounds; to regulate the tone of VOIDED (11) [verb] To make invalid or worthless. | [verb] To empty. | [verb] To throw or send out; to evacuate; to emit; to discharge. WADDED (12) [verb] To crumple or crush into a compact, amorphous shape or ball. | [verb] To wager. | [verb] To insert or force a wad into. WAFFED (16) WAFTED (13) [verb] To (cause to) float easily or gently through the air. | [verb] To be moved, or to pass, on a buoyant medium; to float. | [verb] To give notice to by waving something; to wave the hand to; to beckon. WAGGED (12) [verb] To swing from side to side, such as of an animal's tail, or someone's head, to express disagreement or disbelief. | [verb] To play truant from school. | [verb] To be in action or motion; to move; progress. WAIFED (13) WAILED (10) [verb] To cry out, as in sorrow or anguish. | [verb] To weep, lament persistently or bitterly. | [verb] To make a noise like mourning or crying. WAIRED (10) WAITED (10) [verb] To delay movement or action until the arrival or occurrence of; to await. (Now generally superseded by “wait for”.) | [verb] To delay movement or action until some event or time; to remain neglected or in readiness. | [verb] To wait tables; to serve customers in a restaurant or other eating establishment. WAIVED (13) [verb] To relinquish (a right etc.); to give up claim to; to forego. | [verb] To put aside, avoid. | [verb] To outlaw (someone). WALKED (14) [verb] To move on the feet by alternately setting each foot (or pair or group of feet, in the case of animals with four or more feet) forward, with at least one foot on the ground at all times. Compare run. | [verb] To "walk free", i.e. to win, or avoid, a criminal court case, particularly when actually guilty. | [verb] Of an object, to go missing or be stolen. WALLED (10) [verb] To enclose with, or as if with, a wall or walls. | [verb] To boil. | [verb] To well, as water; spring. WANNED (10) WANTED (10) [verb] To wish for or desire (something); to feel a need or desire for; to crave or demand. | [verb] (in particular) To wish, desire or demand to see, have the presence of or do business with. | [verb] To desire (to experience desire); to wish. WAPPED (14) WARDED (11) [verb] To keep in safety, to watch over, to guard. | [verb] To defend, to protect. | [verb] To fend off, to repel, to turn aside, as anything mischievous that approaches; -- usually followed by off. WARKED (14) WARMED (12) [verb] To make or keep warm. | [verb] To become warm, to heat up. | [verb] To favour increasingly. WARNED (10) [verb] To make (someone) aware of (something impending); especially: | [verb] To caution or admonish (someone) against unwise or unacceptable behaviour. | [verb] (chiefly with "off", "away", and similar words) To advise or order to go or stay away. WARPED (12) [verb] To twist or become twisted, physically or mentally: | [verb] (ropemaking) To run (yarn) off the reel into hauls to be tarred. | [verb] To arrange (strands of thread, etc) so that they run lengthwise in weaving. WARRED (10) [verb] To engage in conflict (may be followed by "with" to specify the foe). | [verb] To carry on, as a contest; to wage. WARTED (10) WASHED (13) [verb] To clean with water. | [verb] To move or erode by the force of water in motion. | [verb] To separate valuable material (such as gold) from worthless material by the action of flowing water. WASTED (10) [verb] To devastate, destroy | [verb] To squander (money or resources) uselessly; to spend (time) idly. | [verb] To kill; to murder. WAUKED (14) WAULED (10) [verb] To wail, to cry plaintively. WAWLED (13) WEANED (10) WEAVED (13) [verb] To form something by passing lengths or strands of material over and under one another. | [verb] To spin a cocoon or a web. | [verb] To unite by close connection or intermixture. WEBBED (14) [verb] To construct or form a web. | [verb] To cover with a web or network. | [verb] To ensnare or entangle. WEBFED (15) WEDDED (12) [verb] To perform the marriage ceremony for; to join in matrimony. | [verb] To take as one's spouse. | [verb] To take a spouse. WEDGED (12) [verb] To support or secure using a wedge. | [verb] To force into a narrow gap. | [verb] To work wet clay by cutting or kneading for the purpose of homogenizing the mass and expelling air bubbles. WEEDED (11) [verb] To remove unwanted vegetation from a cultivated area. WEENED (10) [verb] To suppose, imagine; to think, believe. | [verb] To expect, hope or wish. | [verb] To weep or cry. WEETED (10) WELDED (11) [verb] To join two materials (especially two metals) together by applying heat, pressure and filler, either separately or in any combination. | [verb] To bind together inseparably; to unite closely or intimately. | [verb] To wield. WELLED (10) [verb] To issue forth, as water from the earth; to flow; to spring. | [verb] To have something seep out of the surface. WELTED (10) [verb] To roll; revolve | [verb] To cause to have welts, to beat. | [verb] To install welt (a welt or welts) to reinforce. WENDED (11) [verb] To turn; change. | [verb] To direct (one's way or course); pursue one's way; proceed upon some course or way. | [verb] To turn; make a turn; go round; veer. WETTED (10) [verb] To cover or impregnate with liquid. | [verb] To accidentally urinate in or on. | [verb] To make or become wet. WHALED (13) [verb] To hunt for whales. | [verb] To thrash, to flog, to beat vigorously or soundly. WHILED (13) [verb] To pass (time) idly. | [verb] To occupy or entertain (someone) in order to let time pass. | [verb] To loiter. WHINED (13) [verb] To utter a high-pitched cry. | [verb] To make a sound resembling such a cry. | [verb] To complain or protest with a whine or as if with a whine. WHITED (13) [verb] To make white; to whiten; to bleach. WHORED (13) [verb] To prostitute oneself. | [verb] To engage the services of a prostitute. | [verb] To pimp; to pander. WICKED (16) [noun] People who are wicked. | [adjective] Evil or mischievous by nature. | [adjective] Excellent; awesome; masterful. | [verb] To convey or draw off (liquid) by capillary action. | [adjective] Active; brisk. WIGGED (12) [verb] To put on a wig; to provide with a wig (especially of an actor etc.). | [verb] To upbraid, reprimand. | [verb] To become extremely emotional or excitable; to lose control of one's emotions. WILLED (10) [adjective] Having a document specifying inheritance. | [adjective] (chiefly in combination) Having a will (of a specified kind). | [adjective] Brought under the will of another person. | [verb] To wish, desire. WILTED (10) [verb] To droop or become limp and flaccid (as a dying leaf or flower). | [verb] To fatigue; to lose strength. | [verb] To cause to droop or become limp and flaccid (as a flower). WINCED (12) [verb] To flinch as if in pain or distress. | [verb] To wash (cloth), dip it in dye, etc., with the use of a wince. | [verb] To kick or flounce when unsteady or impatient. WINDED (11) [verb] To blow air through a wind instrument or horn to make a sound. | [verb] To cause (someone) to become breathless, as by a blow to the abdomen, or by physical exertion, running, etc. | [verb] To cause a baby to bring up wind by patting its back after being fed. WINGED (11) [adjective] Having wings. | [adjective] Flying or soaring as if on wings. | [adjective] Swift. | [verb] To injure slightly (as with a gunshot), especially in the wing or arm. | [verb] To complain, especially in an annoying or persistent manner. WINKED (14) [verb] To close one's eyes in sleep. | [verb] To close one's eyes. | [verb] Usually followed by at: to look the other way, to turn a blind eye. WINNED (10) WISHED (13) [verb] To desire; to want. | [verb] To hope (+ object clause with may or in present subjunctive). | [verb] (followed by for) To hope (for a particular outcome). WISPED (12) WISSED (10) [verb] To know; to understand. | [verb] To show, teach, inform, guide, direct. WISTED (10) WITHED (13) WITTED (10) WIZARD (19) [noun] Someone, usually male, who uses (or has skill with) magic, mystic items, and magical and mystical practices. | [noun] One who is especially skilled or unusually talented in a particular field. | [noun] A computer program or script used to simplify complex operations, often for an inexperienced user. WOADED (11) WOLFED (13) [verb] To devour; to gobble; to eat (something) voraciously. | [verb] To make amorous advances to many women; to hit on women; to cruise for sex. | [verb] To hunt for wolves. WOMBED (14) WONNED (10) WONTED (10) [adjective] Usual, customary, habitual, or accustomed. WOODED (11) [adjective] Covered with trees. | [adjective] (of wine) Aged in wooden casks. | [verb] To cover or plant with trees. WOOFED (13) [verb] To make a woofing sound. WOOLED (10) WORDED (11) [verb] To say or write (something) using particular words; to phrase (something). | [verb] To flatter with words, to cajole. | [verb] To ply or overpower with words. WORKED (14) [verb] To do a specific task by employing physical or mental powers. | [verb] To effect by gradual degrees. | [verb] To embroider with thread. WORMED (12) [verb] To make (one's way) with a crawling motion. | [verb] To move with one's body dragging the ground. | [verb] To work one's way by artful or devious means. WOTTED (10) XYLOID (17) YACKED (16) [verb] To talk, particularly informally but persistently; to chatter or prattle. | [verb] To vomit, usually as a result of excessive alcohol consumption. YAFFED (16) YAKKED (18) [verb] To talk, particularly informally but persistently; to chatter or prattle. | [verb] To vomit, usually as a result of excessive alcohol consumption. YANKED (14) [verb] To pull (something) with a quick, strong action. | [verb] To remove from distribution. YAPPED (14) [verb] Of a small dog, to bark. | [verb] To talk, especially excessively; to chatter. | [verb] To rob or steal from (someone). | [adjective] Of a book: having a yapp. YARDED (11) [verb] To confine to a yard. YARNED (10) [verb] To tell a story or stories. YAUPED (12) YAWLED (13) YAWNED (13) [verb] To open the mouth widely and take a long, rather deep breath, often because one is tired or bored, and sometimes accompanied by pandiculation. | [verb] To say while yawning. | [verb] To present a wide opening. YAWPED (15) [verb] To yelp, or utter a sharp cry, as in intense pain, or another raucous noise | [verb] To talk loudly and coarsely | [verb] Clamor, utter loud complaints YEANED (10) [verb] (of goats or sheep) To give birth to. YELLED (10) [verb] Shout; holler; make a loud sound with the voice. | [verb] To convey by shouting | [verb] To tell someone off (in a loud and angry manner) YELPED (12) [verb] To utter an abrupt, high-pitched noise. YENNED (10) [verb] To have a strong desire for. YERKED (14) [verb] To stab. | [verb] To throw or thrust with a sudden, smart movement; to kick or strike suddenly; to jerk. | [verb] To strike or lash with a whip or stick. YESSED (10) YEUKED (14) YIPPED (14) [verb] To bark with a sharp, high-pitched voice YIRRED (10) YOCKED (16) YODLED (11) YOLKED (14) YOWLED (13) [verb] Utter a yowl. | [verb] Express by yowling; utter with a yowl. YUCKED (16) [verb] To itch. YUKKED (18) [verb] To laugh exuberantly. ZAGGED (18) [verb] To move with a sharp turn or reversal. ZAPPED (20) [verb] To make a zap sound. | [verb] To use a remote control to repeatedly change channels on a television. | [verb] To strike (something or someone) with electricity or energy, as by shooting. ZEROED (16) [verb] To set a measuring instrument to zero; to calibrate instrument scale to valid zero. | [verb] To change a memory location or range to values of zero; to set a variable in a computer program to zero. | [verb] To cause or set some value or amount to be zero. ZESTED (16) [verb] To scrape the zest from a fruit. | [verb] To make more zesty. ZIGGED (18) [verb] To make such a turn. ZINCED (18) [verb] To electroplate with zinc. | [verb] To coat with sunblock incorporating zinc oxide. ZINGED (17) [verb] To move very quickly, especially while making a high-pitched hum. ZIPPED (20) [verb] To close with a zip fastener. | [verb] To close as if with a zip fastener. | [verb] To compress (one or more computer files) into a single and often smaller file, especially one in the ZIP format. ZONKED (20) [adjective] Extremely fatigued. | [adjective] Deeply asleep. | [adjective] Drunk. ZOOMED (18) [verb] To communicate with someone using the Zoom videoconferencing software. | [verb] To move fast with a humming noise | [verb] To fly an airplane straight up ZYGOID (20)

7-Letter Words (2533)

ABASHED (13) [verb] To make ashamed; to embarrass; to destroy the self-possession of, as by exciting suddenly a consciousness of guilt, mistake, or inferiority; to disconcert; to discomfit. | [verb] To lose self-possession; to become ashamed. | [adjective] Embarrassed, disconcerted, or ashamed. ABDUCED (13) ABETTED (10) [verb] To urge on, stimulate (a person to do) something desirable. | [verb] To incite; to assist or encourage by aid or countenance in crime. | [verb] To support, countenance, maintain, uphold, or aid (any good cause, opinion, or action); to maintain. ABFARAD (13) ABJURED (17) [verb] To renounce upon oath; to forswear; to disavow. | [verb] To cause one to renounce or recant. | [verb] To reject with solemnity; to abandon forever; to repudiate; to disclaim. ABLATED (10) [verb] To remove or decrease something by cutting, erosion, melting, evaporation, or vaporization. | [verb] To undergo ablation; to become melted or evaporated and removed at a high temperature. ABLUTED (10) ABORTED (10) [verb] (now rare outside medicine) To miscarry; to bring forth (non-living) offspring prematurely. | [verb] To cause a premature termination of (a fetus); to end a pregnancy before term. | [verb] To end prematurely; to stop in the preliminary stages; to turn back. ABRADED (11) [verb] To rub or wear off; erode. | [verb] To wear down or exhaust, as a person; irritate. | [verb] To irritate by rubbing; chafe. ABSCOND (12) [verb] To flee, often secretly; to steal away, particularly to avoid arrest or prosecution. | [verb] To withdraw from. | [verb] To evade, to hide or flee from. ABUTTED (10) [verb] To touch by means of a mutual border, edge or end; to border on; to lie adjacent (to); to be contiguous (said of an area of land) | [verb] To border upon; be next to; abut on; be adjacent to. | [verb] To lean against on one end; to end on, of a part of a building or wall. ACAROID (10) [adjective] Shaped like or resembling a mite. ACCEDED (13) [verb] To approach; to arrive, to come forward. | [verb] To give one's adhesion; to join up with (a group, etc.); to become part of. | [verb] To agree or assent to a proposal or a view; to give way. ACCRUED (12) [verb] To increase, to rise | [verb] To reach or come to by way of increase; to arise or spring up because of growth or result, especially as the produce of money lent. | [verb] To be incurred as a result of the passage of time. ACCUSED (12) [verb] To find fault with, blame, censure | [verb] (followed by "of") to charge with having committed a crime or offence | [verb] To make an accusation against someone ADAPTED (11) [verb] To make suitable; to make to correspond; to fit or suit | [verb] To fit by alteration; to modify or remodel for a different purpose; to adjust | [verb] To make by altering or fitting something else; to produce by change of form or character ADDUCED (12) [verb] To bring forward or offer, as an argument, passage, or consideration which bears on a statement or case; to cite; to allege. ADEEMED (11) [verb] Past tense of "adeem," meaning to revoke or withdraw a specific bequest in a will by disposing of the bequeathed property during the testator's lifetime. | [verb] To take away or remove. ADENOID (9) [noun] One of two folds of lymphatic tissue covered by ciliated epithelium. They are found in the roof and posterior wall of the nasopharynx at the back of the throat behind the uvula. They may obstruct normal breathing and make speech difficult when swollen, a condition often called adenitis. | [adjective] Of or relating to lymphatic glands or lymphoid tissue; lymphoid. ADHERED (12) [verb] To stick fast or cleave, as a glutinous substance does; to become joined or united. | [verb] To be attached or devoted by personal union, in belief, on principle, etc. | [verb] To be consistent or coherent; to be in accordance; to agree. ADJURED (16) [verb] To issue a formal command. | [verb] To earnestly appeal to or advise; to charge solemnly. ADMIRED (11) [verb] To be amazed at; to view with surprise; to marvel at. | [verb] To regard with wonder and delight. | [verb] To look upon with an elevated feeling of pleasure, as something which calls out approbation, esteem, love or reverence. ADMIXED (18) [verb] To mingle with something else; to mix. ADOPTED (11) [verb] To take by choice into relationship (a child, heir, friend, citizen, etc.) | [verb] To take or receive as one's own what is not so naturally. | [verb] To select and take or approve. ADORNED (9) [verb] To make more beautiful and attractive; to decorate. | [adjective] Having been decorated or embellished through applied items or alterations (adornments). ADVISED (12) [verb] To give advice to; to offer an opinion to, as worthy or expedient to be followed. | [verb] To recommend; to offer as advice. | [verb] To give information or notice to; to inform or counsel; — with of before the thing communicated. AERATED (8) [verb] To supply with oxygen or air. | [adjective] Supplied or infused with air or oxygen. | [adjective] Annoyed or agitated. AFEARED (11) [verb] To imbue with fear; to affright, to terrify. | [adjective] Afraid. AFFINED (14) [verb] To refine. AFFIXED (21) [verb] To attach. | [verb] To subjoin, annex, or add at the close or end; to append to. | [verb] To fix or fasten figuratively; with on or upon. AGATOID (9) [adjective] Resembling or containing agate; having the characteristics or appearance of agate. AGISTED (9) [verb] To take to graze or pasture, at a certain sum; used originally of the feeding of cattle in the king's forests, and collecting the money for the same. | [verb] To charge lands etc. with any public burden. AGNIZED (18) [verb] To recognise; to acknowledge. AGROUND (9) [adjective] (of a normally floating craft) Resting on the bottom. | [adjective] (by extension) at a loss, ruined, with no way out | [adverb] (of a normally floating craft) Resting on the bottom. AIRHEAD (11) [noun] A horizontal channel providing ventilation in a mine. | [noun] An area of hostile territory that has been seized for use as an airbase to ensure the further safe landing of troops and materiel. | [noun] (by extension) A (usually temporary) landing area for aircraft for supplying a non-military operation. | [noun] (originally United States) A foolish, silly, or unintelligent person. AIRSHED (11) [noun] An area of land that shares the same air mass and atmospheric conditions, analogous to a watershed for air pollution and air quality management. AIRTHED (11) AIRWARD (11) ALARMED (10) [verb] To call to arms for defense | [verb] To give (someone) notice of approaching danger | [verb] To rouse to vigilance and action; to put on the alert. ALCOVED (13) ALERTED (8) [verb] To give warning to. | [adjective] Having been made alert; having been made attentive, alarmed or warned of something coming soon. ALIBIED (10) [verb] To provide an alibi for. | [verb] To provide an excuse for. ALIENED (8) ALIGNED (9) [verb] To form a line; to fall into line. | [verb] To adjust or form to a line; to range or form in line; to bring into line. | [verb] To store (data) in a way that is consistent with the memory architecture, i.e. by beginning each item at an offset equal to some multiple of the word size. ALLAYED (11) [verb] To make quiet or put at rest; to pacify or appease; to quell; to calm. | [verb] To alleviate; to abate; to mitigate. | [verb] To subside, abate, become peaceful. ALLEGED (9) [verb] To state under oath, to plead. | [verb] To cite or quote an author or his work for or against. | [verb] To adduce (something) as a reason, excuse, support etc. ALLOWED (11) [verb] To grant, give, admit, accord, afford, or yield; to let one have. | [verb] To acknowledge; to accept as true; to concede; to accede to an opinion. | [verb] To grant (something) as a deduction or an addition; especially to abate or deduct. ALLOYED (11) [adjective] Mixed. ALLSEED (8) [noun] Any of several unrelated plants that produce many seeds, such as ALLUDED (9) [verb] To refer to something indirectly or by suggestion. ALLURED (8) [verb] To entice; to attract. ALTERED (8) [verb] To change the form or structure of. | [verb] To become different. | [verb] To tailor clothes to make them fit. AMASSED (10) [verb] To collect into a mass or heap. | [verb] To gather a great quantity of; to accumulate. | [adjective] Having been gathered or assembled in a large group. AMBROID (12) AMEBOID (12) [adjective] Resembling, or characteristic of an amoeba AMENDED (11) [verb] To make better; improve. | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To heal (someone sick); to cure (a disease etc.). AMERCED (12) [verb] To impose a fine on; to fine. | [verb] To punish; to make an exaction. AMYLOID (13) [noun] A waxy compound of protein and polysaccharides that is found deposited in tissues in amyloidosis. | [noun] Any of various starchlike substances. | [adjective] Containing or resembling starch. ANDROID (9) [noun] A robot that is designed to look and act like a human being (not necessarily male) | [adjective] Possessing human qualities. | [adjective] (in pelvimetry) Of the pelvis, having a narrow anterior segment and a heart-shaped brim, typically found in the male. ANEARED (8) [verb] Past tense of "anear," meaning to draw near to or approach. ANEROID (8) [noun] An aneroid barometer | [adjective] Not using or containing fluid ANGELED (9) ANGERED (9) [verb] To cause such a feeling of antagonism in. | [verb] To become angry. | [adjective] Having been made angry. ANISEED (8) [noun] The seed-like fruit of the anise, used in baking and in the flavouring of liqueurs such as ouzo. ANNELID (8) [noun] Any of various wormlike animals, of the phylum Annelida, having a segmented body; they include the earthworm and the leech | [adjective] Of, or relating to these creatures ANNEXED (15) [verb] To add something to another thing, especially territory; to incorporate. | [verb] To attach or connect, as a consequence, condition, etc. | [verb] To join; to be united. ANNOYED (11) [verb] To disturb or irritate, especially by continued or repeated acts; to bother with unpleasant deeds. | [verb] To do something to upset or anger someone; to be troublesome. | [verb] To molest; to harm; to injure. ANSATED (8) [adjective] Having a handle or loop-shaped projection, as in the Egyptian ankh symbol. ANTACID (10) [noun] An agent that counteracts or neutralizes acidity, especially in the stomach. | [adjective] Counteracting or neutralizing acidity, especially in the stomach. ANTHOID (11) ANTIRED (8) ANVILED (11) APPLAUD (12) [noun] Applause; applauding. | [noun] Plaudit. | [verb] To express approval (of something) by clapping the hands. APPLIED (12) [adjective] Put into practical use. | [adjective] Of a branch of science, serving another branch of science or engineering. | [verb] To lay or place; to put (one thing to another) APPOSED (12) [verb] To interrogate; to question. | [verb] To place next or to or near to; to juxtapose. | [verb] To place opposite or before; to put or apply (one thing to another). APRONED (10) [adjective] Wearing an apron. ARANEID (8) [noun] A spider; now specifically a member of the family Araneidae; an orb weaver. ARBORED (10) [adjective] Covered with trees or having a tree-like structure; furnished or shaded with trees. ARCADED (11) [adjective] Having or formed with an arcade or series of arches. | [verb] Past tense of arcade, meaning to furnish with an arcade or to play arcade games. ARMBAND (12) [noun] A band worn around the arm, usually to symbolize protest or mourning. | [noun] A band worn around the arm of the captain of a team. | [noun] An inflatable band worn round the arms to keep afloat in water ARMLOAD (10) [noun] A quantity of things approaching the maximum that could be held or carried with one arm. ARMORED (10) [verb] To equip something with armor or a protective coating or hardening. | [verb] To provide something with an analogous form of protection. | [adjective] Clad or equipped with arms or armor. AROUSED (8) [verb] To stimulate feelings. | [verb] To sexually stimulate. | [verb] To wake from sleep or stupor. ARRASED (8) [adjective] Decorated or hung with tapestry or arras (a type of wall hanging). ARRAYED (11) [verb] To clothe and ornament; to adorn or attire. | [verb] To lay out in an orderly arrangement; to deploy or marshal. | [verb] To set in order, as a jury, for the trial of a cause; that is, to call them one at a time. ARRIVED (11) [verb] To reach; to get to a certain place. | [verb] To obtain a level of success or fame; to succeed. | [verb] To come; said of time. ARROWED (11) [verb] To move swiftly and directly (like an arrow) | [verb] To let fly swiftly and directly | [verb] (of a sugar cane plant) To develop an inflorescence. ASCARID (10) [noun] Any phasmid nematode of the family Ascarididae (Ascaridae) ASHAMED (13) [verb] To feel shame; to be ashamed. | [verb] To make ashamed; to shame. | [adjective] Feeling shame or guilt. ASPIRED (10) [verb] To have a strong desire or ambition to achieve something. | [verb] To go as high as, to reach the top of (something). | [verb] To move upward; to be very tall. ASSAYED (11) [verb] To attempt (something). | [verb] To try, attempt (to do something). | [verb] To analyze or estimate the composition or value of (a metal, ore etc.). ASSUMED (10) [verb] To authenticate by means of belief; to surmise; to suppose to be true, especially without proof | [verb] To take on a position, duty or form | [verb] To adopt a feigned quality or manner; to claim without right; to arrogate ASSURED (8) [verb] To make sure and secure. | [verb] (followed by that or of) To give (someone) confidence in the trustworthiness of (something). | [verb] To guarantee, promise (to do something). ASTOUND (8) [verb] To astonish, bewilder or dazzle. | [adjective] Stunned; astounded; astonished. ATHODYD (15) [noun] A type of jet engine that operates without moving parts, using the forward motion of an aircraft to compress incoming air for combustion. ATTIRED (8) [verb] To clothe or adorn. | [adjective] Said of the horns of a stag when they are of a different tincture to its head. ATTUNED (8) [verb] To bring into musical accord. | [verb] To tune (an instrument). | [verb] To bring into harmony or accord. AUDITED (9) [verb] To examine and adjust (e.g. an account). | [verb] To conduct an independent review and examination of system records and activities in order to test the adequacy and effectiveness of data security and data integrity procedures, to ensure compliance with established policy and operational procedures, and to recommend any necessary changes | [verb] To counsel spiritually. AUGURED (9) [verb] To foretell events; to exhibit signs of future events. | [verb] To anticipate, to foretell, or to indicate a favorable or an unfavorable issue. AURATED (8) [adjective] Containing gold or made of gold; having the color or appearance of gold. AVAILED (11) [verb] To turn to the advantage of. | [verb] To be of service to. | [verb] To promote; to assist. AVENGED (12) [verb] To take vengeance (for); to exact satisfaction for by punishing the injuring party; to vindicate by inflicting pain or evil on a wrongdoer. | [verb] To take vengeance. | [verb] To treat revengefully; to wreak vengeance on. AVERRED (11) [verb] To assert the truth of, to affirm with confidence; to declare in a positive manner. | [verb] To prove or justify a plea. | [verb] To avouch, prove, or verify; to offer to verify. AVERTED (11) [verb] To turn aside or away. | [verb] To ward off, or prevent, the occurrence or effects of. | [verb] To turn away. AVIATED (11) [verb] To operate an aircraft. AVOIDED (12) [verb] To try not to meet or communicate with (a person); to shun | [verb] To keep away from; to keep clear of; to stay away from | [verb] To try not to do something or to have something happen AVULSED (11) [verb] To tear off forcibly. | [adjective] (of a piece of flesh or body part) Having been torn off, as in an avulsion. | [adjective] (of a wound) Having been caused by a piece of flesh or body part being torn off, as in an avulsion. AWAITED (11) [verb] To wait for. | [verb] To expect. | [verb] To be in store for; to be ready or in waiting for. AWARDED (12) [verb] To give by sentence or judicial determination; to assign or apportion, after careful regard to the nature of the case; to adjudge | [verb] To determine; to make or grant an award. | [verb] To give (an award). AWKWARD (18) [noun] Someone or something that is awkward. | [adjective] Lacking dexterity in the use of the hands, or of instruments. | [adjective] Not easily managed or effected; embarrassing. BABBLED (14) [verb] To utter words indistinctly or unintelligibly; to utter inarticulate sounds | [verb] To talk incoherently; to utter meaningless words. | [verb] To talk too much; to chatter; to prattle. BADLAND (11) [noun] An arid region with steep ridges, gullies, and minimal vegetation, typically formed by erosion of soft rock layers. | [noun] (often capitalized) A specific geological formation, particularly the Badlands of South Dakota. BAFFLED (16) [verb] To publicly disgrace, especially of a recreant knight. | [verb] To hoodwink or deceive (someone). | [verb] To bewilder completely; to confuse or perplex. BANDIED (11) [verb] To give and receive reciprocally; to exchange. | [verb] To use or pass about casually. | [verb] To throw or strike reciprocally, like balls in sports. BARMAID (12) [noun] A woman who serves in a bar. BARTEND (10) [verb] To tend a bar; to act as a barman. BASINED (10) [adjective] Shaped like or having a basin; concave. | [verb] Past tense of basin, meaning to form into a basin shape or to catch in a basin. BASTARD (10) [noun] A person who was born out of wedlock, and hence often considered an illegitimate descendant. | [noun] A mongrel (biological cross between different breeds, groups or varieties). | [noun] (typically referring to a man) A contemptible, inconsiderate, overly or arrogantly rude or spiteful person. BATCHED (15) [verb] To aggregate things together into a batch. | [verb] To handle a set of input data or requests as a batch process. | [verb] To live as a bachelor temporarily, of a married man or someone virtually married. BATTLED (10) [verb] To join in battle; to contend in fight | [verb] To fight or struggle; to enter into a battle with. | [verb] To nourish; feed. BAULKED (14) [verb] To pass over or by. | [verb] To omit, miss or overlook by chance. | [verb] To miss intentionally; to avoid. BAUSOND (10) BAYWOOD (16) BEACHED (15) [adjective] Having a beach. | [verb] To run aground on a beach. | [verb] To run (something) aground on a beach. BEARDED (11) [verb] To grow hair on the chin and jaw. | [verb] To boldly and bravely oppose or confront, often to the chagrin of the one being bearded. | [verb] To take by the beard; to seize, pluck, or pull the beard of (a man), in anger or contempt. | [noun] A bearded iris. BEBLOOD (12) BECLOUD (12) [verb] To cause to become obscure or muddled. | [verb] (usually passive) To cover or surround with clouds. | [verb] To cast in a negative light, cast a pall over, darken. BECROWD (15) BEDEWED (14) [verb] To make wet with or as if with dew. | [adjective] Covered with or as if with dew. BEDWARD (14) [adverb] Toward bed or in the direction of bed. BEETLED (10) [verb] To move away quickly, to scurry away. | [verb] To loom over; to extend or jut. | [verb] To beat with a heavy mallet. BEEYARD (13) [noun] An apiary or an area where beehives are kept and maintained. BEGAZED (20) BEHAVED (16) [verb] To conduct (oneself) well, or in a given way. | [verb] To act, conduct oneself in a specific manner; used with an adverbial of manner. | [verb] To conduct, manage, regulate (something). BEHOVED (16) [verb] To befit, to suit. | [verb] To be necessary for (someone). | [verb] To be in the best interest of; to benefit. BELACED (12) [verb] Past tense of belace; to lace or cover with lace. | [adjective] Decorated or trimmed with lace. BELATED (10) [verb] To retard; cause something to be late; delay; benight. | [adjective] Later in relation to the proper time something should have happened. BELAYED (13) [verb] To surround; environ; enclose. | [verb] To overlay; adorn. | [verb] To besiege; invest; surround. BELCHED (15) [verb] To expel (gas) loudly from the stomach through the mouth. | [verb] To eject or emit (something) with spasmodic force or noise. | [verb] To be ejected or emitted (from something) with spasmodic force or noise. BELLIED (10) [adjective] Having a large or prominent belly. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a belly of a specified type. | [adjective] Swollen, bulging, or billowing; bellying. BELOVED (13) [verb] To please. | [verb] To be pleased with; like. | [verb] To love. BEMIRED (12) [verb] To soil with mud or a similar substance. | [verb] To immerse or trap in mire. BEMIXED (19) BEMUSED (12) [verb] To confuse or bewilder. | [verb] To devote to the Muses. | [adjective] Deeply thoughtful; preoccupied BENAMED (12) BENCHED (15) [verb] To remove a player from play. | [verb] To remove someone from a position of responsibility temporarily. | [verb] To push a person backward against a conspirator behind them who is on their hands and knees, causing them to fall over. BERAKED (14) BERATED (10) [verb] To chide or scold vehemently BERIMED (12) BEROBED (12) [adjective] Clothed in or wearing a robe or robes. BERRIED (10) [adjective] Bearing berries. | [adjective] Consisting of a berry; baccate. | [verb] To pick berries. BERTHED (13) [verb] To bring (a ship or vehicle) into its berth BESTEAD (10) [verb] To place in a particular situation or circumstance, typically an awkward or difficult one. | [verb] To be of use or advantage to; to serve. BESTRID (10) [verb] Past tense of bestride; to stand astride over something or someone. | [verb] To stand with legs on either side of; to straddle. BETAXED (17) BETIDED (11) [verb] To happen unto; to befall. | [verb] To happen; to take place; to bechance or befall. BEVELED (13) [verb] To give a canted edge to a surface; to chamfer. | [adjective] Having a bevel, especially at an edge BEWARED (13) BIASSED (10) [adjective] Past tense and past participle of bias; showing prejudice or favoritism toward a particular side or perspective. | [adjective] (of fabric) cut diagonally across the grain. BIELDED (11) [verb] Past tense of "bield," meaning to shelter or protect from wind or cold. | [noun] A shelter or refuge. BIGHEAD (14) [noun] (especially used by children) A person having an inflated opinion of himself; a conceited or arrogant person. | [noun] One of several species of fish having a large head. | [noun] One of several animal diseases that cause swelling of the head. BIGHTED (14) [verb] Past tense of bight, meaning to form a curve or loop in a rope, or to secure with a bight (a loop of rope). BIGOTED (11) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a bigot; strongly prejudiced; forming opinions without just cause BILOBED (12) [adjective] Having two lobes. BILSTED (10) BIRCHED (15) [verb] To punish with a stick, bundle of twigs, or rod made of birch wood. | [verb] To punish as though one were using a stick, bundle of twigs, or rod made of birch wood. BIRDIED (11) [verb] To score a birdie. | [verb] To score a birdie at (a hole). BIRTHED (13) [verb] To bear or give birth to (a child). | [verb] To produce, give rise to. BISTRED (10) [verb] Past tense of "bistre," meaning to color or paint with bistre (a brownish pigment made from soot). | [adjective] Colored or tinted with bistre. BITCHED (15) [verb] To behave or act as a bitch. | [verb] To criticize spitefully, often for the sake of complaining rather than in order to have the problem corrected. | [verb] To spoil, to ruin. | [adjective] Wretched; vile; accursed; damned BLABBED (14) [verb] To tell tales; to gossip without reserve or discretion. BLACKED (16) [verb] To make black; to blacken. | [verb] To apply blacking to (something). | [verb] To boycott, usually as part of an industrial dispute. BLANKED (14) [verb] To make void; to erase. | [verb] To ignore (a person) deliberately. | [verb] To prevent from scoring, for example in a sporting event. BLASTED (10) [verb] To make an impression on, by making a loud blast or din. | [verb] To make a loud noise. | [verb] To shatter, as if by an explosion. BLATTED (10) [verb] To cry, as a calf or sheep; to bleat. | [verb] To make a senseless noise. | [verb] To talk inconsiderately. BLEARED (10) [verb] To be blear; to have blear eyes; to look or gaze with blear eyes. | [verb] (of the eyes or eyesight) To make blurred or dim. | [verb] (of an image) To blur, make blurry. BLEATED (10) [verb] Of a sheep or goat, to make its characteristic cry; of a human, to mimic this sound. | [verb] Of a person, to complain. BLEEPED (12) [verb] To emit one or more bleeps. | [verb] To edit out inappropriate spoken language in a broadcast by replacing offending words with bleeps. BLENDED (11) [verb] To mingle; to mix; to unite intimately; to pass or shade insensibly into each other. | [verb] To be mingled or mixed. | [verb] To pollute by mixture or association; to spoil or corrupt; to blot; to stain. BLESSED (10) [verb] To make something holy by religious rite, sanctify. | [verb] To make the sign of the cross upon, so as to sanctify. | [verb] To invoke divine favor upon. BLINDED (11) [verb] To make temporarily or permanently blind. | [verb] To curse. | [verb] To darken; to obscure to the eye or understanding; to conceal. BLINKED (14) [verb] To close and reopen both eyes quickly. | [verb] To flash on and off at regular intervals. | [verb] To perform the smallest action that could solicit a response. BLIPPED (14) [verb] To emit one or more bleeps. | [verb] To edit out inappropriate spoken language in a broadcast by replacing offending words with bleeps. | [verb] To change state abruptly, such as between off and on or dark and light, sometimes implying motion. BLISSED (10) [adjective] In a state of bliss. BLITZED (19) [verb] To attack quickly or suddenly, as by an air raid or similar action. | [verb] To perform a blitz. | [verb] To purée or chop (food products) using a food processor or blender. BLOATED (10) [verb] To cause to become distended. | [verb] (veterinary medicine) to get an overdistended rumen, talking of a ruminant. | [verb] To fill soft substance with gas, water, etc.; to cause to swell. BLOBBED (14) [verb] To drop in the form of a blob or blobs | [verb] To drop a blob or blobs onto, cover with blobs. | [verb] To fall in the form of a blob or blobs. BLOCKED (16) [verb] To fill (something) so that it is not possible to pass. | [verb] To prevent (something or someone) from passing. | [verb] To prevent (something from happening or someone from doing something). BLOODED (11) [verb] To cause something to be covered with blood; to bloody. | [verb] To let blood (from); to bleed. | [verb] To initiate into warfare or a blood sport, traditionally by smearing with the blood of the first kill witnessed. BLOOMED (12) [verb] To cause to blossom; to make flourish. | [verb] To bestow a bloom upon; to make blooming or radiant. | [verb] Of a plant, to produce blooms; to open its blooms. BLOOPED (12) [verb] To make a hit just beyond the infield. | [verb] To produce a low-pitched beeping sound. | [verb] To cover up splices in a soundtrack tape to eliminate the unwanted noise they may produce. BLOTTED (10) [verb] To cause a blot (on something) by spilling a coloured substance. | [verb] To soak up or absorb liquid. | [verb] To dry (writing, etc.) with blotting paper. BLOUSED (10) [verb] To hang a garment in loose folds. | [verb] To tuck one's pants/trousers (into one's boots). BLOWSED (13) [adjective] Having a coarse, ruddy, or bloated appearance, typically from excessive drinking or lack of care. | [adjective] Disheveled or unkempt in appearance. BLOWZED (22) [adjective] Red-faced and coarse-looking, typically from exposure to weather or excessive drinking. | [adjective] Untidy or slovenly in appearance. BLUBBED (14) [verb] To cry, whine or blubber (usually carries a connotation of disapproval). | [verb] To swell; to puff out, as with weeping. BLUFFED (16) [verb] To make a bluff; to give the impression that one's hand is stronger than it is. | [verb] (by analogy) To frighten or deter with a false show of strength or confidence; to give a false impression of strength or temerity in order to intimidate and gain some advantage. | [verb] To take advantage by bluffing. BLUNGED (11) [verb] To mix clay and water. BLUNTED (10) [verb] To dull the edge or point of, by making it thicker; to make blunt. | [verb] To repress or weaken; to impair the force, keenness, or susceptibility, of | [adjective] High on cannabis BLURBED (12) [verb] To write or quote in a blurb. | [verb] To supply with a blurb. BLURRED (10) [verb] To make indistinct or hazy, to obscure or dim. | [verb] To smear, stain or smudge. | [verb] To become indistinct. BLURTED (10) [verb] To utter suddenly and unadvisedly; to speak quickly or without thought; to divulge inconsiderately — commonly with out. BLUSHED (13) [verb] To become red in the face (and sometimes experience an associated feeling of warmth), especially due to shyness, shame, excitement, or embarrassment. | [verb] To be ashamed or embarrassed (to do something). | [verb] To become red. BOARDED (11) [verb] To step or climb onto or otherwise enter a ship, aircraft, train or other conveyance. | [verb] To provide someone with meals and lodging, usually in exchange for money. | [verb] To receive meals and lodging in exchange for money. BOASTED (10) [verb] To brag; to talk loudly in praise of oneself. | [verb] To speak of with pride, vanity, or exultation, with a view to self-commendation; to extol. | [verb] To speak in exulting language of another; to glory; to exult. BOBBLED (14) [verb] To bob up and down. | [verb] To make a mistake in. | [verb] To roll slowly. BOBSLED (12) [noun] A sled used to go down a bob track. | [noun] The sport of travelling down a bob track as fast as possible. | [noun] A short sled, mostly used as one of a pair connected by a reach or coupling; the compound sled so formed. BOGEYED (14) [verb] To make a bogey. | [verb] To swim; to bathe. BOGGLED (12) [verb] Either literally or figuratively to stop or hesitate as if suddenly seeing a bogle. | [verb] To be bewildered, dumbfounded, or confused. | [verb] To confuse or mystify; overwhelm. BOGWOOD (14) [noun] Wood that has been preserved in a bog, typically darkened and hardened by the acidic conditions and long burial in peat. BOLLARD (10) [noun] A strong vertical post of timber or iron, fixed to the ground and/or on the deck of a ship, to which the ship's mooring lines etc are secured. | [noun] A similar post preventing vehicle access to a pedestrian area, to delineate traffic lanes, or used for security purposes. BOMBARD (14) [noun] A medieval primitive cannon, used chiefly in sieges for throwing heavy stone balls. | [noun] A bassoon-like medieval instrument | [noun] A large liquor container made of leather, in the form of a jug or a bottle. | [verb] To continuously attack something with bombs, artillery shells or other missiles or projectiles. BOODLED (11) [verb] Past tense of boodle, meaning to engage in bribery or corrupt practices, or to spend money freely and wastefully. BOOGIED (11) [verb] To dance a boogie. | [verb] To move, walk, leave, exit. BOOKEND (14) [noun] A heavy object or moveable support placed at one or both ends of a row of books for the purpose of keeping them upright. | [noun] Something that comes before, after, or at both sides of something else. | [verb] To come before and after, or at both sides of. BOOSTED (10) [verb] To lift or push from behind (one who is endeavoring to climb); to push up. | [verb] (by extension) To help or encourage (something) to increase or improve; to assist in overcoming obstacles. | [verb] To steal. BORATED (10) [adjective] Treated with or containing boron or boric acid. BOSOMED (12) [adjective] Having a bosom of a specified kind, as in "full-bosomed" or "flat-bosomed"; often used in combination with descriptive words to describe the chest or breast area. BOTCHED (15) [verb] To perform (a task) in an unacceptable or incompetent manner; to make a mess of something | [verb] To do something without skill, without care, or clumsily. | [verb] To repair or mend clumsily. BOTTLED (10) [verb] To seal (a liquid) into a bottle for later consumption. Also fig. | [verb] To feed (an infant) baby formula. | [verb] To refrain from doing (something) at the last moment because of a sudden loss of courage. BOUGHED (14) [verb] Past tense of "bough," to bend or bow down. | [adjective] Having boughs or branches. BOUNCED (12) [verb] To change the direction of motion after hitting an obstacle. | [verb] To move quickly up and then down, or vice versa, once or repeatedly. | [verb] To cause to move quickly up and down, or back and forth, once or repeatedly. BOUNDED (11) [verb] To surround a territory or other geographical entity. | [verb] To be the boundary of. | [verb] To leap, move by jumping. BOWELED (13) [verb] Past tense of bowel, meaning to remove the bowels or intestines from something; to disembowel. BOWERED (13) [adjective] Furnished with a bower. BOWHEAD (16) [noun] A large whale, Balaena mysticetus, having a large, rounded head, that inhabits Arctic waters. BOXWOOD (20) [noun] The box tree, Buxus sempervirens. | [noun] The hard, close-grained wood of this tree, used in delicate woodwork and in making inlays. | [noun] Any tree of genus Buxus. BOYHOOD (16) [noun] The state or period of being a boy. BRACTED (12) [adjective] Having bracts; furnished with or bearing bracts (modified leaves at the base of a flower or flower cluster). BRADDED (12) BRAGGED (12) [verb] To boast; to talk with excessive pride about what one has, is able to do, or has done; often as an attempt to popularize oneself. | [verb] To boast of. BRAIDED (11) [verb] To make a sudden movement with, to jerk. | [verb] To start into motion. | [verb] To weave together, intertwine (strands of fibers, ribbons, etc.); to arrange (hair) in braids. BRAILED (10) [verb] To reef, shorten or strike sail using brails. BRAINED (10) [verb] To dash out the brains of; to kill by smashing the skull. | [verb] To strike (someone) on the head. | [verb] To destroy; to put an end to. BRAISED (10) [verb] To cook in a small amount of liquid, in a covered pan, somewhere between steaming and boiling. | [verb] To join two metal pieces, without melting them, using heat and diffusion of a jointing alloy of capillary thickness. | [verb] To burn or temper in fire. BRANDED (11) [verb] To burn the flesh with a hot iron, either as a marker (for criminals, slaves etc.) or to cauterise a wound. | [verb] To mark (especially cattle) with a brand as proof of ownership. | [verb] To make an indelible impression on the memory or senses. BRANNED (10) [verb] Past tense of "bran," meaning to sprinkle or mix with bran. | [verb] Past tense of "bran," meaning to remove the bran from grain. BRASSED (10) [verb] Past tense of brass, meaning to cover or fit with brass. | [verb] To behave boldly or impudently; to face with confidence or audacity. BRAVOED (13) [verb] Past tense of "bravo," meaning to applaud or cheer someone with the exclamation "bravo." BRAWLED (13) [verb] To engage in a brawl; to fight or quarrel. | [verb] To create a disturbance; to complain loudly. | [verb] Especially of a rapid stream running over stones: to make a loud, confused noise. BREADED (11) [verb] To coat with breadcrumbs | [verb] To make broad; spread. | [verb] To form in meshes; net. BREAMED (12) [verb] To clean (e.g. a ship's bottom of clinging shells, seaweed, etc.) by the application of fire and scraping. BREEZED (19) [verb] (usually with along) To move casually, in a carefree manner. | [verb] To blow gently. | [verb] To take a horse on a light run in order to understand the running characteristics of the horse and to observe it while under motion. BRICKED (16) [verb] To build with bricks. | [verb] To make into bricks. | [verb] To hit someone or something with a brick. BRIDGED (12) [verb] To be or make a bridge over something. | [verb] To span as if with a bridge. | [verb] To transition from one piece or section of music to another without stopping. BRIDLED (11) [verb] To put a bridle on. | [verb] To check, restrain, or control with, or as if with, a bridle; as in bridle your tongue. | [verb] To show hostility or resentment. BRIEFED (13) [verb] To summarize a recent development to some person with decision-making power. | [verb] To write a legal argument and submit it to a court. BRIGAND (11) [noun] An outlaw or bandit. BRIMMED (14) [verb] To be full to overflowing. | [verb] To fill to the brim, upper edge, or top. | [verb] Of pigs: to be in heat, to rut. BRINDED (11) [adjective] Having a brindled or streaked pattern, typically with dark streaks or spots on a lighter background (especially used to describe animal coats). BRISKED (14) [verb] (often with "up") To make or become lively; to enliven; to animate. BROILED (10) [verb] To cook by direct, radiant heat. | [verb] To expose to great heat. | [verb] To be exposed to great heat. BRONZED (19) [verb] To plate with bronze. | [verb] To color bronze; (of the sun) to tan. | [verb] (of the skin) To change to a bronze or tan colour due to exposure to the sun. BROODED (11) [verb] To keep an egg warm to make it hatch. | [verb] To protect (something that is gradually maturing); to foster. | [verb] (typically with about or over) To dwell upon moodily and at length, mainly alone. BROOKED (14) [verb] To use; enjoy; have the full employment of. | [verb] To earn; deserve. | [verb] To bear; endure; support; put up with; tolerate (usually used in the negative, with an abstract noun as object). BROOMED (12) [verb] Past tense of broom; to sweep with a broom. | [verb] To remove or eliminate completely (as if sweeping away). BROWNED (13) [verb] To become brown. | [verb] To cook something until it becomes brown. | [verb] To tan. BROWSED (13) [verb] To scan, to casually look through in order to find items of interest, especially without knowledge of what to look for beforehand. | [verb] To move about while sampling, such as with food or products on display. | [verb] To navigate through hyperlinked documents on a computer, usually with a browser. BRUISED (10) [verb] To strike (a person), originally with something flat or heavy, but now specifically in such a way as to discolour the skin without breaking it. | [verb] To damage the skin of (fruit or vegetables), in an analogous way. | [verb] Of fruit or vegetables, to gain bruises through being handled roughly. BRUITED (10) [verb] To disseminate, promulgate, or spread news, a rumour, etc. BRUSHED (13) [verb] To clean with a brush. | [verb] To untangle or arrange with a brush. | [verb] To apply with a brush. BUBBLED (14) [verb] To produce bubbles, to rise up in bubbles (such as in foods cooking or liquids boiling). | [verb] To churn or foment, as if wishing to rise to the surface. | [verb] To rise through a medium or system, similar to the way that bubbles rise in liquid. BUCKLED (16) [verb] To distort or collapse under physical pressure; especially, of a slender structure in compression. | [verb] To make bend; to cause to become distorted. | [verb] To give in; to react suddenly or adversely to stress or pressure (of a person). BUDDIED (12) [verb] To assign a buddy, or partner, to. BUGSEED (11) BUILDED (11) [verb] Past tense and past participle of build; constructed or erected. BULLIED (10) [adjective] Having been a victim of a bully. | [verb] To intimidate (someone) as a bully. | [verb] To act aggressively towards. BUMBLED (14) [verb] To act in an inept, clumsy or inexpert manner; to make mistakes. | [verb] To boom, as a bittern; to buzz, as a fly. BUNCHED (15) [verb] To gather into a bunch. | [verb] To gather fabric into folds. | [verb] To form a bunch. BUNCOED (12) [verb] To swindle (someone). BUNDLED (11) [verb] To tie or wrap together into a bundle. | [verb] To hustle; to dispatch something or someone quickly. | [verb] To prepare for departure; to set off in a hurry or without ceremony; used with away, off, out. BUNGLED (11) [verb] To botch up, bumble or incompetently perform a task; to make or mend clumsily; to manage awkwardly. BUNKOED (14) [verb] To swindle (someone). BURBLED (12) [verb] To bubble; to gurgle. | [verb] To babble; to speak in an excited rush. | [verb] To trouble or confuse. BURGLED (11) [verb] To commit burglary. | [verb] To take the ball legally from an opposing player. BURSEED (10) BURSTED (10) [verb] Past tense of burst; to have broken open or apart suddenly and violently. | [verb] To have emerged or appeared suddenly. BURWEED (13) [noun] A prickly weed with burr-like seed pods, particularly any plant of the genus Ambrosia or similar plants that produce adhesive fruits. BUSLOAD (10) [noun] The amount that can fit on a bus. BUSTARD (10) [noun] Any of several large terrestrial birds of the family Otididae that inhabit dry open country and steppes in the Old World. BUSTLED (10) [verb] To move busily and energetically with fussiness (often followed by about). | [verb] To teem or abound (usually followed by with); to exhibit an energetic and active abundance (of a thing). | [adjective] Having a bustle, as clothing. BUZZARD (28) [noun] Any of several Old World birds of prey of the genus Buteo with broad wings and a broad tail. | [noun] Any scavenging bird such as the American black vulture (Coragyps atratus) or the turkey vulture (Cathartes aura). | [noun] (often preceded by "old", the "old buzzard") In North America, a curmudgeonly or cantankerous man; an old person; a mean, greedy person. BYLINED (13) [verb] Past tense of byline; to credit an article or piece of writing to a particular author by publishing their name at the beginning or end of the text. CABINED (12) [verb] To place in a cabin or other small space. | [verb] (by extension) To limit the scope of. | [verb] To live in, or as if in, a cabin; to lodge. CACKLED (16) [verb] To make a sharp, broken noise or cry, as a hen or goose does. | [verb] To laugh with a broken sound similar to a hen's cry. | [verb] To talk in a silly manner; to prattle. CACTOID (12) CADDIED (12) [verb] To serve as a golf caddie. | [verb] To serve as a caddy, carrying golf clubs etc. CAIRNED (10) [verb] Past tense of cairn, meaning to mark a path or location with a cairn (a pile of stones). CAJOLED (17) [verb] To persuade someone to do something which they are reluctant to do, especially by flattery or promises; to coax. CALQUED (19) [verb] To adopt (a word or phrase) from one language to another by semantic translation of its parts. CAMEOED (12) [verb] Made a brief appearance in a film, television show, or other performance. | [verb] Past tense of cameo, referring to creating or appearing in a cameo role. CANALED (10) [verb] Past tense of "canal," meaning to provide with a canal or to form into a canal. CANDIED (11) [adjective] Coated or encrusted with sugar | [adjective] Preserved in sugar or syrup by baking till it becomes translucent | [adjective] Pleasing, flattering. CANDLED (11) [verb] To observe the growth of an embryo inside (an egg), using a bright light source. | [verb] To dry greenware prior to beginning of the firing cycle, setting the kiln at 200° Celsius until all water is removed from the greenware. | [verb] To check an item (such as an envelope) by holding it between a light source and the eye. CAPERED (12) [verb] To leap or jump about in a sprightly or playful manner. | [verb] To jump as part of a dance. | [verb] To engage in playful behaviour. CARABID (12) [noun] Any of the family Carabidae, the ground beetles. CARLOAD (10) [noun] The contents of an automobile (passengers, supplies, etc.) for one trip. | [noun] The quantity of goods that can be carried in a freight car. CAROLED (10) [verb] Past tense of carol; sang carols or sang joyfully. CAROMED (12) [verb] To make a carom (shot in billiards). | [verb] To strike and bounce back; to strike (something) and rebound. CAROTID (10) [noun] Any of a number of major arteries in the head and neck. | [adjective] Relating to these arteries. CARRIED (10) [verb] To lift (something) and take it to another place; to transport (something) by lifting. | [verb] To transfer from one place (such as a country, book, or column) to another. | [verb] To convey by extension or continuance; to extend. CASQUED (19) [adjective] Wearing or having a casque (a helmet or helmet-like structure). CASTLED (10) [verb] To house or keep in a castle. | [verb] To protect or separate in a similar way. | [verb] To make into a castle: to build in the form of a castle or add (real or imitation) battlements to an existing building. CATBIRD (12) [noun] Either of two species of American mockingbird relatives, the grey catbird, Dumetella carolinensis, and the black catbird, Melanoptila glabrirostris. | [noun] Any of four species of Australasian bowerbirds of the genera Ailuroedus and Scenopoeetes. | [noun] A babbler-like bird from eastern Africa, Parophasma galinieri. CATERED (10) [verb] To provide, particularly: | [verb] To place, set, move, or cut diagonally or rhomboidally. CATHEAD (13) [noun] A heavy piece of timber projecting from each side of the bow of a ship for holding anchors which were fitted with a stock in position for letting go or for securing after weighing. | [noun] Similar rigging on the outside of a building. CAULKED (14) [verb] To drive oakum into the seams of a ship's wooden deck or hull to make it watertight. | [verb] To apply caulking to joints, cracks, or a juncture of different materials. | [verb] Fuck CAVILED (13) [verb] To criticise for petty or frivolous reasons. CENTRED (10) [verb] To cause (an object) to occupy the center of an area. | [verb] To cause (some attribute, such as a mood or voltage) to be adjusted to a value which is midway between the extremes. | [verb] To give (something) a central basis. CEPHEID (15) [noun] A cepheid variable. | [adjective] Relating to cepheid variables. CERATED (10) [adjective] Covered with a waxy or wax-like substance; having a texture resembling wax. CESTOID (10) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a tapeworm or the tapeworm class Cestoda. | [noun] A tapeworm or member of the class Cestoda. CHAFFED (19) [verb] To use light, idle language by way of fun or ridicule; to banter. | [verb] To make fun of; to turn into ridicule by addressing in ironical or bantering language; to quiz. CHAINED (13) [verb] To fasten something with a chain. | [verb] To link multiple items together. | [verb] To secure someone with fetters. CHAIRED (13) [verb] To act as chairperson at; to preside over. | [verb] To carry in a seated position upon one's shoulders, especially in celebration or victory. | [verb] To award a chair to (a winning poet) at a Welsh eisteddfod. CHALCID (15) [noun] Any of many small wasps, of the superfamily Chalcidoidea, having parasitic larvae CHALKED (17) [verb] To apply chalk to anything, such as the tip of a billiard cue. | [verb] To record something, as on a blackboard, using chalk. | [verb] To use powdered chalk to mark the lines on a playing field. CHAMPED (17) [verb] To bite or chew, especially noisily or impatiently. CHANCED (15) [verb] To happen by chance, to occur. | [verb] To befall; to happen to. | [verb] To try or risk. CHANGED (14) [verb] To become something different. | [verb] To make something into something else. | [verb] To replace. CHANTED (13) [verb] To sing, especially without instruments, and as applied to monophonic and pre-modern music. | [verb] To sing or intone sacred text. | [verb] To utter or repeat in a strongly rhythmical manner, especially as a group. CHAPPED (17) [verb] Of the skin, to split or flake due to cold weather or dryness. | [verb] To cause to open in slits or chinks; to split; to cause the skin of to crack or become rough. | [verb] To strike, knock. CHARGED (14) [verb] To assign a duty or responsibility to | [verb] To assign (a debit) to an account | [verb] To pay on account, as by using a credit card CHARKED (17) [verb] Past tense of "chark," meaning to burn or scorch something, especially to reduce to charcoal. CHARMED (15) [verb] To seduce, persuade or fascinate someone or something. | [verb] To use a magical charm upon; to subdue, control, or summon by incantation or supernatural influence. | [verb] To protect with, or make invulnerable by, spells, charms, or supernatural influences. CHARRED (13) [verb] To burn something to charcoal. | [verb] To burn slightly or superficially so as to affect colour. | [verb] To turn, especially away or aside. CHARTED (13) [verb] To draw a chart or map of. | [verb] To draw or figure out (a route or plan). | [verb] To record systematically. CHASMED (15) [verb] Past tense of chasm, meaning to form or create a chasm or deep opening. CHASSED (13) [verb] To perform this step. | [verb] To dismiss. CHATTED (13) [verb] To be engaged in informal conversation. | [verb] To talk more than a few words. | [verb] To talk of; to discuss. CHEATED (13) [verb] To violate rules in order to gain advantage from a situation. | [verb] To be unfaithful to one's spouse or partner. | [verb] To manage to avoid something even though it seemed unlikely. CHECKED (19) [verb] To inspect; to examine. | [verb] To verify the accuracy of a text or translation, usually making some corrections (proofread) or many (copyedit). | [verb] (often used with "off") To mark items on a list (with a checkmark or by crossing them out) that have been chosen for keeping or removal or that have been dealt with (for example, completed or verified as correct or satisfactory). CHEEKED (17) [verb] To be impudent towards. | [verb] To pull a horse's head back toward the saddle using the cheek strap of the bridle. | [adjective] (usually in combination) Having some specific type of cheek. CHEEPED (15) [verb] Of a small bird, to make short, high-pitched sounds sounding like "cheep". | [verb] To express in a chirping tone. CHEERED (13) [verb] To gladden; to make cheerful; often with up. | [verb] To infuse life, courage, animation, or hope, into; to inspirit; to solace or comfort. | [verb] To applaud or encourage with cheers or shouts. CHEESED (13) [verb] To prepare curds for making cheese. | [verb] To make holes in a pattern of circuitry to decrease pattern density. | [verb] To smile excessively, as for a camera. CHEFFED (19) [verb] To work as a chef; to prepare and cook food professionally. | [verb] To stab with a knife, to shank, to lacerate with a rambo. CHELOID (13) CHESTED (13) [verb] To hit with one's chest (front of one's body) | [verb] To deposit in a chest. | [verb] To place in a coffin. CHEVIED (16) [verb] To chase or hunt. | [verb] To vex or harass with petty attacks. | [verb] To maneuver or secure gradually. CHILIAD (13) [noun] A group of 1000 things. | [noun] A period of 1000 years; a millennium. CHILLED (13) [verb] To lower the temperature of something; to cool | [verb] To become cold | [verb] To harden a metal surface by sudden cooling CHINKED (17) [verb] To fill an opening such as the space between logs in a log house with chinking; to caulk. | [verb] To crack; to open. | [verb] To cause to open in cracks or fissures. CHINNED (13) [verb] To talk. | [verb] To talk to or with (someone). | [verb] To perform a chin-up (exercise in which one lifts one's own weight while hanging from a bar). CHIPPED (17) [verb] To chop or cut into small pieces. | [verb] To break small pieces from. | [verb] To play a shot hitting the ball predominantly upwards rather than forwards. In association football specifically, when the shot is a shot on goal, the opposing goalkeeper may be the direct object of the verb, rather than the ball. CHIRKED (17) [verb] Past tense of "chirk," meaning to make a chirping sound or to chirp. | [verb] To cheer up or make cheerful (archaic/dialectal). CHIRMED (15) CHIRPED (15) [verb] To make a short, sharp, cheerful note, as of small birds or crickets | [verb] To speak in a high-pitched staccato | [verb] (radar, sonar, radio telescopy etc.) To modify (a pulse of signal) so that it sweeps through a band of frequencies throughout its duration. CHIRRED (13) [verb] To make the prolonged trilling sound of an insect (e.g. a grasshopper, a cicada). | [verb] To coo like a pigeon. CHIVIED (16) [verb] To chase or hunt. | [verb] To vex or harass with petty attacks. | [verb] To maneuver or secure gradually. CHLORID (13) CHOCKED (19) [verb] To stop or fasten, as with a wedge, or block; to scotch. | [verb] To fill up, as a cavity. | [verb] To insert a line in a chock. CHOIRED (13) [verb] Past tense of choir; to sing in a choir or to arrange singers in a choir formation. CHOMPED (17) [verb] To bite or chew loudly or heavily. | [verb] (Perl) To remove the final character from (a text string) if it is a newline (or, less commonly, some other programmer-specified character). CHOPPED (17) [verb] To cut into pieces with short, vigorous cutting motions. | [verb] To sever with an axe or similar implement. | [verb] To give a downward cutting blow or movement, typically with the side of the hand. CHORDED (14) [verb] To write chords for. | [verb] To accord; to harmonize together. | [verb] To provide with musical chords or strings; to string; to tune. CHOROID (13) [noun] The pigmented vascular layer of the eyeball between the retina and the sclera. | [adjective] Resembling the chorion, particularly in containing many blood vessels. CHOUSED (13) [verb] Past tense of "chouse," meaning to cheat or swindle someone. CHOWSED (16) CHROMED (15) [verb] To plate with chrome. | [verb] To treat with a solution of potassium bichromate, as in dyeing. CHUCKED (19) [verb] To place in a chuck, or hold by means of a chuck, as in turning. | [verb] To bore or turn (a hole) in a revolving piece held in a chuck. | [verb] To make a clucking sound. CHUFFED (19) [verb] To make noisy puffing sounds, as of a steam locomotive. | [verb] To break wind. | [verb] To intermittently extinguish and reignite a powder charge. CHUGGED (15) [verb] To make dull explosive sounds. | [verb] To move or travel whilst making such sounds. | [verb] To drink a large amount (especially of beer) in a single action/without breathing; to chugalug. People usually chant this at the person who is drinking. CHUMMED (17) [verb] To share rooms with someone; to live together. | [verb] To lodge (somebody) with another person or people. | [verb] To make friends; to socialize. CHUMPED (17) [verb] Past tense of chump; to treat someone as a fool or to trick someone. | [verb] To bite or chew noisily or vigorously. CHUNKED (17) [verb] To break into large pieces or chunks. | [verb] To break down (language, etc.) into conceptual pieces of manageable size. | [verb] To throw. CHURNED (13) [verb] To agitate rapidly and repetitively, or to stir with a rowing or rocking motion; generally applies to liquids, notably cream. | [verb] To produce excessive and sometimes undesirable or unproductive activity or motion. | [verb] To move rapidly and repetitively with a rocking motion; to tumble, mix or shake. CHURRED (13) [verb] To make the prolonged trilling sound of an insect (e.g. a grasshopper, a cicada). | [verb] To make the low vocal sound of some birds. CICHLID (15) [noun] Any of many tropical fish, of the family Cichlidae, popular as aquarium fish. CINCHED (15) [verb] To bring to certain conclusion. | [verb] To tighten down. | [verb] In the game of cinch, to protect (a trick) by playing a higher trump than the five. CIRCLED (12) [verb] To travel around along a curved path. | [verb] To surround. | [verb] To place or mark a circle around. CIRSOID (10) [adjective] Resembling or having the form of a varicose vein; characterized by a twisted or coiled appearance. CISSOID (10) [noun] A plane curve generated by a point on a circle rolling along a straight line, used in mathematics and geometry. CLACKED (16) [verb] To make a sudden, sharp noise, or succession of noises; to click. | [verb] To cause to make a sudden, sharp noise, or succession of noises; to click. | [verb] To chatter or babble; to utter rapidly without consideration. CLAGGED (12) [verb] Past tense of clag; to stick or adhere; to clog or become blocked with sticky material. CLAIMED (12) [verb] To demand ownership of. | [verb] To state a new fact, typically without providing evidence to prove it is true. | [verb] To demand ownership or right to use for land. CLAMMED (14) [verb] To dig for clams. | [verb] To produce, in bellringing, a clam or clangor; to cause to clang. | [verb] To be moist or glutinous; to stick; to adhere. CLAMPED (14) [verb] To fasten in place or together with (or as if with) a clamp. | [verb] To hold or grip tightly. | [verb] To modify (a numeric value) so it lies within a specific range. CLANGED (11) [verb] To strike (objects) together so as to produce a clang. | [verb] To give out a clang; to resound. CLANKED (14) [verb] To make a clanking sound | [verb] To cause to sound with a clank. CLAPPED (14) [verb] To strike the palms of the hands together, creating a sharp sound. | [verb] To applaud. | [verb] To slap with the hand in a jovial manner. CLASHED (13) [verb] To make a clashing sound. | [verb] To cause to make a clashing sound. | [verb] To come into violent conflict. CLASPED (12) [verb] To take hold of; to grasp; to grab tightly. | [verb] To shut or fasten together with, or as if with, a clasp. CLASSED (10) [verb] To assign to a class; to classify. | [verb] To be grouped or classed. | [verb] To divide into classes, as students; to form into, or place in, a class or classes. CLEANED (10) [verb] To remove dirt from a place or object. | [verb] To tidy up, make a place neat. | [verb] To remove equipment from a climbing route after it was previously lead climbed. CLEARED (10) [verb] To remove obstructions, impediments or other unwanted items from. | [verb] To remove (items or material) so as to leave something unobstructed or open. | [verb] To become free from obstruction or obscurement; to become transparent. CLEATED (10) [adjective] Fitted with cleats, or having cleats attached. | [verb] Past tense of cleat; to furnish or equip with cleats. CLEAVED (13) [adjective] Cleft or cloven. CLEEKED (14) [verb] Past tense of "cleek," to strike or hit a golf ball with a cleek (a type of golf club). | [verb] To seize or snatch. CLEFTED (13) [adjective] Having a cleft or split; divided into two parts. CLERKED (14) [verb] To act as a clerk, to perform the duties or functions of a clerk CLICHED (15) [verb] To use a cliché; to make up a word or a name that sounds like a cliché. | [adjective] Repeated so often that it has become stale or commonplace; hackneyed. CLICKED (16) [verb] To cause to make a click; to operate (a switch, etc) so that it makes a click. | [verb] To press and release (a button on a computer mouse). | [verb] To select a software item using, usually, but not always, the pressing of a mouse button. CLIMBED (14) [verb] To ascend; rise; to go up. | [verb] To mount; to move upwards on. | [verb] To scale; to get to the top of something. CLINGED (11) [verb] Past tense of cling; held on tightly or adhered closely to something. CLINKED (14) [verb] To make a clinking sound; to make a sound of metal on metal or glass on glass; to strike materials such as metal or glass against one another. | [verb] To rhyme. CLIPPED (14) [verb] To grip tightly. | [verb] To fasten with a clip. | [verb] To hug, embrace. CLIQUED (19) [verb] Past tense of clique, meaning to form or associate with a clique or exclusive group. CLOAKED (14) [verb] To cover as with a cloak. | [verb] To hide or conceal. | [verb] To render or become invisible via futuristic technology. CLOCKED (16) [verb] To measure the duration of. | [verb] To measure the speed of. | [verb] To hit (someone) heavily. CLOGGED (12) [verb] To block or slow passage through (often with 'up'). | [verb] To encumber or load, especially with something that impedes motion; to hamper. | [verb] To burden; to trammel; to embarrass; to perplex. CLOMPED (14) [verb] To walk heavily or clumsily, as with clogs. | [verb] To make some object hit something, thereby producing a clomping sound. CLONKED (14) [verb] To make such a sound. CLOPPED (14) [verb] To make this sound; to walk so as to make this sound. CLOTHED (13) [verb] To adorn or cover with clothing; to dress; to supply clothes or clothing. | [verb] To cover or invest, as if with a garment. | [adjective] Wearing clothes or clothing. | [adjective] Covered with a cloth. CLOTTED (10) [verb] To form a clot or mass. | [verb] To cause to clot or form into a mass. | [adjective] Containing clots. CLOUDED (11) [verb] To become foggy or gloomy, or obscured from sight. | [verb] To overspread or hide with a cloud or clouds. | [verb] To make obscure. CLOURED (10) CLOUTED (10) [verb] To form a clot or mass. | [verb] To cause to clot or form into a mass. | [verb] To hit, especially with the fist. CLOWNED (13) [verb] To act in a silly or playful fashion. | [verb] To ridicule. CLUBBED (14) [verb] To hit with a club. | [verb] To join together to form a group. | [verb] To combine into a club-shaped mass. CLUCKED (16) [verb] To make such a sound. | [verb] To cause (the tongue) to make a clicking sound. | [verb] To call together, or call to follow, as a hen does her chickens. CLUMPED (14) [verb] To form clusters or lumps. | [verb] To gather in dense groups. | [verb] To walk with heavy footfalls. CLUNKED (14) [verb] To make such a sound CLUPEID (12) [noun] A fish of the family Clupeidae, which includes herrings, sardines, and anchovies. COACHED (15) [verb] To train. | [verb] To instruct; to train. | [verb] To study under a tutor. COACTED (12) [verb] Past tense of coact; to act together or in conjunction with another. COAPTED (12) [verb] Past tense of coapt; to fit or adapt together precisely, especially in medical contexts where bone fragments or wound edges are brought into close alignment. COASTED (10) [verb] To glide along without adding energy; to allow a vehicle to continue moving forward after disengaging the engine or ceasing to apply motive power. | [verb] To sail along a coast. | [verb] To make a minimal effort; to continue to do something in a routine way, without initiative or effort. COBBLED (14) [verb] To make shoes (what a cobbler does). | [verb] To assemble in an improvised way. | [verb] To use cobblestones to pave a road, walkway, etc. COCCOID (14) [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a coccus (a spherical bacterium). COCKLED (16) [verb] To cause to contract into wrinkles or ridges, as some kinds of cloth after a wetting; to pucker. | [adjective] Enclosed in a shell. CODDLED (12) [verb] To treat gently or with great care. | [verb] To cook slowly in hot water that is below the boiling point. | [verb] To exercise excessive or damaging authority in an attempt to protect. To overprotect. COERCED (12) [verb] To restrain by force, especially by law or authority; to repress; to curb. | [verb] To use force, threat, fraud, or intimidation in an attempt to compel one to act against their will. | [verb] To force an attribute, normally of a data type, to take on the attribute of another data type. COFFLED (16) [verb] Past tense of coffle, meaning to chain or shackle together in a coffle (a line of people or animals chained together). COFOUND (13) [verb] To found at the same time as another. | [verb] To found with one or more other people. COHERED (13) [verb] To stick together physically, by adhesion. | [verb] To be consistent as part of a group, or by common purpose. COIFFED (16) [verb] To style or arrange hair. COIGNED (11) [verb] Past tense of "coign," meaning to provide with a coign (an external angle of a wall or building) or to position at a corner. | [verb] To treat or shape (stone) into a corner piece. COLLARD (10) [noun] A Mediterranean variety of kale, Brassica oleracea var. acephala. COLLIED (10) [verb] Past tense of "colly," meaning to blacken or soil (especially the face with soot or coal dust). | [verb] To embrace or fondle. COLLOID (10) [noun] A stable system of two phases, one of which is dispersed in the other in the form of very small droplets or particles. | [noun] An intimate mixture of two substances one of which, called the dispersed phase (or colloid), is uniformly distributed in a finely divided state throughout the second substance, called the dispersion medium (or dispersing medium). | [noun] A particle less than 1 micron in diameter, following the Wentworth scale COLORED (10) [verb] To give something color. | [verb] To apply colors to the areas within the boundaries of a line drawing using colored markers or crayons. | [verb] (of a person or their face) To become red through increased blood flow. COMMAND (14) [noun] An order to do something. | [noun] The right or authority to order, control or dispose of; the right to be obeyed or to compel obedience. | [noun] Power of control, direction or disposal; mastery. COMMEND (14) [noun] Commendation; praise. | [noun] (in the plural) Compliments; greetings. | [verb] To congratulate or reward. COMPEND (14) [noun] A brief summary or abridgment of a larger work; a compendium. | [verb] To make a compend of; to abridge or summarize. COMPTED (14) CONCORD (12) [noun] A state of agreement; harmony; union. | [noun] Agreement by stipulation; compact; covenant; treaty or league | [noun] (grammar) Agreement of words with one another, in gender, number, person or case. | [noun] A variety of sweet American grape, with large dark blue (almost black) grapes in compact clusters; a Concord grape. | [verb] To agree; to act together CONGAED (11) [verb] To dance the conga. CONGEED (11) CONTEND (10) [verb] To strive in opposition; to contest; to dispute; to vie; to quarrel; to fight. | [verb] To struggle or exert oneself to obtain or retain possession of, or to defend. | [verb] To strive in debate; to engage in discussion; to dispute; to argue. COOEYED (13) COOPTED (12) [verb] To elect as a fellow member of a group, such as a committee. | [verb] To commandeer, appropriate or take over. | [verb] To absorb or assimilate into an established group. COPEPOD (14) [noun] Any of very many small crustaceans of the subclass Copepoda, that are widely distributed and ecologically important. CORMOID (12) CORNFED (13) [adjective] (of an animal) Fed on corn. | [adjective] (sometimes derogatory, of a person) Sheltered; uncultured. | [adjective] (of a vehicle) Running on ethanol (E85). COSTARD (10) [noun] A large cooking apple. | [noun] The tree on which large cooking apples grow. | [noun] The human head. COUCHED (15) [adjective] Couché. COUGHED (14) [verb] To push air from the lungs in a quick, noisy explosion. | [verb] (sometimes followed by "up") To force something out of the throat or lungs by coughing. | [verb] To make a noise like a cough. COUNTED (10) [verb] To recite numbers in sequence. | [verb] To determine the number (of objects in a group). | [verb] To be of significance; to matter. COUPLED (12) [verb] To join (two things) together, or (one thing) to (another). | [verb] To join in wedlock; to marry. | [verb] To join in sexual intercourse; to copulate. COURSED (10) [verb] To run or flow (especially of liquids and more particularly blood). | [verb] To run through or over. | [verb] To pursue by tracking or estimating the course taken by one's prey; to follow or chase after. COURTED (10) [verb] To seek to achieve or win. | [verb] To risk (a consequence, usually negative). | [verb] To try to win a commitment to marry from. COVERED (13) [verb] To place something over or upon, as to conceal or protect. | [verb] To be over or upon, as to conceal or protect. | [verb] To be upon all of, so as to completely conceal. COVETED (13) [verb] To wish for with eagerness; to desire possession of, often enviously. | [verb] To long for inordinately or unlawfully; to hanker after (something forbidden). | [verb] To yearn; to have or indulge an inordinate desire, especially for another's possession. COWBIND (15) COWBIRD (15) [noun] Any bird of the genus Molothrus. The cowbirds are brood parasites. COWERED (13) [verb] To crouch or cringe, or to avoid or shy away from something, in fear. | [verb] To crouch in general. | [verb] To cause to cower; to frighten into submission. COWHAND (16) [noun] One who tends free-range cattle, especially in the American West. COWHERD (16) [noun] A person who herds cattle; a cowboy. COWSHED (16) [noun] A small barn for keeping cows. COZENED (19) [verb] To become cozy; (by extension) to become acquainted, comfortable, or familiar with. | [verb] To cheat; to defraud; to deceive, usually by small arts, or in a pitiful way. CRAALED (10) CRABBED (14) [verb] To fish for crabs. | [verb] To ruin. | [verb] To complain. CRACKED (16) [verb] To form cracks. | [verb] To break apart under pressure. | [verb] To become debilitated by psychological pressure. CRADLED (11) [verb] To contain in or as if in a cradle. | [verb] To rock (a baby to sleep). | [verb] To wrap protectively, to hold gently and protectively. CRAFTED (13) [verb] To make by hand and with much skill. | [verb] To construct, develop something (like a skilled craftsman). | [verb] To combine multiple items to form a new item, such as armour or medicine. CRAGGED (12) [adjective] Having crags CRAMMED (14) [verb] To press, force, or drive, particularly in filling, or in thrusting one thing into another; to stuff; to fill to superfluity. | [verb] To fill with food to satiety; to stuff. | [verb] To put hastily through an extensive course of memorizing or study, as in preparation for an examination. CRAMPED (14) [verb] (of a muscle) To contract painfully and uncontrollably. | [verb] To affect with cramps or spasms. | [verb] To prohibit movement or expression of. CRANKED (14) [verb] To turn by means of a crank. | [verb] To turn a crank. | [verb] (of a crank or similar) To turn. CRAPPED (14) [verb] To defecate. | [verb] To defecate in or on (clothing etc.). | [verb] To bullshit. CRASHED (13) [verb] To collide with something destructively, fall or come down violently. | [verb] To severely damage or destroy something by causing it to collide with something else. | [verb] (via gatecrash) To attend a social event without invitation, usually with unfavorable intentions. CRAWDAD (14) [noun] The crayfish. CRAWLED (13) [verb] To creep; to move slowly on hands and knees, or by dragging the body along the ground. | [verb] To move forward slowly, with frequent stops. | [verb] To act in a servile manner. CREAKED (14) [verb] To make a prolonged sharp grating or squeaking sound, as by the friction of hard substances. | [verb] To produce a creaking sound with. | [verb] To suffer from strain or old age. CREAMED (12) [verb] To puree, to blend with a liquifying process. | [verb] To turn a yellowish white colour; to give something the color of cream. | [verb] To obliterate, to defeat decisively. CREASED (10) [verb] To make a crease in; to wrinkle. | [verb] To undergo creasing; to form wrinkles. | [verb] To lightly bloody; to graze. CREATED (10) [verb] To bring into existence; (sometimes in particular:) | [verb] To cause, to bring (a non-object) about by an action, behavior, or event, to occasion. | [verb] To confer or invest with a rank or title of nobility, to appoint, ordain or constitute. CREELED (10) [verb] Past tense of creel, meaning to catch fish and place them in a creel (a fishing basket), or to move in a winding or meandering path. CRESTED (10) [verb] Particularly with reference to waves, to reach a peak. | [verb] To reach the crest of (a hill or mountain) | [verb] To furnish with, or surmount as, a crest; to serve as a crest for. CRIBBED (14) [verb] To place or confine in a crib. | [verb] To shut up or confine in a narrow habitation; to cage; to cramp. | [verb] To collect one or more passages and/or references for use in a speech, written document or as an aid for some task; to create a crib sheet. CRICKED (16) [verb] To develop a crick (cramp, spasm). | [verb] To cause to develop a crick; to create a crick in. | [verb] To twist, bend, or contort, especially in a way that produces strain. CRICOID (12) [noun] The ring-shaped cartilage (cricoid cartilage) of the larynx. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being a cartilage of the larynx with which arytenoid cartilages articulate. CRIMPED (14) [verb] To press into small ridges or folds, to pleat, to corrugate. | [verb] To fasten by bending metal so that it squeezes around the parts to be fastened. | [verb] To pinch and hold; to seize. CRINGED (11) [verb] To shrink, cower, tense or recoil, as in fear, disgust or embarrassment. | [verb] To bow or crouch in servility. | [verb] To contract; to draw together; to cause to shrink or wrinkle; to distort. CRINOID (10) [noun] One of the numerous animals that make up the class Crinoidea; the feather stars or sea lilies. | [adjective] Relating to or sharing the qualities and features of the class Crinoidea. CRISPED (12) [verb] To make crisp. | [verb] To become crisp. | [verb] To cause to curl or wrinkle (of the leaves or petals of plants, for example); to form into ringlets or tight curls (of hair). CROAKED (14) [verb] To make a croak. | [verb] To utter in a low, hoarse voice. | [verb] (of a frog, toad, raven, or various other birds or animals) To make its cry. CROCKED (16) [verb] To break something or injure someone. | [verb] (leatherworking) To transfer coloring through abrasion from one item to another. | [verb] To cover the drain holes of a planter with stones or similar material, in order to ensure proper drainage. | [adjective] Drunk (of a person) CROOKED (14) [verb] To bend, or form into a hook. | [verb] To become bent or hooked. | [verb] To turn from the path of rectitude; to pervert; to misapply; to twist. | [adjective] Not straight; having one or more bends or angles. CROONED (10) [verb] To hum or sing softly or in a sentimental manner. | [verb] To say softly or gently | [verb] To soothe by singing softly. CROPPED (14) [verb] To remove the top end of something, especially a plant. | [verb] To mow, reap or gather. | [verb] To cut (especially hair or an animal's tail or ears) short. CROSSED (10) [verb] To make or form a cross. | [verb] To move relatively. | [verb] (social) To oppose. CROWDED (14) [verb] To press forward; to advance by pushing. | [verb] To press together or collect in numbers | [verb] To press or drive together, especially into a small space; to cram. CROWNED (13) [verb] To place a crown on the head of. | [verb] To formally declare (someone) a king, queen, emperor, etc. | [verb] To bestow something upon as a mark of honour, dignity, or recompense; to adorn; to dignify. CRUDDED (12) [verb] Past tense of "crud," meaning to soil, dirty, or make filthy with crud (a sticky or oily substance). CRUISED (10) [verb] To sail about, especially for pleasure. | [verb] To travel at constant speed for maximum operating efficiency. | [verb] To move about an area leisurely in the hope of discovering something, or looking for custom. CRUMBED (14) [verb] To cover with crumbs. | [verb] To break into crumbs or small pieces with the fingers; to crumble. CRUMPED (14) [verb] To produce such a sound. | [verb] For one's health to decline rapidly (but not as rapidly as crash). CRUSHED (13) [verb] To press between two hard objects; to squeeze so as to alter the natural shape or integrity of it, or to force together into a mass. | [verb] To reduce to fine particles by pounding or grinding | [verb] To overwhelm by pressure or weight. CRUSTED (10) [verb] To cover with a crust. | [verb] To form a crust. CTENOID (10) [noun] A ctenoidean. | [adjective] Having a toothed margin, usually fish scales | [adjective] Comb-like in shape. CUCKOLD (16) [noun] A man married to an unfaithful wife, especially when he is unaware or unaccepting of the fact. | [noun] A West Indian plectognath fish, Rhinesomus triqueter. | [noun] The scrawled cowfish, Acanthostracion quadricornis and allied species. CUDDLED (12) [verb] To embrace affectionately, lie together snugly. | [verb] To cradle in one's arms so as to give comfort, warmth. | [verb] To lie close or snug; to crouch; to nestle. CUDWEED (14) [noun] Any of many of species of flowering plants in family Asteraceae: | [noun] Cudbear (Lecanora tartarea) CULICID (12) [noun] A member of the Culicidae family, which includes mosquitoes. CULLIED (10) [verb] Past tense of "cully," meaning to deceive or trick someone; to treat as a dupe or fool. CUPELED (12) [verb] To refine by means of a cupel. CURATED (10) [verb] To act as a curator for. | [verb] To apply selectivity and taste to, as a collection of fashion items or web pages. | [verb] To work or act as a curator. CURDLED (11) [verb] To form curds so that it no longer flows smoothly; to cause to form such curds. (usually said of milk) | [verb] To clot or coagulate; to cause to congeal, such as through cold. (metaphorically of blood) | [verb] To cause a liquid to spoil and form clumps so that it no longer flows smoothly CURRIED (10) [adjective] Cooked or flavoured with curry. | [verb] To cook or season with curry powder. | [verb] To groom (a horse); to dress or rub down a horse with a curry comb. CUSTARD (10) [noun] A type of sauce made from milk and eggs (and usually sugar, and sometimes vanilla or other flavourings) and thickened by heat, served hot poured over desserts, as a filling for some pies and cakes, or cold and solidified; also used as a base for some savoury dishes, such as quiches, or eaten as a stand-alone dessert. CUTTLED (10) CYCLOID (15) [noun] The locus of a point on the circumference of a circle that rolls without slipping on a fixed straight line. | [noun] A fish having cycloid scales. | [adjective] Resembling a circle; cycloidal. CYSTOID (13) DABBLED (13) [verb] To make slightly wet or soiled by spattering or sprinkling a liquid (such as water, mud, or paint) on it; to bedabble. | [verb] To cause splashing by moving a body part like a bill or limb in soft mud, water, etc., often playfully; to play in shallow water; to paddle. | [verb] To participate or have an interest in an activity in a casual or superficial way. DADDLED (11) DAGGLED (11) DAGWOOD (13) [noun] A multi-layered sandwich containing cold cuts, cheese, lettuce and any of several other fillings DAISIED (9) DALLIED (9) [verb] To waste time in trivial activities, or in idleness; to trifle. | [verb] To caress, especially of a sexual nature; to fondle or pet | [verb] To delay unnecessarily; to while away. DAMAGED (12) [verb] To impair the soundness, goodness, or value of; to harm or cause destruction. | [verb] To undergo damage. | [adjective] Suffered a damage. DANDLED (10) [verb] To move up and down on one's knee or in one's arms, in affectionate play, as an infant. | [verb] To treat with fondness, as if a child; to fondle; to toy with; to pet. | [verb] To play with; to put off or delay by trifles; to wheedle. DANGLED (10) [verb] To hang loosely with the ability to swing. | [verb] The action of performing a move or deke with the puck in order to get past a defender or goalie; perhaps because of the resemblance to dangling the puck on a string. | [verb] To hang or trail something loosely. DAPPLED (13) [verb] To mark or become marked with mottling or spots. | [adjective] Having a mottled or spotted skin or coat, dapple. DARKLED (13) DARTLED (9) DASTARD (9) [noun] A malicious coward; a dishonorable sneak. | [verb] To dastardize. | [adjective] Meanly shrinking from danger, cowardly, dastardly. DAUNTED (9) [verb] To discourage, intimidate. | [verb] To overwhelm. | [adjective] (Normally with a copular verb). Mildly afraid or worried by some upcoming situation. DAVENED (12) [verb] To recite the Jewish liturgy; to pray DAWDLED (13) [verb] To spend time idly and unfruitfully, to waste time. | [verb] To spend (time) without haste or purpose. | [verb] To move or walk lackadaisically. DAZZLED (27) [verb] To confuse the sight of by means of excessive brightness. | [verb] To render incapable of thinking clearly; to overwhelm with showiness or brilliance. | [verb] To be overpowered by light; to be confused by excess of brightness. DEAIRED (9) DEASHED (12) DEBASED (11) [verb] To lower in character, quality, or value; to degrade. | [verb] To lower in position or rank. | [verb] To lower the value of (a currency) by reducing the amount of valuable metal in the coins. DEBATED (11) [verb] To participate in a debate; to dispute, argue, especially in a public arena. | [verb] To fight. | [verb] To engage in combat for; to strive for. DEBITED (11) [verb] To make an entry on the debit side of an account. | [verb] To record a receivable in the bookkeeping. DEBONED (11) [verb] To remove the bones from. | [adjective] Having its bones removed. DEBUTED (11) [verb] To formally introduce, as to the public | [verb] To make one's initial formal appearance DECAPOD (13) [noun] Any of various animals having ten legs or similar appendages, especially mollusks such as squid and cuttlefish. | [noun] Any crustacean, of the order Decapoda, such as crabs or lobsters. | [noun] A nickname for either the 0-10-0 or 2-10-0 train configurations. Sometimes capitalized. DECAYED (14) [verb] To deteriorate, to get worse, to lose strength or health, to decline in quality. | [verb] (of organic material) To rot, to go bad. | [verb] (of an unstable atom) To change by undergoing fission, by emitting radiation, or by capturing or losing one or more electrons. DECIDED (12) [verb] To resolve (a contest, problem, dispute, etc.); to choose, determine, or settle | [verb] To make a judgment, especially after deliberation | [verb] To cause someone to come to a decision DECODED (12) [verb] To convert from an encrypted form to plain text. | [verb] To figure out something difficult to interpret. DECOYED (14) [verb] To lead into danger by artifice; to lure into a net or snare; to entrap. | [verb] To act as, or use, a decoy. DECREED (11) [verb] To command by a decree. DECRIED (11) [verb] To denounce as harmful. | [verb] To blame for ills. DEDUCED (12) [verb] To reach a conclusion by applying rules of logic to given premises. | [verb] To take away; to deduct; to subtract. | [verb] (Latinism) To lead forth. DEFACED (14) [verb] To damage or vandalize something, especially a surface, in a visible or conspicuous manner. | [verb] To void or devalue; to nullify or degrade the face value of. | [verb] (flags) To alter a coat of arms or a flag by adding an element to it. DEFAMED (14) [verb] To disgrace; to bring into disrepute. | [verb] To charge; to accuse (someone) of an offence. | [verb] To harm or diminish the reputation of; to disparage. DEFILED (12) [verb] To make unclean, dirty, or impure; soil; befoul. | [verb] To vandalize or add inappropriate contents to something considered sacred or special; desecrate | [verb] To deprive or ruin someone's (sexual) purity or chastity, often not consensually; stain; tarnish; mar; rape DEFINED (12) [verb] To determine with precision; to mark out with distinctness; to ascertain or exhibit clearly. | [verb] To settle, decide (an argument etc.) | [verb] To express the essential nature of something. DEFRAUD (12) [verb] To obtain money or property from (a person) by fraud; to swindle. | [verb] To deprive. DEFUSED (12) [verb] To remove the fuse from (a bomb, etc.). | [verb] To make less dangerous, tense, or hostile. | [verb] To disorder; to make shapeless. DEFUZED (21) DEGREED (10) DEIFIED (12) [verb] To make a god of (something or someone). | [verb] To treat as worthy of worship; to regard as a deity. DEIGNED (10) [verb] To condescend; to do despite a perceived affront to one's dignity. | [verb] To condescend to give; to do something. | [verb] To esteem worthy; to consider worth notice. DELATED (9) [verb] To enlarge; to make bigger. | [verb] To become wider or larger; to expand. | [verb] To speak largely and copiously; to dwell in narration; to enlarge; with "on" or "upon". DELAYED (12) [verb] To put off until a later time; to defer. | [verb] To retard; to stop, detain, or hinder, for a time. | [verb] To allay; to temper. DELETED (9) [verb] To remove, get rid of or erase, especially written or printed material, or data on a computer or other device. DELIMED (11) DELTOID (9) [noun] The deltoid muscle, a triangular muscle on the human shoulder. | [noun] The deltoid ligament, a triangular ligament on the human ankle. | [adjective] In the shape of the upper case Greek letter delta Δ; triangular. DELUDED (10) [verb] To deceive into believing something which is false; to lead into error; to dupe. | [verb] To frustrate or disappoint. | [adjective] Being affected by delusions. DELUGED (10) [verb] To flood with water. | [verb] To overwhelm. DEMIGOD (12) [noun] A half-god or hero; the offspring of a deity and a mortal. | [noun] A lesser deity. DEMISED (11) [verb] To give. | [verb] To convey, as by will or lease. | [verb] To transmit by inheritance. DEMODED (12) DEMOTED (11) [verb] To lower the rank or status of. | [verb] To relegate. DENOTED (9) [verb] To indicate; to mark. | [verb] To make overt. | [verb] To refer to literally; to convey as meaning. DENTOID (9) DENUDED (10) [verb] To divest of all covering; to make bare or naked; to strip. | [adjective] Exposed by erosion DEODAND (10) DEPONED (11) [verb] To testify, especially in the form of a deposition. | [verb] To take the deposition of; to depose. | [verb] To lay, as a stake; to wager. DEPOSED (11) [verb] To put down; to lay down; to deposit; to lay aside; to put away. | [verb] To remove (a leader) from (high) office, without killing the incumbent. | [verb] To give evidence or testimony, especially in response to interrogation during a deposition DEPUTED (11) [verb] To assign (someone or something) to or for something | [verb] To delegate (a task, etc.) to a subordinate | [verb] To deputize (someone), appoint as deputy DERATED (9) [verb] To lower the rated capability of any rated equipment or material. DERIDED (10) [verb] To harshly mock; ridicule. DERIVED (12) [verb] To obtain or receive (something) from something else. | [verb] To deduce (a conclusion) by reasoning. | [verb] To find the derivation of (a word or phrase). DERMOID (11) [adjective] Resembling skin DESCEND (11) [verb] To pass from a higher to a lower place; to move downwards; to come or go down in any way, for example by falling, flowing, walking, climbing etc. | [verb] To enter mentally; to retire. | [verb] (with on or upon) To make an attack, or incursion, as if from a vantage ground; to come suddenly and with violence. DESEXED (16) [verb] To remove another's sexual characteristics or functions, often physical sterilization. DESIRED (9) [verb] To want; to wish for earnestly. | [verb] To put a request to (someone); to entreat. | [verb] To want emotionally or sexually. DESMOID (11) [noun] A fibrous tumour. | [adjective] Pertaining to a bundle. | [adjective] Fibrous; having closely interwoven fibres in bundles. DESPOND (11) [noun] Despondency. | [verb] To give up the will, courage, or spirit; to become dejected, lose heart. DETOXED (16) [verb] To detoxify, especially from alcohol or recreational drugs. DEVELED (12) DEVILED (12) [verb] To make like a devil; to invest with the character of a devil. | [verb] To annoy or bother. | [verb] To work as a ‘devil’; to work for a lawyer or writer without fee or recognition. DEVISED (12) [verb] To use one's intellect to plan or design (something). | [verb] To leave (property) in a will. | [verb] To form a scheme; to lay a plan; to contrive; to consider. DEVOTED (12) [verb] To give one's time, focus one's efforts, commit oneself, etc. entirely for, on, or to a certain matter | [verb] To consign over; to doom | [verb] To execrate; to curse DEWAXED (19) [verb] To remove wax from a material or from a surface. | [adjective] That has been treated by a dewaxing process DIALLED (9) [verb] To control or select something with a dial, or (figuratively) as if with a dial. | [verb] To select a number, or to call someone, on a telephone. | [verb] To use a dial or a telephone. DIAMOND (11) [noun] A glimmering glass-like mineral that is an allotrope of carbon in which each atom is surrounded by four others in the form of a tetrahedron. | [noun] A gemstone made from this mineral. | [noun] A ring containing a diamond. | [noun] The size of type between brilliant and pearl, standardized as 4 1/2-point. DIAPSID (11) [noun] Any of very many reptiles, of the subclass Diapsida, that have a pair of openings in the skull behind each eye DIBBLED (13) [verb] To make holes or plant seeds using, or as if using, a dibble. | [verb] To use a dibble; to make holes in the soil. | [verb] To dib or dip frequently, as in angling. DIDDLED (11) [verb] To cheat; to swindle. | [verb] To have sex with. | [verb] To masturbate (especially of women). DIEHARD (12) [noun] A person with such an attitude. | [adjective] Unreasonably or stubbornly resisting change. | [adjective] Fanatically opposing progress or reform. DIGHTED (13) [verb] To deal with, handle. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. | [verb] To dispose, put (in a given state or condition). DILATED (9) [verb] To enlarge; to make bigger. | [verb] To become wider or larger; to expand. | [verb] To speak largely and copiously; to dwell in narration; to enlarge; with "on" or "upon". DILUTED (9) [verb] To make thinner by adding solvent to a solution, especially by adding water. | [verb] To weaken, especially by adding a foreign substance. | [verb] To cause the value of individual shares or the stake of a shareholder to decrease by increasing the total number of shares. DIMPLED (13) [verb] To create a dimple in. | [verb] To create a dimple in one's face by smiling. | [verb] To form dimples; to sink into depressions or little inequalities. DINDLED (10) DIPLOID (11) [noun] A cell which is diploid. | [noun] An organism with diploid cells. | [adjective] Of a cell, having a pair of each type of chromosome, one of the pair being derived from the ovum and the other from the spermatozoon. Most somatic cells of higher organisms are diploid. DIRTIED (9) [verb] To make (something) dirty. | [verb] To stain or tarnish (somebody) with dishonor. | [verb] To debase by distorting the real nature of (something). DISBAND (11) [verb] To break up or (cause to) cease to exist; to disperse. | [verb] To loose the bands of; to set free. | [verb] To divorce. DISCARD (11) [noun] Anything discarded. | [noun] A discarded playing card in a card game. | [noun] A temporary variable used to receive a value of no importance and unable to be read later. DISCOED (11) [verb] To dance disco-style dances. | [verb] To go to discotheques. DISCOID (11) [noun] A disk-shaped dental excavator designed to remove the carious dentin of a decayed tooth | [adjective] Shaped like a disc/disk. DISCORD (11) [noun] Lack of concord, agreement or harmony. | [noun] Tension or strife resulting from a lack of agreement; dissension. | [noun] An inharmonious combination of simultaneously sounded tones; a dissonance. DISPEND (11) DISTEND (9) [verb] To extend or expand, as from internal pressure; to swell | [verb] To extend; to stretch out; to spread out. | [verb] To cause to swell. DISUSED (9) [verb] To cease the use of. | [verb] To disaccustom. | [adjective] No longer in use. DITCHED (14) [verb] To smear, daub, plaster, or impregnate, especially with dirt which becomes hard and ingrained. | [verb] To discard or abandon. | [verb] To deliberately crash-land an airplane on water. DITTOED (9) DIVIDED (13) [verb] To split or separate (something) into two or more parts. | [verb] To share (something) by dividing it. | [verb] (with by) To calculate the number (the quotient) by which you must multiply one given number (the divisor) to produce a second given number (the dividend). DIVINED (12) [verb] To foretell (something), especially by the use of divination. | [verb] To guess or discover (something) through intuition or insight. | [verb] To search for (underground objects or water) using a divining rod. DIVVIED (15) [verb] To divide into portions. DIZENED (18) DIZZIED (27) [verb] To make dizzy, to bewilder. DOGSLED (10) [noun] A sled, pulled by dogs over ice and snow. | [verb] To ride on a dogsled | [verb] To race dogsleds DOGWOOD (13) [noun] Any of various small trees of the genus Cornus, especially the wild cornel and the flowering cornel | [noun] The wood of such trees and shrubs. | [noun] A wood or tree similar to this genus, used in different parts of the world. DOLLIED (9) [verb] To hit a dolly. | [verb] To move (an object) using a dolly. | [verb] To wash (laundry) in a tub using the stirring device called a dolly. DONATED (9) [verb] To make a donation; to give away something of value to support or contribute towards a cause or for the benefit of another. | [adjective] Having been given freely rather than purchased. DONNERD (9) DOODLED (10) [verb] To draw or scribble aimlessly. | [verb] To drone like a bagpipe. DOUBLED (11) [verb] To multiply by two. | [verb] To fold over so as to make two folds. | [verb] To be the double of; to exceed by twofold; to contain or be worth twice as much as. DOUBTED (11) [verb] To be undecided about; to lack confidence in; to disbelieve, to question. | [verb] To harbour suspicion about; suspect. | [verb] To anticipate with dread or fear; to apprehend. DOUCHED (14) [verb] To administer a douche to; to shower; to douse | [verb] To use a douche. DOVENED (12) DOWELED (12) [verb] To fasten together with dowels. | [verb] To furnish with dowels. DOWERED (12) [verb] To give a dower or dowry. | [verb] To endow. DOZENED (18) DRABBED (13) DRAFTED (12) [verb] To write a first version, make a preliminary sketch. | [verb] To draw in outline; to make a draught, sketch, or plan of, as in architectural and mechanical drawing. | [verb] To write a law. DRAGGED (11) [verb] To pull along a surface or through a medium, sometimes with difficulty. | [verb] To move onward heavily, laboriously, or slowly; to advance with weary effort; to go on lingeringly. | [verb] To act or proceed slowly or without enthusiasm; to be reluctant. DRAINED (9) [verb] To lose liquid. | [verb] To flow gradually. | [verb] To cause liquid to flow out of. DRAMMED (13) DRATTED (9) [verb] To damn or curse. | [adjective] Expressing annoyance or irritation towards the mentioned thing. DRAWLED (12) [verb] To drag on slowly and heavily; to while or dawdle away time indolently. | [verb] To utter or pronounce in a dull, spiritless tone, as if by dragging out the utterance. | [verb] To move slowly and heavily; move in a dull, slow, lazy manner. DREADED (10) [verb] To fear greatly. | [verb] To anticipate with fear. | [verb] To be in dread, or great fear. DREAMED (11) [verb] To see imaginary events in one's mind while sleeping. | [verb] To hope, to wish. | [verb] To daydream. DREDGED (11) [verb] To make a channel deeper or wider using a dredge. | [verb] To bring something to the surface with a dredge. | [verb] (Usually with up) to unearth. DRESSED (9) [verb] To fit out with the necessary clothing; to clothe, put clothes on (something or someone). | [verb] To clothe oneself; to put on clothes. | [verb] To put on the uniform and equipment necessary to play the game. DRIBBED (13) DRIFTED (12) [verb] To move slowly, especially pushed by currents of water, air, etc. | [verb] To move haphazardly without any destination. | [verb] To deviate gently from the intended direction of travel. DRILLED (9) [verb] To create (a hole) by removing material with a drill (tool). | [verb] To practice, especially in (or as in) a military context. | [verb] To cause to drill (practice); to train in military arts. DRIPPED (13) [verb] To fall one drop at a time. | [verb] To leak slowly. | [verb] To let fall in drops. DROLLED (9) DROMOND (11) [noun] A Byzantine bireme, similar to the chelandion, but used primarily for naval combat. DROOLED (9) [verb] To secrete saliva, especially in anticipation of food. | [verb] To secrete any substance in a similar way. | [verb] To react to something with uncontrollable desire. DROOPED (11) [verb] To hang downward; to sag. | [verb] To slowly become limp; to bend gradually. | [verb] To lose all energy, enthusiasm or happiness; to flag. DROPPED (13) [verb] To fall in droplets (of a liquid). | [verb] To drip (a liquid). | [verb] Generally, to fall (straight down). DROUKED (13) DROWNED (12) [verb] To die from suffocation while immersed in water or other fluid. | [verb] To kill by suffocating in water or another liquid. | [verb] To be flooded: to be inundated with or submerged in (literally) water or (figuratively) other things; to be overwhelmed. DROWSED (12) [verb] To be sleepy and inactive. | [verb] To nod off; to fall asleep. | [verb] To advance drowsily. (Used especially in the phrase "drowse one's way" ⇒ sleepily make one's way.) DRUBBED (13) [verb] To beat (someone or something) with a stick. | [verb] To defeat someone soundly; to annihilate or crush. | [verb] To forcefully teach something. DRUDGED (11) [verb] To labour in (or as in) a low servile job. DRUGGED (11) [verb] To administer intoxicating drugs to, generally without the recipient's knowledge or consent. | [verb] To add intoxicating drugs to with the intention of drugging someone. | [verb] To prescribe or administer drugs or medicines. DRUMMED (13) DRYLAND (12) [noun] Land that is arid, but not so dry as to be a desert. DUELLED (9) [verb] To engage in a battle. DUETTED (9) DULLARD (9) [noun] A stupid person; a fool. DUMMIED (13) [verb] To make a mock-up or prototype version of something, without some or all off its intended functionality. | [verb] To feint. DWARFED (15) [verb] To render (much) smaller, turn into a dwarf (version). | [verb] To make appear (much) smaller, puny, tiny. | [verb] To make appear insignificant. DWELLED (12) [verb] To live; to reside. | [verb] To linger (on) a particular thought, idea etc.; to remain fixated (on). | [verb] To be in a given state. DYEWEED (15) DYEWOOD (15) EARTHED (11) [verb] To connect electrically to the earth. | [verb] To bury. | [verb] To burrow. EDIFIED (12) [adjective] Furnished with buildings. | [verb] To build, construct. | [verb] To instruct or improve morally or intellectually. EFFACED (16) [verb] To erase (as anything impressed or inscribed upon a surface); to render illegible or indiscernible. | [verb] To cause to disappear as if by rubbing out or striking out. | [verb] To make oneself inobtrusive as if due to modesty or diffidence. EFFUSED (14) [verb] To emit; to give off | [verb] To gush; to be excitedly talkative and enthusiastic about something | [verb] To pour out like a stream or freely; to cause to exude; to shed. EGESTED (9) [verb] To eliminate undigested food or waste from the body (as feces). EGGHEAD (13) [noun] A bald person, especially a man. | [noun] A bald head. | [noun] A coldly out of personal touch intellectual. EJECTED (17) [verb] To compel (a person or persons) to leave. | [verb] To throw out or remove forcefully. | [verb] To compel (a sports player) to leave the field because of inappropriate behaviour. ELAPSED (10) [verb] (of time) To pass or move by. ELBOWED (13) [verb] To push with the elbow. | [verb] (by extension) To nudge, jostle or push. | [adjective] Having bends or corners. ELECTED (10) [verb] To choose or make a decision (to do something) | [verb] To choose (a candidate) in an election | [noun] One who is elected. ELOINED (8) EMBAYED (15) [verb] To bathe; to steep. | [verb] To shut in, enclose, shelter or trap, such as ships in a bay. | [adjective] Enclosed in (or as though in) a bay; harboured. EMBOWED (15) [verb] To bend like a bow; to curve. | [adjective] Bent, curved or arched like a bow. EMBRUED (12) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). EMENDED (11) [verb] To correct and revise (text or a document). EMERALD (10) [noun] Any of various green gemstones, especially a green transparent form of beryl, highly valued as a precious stone. | [noun] Emerald green, a colour. | [noun] Any hummingbird in the genera Chlorostilbon and Elvira; and some in the genus Amazilia EMERGED (11) [verb] To come into view. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid. | [verb] To become known. EMEROID (10) EMERSED (10) [adjective] (of an aquatic plant) That rises above the surface EMITTED (10) [verb] To send out or give off EMPALED (12) EMPTIED (12) [verb] To make empty; to void; to remove the contents of. | [verb] Of a river, duct, etc: to drain or flow toward an ultimate destination. ENABLED (10) [verb] To make somebody able (to do, or to be, something); to give sufficient ability or power to do or to be; to give strength or ability to. | [verb] To affirm; to make firm and strong. | [verb] To qualify or approve for some role or position; to render sanction or authorization to; to confirm suitability for. ENACTED (10) [verb] To make (a bill) into law | [verb] To act the part of; to play | [verb] To do; to effect ENCAGED (11) [verb] To lock inside a cage; to imprison. ENCASED (10) [verb] To enclose, as in a case. ENCODED (11) [verb] To convert (plain text) into code. | [verb] (communication) To convert source information into another form. | [verb] To constitute the code necessary for the biosynthesis of a protein by means of a matrix so as to transcribe DNA material. ENCORED (10) [verb] To call for an extra performance or repetition of, or by. | [verb] To call for an encore. | [verb] To perform an encore. ENDITED (9) ENDOPOD (11) [noun] Endopodite ENDOWED (12) [verb] To provide with a dower or a dowry. | [verb] To give property to (someone) as a gift; specifically, to provide (a person or institution) with support in the form of a permanent fund of money or other benefits. | [verb] Followed by with, or rarely by of: to enrich or furnish with some faculty or quality. ENDURED (9) [verb] To continue or carry on, despite obstacles or hardships; to persist. | [verb] To tolerate or put up with something unpleasant. | [verb] To last. ENERGID (9) ENFACED (13) ENGAGED (10) [verb] (heading) To interact socially. | [verb] (heading) To interact antagonistically. | [verb] (heading) To interact contractually. ENGINED (9) ENISLED (8) [verb] To make into an island. | [verb] (by extension) To isolate. | [adjective] Placed alone or apart, as if on an island. ENJOYED (18) [verb] To receive pleasure or satisfaction from something | [verb] To have the use or benefit of something. | [verb] To be satisfied or receive pleasure. ENLACED (10) [verb] To bind or encircle with lace, or as with lace | [verb] (by extension) To entangle. ENRAGED (9) [verb] To fill with rage; to provoke to frenzy or madness; to make furious. | [adjective] Angered, made furious, made full of rage. | [adjective] Insane, mad. ENROBED (10) [verb] To invest or adorn with a robe or vestment; to attire. | [verb] To coat or cover. ENSILED (8) [verb] To preserve (forage) in a silo. ENSKIED (12) ENSKYED (15) ENSURED (8) [verb] To make a pledge to (someone); to promise, guarantee (someone of something); to assure. | [verb] To make sure or certain of something (usually some future event or condition). ENTERED (8) [verb] To go or come into an enclosed or partially enclosed space. | [verb] To cause to go (into), or to be received (into); to put in; to insert; to cause to be admitted. | [verb] To go or come into (a state or profession). ENTICED (10) [verb] To lure; to attract by arousing desire or hope. ENWOUND (11) EPOXIED (17) [verb] To glue with epoxy. EPOXYED (20) EQUALED (17) [verb] To be equal to, to have the same value as; to correspond to. | [verb] To make equivalent to; to cause to match. | [verb] To have as its consequence. EQUATED (17) [verb] To consider equal or equivalent. | [verb] To set as equal. ERECTED (10) [verb] To put up by the fitting together of materials or parts. | [verb] To cause to stand up or out. | [verb] To raise and place in an upright or perpendicular position; to set upright; to raise. ERICOID (10) ERMINED (10) ERUCTED (10) [verb] To burp or belch. ERUPTED (10) [verb] To eject something violently (such as lava or water, as from a volcano or geyser). | [verb] To burst forth; to break out. | [verb] To spontaneously release pressure or tension. ESCAPED (12) [verb] To get free; to free oneself. | [verb] To avoid (any unpleasant person or thing); to elude, get away from. | [verb] To avoid capture; to get away with something, avoid punishment. ESCOTED (10) ESSAYED (11) [verb] To try. | [verb] To move forth, as into battle. ESTATED (8) ETHMOID (13) [noun] (bone) A square bone at the root of the nose, forming part of the cranium, and having many perforations through which the olfactory nerves pass to the nose. | [adjective] (bone) Of or relating to the ethmoid bone. EUCHRED (13) [verb] To deceive or outwit. | [adjective] Exhausted; worn out EUPLOID (10) [noun] Any organism having a chromosome number that is an exact multiple of the haploid number for the species. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to euploidy. EVERTED (11) [verb] To turn inside out (like a pocket being emptied) or outwards. | [verb] To move (someone or something) out of the way. | [verb] To turn upside down; to overturn. EVICTED (13) [verb] To expel (one or more people) from their property; to force (one or more people) to move out. EVINCED (13) [verb] To show or demonstrate clearly; to manifest. EVOLVED (14) [verb] To move in regular procession through a system. | [verb] To change; transform. | [verb] To come into being; develop. EXACTED (17) [verb] To demand and enforce the payment or performance of, sometimes in a forcible or imperious way. | [verb] To make desirable or necessary. | [verb] To inflict; to forcibly obtain or produce. EXALTED (15) [verb] To honor; to hold in high esteem. | [verb] To raise in rank, status etc., to elevate. | [verb] To elate, or fill with the joy of success. EXCIDED (18) EXCISED (17) [verb] To impose an excise tax on something. | [verb] To cut out; to remove. EXCITED (17) [verb] To stir the emotions of. | [verb] To arouse or bring out (e.g. feelings); to stimulate. | [verb] To cause an electron to move to a higher than normal state; to promote an electron to an outer level. EXCUSED (17) [verb] To forgive; to pardon. | [verb] To allow to leave, or release from any obligation. | [verb] To provide an excuse for; to explain, with the aim of alleviating guilt or negative judgement. EXERTED (15) [verb] To put in vigorous action. | [verb] To make use of, to apply, especially of something non-material. EXHALED (18) [verb] To expel air from the lungs through the nose or mouth by action of the diaphragm, to breathe out. | [verb] To expel (something, such as tobacco smoke) from the lungs by action of the diaphragm. | [verb] To pass off in the form of vapour; to emerge. EXHUMED (20) [verb] To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter. | [verb] To uncover; to bring to light. EXISTED (15) [verb] (stative) to be; have existence; have being or reality EXPIRED (17) [verb] To die. | [verb] To lapse and become invalid. | [verb] To exhale; to breathe out. EXPOSED (17) [verb] To reveal, uncover, make visible, bring to light, introduce to. | [verb] To subject photographic film to light thereby recording an image. | [verb] To abandon, especially an unwanted baby in the wilderness. EXPOUND (17) [verb] To set out the meaning of; to explain or discuss at length | [verb] To make a statement, especially at length. EXSCIND (17) EXULTED (15) [verb] To rejoice; to be very happy, especially in triumph. FACETED (13) [verb] To cut a facet into a gemstone. | [adjective] Having facets. FACIEND (13) FACTOID (13) [noun] An inaccurate statement or statistic believed to be true because of broad repetition, especially if cited in the media. | [noun] (originally North America) An interesting item of trivia; a minor fact. FAGOTED (12) [verb] To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or bundle. FAINTED (11) [verb] To lose consciousness through a lack of oxygen or nutrients to the brain, usually as a result of suddenly reduced blood flow (may be caused by emotional trauma, loss of blood or various medical conditions). | [verb] To sink into dejection; to lose courage or spirit; to become depressed or despondent. | [verb] To decay; to disappear; to vanish. FAITHED (14) FANCIED (13) [adjective] Imagined. | [verb] To appreciate without jealousy or greed. | [verb] Would like FANFOLD (14) FATBIRD (13) FATHEAD (14) [noun] An idiot; a fool. | [noun] A cyprinid fish of the Mississippi valley, Pimephales promelas, the black-headed minnow. | [noun] A labroid food fish of California; the California sheephead. Semicossyphus pulcher. FATWOOD (14) FAULTED (11) [verb] To criticize, blame or find fault with something or someone. | [verb] To fracture. | [verb] To commit a mistake or error. FAVORED (14) [verb] To look upon fondly; to prefer. | [verb] To encourage, conduce to | [verb] To do a favor [noun sense 1] for; to show beneficence toward. FEASTED (11) [verb] To partake in a feast, or large meal. | [verb] To dwell upon (something) with delight. | [verb] To hold a feast in honor of (someone). FEIGNED (12) [verb] To make a false show or pretence of; to counterfeit or simulate. | [verb] To imagine; to invent; to pretend. | [verb] To make an action as if doing one thing, but actually doing another, for example to trick an opponent. FEINTED (11) [verb] To make a feint, or mock attack. FENLAND (11) [noun] A kind of low-lying ground, often wet or marshy FEOFFED (17) FERRIED (11) [verb] To carry; transport; convey. | [verb] To move someone or something from one place to another, usually repeatedly. | [verb] To carry or transport over a contracted body of water, as a river or strait, in a boat or other floating conveyance plying between opposite shores. FERULED (11) FETCHED (16) [verb] To retrieve; to bear towards; to go and get. | [verb] To obtain as price or equivalent; to sell for. | [verb] To bring or get within reach by going; to reach; to arrive at; to attain; to reach by sailing. FETTLED (11) [verb] To sort out, to fix, to mend, to repair. | [verb] To make preparations; to put things in order; to do trifling business. | [verb] To line the hearth of a furnace with sand prior to pouring molten metal. FEVERED (14) [verb] To put into a fever; to affect with fever. | [verb] To become fevered. | [adjective] Affected by a fever; feverish. FIBERED (13) FIBROID (13) [noun] A benign tumour of the uterus that is composed of either fibrous connective tissue or muscle. | [noun] A fibroma. FIDDLED (13) [verb] To play aimlessly. | [verb] To adjust or manipulate for deception or fraud. | [verb] To play traditional tunes on a violin in a non-classical style. FIELDED (12) [verb] To intercept or catch (a ball) and play it. | [verb] (and other batting sports) To be the team catching and throwing the ball, as opposed to hitting it. | [verb] To place (a team, its players, etc.) in a game. FIGURED (12) [verb] To calculate, to solve a mathematical problem. | [verb] To come to understand. | [verb] To think, to assume, to suppose, to reckon. FILCHED (16) [verb] To illegally take possession of (especially items of low value); to pilfer, to steal. FILETED (11) FIXATED (18) [verb] To make something fixed and stable; to fix. | [verb] To stare fixedly at something. | [verb] To attend to something to the exclusion of all others; used with on. FIZZLED (29) [verb] To sputter or hiss. | [verb] To decay or die off to nothing; to burn out; to end less successfully than previously hoped. FLACCID (15) [adjective] Flabby. | [adjective] Soft; floppy. | [adjective] Lacking energy or vigor. FLACKED (17) [verb] To flutter; palpitate. | [verb] To hang loosely; flag. | [verb] To beat by flapping. FLAGGED (13) [verb] To furnish or deck out with flags. | [verb] To mark with a flag, especially to indicate the importance of something. | [verb] (often with down) To signal to, especially to stop a passing vehicle etc. | [adjective] Paved with flagstones. | [adjective] Having split, bushy ends (of bristles). FLAILED (11) [verb] To beat using a flail or similar implement. | [verb] To wave or swing vigorously | [verb] To thresh. FLAMMED (15) FLANGED (12) FLANKED (15) [verb] To attack the flank(s) of. | [verb] To defend the flank(s) of. | [verb] To place to the side(s) of. FLAPPED (15) [adjective] Fitted with a flap. FLASHED (14) [verb] To cause to shine briefly or intermittently. | [verb] To blink; to shine or illuminate intermittently. | [verb] To be visible briefly. FLATBED (13) [noun] An open freight vehicle with no sides, designed to carry heavy or outsized loads. | [noun] A railway freight car with no sides; a flatcar. | [noun] A document scanner with a flat bed. FLATTED (11) [verb] To make a flat call; to call without raising. | [verb] To become flat or flattened; to sink or fall to an even surface. | [verb] To fall from the pitch. FLECKED (17) [verb] To mark with small spots FLEDGED (13) [verb] To care for a young bird until it is capable of flight. | [verb] To grow, cover or be covered with feathers. | [verb] To decorate with feathers. FLEECED (13) [verb] To con or trick (someone) out of money. | [verb] To shear the fleece from (a sheep or other animal). | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, wool. FLEERED (11) [verb] To make a wry face in contempt, or to grin in scorn | [verb] To grin with an air of civility; to leer. FLEETED (11) [verb] To float. | [verb] To pass over rapidly; to skim the surface of. | [verb] To hasten over; to cause to pass away lightly, or in mirth and joy. FLENSED (11) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLESHED (14) [adjective] Having flesh; corpulent. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified form of flesh or body. FLICKED (17) [verb] To move or hit (something) with a short, quick motion. FLINTED (11) FLIPPED (15) [verb] To throw so as to turn over. | [verb] To put into a quick revolving motion through a snap of the thumb and index finger. | [verb] To win a state (or county) won by another party in the preceding elections FLIRTED (11) [verb] To throw (something) with a jerk or sudden movement; to fling. | [verb] To jeer at; to mock. | [verb] To dart about; to move with quick, jerky motions. FLITTED (11) [verb] To move about rapidly and nimbly. | [verb] To move quickly from one location to another. | [verb] To unpredictably change state for short periods of time. FLOATED (11) [verb] Of an object or substance, to be supported by a liquid of greater density than the object so as that part of the object or substance remains above the surface. | [verb] To cause something to be suspended in a liquid of greater density. | [verb] To be capable of floating. FLOCCED (15) FLOCKED (17) [verb] To congregate in or head towards a place in large numbers. | [verb] To flock to; to crowd. | [verb] To treat a pool with chemicals to remove suspended particles. FLOGGED (13) [verb] To whip or scourge someone or something as punishment. | [verb] To use something to extreme; to abuse. | [verb] To sell. FLOODED (12) [verb] To overflow, as by water from excessive rainfall. | [verb] To cover or partly fill as if by a flood. | [verb] To provide (someone or something) with a larger number or quantity of something than can easily be dealt with. FLOORED (11) [verb] To cover or furnish with a floor. | [verb] To strike down or lay level with the floor; to knock down. | [verb] (driving) To accelerate rapidly. FLOPPED (15) [verb] To fall heavily due to lack of energy. | [verb] To cause to drop heavily. | [verb] To fail completely; not to be successful at all (of a movie, play, book, song etc.). FLOSSED (11) [verb] To clean the area between the teeth using floss. | [verb] To show off, especially by exhibiting one's wealth or talent. | [verb] To perform the floss dance move. FLOURED (11) [verb] To apply flour to something; to cover with flour. | [verb] To reduce to flour. | [verb] To break up into fine globules of mercury in the amalgamation process. FLOUTED (11) [verb] To express contempt for (laws, rules, etc.) by word or action. | [verb] To scorn. FLUBBED (15) [verb] To goof, fumble, or err in the performance of an action. FLUFFED (17) [verb] To make something fluffy. | [verb] To become fluffy, puff up. | [verb] To move lightly like fluff. FLUMPED (15) [verb] To move or fall heavily, or with a dull sound. | [verb] To drop something heavily or with a dull sound. FLUNKED (15) [verb] Of a student, to fail a class; to not pass. | [verb] Of a teacher, to deny a student a passing grade. | [verb] To shirk (a task or duty). FLUORID (11) FLUSHED (14) [verb] To cause to take flight from concealment. | [verb] To take suddenly to flight, especially from cover. | [verb] To cleanse by flooding with generous quantities of a fluid. FOCUSED (13) [verb] (followed by on or upon) To concentrate one's attention. | [verb] To cause (rays of light, etc) to converge at a single point. | [verb] To adjust (a lens, an optical instrument) in order to position an image with respect to the focal plane. FOISTED (11) [verb] To introduce or insert surreptitiously or without warrant. | [verb] To force another to accept especially by stealth or deceit. | [verb] To pass off as genuine or worthy. FOLIOED (11) FONDLED (12) [verb] To touch or stroke lovingly. | [verb] To grasp. FOOTLED (11) [verb] To waste time; to trifle. | [verb] To talk nonsense. FOOTPAD (13) [noun] The soft underside of an animal's paw. | [noun] A medicated bandage for the treatment of corns and warts. | [noun] A thief on foot who robs travellers on the road. FOOZLED (20) [verb] To do something clumsily or awkwardly; to bungle. FORAGED (12) [verb] To search for and gather food for animals, particularly cattle and horses. | [verb] To rampage through, gathering and destroying as one goes. | [verb] To rummage. FORAYED (14) [verb] To scour (an area or place) for food, treasure, booty etc. | [verb] To pillage; to ravage. FOREDID (12) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FORFEND (14) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FORWARD (14) [noun] One of the eight players (comprising two props, one hooker, two locks, two flankers and one number eight, collectively known as the pack) whose primary task is to gain and maintain possession of the ball (compare back). | [noun] A player on a team in football (soccer) in the row nearest to the opposing team's goal, who are therefore principally responsible for scoring goals. | [noun] An umbrella term for a centre or winger in ice hockey. | [noun] An introductory section preceding the main text of a book or other document; a preface or introduction. FOULARD (11) [noun] A lightweight silk or silk-and-cotton fabric, often with a printed pattern. | [noun] A piece of clothing, or a handkerchief, made with this fabric. FOUNDED (12) [verb] To start (an institution or organization). | [verb] To begin building. | [verb] To melt, especially of metal in an industrial setting. FRACTED (13) FRAGGED (13) [verb] To deliberately kill (one's superior officer) with a fragmentation grenade. | [verb] To hit with the explosion of a fragmentation grenade. | [verb] To kill. FRANKED (15) [verb] To place a frank on an envelope. | [verb] To exempt from charge for postage, as a letter, package, or packet, etc. | [verb] To send by public conveyance free of expense. FRAPPED (15) [verb] To draw together tightly; to secure by many turns of a lashing. | [verb] To strike. FREAKED (15) [verb] To make greatly distressed and/or a discomposed appearance | [verb] To be placed or place someone under the influence of a psychedelic drug | [verb] To streak; to variegate FRESHED (14) FRETTED (11) [verb] Especially when describing animals: to consume, devour, or eat. | [verb] To chafe or irritate; to worry. | [verb] To make rough, to agitate or disturb; to cause to ripple. FRIGGED (13) [verb] To fidget, to wriggle around | [verb] To masturbate | [verb] To fuck (misapplied euphemism) FRILLED (11) FRINGED (12) [verb] To decorate with fringe. | [verb] To serve as a fringe. | [adjective] Possessing a fringe. FRISKED (15) [verb] To frolic, gambol, skip, dance, leap. | [verb] To search somebody by feeling his or her body and clothing. FRITTED (11) [verb] To add frit to a glass or ceramic mixture | [verb] To prepare by heat (the materials for making glass); to fuse partially. FRIZZED (29) [verb] Of hair, to form into a mass of tight curls. | [verb] To curl; to make frizzy. | [verb] To form into little burs, knobs, or tufts, as the nap of cloth. FROCKED (17) FROGGED (13) [verb] To hunt or trap frogs. | [verb] To use a pronged plater to transfer (cells) to another plate. | [verb] To spatchcock (a chicken). FRONDED (12) FRONTED (11) [verb] To face (on, to); to be pointed in a given direction. | [verb] To face, be opposite to. | [verb] To face up to, to meet head-on, to confront. FROSTED (11) [noun] A kind of milkshake made with ice cream. | [adjective] Covered in frost; frosty. | [adjective] Appearing to be covered in frost. FROTHED (14) [verb] To create froth in (a liquid). | [verb] (of a liquid) To bubble. | [verb] To spit, vent, or eject, as froth. FROWARD (14) [adjective] Disobedient, contrary, unmanageable; difficult to deal with; with an evil disposition. | [preposition] Away from. FROWNED (14) [verb] To have a frown on one's face. | [verb] To manifest displeasure or disapprobation; to look with disfavour or threateningly. | [verb] To repress or repel by expressing displeasure or disapproval; to rebuke with a look. FRUGGED (13) [verb] To perform this dance. FRUITED (11) [verb] To produce fruit, seeds, or spores. | [adjective] Containing fruit; bearing fruit. FUDDLED (13) [verb] To confuse or befuddle. | [verb] To intoxicate. | [verb] To become intoxicated; to get drunk. FUELLED (11) [verb] To provide with fuel. | [verb] To exacerbate, to cause to grow or become greater. FUMBLED (15) [verb] To handle nervously or awkwardly. | [verb] To grope awkwardly in trying to find something | [verb] To blunder uncertainly. FUNGOID (12) [noun] A fungus, or some other organism closely resembling a fungus. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling a fungus. GABBARD (13) GABBLED (13) [verb] To talk fast, idly, foolishly, or without meaning. | [verb] To utter inarticulate sounds with rapidity. GAGGLED (11) GALLIED (9) GALOPED (11) GAMBLED (13) [verb] To take a risk, with the potential of a positive outcome. | [verb] To play risky games, especially casino games, for monetary gain. | [verb] To risk (something) for potential gain. GARAGED (10) [verb] To store in a garage. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified kind or number of garages. GARBLED (11) [verb] To pick out such parts (of a text) as may serve a purpose; to mutilate; to pervert | [verb] To make false by mutilation or addition | [verb] To sift or bolt, to separate the fine or valuable parts of from the coarse and useless parts, or from dross or dirt GARGLED (10) [verb] To clean one's mouth by holding water or some other liquid in the back of the mouth and blowing air out from the lungs | [verb] To make a sound like the one made while gargling | [verb] To clean a specific part of the body by gargling (almost always throat or mouth) GARLAND (9) [noun] A wreath, especially one of plaited flowers or leaves, worn on the body or draped as a decoration. | [noun] An accolade or mark of honour. | [noun] A metal gutter placed round a mineshaft on the inside, to catch water running down inside the shaft and run it into a drainpipe. GAROTED (9) GAVELED (12) [verb] To divide or distribute according to the gavel system. | [verb] To use a gavel. GELATED (9) GENTLED (9) [verb] To become gentle | [verb] To ennoble | [verb] (animal husbandry) to break; to tame; to domesticate GESSOED (9) GHOSTED (12) [verb] To haunt; to appear to in the form of an apparition. | [verb] To die; to expire. | [verb] To ghostwrite. GIDDIED (11) [verb] To make dizzy or unsteady. | [verb] To reel; to whirl. GIGGLED (11) [verb] To laugh gently or in a high-pitched voice; to laugh in a silly or giddy way. GILLIED (9) GIPSIED (11) GIRDLED (10) [verb] To gird, encircle, or constrain by such means. | [verb] To kill or stunt a tree by removing or inverting a ring of bark. GIRTHED (12) [adjective] Of a sizeable girth; portly. GIZZARD (27) [noun] A portion of the esophagus of either a bird or an annelid that contains ingested grit and is used to grind up ingested food before it is transferred to the stomach. GLACEED (11) GLADDED (11) [verb] To make glad GLAIRED (9) GLAIVED (12) GLANCED (11) [verb] To look briefly (at something). | [verb] To graze a surface. | [verb] To sparkle. GLASSED (9) [verb] To apply fibreglass to. | [verb] To fit with glass; to glaze. | [verb] To enclose in glass. GLEAMED (11) [verb] To shine; to glitter; to glisten. | [verb] To be briefly but strongly apparent. | [verb] To disgorge filth, as a hawk. GLEANED (9) [verb] To collect (grain, grapes, etc.) left behind after the main harvest or gathering. | [verb] To gather what is left in (a field or vineyard). | [verb] To gather information in small amounts, with implied difficulty, bit by bit. GLEEKED (13) GLEETED (9) GLENOID (9) GLINTED (9) [verb] To flash or gleam briefly. | [verb] To glance; to peep forth, as a flower from the bud; to glitter. | [verb] To cause to flash or gleam; to reflect. GLOATED (9) [verb] To exhibit a conspicuous (sometimes malevolent) pleasure or sense of self-satisfaction, often at an adversary's misfortune. | [verb] To triumph, crow, relish, glory, revel. GLOBOID (11) GLOCHID (14) [noun] A small, detachable, irritant spine occurring in dense clusters in the areoles of certain cacti such as the prickly pear. GLOMMED (13) [verb] To steal, to grab. | [verb] To stare. | [verb] To attach. GLOOMED (11) [verb] To be dark or gloomy. | [verb] To look or feel sad, sullen or despondent. | [verb] To render gloomy or dark; to obscure; to darken. GLOPPED (13) [verb] To stare in amazement. | [verb] To apply (a liquid) thickly and messily. | [verb] To swallow greedily. GLORIED (9) [adjective] Illustrious, honourable | [verb] To exult with joy; to rejoice. | [verb] To boast; to be proud. GLOSSED (9) [verb] To give a gloss or sheen to. | [verb] To make (something) attractive by deception | [verb] To become shiny. GLOUTED (9) GLUGGED (11) [verb] To flow in noisy bursts. | [verb] To quickly swallow liquid. GLUTTED (9) [verb] To fill to capacity; to satisfy all demand or requirement; to sate. | [verb] To eat gluttonously or to satiety. GNARLED (9) [verb] To knot or twist something. | [verb] To snarl or growl; to gnar. | [adjective] Knotty and misshapen. | [verb] To knot or twist something. GNARRED (9) GNASHED (12) [verb] To grind (one's teeth) in pain or in anger. | [verb] To grind between the teeth. | [verb] To run away. GOATEED (9) GOBBLED (13) [verb] To eat hastily or greedily; to scoff or scarf (often used with up) | [verb] To make the sound of a turkey. GOBIOID (11) GODHEAD (13) [noun] Divinity or godhood, divine essence or nature. | [noun] God. | [noun] Any deity or idol. GODHOOD (13) GODSEND (10) [noun] An unexpected good fortune or benefit; a windfall. GOGGLED (11) [verb] To stare (at something) with wide eyes. | [verb] To roll the eyes. | [adjective] Wearing goggles. GOLIARD (9) GORMAND (11) GOWANED (12) GRABBED (13) [verb] To grip suddenly; to seize; to clutch. | [verb] To make a sudden grasping or clutching motion (at something). | [verb] To restrain someone; to arrest. GRAFTED (12) [verb] To insert (a graft) in a branch or stem of another tree; to propagate by insertion in another stock; also, to insert a graft upon. | [verb] To insert scions (grafts) from one tree, or kind of tree, etc., into another; to practice grafting. | [verb] To implant a portion of (living flesh or akin) in a lesion so as to form an organic union. GRAINED (9) [verb] To feed grain to. | [verb] To make granular; to form into grains. | [verb] To form grains, or to assume a granular form, as the result of crystallization; to granulate. GRANDAD (10) [noun] Grandfather | [noun] A familiar or disparaging term of address to an old man. GRANTED (9) [verb] (ditransitive) to give (permission or wish) | [verb] (ditransitive) To bestow or confer, with or without compensation, particularly in answer to prayer or request; to give. | [verb] To agree with (someone) on (something); to accept (something) for the sake of argument; to admit to (someone) that (something) is true. GRAPHED (14) [verb] To draw a graph. | [verb] To draw a graph of a function. GRASPED (11) [verb] To grip; to take hold, particularly with the hand. | [verb] To understand. | [verb] To take advantage of something, to seize, to jump at a chance. GRASSED (9) [verb] To lay out on the grass; to knock down (an opponent etc.). | [verb] To act as a grass or informer, to betray; to report on (criminals etc) to the authorities. | [verb] To cover with grass or with turf. GREASED (9) [verb] To put grease or fat on something, especially in order to lubricate. | [verb] To bribe. | [verb] To cause to go easily; to facilitate. GREAVED (12) GREENED (9) [verb] To make (something) green, to turn (something) green. | [verb] To become or grow green in colour. | [verb] To add greenspaces to (a town, etc.). GREETED (9) [verb] To welcome in a friendly manner, either in person or through another means e.g. writing or over the phone/internet | [verb] To arrive at or reach, or meet (talking of something which brings joy) | [verb] To accost; to address. GRIEVED (12) [verb] To cause sorrow or distress to. | [verb] To feel very sad about; to mourn; to sorrow for. | [verb] To experience grief. GRIFTED (12) [verb] To obtain illegally, as by con game. | [verb] To obtain money illegally. | [verb] To obtain money immorally or through deceitful means. GRILLED (9) [verb] To cook (food) on a grill; to barbecue. | [verb] To cook food under the element of a stove or only under the top element of an oven – broil, salamander. | [verb] To interrogate; to question aggressively or harshly. | [adjective] Fitted with a grille. GRINDED (10) GRINNED (9) [verb] To smile, parting the lips so as to show the teeth. | [verb] To express by grinning. | [verb] To show the teeth, like a snarling dog. GRIPPED (13) [verb] To take hold of, particularly with the hand. | [verb] To help or assist, particularly in an emotional sense. | [verb] To do something with another that makes you happy/gives you relief. GRITTED (9) [verb] Apparently only in grit one's teeth: to clench, particularly in reaction to pain or anger. | [verb] To cover with grit. | [verb] To give forth a grating sound, like sand under the feet; to grate; to grind. GROANED (9) [verb] To make a groan. | [verb] To strive after earnestly, as if with groans. GROINED (9) [verb] To deliver a blow to the genitals of. | [verb] To build with groins. | [verb] (literary) To hollow out, to excavate. GROOMED (11) [verb] To attend to one's appearance and clothing. | [verb] To care for (horses or other animals) by brushing and cleaning them. | [verb] To prepare (someone) for election or appointment. GROOVED (12) [verb] To cut a groove or channel in; to form into channels or grooves; to furrow. | [verb] To perform, dance to, or enjoy rhythmic music. | [adjective] Having grooves GROSSED (9) [verb] To earn money, not including expenses. GROUPED (11) [verb] To put together to form a group. | [verb] To come together to form a group. GROUSED (9) [verb] To seek or shoot grouse. | [verb] To complain or grumble. GROUTED (9) [verb] To insert mortar between tiles. GROWLED (12) [verb] To utter a deep guttural sound, as an angry animal; to give forth an angry, grumbling sound. | [verb] Of a wind instrument: to produce a low-pitched rumbling sound. | [verb] To send a user a message via the Growl software library. GRUBBED (13) [verb] To scavenge or in some way scrounge, typically for food. | [verb] To dig; to dig up by the roots; to root out by digging; often followed by up. | [verb] To supply with food. GRUDGED (11) [verb] To be unwilling to give or allow (someone something). | [verb] To grumble, complain; to be dissatisfied. | [verb] To hold or harbour with malicious disposition or purpose; to cherish enviously. GRUELED (9) GRUFFED (15) GRUMPED (13) [verb] To complain. | [verb] To be grumpy. GRUNTED (9) [verb] (of a person) To make a grunt or grunts. | [verb] (of a pig) To make a grunt or grunts. | [verb] To break wind; to fart. GUARDED (10) [verb] To protect from danger; to secure against surprise, attack, or injury; to keep in safety; to defend. | [verb] To keep watch over, in order to prevent escape or restrain from acts of violence, or the like. | [verb] To watch by way of caution or defense; to be caution; to be in a state or position of defense or safety. GUESSED (9) [verb] To reach a partly (or totally) unqualified conclusion. | [verb] To solve by a correct conjecture; to conjecture rightly. | [verb] To suppose (introducing a proposition of uncertain plausibility). GUESTED (9) [verb] To appear as a guest, especially on a broadcast | [verb] As a musician, to play as a guest, providing an instrument that a band/orchestra does not normally have in its line up (for instance, percussion in a string band) | [verb] To receive or entertain hospitably. GUGGLED (11) GUISARD (9) GULLIED (9) [verb] To flow noisily. | [verb] To wear away into a gully or gullies. GUMWEED (14) GUMWOOD (14) GURGLED (10) [verb] To flow with a bubbling sound. | [verb] To make such a sound. GURNARD (9) [noun] Any of various marine fish of the family Triglidae that have a large armored head and fingerlike pectoral fins used for crawling along the sea bottom. GUSSIED (9) GUTTLED (9) GUZZLED (27) [verb] To drink or eat quickly, voraciously, or to excess; to gulp down; to swallow greedily, continually, or with gusto. | [verb] To consume alcoholic beverages, especially frequently or habitually. | [verb] (by extension) To consume anything quickly, greedily, or to excess, as if with insatiable thirst. GYPSIED (14) GYRATED (12) [verb] To revolve round a central point; to move spirally about an axis, as a tornado; to revolve. HABITED (13) [verb] To clothe. | [verb] To inhabit. | [adjective] Dressed in a habit. HACKLED (17) [verb] To dress (flax or hemp) with a hackle; to prepare fibres of flax or hemp for spinning. | [verb] To separate, as the coarse part of flax or hemp from the fine, by drawing it through the teeth of a hackle or hatchel. | [verb] To tear asunder; to break into pieces. HAEMOID (13) HAGGARD (13) [noun] A hunting bird captured as an adult. | [noun] A young or untrained hawk or falcon. | [noun] A fierce, intractable creature. | [noun] (Isle of Man) A stackyard, an enclosure on a farm for stacking grain, hay, etc. HAGGLED (13) [verb] To argue for a better deal, especially over prices with a seller. | [verb] To hack (cut crudely) | [verb] To stick at small matters; to chaffer; to higgle. HALBERD (13) [noun] A hand weapon consisting of a long pole fitted with a metal head; the head consists of a blade similar to an axe and usually a spike or hook. HALLOED (11) [verb] To shout, or to call with a loud voice. | [verb] To chase while shouting "hallo!" | [verb] To cry "hallo" (to someone). HALYARD (14) [noun] A rope used to raise or lower a sail, flag, spar or yard. HANDLED (12) [verb] To touch; to feel or hold with the hand(s). | [verb] To accustom to the hand; to take care of with the hands. | [verb] To manage, use, or wield with the hands. HAPLOID (13) [noun] A cell which is haploid. | [noun] An organism, such as a fungus, with haploid cells. | [adjective] (of a cell) Having a single set of unpaired chromosomes. HARRIED (11) [adjective] Stressed, rushed, panicked, overly busy or preoccupied. | [adjective] Harassed. | [verb] To plunder, pillage, assault. HASSLED (11) [verb] To trouble, to bother, to annoy. | [verb] To pick a fight or start an argument. HATBAND (13) [noun] A band fastened around a hat. HATCHED (16) [verb] To close with a hatch or hatches. | [verb] (of young animals) To emerge from an egg. | [verb] (of eggs) To break open when a young animal emerges from it. HAUNTED (11) [verb] To inhabit, or visit frequently (most often used in reference to ghosts). | [verb] To make uneasy, restless. | [verb] To stalk, to follow HAVENED (14) HAVERED (14) [verb] To hem and haw | [verb] To talk foolishly; to chatter. HAYSEED (14) [noun] Seeds from grass that has become hay. | [noun] Cruft from bits of hay that sticks to clothing, etc. | [noun] A rustic person; a yokel or bumpkin. HAYWARD (17) HEARSED (11) HEARTED (11) [verb] To be fond of. Often bracketed or abbreviated with a heart symbol. | [verb] To give heart to; to hearten; to encourage. | [verb] To fill an interior with rubble, as a wall or a breakwater. HECKLED (17) [verb] To question harshly in an attempt to find or reveal weaknesses. | [verb] To insult, tease, make fun of or badger. | [verb] To prepare flax for spinning using special combs called hackles HEISTED (11) [verb] To steal, rob or hold up (something). HELIPAD (13) [noun] A small landing place for helicopters, denoted by a large "H". HELLOED (11) [verb] To greet with "hello". HENNAED (11) [verb] To dye or tattoo with henna. | [adjective] Dyed with henna HERRIED (11) HEXAPOD (20) [noun] Any organism, being or robot with six legs. | [noun] An arthropod with six feet; a member of subphylum Hexapoda. | [noun] An insect. HIGGLED (13) [verb] To hawk or peddle provisions. | [verb] To wrangle (over a price, terms of an agreement, etc.); to haggle. HIGHTED (15) HILLOED (11) HINNIED (11) HIRPLED (13) [verb] To walk with a limp, to drag a limb, to walk lamely; to move with a gait somewhere between walking and crawling. HIRSLED (11) HISTOID (11) HITCHED (16) [verb] To pull with a jerk. | [verb] To attach, tie or fasten. | [verb] To marry oneself to; especially to get hitched. HOARDED (12) [verb] To amass, usually for one's own private collection. HOBBLED (15) [verb] To fetter by tying the legs; to restrict (a horse) with hobbles. | [verb] To walk lame, or unevenly. | [verb] To move roughly or irregularly. HOCUSED (13) [verb] To play a trick on, to trick (someone); to hoax; to cheat. | [verb] To stupefy (someone) with drugged liquor (especially in order to steal from them). | [verb] To drug (liquor). HOGTIED (12) [verb] To tie an animal's or someone's feet together; originally all four legs of a quadruped. | [verb] To render helpless. HOGWEED (15) [noun] Any coarse weedy herb. | [noun] An umbelliferous plant, of genus Heracleum, most species of which are phototoxic. | [noun] Certain plants from the genera Ambrosia, Erigeron, or Heracleum. HOICKED (17) [verb] To play such a shot. | [verb] To lift (a heavy object) carelessly; hoist. | [verb] To throw something out. HOISTED (11) [verb] To raise; to lift; to elevate (especially, to raise or lift to a desired elevation, by means of tackle or pulley, said of a sail, a flag, a heavy package or weight). | [verb] To lift a trophy or similar prize into the air in celebration of a victory. | [verb] To lift someone up to be flogged. HOLLAED (11) HOLLAND (11) [noun] A type of linen cloth, originally from Holland. HOLLOED (11) HOMAGED (14) HOMERED (13) [verb] To hit a homer; to hit a home run. HOMINID (13) [noun] Any primate of the taxonomic family Hominidae. All the great apes (chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans and humans). | [adjective] Of the Hominidae HONDLED (12) HONEYED (14) [verb] To sweeten; to make agreeable. | [verb] To be gentle, agreeable, or coaxing; to talk fondly; to use endearments. | [verb] To be or become obsequiously courteous or complimentary; to fawn. HONORED (11) [verb] To think of highly, to respect highly; to show respect for; to recognise the importance or spiritual value of | [verb] To conform to, abide by, act in accordance with (an agreement, treaty, promise, request, or the like) | [verb] To confer (bestow) an honour or privilege upon (someone) HOPHEAD (16) [noun] A drug addict. | [noun] A beer enthusiast or homebrewer. HOPPLED (15) [verb] To impede by a hopple; to tie the feet of (a horse or a cow) loosely together; to hobble. | [verb] To entangle; to hamper. HOPTOAD (13) HOTCHED (16) [verb] To move irregularly up and down. | [verb] To swarm (with). HOTHEAD (14) [noun] One who angers easily or goes in search of arguments or fights. | [noun] One who reacts quickly and without thinking carefully first HOUNDED (12) [verb] To persistently harass. | [verb] To urge on against; to set (dogs) upon in hunting. HOVELED (14) HOVERED (14) [verb] To float in the air. | [verb] To linger or hang in one place, especially in an uncertain manner. | [verb] To waver, or be uncertain. HOWDIED (15) HUDDLED (13) [verb] To crowd together. | [verb] To curl one's legs up to the chest and keep one's arms close to the torso; to crouch; to assume a position similar to that of an embryo in the womb. | [verb] To get together and discuss a topic. HULLOED (11) [verb] To greet with "hello". HUMBLED (15) [verb] To defeat or reduce the power, independence, or pride of | [verb] To make humble or lowly; to make less proud or arrogant; to make meek and submissive. | [adjective] (usually qualifying a first-person pronoun) Grateful for the support of others, touched; honored, flattered. HUMORED (13) [adjective] (only in combination with good, bad or ill) Having a particular disposition or mood. See good humor, bad humor, ill humor. | [verb] To pacify by indulging. HUMPHED (18) HUNCHED (16) [verb] To bend the top of one's body forward while raising one's shoulders. | [verb] To raise (one's shoulders) (while lowering one's head or bending the top of one's body forward); to curve (one's body) forward (sometimes followed by up). | [verb] To walk (somewhere) while hunching one's shoulders. HUNDRED (12) [noun] A hundred-dollar bill, or any other note denominated 100 (e.g. a hundred euros). | [noun] An administrative subdivision of southern English counties formerly reckoned as comprising 100 hides (households or families) and notionally equal to 12,000 acres. | [noun] (by extension) Similar divisions in other areas, particularly in other areas of Britain or the British Empire HURDLED (12) [verb] To jump over something while running. | [verb] To compete in the track and field events of hurdles (e.g. high hurdles). | [verb] To overcome an obstacle. HURRIED (11) [adjective] Done in a hurry; rushed. | [verb] To do things quickly. | [verb] Often with up, to speed up the rate of doing something. HURTLED (11) [verb] To move rapidly, violently, or without control. | [verb] To meet with violence or shock; to clash; to jostle. | [verb] To make a threatening sound, like the clash of arms; to make a sound as of confused clashing or confusion; to resound. HUSBAND (13) [noun] The master of a house; the head of a family; a householder. | [noun] A tiller of the ground; a husbandman. | [noun] A prudent or frugal manager. HUSTLED (11) [verb] To push someone roughly, to crowd, to jostle. | [verb] To rush or hurry. | [verb] To bundle; to stow something quickly. HUTCHED (16) HUZZAED (29) [verb] To cheer with a huzzah sound. HYALOID (14) [noun] The hyaloid membrane | [adjective] Transparent or glassy HYDATID (15) [noun] A cyst due to infection by larvae of some species of the tapeworm Echinococcus. HYDROID (15) [noun] Any of many colonial coelenterates that exist mainly as a polyp; a hydrozoan | [adjective] Of or pertaining to such creatures HYENOID (14) HYPNOID (16) ICICLED (12) IDEATED (9) [verb] To apprehend in thought so as to fix and hold in the mind; to memorize. | [verb] To generate an idea. IGNITED (9) [verb] To set fire to (something), to light (something) | [verb] To spark off (something), to trigger | [verb] To commence burning. IGNORED (9) [verb] To deliberately not listen or pay attention to. | [verb] To pretend to not notice someone or something. | [verb] Fail to notice. ILLUMED (10) [verb] To throw or spread light upon; to make light or bright IMBIBED (14) [verb] To drink (used frequently of alcoholic beverages). | [verb] To take in; absorb. IMBRUED (12) [verb] To stain (in, with, blood, slaughter, etc.). | [adjective] Stained with blood; wounded, bloody. | [adjective] Stained with blood. IMMIXED (19) IMMURED (12) [verb] To cloister, confine, imprison: to lock up behind walls. | [verb] To put or bury within a wall. | [verb] (of a growing crystal) To trap or capture (an impurity); chiefly in the participial adjective immured and gerund or gerundial noun immuring. IMPALED (12) [verb] To pierce (something) with any long, pointed object. | [verb] To place two coats of arms side by side on the same shield (often those of two spouses upon marriage). | [verb] To pierce with a pale; to put to death by fixing on a sharp stake. IMPAVID (15) IMPEDED (13) [verb] To get in the way of; to hinder. IMPLEAD (12) [verb] To sue in court, raise an action against a defendant IMPLIED (12) [adjective] Suggested without being stated directly; implicated or hinted at. | [verb] (of a proposition) to have as a necessary consequence | [verb] (of a person) to suggest by logical inference IMPONED (12) IMPOSED (12) [verb] To establish or apply by authority. | [verb] To be an inconvenience (on or upon) | [verb] To enforce: compel to behave in a certain way IMPOUND (12) [noun] A place in which things are impounded | [noun] A state of being impounded | [noun] That which has been impounded IMPUTED (12) [verb] To attribute or ascribe (responsibility or fault) to a cause or source. | [verb] To ascribe (sin or righteousness) to someone by substitution. | [verb] To take into account. INARMED (10) INBOARD (10) [noun] An engine located within the hull of a ship | [noun] A boat with such an engine | [verb] To discount a product in order to increase sales INBOUND (10) [noun] (logistics) An inbound shipment. | [verb] To pass a ball inbounds | [adjective] Coming in, heading inwards INBREED (10) [verb] To breed or reproduce with those that are related. | [verb] To breed with those that share common traits or qualities. | [verb] To produce or generate within. INCAGED (11) INCASED (10) [verb] To enclose, as in a case. INCISED (10) [verb] To cut in or into with a sharp instrument; to carve; to engrave. INCITED (10) [verb] To stir up or excite; to rouse or goad into action. INCUSED (10) [verb] To hammer or press (usually onto a coin) INDEXED (16) [verb] To arrange an index for something, especially a long text. | [verb] To inventory, to take stock. | [verb] To normalise in order to account for inflation; to correct for inflation by linking to a price index in order to maintain real levels. INDITED (9) [verb] To physically make letters and words on a writing surface; to inscribe. | [verb] To write, especially a literary or artistic work; to compose. | [verb] To dictate; to prompt. INDOWED (12) INDUCED (11) [verb] To lead by persuasion or influence; incite or prevail upon. | [verb] To cause, bring about, lead to. | [verb] To cause or produce (electric current or a magnetic state) by a physical process of induction. INFIELD (11) [noun] The area inside a racetrack or running track. | [noun] A constrained scope or area. | [noun] An area to cultivate: a field INFIXED (18) [verb] To set; to fasten or fix by piercing or thrusting in. | [verb] To instill. | [verb] To insert a morpheme inside an existing word. INFUSED (11) [verb] To cause to become an element of something; to insert or fill. | [verb] To steep in a liquid, so as to extract the soluble constituents (usually medicinal or herbal). | [verb] To inspire; to inspirit or animate; to fill (with). INGOTED (9) INHALED (11) [verb] To draw air into the lungs, through the nose or mouth by action of the diaphragm. | [verb] To draw air or any form of gas (either in a pure form, or mixed with small particles in form of aerosols/smoke -sometimes stemming from a medicament) into the lungs, through the nose or mouth by action of the diaphragm. | [verb] To eat very quickly. INHERED (11) [verb] To be inherent; to be an essential or intrinsic part of; to be fixed or permanently incorporated with something INHUMED (13) [verb] To bury in a grave. INJURED (15) [verb] To wound or cause physical harm to a living creature. | [verb] To damage or impair. | [verb] To do injustice to. INKWOOD (15) INLACED (10) INSIPID (10) [adjective] Unappetizingly flavorless. | [adjective] Flat; lacking character or definition. INSTEAD (8) [adverb] In the place of something (usually mentioned earlier); as a substitute or alternative. INSURED (8) [verb] To make a pledge to (someone); to promise, guarantee (someone of something); to assure. | [verb] To make sure or certain of something (usually some future event or condition). | [verb] To provide for compensation if some specified risk occurs. Often agreed by policy (contract) to offer financial compensation in case of an accident, theft or other undesirable event. INTONED (8) [verb] To give tone or variety of tone to; to vocalize. | [verb] To utter with a musical or prolonged note or tone; to speak or recite with singing voice; to chant. | [verb] To utter a tone; utter a protracted sound. INURNED (8) [verb] To place (the remains of a person who has died) in an urn or other container. | [verb] To hold or contain (the remains of a person who has died). | [adjective] Of cremated ashes: placed in an urn; buried, entombed. INVADED (12) [verb] To move into. | [verb] To enter by force in order to conquer. | [verb] To infest or overrun. INVALID (11) [adjective] Not valid; not true, correct, acceptable or appropriate. | [noun] (sometimes offensive) Any person with a disability or illness. | [noun] (sometimes offensive) A person who is confined to home or bed because of illness, disability or injury; one who is too sick or weak to care for themselves. INVITED (11) [verb] To ask for the presence or participation of someone or something. | [verb] To request formally. | [verb] To encourage. INVOKED (15) [verb] To call upon (a person, a god) for help, assistance or guidance. | [verb] To solicit, petition for, appeal to a favorable attitude. | [verb] To call to mind (something) for some purpose. INWOUND (11) IODATED (9) IODISED (9) [verb] To treat or react with iodine. | [adjective] Treated with iodine or an iodide. IODIZED (18) [adjective] Treated with iodine or an iodide. IONISED (8) [verb] To dissociate atoms or molecules into electrically charged species; to be thus dissociated. IONIZED (17) [verb] To dissociate atoms or molecules into electrically charged species; to be thus dissociated. IRACUND (10) [adjective] Angry; irritable ISOLEAD (8) JANGLED (16) [verb] To make a rattling metallic sound. | [verb] To cause something to make a rattling metallic sound. | [verb] To irritate. JARHEAD (18) [noun] A US marine. JAUNCED (17) JAUNTED (15) [verb] To ramble here and there; to stroll; to make an excursion. | [verb] To ride on a jaunting car. | [verb] To jolt; to jounce. JAYBIRD (20) JELLIED (15) [adjective] Converted into jelly; congealed | [adjective] Cooked in jelly | [verb] To wiggle like jelly. JEMMIED (19) [verb] To shoehorn, to cram. | [verb] To pry (something, especially a lock) open with or as if with a crowbar. JEOPARD (17) JERREED (15) JETBEAD (17) JETTIED (15) JEWELED (18) [verb] To bejewel; to decorate or bedeck with jewels or gems. | [adjective] Set with jewels JIGGLED (17) [verb] To shake something gently; to rattle or wiggle. | [verb] To shake, rattle, or wiggle. JIMMIED (19) [verb] To pry (something, especially a lock) open with or as if with a crowbar. JINGLED (16) [verb] To make a noise of metal or glass clattering against itself. | [verb] To cause to make a noise of metal or glass clattering against itself. | [verb] To rhyme or sound with a jingling effect. JOGGLED (17) [verb] To shake slightly; to push suddenly but slightly, so as to cause to shake or totter; to jostle; to jog. | [verb] To shake or totter; to slip out of place. | [verb] To jog or run while juggling. JOINTED (15) [adjective] Having joints. | [adjective] (of an entertainment venue) Extremely full of people, packed, chockablock. | [verb] To unite by a joint or joints; to fit together; to prepare so as to fit together JOISTED (15) JOLLIED (15) [verb] To amuse or divert. JOSTLED (15) [verb] To bump into or brush against while in motion; to push aside. | [verb] To move through by pushing and shoving. | [verb] To be close to or in physical contact with. JOUNCED (17) [verb] To jolt; to shake, especially by rough riding or by driving over obstructions. JOUSTED (15) [verb] To engage in mock combat on horseback, as two knights in the lists; to tilt. | [verb] To engage in verbal sparring over an important issue. (used of two people, both of whom participate more or less equally) | [verb] To touch penises while engaging in a sex act, especially oral sex. JUGGLED (17) [verb] To manipulate objects, such as balls, clubs, beanbags, rings, etc. in an artful or artistic manner. Juggling may also include assorted other circus skills such as the diabolo, devil sticks, hat, and cigar box manipulation as well. | [verb] To handle or manage many tasks at once. | [verb] To deceive by trick or artifice. JUGHEAD (19) JUMBLED (19) [verb] To mix or confuse. | [verb] To meet or unite in a confused way. | [adjective] In disarray, mixed up. JUNGLED (16) JUSTLED (15) JUTTIED (15) KATYDID (16) [noun] A relative of grasshoppers and crickets, in the family Tettigoniidae. KAYAKED (19) [verb] To use a kayak, to travel or race in a kayak. | [verb] To traverse (a body of water) by kayak. KECKLED (18) KEYCARD (17) [noun] A usually plastic card which stores a digital signature that is used to operate an electronic access control lock. KEYWORD (18) [noun] Any word used as the key to a code. | [noun] Any word used in a reference work to link to other words or other information. | [noun] A reserved word used to identify a specific command, function etc. KIBBLED (16) KILORAD (12) KINDLED (13) [verb] To start (a fire) or light (a torch, a match, coals, etc.). | [verb] To arouse or inspire (a passion, etc). | [verb] To begin to grow or take hold. KINDRED (13) [noun] (often plurale tantum) Distant and close relatives, collectively; kin. | [noun] (often plurale tantum) People of the same ethnic descent, not including speaker; brethren. | [noun] A grouping of relatives. KIRTLED (12) KITTLED (12) [verb] To tickle, to touch lightly. | [verb] To bring forth young, as a cat; to kitten; to litter. KNACKED (18) KNAPPED (16) [verb] To shape a brittle material having conchoidal fracture, usually a mineral (flint, obsidian, chert etc.), by breaking away flakes, often forming a sharp edge or point. | [verb] To rap or strike sharply. | [verb] To bite; to bite off; to break short. KNARRED (12) KNEADED (13) [verb] To work and press into a mass, usually with the hands; especially, to work, as by repeated pressure with the knuckles, into a well mixed mass, the materials of bread, cake, etc. | [verb] To treat or form as if by kneading; to beat. | [verb] (of cats) To make an alternating pressing motion with the two front paws. KNEELED (12) [verb] To rest on one's bent knees, sometimes only one; to move to such a position. | [verb] To cause to kneel. | [verb] To rest on (one's) knees KNEEPAD (14) [noun] A protective garment worn on a knee to protect it from injury, for example due to a blow or a fall. KNELLED (12) [verb] To ring a bell slowly, especially for a funeral; to toll. | [verb] To signal or proclaim something (especially a death) by ringing a bell. | [verb] To summon by, or as if by, ringing a bell. KNITTED (12) [verb] To turn thread or yarn into a piece of fabric by forming loops that are pulled through each other. This can be done by hand with needles or by machine. | [verb] To join closely and firmly together. | [verb] To become closely and firmly joined; become compacted. KNOBBED (16) [verb] (of a man) To have sex with. | [adjective] Having a knob or knobs. KNOCKED (18) [verb] To strike for admittance; to rap upon, as a door. | [verb] To criticize verbally; to denigrate; to undervalue. | [verb] To kick a ball towards another player; to pass. KNOLLED (12) [verb] To ring (a bell) mournfully; to knell. | [verb] To sound, like a bell; to knell. | [verb] To arrange related objects in parallel or at 90 degree angles. KNOPPED (16) KNOTTED (12) [verb] To form into a knot; to tie with a knot or knots. | [verb] To form wrinkles in the forehead, as a sign of concentration, concern, surprise, etc. | [verb] To unite closely; to knit together. KNOUTED (12) [verb] To flog or beat with a knout. KNURLED (12) KOTOWED (15) KRAALED (12) [verb] To enclose (livestock) within a kraal or stockade. LABELED (10) [verb] To put a label (a ticket or sign) on (something). | [verb] (ditransitive) To give a label to (someone or something) in order to categorise that person or thing. | [verb] To replace specific atoms by their isotope in order to track the presence or movement of this isotope through a reaction, metabolic pathway or cell. LABORED (10) [verb] To toil, to work. | [verb] To belabour, to emphasise or expand upon (a point in a debate, etc). | [verb] To be oppressed with difficulties or disease; to do one's work under conditions which make it especially hard or wearisome; to move slowly, as against opposition, or under a burden. LABROID (10) LADENED (9) LAGERED (9) LAGGARD (10) [noun] One who lags behind; one who takes more time than is necessary or than the others in a group. | [adjective] Lagging behind; taking more time than the others in a group. | [adjective] (animal husbandry) Not growing as quickly as the rest of the flock or herd. LALLAND (8) LANATED (8) LANGUID (9) [adjective] Lacking enthusiasm, energy, or strength; drooping or flagging from weakness, fatigue, or lack of energy | [adjective] Heavy; dull; dragging; wanting spirit or animation; listless; apathetic. | [noun] A languet in an organ (musical instrument). LANIARD (8) [noun] A short rope used for fastening rigging. | [noun] A cord used to hold a small object such as a key, whistle, card, or knife, worn around the neck or wrist: a form of necklace or wristband. | [noun] A cord with a hook; once used to fire artillery. LANYARD (11) [noun] A short rope used for fastening rigging. | [noun] A cord used to hold a small object such as a key, whistle, card, or knife, worn around the neck or wrist: a form of necklace or wristband. | [noun] A cord with a hook; once used to fire artillery. LAPELED (10) LASSOED (8) [verb] To catch with a lasso. LATCHED (13) [verb] To close or lock as if with a latch. | [verb] To catch; lay hold of. | [verb] To smear; to anoint. LATENED (8) LATERAD (8) LAUGHED (12) [verb] To show mirth, satisfaction, or derision, by peculiar movement of the muscles of the face, particularly of the mouth, causing a lighting up of the face and eyes, and usually accompanied by the emission of explosive or chuckling sounds from the chest and throat; to indulge in laughter. | [verb] To be or appear cheerful, pleasant, mirthful, lively, or brilliant; to sparkle; to sport. | [verb] (followed by "at") To make an object of laughter or ridicule; to make fun of; to deride; to mock. LAYERED (11) [verb] To cut or divide (something) into layers | [verb] To arrange (something) in layers. | [adjective] Formed of layers. LEACHED (13) [verb] To purge a soluble matter out of something by the action of a percolating fluid. | [verb] To part with soluble constituents by percolation. LEAGUED (9) [verb] To form an association; to unite in a league or confederacy; to combine for mutual support. LEARNED (8) [adjective] Having much learning, knowledgeable, erudite; highly educated. | [adjective] A courteous description used in various ways to refer to lawyers or judges, including: | [adjective] Scholarly (exhibiting scholarship) | [verb] To acquire, or attempt to acquire knowledge or an ability to do something. LEASHED (11) [verb] To fasten or secure with a leash. | [verb] To curb, restrain LEECHED (13) [verb] To apply a leech medicinally, so that it sucks blood from the patient. | [verb] To drain (resources) without giving back. | [verb] To treat, cure or heal. LEEWARD (11) [adjective] On the side sheltered from the wind; in that direction. | [adverb] Away from the direction from which the wind is blowing; downwind. LEGATED (9) LENTOID (8) [adjective] Having the form of a lens; lens-shaped. LEOPARD (10) [noun] Panthera pardus, a large wild cat with a spotted coat native to Africa and Asia, especially the male of the species (in contrast to leopardess). | [noun] (inexact) A similar-looking, large wild cat named after the leopard. | [noun] A lion passant guardant. LEOTARD (8) [noun] A one-piece skintight garment with or without sleeves and without legs (often worn by gymnasts, acrobats, wrestlers, female swimmers, etc.) LEPORID (10) LETCHED (13) [verb] To purge a soluble matter out of something by the action of a percolating fluid. | [verb] To part with soluble constituents by percolation. LEVELED (11) [verb] To adjust so as to make as flat or perpendicular to the ground as possible. | [verb] To destroy by reducing to ground level; to raze. | [verb] To progress to the next level. LEVERED (11) [verb] To move with a lever. | [verb] To use, operate or move (something) like a lever (physically). | [verb] To use (something) like a lever (in an abstract sense). LIAISED (8) [verb] To establish a liaison. | [verb] To act between parties with a view to reconciling differences. | [verb] To cooperate, consult and discuss in order to come to a common solution. LIANOID (8) LIBELED (10) [verb] To defame someone, especially in a manner that meets the legal definition of libel. | [verb] To proceed against (a ship, goods, etc.) by filing a libel. LICHTED (13) LIGATED (9) [verb] To bind with a ligature or bandage. | [verb] To connect text characters with a ligature. LIGHTED (12) [verb] To start (a fire). | [verb] To set fire to; to set burning. | [verb] To illuminate; to provide light for when it is dark. LIKENED (12) [verb] (followed by to or unto) To compare; to state that (something) is like (something else). LIMITED (10) [verb] To restrict; not to allow to go beyond a certain bound, to set boundaries. | [verb] To have a limit in a particular set. | [verb] To beg, or to exercise functions, within a certain limited region. LINGCOD (11) [noun] Ophiodon elongatus, a fish of the greenlings, of the family Hexagrammidae, native to the west coast of North America. LINSEED (8) [noun] The seed of the flax plant, which yields linseed oil. LITHOED (11) [verb] To lithograph. LITHOID (11) LIVENED (11) [verb] To cause to be more lively, or to become more lively. LOATHED (11) [verb] To detest, hate, revile. LOBATED (10) LOBBIED (12) [verb] To attempt to influence (a public official or decision-maker) in favor of a specific opinion or cause. LOCATED (10) [verb] To place; to set in a particular spot or position. | [verb] To find out where something is located. | [verb] To designate the site or place of; to define the limits of (Note: the designation may be purely descriptive: it need not be prescriptive.) LOCULED (10) LOGWOOD (12) [noun] A tree, Haematoxylum campechianum, in the legume family, of great economic importance and growing throughout Central America. | [noun] Any of various trees of the genus Xylosma in the willow family. LOUNGED (9) [verb] To relax; to spend time lazily; to stand, sit, or recline, in an indolent manner. LOUVRED (11) LOWBRED (13) LOWERED (11) [verb] To frown; to look sullen. | [verb] To be dark, gloomy, and threatening, as clouds; of the sky: to be covered with dark and threatening clouds; to show threatening signs of approach, as a tempest. | [verb] To let descend by its own weight, as something suspended; to let down LOWLAND (11) [noun] Area which is lower than surrounding areas. LUNATED (8) LUNCHED (13) [verb] To eat lunch. | [verb] To treat to lunch. LURCHED (13) [verb] To make such a sudden, unsteady movement. | [verb] To swallow or eat greedily; to devour; hence, to swallow up. | [verb] To leave someone in the lurch; to cheat. LUSTRED (8) [adjective] Having a lustre. LUXATED (15) [verb] To dislocate. LYCOPOD (15) [noun] A club moss. | [noun] Any member of the Lycopodiophyta. LYNCHED (16) [verb] To execute (somebody) without a proper legal trial or procedure, especially by hanging and backed by a mob. LYRATED (11) MACKLED (16) MACULED (12) MAJORED (17) [verb] To concentrate on a particular area of study as a student in a college or university MALLARD (10) [noun] A common and widespread dabbling duck, Anas platyrhynchos, whose male has a distinctive dark green head. MAMBOED (14) [verb] To perform this dance. MANAGED (11) [verb] To direct or be in charge of. | [verb] To handle or control (a situation, job). | [verb] To handle with skill, wield (a tool, weapon etc.). MANGLED (11) [verb] To change, mutilate or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging etc. | [verb] To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier for internal use by the compiler, etc. | [verb] To wring laundry. MANGOLD (11) [noun] Mangelwurzel MANHOOD (13) [noun] The state or condition of being a human being | [noun] The state or condition of being an adult male human being, as distinguished from a child or a woman. Compare adulthood. Contrast womanhood and childhood. | [noun] All of the adult male human beingss of a given locality, region, district, country, nation or state, or all of the adult male humans pertaining to a given human subgroup (culture, race, ethnicity, lineage, family, etc.), regarded collectively MANKIND (14) [noun] The human race in its entirety. | [noun] Men collectively, as opposed to all women. | [noun] Human feelings; humanity. MANSARD (10) [noun] A mansard roof | [noun] The upper storey of a building, surrounded by such a roof | [adjective] (of a roof) having two slopes on each side, the lower being steeper than the upper MANTLED (10) [verb] To cover or conceal (something); to cloak; to disguise. | [verb] To become covered or concealed. | [verb] To spread like a mantle (especially of blood in the face and cheeks when a person flushes). MANURED (10) [verb] To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture. | [verb] To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver). MANWARD (13) MARBLED (12) [verb] To cause (something to have) the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example by mixing viscous ingredients incompletely, or by applying paint or other colorants unevenly. | [verb] To get or have the streaked or swirled appearance of certain types of marble, for example due to the incomplete mixing of viscous ingredients, or the uneven application of paint or other colorants. | [verb] To cause meat, usually beef, pork, or lamb, to be interlaced with fat so that its appearance resembles that of marble. MARCHED (15) [verb] To walk with long, regular strides, as a soldier does. | [verb] To cause someone to walk somewhere. | [verb] To go to war; to make military advances. MARRIED (10) [noun] A married person. | [adjective] In a state of marriage; having a wife or a husband. | [adjective] Showing commitment or devotion normally reserved for a spouse MASONED (10) [verb] (normally with a preposition) To build stonework or brickwork about, under, in, over, etc.; to construct by masons | [adjective] (of a building) Having the mortar and bricks of different tinctures. MASTOID (10) [noun] The mastoid process. | [adjective] Of or relating to the mastoid process of the temporal bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a breast or nipple. MATCHED (15) [verb] To agree; to be equal; to correspond. | [verb] To agree with; to be equal to; to correspond to. | [verb] To make a successful match or pairing. MATTOID (10) MATURED (10) [verb] To proceed toward maturity: full development or completion (either of concrete or of abstract things, e.g. plans, judgments, qualities). | [verb] (of food, especially fruit) To attain maturity, to become mature or ripe. | [verb] To bring (something) to maturity, full development or completion. MAYWEED (16) [noun] Stinking chamomile, Anthemis cotula. | [noun] Corn chamomile, field chamomile, Anthemis arvensis. | [noun] Plants of the genera Matricaria and Tripleurospermum. MAZZARD (28) [noun] A sweet cherry, Prunus avium MEASLED (10) MEDALED (11) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to one who has received a medal. MEDDLED (12) [verb] To interfere in or with; to concern oneself with unduly. | [verb] To interest or engage oneself; to have to do (with), in a good sense. | [verb] To mix (something) with some other substance; to commingle, combine, blend. MEGAPOD (13) MELAMED (12) MENACED (12) [verb] To make threats against (someone); to intimidate. | [verb] To threaten (an evil to be inflicted). | [verb] To endanger (someone or something); to imperil or jeopardize. MERITED (10) [verb] To deserve, to earn. | [verb] To be deserving or worthy. | [verb] To reward. MERMAID (12) [noun] A mythological creature with a woman's head and upper body, and a tail of a fish. | [noun] (as a modifier) Coloured a brilliant turquoise. | [noun] A prostitute. METALED (10) [adjective] (of a road) Surfaced, tarred, covered in stone or crushed rock (usually tar-coated). | [adjective] (of any object) Made of metal or having metal fittings or plating. METERED (10) [verb] To measure with a metering device. | [verb] To imprint a postage mark with a postage meter. | [verb] To regulate the flow of or to deliver in regulated amounts (usually of fluids but sometimes of other things such as anticipation or breath). METTLED (10) MIAOUED (10) MIAOWED (13) [verb] Of a cat, to make its cry. MIAULED (10) [verb] To give the cry of a cat. MIDDLED (12) [verb] To take a middle view of. | [verb] To double (a rope) into two equal portions; to fold in the middle. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified kind of middle. MIDLAND (11) [noun] The region of a country not near the borders; the interior. | [adjective] Resembling or relating to the interior region of a country. MIMEOED (12) MINGLED (11) [verb] To intermix; to combine or join, as an individual or part, with other parts, but commonly so as to be distinguishable in the product | [verb] To associate or unite in a figurative way, or by ties of relationship | [verb] To cause or allow to intermarry MINORED (10) [verb] To choose or have an area of secondary concentration as a student in a college or university. MINUEND (10) [noun] A number or quantity from which another is to be subtracted. MINUTED (10) [verb] Of an event, to write in a memo or the minutes of a meeting. | [verb] To set down a short sketch or note of; to jot down; to make a minute or a brief summary of. MISBIND (12) MISCUED (12) [verb] To give an incorrect cue. | [verb] To mishit, strike incorrectly. MISDEED (11) [noun] That which was done that should not have been, ranging from any sin or moral offense to various degrees of crime. MISLAID (10) [adjective] Cannot be currently found, put in an obscure place, lost - often temporarily. | [verb] To leave or lay something in the wrong place and then forget where one put it. MISLEAD (10) [verb] To lead astray, in a false direction. | [verb] To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. | [verb] To deceptively trick into something wrong. MISPLED (12) MISREAD (10) [noun] An instance of reading wrongly. | [verb] To read wrongly, normally by accident; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of. MISSAID (10) MISSEND (10) MISSHOD (13) MISTEND (10) MISUSED (10) [verb] To use (something) incorrectly. | [verb] To abuse or mistreat (something or someone). | [verb] To rape (a woman); later more generally, to sexually abuse (someone). MISWORD (13) MITERED (10) [verb] To adorn with a mitre. | [verb] To unite at an angle of 45°. MIZZLED (28) [verb] To rain in very fine drops. | [verb] To abscond, scram, flee. | [verb] To yield. MODELED (11) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MONACID (12) MONEYED (13) [adjective] Affluent; rich | [adjective] Paid for; funded MOOCHED (15) [verb] To wander around aimlessly, often causing irritation to others. | [verb] To beg, cadge, or sponge; to exploit or take advantage of others for personal gain. | [verb] To steal or filch. MOSEYED (13) [verb] To set off, get going; to start a journey. | [verb] To go off quickly: to hurry up. | [verb] To amble; to walk or proceed in a leisurely manner. MOTIVED (13) MOTORED (10) [verb] To make a journey by motor vehicle; to drive. | [verb] To move at a brisk pace. | [verb] To leave. MOTTLED (10) [verb] To mark with blotches of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate. | [adjective] Colored in patches; spotted MOUCHED (15) MOULDED (11) [verb] To shape in or on a mold; to form into a particular shape; to give shape to. | [verb] To guide or determine the growth or development of; influence | [verb] To fit closely by following the contours of. MOULTED (10) [verb] To shed or lose a covering of hair or fur, feathers, skin, horns, etc, and replace it with a fresh one. | [verb] To shed in such a manner. MOUNDED (11) [verb] To fortify with a mound; add a barrier, rampart, etc. to. | [verb] To force or pile into a mound or mounds. MOUNTED (10) [verb] To get upon; to ascend; to climb. | [verb] To place oneself on (a horse, a bicycle, etc.); to bestride. | [verb] To cause to mount; to put on horseback; to furnish with animals for riding. MOURNED (10) [verb] To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). | [verb] To utter in a sorrowful manner. | [verb] To wear mourning. MOUSSED (10) [verb] To apply mousse (styling cream). MOUTHED (13) [verb] To speak; to utter. | [verb] To make the actions of speech, without producing sound. | [verb] To utter with a voice that is overly loud or swelling. MUDDIED (12) [adjective] Made dirty with mud. | [adjective] Made unclear, obfuscated (generally as part of the phrase muddied the water) | [adjective] Made muted of color. MUDDLED (12) [verb] To mix together, to mix up; to confuse. | [verb] To mash slightly for use in a cocktail. | [verb] To dabble in mud. MUFFLED (16) [verb] To wrap (a person, face etc.) in fabric or another covering, for warmth or protection; often with up. | [verb] To wrap up or cover (a source of noise) in order to deaden the sound. | [verb] To mute or deaden (a sound etc.). MULCHED (15) [verb] To apply mulch. | [verb] To turn into mulch. MULCTED (12) [verb] To impose such a fine or penalty. | [verb] To swindle (someone) out of money. MUMBLED (14) [verb] To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. | [verb] To chew something gently with closed lips. MUMMIED (14) MUNCHED (15) [verb] To chew with a grinding, crunching sound, and with the mouth closed — often used with on. | [verb] To eat vigorously or with excitement. MUSCLED (12) [verb] To use force to make progress, especially physical force. | [adjective] Bearing muscles or muscle tissue. | [adjective] Having large muscles. MUSTARD (10) [noun] A plant of certain species of the genus Brassica, or of related genera (especially Sinapis alba, in the family Brassicaceae, with yellow flowers, and linear seed pods). | [noun] Powder or paste made from seeds of the mustard plant, and used as a condiment or a spice. | [noun] The leaves of the mustard plant, used as a salad. MUTATED (10) [verb] To undergo mutation. | [verb] To cause mutation. | [adjective] Possessing a mutation. MUTINED (10) MUZZLED (28) [verb] To bind or confine an animal's mouth by putting a muzzle, as to prevent it from eating or biting. | [verb] To restrain (from speaking, expressing opinion or acting); gag, silence, censor. | [verb] To veil, mask, muffle. MYELOID (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to bone marrow. | [adjective] (less commonly used) Of or pertaining to the spinal cord. NAEVOID (11) NATURED (8) [verb] To endow with natural qualities. | [adjective] (in combination) Having or possessing the specified disposition or temperament. NEEDLED (9) [verb] To pierce with a needle, especially for sewing or acupuncture. | [verb] To tease in order to provoke; to poke fun at. | [verb] To form, or be formed, in the shape of a needle. NEGATED (9) [verb] To deny the existence, evidence, or truth of; to contradict. | [verb] To nullify or cause to be ineffective. | [verb] To be negative; bring or cause negative results. NEGROID (9) [noun] (ethnology) A person with negroid characteristics, particularly coiled hair and very high melanin content giving them dark brown skin | [adjective] (ethnology) having negro features racially. Pertaining to the racial classification of humanity including people indigenous to sub-Saharan Africa and their diaspora in other parts of the world. NEIGHED (12) [verb] (of a horse) To make its cry. | [verb] To make a sound similar to a horse's cry. | [verb] To scoff or sneer. NESTLED (8) [verb] To settle oneself comfortably and snugly. | [verb] To press oneself against another affectionately. | [verb] To lie half-hidden or in shelter. NETTLED (8) [verb] Of the nettle plant and similar physical causes, to sting, causing a rash in someone. | [verb] To pique, irritate, vex or provoke. | [adjective] Annoyed; offended NEUROID (8) NIBBLED (12) [verb] To eat with small, quick bites. | [verb] To bite lightly. | [verb] To consume gradually. NICKLED (14) NIGGARD (10) [noun] A miser or stingy person; a skinflint. | [noun] A false bottom in a grate, used for saving fuel. | [verb] To hoard; to act stingily. NIGGLED (10) [verb] To trifle with; to deceive; to mock. | [verb] To use, spend, or do in a petty or trifling manner. | [verb] To dwell too much on minor points or on trifling details. NIPPLED (12) NOBBLED (12) [verb] To injure or obstruct intentionally. | [verb] To gain influence by corrupt means or intimidation. | [verb] To steal. NOCTUID (10) [noun] Any in the species-rich family Noctuidae of moths. NODDLED (10) [verb] To nod repeatedly. | [adjective] Having a noddle or head. | [verb] To think or ponder. NONACID (10) NONFOOD (11) NONPAID (10) NONSKED (12) NONSKID (12) [adjective] Having a surface designed to prevent or reduce skidding; not able to skid or be skidded upon. NONWORD (11) [noun] Any sequence of sounds or letters which is not considered to be a word. NOODGED (10) NOODLED (9) [verb] To think or ponder. | [verb] To fiddle, play with, or mess around. | [verb] To improvise music. NORLAND (8) NOTATED (8) [verb] To mark with spots or lines, which are often colored. | [verb] To add notes to; to annotate | [verb] To create notation (i.e. music); to record/put down in the form of notation NOTCHED (13) [verb] To cut a notch in (something). | [verb] To record (a score or similar) by making notches on something. | [verb] To join by means of notches. NOTEPAD (10) [noun] A pad of paper, often bound, in which one jots down notes; a notebook. NOTICED (10) [verb] To remark upon; to mention. | [verb] To become aware of; to observe. | [verb] To lavish attention upon; to treat (someone) favourably. NUANCED (10) [verb] To apply a nuance to; to change or redefine in a subtle way. | [adjective] Having nuances; possessed of multiple layers of detail, pattern, or meaning NUDZHED (21) NUTATED (8) NUTWOOD (11) NUZZLED (26) [verb] (of animals, lovers, etc) To touch someone or something with the nose. | [verb] To nurse; to foster; to bring up. | [verb] To nestle; to house, as in a nest. OBLIGED (11) [verb] To constrain someone by force or by social, moral or legal means. | [verb] To do (someone) a service or favour (hence, originally, creating an obligation). | [verb] To be indebted to someone. OBOVOID (13) OCELOID (10) OCHERED (13) OCHROID (13) OCTOPOD (12) [noun] Any animal with eight feet or foot-like parts. | [noun] Any cephalopod mollusks of the order Octopoda. | [noun] A railway locomotive with eight wheels. OERSTED (8) [noun] The CGS unit of magnetizing field (symbol Oe), defined as 1000/4π (≈79.5774715) amperes per meter of flux path. OFFERED (14) [verb] To propose or express one's willingness (to do something). | [verb] To present in words; to proffer; to make a proposal of; to suggest. | [verb] To place at someone’s disposal; to present (something) to be either accepted or turned down. OFFHAND (17) [adjective] Without planning or thinking ahead. | [adjective] Careless; without sufficient thought or consideration. | [adjective] Curt, abrupt, unfriendly. OFFLOAD (14) [noun] The act of offloading something, or diverting it elsewhere. | [noun] The act of passing the ball to a team mate when tackled. | [verb] To unload. OILBIRD (10) [noun] Steatornis caripensis, a nocturnal South American bird related to the nightjars that feeds on the fruit of the oil palm and tropical laurels. OILSEED (8) [noun] The seed of any of several plants which are used commercially as a source of vegetable oil | [noun] The plant that yields such seed OMITTED (10) [verb] To leave out or exclude. | [verb] To fail to perform. | [verb] To neglect or take no notice of. ONBOARD (10) [verb] To become a part of a group; to incorporate (someone) into a group. | [verb] To begin to use a product or service; to take (someone) on as a new customer of a product or service. | [adjective] Carried or used on or in a vehicle or vessel ONEFOLD (11) [adjective] Constituting or being indicative of a single aspect or theme. | [adjective] Consisting of a single undivided part; whole; complete. | [adjective] Simple, plain, straightforward. OPAQUED (19) OPERAND (10) [noun] A quantity to which an operator is applied (in 3 - x, the operands of the subtraction operator are 3 and x). OPIATED (10) [verb] To treat with an opiate drug. | [adjective] Treated with an opiate. | [adjective] Under the influence of an opiate. OPPOSED (12) [verb] To attempt to stop the progression of; to resist or antagonize by physical means, or by arguments, etc.; to contend against. | [verb] To object to. | [verb] To present or set up in opposition; to pose. ORBITED (10) [verb] To circle or revolve around another object. | [verb] To move around the general vicinity of something. | [verb] To place an object into an orbit around a planet. ORCHARD (13) [noun] A garden or an area of land for the cultivation of fruit or nut trees. | [noun] The trees themselves cultivated in such an area. ORDERED (9) [verb] To set in some sort of order. | [verb] To arrange, set in proper order. | [verb] To issue a command to. OROTUND (8) [adjective] Characterized by fullness, clarity, strength, and smoothness of sound. | [adjective] Pompous; bombastic. OSMOSED (10) [verb] To diffuse by osmosis. | [verb] To cause to diffuse by osmosis. OSTEOID (8) [noun] An organic matrix of protein and polysaccharides, secreted by osteoblasts, that becomes bone after mineralization | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of bone; bonelike OUGHTED (12) OUTBRED (10) [verb] To breed from parents not closely related. | [verb] To breed more successfully than. OUTCHID (13) OUTFIND (11) OUTLAID (8) OUTLAND (8) OUTPLOD (10) OUTREAD (8) OUTSOLD (8) [verb] To sell more than; to surpass in sales. | [verb] To sell at a higher price (than) OUTSPED (10) OUTTOLD (8) OUTVIED (11) [verb] To outdo a competitor or rival. OUTWARD (11) [adjective] Outer; located towards the outside | [adjective] Visible, noticeable | [adjective] Tending to the exterior or outside. | [verb] To ward off; to keep out. | [noun] A ward in a detached building connected with a hospital. OUTWIND (11) OVERBED (13) OVERBID (13) [verb] To outlive; survive. OVERDID (12) [verb] To do too much; to exceed what is proper or true in doing; to carry too far. | [verb] To cook for too long. | [verb] To give (someone or something) too much work; to require too much effort or strength of (someone); to use up too much of (something). OVERFED (14) [adjective] Excessively fed; given too much to eat. | [verb] To feed a person or animal too much. | [verb] To eat more than is necessary. OVERSAD (11) OXBLOOD (17) OXYACID (20) [noun] An acid containing oxygen, as opposed to a hydracid. PADDLED (12) [verb] To propel something through water with a paddle, oar, hands, etc. | [verb] To row a boat with less than one's full capacity. | [verb] To spank with a paddle. PAGURID (11) PAINTED (10) [verb] To apply paint to. | [verb] To apply in the manner that paint is applied. | [verb] To cover (something) with spots of colour, like paint. PALACED (12) PALSIED (10) [adjective] Afflicted with palsy. | [adjective] Trembling as if afflicted with palsy. | [verb] To paralyse, either completely or partially. PANDIED (11) PANELED (10) [verb] To fit with panels. | [adjective] Having panels. PAPERED (12) [verb] To apply paper to. | [verb] To document; to memorialize. | [verb] To fill (a theatre or other paid event) with complimentary seats. PARADED (11) [verb] To march in or as if in a procession. | [verb] To cause (someone) to march in or as if in a procession; to display or show (something) during a procession. | [verb] To exhibit in a showy or ostentatious manner. PARCHED (15) [verb] To burn the surface of, to scorch. | [verb] To roast, as dry grain. | [verb] To dry to extremity; to shrivel with heat. PAROLED (10) [verb] To release (a prisoner) on the understanding that s/he checks in regularly and obeys the law. PAROTID (10) [noun] The parotid gland. | [adjective] Relating to the parotid gland. PARRIED (10) [verb] To avoid, deflect, or ward off (an attack, a blow, an argument, etc.). PARTIED (10) [verb] To celebrate at a party, to have fun, to enjoy oneself. | [verb] To take recreational drugs. | [verb] To engage in flings, to have one-night stands, to sow one's wild oats. PATCHED (15) [verb] To mend by sewing on a piece or pieces of cloth, leather, or the like | [verb] To mend with pieces; to repair by fastening pieces on. | [verb] To make out of pieces or patches, like a quilt. PATINED (10) PAYLOAD (13) [noun] That part of a cargo that produces revenue. | [noun] The total weight of passengers, crew, equipment and cargo carried by an aircraft or spacecraft. | [noun] That part of a rocket, missile, propelled stinger or torpedo that is not concerned with propulsion or guidance, such as a warhead or satellite. PEACHED (15) [verb] To inform on someone; turn informer. | [verb] To inform against. PEARLED (10) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To set or adorn with pearls, or with mother-of-pearl. | [verb] To cause to resemble pearls in shape; to make into small round grains. | [verb] To cause to resemble pearls in lustre or iridescence. PEASCOD (12) PEBBLED (14) PEDALED (11) [verb] To operate a pedal attached to a wheel in a continuous circular motion. | [verb] To operate a bicycle. PEDDLED (12) [verb] To sell things, especially door to door or in insignificant quantities. | [verb] To sell illegal narcotics. | [verb] To spread or cause to spread. PEOPLED (12) [verb] To stock with people or inhabitants; to fill as with people; to populate. | [verb] To become populous or populated. | [verb] To inhabit; to occupy; to populate. PERACID (12) PERCHED (15) [verb] To rest on (or as if on) a perch; to roost. | [verb] To stay in an elevated position. | [verb] To place something on (or as if on) a perch. PERCOID (12) [noun] Any fish of the genus Perca, or allied genera of the family Percidae (originally named "Percoides" before family-name endings were standardized). | [noun] Any fish in the superfamily Percoidea | [adjective] Of or belonging to Percoidea, a taxonomic superfamily in the order Perciformes. PERILED (10) [verb] To cause to be in danger; to imperil; to risk. PEROXID (17) PERPEND (12) [verb] To ponder, consider. | [noun] A brick or stone that has its longest dimension perpendicular to the face of a wall, especially one that extends through the wall's entire thickness. | [noun] A vertical joint (usually mortar) between bricks or blocks in a horizontal course. PERUKED (14) PERUSED (10) [verb] To examine or consider with care. | [verb] To read completely. | [verb] To look over casually; to skim. PESTLED (10) [verb] To pound, crush, rub or grind, as in a mortar with a pestle. PETALED (10) PETERED (10) [verb] In whist, to play a blue peter. | [verb] (most often used in the phrase peter out) To dwindle; to trail off; to diminish to nothing. PETTLED (10) PHASMID (15) PHONIED (13) PHOTOED (13) [verb] To take a photograph of. PHRASED (13) [verb] To express (an action, thought or idea) by means of particular words. | [verb] To perform a passage with the correct phrasing. | [verb] To divide into melodic phrases. PHYTOID (16) PIAFFED (16) [verb] To strut pretentiously, to parade about. | [verb] To trot a horse with a high, slow, step, lifting the feet but without moving forward significantly. | [verb] To ride a horse in this way. PICKLED (16) [verb] To preserve food (or sometimes other things) in a salt, sugar or vinegar solution. | [verb] To remove high-temperature scale and oxidation from metal with heated (often sulphuric) industrial acid. | [verb] (in the Python programming language) To serialize. PICOTED (12) PIDDLED (12) [verb] To eat with small, quick bites. | [verb] To bite lightly. | [verb] To consume gradually. PIEBALD (12) [noun] An animal with piebald coloration. | [adjective] Spotted or blotched, especially in black and white. | [adjective] Of mixed character, heterogeneous. PIERCED (12) [verb] To puncture; to break through | [verb] To create a hole in the skin for the purpose of inserting jewelry | [verb] To break or interrupt abruptly PIFFLED (16) PIGWEED (14) [noun] Any of various weedy plants sometimes used as pig fodder PILOTED (10) [verb] To control (an aircraft or watercraft). | [verb] To guide (a vessel) through coastal waters. | [verb] To test or have a preliminary trial of (an idea, a new product, etc.) PIMPLED (14) PINCHED (15) [verb] To squeeze a small amount of a person's skin and flesh, making it hurt. | [verb] To squeeze between the thumb and forefinger. | [verb] To squeeze between two objects. PINFOLD (13) [noun] An open enclosure for animals, especially an area where stray animals were rounded up if their owners failed to properly supervise their use of common grazing land. | [verb] To confine (animals) in a pinfold. PINGUID (11) [adjective] Relating to fat. PINHEAD (13) [noun] The head of a pin. (Frequently used in size comparisons.) | [noun] An ignorant, naive, foolish, or stupid person. | [noun] A telemark skier. PINWEED (13) PIRATED (10) [verb] To appropriate by piracy, plunder at sea. | [verb] (intellectual property) To create and/or sell an unauthorized copy of | [verb] (intellectual property) To knowingly obtain an unauthorized copy of PITCHED (15) [verb] To cover or smear with pitch. | [verb] To darken; to blacken; to obscure. | [verb] To throw. PITHEAD (13) [noun] The area around the top of the mineshaft of a coal mine PIVOTED (13) [verb] To turn on an exact spot. | [verb] To make a sudden or swift change in strategy, policy, etc. | [adjective] Fitted with a pivot or pivots. PLACARD (12) [noun] A sheet of paper or cardboard with a written or printed announcement on one side for display in a public place. | [noun] A public proclamation; a manifesto or edict issued by authority. | [noun] Permission given by authority; a license. PLACOID (12) [noun] Such a scale | [noun] Any fish having placoid scales, such as the sharks | [adjective] Platelike; having irregular, platelike, bony scales, often bearing spines; pertaining to the placoid fish PLAFOND (13) [noun] A ceiling, especially one that is ornately decorated. | [noun] A painting or decoration on a ceiling. | [noun] The tibial plafond. PLAGUED (11) [verb] To harass, pester or annoy someone persistently or incessantly. | [verb] To afflict with a disease or other calamity. | [adjective] Constantly afflicted or relentlessly attacked (by someone or something). PLAIDED (11) PLAINED (10) [verb] To complain. | [verb] To lament, bewail. | [verb] To level; to raze; to make plain or even on the surface. PLAITED (10) [verb] To fold; to double in narrow folds; to pleat | [verb] To interweave the strands or locks of; to braid PLANKED (14) [verb] To cover something with planking. | [verb] To bake (fish, etc.) on a piece of cedar lumber. | [verb] To lay down, as on a plank or table; to stake or pay cash. PLANNED (10) [verb] To design (a building, machine, etc.). | [verb] To create a plan for. | [verb] To intend. PLANTED (10) [verb] To place (a seed or plant) in soil or other substrate in order that it may live and grow. | [verb] To place (an object, or sometimes a person), often with the implication of intending deceit. | [verb] To place or set something firmly or with conviction. PLASHED (13) [verb] To splash. | [verb] To cause a splash. | [verb] To splash or sprinkle with colouring matter. PLASMID (12) [noun] A loop of double-stranded DNA that is separate from and replicates independently of the chromosomes, most commonly found in bacteria, but also in archaeans and eukaryotic cells, and used in genetic engineering as a vector for gene transfer. PLASTID (10) [noun] Any of various organelles found in the cells of plants and algae, often concerned with photosynthesis PLATTED (10) [verb] To create a plat; to lay out property lots and streets; to map. | [verb] (obsolete except regional England) To braid, to plait. PLEADED (11) [verb] To present (an argument or a plea), especially in a legal case. | [verb] To beg, beseech, or implore. | [verb] To offer by way of excuse. PLEASED (10) [verb] To make happy or satisfy; to give pleasure to. | [verb] To desire; to will; to be pleased by. | [adjective] Happy, content PLEATED (10) [verb] To form one or more pleats in a piece of fabric or a garment. | [verb] To plait. | [adjective] Having pleats. PLEDGED (12) [verb] To make a solemn promise (to do something). | [verb] To deposit something as a security; to pawn. | [verb] To give assurance of friendship by the act of drinking; to drink to one's health. PLEOPOD (12) [noun] One of the abdominal legs of a crustacean. PLINKED (14) [verb] To make a plink sound. | [verb] (with "out") To play a song or a portion of a song, usually on a percussion instrument such as a piano. | [verb] To take part in the sport of plinking. PLODDED (12) [verb] To walk or move slowly and heavily or laboriously (+ on, through, over). | [verb] To trudge over or through. | [verb] To toil; to drudge; especially, to study laboriously and patiently. PLONKED (14) [verb] To set or toss (something) down carelessly. | [verb] To automatically ignore a particular poster. PLOPPED (14) [verb] To make the sound of an object dropping into a body of liquid. | [verb] To land heavily or loosely. | [verb] To defecate; derived from the "plop" sound made when excrement hits water in a toilet. PLOTTED (10) [verb] To conceive (a crime, etc). | [verb] To trace out (a graph or diagram). | [verb] To mark (a point on a graph, chart, etc). PLOTZED (19) [verb] To flop down wearily. | [verb] To faint. | [verb] To fall down dead. PLUCKED (16) [verb] To pull something sharply; to pull something out | [verb] To take or remove (someone) quickly from a particular place or situation. | [verb] To gently play a single string, e.g. on a guitar, violin etc. PLUGGED (12) [verb] To stop with a plug; to make tight by stopping a hole. | [verb] To blatantly mention a particular product or service as if advertising it. | [verb] To persist or continue with something. PLUMBED (14) [verb] To determine the depth, generally of a liquid; to sound. | [verb] To attach to a water supply and drain. | [verb] To think about or explore in depth, to get to the bottom of, especially to plumb the depths of. PLUMPED (14) [verb] To grow plump; to swell out. | [verb] To make plump; to fill (out) or support; often with up. | [verb] To cast or let drop all at once, suddenly and heavily. PLUNGED (11) [verb] To thrust into liquid, or into any penetrable substance; to immerse. | [verb] To cast, stab or throw into some thing, state, condition or action. | [verb] To baptize by immersion. PLUNKED (14) [verb] To drop or throw something heavily onto or into something else, so that it makes a dull sound. | [verb] To land suddenly or heavily; to plump down. | [verb] To intentionally hit the batter with a pitch. PLYWOOD (16) [noun] Construction material supplied in sheets, and made of three or more layers of wood veneer glued together, laid up with alternating layers having their grain perpendicular to each other. | [noun] A specific grade or type of this construction material. | [verb] To fit or block up with plywood. POACHED (15) [verb] To cook something in simmering liquid. | [verb] To be cooked in simmering liquid | [verb] To become soft or muddy. POCHARD (15) [noun] Any of various diving ducks of the subfamily Aythyinae, especially the common pochard, Aythya ferina. POINDED (11) [verb] To seize property in this manner POINTED (10) [verb] To extend the index finger in the direction of something in order to show where it is or to draw attention to it. | [verb] To draw attention to something or indicate a direction. | [verb] To face in a particular direction. POLICED (12) [verb] To enforce the law and keep order among (a group). | [verb] To clean up an area. | [verb] To enforce norms or standards upon. POLKAED (14) [verb] To dance the polka. POLLARD (10) [noun] A pruned tree; the wood of such trees. | [noun] A buck deer that has shed its antlers. | [noun] A hornless variety of domestic animal, as cattle or goats. POLYPOD (15) [noun] An animal with many feet | [noun] Any fern of the family Polypodiaceae | [adjective] Having many feet. POMADED (13) [verb] To anoint with pomade; to use pomade to style (hair). PONIARD (10) [noun] A dagger typically having a slender square or triangular blade. | [verb] To stab with a poniard. POOCHED (15) [verb] To distend, to swell or extend beyond normal limits; usually used with out. | [adjective] Made unusable; broken; buggered. POPEYED (15) POPPIED (14) POPPLED (14) [verb] Of water, to move in a choppy, bubbling, or tossing manner. | [verb] To move quickly up and down; to bob up and down, like a cork on rough water. PORTEND (10) [verb] To serve as a warning or omen of. | [verb] To signify; to denote. POSITED (10) [verb] Assume the existence of; to postulate. | [verb] Propose for consideration or study; to suggest. | [verb] Put (something somewhere) firmly; to place or position. POTHEAD (13) [noun] A person who smokes cannabis frequently, to excess. POUCHED (15) [verb] To enclose within a pouch. | [verb] To transport within a pouch, especially a diplomatic pouch. | [verb] (of fowls and fish) To swallow. POUFFED (16) POULARD (10) POUNCED (12) [verb] To sprinkle or rub with pounce powder. | [verb] To leap into the air intending to seize someone or something. | [verb] To attack suddenly by leaping. POUNDED (11) [verb] To confine in, or as in, a pound; to impound. | [verb] To strike hard, usually repeatedly. | [verb] To crush to pieces; to pulverize. POWERED (13) [verb] To provide power for (a mechanical or electronic device). | [verb] To hit or kick something forcefully. | [verb] To enable or provide the impetus for. PRAISED (10) [verb] To give praise to; to commend, glorify, or worship. PRANCED (12) [verb] (of a horse) To spring forward on the hind legs. | [verb] To strut about in a showy manner. PRANGED (11) [verb] To crash an aeroplane. | [verb] To crash; to have an accident while controlling a vehicle. | [verb] To damage (the vehicle one is driving) in an accident; to have a minor collision with (another motor vehicle). PRANKED (14) [verb] To perform a practical joke on; to trick. | [verb] To call someone's phone and promptly hang up | [verb] To adorn in a showy manner; to dress or equip ostentatiously. PRAWNED (13) PREAGED (11) PREBEND (12) [noun] A stipend paid to a canon of a cathedral. | [noun] The property or other source of this endowment. | [noun] Political patronage employment. | [verb] To bend in advance. PREBIND (12) PREENED (10) [verb] To pin; fasten. | [verb] (of birds) To groom; to trim or dress with the beak, as the feathers. | [verb] To show off, posture, or smarm. PREMOLD (12) PREPAID (12) [adjective] Paid for in advance | [verb] To pay in advance, or beforehand PREPPED (14) [verb] To prepare. PRESOLD (10) [verb] To sell or obtain commitments to buy in advance of a formal offer to sell. PRESSED (10) [verb] To exert weight or force against, to act upon with force or weight; to exert pressure upon. | [verb] To activate a button or key by exerting a downward or forward force on it, and then releasing it. | [verb] To compress, squeeze. PRETEND (10) [verb] To claim, to allege, especially when falsely or as a form of deliberate deception. | [verb] To feign, affect (a state, quality, etc.). | [verb] To lay claim to (an ability, status, advantage, etc.). (originally used without to) PREVUED (13) PRICKED (16) [verb] To pierce or puncture slightly. | [verb] To form by piercing or puncturing. | [verb] To mark or denote by a puncture; to designate by pricking; to choose; to mark. PRIGGED (12) PRILLED (10) PRIMMED (14) [verb] To make affectedly precise or proper. | [verb] To dress or act smartly. PRIMPED (14) [verb] To spend time improving one's appearance, often in front of a mirror. | [verb] To dress in an affected manner. PRINKED (14) [verb] To give a wink; to wink. | [verb] To look, gaze. | [verb] To dress finely, primp, preen, spruce up. PRINTED (10) [verb] To produce one or more copies of a text or image on a surface, especially by machine; often used with out or off: print out, print off. | [verb] To produce a microchip (an integrated circuit) in a process resembling the printing of an image. | [verb] To write very clearly, especially, to write without connecting the letters as in cursive. PRISSED (10) PROBAND (12) [noun] An individual who presents with a genetic disorder or other specific characteristic, when this leads to the investigation of the individual's family PROCEED (12) [verb] To move, pass, or go forward or onward; to advance; to carry on | [verb] To pass from one point, topic, or stage, to another. | [verb] To come from; to have as its source or origin. PRODDED (12) [verb] To poke, to push, to touch. | [verb] To encourage, to prompt. | [verb] To prick with a goad. PROGGED (12) PRONGED (11) [adjective] (chiefly in combination) Having (a specified number or type of) prongs PROOFED (13) [verb] To proofread. | [verb] To make resistant, especially to water. | [verb] To allow yeast-containing dough to rise. PROPEND (12) PROPPED (14) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To support or shore up something. | [verb] To play rugby in the prop position | [verb] (usually with "up" - see prop up) To position the feet of (a person) while sitting, lying down, or reclining so that the knees are elevated at a higher level. PROTEID (10) PROTEND (10) PROWLED (13) [verb] To rove over, through, or about in a stealthy manner; especially, to search in, as for prey or booty. | [verb] To idle; to go about aimlessly. | [verb] To collect by plunder. PSALMED (12) PSHAWED (16) [verb] To express disgust or contempt. PSYCHED (18) [verb] To put (someone) into a required psychological frame of mind (also psych up). | [verb] To intimidate (someone) emotionally or using psychology (also psych out). | [verb] To treat (someone) using psychoanalysis. PSYLLID (13) [noun] Any of the host-specific plant-feeding insects of the family Psyllidae, which feed on plant juices. PUDDLED (12) [verb] To form a puddle. | [verb] To play or splash in a puddle. | [verb] Of butterflies, to congregate on a puddle or moist substance to pick up nutrients. PUMICED (14) [verb] To abrade or roughen with pumice. PUNCHED (15) [verb] To strike with one's fist. | [verb] (of cattle) To herd. | [verb] To operate (a device or system) by depressing a button, key, bar, or pedal, or by similar means. PUNGLED (11) PUPATED (12) [verb] To become a pupa. PURFLED (13) [verb] To decorate (wood, cloth etc.) with a purfle or ornamental border; to border. | [verb] To ornament with a bordure of ermines, furs, etc. or with gold studs or mountings. PURPLED (12) [verb] To turn purple in colour. | [verb] To dye purple. | [verb] To clothe in purple. PURSUED (10) [verb] To follow urgently, originally with intent to capture or harm; to chase. | [verb] To follow, travel down (a particular way, course of action etc.). | [verb] To aim for, go after (a specified objective, situation etc.). PUSHROD (13) [noun] A rod in a piston engine that actuates rocker arms above the cylinder head. | [noun] A rod in an internal gear hub that actuates the shifting mechanism. PUTTIED (10) [verb] To fix or fill using putty. PUZZLED (28) [verb] To perplex (someone). | [verb] To think long and carefully, in bewilderment. | [verb] To make intricate; to entangle. PYGMOID (16) PYRALID (13) [noun] A moth of the family Pyralidae. | [adjective] Pertaining to the Pyralidae family of moths. PYRAMID (15) [noun] An ancient massive construction with a square or rectangular base and four triangular sides meeting in an apex, such as those built as tombs in Egypt or as bases for temples in Mesoamerica. | [noun] A construction in the shape of a pyramid, usually with a square or rectangular base. | [noun] A solid with triangular lateral faces and a polygonal (often square or rectangular) base. QUACKED (23) [verb] To make a noise like a duck. | [verb] To practice or commit quackery (fraudulent medicine). | [verb] To make vain and loud pretensions. QUADDED (19) QUAFFED (23) [verb] To drink or imbibe with vigour or relish; to drink copiously; to swallow in large draughts. QUAILED (17) [verb] To waste away; to fade, to wither | [verb] To daunt or frighten (someone) | [verb] To lose heart or courage; to be daunted or fearful. QUANTED (17) QUASHED (20) [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To crush or dash to pieces. | [verb] To void or suppress (a subpoena, decision, etc.). QUEENED (17) [verb] To make a queen. | [verb] To act the part of a queen; to queen it. | [verb] To promote a pawn, usually to a queen. QUEERED (17) [verb] To render an endeavor or agreement ineffective or null. | [verb] To puzzle. | [verb] To ridicule; to banter; to rally. QUELLED (17) [verb] To subdue, to put down; to silence or force (someone) to submit. | [verb] To suppress, to put an end to (something); to extinguish. | [verb] To kill. QUERIED (17) [verb] To ask a question. | [verb] To ask, inquire. | [verb] To question or call into doubt. QUESTED (17) [verb] To seek or pursue a goal; to undertake a mission or job. | [verb] To search for; to examine. | [verb] (of a tick) To locate and attach to a host animal. QUIETED (17) [verb] To become quiet, silent, still, tranquil, calm. | [verb] To cause someone to become quiet. QUILLED (17) [verb] To pierce or be pierced with quills. | [verb] To write. | [verb] To form fabric into small, rounded folds. QUILTED (17) [verb] To construct a quilt. | [verb] To construct something, such as clothing, using the same technique. | [adjective] Having the characteristics of a quilt; specifically, having two layers of cloth sewn together, with a layer of padding between them. QUINOID (17) QUIPPED (21) [verb] To make a quip. | [verb] To taunt; to treat with quips. QUIRKED (21) [adjective] Having, or formed with, a quirk. QUIRTED (17) [verb] To strike with a quirt. QUITTED (17) [verb] To pay (a debt, fine etc.). | [verb] To repay (someone) for (something). | [verb] To repay, pay back (a good deed, injury etc.). QUIZZED (35) [verb] To hoax; to chaff or mock with pretended seriousness of discourse; to make sport of, as by obscure questions. | [verb] To peer at; to eye suspiciously or mockingly. | [verb] To question closely, to interrogate. QUOINED (17) [adjective] Furnished with a quoin. QUOITED (17) [verb] To play quoits. | [verb] To throw as with a quoit. RABBLED (12) RACEMED (12) RADDLED (10) [adjective] Worn-out and broken-down. RADIOED (9) [verb] To use two-way radio to transmit (a message) (to another radio or other radio operator). | [verb] To order or assist (to a location), using telecommunications. RAFFLED (14) [verb] To award something by means of a raffle or random drawing, often used with off. | [verb] To participate in a raffle. | [adjective] Having the edge finely notched. RAGWEED (12) [noun] A plant of the genus Ambrosia. These weeds are particularly noted for producing pollen which people with hay fever are allergic to. RALLIED (8) [verb] To collect, and reduce to order, as troops dispersed or thrown into confusion; to gather again; to reunite. | [verb] To come into orderly arrangement; to renew order, or united effort, as troops scattered or put to flight; to assemble; to unite. | [verb] To collect one's vital powers or forces; to regain health or consciousness; to recuperate. RALPHED (13) [verb] To vomit. RAMBLED (12) [verb] To move about aimlessly, or on a winding course | [verb] To walk for pleasure; to amble or saunter. | [verb] To talk or write incessantly, unclearly, or incoherently, with many digressions. RANCHED (13) [verb] To operate a ranch; engage in ranching. | [verb] To work on a ranch RANKLED (12) [verb] To cause irritation or deep bitterness. | [verb] To fester. RASSLED (8) [verb] To contend, with an opponent, by grappling and attempting to throw, immobilize or otherwise defeat him, depending on the specific rules of the contest | [verb] To struggle or strive | [verb] To take part in a wrestling match with someone RATTLED (8) [verb] To create a rattling sound by shaking or striking. | [verb] To scare, startle, unsettle, or unnerve. | [verb] To make a rattling noise; to make noise by or from shaking. RAVAGED (12) [verb] To devastate or destroy something. | [verb] To pillage or sack something, to lay waste to something. | [verb] To wreak destruction. RAVELED (11) [verb] To tangle; entangle; entwine confusedly, become snarled; thus to involve; perplex; confuse. | [verb] To undo the intricacies of; to disentangle or clarify. | [verb] To pull apart (especially cloth or a seam); unravel. RAVENED (11) [verb] To obtain or seize by violence. | [verb] To devour with great eagerness. | [verb] To prey on with rapacity. RAVINED (11) RAZORED (17) [verb] To shave with a razor. REACHED (13) [verb] To extend, stretch, or thrust out (for example a limb or object held in the hand). | [verb] To give to someone by stretching out a limb, especially the hand; to give with the hand; to pass to another person; to hand over. | [verb] To stretch out the hand. REACTED (10) [verb] To act or perform a second time; to do over again; to reenact. | [verb] To return an impulse or impression; to resist the action of another body by an opposite force | [verb] To act upon each other; to exercise a reciprocal or a reverse effect, as two or more chemical agents; to act in opposition. READDED (10) READIED (9) [verb] To prepare; to make ready for action. REARMED (10) [verb] To replace or restore the weapons or arms of a previously defeated, or disarmed army, country, person or other body. REBATED (10) [verb] To deduct or return an amount from a bill or payment | [verb] To diminish or lessen something | [verb] To beat to obtuseness; to deprive of keenness; to blunt; to turn back the point of, as a lance used for exercise. REBLEND (10) REBOARD (10) [verb] To board (a vehicle, etc.) again. | [verb] To replace the wooden boards of. REBORED (10) [verb] To bore through an existing hole, generally to correct its shape. REBOUND (10) [noun] The recoil of an object bouncing off another. | [noun] A return to health or well-being; a recovery. | [noun] An effort to recover from a setback. | [verb] To bind again. REBREED (10) REBUILD (10) [noun] A process or result of rebuilding. | [verb] To build again. REBUKED (14) [verb] To criticise harshly; to reprove. RECANED (10) RECEDED (11) [verb] To move back; to retreat; to withdraw. | [verb] To cede back; to grant or yield again to a former possessor. | [verb] To take back. RECITED (10) [verb] To repeat aloud (some passage, poem or other text previously memorized, or in front of one's eyes), often before an audience. | [verb] To list or enumerate something. | [verb] To deliver a recitation. RECODED (11) [verb] To code again or differently. RECUSED (10) [verb] To refuse or reject (a judge); to declare that the judge shall not try the case or is disqualified from acting. | [verb] (of a judge) To refuse to act as a judge; to declare oneself disqualified from acting. REDATED (9) REDBIRD (11) REDDLED (10) REDHEAD (12) [noun] A person with red hair. | [noun] A North American duck (Aythya americana) highly esteemed as a game bird. | [noun] A kind of milkweed (Asclepia curassavica), with red flowers, formerly used in medicine. REDOUND (9) [noun] A coming back, as an effect or consequence; a return. | [verb] To swell up (of water, waves etc.); to overflow, to surge (of bodily fluids). | [verb] To contribute to an advantage or disadvantage for someone or something. REDRIED (9) REDUCED (11) [verb] To bring down the size, quantity, quality, value or intensity of something; to diminish, to lower. | [verb] To lose weight. | [verb] To bring to an inferior rank; to degrade, to demote. REDWOOD (12) [noun] (USDA-preferred term) The species Sequoia sempervirens. | [noun] Any of the evergreen conifers belonging to the genus Sequoia in the wide sense. | [noun] The wood of the species Sequoia sempervirens. REESTED (8) REFACED (13) [verb] To replace the face or surface of something; to create a new outer layer. REFILED (11) REFINED (11) [verb] To purify; reduce to a fine, unmixed, or pure state; to free from impurities. | [verb] To become pure; to be cleared of impure matter. | [verb] To purify of coarseness, vulgarity, inelegance, etc.; to polish. REFIRED (11) REFIXED (18) [verb] To fix again. REFLOOD (11) REFOUND (11) [verb] To find something again. | [verb] To found again; to reestablish. | [verb] To found or cast anew. REFRIED (11) REFUGED (12) REFUSED (11) [verb] To decline (a request or demand). | [verb] To decline a request or demand, forbear; to withhold permission. | [verb] To throw back, or cause to keep back (as the centre, a wing, or a flank), out of the regular alignment when troops are about to engage the enemy. REFUTED (11) [verb] To prove (something) to be false or incorrect. | [verb] To deny the truth or correctness of (something). REGALED (9) [verb] To please or entertain (someone). | [verb] To provide hospitality for (someone); to supply with abundant food and drink. | [verb] To feast (on, with something). REGLUED (9) REGRIND (9) REHEARD (11) [verb] To hear again. | [verb] To try (a lawsuit, etc.) again judicially. REHIRED (11) [verb] To hire again. REIFIED (11) [verb] To regard something abstract as if it were a concrete material thing REIGNED (9) [verb] To exercise sovereign power, to rule as a monarch. | [verb] To reign over (a country) | [verb] To be the winner of the most recent iteration of a competition. REINKED (12) REKEYED (15) [verb] To enter information into a device, such as a keyboard or keypad, after it has been done at least once before. | [verb] To modify (a lock or its cylinder) to change which keys will open it. | [verb] To change the key or tenor of; to reframe. RELACED (10) RELATED (8) [verb] To tell in a descriptive way. | [verb] To bring into a relation, association, or connection (between one thing and another). | [verb] To have a connection. RELAXED (15) [verb] To calm down. | [verb] To make something loose. | [verb] To become loose. RELAYED (11) [verb] To release a new set of hounds. | [verb] To place (people or horses) in relays, such that one can take over from another. | [verb] To take on a new relay of horses; to change horses. RELINED (8) [verb] To add new lines to. | [verb] To add a new lining to. RELIVED (11) [verb] To experience (something) again; to live over again. | [verb] To bring back to life; to revive, resuscitate. | [verb] To come back to life. RELUMED (10) [verb] To rekindle; to relight (literally or figuratively). | [verb] To make clear or bright again. REMATED (10) REMISED (10) [verb] To send or give back. | [verb] To surrender all interest in a property by executing a deed, to quitclaim. REMIXED (17) [verb] To mix again. | [verb] To create a remix. | [verb] To rearrange or radically alter (a particular piece of music). REMORID (10) REMOVED (13) [verb] To move something from one place to another, especially to take away. | [verb] To murder. | [verb] To dismiss a batsman. RENAMED (10) [verb] To give a new name to. RENEGED (9) [verb] To break a promise or commitment; to go back on one's word. | [verb] In a card game, to break one's commitment to follow suit when capable. | [verb] To deny; to renounce RENEWED (11) [verb] To make (something) new again; to restore to freshness or original condition. | [verb] To replace (something which has broken etc.); to replenish (something which has been exhausted), to keep up a required supply of. | [verb] To make new spiritually; to regenerate. REOILED (8) REPAVED (13) REPINED (10) [verb] To fail; to wane. | [verb] To complain; to regret. REPLEAD (10) REPLIED (10) [verb] To give a written or spoken response, especially to a question, request, accusation or criticism; to answer. | [verb] To act or gesture in response. | [verb] To repeat something back; to echo. REPOSED (10) [verb] To lie at rest; to rest. | [verb] To lie; to be supported. | [verb] To lay, to set down. REPUTED (10) [verb] To attribute or credit something to something; to impute. | [verb] To consider, think, esteem, reckon (a person or thing) to be, or as being, something | [adjective] Accorded a reputation. RESAWED (11) RESCIND (10) [verb] To repeal, annul, or declare void; to take (something such as a rule or contract) out of effect. | [verb] To cut away or off. RESCUED (10) [verb] To save from any violence, danger or evil. | [verb] To free or liberate from confinement or other physical restraint. | [verb] To recover forcibly. RESEWED (11) RESIDED (9) [verb] To dwell permanently or for a considerable time; to have a settled abode for a time; to remain for a long time. | [verb] To have a seat or fixed position; to inhere; to lie or be as in attribute or element. | [verb] To sink; to settle, as sediment. RESILED (8) [verb] To start back; to recoil; to recede from a purpose. | [verb] To spring back; rebound; resume the original form or position, as an elastic body. RESINED (8) [verb] To apply resin to. RESITED (8) [verb] To move to another site or place. RESIZED (17) [verb] To alter the size of something. | [verb] To change in size. RESOLED (8) [verb] To replace or reattach the sole of an article of footwear. RESOUND (8) [noun] An echoing or reverberating sound. | [verb] To echo (a sound) or again sound. | [verb] To reverberate with sound or noise. RESOWED (11) RESPOND (10) [noun] A response. | [noun] A versicle or short anthem chanted at intervals during the reading of a lection. | [noun] A half-pillar, pilaster, or any corresponding device engaged in a wall to receive the impost of an arch. RESUMED (10) [verb] To take back possession of (something). | [verb] To summarise. | [verb] To start (something) again that has been stopped or paused from the point at which it was stopped or paused; continue, carry on. RETAPED (10) RETAXED (15) RETCHED (13) [verb] To make an unsuccessful effort to vomit; to strain, as in vomiting. | [verb] To reck | [verb] To reach RETILED (8) [verb] To tile again; to replace with new tiles RETIMED (10) [verb] To reschedule for another time. | [verb] To change the timing or duration of. RETIRED (8) [verb] To stop working on a permanent basis, usually because of old age or illness. | [verb] (sometimes reflexive) To withdraw; to take away. | [verb] To cease use or production of something. RETREAD (8) [noun] A used tire whose surface, the tread, has been replaced to extend its life and use. | [noun] A person who re-entered military service in World War Two after serving in World War One. | [verb] To replace the traction-providing surface of a vehicle that employs tires, tracks or treads. | [noun] (sometimes figurative) A return over ground previously covered; a retraversal or repetition. RETRIED (8) [verb] To try or attempt again. | [verb] To try judicially a second time. RETUNED (8) [verb] To tune again. RETYPED (13) [verb] To re-enter (text) using a keyboard. REVELED (11) [verb] To make merry; to have a happy, lively time. | [verb] To take delight (in something). REVERED (11) [verb] To regard someone or something with great awe or devotion. | [verb] To honour in a form lesser than worship, e.g. a saint, or an idol | [adjective] Respected or given reverence REVILED (11) [verb] To attack (someone) with abusive language. REVISED (11) [verb] To look at again, to reflect on. | [verb] To review, alter and amend, especially of written material. | [verb] To look over again (something previously written or learned), especially in preparation for an examination. REVIVED (14) [verb] To return to life; to become reanimated or reinvigorated. | [verb] To return to life; to cause to recover life or strength; to cause to live anew. | [verb] To recover from a state of oblivion, obscurity, neglect, or depression. REVOKED (15) [verb] To cancel or invalidate by withdrawing or reversing. | [verb] To fail to follow suit in a game of cards when holding a card in that suit. | [verb] To call or bring back. REVOTED (11) REWAKED (15) REWAXED (18) REWIRED (11) [verb] To replace or reconnect the wires of a device or installation. | [verb] To change the functionality of something by altering the parameters or logic. REWOUND (11) [verb] To wind (something) again. | [verb] To wind (something) back, now especially of cassette or video tape, CD, DVD etc.; to go back on a video or audio recording. | [verb] To go back or think back to a previous moment or place, or a previous point in a discourse. REYNARD (11) [noun] A male fox. REZONED (17) [verb] To change the zoning assigned to a piece of property by the planning and zoning commission of a government that determines proper and legal use for land. RHIZOID (20) [noun] A rootlike structure in fungi and some plants that acts as support and/or aids the absorption of nutrients. | [adjective] Resembling the root of a plant. RIBBAND (12) RIDDLED (10) [verb] To speak ambiguously or enigmatically. | [verb] To solve, answer, or explicate a riddle or question. | [verb] To put something through a riddle or sieve, to sieve, to sift. RIFFLED (14) [verb] To flow over a swift, shallow part of a stream. | [verb] To ruffle with a rippling action. | [verb] To skim or flick through the pages of a book. RIGHTED (12) [verb] To correct. | [verb] To set upright. | [verb] To return to normal upright position. RIMLAND (10) [noun] A land or region at the periphery of a heartland RIMPLED (12) RIPCORD (12) [noun] A cord to release a parachute from its sack. RIPENED (10) [verb] To grow ripe; to become mature (said of grain, fruit, flowers etc.) | [verb] To approach or come to perfection. | [verb] To cause to mature; to make ripe RIPPLED (12) [verb] To move like the undulating surface of a body of water; to undulate. | [verb] To propagate like a moving wave. | [verb] To make a sound as of water running gently over a rough bottom, or the breaking of ripples on the shore. RIVALED (11) [verb] To oppose or compete with. | [verb] To be equal to, or match, or to surpass another. | [verb] To strive to equal or excel; to emulate. RIVETED (11) [verb] To attach or fasten parts by using rivets. | [verb] To install rivets. | [verb] To command the attention of. ROACHED (13) [adjective] Having a style of trimming a horse's mane so that the hair stands straight up from the neck, similar to the natural growth pattern of a zebra's mane, or a mohawk haircut on a human. ROADBED (11) [noun] The prepared location for a road, including its foundation. | [noun] Another term for 'trackbed. ROASTED (8) [verb] To cook food by heating in an oven or over a fire without covering, resulting in a crisp, possibly even slightly charred appearance. | [verb] To cook by surrounding with hot embers, ashes, sand, etc. | [verb] To process by drying through exposure to sun or artificial heat RODEOED (9) [verb] To perform in a rodeo show. ROOSTED (8) [verb] (of birds or bats) To settle on a perch in order to sleep or rest | [verb] To spend the night | [verb] To rout out of bed; to rouse ROSEBUD (10) [noun] The bud of a rose. | [noun] (sometimes as a term of endearment) A pretty young woman. | [noun] A debutante. ROSINED (8) [verb] To apply rosin to (something); to rub or cover with rosin. ROTATED (8) [verb] To spin, turn, or revolve. | [verb] To advance through a sequence; to take turns. | [verb] (of aircraft) To lift the nose, just prior to takeoff. ROUGHED (12) [verb] To create in an approximate form. | [verb] To commit the offense of roughing, i.e. to punch another player. | [verb] To render rough; to roughen. ROUNDED (9) [verb] To shape something into a curve. | [verb] To become shaped into a curve. | [verb] (with "out") To finish; to complete; to fill out. ROUSTED (8) [verb] To rout out of bed; to rouse | [verb] To harass, to treat in a rough way. | [verb] To arrest ROWELED (11) [verb] To use a rowel on (something), especially to drain fluid. | [verb] To fit with spurs. | [verb] To apply the spur to. RUBBLED (12) [adjective] Reduced to rubble. RUCKLED (14) [verb] To crease or wrinkle. | [verb] To make a rattling noise in the throat. RUDDLED (10) RUFFLED (14) [verb] To make a ruffle in; to curl or flute, as an edge of fabric. | [verb] To disturb; especially, to cause to flutter. | [verb] To grow rough, boisterous, or turbulent. RUMBAED (12) [verb] To dance the rumba RUMBLED (12) [verb] To make a low, heavy, continuous sound. | [verb] To discover deceitful or underhanded behaviour. | [verb] To move while making a rumbling noise. RUMORED (10) [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. | [adjective] Widely reported without strong evidence. RUMPLED (12) [verb] To make wrinkled, particularly fabric. | [verb] To muss; to tousle. | [adjective] Wrinkled or crumpled RUNKLED (12) RUSTLED (8) [verb] To move (something) with a soft crackling sound. | [verb] To make or obtain in a lively, energetic way. | [verb] To steal (cattle or other livestock). SABERED (10) [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. SADDLED (10) [verb] To put a saddle on (an animal). | [verb] To get into a saddle. | [verb] To burden or encumber. SAGGARD (10) SAINTED (8) [verb] To canonize, to formally recognize someone as a saint. | [adjective] Made a saint; saint-like, reverenced. | [adjective] Used to mark a beloved person mentioned in conversation as being deceased. SALLIED (8) [verb] To make a sudden attack (e.g. on an enemy from a defended position). | [verb] To set out on an excursion; venture; depart (often followed by "forth.") | [verb] To venture off the beaten path. SALUTED (8) [verb] To make a gesture in honor of (someone or something). | [verb] To act in thanks, honor, or tribute; to thank or extend gratitude; to praise. | [verb] To wave, to acknowledge an acquaintance. SALVOED (11) SAMBAED (12) [verb] To dance the samba. SAMPLED (12) [verb] To take or to test a sample or samples of. | [verb] To reduce a continuous signal (such as a sound wave) to a discrete signal. | [verb] To reuse a portion of (an existing sound recording) in a new piece of music. SAPHEAD (13) SAPWOOD (13) [noun] The wood just under the bark of a stem or branch, different in color from the heartwood. SARCOID (10) [noun] Sarcoidosis. | [adjective] Relating to sarcoid (sarcoidosis). | [adjective] Resembling sarcoma. SATYRID (11) [noun] Any butterfly of the nymphalid subfamily Satyrinae, formerly the family Satyridae. SAUTEED (8) [verb] To cook (food) using a small amount of fat in an open pan over a relatively high heat, allowing the food to brown and form a crust stopping it from sticking to the pan as it cooks. SAVAGED (12) [verb] To attack or assault someone or something ferociously or without restraint. | [verb] To criticise vehemently. | [verb] (of an animal) To attack with the teeth. SAVORED (11) [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. | [verb] To appreciate, enjoy or relish something. | [verb] To season. SAVVIED (14) [verb] To understand. SCABBED (14) [verb] To become covered by a scab or scabs. | [verb] To form into scabs and be shed, as damaged or diseased skin. | [verb] To remove part of a surface (from). SCALDED (11) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. SCALPED (12) [verb] To remove the scalp (part of the head from where the hair grows), by brutal act or accident. | [verb] To resell, especially tickets, usually for an inflated price, often illegally. | [verb] On an open outcry exchange trading floor, to buy and sell rapidly for one's own account, aiming to buy from a seller and a little later sell to a buyer, making a small profit from the difference (roughly the amount of the bid/offer spread, or less). SCAMMED (14) [verb] To defraud or embezzle. SCAMPED (14) [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. SCANNED (10) [verb] To examine sequentially, carefully, or critically; to scrutinize; to behold closely. | [verb] To look about for; to look over quickly. | [verb] To create a digital copy of an image using a scanner. SCANTED (10) [verb] To limit in amount or share; to stint. | [verb] To fail, or become less; to scantle. | [adjective] Diminished; restricted. SCARFED (13) [verb] To throw on loosely; to put on like a scarf. | [verb] To dress with a scarf, or as with a scarf; to cover with a loose wrapping. | [verb] To shape by grinding. SCARPED (12) [verb] (earth science) to cut, scrape, erode, or otherwise make into a scarp or escarpment SCARRED (10) [verb] To mark the skin permanently. | [verb] To form a scar. | [verb] To affect deeply in a traumatic manner. SCARTED (10) SCATHED (13) [verb] To injure or harm. | [verb] To blast; scorch; wither. SCATTED (10) [verb] To sing an improvised melodic solo using nonsense syllables, often onomatopoeic or imitative of musical instruments. | [verb] To leave quickly (often used in the imperative). | [verb] An imperative demand, often understood by speaker and listener as impertinent. SCENDED (11) [verb] To heave upward. SCENTED (10) [verb] To detect the scent of; to discern by the sense of smell. | [verb] To have a suspicion of. | [verb] To impart an odour to. SCHEMED (15) [verb] To plot, or contrive a plan. | [verb] To plan; to contrive. SCIURID (10) SCOFFED (16) [verb] To jeer; to laugh with contempt and derision. | [verb] To mock; to treat with scorn. | [verb] To eat food quickly. SCOLDED (11) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. | [verb] To rebuke angrily. SCONCED (12) SCOOPED (12) [verb] To lift, move, or collect with a scoop or as though with a scoop. | [verb] To make hollow; to dig out. | [verb] To report on something, especially something worthy of a news article, before (someone else). SCOOTED (10) [verb] To walk fast; to go quickly; to run away hastily. | [verb] To ride on a scooter. | [verb] (of an animal) To move with the forelegs while sitting, so that the floor rubs against its rear end. SCORNED (10) [verb] To feel or display contempt or disdain for something or somebody; to despise. | [verb] To reject, turn down. | [verb] To refuse to do something, as beneath oneself. SCOURED (10) [verb] To clean, polish, or wash something by rubbing and scrubbing it vigorously, frequently with an abrasive or cleaning agent. | [verb] To remove debris and dirt by purging; to sweep along or off (by a current of water). | [verb] To clear the digestive tract by administering medication that induces defecation or vomiting; to purge. SCOUTED (10) [verb] To explore a wide terrain, as if on a search; to reconnoiter. | [verb] To observe, watch, or look for, as a scout; to follow for the purpose of observation, as a scout. | [verb] To reject with contempt. SCOWLED (13) [verb] To wrinkle the brows, as in frowning or displeasure; to put on a frowning look; to look sour, sullen, severe, or angry. | [verb] (by extension) To look gloomy, dark, or threatening; to lower. | [verb] To look at or repel with a scowl or a frown. SCRAPED (12) [verb] To draw (an object, especially a sharp or angular one), along (something) while exerting pressure. | [verb] To remove (something) by drawing an object along in this manner. | [verb] To injure or damage by rubbing across a surface. SCREWED (13) [verb] To connect or assemble pieces using a screw. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. | [verb] To cheat someone or ruin their chances in a game or other situation. SCRIBED (12) [verb] To write. | [verb] To write, engrave, or mark upon; to inscribe. | [verb] To record. SCRIVED (13) SCUDDED (12) [verb] To race along swiftly (especially used of clouds). | [verb] To run, or be driven, before a high wind with no sails set. | [verb] To hit or slap. SCUFFED (16) [verb] To scrape the feet while walking. | [verb] To hit lightly, to brush against. | [verb] To mishit (a shot on a ball) due to poor contact with the ball. SCULKED (14) SCULLED (10) [verb] To row a boat using a scull or sculls. | [verb] To skate while keeping both feet in contact with the ground or ice. | [verb] To drink the entire contents of (a drinking vessel) without pausing. SCULPED (12) [verb] (sometimes humorous) To sculpture; to carve or engrave. | [verb] To flay. SCUMMED (14) [verb] To remove the layer of scum from (a liquid etc.). | [verb] To remove (something) as scum. | [verb] To become covered with scum. SCYTHED (16) [verb] To use a scythe. | [verb] To cut with a scythe. | [verb] To cut off as with a scythe; to mow. SEABIRD (10) [noun] Any bird that spends most of its time in coastal waters or over the oceans. SEAFOOD (11) [noun] Fish, shellfish, seaweed, and other edible aquatic life. SEAWARD (11) [adjective] Being in or facing towards the sea, as opposed to the land. | [adverb] In the direction of the sea, toward the sea. SEAWEED (11) [noun] Any of numerous marine plants and algae, such as a kelp. SECEDED (11) [verb] To split from or to withdraw from membership of a political union, an alliance or an organisation. | [verb] To split or to withdraw one or more constituent entities from membership of a political union, an alliance or an organisation. SECURED (10) [verb] To make safe; to relieve from apprehensions of, or exposure to, danger; to guard; to protect. | [verb] To put beyond hazard of losing or of not receiving; to make certain; to assure; frequently with against or from, or formerly with of. | [verb] To make fast; to close or confine effectually; to render incapable of getting loose or escaping. SEDATED (9) [verb] To calm or put (a person) to sleep using a sedative drug. | [verb] To make tranquil. SEDUCED (11) [verb] To beguile or lure (someone) away from duty, accepted principles, or proper conduct; to lead astray. | [verb] To entice or induce (someone) to engage in a sexual relationship. | [verb] (by extension) To have sexual intercourse with. SEEDBED (11) [noun] Ground prepared for the planting of seeds. | [noun] A place conducive to development and attainment. SEEDPOD (11) SEETHED (11) [verb] To boil. | [verb] (of a liquid) To boil vigorously. | [verb] (of a liquid) To foam in an agitated manner, as if boiling. SEPALED (10) SERIFED (11) SERRIED (8) [adjective] Crowded together in rows. | [verb] To crowd; to press together. SETTLED (8) [verb] To conclude or resolve (something): | [verb] To place or arrange in(to) a desired (especially: calm) state, or make final disposition of (something). | [verb] To become calm, quiet, or orderly; to stop being agitated. SEVERED (11) [verb] To cut free. | [verb] To suffer disjunction; to be parted or separated. | [verb] To make a separation or distinction; to distinguish. SEWERED (11) SHAFTED (14) [verb] To fuck over; to cause harm to, especially through deceit or treachery. | [verb] To equip with a shaft. | [verb] To fuck; to have sexual intercourse with. SHAGGED (13) [verb] To make hairy or shaggy; to roughen. | [verb] To hang in shaggy clusters. | [verb] To shake, wiggle around. | [adjective] Extremely tired. SHAMMED (15) [verb] To deceive, cheat, lie. | [verb] To obtrude by fraud or imposition. | [verb] To assume the manner and character of; to imitate; to ape; to feign. SHANKED (15) [verb] To travel on foot. | [verb] To stab, especially with an improvised blade. | [verb] To remove another's trousers, especially in jest; to depants. SHARKED (15) [verb] To fish for sharks. | [verb] To steal or obtain through fraud. | [verb] To play the petty thief; to practice fraud or trickery; to swindle. SHARPED (13) [verb] To raise the pitch of a note half a step making a natural note a sharp. | [verb] To play tricks in bargaining; to act the sharper. | [verb] To sharpen. SHAULED (11) SHAWLED (14) SHEAFED (14) [verb] To gather and bind into a sheaf; to make into sheaves | [verb] To collect and bind cut grain, or the like; to make sheaves. SHEARED (11) [verb] To cut, originally with a sword or other bladed weapon, now usually with shears, or as if using shears. | [verb] To remove the fleece from a sheep etc by clipping. | [verb] To deform because of forces pushing in opposite directions. SHEAVED (14) [verb] To gather and bind into a sheaf. | [adjective] (of straw) Made into a sheaf SHEDDED (13) [verb] To place or allocate a vehicle, such as a locomotive, in or to a depot or shed. | [adjective] Having, or covered by, a shed. SHEENED (11) [verb] To shine; to glisten. SHEERED (11) [verb] To swerve from a course. | [verb] To shear. SHEETED (11) [verb] To cover or wrap with cloth, or paper, or other similar material. | [verb] To form into sheets. | [verb] Of rain, or other precipitation, to pour heavily. SHELLED (11) [verb] To remove the outer covering or shell of something. | [verb] To bombard, to fire projectiles at, especially with artillery. | [verb] To disburse or give up money, to pay. (Often used with out). SHELVED (14) [verb] To place on a shelf. | [verb] To set aside; to quit or postpone. | [verb] To furnish with shelves. SHIFTED (14) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To move from one place to another; to redistribute. | [verb] To change in form or character; swap. | [verb] To change position. SHILLED (11) [verb] To promote or endorse in return for payment, especially dishonestly. | [verb] To put under cover; to sheal. | [verb] To shell. SHIMMED (15) [verb] To fit one or more shims to a piece of machinery. | [verb] To adjust something by using shims. | [verb] To intercept and modify calls to (an API), usually for compatibility purposes. SHINNED (11) [verb] (as "shin up") To climb a mast, tree, rope, or the like, by embracing it alternately with the arms and legs, without help of steps, spurs, or the like. | [verb] To strike with the shin. | [verb] To run about borrowing money hastily and temporarily, as when trying to make a payment. SHIPPED (15) [verb] To send by water-borne transport. | [verb] To send (a parcel or container) to a recipient (by any means of transport). | [verb] To release a product to vendors; to launch. SHIRKED (15) [verb] To avoid, especially a duty, responsibility, etc.; to stay away from. | [verb] To evade an obligation; to avoid the performance of duty, as by running away. | [verb] To procure by petty fraud and trickery; to obtain by mean solicitation. SHIRRED (11) [verb] To make gathers in textiles by drawing together parallel threads. | [verb] To bake (a raw egg removed from its shell) in a baking dish. SHITTED (11) [verb] To defecate. | [verb] To excrete (something) through the anus. | [verb] To fool or try to fool someone; to be deceitful. SHOALED (11) [verb] To arrive at a shallow (or less deep) area. | [verb] To cause a shallowing; to come to a more shallow part of. | [verb] To become shallow. SHOCKED (17) [verb] To cause to be emotionally shocked, to cause (someone) to feel surprised and upset. | [verb] To give an electric shock to. | [verb] To meet with a shock; to collide in a violent encounter. SHOGGED (13) SHOOLED (11) SHOPPED (15) [verb] To visit stores or shops to browse or explore merchandise, especially with the intention of buying such merchandise. | [verb] To purchase products from (a range or catalogue, etc.). | [verb] To report the criminal activities or whereabouts of someone to an authority. SHORTED (11) [verb] To cause a short circuit in (something). | [verb] Of an electrical circuit, to short circuit. | [verb] To shortchange. SHOTTED (11) [adjective] Loaded with shot | [adjective] Having a shot attached. SHOUTED (11) [verb] To utter a sudden and loud cry, as in joy, triumph, exultation or anger, or to attract attention, to animate others, etc. | [verb] To utter with a shout; to cry; to shout out | [verb] To pay for food, drink or entertainment for others. SHREWED (14) SHRINED (11) [verb] To enshrine; to place reverently, as if in a shrine. | [adjective] Enshrined SHRIVED (14) SHUCKED (17) [verb] To remove the shuck from (walnuts, oysters, etc.). | [verb] To remove (any outer covering). | [verb] To fool; to hoax. SHUNNED (11) [verb] To avoid, especially persistently. | [verb] To escape (a threatening evil, an unwelcome task etc). | [verb] To screen, hide. SHUNTED (11) [verb] To cause to move (suddenly), as by pushing or shoving; to give a (sudden) start to. | [verb] To divert to a less important place, position, or state. | [verb] To provide with a shunt. SHUSHED (14) [verb] To be quiet; to keep quiet. | [verb] To ask someone to be quiet, especially by saying shh. SIALOID (8) SICKBED (16) [noun] A bed used by a person who is sick. | [noun] A place for convalescence. SICKLED (14) SIGANID (9) SIGHTED (12) [verb] To register visually. | [verb] To get sight of (something). | [verb] To apply sights to; to adjust the sights of; also, to give the proper elevation and direction to by means of a sight. SIGMOID (11) [noun] A function having a graph whose shape is sigmoid.. | [adjective] Curved in two directions, like the letter "S", or the Greek ς (sigma). | [adjective] Semi-circular, like the lunar sigma (similar to English C). SILURID (8) SIMIOID (10) SINEWED (11) [adjective] Furnished with sinews. | [adjective] Equipped; strengthened. SINGLED (9) [verb] To identify or select one member of a group from the others; generally used with out, either to single out or to single (something) out. | [verb] To get a hit that advances the batter exactly one base. | [verb] To thin out. SIXFOLD (18) [adjective] Having six component parts. | [adverb] Times six, multiplied by six. SIZZLED (26) [verb] To make the sound of water hitting a hot surface. | [verb] To be exciting or dazzling. SKEINED (12) SKELPED (14) [verb] To beat or slap. | [verb] To move briskly along. | [verb] To form (a plate or bar of metal, etc.) into a skelp. SKIDDED (14) [verb] To slide in an uncontrolled manner as in a car with the brakes applied too hard. | [verb] To protect or support with a skid or skids. | [verb] To cause to move on skids. SKILLED (12) [adjective] Having or showing skill; skillful. | [adjective] Requiring special abilities or training. | [verb] To set apart; separate. SKIMMED (16) [verb] To pass lightly; to glide along in an even, smooth course; to glide along near the surface. | [verb] To pass near the surface of; to brush the surface of; to glide swiftly along the surface of. | [verb] To hasten along with superficial attention. SKIMPED (16) [verb] To mock, deride, scorn, scold, make fun of. | [verb] To slight; to do carelessly; to scamp. | [verb] To make insufficient allowance for; to scant; to scrimp. SKINKED (16) SKINNED (12) [verb] To injure the skin of. | [verb] To remove the skin and/or fur of an animal or a human. | [verb] To high five. SKIPPED (16) [verb] To move by hopping on alternate feet. | [verb] To leap about lightly. | [verb] To skim, ricochet or bounce over a surface. SKIRLED (12) [verb] To make a shrill sound, as of bagpipes. SKIRRED (12) [verb] To leave hastily; to flee, especially with a whirring sound | [verb] To make a whirring sound. | [verb] To search about in, scour SKIRTED (12) [verb] To be on or form the border of. | [verb] To move around or along the border of; to avoid the center of. | [verb] To cover with a skirt; to surround. SKOALED (12) SKULKED (16) [verb] To stay where one cannot be seen, conceal oneself (often in a cowardly way or with the intent of doing harm). | [verb] To move in a stealthy or furtive way; to come or go while trying to avoid detection. | [verb] To avoid an obligation or responsibility. SKULLED (12) [verb] To hit in the head with a fist, a weapon, or a thrown object. | [verb] To strike the top of (the ball). | [adjective] (often in combination) Having a skull. SKUNKED (16) [verb] To defeat so badly as to prevent any opposing points. | [verb] To win by 30 or more points. | [verb] (of beer) To go bad, to spoil. SKYWARD (18) [adjective] Pointing or facing at or moving toward the sky. | [adverb] At or toward the sky. SLABBED (12) [verb] To make something into a slab. SLACKED (14) [verb] To slacken. | [verb] To mitigate; to reduce the strength of. | [verb] To lose cohesion or solidity by a chemical combination with water; to slake. SLAGGED (10) [verb] To produce slag | [verb] To become slag; to agglomerate when heated below the fusion point | [verb] To reduce to slag SLAMMED (12) [verb] To shut with sudden force so as to produce a shock and noise. | [verb] To put in or on a particular place with force and loud noise. (Often followed by a preposition such as down, against or into.) | [verb] To strike forcefully with some implement. SLANGED (9) [verb] To vocally abuse, or shout at. | [verb] To sell (especially illegal drugs). SLANTED (8) [verb] To lean, tilt or incline. | [verb] To bias or skew. | [verb] To lie or exaggerate. SLAPPED (12) [verb] To give a slap to. | [verb] To cause something to strike soundly. | [verb] To strike soundly against something. SLASHED (11) [verb] To cut or attempt to cut, particularly: | [verb] To strike violently and randomly, particularly: | [verb] To move quickly and violently. SLATTED (8) [verb] To construct or provide with slats. | [verb] To slap; to strike; to beat; to throw down violently. | [verb] To split; to crack. SLEAVED (11) SLEDDED (10) [verb] To ride a sled. | [verb] To convey on a sled. SLEDGED (10) [verb] To hit with a sledgehammer. | [verb] To drag or draw a sledge. | [verb] To ride, travel with or transport in a sledge. SLEEKED (12) [verb] To make smooth or glossy; to polish or cause to be attractive. SLEETED (8) [verb] (of the weather) To be in a state in which sleet is falling. SLEEVED (11) SLICKED (14) [verb] To make slick. SLIMMED (12) [verb] To lose weight in order to achieve slimness. | [verb] To make slimmer; to reduce in size. SLINKED (12) SLIPPED (12) [verb] To lose one’s traction on a slippery surface; to slide due to a lack of friction. | [verb] To err. | [verb] To accidentally reveal a secret or otherwise say something unintentional. SLITTED (8) [adjective] Having a slit or slits. SLOGGED (10) [verb] To walk slowly, encountering resistance. | [verb] (by extension) To work slowly and deliberately at a tedious task. | [verb] To strike something with a heavy blow, especially a ball with a bat. SLOPPED (12) [verb] To spill or dump liquid, especially over the rim of a container when it moves. | [verb] To spill liquid upon; to soil with a spilled liquid. | [verb] In the game of pool or snooker to pocket a ball by accident; in billiards, to make an ill-considered shot. SLOSHED (11) [verb] (of a liquid) To shift chaotically; to splash noisily. | [verb] (of a liquid) To cause to slosh | [verb] To make a sloshing sound. SLOTTED (8) [verb] To bar, bolt or lock a door or window. | [verb] To shut with violence; to slam. | [verb] To put something (such as a coin) into a slot (narrow aperture) SLUBBED (12) [verb] To draw and twist fibers in order to prepare them for spinning. SLUFFED (14) SLUGGED (10) [verb] To drink quickly; to gulp; to down. | [verb] To take part in casual carpooling; to form ad hoc, informal carpools for commuting, essentially a variation of ride-share commuting and hitchhiking. | [verb] (of a bullet) To become reduced in diameter, or changed in shape, by passing from a larger to a smaller part of the bore of the barrel. SLUICED (10) [verb] To emit by, or as by, flood gates. | [verb] To wet copiously, as by opening a sluice | [verb] To wash with, or in, a stream of water running through a sluice. SLUMMED (12) [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. SLUMPED (12) [verb] To collapse heavily or helplessly. | [verb] To decline or fall off in activity or performance. | [verb] To slouch or droop. SLURPED (10) [verb] To eat or drink noisily. | [verb] To make a loud sucking noise. SLURRED (8) [verb] To insult or slight. | [verb] To run together; to articulate poorly. | [verb] To play legato or without separate articulation; to connect (notes) smoothly. SLUSHED (11) [verb] To smear with slushy liquid or grease. | [verb] To slosh or splash; to move as, or through, a slushy or liquid substance. | [verb] To paint with a mixture of white lead and lime. SMACKED (16) [verb] To get the flavor of. | [verb] To indicate or suggest something; used with of. | [verb] To have a particular taste; used with of. SMARAGD (11) SMARTED (10) [verb] To hurt or sting. | [verb] To cause a smart or sting in. | [verb] To feel a pungent pain of mind; to feel sharp pain or grief; be punished severely; to feel the sting of evil. SMASHED (13) [verb] To break (something brittle) violently. | [verb] To be destroyed by being smashed. | [verb] To hit extremely hard. SMEARED (10) [verb] To spread (a substance, especially one that colours or is dirty) across a surface by rubbing. | [verb] To have a substance smeared on (a surface). | [verb] To damage someone's reputation by slandering, misrepresenting, or otherwise making false accusations about an individual, their statements, or their actions. SMEEKED (14) SMELLED (10) [verb] To sense a smell or smells. | [verb] Followed by like or of if descriptive: to have a particular smell, whether good or bad. | [verb] (without a modifier) To smell bad; to stink. SMELTED (10) [verb] To fuse or melt two things into one, especially in order to extract metal from ore; to meld SMERKED (14) SMIRKED (14) [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. SMOCKED (16) [verb] To provide with, or clothe in, a smock or a smock frock. | [verb] To apply smocking. SMUDGED (12) [verb] To obscure by blurring; to smear. | [verb] To soil or smear with dirt. | [verb] To use dense smoke to protect from insects. SMUTTED (10) [verb] To stain (or be stained) with soot or other dirt. | [verb] To taint (grain, etc.) with the smut fungus. | [verb] To become tainted by the smut fungus. SNACKED (14) [verb] To eat a light meal. | [verb] To eat between meals. | [verb] To snatch. SNAFUED (11) [verb] To screw up or foul up. SNAGGED (10) [verb] To catch or tear (e.g. fabric) upon a rough surface or projection. | [verb] To damage or sink (a vessel) by collision; said of a tree or branch fixed to the bottom of a navigable body of water and partially submerged or rising to just beneath the surface. | [verb] To fish by means of dragging a large hook or hooks on a line, intending to impale the body (rather than the mouth) of the target. SNAILED (8) SNAPPED (12) [verb] To fracture or break apart suddenly. | [verb] To give forth or produce a sharp cracking noise; to crack. | [verb] To attempt to seize with the teeth or bite. SNARLED (8) [verb] To entangle; to complicate; to involve in knots. | [verb] To become entangled. | [verb] To place in an embarrassing situation; to ensnare; to make overly complicated. SNEAKED (12) [verb] To creep or go stealthily; to come or go while trying to avoid detection, as a person who does not wish to be seen. | [verb] To take something stealthily without permission. | [verb] (ditransitive) To stealthily bring someone something. SNEAPED (10) SNEDDED (10) [verb] To lop. SNEERED (8) [verb] To raise a corner of the upper lip slightly, especially in scorn | [verb] To utter with a grimace or contemptuous expression; to say sneeringly. SNEEZED (17) [verb] To expel air as a reflex induced by an irritation in the nose. | [verb] To expel air as if the nose were irritated. SNELLED (8) [verb] To tie a hook to the end of a fishing line with a snell knot. SNIBBED (12) [verb] To latch (a door, window etc.). SNICKED (14) [verb] To latch, to lock. | [verb] To cut. | [verb] To cut or snip. SNIFFED (14) [verb] To make a short, audible inhalation, through the nose, as when smelling something. | [verb] To say something while sniffing, for example in case of illness or unhappiness, or in contempt. | [verb] To perceive vaguely SNIPPED (12) [verb] To cut with short sharp actions, as with scissors. | [verb] To reduce the price of a product, to create a snip. | [verb] To break off; to snatch away. SNOGGED (10) [verb] To kiss passionately. SNOODED (9) SNOOKED (12) SNOOLED (8) SNOOPED (10) [verb] To be devious and cunning so as not to be seen. | [verb] To secretly spy on or investigate, especially into the private personal life of others. SNOOTED (8) SNOOZED (17) [verb] To sleep, especially briefly; to nap, doze. | [verb] To pause; to postpone for a short while. SNORTED (8) [verb] To make a snort; to exhale roughly through the nose. | [verb] To express or force out by snorting. | [verb] To inhale (usually a drug) through the nose. SNOUTED (8) SNUBBED (12) [verb] To slight, ignore or behave coldly toward someone. | [verb] To turn down; to dismiss. | [verb] To check; to reprimand. SNUFFED (14) [verb] To inhale through the nose. | [verb] To turn up the nose and inhale air, as an expression of contempt; hence, to take offence. | [verb] To extinguish a candle or oil-lamp flame by covering the burning end of the wick until the flame is suffocated. SNUGGED (10) [verb] To make secure or snug. | [verb] To snuggle or nestle. | [verb] To make smooth. SOBERED (10) [verb] (often with up) To make or become sober. | [verb] (often with up) To overcome or lose a state of intoxication. | [verb] To moderate one's feelings SOLACED (10) [verb] To give solace to; comfort; cheer; console. | [verb] To allay or assuage. | [verb] To take comfort; to be cheered. SOLATED (8) SONHOOD (11) SOOTHED (11) [verb] To restore to ease, comfort, or tranquility; relieve; calm; quiet; refresh. | [verb] To allay; assuage; mitigate; soften. | [verb] To smooth over; render less obnoxious. SOPITED (10) SORTIED (8) [verb] To sally. SOUGHED (12) [verb] To make a soft rustling or murmuring sound. | [verb] To drain. SOUNDED (9) [verb] To produce a sound. | [verb] To convey an impression by one's sound. | [verb] To be conveyed in sound; to be spread or published; to convey intelligence by sound. SOURCED (10) [verb] To obtain or procure: used especially of a business resource. | [verb] To find information about (a quotation)'s source (from which it comes): to find a citation for. SOUTHED (11) [verb] To turn or move toward the south; to veer toward the south. | [verb] To come to the meridian; to cross the north and south line. SOZZLED (26) [adjective] Very drunk. SPALLED (10) [verb] To break into fragments or small pieces. | [verb] To reduce, as irregular blocks of stone, to an approximately level surface by hammering. SPANKED (14) [verb] To beat, smack or slap a person's buttocks, with the bare hand or other object, as punishment, gesture, or form of sexual interaction. | [verb] To soundly defeat, to trounce. | [verb] To hit very hard SPANNED (10) [verb] To extend through the distance between or across. | [verb] To extend through (a time period). | [verb] To measure by the span of the hand with the fingers extended, or with the fingers encompassing the object. SPARGED (11) [verb] To sprinkle or spray. | [verb] To introduce bubbles into (a liquid). SPARKED (14) [verb] To trigger, kindle into activity (an argument, etc). | [verb] To light; to kindle. | [verb] To give off a spark or sparks. SPAROID (10) SPARRED (10) [verb] To bolt, bar. | [verb] To supply or equip (a vessel) with spars. | [verb] To fight, especially as practice for martial arts or hand-to-hand combat. SPATHED (13) SPATTED (10) [verb] To spawn. Used of shellfish as above. | [verb] To quarrel or argue briefly. | [verb] To strike with a spattering sound. SPAWNED (13) [verb] To produce or deposit (eggs) in water. | [verb] To generate, bring into being, especially non-mammalian beings in very large numbers. | [verb] To bring forth in general. SPEANED (10) SPEARED (10) [verb] To pierce with a spear. | [verb] (by extension) To penetrate or strike with, or as if with, any long narrow object; to make a thrusting motion that catches an object on the tip of a long device. | [verb] To shoot into a long stem, as some plants do. SPECCED (14) [verb] To specify, especially in a formal specification document. SPECKED (16) [adjective] Having specks or spots, speckled. SPEEDED (11) [verb] To succeed; to prosper, be lucky. | [verb] To help someone, to give them fortune; to aid or favour. | [verb] To go fast. SPEELED (10) SPEERED (10) SPEILED (10) SPEIRED (10) SPELLED (10) [verb] To put under the influence of a spell; to affect by a spell; to bewitch; to fascinate; to charm. | [verb] To read (something) as though letter by letter; to peruse slowly or with effort. | [verb] (sometimes with “out”) To write or say the letters that form a word or part of a word. SPHERED (13) [verb] To place in a sphere, or among the spheres; to ensphere. | [verb] To make round or spherical; to perfect. SPIELED (10) [verb] To talk at length. | [verb] To give a sales pitch; to promote by speaking. SPIERED (10) SPIFFED (16) [verb] (usually with up or out) To make spiffy (attractive, polished, or up-to-date) | [verb] To reward (a salesperson) with a spiff or bonus. | [verb] To attach a spiff or bonus to the selling of (a product) SPILLED (10) [verb] To drop something so that it spreads out or makes a mess; to accidentally pour. | [verb] To spread out or fall out, as above. | [verb] To drop something that was intended to be caught. SPIROID (10) SPIRTED (10) [verb] To cause to gush out suddenly or violently in a stream or jet. | [verb] To rush from a confined place in a small stream or jet. | [verb] To make a strong effort for a short period of time. SPITTED (10) [verb] To impale on a spit; to pierce with a sharp object. | [verb] To use a spit to cook; to attend to food that is cooking on a spit. | [verb] To dig (something) using a spade; also, to turn (the soil) using a plough. | [verb] To impale on a spit; to pierce with a sharp object. SPLAYED (13) [verb] To spread; spread out. | [verb] To dislocate, as a shoulder bone. | [verb] To turn on one side; to render oblique; to slope or slant, as the side of a door, window etc. SPLICED (12) [verb] To unite, as two ropes, or parts of a rope, by a particular manner of interweaving the strands, -- the union being between two ends, or between an end and the body of a rope. | [verb] To unite, as spars, timbers, rails, etc., by lapping the two ends together, or by applying a piece which laps upon the two ends, and then binding, or in any way making fast. | [verb] To unite in marriage. SPLINED (10) [adjective] Having a spline or splines. SPOILED (10) [verb] To strip (someone who has been killed or defeated) of their arms or armour. | [verb] To strip or deprive (someone) of their possessions; to rob, despoil. | [verb] To plunder, pillage (a city, country etc.). SPONGED (11) [verb] To take advantage of the kindness of others. | [verb] To get by imposition; to scrounge. | [verb] To deprive (somebody) of something by imposition. SPOOFED (13) [verb] To gently satirize. | [verb] To deceive. | [verb] To falsify. SPOOKED (14) [verb] To frighten or make nervous (especially by startling). | [verb] To become frightened (by something startling). | [verb] To haunt. SPOOLED (10) [verb] To wind on a spool or spools. | [verb] To send files to a device or a program (a spooler or a daemon that puts them in a queue for processing at a later time). SPOONED (10) [verb] To sail briskly with the wind astern, with or without sails hoisted. | [verb] To serve using a spoon; to transfer (something) with a spoon. | [verb] To flirt; to make advances; to court, to interact romantically or amorously. SPOORED (10) [verb] To track an animal by following its spoor SPOROID (10) SPORTED (10) [verb] To amuse oneself, to play. | [verb] To mock or tease, treat lightly, toy with. | [verb] To display; to have as a notable feature. SPOTTED (10) [verb] To see, find; to pick out, notice, locate, distinguish or identify. | [verb] To loan a small amount of money to someone. | [verb] To stain; to leave a spot (on). SPOUSED (10) SPOUTED (10) [verb] To gush forth in a jet or stream | [verb] To eject water or liquid in a jet. | [verb] To speak tediously or pompously. SPRAYED (13) [verb] To project a liquid in a dispersive manner toward something. | [verb] To project in a dispersive manner. | [verb] To project many small items dispersively. | [adjective] Chapped with cold SPRUCED (12) [verb] (usually with up) To arrange neatly; tidy up. | [verb] (usually with up) To make oneself spruce (neat and elegant in appearance). | [verb] To tease. SPUDDED (12) [verb] (drilling) To begin drilling an oil well; to drill by moving the drill bit and shaft up and down, or by raising and dropping a bit. | [verb] (roofing) To remove the roofing aggregate and most of the bituminous top coating by scraping and chipping. | [verb] (camping) To set up a recreational vehicle (RV) at a campsite, typically by leveling the RV and connecting it to electric, water, and/or sewer hookups. SPUNKED (14) SPURNED (10) [verb] To reject disdainfully; contemn; scorn. | [verb] To reject something by pushing it away with the foot. | [verb] To waste; fail to make the most of (an opportunity) SPURRED (10) [verb] To ask, to inquire | [verb] To prod (especially a horse) on the side or flank, with the intent to urge motion or haste, to gig. | [verb] To urge or encourage to action, or to a more vigorous pursuit of an object SPURTED (10) [verb] To cause to gush out suddenly or violently in a stream or jet. | [verb] To rush from a confined place in a small stream or jet. | [verb] To make a strong effort for a short period of time. SQUALID (17) [adjective] Extremely dirty and unpleasant. | [adjective] Showing a contemptible lack of moral standards. | [noun] Any member of the family Squalidae of dogfish sharks. SQUARED (17) [verb] To adjust so as to align with or place at a right angle to something else; in particular: | [verb] To resolve or reconcile; to suit or fit. | [verb] To adjust or adapt so as to bring into harmony with something. SQUIRED (17) [verb] To attend as a squire. | [verb] To attend as a beau, or gallant, for aid and protection. STABBED (12) [verb] To pierce or to wound (somebody) with a pointed tool or weapon, especially a knife or dagger. | [verb] To thrust in a stabbing motion. | [verb] To recklessly hit with the tip of a pointed object, such as a weapon or finger (often used with at). STABLED (10) [verb] To put or keep (an animal) in a stable. | [verb] To dwell in a stable. | [verb] To park (a rail vehicle). STACKED (14) [verb] To arrange in a stack, or to add to an existing stack. | [verb] To arrange the cards in a deck in a particular manner. | [verb] To take all the money another player currently has on the table. STAFFED (14) [verb] To supply (a business, volunteer organization, etc.) with employees or staff members. | [adjective] Occupied by staff, having members of staff. STAGGED (10) [verb] To act as a "stag", an irregular dealer in stocks. | [verb] To watch; to dog, or keep track of. STAINED (8) [verb] To discolour. | [verb] To taint or tarnish someone's character or reputation | [verb] To coat a surface with a stain STALKED (12) [verb] To approach slowly and quietly in order not to be discovered when getting closer. | [verb] To (try to) follow or contact someone constantly, often resulting in harassment.Wp | [verb] To walk slowly and cautiously; to walk in a stealthy, noiseless manner. STALLED (8) [verb] To put (an animal, etc.) in a stall. | [verb] To fatten. | [verb] To come to a standstill. STAMPED (12) [verb] To step quickly and heavily, once or repeatedly. | [verb] To move (the foot or feet) quickly and heavily, once or repeatedly. | [verb] To strike, beat, or press forcibly with the bottom of the foot, or by thrusting the foot downward. STANGED (9) STAPLED (10) [verb] To sort according to its staple. | [verb] To secure with a staple. | [adjective] Fastened with staples. STARRED (8) [verb] To appear as a featured performer or headliner, especially in an entertainment program. | [verb] To feature (a performer or a headliner), especially in a movie or an entertainment program. | [verb] To mark with a star or asterisk. | [adjective] Having a star or stars. STARTED (8) [verb] To begin, commence, initiate. | [verb] To begin an activity. | [verb] To have its origin (at), begin. STARVED (11) [verb] To die; in later use especially to die slowly, waste away. | [verb] To die because of lack of food or of not eating. | [verb] To be very hungry. STASHED (11) [verb] To hide or store away for later use. STATUED (8) STEADED (9) STEAMED (10) [verb] To cook with steam. | [verb] To expose to the action of steam; to apply steam to for softening, dressing, or preparing. | [verb] To produce or vent steam. STEEKED (12) STEELED (8) [verb] To edge, cover, or point with steel. | [verb] To harden or strengthen; to nerve or make obdurate; to fortify against. | [verb] (of mirrors) To back with steel. STEEPED (10) [verb] (middle voice) To soak or wet thoroughly. | [verb] To imbue with something; to be deeply immersed in. STEERED (8) [verb] To guide the course of a vessel, vehicle, aircraft etc. (by means of a device such as a rudder, paddle, or steering wheel). | [verb] To guide the course of a vessel, vehicle, aircraft etc. (by means of a device such as a rudder, paddle, or steering wheel). | [verb] To be directed and governed; to take a direction, or course; to obey the helm. STEEVED (11) [verb] To project upward, or make an angle with the horizon or with the line of a vessel's keel; said of the bowsprit, etc. | [verb] To stow, as bales in a vessel's hold, by means of a steeve. STEMMED (12) [verb] To remove the stem from. | [verb] To be caused or derived; to originate. | [verb] To descend in a family line. STEPPED (12) [verb] To move the foot in walking; to advance or recede by raising and moving one of the feet to another resting place, or by moving both feet in succession. | [verb] To walk; to go on foot; especially, to walk a little distance. | [verb] To walk slowly, gravely, or resolutely. STEROID (8) [noun] A class of organic compounds having a structure of 17 carbon atoms arranged in four rings; they are lipids, and occur naturally as sterols, bile acids, adrenal and sex hormones, and some vitamins; many drugs are synthetic steroids. | [noun] Any anabolic hormone used to promote muscle growth. | [noun] Any chemical compound used to enhance athletic performance. STETTED (8) [verb] To let (edited material) stand, or remain as it was. STEWARD (11) [noun] A person who manages the property or affairs for another entity, particularly the chief administrator of a medieval manor. | [noun] A ship's officer who is in charge of making dining arrangements and provisions. | [noun] A flight attendant, a male flight attendant. STICKED (14) STIFFED (14) [verb] To fail to pay that which one owes (implicitly or explicitly) to another, especially by departing hastily. | [verb] To cheat someone | [verb] To tip ungenerously STIFLED (11) [verb] To interrupt or cut off. | [verb] To repress, keep in or hold back. | [verb] To smother or suffocate. STILLED (8) [verb] To calm down, to quiet | [verb] To trickle, drip. | [verb] To cause to fall by drops. STILTED (8) [verb] To raise on stilts, or as if on stilts | [adjective] Making use of or possessing a stilt or stilts, or things resembling stilts; raised on stilts. | [adjective] Elevated or raised in a contrived or unnatural way; stiff and artificially formal or pompous; also, depending on redundant, unnecessary elements. STIMIED (10) [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. | [verb] To bring into the position of, or impede by, a stymie. STINTED (8) [verb] To stop (an action); cease, desist. | [verb] To stop speaking or talking (of a subject). | [verb] To be sparing or mean. STIPEND (10) [noun] A scholarship granted to a student. | [noun] A fixed payment, generally small and occurring at regular intervals; a modest allowance. | [verb] To provide (someone) with a stipend. STIRRED (8) [verb] To incite to action | [verb] To disturb the relative position of the particles of, as of a liquid, by passing something through it; to agitate. | [verb] To agitate the content of (a container), by passing something through it. STOBBED (12) STOCKED (14) [verb] To have on hand for sale. | [verb] To provide with material requisites; to store; to fill; to supply. | [verb] To allow (cows) to retain milk for twenty-four hours or more prior to sale. STODGED (10) STOMPED (12) [verb] To trample heavily. | [verb] To severely beat someone physically or figuratively. STOOGED (9) [verb] To act as a straight man. STOOKED (12) [verb] To make stooks. STOOLED (8) [verb] To produce stool: to defecate. | [verb] To cut down (a plant) until its main stem is close to the ground, resembling a stool, to promote new growth. | [verb] To ramify; to tiller, as grain; to shoot out suckers. STOOPED (10) [verb] To bend the upper part of the body forward and downward to a half-squatting position; crouch. | [verb] To lower oneself; to demean or do something below one's status, standards, or morals. | [verb] Of a bird of prey: to swoop down on its prey. STOPPED (12) [verb] To cease moving. | [verb] To not continue. | [verb] To cause (something) to cease moving or progressing. STORIED (8) [adjective] Much talked or written about | [adjective] Historical | [adjective] Having multiple storeys; multistoried STORMED (10) [verb] (with adverbial of direction) To move quickly and noisily like a storm, usually in a state of uproar or anger. | [verb] To rage or fume; to be in a violent temper. | [verb] To assault (a stronghold or fortification) with military forces. STRAFED (11) [verb] To attack (ground targets) with automatic gunfire from a low-flying aircraft. | [verb] To sidestep; to move sideways without turning (a core mechanic of most first-person shooters). STRAKED (12) STRAWED (11) STRAYED (11) [verb] To wander, as from a direct course; to deviate, or go out of the way. | [verb] To wander from one's limits; to rove or roam at large; to go astray. | [verb] To wander from the path of duty or rectitude; to err. STREWED (11) [verb] (archaic except strewn) To distribute objects or pieces of something over an area, especially in a random manner. | [verb] (archaic except strewn) To cover, or lie upon, by having been scattered. | [verb] To spread abroad; to disseminate. STRIPED (10) [verb] To mark with stripes. | [verb] To lash with a whip or strap. | [verb] To distribute data across several separate physical disks to reduce the time to read and write. STRIVED (11) STROKED (12) [verb] To move one's hand or an object (such as a broom) along (a surface) in one direction. | [verb] To hit the ball with the bat in a flowing motion. | [verb] To give a finely fluted surface to. STROWED (11) [verb] (archaic except strewn) To distribute objects or pieces of something over an area, especially in a random manner. | [verb] (archaic except strewn) To cover, or lie upon, by having been scattered. | [verb] To spread abroad; to disseminate. STROYED (11) STUBBED (12) [verb] To remove most of a tree, bush, or other rooted plant by cutting it close to the ground. | [verb] To remove a plant by pulling it out by the roots. | [verb] To jam, hit, or bump, especially a toe. STUDDED (10) [adjective] Having studs. | [adjective] (in combination) Having many of some specified thing. STUDIED (9) [adjective] Practiced; self-conscious; careful. | [adjective] Qualified by, or versed in, study; learned. | [verb] (usually academic) To review materials already learned in order to make sure one does not forget them, usually in preparation for an examination. STUFFED (14) [verb] To fill by packing or crowding something into; to cram with something; to load to excess. | [verb] To fill a space with (something) in a compressed manner. | [verb] To fill with seasoning. STUMMED (12) [verb] To ferment. | [verb] To renew (wine etc.) by mixing must with it and raising a new fermentation. | [verb] To fume, as a cask of liquor, with burning sulphur. STUMPED (12) [verb] To stop, confuse, or puzzle. | [verb] To baffle; to make unable to find an answer to a question or problem. | [verb] To campaign. STUNNED (8) [verb] To incapacitate; especially by inducing disorientation or unconsciousness. | [verb] To shock or surprise. | [verb] To hit the cue ball so that it slides without topspin or backspin (and with or without sidespin) and continues at a natural angle after contact with the object ball STUNTED (8) [verb] (cheerleading) To perform a stunt. | [verb] To show off; to posture. | [verb] To check or hinder the growth or development of. STYLOID (11) [noun] The styloid process. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the styloid process, a long and slender process from the lower side of the temporal bone of man, corresponding to the tympanohyal and stylohyal of other animals; styliform. STYMIED (13) [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. | [verb] To bring into the position of, or impede by, a stymie. SUBACID (12) [noun] Any substance that is moderately acid. | [adjective] Somewhat acidic. SUBARID (10) SUBDUED (11) [verb] To overcome, quieten, or bring under control. | [verb] To bring (a country) under control by force. | [adjective] Conquered; overpowered; crushed; submissive. SUBHEAD (13) [noun] A subheading or subtitle SUBTEND (10) [verb] To use an angle to delimit (mark off, enclose) part of a straight or curved line, for example an arc or the opposite side of a triangle. | [verb] (also mathematics) To extend or stretch opposite something; to be part of a straight or curved line that is opposite to and delimits an angle. | [verb] To form the central angle of a circle underneath an arc SUCCEED (12) [verb] To follow in order; to come next after; hence, to take the place of. | [verb] To obtain the object desired; to accomplish what is attempted or intended; to have a prosperous issue or termination; to be successful. | [verb] To fall heir to; to inherit. SUCKLED (14) [verb] To give suck to; to nurse at the breast, udder, or dugs. | [verb] To nurse; to suck milk from a nursing mother. | [verb] To nurse from (a breast, nursing mother, etc.). SUGARED (9) [verb] To add sugar to; to sweeten with sugar. | [verb] To make (something unpleasant) seem less so. | [verb] In making maple sugar, to complete the process of boiling down the syrup till it is thick enough to crystallize; to approach or reach the state of granulation; with the preposition off. SULLIED (8) [adjective] Defiled or tainted, soiled or stained. | [verb] To soil or stain; to dirty. | [verb] To corrupt or damage. SULPHID (13) SUMMAND (12) [noun] Something which is added or summed. SUNBIRD (10) [noun] A bird belonging to any of several species in the family Nectariniidae. | [noun] A person, usually one who is retired, who travels from a warm climate to a colder one in the summer. SUNLAND (8) SUNWARD (11) [adjective] Directed or turned toward the sun. | [adverb] In the direction of the sun. SUPERED (10) SUPPLED (12) [verb] To make or become supple. | [verb] To make compliant, submissive, or obedient. SUSPEND (10) [verb] To halt something temporarily. | [verb] To hold in an undetermined or undecided state. | [verb] To discontinue or interrupt a function, task, position, or event. SUTURED (8) [verb] To sew up or join by means of a suture. SWABBED (15) [verb] To use a swab on something, or clean something with a swab. SWACKED (17) [adjective] Drunk. SWAGGED (13) [verb] To (cause to) sway. | [verb] To droop; to sag. | [verb] To decorate (something) with loops of draped fabric. SWAMPED (15) [verb] To drench or fill with water. | [verb] To overwhelm; to make too busy, or overrun the capacity of. | [verb] To plunge into difficulties and perils; to overwhelm; to ruin; to wreck. SWANKED (15) [verb] To swagger, to show off. SWANNED (11) [verb] To travel or move about in an aimless, idle, or pretentiously casual way. | [verb] To declare (chiefly in first-person present constructions). SWAPPED (15) [verb] To exchange or give (something) in an exchange (for something else). | [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To beat the air, or ply the wings, with a sweeping motion or noise; to flap. SWARDED (12) SWARMED (13) [verb] To move as a swarm. | [verb] To teem, or be overrun with insects, people, etc. | [verb] To fill a place as a swarm. SWASHED (14) [verb] To swagger; to bluster and brag. | [verb] To dash or flow noisily; to splash. | [verb] To fall violently or noisily. SWATHED (14) [verb] To bind with a swathe, band, bandage, or rollers SWATTED (11) [verb] To beat off, as insects; to bat, strike, or hit. | [verb] To illegitimately provoke a SWAT assault upon (someone). SWEATED (11) [verb] To emit sweat. | [verb] To cause to excrete moisture through skin. | [verb] To work hard. SWELLED (11) [verb] To become bigger, especially due to being engorged. | [verb] To cause to become bigger. | [verb] To grow gradually in force or loudness. SWERVED (14) [verb] To stray; to wander; to rove. | [verb] To go out of a straight line; to deflect. | [verb] To wander from any line prescribed, or from a rule or duty; to depart from what is established by law, duty, custom, or the like; to deviate. SWIGGED (13) [verb] To drink (usually by gulping or in a greedy or unrefined manner); to quaff. | [verb] To suck. | [verb] To take up the last bit of slack in rigging by taking a single turn around a cleat, then hauling on the line above and below the cleat while keeping tension on the line. SWILLED (11) [verb] To drink (or, rarely, eat) greedily or to excess. | [verb] To wash (something) by flooding with water. | [verb] To move (a liquid or liquid-filled vessel) in a circular motion. SWINGED (12) [verb] To singe. | [verb] To move like a lash; to lash. | [verb] To strike hard. SWINKED (15) SWIRLED (11) [verb] To twist or whirl, as an eddy. | [verb] To be arranged in a twist, spiral or whorl. | [verb] To circulate. SWISHED (14) [verb] To make a rustling sound while moving. | [verb] To flourish with a swishing sound. | [verb] To flog; to lash. SWOBBED (15) [verb] To use a swab on something, or clean something with a swab. SWOONED (11) [verb] To faint, to lose consciousness. | [verb] (by extension) To be overwhelmed by emotion, especially infatuation. | [verb] To make a moan, sigh, or some other sound expressing infatuation or affection. SWOOPED (13) [verb] To fly or glide downwards suddenly; to plunge (in the air) or nosedive. | [verb] To move swiftly, as if with a sweeping movement, especially to attack something. | [verb] To fall on at once and seize; to catch while on the wing. SWOPPED (15) [verb] To exchange or give (something) in an exchange (for something else). | [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To beat the air, or ply the wings, with a sweeping motion or noise; to flap. SWOTTED (11) [verb] To study with effort or determination (object of study indicated by "up on"). SWOUNED (11) SYLPHID (16) SYNCHED (16) [verb] To synchronize, especially in the senses of data synchronization, time synchronization, or synchronizing music with video. | [verb] To flush all pending I/O operations to disk. SYRPHID (16) [noun] Any species of the hoverfly family Syrphidae. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to flies of the family Syrphidae. TABANID (10) TABBIED (12) TABERED (10) TABLOID (10) [noun] A newspaper having pages half the dimensions of the standard format. | [noun] A newspaper, especially one in this format, that favours stories of a sensational or even fictitious nature over serious news. | [noun] A compressed portion of drugs, chemicals, etc.; a tablet. TABOOED (10) [verb] To mark as taboo. | [verb] To ban. | [verb] To avoid. TABORED (10) TACKLED (14) [verb] To force a person to the ground with the weight of one's own body, usually by jumping on top or slamming one's weight into him or her. | [verb] To face or deal with, attempting to overcome or fight down. | [verb] To attempt to take away a ball. TAINTED (8) [verb] To contaminate or corrupt (something) with an external agent, either physically or morally. | [verb] To spoil (food) by contamination. | [verb] To be infected or corrupted; to be touched by something corrupting. TALCKED (14) TALIPED (10) TALLIED (8) [verb] To count something. | [verb] To record something by making marks. | [verb] To make things correspond or agree with each other. TALONED (8) TANGLED (9) [verb] To become mixed together or intertwined | [verb] To enter into an argument, conflict, dispute, or fight | [verb] To mix together or intertwine TANGOED (9) [verb] To dance the tango. | [verb] To mingle or interact (with each other). TANKARD (12) [noun] A large drinking vessel, sometimes of pewter, sometimes with a glass base, with one handle and often a hinged cover. TANYARD (11) TAPERED (10) [verb] To make thinner or narrower at one end. | [verb] To diminish gradually. | [adjective] Narrowing gradually towards a point. TARRIED (8) [verb] To delay; to be late or tardy in beginning or doing anything. | [verb] To linger in expectation of something or until something is done or happens. | [verb] To abide, stay or wait somewhere, especially if longer than planned. TARWEED (11) [noun] Any of various American flowering plants that have sticky leaves. TATTLED (8) [verb] To chatter; to gossip. | [verb] Often said of children: to report incriminating information about another person, or a person's wrongdoing; to tell on somebody. | [verb] To speak like a baby or young child; to babble, to prattle; to speak haltingly; to stutter. TAUNTED (8) [verb] To make fun of (someone); to goad (a person) into responding, often in an aggressive manner. TAXPAID (17) TEAZLED (17) [verb] To raise the nap on cloth; to tease; to card. TEETHED (11) [verb] To grow teeth. | [verb] To bite on something to relieve discomfort caused by growing teeth. TELEXED (15) [verb] To send (a message) by telex. TELFORD (11) TEMPLED (12) TEMPTED (12) [verb] To provoke someone to do wrong, especially by promising a reward; to entice. | [verb] To attract; to allure. | [verb] To provoke something; to court. TENFOLD (11) [verb] To increase to ten times as much; to multiply by ten | [adjective] Containing ten parts | [adjective] Ten times as much TENONED (8) [verb] To make into a tenon. | [verb] To fit with tenons. | [adjective] Having one or more tenons. TENURED (8) [verb] To grant tenure, the status of having a permanent academic position, to (someone). | [adjective] Having tenure TETCHED (13) THACKED (17) THANKED (15) [verb] To express gratitude or appreciation toward. | [verb] To feel gratitude or appreciation toward. | [verb] To credit or hold responsible. THEROID (11) [adjective] Bestial, resembling an animal. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being the thyroid gland. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being the chief cartilage of the larynx. THIEVED (14) [verb] To commit theft. THIGHED (15) THINNED (11) [verb] To make thin or thinner. | [verb] To become thin or thinner. | [verb] To dilute. THIRLED (11) THONGED (12) [adjective] Having a thong or thongs. THORNED (11) THRAWED (14) THRIVED (14) [verb] To grow or increase stature; to grow vigorously or luxuriantly, to flourish. | [verb] To increase in wealth or success; to prosper, be profitable. THRONED (11) [verb] To place on a royal seat; to enthrone. | [verb] To place in an elevated position; to give sovereignty or dominion to; to exalt. | [verb] To be in, or sit upon, a throne; to be placed as if upon a throne. THUDDED (13) [verb] To make the sound of a dull impact. THUMBED (15) [verb] To touch or cover with the thumb. | [verb] (with through) To turn the pages of (a book) in order to read it cursorily. | [verb] (travel) To hitchhike THUMPED (15) [verb] To hit (someone or something) as if to make a thump. | [verb] To cause to make a thumping sound. | [verb] To thud or pound. THUNKED (15) [verb] To strike against something, without breakage, making a "thunk" sound. | [verb] (functional programming) To delay (a computation). | [verb] To map (machine data) from one system-specific form to another. THYROID (14) [noun] The thyroid gland. | [noun] The thyroid cartilage. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being the thyroid gland. TIARAED (8) TICKLED (14) [verb] To touch repeatedly or stroke delicately in a manner which causes laughter, pleasure and twitching. | [verb] To unexpectedly touch or stroke delicately in a manner which causes displeasure or withdrawal. | [verb] (of a body part) To feel as if the body part in question is being tickled. TIERCED (10) [adjective] Divided into three (either vertically or horizontally) TINCTED (10) TINGLED (9) [verb] To feel a prickling or mildly stinging sensation. | [verb] To cause to feel a prickling or mildly stinging sensation. | [verb] To ring, to tinkle. TINKLED (12) [verb] To make light metallic sounds, rather like a very small bell. | [verb] To cause to tinkle. | [verb] To indicate, signal, etc. by tinkling. TIPPLED (12) [verb] To sell alcoholic liquor by retail. | [verb] To drink too much alcohol. | [verb] To drink alcohol regularly or habitually, but not to excess. TIPTOED (10) [verb] To walk quietly with only the tips of the toes touching the ground. TISSUED (8) TOADIED (9) [verb] (construed with to) To behave like a toady (to someone). TOASTED (8) [verb] To lightly cook by browning via direct exposure to a fire or other heat source. | [verb] To grill, lightly cook by browning specifically under a grill or in a toaster | [verb] To engage in a salutation and/or accompanying raising of glasses while drinking alcohol in honor of someone or something. TODDLED (10) [verb] To walk unsteadily, as a small child does. | [verb] To walk in a carefree manner. TOEHOLD (11) [noun] A foothold small enough to support just the toe. | [noun] (by extension) Any small advantage which allows one to make significant progress; a slight footing or foothold. | [noun] A hold in which the aggressor bends back the opponent's foot. TOGATED (9) TOGGLED (10) [verb] To alternate between two positions using a single switch or lever. | [verb] To switch between alternate states. | [verb] To fix like a toggle iron; to fix fast. TOKENED (12) TONGUED (9) [verb] On a wind instrument, to articulate a note by starting the air with a tap of the tongue, as though by speaking a 'd' or 't' sound (alveolar plosive). | [verb] To manipulate with the tongue, as in kissing or oral sex. | [verb] To protrude in relatively long, narrow sections. TOOTHED (11) TOOTLED (8) [verb] To make a soft toot sound. | [verb] To play (a musical instrument) making such a sound. | [verb] To go (somewhere); to amble aimlessly. TOPPLED (12) [verb] To push, throw over, overturn or overthrow something | [verb] To totter and fall, or to lean as if about to do so TORCHED (13) [verb] To set fire to, especially by use of a torch (flaming stick). TORQUED (17) [verb] To twist or turn something. | [adjective] Upset; angry. TOTALED (8) [verb] To add up; to calculate the sum of. | [verb] To equal a total of; to amount to. | [verb] To demolish; to wreck completely. (from total loss) TOUCHED (13) [adjective] Emotionally moved (by), made to feel emotion (by). | [adjective] Slightly mentally deficient; touched in the head. TOUGHED (12) [verb] To endure. | [verb] To toughen. TOUSLED (8) [verb] To put into disorder; to tumble; to touse; to muss. | [adjective] (of hair etc) Unkempt, dishevelled or in disarray. TOUZLED (17) TOWELED (11) [verb] To hit with a towel. | [verb] To dry by using a towel. | [verb] To block up (a door, etc.) with a towel, to conceal the fumes of a recreational drug. TOWERED (11) [verb] To be very tall. | [verb] To be high or lofty; to soar. | [verb] To soar into. TOWHEAD (14) [noun] A blond person whose very pale, almost white hair resembles tow; the hair of such a person. | [noun] An alluvial deposit in a river, such as a sandbar, or a small island formed from silt, often permanent enough to have vegetation. TOWMOND (13) TRACKED (14) [verb] To continue over time. | [verb] To follow the tracks of. | [verb] To make tracks on. TRAIKED (12) TRAILED (8) [verb] To follow behind (someone or something); to tail (someone or something). | [verb] To drag (something) behind on the ground. | [verb] To leave (a trail of). TRAINED (8) [verb] To practice an ability. | [verb] To teach and form (someone) by practice; to educate (someone). | [verb] To improve one's fitness. TRAMMED (12) TRAMPED (12) [verb] To walk with heavy footsteps. | [verb] To walk for a long time (usually through difficult terrain). | [verb] To hitchhike. TRANCED (10) [adjective] Held as if in a trance; captivated. TRAPPED (12) [verb] To physically capture, to catch in a trap or traps, or something like a trap. | [verb] To ensnare; to take by stratagem; to entrap. | [verb] To provide with a trap. TRASHED (11) [verb] To discard. | [verb] To make into a mess. | [verb] To beat soundly in a game. TRAWLED (11) [verb] To take (fish or other marine animals) with a trawl. | [verb] To fish from a slow-moving boat. | [verb] To make an exhaustive search for something within a defined area. TREADED (9) [verb] To step or walk (on or over something); to trample. | [verb] To step or walk upon. | [verb] To beat or press with the feet. TREATED (8) [verb] To negotiate, discuss terms, bargain (for or with). | [verb] To discourse; to handle a subject in writing or speaking; to conduct a discussion. | [verb] To discourse on; to represent or deal with in a particular way, in writing or speaking. TREBLED (10) [verb] To multiply by three; to make into three parts, layers, or thrice the amount. | [verb] To become multiplied by three or increased threefold. | [verb] To make a shrill or high-pitched noise. TREKKED (16) [verb] To make a slow or arduous journey. | [verb] To journey on foot, especially to hike through mountainous areas. | [verb] To travel by ox wagon. TRENDED (9) [verb] To have a particular direction; to run; to stretch; to tend. | [verb] To cause to turn; to bend. | [verb] To be the subject of a trend; to be currently popular, relevant or interesting. TRESSED (8) [adjective] Having tresses. | [adjective] Formed into ringlets or braided. TRIACID (10) TRIAGED (9) [verb] To assess or sort according to quality or some other aspect. TRICKED (14) [verb] To fool; to cause to believe something untrue; to deceive. | [verb] To draw (as opposed to blazon - to describe in words). | [verb] To dress; to decorate; to adorn fantastically; often followed by up, off, or out. TRICLAD (10) [noun] Any of the turbellarian flatworms of order Tricladida. TRIFLED (11) [verb] To deal with something as if it were of little importance or worth. | [verb] To act, speak, or otherwise behave with jest. | [verb] To inconsequentially toy with something. TRIFOLD (11) [noun] Any sheet of paper or cardboard, folded into three sections along two parallel creases and used to present information, typically as a brochure or display board. | [noun] A wallet with three equal-sized sections that fold together. | [noun] Anything folded into thirds to resemble a trifold. TRIGGED (10) [verb] To stop (a wheel, barrel, etc.) by placing something under it; to scotch; to skid. | [verb] To fill; to stuff; to cram. TRILLED (8) [verb] To create a trill sound; to utter trills or a trill; to play or sing in tremulous vibrations of sound; to have a trembling sound; to quaver. | [verb] To impart the quality of a trill to; to utter as, or with, a trill. | [verb] To trickle. TRIMMED (12) [verb] To reduce slightly; to cut; especially, to remove excess. | [verb] To decorate or adorn; especially of a Christmas tree. | [verb] (of an aircraft) To adjust pitch using trim tabs. TRIOXID (15) TRIPLED (10) [verb] To multiply by three | [verb] To get a three-base hit | [verb] To become three times as large TRIPPED (12) [verb] To fall over or stumble over an object as a result of striking it with one's foot | [verb] (sometimes followed by "up") to cause (a person or animal) to fall or stumble by knocking their feet from under them | [verb] To be guilty of a misstep or mistake; to commit an offence against morality, propriety, etc TROAKED (12) TROCKED (14) TROLAND (8) TROLLED (8) [verb] To saunter. | [verb] To trundle, to roll from side to side. | [verb] To draw someone or something out, to entice, to lure as if with trailing bait. TROMPED (12) [verb] To tread heavily, especially to crush underfoot. | [verb] To utterly defeat an opponent. TROOPED (10) [verb] To move in numbers; to come or gather in crowds or troops. | [verb] To march on; to go forward in haste. | [verb] To move or march as if in a crowd. TROTHED (11) TROTTED (8) [verb] To move along briskly; specifically, to move at a pace between a walk and a run. | [verb] (of a horse) To move at a gait between a walk and a canter. | [verb] To cause to move, as a horse or other animal, in the pace called a trot; to cause to run without galloping or cantering. TROUPED (10) TRUCKED (14) [verb] To drive a truck: Generally a truck driver's slang. | [verb] To convey by truck. | [verb] To travel or live contentedly. TRUDGED (10) [verb] To walk wearily with heavy, slow steps. | [verb] To trudge along or over a route etc. TRUMPED (12) [verb] To play on (a card of another suit) with a trump. | [verb] To play a trump, or to take a trick with a trump. | [verb] To get the better of, or finesse, a competitor. TRUNKED (12) TRUSSED (8) [verb] To tie up a bird before cooking it. | [verb] To secure or bind with ropes. | [verb] To support. TRUSTED (8) [verb] To place confidence in; to rely on, to confide, or have faith, in. | [verb] To give credence to; to believe; to credit. | [verb] To hope confidently; to believe (usually with a phrase or infinitive clause as the object) TRYSTED (11) [verb] To make a tryst; to agree to meet at a place. | [verb] To arrange or appoint (a meeting time etc.). | [verb] To keep a tryst, to meet at an agreed place and time. TUMBLED (12) [verb] To fall end over end; to roll over and over. | [verb] To perform gymnastics such as somersaults, rolls, and handsprings. | [verb] To drop rapidly. TURTLED (8) TUSSLED (8) [verb] To have a tussle. TUTORED (8) [verb] To instruct or teach, especially an individual or small group. | [verb] To treat with authority or sternness. TUTOYED (11) TWANGED (12) [verb] To produce or cause to produce a sharp vibrating sound, like a tense string pulled and suddenly let go. | [verb] To have a nasal sound. | [verb] To have a trace of a regional or foreign accent. TWEAKED (15) [verb] To pinch and pull with a sudden jerk and twist; to twitch. | [verb] To adjust slightly; to fine-tune. | [verb] To twit or tease. TWEETED (11) [verb] To make a short high-pitched sound, like that of certain birds. | [verb] To post an update to Twitter. TWEEZED (20) [verb] To pluck or grasp using tweezers. | [verb] To shape by plucking out hairs with tweezers. | [verb] To pluck out hairs using tweezers. TWIGGED (13) [verb] To beat with twigs. | [verb] To realise something; to catch on; to recognize someone or something. | [verb] To understand the meaning of (a person); to comprehend. TWILLED (11) [verb] To weave (cloth, etc.) so as to produce the appearance of diagonal lines or ribs on the surface. | [adjective] (of fabric) Having diagonal parallel ribs. | [adjective] A Shakespearean word, perhaps meaning: woven with sticks to hinder erosion. TWINGED (12) [verb] To pull with a twitch; to pinch; to tweak. | [verb] To affect with a sharp, sudden pain; to torment with pinching or sharp pains. | [verb] To have a sudden, sharp, local pain, like a twitch; to suffer a keen, darting, or shooting pain. TWINNED (11) [verb] (obsolete outside Scotland) To separate, divide. | [verb] (obsolete outside Scotland) To split, part; to go away, depart. | [verb] (usually in the passive) To join, unite; to form links between (now especially of two places in different countries). TWIRLED (11) [verb] To perform a twirl. | [verb] To rotate rapidly. | [verb] To twist round. TWISTED (11) [verb] To turn the ends of something, usually thread, rope etc., in opposite directions, often using force. | [verb] To join together by twining one part around another. | [verb] To contort; to writhe; to complicate; to crook spirally; to convolve. TWITTED (11) [verb] To reproach, blame; to ridicule or tease. | [verb] To ignore or killfile (a user on a bulletin board system). TWOFOLD (14) [adjective] Double; duplicate; multiplied by two. | [adjective] Having two parts, especially two different parts. | [adverb] In a double degree; doubly. TYPHOID (16) [noun] Typhoid fever ULCERED (10) ULLAGED (9) UMBELED (12) UMBERED (12) UMPIRED (12) [verb] To act as an umpire in a game. | [verb] To decide as an umpire. UNACTED (10) UNAIDED (9) [adjective] Without the help, aid or assistance of someone or something. UNAIMED (10) UNAIRED (8) [adjective] Not aired. UNARMED (10) [adjective] Defenceless and lacking weapons or armour. | [adjective] Not carrying arms. | [adjective] Not having thorns or claws etc. UNASKED (12) [adjective] Not asked about. UNBAKED (14) [adjective] Not baked or cooked. UNBASED (10) UNBATED (10) UNBONED (10) UNBOUND (10) [verb] To take bindings off. | [verb] To set free from a debt, contract or promise. | [verb] To disable some kind of connection in software, such as a key binding. UNBOWED (13) [adjective] Not bowed; erect or upright. | [adjective] Not subdued or deterred. UNBOXED (17) [verb] To remove from a box. | [verb] To retrieve (a value of a primitive type) from the object in which it is boxed. UNBRAID (10) [verb] To disentangle the strands of a braid UNBUILD (10) [verb] To dismantle or deconstruct (something previously built). UNCAGED (11) [verb] To take out of or release from a cage. | [verb] (by extension) To unleash; to remove from restraints. | [adjective] Not caged; not kept in a cage. UNCAKED (14) UNCASED (10) [adjective] Not cased; without a casing. UNCLOUD (10) UNCODED (11) UNCURED (10) [adjective] Not cured. UNDATED (9) [adjective] Not marked with a date. | [adjective] Of a style that will not go out of fashion; a classic. | [adjective] Rising and falling in waves toward the margin, as a leaf; waved. UNDRIED (9) [adjective] Not dried. UNENDED (9) UNFADED (12) UNFAKED (15) UNFAZED (20) [adjective] Not frightened or hesitant; undaunted; not put off. | [adjective] Undamaged UNFIRED (11) [adjective] Not fired UNFIXED (18) [verb] To unfasten from a fixing. | [adjective] Not fixated or fixed; moving or changing freely | [adjective] (of a problem) Not fixed; not corrected. UNFOUND (11) UNFREED (11) UNFUSED (11) [adjective] Not fused; distinct | [adjective] Lacking a fuse | [verb] To separate after a fusion; to make no longer fused. UNGLUED (9) [verb] To separate that which was held by glue | [verb] To cease to adhere to or follow attentively | [adjective] Not secured with glue. UNGUARD (9) [verb] To deprive of a guard; to leave unprotected. UNHEARD (11) [adjective] Not heard. | [adjective] Not listened to. | [adjective] Not known to fame; not illustrious or celebrated; obscure. | [verb] To reverse the process of hearing, so that (a sound, etc.) was never heard. UNHIRED (11) UNHOPED (13) [adjective] Not hoped for; unexpected. UNIFIED (11) [adjective] United into a whole | [adjective] That operates as a single entity | [adjective] (of a school district) that serves all grade levels between kindergarten and twelfth grade. UNITARD (8) [noun] A skin-tight garment covering the torso and the legs, sometimes the arms and feet. UNJADED (16) UNLACED (10) [verb] To remove the knot from laces; to undo laces. | [verb] To loosen the clothing of (a person). | [verb] To remove (film) from a projector. UNLADED (9) [verb] To unload. | [verb] To disburden; take the burden from; relieve. | [verb] To discharge the cargo from. UNLINED (8) [adjective] Without lining; without liner. | [adjective] Unmarked by lines, especially of the skin. UNLIVED (11) [adjective] That has not been lived. | [adjective] Bereft or deprived of life. UNLOBED (10) UNLOVED (11) [verb] To lose one's love (for someone or something). | [adjective] Not loved. UNMATED (10) UNMEWED (13) UNMINED (10) UNMIXED (17) [adjective] Pure, not mixed or combined. UNMOVED (13) [adjective] Not physically moved. | [adjective] Not affected emotionally, or not showing emotion. | [adjective] Not sympathetic; uncaring. UNNAMED (10) [adjective] Not having a name. UNNOTED (8) [adjective] That has not been noted. UNOILED (8) [adjective] Not having been oiled. | [verb] To remove the oil from. UNOWNED (11) [adjective] Not owned; not having an owner. | [adjective] Not avowed or acknowledged as one's own property or one's own work. UNPAGED (11) [adjective] Without page numbers. | [adjective] (of memory) Not subject to paging. UNPAVED (13) [adjective] (of a road or path) Not having a hard, impervious surface; not paved UNPILED (10) UNPOSED (10) [adjective] Not posed; without deliberate posing UNRAKED (12) UNRATED (8) [verb] To remove the rating from something. | [adjective] Not rated; having no rating UNRAZED (17) UNRIMED (10) UNROBED (10) [verb] To disrobe, to undress. | [adjective] Not robed. UNROPED (10) [adjective] Not attached to a rope | [verb] To remove from a rope UNROUND (8) UNRULED (8) [adjective] Plain, not ruled with lines. | [adjective] Not ruled; not governed; not controlled or influenced. UNSATED (8) UNSAVED (11) [verb] To undo an act of saving; to erase. | [adjective] Not saved; unredeemed. | [adjective] Not saved (stored in a file). UNSAWED (11) UNSEWED (11) UNSEXED (15) [adjective] Not separated by sex. | [verb] To deprive of sexual attributes or characteristics. | [verb] To sterilize (deprive of the ability to procreate); to castrate. UNSIZED (17) [adjective] Not sized UNSOLID (8) UNSOUND (8) [adjective] Not sound, particularly: UNSOWED (11) UNTAMED (10) [adjective] Wild, uncontrolled, especially of animals not domesticated or trained to human contact. UNTAXED (15) [adjective] Not subject to being taxed. | [adjective] Not having had the required taxes paid on it. | [adjective] Not tired or strained, working well within capacity. UNTIRED (8) UNTREAD (8) UNTRIED (8) [adjective] Not yet tried or tested; unknown. | [adjective] Not put on trial; not taken before a legal court. UNTUNED (8) [adjective] The state of not having been tuned. | [adjective] Of or relating to a musical instrument that does not produce specific pitches, e.g. many drums and cymbals. UNURGED (9) UNVEXED (18) UNWAXED (18) [adjective] Not waxed. UNWOOED (11) UNWOUND (11) [verb] To separate (something that is wound up) | [verb] To disentangle | [verb] To relax; to chill out; to rest and relieve of stress UNYOKED (15) [verb] To release something from a yoke or harness. | [verb] To disconnect, unlink. | [verb] To liberate, deliver from oppression. UNZONED (17) UPBOUND (12) UPBRAID (12) [noun] The act of reproaching; scorn; disdain. | [verb] To criticize severely. | [verb] (followed by with or for, and formerly of before the object) To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to reproach UPBUILD (12) [verb] To build up (literally). | [verb] To build up; to develop (figuratively). UPDATED (11) [verb] To bring (a thing) up to date. | [verb] To bring (a person) up to date: to inform (a person) about recent developments. UPDIVED (14) UPDRIED (11) UPENDED (11) [verb] To end up; to set on end. | [verb] To tip or turn over. | [verb] To destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat. UPFIELD (13) [adjective] Away from the defending team's end of the playing field | [adjective] Describing an NMR resonance at a lower frequency to that of a reference signal | [adverb] Away from the defending team's end of the playing field UPGAZED (20) UPHOARD (13) UPPILED (12) UPRATED (10) [verb] To give something a higher rating | [adjective] That has been given a higher rating | [adjective] Upgraded UPSTAND (10) [noun] A section of a roof covering or flashing which turns up against a vertical surface. | [verb] To stand up; arise; be erect; rise. UPSTOOD (10) UPTREND (10) [noun] An upward trend, or an upturn. | [verb] To undergo an upward trend. USHERED (11) [verb] To guide people to their seats. | [verb] To accompany or escort (someone). | [verb] To precede; to act as a forerunner or herald. USURPED (10) [verb] To seize power from another, usually by illegitimate means. | [verb] To use and assume the coat of arms of another person. | [verb] To take the place rightfully belonging to someone or something else. UTTERED (8) [verb] To produce (speech or other sounds) with one's voice. | [verb] To reveal or express (an idea, thought, desire, etc.) with speech. | [verb] To produce (a noise) (of an inanimate object). VACATED (13) [verb] To move out of a dwelling, either by choice or by eviction. | [verb] To leave an office or position. | [verb] To have a court judgement set aside; to annul. VALETED (11) [verb] To serve (someone) as a valet. | [verb] To clean and service (a car), as a valet does. | [verb] To leave (a car) with a valet to park it. VALGOID (12) VAMOSED (13) VANWARD (14) VAPORED (13) [verb] To become vapor; to be emitted or circulated as vapor. | [verb] To turn into vapor. | [verb] To emit vapor or fumes. VAULTED (11) [verb] To build as, or cover with a vault. | [verb] To jump or leap over. | [adjective] Of a ceiling supported by arches, introduced in the Gothic style. VAUNTED (11) [verb] To speak boastfully. | [verb] To speak boastfully about. | [verb] To boast of; to make a vain display of; to display with ostentation. VELURED (11) VENOMED (13) VIALLED (11) VISAGED (12) VISCOID (13) VISITED (11) [verb] To habitually go to (someone in distress, sickness etc.) to comfort them. (Now generally merged into later senses, below.) | [verb] To go and meet (a person) as an act of friendliness or sociability. | [verb] Of God: to appear to (someone) to comfort, bless, or chastise or punish them. (Now generally merged into later senses, below.) VISORED (11) VISTAED (11) VITTLED (11) VIZORED (20) VOLUMED (13) VOLUTED (11) VOMITED (13) [verb] To regurgitate or eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth; puke. | [verb] To regurgitate and discharge (something swallowed); to spew. | [verb] To eject from any hollow place; to belch forth; to emit. VOUCHED (16) [verb] To take responsibility for; to express confidence in; to witness; to obtest. | [verb] To warrant; to maintain by affirmations | [verb] To back; to support; to confirm. VOYAGED (15) [verb] To go on a long journey. VROOMED (13) [verb] To move with great speed; to zoom. WABBLED (15) WADDIED (13) WADDLED (13) [verb] To walk with short steps, tilting the body from side to side. WAFERED (14) [verb] To seal or fasten with a wafer. WAFFLED (17) [verb] To smash. | [verb] (of birds) To move in a side-to-side motion and descend (lose altitude) before landing. Cf wiffle, whiffle. | [verb] To speak or write vaguely and evasively. WAGERED (12) [verb] To bet something; to put it up as collateral | [verb] To suppose; to dare say. WAGGLED (13) [verb] To move (something) with short, quick motions; to wobble. | [verb] To reel, sway, or move from side to side; to move with a wagging motion; to waddle. WAGONED (12) WAISTED (11) WAKENED (15) [verb] To wake or rouse from sleep. | [verb] To awaken; to cease to sleep; to be awakened; to stir. WALTZED (20) [verb] To dance the waltz (with). | [verb] (usually with in, into, around, etc.) To move briskly and unhesitatingly, especially in an inappropriately casual manner, or when unannounced or uninvited. | [verb] To accomplish a task with little effort. WAMBLED (15) WANGLED (12) [verb] To obtain through manipulative or deceitful methods. | [verb] To falsify, as records. | [verb] To achieve through contrivance or cajolery. WARBLED (13) [verb] To modulate a tone's frequency. | [verb] To sing like a bird, especially with trills. | [verb] To cause to quaver or vibrate. WARHEAD (14) [noun] The part of a missile, projectile, torpedo, rocket, or other munition which contains either the nuclear or thermonuclear system, high explosive system, chemical or biological agents, or inert materials intended to inflict damage. | [noun] The glans penis. WARLORD (11) [noun] A high military officer in a warlike nation. | [noun] A local ruler or bandit leader usually where the government is weak. WARSLED (11) WATCHED (16) [verb] To look at, see, or view for a period of time. | [verb] To observe over a period of time; to notice or pay attention. | [verb] To mind, attend, or guard. WATERED (11) [verb] To pour water into the soil surrounding (plants). | [verb] To wet or supply with water; to moisten; to overflow with water; to irrigate. | [verb] To provide (animals) with water for drinking. | [adjective] Supplied with water. WATTLED (11) [verb] To construct a wattle, or make a construction of wattles. | [verb] To bind with wattles or twigs. | [adjective] Having a wattle WAVERED (14) [verb] To sway back and forth; to totter or reel. | [verb] To flicker, glimmer, quiver, as a weak light. | [verb] To fluctuate or vary, as commodity prices or a poorly sustained musical pitch. WAXWEED (21) WAYLAID (14) [verb] To lie in wait for and attack from ambush. | [verb] To accost or intercept unexpectedly. WAYWARD (17) [adjective] Given to wilful, perverse deviation from the expected norm; tending to stray | [adjective] Obstinate, contrary and unpredictable | [adjective] Not on target WEARIED (11) [verb] To make or to become weary. WEASAND (11) [noun] The oesophagus; the windpipe; the trachea. | [noun] The throat in general. WEAZAND (20) WEDELED (12) WEEKEND (15) [noun] The break in the working week, usually two days including the traditional holy or sabbath day. Thus in western countries, Saturday and Sunday. | [verb] To spend the weekend. | [adjective] Of, relating to or for the weekend. WEEWEED (14) WEIGHED (15) [verb] To determine the weight of an object. | [verb] Often with "out", to measure a certain amount of something by its weight, e.g. for sale. | [verb] To determine the intrinsic value or merit of an object, to evaluate. WELCHED (16) [verb] To fail to repay a small debt. | [verb] To fail to fulfill an obligation. WELSHED (14) [verb] To swindle someone by not paying a debt, especially a gambling debt. WENCHED (16) [verb] To frequent prostitutes; to whore; also, to womanize. WERGELD (12) WERGILD (12) WESSAND (11) WETLAND (11) [noun] (usually in the plural) Land that is covered mostly with water, with occasional marshy and soggy areas. WHACKED (20) [verb] To hit, slap or strike. | [verb] To kill, bump off. | [verb] To share or parcel out; often with up. WHAMMED (18) [verb] To strike or smash (into) something with great force or impact WHANGED (15) [verb] (chiefly of an object) To make a noise like something moving quickly through the air. | [verb] To throw with a rapid slamming motion. | [verb] To whack or beat. WHAPPED (18) [verb] To strike hard and suddenly. | [verb] To throw oneself quickly, or by an abrupt motion; to turn suddenly. WHARFED (17) WHEELED (14) [verb] To roll along on wheels. | [verb] To transport something or someone using any wheeled mechanism, such as a wheelchair. | [verb] To ride a bicycle or tricycle. WHEEPED (16) WHEEZED (23) [verb] To breathe hard, and with an audible piping or whistling sound, as persons affected with asthma. WHELMED (16) [verb] To bury, to cover; to engulf, to submerge. | [verb] To throw (something) over a thing so as to cover it. | [verb] To ruin or destroy. WHELPED (16) [verb] (of she-dog, she-wolf, vixen, etc.) To give birth. WHETTED (14) [verb] To hone or rub on with some substance, as a piece of stone, for the purpose of sharpening – see whetstone. | [verb] To stimulate or make more keen. | [verb] To preen. WHIDDED (16) WHIFFED (20) [verb] To waft. | [verb] To sniff. | [verb] To strike out. WHINGED (15) [verb] To move with great force or speed. | [verb] To complain, especially in an annoying or persistent manner. | [verb] To whine. WHIPPED (18) [verb] To hit with a whip. | [verb] (by extension) To hit with any flexible object. | [verb] To defeat, as in a contest or game. WHIRLED (14) [verb] To rotate, revolve, spin or turn rapidly. | [verb] To have a sensation of spinning or reeling. | [verb] To make something or someone whirl. WHIRRED (14) [verb] To move or vibrate (something) with a buzzing sound. | [verb] To make a sibilant buzzing or droning sound. | [verb] To cause (something) to make such a sound. WHISHED (17) WHISKED (18) [verb] To move something with quick light sweeping motions. | [verb] In cooking, to whip e.g. eggs or cream. | [verb] To move something rapidly and with no warning. WHISTED (14) WHIZZED (32) [verb] To make a whirring or hissing sound, similar to that of an object speeding through the air. | [verb] To rush or move swiftly with such a sound. | [verb] To throw or spin rapidly. WHOMPED (18) [verb] Hit extremely hard. WHOOFED (17) WHOOPED (16) [verb] To make a whoop. | [verb] To shout, to yell. | [verb] To cough or breathe with a sonorous inspiration, as in whooping cough. | [adjective] (Southern) Flawless. WHOPPED (18) [verb] To throw or move (something) quickly, usually with an impact. | [verb] To administer corporal punishment WHORLED (14) [adjective] Formed from whorls; having whorls WHUMPED (18) [verb] To strike something with a whump. WIDDLED (13) [verb] To urinate. | [verb] To play guitar (especially the electric guitar) quickly. WIDENED (12) [verb] To become wide or wider. | [verb] To make wide or wider. | [verb] To let out clothes to a larger size. WIDOWED (15) [verb] To make a widow or widower of someone; to cause the death of the spouse of. | [verb] To strip of anything valued. | [verb] To endow with a widow's right. WIELDED (12) [verb] To command, rule over; to possess or own. | [verb] To control, to guide or manage. | [verb] To handle with skill and ease, especially a weapon or tool. WIGGLED (13) [verb] To move with irregular, back and forward or side to side motions; To shake or jiggle. WILLIED (11) WIMBLED (15) WIMPLED (15) WINCHED (16) [verb] To use a winch | [verb] To wince; to shrink | [verb] To kick with impatience or uneasiness. WINDLED (12) WINKLED (15) [verb] To extract. WINTLED (11) WITCHED (16) [verb] To practise witchcraft. | [verb] To bewitch. | [verb] To dowse for water. WIZENED (20) [verb] To wither; to become, or make, lean and wrinkled by shrinkage, as from age or illness. | [adjective] Withered; lean and wrinkled by shrinkage as from age or illness. WOBBLED (15) [verb] To move with an uneven or rocking motion, or unsteadily to and fro. | [verb] To tremble or quaver. | [verb] To vacillate in one's opinions. WOMANED (13) WOOLLED (11) WOOPSED (13) WOOSHED (14) [verb] To make a breathy sound like a whoosh. WORRIED (11) [adjective] Thinking about unpleasant things that have happened or that might happen; feeling afraid and unhappy. | [verb] To be troubled; to give way to mental anxiety or doubt. | [verb] Disturb the peace of mind of; afflict with mental agitation or distress. WORSTED (11) [noun] Yarn made from long strands of wool. | [noun] The fine, smooth fabric made from such wool yarn. | [verb] To make worse. WORTHED (14) WOUNDED (12) [verb] To hurt or injure (someone) by cutting, piercing, or tearing the skin. | [verb] To hurt (a person's feelings). | [adjective] Suffering from a wound, especially one acquired in battle from a weapon, such as a gun or a knife. WRACKED (17) [verb] To place in or hang on a rack. | [verb] To torture (someone) on the rack. | [verb] To cause (someone) to suffer pain. WRAPPED (15) [verb] To enclose (an object) completely in any flexible, thin material such as fabric or paper. | [verb] To enclose or coil around an object or organism, as a form of grasping. | [verb] To conceal by enveloping or enfolding; to hide. WRATHED (14) WREAKED (15) [verb] To cause something harmful; to afflict; to inflict; to harm or injury; to let out something harmful; . | [verb] To chasten, or chastise/chastize, or castigate, or punish, or smite. | [verb] To inflict or take vengeance on. WRECKED (17) [verb] To destroy violently; to cause severe damage to something, to a point where it no longer works, or is useless. | [verb] To ruin or dilapidate. | [verb] To dismantle wrecked vehicles or other objects, to reclaim any useful parts. WRESTED (11) [verb] To pull or twist violently. | [verb] To obtain by pulling or violent force. | [verb] To seize. WRICKED (17) WRINGED (12) WRITHED (14) [verb] To twist, to wring (something). | [verb] To contort (a part of the body). | [verb] To twist or contort the body; to be distorted. WRONGED (12) [verb] To treat unjustly; to injure or harm. | [verb] To deprive of some right, or to withhold some act of justice. | [verb] To slander; to impute evil to unjustly. XEROXED (22) [verb] To make a paper copy or copies by means of a photocopier. XIPHOID (20) [noun] The xiphoid process. | [adjective] Shaped like a sword, ensiform. | [adjective] Of or relating to the xiphisternum. YACHTED (16) [verb] To sail, voyage, or race in a yacht. YCLEPED (15) YEAREND (11) [noun] The end of a year, especially a financial year. YEARNED (11) [verb] To long, have a strong desire (for something). | [verb] To long for something in the past with melancholy, nostalgically. | [verb] To have strong feelings of love, sympathy, affection, etc. (toward someone). YEASTED (11) YIELDED (12) [verb] To pay, give in payment; repay, recompense; reward; requite. | [verb] To furnish; to afford; to render; to give forth. | [verb] To give way; to allow another to pass first. YODELED (12) [verb] To sing (a song) in such a way that the voice fluctuates rapidly between the normal chest voice and falsetto. ZEBROID (19) ZINCKED (23) ZINCOID (19) ZIZZLED (35) ZONATED (17)

8-Letter Words (3146)

ABDUCTED (14) [verb] To take away by force; to carry away (a human being) wrongfully and usually with violence or deception; to kidnap. | [verb] To draw away, as a limb or other part, from the median axis of the body. | [adjective] Having been kidnapped; having become the victim of an abduction ABHORRED (14) [verb] To regard with horror or detestation; to shrink back with shuddering from; to feel excessive repugnance toward; to detest to extremity; to loathe. | [verb] To fill with horror or disgust. | [verb] To turn aside or avoid; to keep away from; to reject. ABOUNDED (12) [verb] To be full to overflowing. | [verb] To be wealthy. | [verb] To be highly productive. ABRIDGED (13) [verb] To deprive; to cut off. | [verb] To debar from. | [verb] To make shorter; to shorten in duration or extent. ABSCISED (13) [verb] To cut off. | [verb] To separate by means of abscission; to shed or drop off. ABSEILED (11) [verb] To descend a steep or vertical drop using a rope with a mechanical friction device or (classic abseil) by wrapping the rope around the body; to rappel. ABSENTED (11) [verb] To keep (oneself) away. | [verb] To keep (someone) away. | [verb] Stay away; withdraw. ABSOLVED (14) [verb] To set free, release or discharge (from obligations, debts, responsibility etc.). | [verb] To resolve; to explain; to solve. | [verb] To pronounce free from or give absolution for a penalty, blame, or guilt. ABSORBED (13) [verb] To include so that it no longer has separate existence; to overwhelm; to cause to disappear as if by swallowing up; to incorporate; to assimilate; to take in and use up. | [verb] To engulf, as in water; to swallow up. | [verb] To suck up; to drink in; to imbibe, like a sponge or as the lacteals of the body; to chemically take in. ACCENTED (13) [verb] To express the accent of vocally; to utter with accent. | [verb] To mark emphatically; to emphasize; to accentuate; to make prominent. | [verb] To mark with written accents. ACCEPTED (15) [verb] To receive, especially with a consent, with favour, or with approval. | [verb] To admit to a place or a group. | [verb] To regard as proper, usual, true, or to believe in. ACCESSED (13) [verb] Past tense of access; gained entry to or made use of something. | [verb] Approached or reached a place or person. ACCORDED (14) [verb] To make to agree or correspond; to suit one thing to another; to adjust. | [verb] To bring (people) to an agreement; to reconcile, settle, adjust or harmonize. | [verb] To agree or correspond; to be in harmony; to be concordant. ACCOSTED (13) [verb] To approach and speak to boldly or aggressively, as with a demand or request. | [verb] To join side to side; to border. | [verb] (by extension) To sail along the coast or side of. ACCRETED (13) [verb] To grow together, combine; to fuse. | [verb] To adhere; to grow or to be added to gradually. | [verb] To make adhere; to add; to make larger or more, as by growing. ACCURSED (13) [verb] To devote to destruction; to imprecate misery or evil upon; to curse; to execrate; to anathematize. | [adjective] (prenominal) Hateful; detestable, loathsome. | [adjective] Doomed to destruction or misery; cursed; anathematized. ACERATED (11) [adjective] Having sharp points or edges; furnished with sharp projections or needle-like structures. ACETAMID (13) [noun] A colorless crystalline compound, CH₃CONH₂, derived from acetic acid and used in organic synthesis and as a solvent. ACETATED (11) [adjective] Treated with or containing acetic acid or acetate; having undergone acetation. ACHIEVED (17) [verb] To succeed in something, now especially in academic performance. | [verb] To carry out successfully; to accomplish. | [verb] To conclude, finish, especially successfully. ACIDHEAD (15) [noun] A person who uses the hallucinogenic drug LSD. ACQUIRED (20) [verb] To get. | [verb] To gain, usually by one's own exertions; to get as one's own | [verb] To contract. ACTINOID (11) [adjective] Resembling or relating to a ray or rays, particularly in reference to anatomical structures arranged radially. | [noun] Any of the actinoids, a series of chemical elements in the periodic table. ACTUATED (11) [verb] To activate, or to put into motion; to animate. | [verb] To incite to action; to motivate. ACYLATED (14) [verb] To add one or more acyl groups to a compound. | [adjective] Having an acyl functional group; modified by addition of an acyl group ADDICTED (13) [verb] To deliver (someone or something) following a judicial decision. | [verb] To devote (oneself) to a given activity, occupation, thing etc. | [verb] To bind (a person or thing) to the service of something. ADDUCTED (13) [verb] To draw towards a center or a middle line. ADHEREND (13) [noun] A substance or surface to which an adhesive is applied; the material being bonded in an adhesive joint. ADJOINED (17) [verb] To be in contact or connection with. | [verb] To extend an algebraic object (e.g. a field, a ring etc.) by adding to it (an element not belonging to it) and all finite power series of (the element). ADJUDGED (19) [verb] To declare to be. | [verb] To deem or determine to be. | [verb] To award judicially; to assign. ADJUSTED (17) [verb] To modify. | [verb] To improve or rectify. | [verb] To settle an insurance claim. ADMITTED (12) [verb] To allow to enter; to grant entrance (to), whether into a place, into the mind, or into consideration | [verb] To allow (someone) to enter a profession or to enjoy a privilege; to recognize as qualified for a franchise. | [verb] To concede as true; to acknowledge or assent to, as an allegation which it is impossible to deny ADSORBED (12) [verb] To accumulate on a surface, by adsorption ADULATED (10) [verb] To flatter effusively. ADVANCED (15) [verb] To promote or advantage. | [verb] To move forward in space or time. | [verb] To raise, be raised. ADVECTED (15) [verb] To transport (something) by advection. ADVERTED (13) [verb] To take notice, to pay attention (to). | [verb] To turn attention to, to take notice of (something). | [verb] To call attention, refer (to). AERIFIED (12) [verb] Past tense of aerify; to supply with air or expose to air, especially in soil treatment to improve aeration. AFFECTED (17) [verb] To influence or alter. | [verb] To move to emotion. | [verb] Of an illness or condition, to infect or harm (a part of the body). AFFIRMED (17) [verb] To agree, verify or concur; to answer positively. | [verb] To assert positively; to tell with confidence; to aver; to maintain as true. | [verb] To support or encourage. AFFORDED (16) [verb] To incur, stand, or bear without serious detriment, as an act which might under other circumstances be injurious;—with an auxiliary, as can, could, might, etc.; to be able or rich enough. | [verb] To offer, provide, or supply, as in selling, granting, expending, with profit, or without loss or too great injury. | [verb] To give forth; to supply, yield, or produce as the natural result, fruit, or issue. AFFRAYED (18) [verb] Past tense of affray; to frighten or startle. | [verb] Past tense of affray; to engage in a noisy fight or brawl. AGALWOOD (13) [noun] A fragrant resinous wood from an Asian tree, used in perfumes and incense; also called agarwood or eaglewood. AGATIZED (19) [verb] Converted into or resembling agate, a type of microcrystalline quartz stone. AGENIZED (19) [verb] Past tense of agenize; to treat (flour) with a chemical agent to improve its baking properties. AGGRADED (12) [verb] Past tense of "aggrades," meaning to build up or increase the level of a riverbed or land surface through deposition of sediment. AGITATED (10) [verb] To disturb or excite; to perturb or stir up (a person). | [verb] To cause to move with a violent, irregular action; to shake. | [verb] To set in motion; to actuate. AGONISED (10) [verb] To writhe with agony; to suffer violent anguish. | [verb] To struggle; to wrestle; to strive desperately, whether mentally or physically. AGONIZED (19) [verb] To writhe with agony; to suffer violent anguish. | [verb] To struggle; to wrestle; to strive desperately, whether mentally or physically. AGUEWEED (13) [noun] A plant of the aster family, also known as boneset, used traditionally to treat fevers and ague. AIRBOUND (11) AIRFIELD (12) [noun] An open field designated for the taking off and landing of aircraft, but which, unlike an airport, does not necessarily have terminals or paved runways. AIRSPEED (11) [noun] The speed of an aircraft relative to the air through which it is flying. ALARUMED (11) ALIGHTED (13) [verb] (with from) To get off or exit a vehicle or animal; to descend; to dismount. | [verb] (with on or at) To descend and settle, lodge, rest, or stop. | [verb] (followed by upon) To find by accident; to come upon. ALKALOID (13) [noun] Any of many organic heterocyclic bases that occur in nature and often have medicinal properties. | [adjective] Relating to, resembling, or containing alkali. ALLOTTED (9) [verb] To distribute or apportion by (or as if by) lot. | [verb] To assign or designate as a task or for a purpose. AMBEROID (13) AMBUSHED (16) [verb] To station in ambush with a view to surprise an enemy. | [verb] To attack by ambush; to waylay. | [adjective] Having been the target of an ambush. AMMONOID (13) [noun] An extinct cephalopod of the subclass Ammonoidea (including ammonites). | [adjective] Characteristic of an ammonite AMOEBOID (13) [adjective] Resembling, or characteristic of an amoeba | [noun] Single‐celled organism that moves or feeds by means of temporary projections, called pseudopods. They are taxonomically classified in a sub‐phylum called Sarcodina. AMOUNTED (11) [verb] (followed by to) To total or evaluate. | [verb] (followed by to) To be the same as or equivalent to. | [verb] To go up; to ascend. AMPHIPOD (18) [noun] A member of taxonomic order Amphipoda of small, shrimp-like crustaceans. ANALYSED (12) [verb] To subject to analysis. | [verb] To resolve (anything complex) into its elements. | [verb] To separate into the constituent parts, for the purpose of an examination of each separately. ANALYZED (21) [verb] To subject to analysis. | [verb] To resolve (anything complex) into its elements. | [verb] To separate into the constituent parts, for the purpose of an examination of each separately. ANCHORED (14) [verb] To connect an object, especially a ship or a boat, to a fixed point. | [verb] To cast anchor; to come to anchor. | [verb] To stop; to fix or rest. ANCONOID (11) [adjective] Resembling or relating to the elbow or the ancon (the angle of the elbow). ANGLEPOD (12) [noun] A plant of the milkweed family with angled or winged seed pods. ANIMATED (11) [verb] To impart motion or the appearance of motion to. | [verb] To give spirit or vigour to; to stimulate or enliven; to inspirit. | [adjective] Full of life or spirit; lively; vigorous; spritely. ANNEALED (9) [verb] To subject to great heat and then (often slow) cooling, and sometimes reheating and further cooling, for the purpose of rendering less brittle; to temper; to toughen. | [verb] To cool glass slowly, to minimize internal stress. | [verb] To burn colors onto a glass or other surface. ANNULLED (9) [verb] To formally revoke the validity of. | [verb] To dissolve (a marital union) on the grounds that it is not valid. ANODIZED (19) [verb] To coat the surface of a metal electrolytically with an oxide, either as protection or decoration | [adjective] Of a metal object: having a surface layer of oxide, for decoration or protection, and formed via an electrolytic process. ANOINTED (9) [verb] To smear or rub over with oil or an unctuous substance; also, to spread over, as oil. | [verb] To apply oil to or to pour oil upon, etc., as a sacred rite, especially for consecration. | [verb] To choose or nominate somebody for a leading or otherwise important position, especially formally or officially, or as an intended successor. ANSWERED (12) [verb] To make a reply or response to. | [verb] To speak in defence against; to reply to in defence. | [verb] To respond to a call by someone at a door or telephone, or other similar piece of equipment. ANTHEMED (14) ANTHERID (12) ANTICKED (15) [verb] Past tense of "antick," an archaic or dialectal form meaning to act in a silly, playful, or clownish manner; to caper or perform antics. ANTICOLD (11) ANTIQUED (18) [verb] To search or shop for antiques. | [verb] To make an object appear to be an antique in some way. | [verb] To emboss without gilding. ANTISKID (13) [adjective] Designed to prevent or reduce skidding, especially referring to tires or road surfaces that have enhanced grip. ANTIWEED (12) ANTLERED (9) [adjective] Having antlers; bearing antlers. ANVILLED (12) APPALLED (13) [verb] To fill with horror; to dismay. | [verb] To make pale; to blanch. | [verb] To weaken; to reduce in strength APPEALED (13) [verb] To call upon another to decide a question controverted, to corroborate a statement, to vindicate one's rights, etc. | [verb] To call on (someone) for aid | [verb] (informal elsewhere) To apply for the removal of a cause from an inferior to a superior judge or court for the purpose of reexamination or for decision. APPEARED (13) [verb] To come or be in sight; to be in view; to become visible. | [verb] To come before the public. | [verb] To stand in presence of some authority, tribunal, or superior person, to answer a charge, plead a cause, etc.; to present oneself as a party or advocate before a court, or as a person to be tried. APPEASED (13) [verb] To make quiet; to calm; to reduce to a state of peace; to dispel (anger or hatred). | [verb] To come to terms with; to adapt to the demands of. APPENDED (14) [verb] To hang or attach to, as by a string, so that the thing is suspended | [verb] To add, as an accessory to the principal thing; to annex | [verb] To write more data to the end of a pre-existing file, string, or other object. APPRISED (13) [verb] To notify, or to make aware; to inform. APPRIZED (22) [verb] To determine the value or worth of something, particularly as a person appointed for this purpose. | [verb] To consider comprehensively. | [verb] To judge the performance of someone, especially a worker. APPROVED (16) [verb] To sanction officially; to ratify; to confirm; to set as satisfactory. | [verb] To regard as good; to commend; to be pleased with; to think well of. | [verb] To make proof of; to demonstrate; to prove or show practically. ARABIZED (20) [verb] Past tense of arabize; to make Arab in character, language, or culture. ARACHNID (14) [noun] Any of the eight-legged creatures, including spiders and scorpions, of the class Arachnida. ARBOURED (11) [adjective] Having an arbour or arbours; shaded by or situated within an arbour. ARCHIVED (17) [verb] To put into an archive. | [adjective] Having been placed into an archive. ARCUATED (11) [adjective] Curved or arched in form; having the shape of an arc. ARGUFIED (13) [verb] To argue without any aim; to dispute; to disagree. | [verb] To weary with arguing. | [verb] To be evidence of something; to be of importance or relevance. ARILLOID (9) ARMOURED (11) [verb] To equip something with armour or a protective coating or hardening. | [verb] To provide something with an analogous form of protection. | [adjective] Possessing, wearing, or fitted out with armour. AROINTED (9) AROYNTED (12) ARRANGED (10) [verb] To set up; to organize; to put into an orderly sequence or arrangement. | [verb] To plan; to prepare in advance. | [verb] To prepare and adapt an already-written composition for presentation in other than its original form. ARRESTED (9) [verb] To stop the motion of (a person or animal). | [verb] To stay, remain. | [verb] To stop or slow (a process, course etc.). ARTICLED (11) [verb] To bind by articles of apprenticeship. | [verb] To accuse or charge by an exhibition of articles or accusations. | [verb] To formulate in articles; to set forth in distinct particulars. ASCENDED (12) [verb] To move upward, to fly, to soar. | [verb] To slope in an upward direction. | [verb] To go up. ASCRIBED (13) [verb] To attribute a cause or characteristic to someone or something. | [verb] To attribute a book, painting or any work of art or literature to a writer or creator. | [verb] (with to) To believe in or agree with; subscribe. ASHLARED (12) [verb] Constructed or faced with ashlar (squared stone blocks). ASHLERED (12) ASPERSED (11) [verb] To sprinkle or scatter (liquid or dust). | [verb] To falsely or maliciously charge another; to slander. | [adjective] Having an indefinite number of small charges scattered over the surface. ASSAILED (9) [verb] To attack with harsh words or violent force (also figuratively). ASSENTED (9) [verb] To agree; to give approval. | [verb] To admit a thing as true. ASSERTED (9) [verb] To declare with assurance or plainly and strongly; to state positively. | [verb] To use or exercise and thereby prove the existence of. | [verb] To maintain or defend, as a cause or a claim, by words or measures; to vindicate a claim or title to ASSESSED (9) [verb] To determine, estimate or judge the value of; to evaluate | [verb] To impose or charge, especially as punishment for an infraction. | [verb] To calculate and demand (the tax money due) from a person or entity. ASSIGNED (10) [verb] To designate or set apart something for some purpose. | [verb] To appoint or select someone for some office. | [verb] To allot or give something as a task. ASSISTED (9) [verb] To help. | [verb] To make a pass that leads directly towards scoring. | [verb] To help compensate for what is missing with the help of a medical technique or therapy. ASSOILED (9) [verb] Past tense of assoil; to absolve, pardon, or acquit. | [verb] To soil or make dirty. ASSORTED (9) [verb] To sort or arrange according to characteristic or class. | [verb] To be of a kind with. | [verb] To be associated with; to consort with. ASSUAGED (10) [verb] To lessen the intensity of, to mitigate or relieve (hunger, emotion, pain etc.). | [verb] To pacify or soothe (someone). | [verb] To calm down, become less violent (of passion, hunger etc.); to subside, to abate. ASSWAGED (13) [verb] Past tense of assuage; to calm, pacify, or reduce the intensity of something such as pain, anger, or thirst. ASTEROID (9) [noun] Any member of the taxonomic class Asteroidea; a starfish | [noun] A naturally occurring solid object, which is smaller than a planet and is not a comet, that orbits a star | [noun] In the Solar system, such a body that orbits within the orbit of Jupiter ASTONIED (9) [adjective] Greatly surprised or amazed; astonished. ATHETOID (12) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by athetosis, a condition involving involuntary writhing movements of the body or limbs. ATOMISED (11) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATOMIZED (20) [verb] To separate or reduce into atoms | [verb] To make into a fine spray | [verb] To fragment, break into small pieces or concepts ATTACHED (14) [verb] To fasten, to join to (literally and figuratively). | [verb] To adhere; to be attached. | [verb] To come into legal operation in connection with anything; to vest. ATTACKED (15) [verb] To apply violent force to someone or something. | [verb] To aggressively challenge a person, idea, etc., with words (particularly in newspaper headlines, because it typesets into less space than "criticize" or similar). | [verb] To begin to affect; to act upon injuriously or destructively; to begin to decompose or waste. ATTAINED (9) [verb] To gain (an object or desired result). | [verb] To reach or come to, by progression or motion; to arrive at (a place, time, state, etc.). | [verb] To come or arrive, by motion, growth, bodily exertion, or efforts toward a place, object, state, etc. ATTENDED (10) [verb] To set on fire; kindle. | [verb] To take or catch fire. | [verb] To listen to (something or someone); to pay attention to; regard; heed. ATTESTED (9) [verb] To affirm to be correct, true, or genuine. | [verb] To certify by signature or oath. | [verb] To certify in an official capacity. ATTORNED (9) [verb] To transfer one's obligations from a person to another person. | [verb] To consent to the transfer of one's obligations as tenant under a lease to a new landlord. | [verb] To acknowledge the jurisdiction of (a particular court) over one's dispute. ATTRITED (9) [verb] To wear down through attrition, especially mechanical attrition | [verb] To engage in attrition; to quit or drop out | [verb] To be reduced in quantity through attrition AUNTHOOD (12) [noun] The state or condition of being an aunt. AUREOLED (9) AURICLED (11) [adjective] Having auricles or ear-like appendages; equipped with ears or ear-shaped structures. AUTACOID (11) [noun] A substance produced by body tissues that has a local physiological effect, such as a hormone or neurotransmitter. AUTHORED (12) [verb] (sometimes proscribed) To create a work as its author. AUTOCOID (11) [noun] A substance produced by body tissues that has a local effect on the organism, such as a hormone or neurotransmitter. AVERAGED (13) [verb] To compute the average of, especially the arithmetic mean. | [verb] Over a period of time or across members of a population, to have or generate a mean value of. | [verb] To divide among a number, according to a given proportion. AVOUCHED (17) [verb] To declare freely and openly; to assert. | [verb] To acknowledge deliberately; to admit; to confess; to sanction. | [verb] To confirm or verify, to affirm the validity of. AWAKENED (16) [verb] To cause to become awake. | [verb] To stop sleeping; awake. | [verb] To bring into action (something previously dormant); to stimulate. AWNINGED (13) [adjective] Equipped with or having an awning; covered by an awning. AZOTISED (18) [verb] Past tense of azotise; to combine or treat with nitrogen or nitrogenous compounds. AZOTIZED (27) [verb] Past tense of azotize; to combine or treat with nitrogen or a nitrogen compound. BABYHOOD (19) [noun] The state or time of being a baby; early infancy. BACCATED (15) [adjective] Having the form of a berry or baccate; resembling a berry in structure or appearance. BACKBEND (19) [noun] A move in which the performer bends backwards until the hands touch the floor or catches him/herself with the hands | [verb] To perform such a move. BACKHAND (20) [noun] A stroke made across the chest from the off-hand side to the racquet hand side; a stroke during which the back of the hand faces the shot. | [noun] Handwriting that leans to the left | [noun] (Ultimate Frisbee) the standard throw; a throw during which the disc begins on the off-hand side and travels across the chest to be released from the opposite side. BACKLAND (17) [noun] Land that lies behind or beyond some primary settlement or development. BACKSLID (17) [verb] To regress; to slip backwards or revert to a previous, worse state. | [verb] To shirk responsibility; to renege on one's obligations or commitments. BACKWARD (20) [noun] The state behind or past. | [adjective] (of motion) In the direction towards the back. | [adjective] (of motion) In the direction reverse of normal. BACKWOOD (20) [adjective] Native to or located in a remote rural location. | [adjective] Rustic, unsophisticated, countrified. BACKYARD (20) [noun] A yard to the rear of a house or similar residence. | [noun] A person's neighborhood, or an area nearby to a person's usual residence or place of work and where the person is likely to go. | [noun] An area nearby to a country or other jurisdiction's legal boundaries, particularly an area in which the country feels it has an interest. BADASSED (12) [adjective] Having or showing a tough, confident, and aggressive attitude or demeanor. BADGERED (13) [verb] To pester, to annoy persistently; press. | [verb] To pass gas; to fart. BALANCED (13) [verb] To bring (items) to an equipoise, as the scales of a balance by adjusting the weights. | [verb] To make (concepts) agree. | [verb] To hold (an object or objects) precariously; to support on a narrow base, so as to keep from falling. BALDHEAD (15) [noun] A person whose head is bald. | [noun] A white-headed variety of pigeon. | [noun] (Rastafarianism) A person who is not Rastafarian. BALLOTED (11) [verb] To vote or decide by ballot. | [verb] To draw lots. BALSAMED (13) [verb] Past tense of balm; treated with balm or a soothing substance. | [adjective] Having been treated with balm; soothed or mitigated. BANDAGED (13) [verb] To apply a bandage to something. BANISHED (14) [verb] (heading) To send someone away and forbid that person from returning. | [verb] To expel, especially from the mind. | [adjective] Having been subject to banishment; kicked out and forbidden from returning; forbidden and prohibited. BANJAXED (25) [verb] (originally Ireland) To ruin or destroy. | [adjective] Broken, ruined, shattered; confounded. | [adjective] Tired, sleepy, cream crackered. BANKCARD (17) [noun] A card that a bank issues used by the cardholder in the course of authorization to receive bank services. BANNERED (11) [verb] Past tense of banner; to display a banner or to mark with a banner. | [adjective] Decorated with or bearing a banner. BANTERED (11) [verb] To engage in banter or playful conversation. | [verb] To play or do something amusing. | [verb] To tease (someone) mildly. BAPTISED (13) [adjective] (of a person) Who has been baptised. | [verb] To perform the sacrament of baptism by sprinkling or pouring water over someone or immersing them in water. | [verb] To dedicate or christen. BAPTIZED (22) [verb] To perform the sacrament of baptism by sprinkling or pouring water over someone or immersing them in water. | [verb] To dedicate or christen. | [verb] Of rum, brandy, or any other spirits, to dilute with water. BARBERED (13) [verb] To cut the hair or beard of (a person). | [verb] To chatter, talk. BAREHEAD (14) [adjective] Without a hat or head covering; bareheaded. BARNYARD (14) [noun] The yard associated with or surrounding a barn. BARRAGED (12) [verb] To direct a barrage at. BARRELED (11) [verb] To put or to pack in a barrel or barrels. | [verb] To move quickly or in an uncontrolled manner. | [adjective] Having the specified number of barrels BARTERED (11) [verb] To exchange goods or services without involving money. BASIFIED (14) [verb] Past tense of basify; to convert into a base or make basic in chemical properties. BASSETED (11) [verb] Past tense of "basset," to hunt with basset hounds or to extract minerals from the surface of the earth where a vein outcrops. BASSWOOD (14) [noun] Any of several trees of the genus Tilia; the lindens, especially Tilia americana, the American basswood. BATTENED (11) [verb] To become better; improve in condition, especially by feeding. | [verb] To feed (on); to revel (in). | [verb] To thrive by feeding; grow fat; feed oneself gluttonously. BATTERED (11) [verb] To hit or strike violently and repeatedly. | [verb] To coat with batter (the food ingredient). | [verb] To defeat soundly; to thrash. BEACONED (13) [verb] Past tense of beacon; to serve as a beacon or signal light; to guide or direct as if by a beacon. BEARWOOD (14) BEAVERED (14) [adjective] Covered with, or wearing, a beaver or hat. | [adjective] Having or wearing a beaver (part of a helmet covering the lower face) BECALMED (15) [verb] To make calm or still; make quiet; calm. | [verb] To deprive (a ship) of wind, so that it cannot move (usually in passive). | [adjective] (of a sailing ship) Unable to move due to lack of wind. BECAPPED (17) [verb] Past tense of "becap," meaning to put a cap on or to cover with a cap. BECKONED (17) [verb] To wave or nod to somebody with the intention to make the person come closer. | [verb] To seem attractive and inviting BECOWARD (16) BECRIMED (15) BECURSED (13) [verb] Past tense and past participle of becurse; to curse or place under a curse. BEDAMNED (14) [verb] Past tense of bedamn; to curse or damn. BEDAUBED (14) [verb] To smear upon; to soil. | [verb] To ornament garishly; to overdecorate. BEDECKED (18) [verb] To deck, ornament, or adorn; to grace. | [adjective] Covered; encrusted; arrayed. BEDIMMED (16) [verb] To make dim; to obscure or darken. BEDOTTED (12) [verb] Covered or marked with dots or small spots. BEDRAPED (14) [verb] Draped or covered with cloth or fabric; adorned with drapery. BEDSTAND (12) BEDSTEAD (12) [noun] The framework that supports a bed. BEDUMBED (16) [verb] Past tense of bedumb; to make dumb or stupid. BEDUNCED (14) BEEBREAD (13) [noun] Bee pollen with added honey and bee secretions, made and stored in brood cells by forager bees, and used as food for worker bees and larvae. BEEFWOOD (17) [noun] Any of the Australian trees having timber resembling raw beef. | [noun] The timber of those trees. BEELINED (11) [verb] Past tense of beeline; to go or move in a straight line directly toward a destination, typically in a hurry. BEFITTED (14) [verb] To be fit for BEFLEAED (14) [adjective] Infested with fleas. BEFOGGED (16) [verb] To envelop in fog or smoke. | [verb] To confuse, mystify (a person); to make less acute or perceptive, to cloud (a person’s faculties). | [verb] To obscure, make less clear (a subject, issue, etc.). BEFOOLED (14) [verb] To make a fool out of (someone); to fool, trick, or deceive (someone). BEFOULED (14) [verb] To make foul; to soil; to contaminate, pollute. | [verb] (specifically) To defecate on, to soil with excrement. | [verb] To stain or mar (for example with infamy or disgrace). BEFRIEND (14) [verb] To become a friend of, to make friends with. | [verb] To act as a friend to, to assist. | [verb] To favor. BEGALLED (12) BEGGARED (13) [verb] To make a beggar of someone; impoverish. | [verb] To exhaust the resources of; to outdo. BEGIRDED (13) [verb] Past tense of begird; to encircle or gird about; to surround or bind with a belt or band. BEGRIMED (14) [verb] To make something dirty; to soil. | [adjective] Dirty, soiled, grimy. BEGUILED (12) [verb] To deceive or delude (using guile). | [verb] To charm, delight or captivate. | [verb] To cause (time) to seem to pass quickly, by way of pleasant diversion. BEGULFED (15) BEHEADED (15) [verb] To remove the head of; to cut someone's head off. | [adjective] Having had one's head cut off. BEHOOVED (17) [verb] To befit, to suit. | [verb] To be necessary for (someone). | [verb] To be in the best interest of; to benefit. BEHOWLED (17) BEKISSED (15) [verb] Past tense of bekiss; to cover with kisses. BELADIED (12) BELAUDED (12) BELEAPED (13) BELFRIED (14) [verb] Enclosed or confined in a belfry (a bell tower). | [adjective] Having a belfry or bell tower; fitted with bells. BELIEVED (14) [verb] To accept as true, particularly without absolute certainty (i.e., as opposed to knowing) | [verb] To accept that someone is telling the truth. | [verb] To have religious faith; to believe in a greater truth. BELLBIRD (13) [noun] Any of various birds with a far-carrying bell-like call, including the crested bellbird, Oreoica gutturalis, the New Zealand bellbird, Anthornis melanura and the neotropical bellbirds of the genus Procnias. | [noun] The bell miner, Manorina melanophrys, a bird that feeds on bell lerp (a variety of psyllid). BELLOWED (14) [verb] To make a loud, deep, hollow noise like the roar of an angry bull. | [verb] To shout in a deep voice. BELONGED (12) [verb] To have its proper place. | [verb] (followed by to) To be part of, or the property of. | [verb] (followed by to) To be the spouse or partner of. BEMEANED (13) [verb] Past tense of bemean; to demean or lower in dignity or respect. BEMISTED (13) [verb] Covered or obscured with mist. | [adjective] Obscured by or filled with mist. BEMOANED (13) [verb] To moan or complain about (something). | [verb] To be dismayed or worried about (someone), particularly because of their situation or what has happened to them. BEMOCKED (19) [verb] Past tense of bemock; to mock or ridicule someone or something. BENDAYED (15) BENTWOOD (14) [noun] (sometimes attributive) Lengths of wood that have been made pliable by heating with steam and then bent into the appropriate shape (to make furniture, ships' hulls, etc.). | [noun] An object, especially a piece of furniture, made from bentwood. BENUMBED (15) [verb] To make numb, as by cold or anesthetic. | [verb] To deaden, dull (the mind, faculties, etc.). | [adjective] Lacking sensation; numb. BEREAVED (14) [verb] To deprive by or as if by violence; to rob; to strip; to benim. | [verb] To take away by destroying, impairing, or spoiling; take away by violence. | [verb] To deprive of power; prevent. BERHYMED (19) BERINGED (12) [adjective] Wearing a ring or rings; adorned with a ring or rings. BEROUGED (12) BESEEMED (13) [verb] Past tense of beseem; to be suitable or appropriate for; to befit. BESHAMED (16) BESHROUD (14) BESIEGED (12) [verb] To beset or surround with armed forces for the purpose of compelling to surrender, to lay siege to, beleaguer. | [verb] To beleaguer, to vex, to lay siege to, to beset. | [verb] To assail or ply, as with requests or demands. BESLAVED (14) [verb] Past tense of enslave; subjected to slavery or bondage. BESLIMED (13) [verb] Past tense of beslime; covered or coated with slime. BESMILED (13) BESMOKED (17) [adjective] Filled with or darkened by smoke; smoky. BESNOWED (14) [adjective] Covered with snow. BESOTTED (11) [verb] To muddle, stupefy, or cause to act foolishly, as with alcoholic liquor or infatuation. | [adjective] Infatuated | [adjective] Intellectually or morally blinded BESPREAD (13) [verb] To spread over or across something; to cover by spreading. BESTOWED (14) [verb] To lay up in store; deposit for safe keeping; to stow or place; to put something somewhere. | [verb] To lodge, or find quarters for; provide with accommodation. | [verb] To dispose of. BETRAYED (14) [verb] To deliver into the hands of an enemy by treachery or fraud, in violation of trust; to give up treacherously or faithlessly. | [verb] To prove faithless or treacherous to, as to a trust or one who trusts; to be false to; to deceive. | [verb] To violate the confidence of, by disclosing a secret, or that which one is bound in honor not to make known. BETTERED (11) [verb] To improve. | [verb] To become better; to improve. | [verb] To surpass in excellence; to exceed; to excel. BEUNCLED (13) BEVELLED (14) [verb] To give a canted edge to a surface; to chamfer. | [adjective] Having a bevel, especially at an edge BEWAILED (14) [verb] To wail over; to feel or express deep sorrow for BEWIGGED (16) [adjective] Wearing a wig. | [adjective] Perplexed, bewildered. BEWINGED (15) [adjective] Having wings or wing-like appendages; equipped with wings. BEWORMED (16) BEWRAYED (17) [verb] Past tense of bewray; to reveal, expose, or betray something or someone. BICKERED (17) [verb] To quarrel in a tiresome, insulting manner. | [verb] To brawl or move tremulously, quiver, shimmer (of a water stream, light, flame, etc.) | [verb] (of rain) To patter. BICUSPID (15) [noun] A tooth with two cusps; a premolar tooth. | [adjective] Having two points or prominences; ending in two points; said of teeth, leaves, fruit, etc. BICYCLED (18) [verb] To travel or exercise using a bicycle. BIFORKED (18) BIFORMED (16) BIKINIED (15) BILLETED (11) [verb] (of a householder etc.) To lodge soldiers, or guests, usually by order. | [verb] (of a soldier) To lodge, or be quartered, in a private house. | [verb] To direct, by a ticket or note, where to lodge. BILLFOLD (14) [noun] A small, folding sleeve or case designed to hold paper currency, as well as credit cards, pictures, etc. BILLHEAD (14) [noun] A printed heading on a sheet of paper used by a business for correspondence and invoices. | [noun] The heading or top portion of a bill or invoice that identifies the business. BILLIARD (11) [noun] A shot in billiards or snooker in which the cue ball strikes two other balls; a carom. | [noun] Pertaining to the game of billiards. | [noun] A dynamical system in which a particle alternates between motion in a straight line and specular reflections from a boundary. | [numeral] 1015, a thousand billion (long scale) or a million milliard. BILLOWED (14) [verb] To surge or roll in billows. | [verb] To swell out or bulge. BINDWEED (15) [noun] Trailing vine-like plants in the family Convolvulaceae with funnel-shaped flowers. | [noun] Plants of species in other families with similar appearance BIOPSIED (13) [verb] To take a sample (a biopsy) for pathological examination. BIPARTED (13) [adjective] Divided into two parts; having two distinct sections or components. BIRDSEED (12) [noun] Seed, usually constituting a mixture from several species of plant, set out as food for birds. BISECTED (13) [verb] To cut or divide into two parts. | [adjective] Divided into two equal pieces. BISHOPED (16) [verb] Past tense of bishop, meaning to move a bishop in chess, or to appoint someone as a bishop in the Christian church. BISTERED (11) [verb] Past tense of bistre; colored or stained with bistre (a brownish pigment made from soot). BITTERED (11) [verb] Past tense of bitter; made bitter or resentful. | [adjective] Having a bitter taste or quality; embittered. BIVALVED (17) [adjective] Having two valves. BLANCHED (16) [verb] To grow or become white | [verb] To take the color out of, and make white; to bleach | [verb] To cook by dipping briefly into boiling water, then directly into cold water. BLAZONED (20) [verb] To describe a coat of arms. | [verb] To make widely or generally known, to proclaim. | [verb] To display conspicuously or publicly. BLEACHED (16) [verb] To treat with bleach, especially so as to whiten (fabric, paper, etc.) or lighten (hair). | [verb] To be whitened or lightened (by the sun, for example). | [verb] (of corals) to lose color due to stress-induced expulsion of symbiotic unicellular algae. BLENCHED (16) [verb] To shrink; start back; give way; flinch; turn aside or fly off. | [verb] (of the eye) To quail. | [verb] To deceive; cheat. BLIGHTED (15) [verb] To affect with blight; to blast; to prevent the growth and fertility of. | [verb] To suffer blight. | [verb] To spoil or ruin (something). BLINKARD (15) [noun] A person who blinks excessively or habitually. | [noun] A horse that wears blinders. BLIZZARD (29) [noun] A large snowstorm accompanied by strong winds and greatly reduced visibility caused by blowing snow. | [noun] A large amount of paperwork. | [noun] A large number of similar things. BLOODIED (12) [adjective] Covered or stained with blood | [verb] To draw blood from one's opponent in a fight. | [verb] To demonstrably harm the cause of an opponent. BLOODRED (12) [noun] Alternative form of blood-red BLOTCHED (16) [verb] To mark with blotches. | [verb] To develop blotches, to become blotchy. | [adjective] Covered in blotches. BLOWHARD (17) [noun] A person who talks too much or too loudly, especially in a boastful or self-important manner. BLUEBIRD (13) [noun] Any of various North American birds of the genus Sialia in the thrush family. Their plumage is blue or blue and red. | [noun] Any of various African starlings of the genus Lamprotornis, family Sturnidae, having predominantly glossy blue plumage. BLUEHEAD (14) [noun] The blunt-headed wrasse or blue-headed wrasse, a fish of the species Thalassoma amblycephalum or Thalassoma bifasciatum. BLUEWEED (14) [noun] A North American plant of the borage family with blue flowers, also known as viper's bugloss. | [noun] Any of various plants with blue flowers, particularly those considered weeds. BLUEWOOD (14) BOATLOAD (11) [noun] Cargo or passengers that fill a boat. | [noun] A large quantity. BOATYARD (14) [noun] A place where boats are built and repaired. | [noun] Shipyard BOLLIXED (18) [verb] To confuse. | [verb] To botch or bungle. BOLLOXED (18) [verb] Past tense of bollix; to mess up or bungle something. | [verb] To damage or ruin something. BOLTHEAD (14) [noun] The head of a bolt, typically hexagonal in shape. | [noun] A stupid or foolish person. BOMBLOAD (15) BOMBYCID (20) [noun] A moth of the family Bombycidae, which includes the silkworm moth. BONDMAID (14) [noun] A female slave or a woman bound to servitude; a maidservant in bondage. BONEHEAD (14) [noun] Someone who is stubborn, thick-skulled, or stupid. BONEYARD (14) [noun] A graveyard. | [noun] In the game of dominoes, the pile of upside-down pieces that have yet to be used. | [noun] A dumpsite for obsolete or unusable aircraft. BONNETED (11) [adjective] Wearing a bonnet or having a bonnet on. | [verb] Past tense of bonnet; to put a bonnet on someone or something. BOOGEYED (15) [verb] Past tense of boogie, meaning to dance to pop or rock music, or to move quickly. BOOHOOED (14) [verb] To cry, weep. BORDERED (12) [verb] To put a border on something. | [verb] To form a border around; to bound. | [verb] To lie on, or adjacent to, a border of. BORROWED (14) [verb] To receive (something) from somebody temporarily, expecting to return it. | [verb] To take money from a bank under the agreement that the bank will be paid over the course of time. | [verb] To adopt (an idea) as one's own. BOTHERED (14) [verb] To annoy, to disturb, to irritate. | [verb] To feel care or anxiety; to make or take trouble; to be troublesome. | [verb] To do something which is of negligible inconvenience. BOTRYOID (14) [adjective] Resembling a bunch of grapes in form or appearance, used to describe mineral formations or other structures with a clustered, rounded shape. BOTTOMED (13) [verb] To furnish (something) with a bottom. | [verb] To wind (like a ball of thread etc.). | [verb] To establish or found (something) on or upon. BOUNTIED (11) [verb] Past tense of bounty, meaning to offer a reward for something, or to provide with a bounty. BOWELLED (14) [verb] Past tense of bowel; to remove the bowels or entrails from something. | [adjective] Having bowels or internal organs (archaic usage). BOWWOWED (20) [verb] Past tense of bowwow; to bark like a dog or make a barking sound. BOXBOARD (20) [noun] Paperboard used for the manufacture of folding cartons and rigid boxes. BRABBLED (15) [verb] Past tense of "brabble," meaning to wrangle or quarrel noisily. | [verb] To speak or act in a confused or muddled manner. BRACONID (13) [noun] Any of the parasitic wasps of the family Braconidae. BRAILLED (11) [verb] To write in, or convert into, the braille writing system. BRAMBLED (15) [adjective] Overgrown with brambles. BRANCHED (16) [verb] To arise from the trunk or a larger branch of a tree. | [verb] To produce branches. | [verb] To (cause to) divide into separate parts or subdivisions. BRANDIED (12) [adjective] Preserved in or flavored with brandy. | [verb] Past tense of brandy, to add brandy to something. BRASSARD (11) [noun] An armor plate that protects the arm. | [noun] An insignia or band worn around the upper arm. BRATTLED (11) [verb] To rattle; to make a scampering noise. BRAZENED (20) [verb] To turn a brass color. | [verb] Generally followed by out or through: to carry through in a brazen manner; to act boldly despite embarrassment, risk, etc. BREACHED (16) [verb] To make a breach in. | [verb] To violate or break. | [verb] (of the sea) To break into a ship or into a coastal defence. BREASTED (11) [verb] To push against with the breast; to meet full on, oppose, face. | [verb] To reach the top (of a hill). | [verb] To debreast. BREATHED (14) [verb] To draw air into (inhale), and expel air from (exhale), the lungs in order to extract oxygen and excrete waste gases. | [verb] To take in needed gases and expel waste gases in a similar way. | [verb] To inhale (a gas) to sustain life. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified kind of breath. BREECHED (16) [verb] To dress in breeches. (especially) To dress a boy in breeches or trousers for the first time. | [verb] To beat or spank on the buttocks. | [verb] To fit or furnish with a breech. BREVETED (14) [verb] To promote by brevet. BRIGADED (13) [verb] To form or unite into a brigade; to group together. BRINDLED (12) [verb] To form streaks of a different color. | [adjective] Of a brownish, tawny or gray colour, with streaks or spots; streaky, spotted BRISTLED (11) [verb] To rise or stand erect, like bristles. | [verb] Abound, to have an abundance of something | [verb] (with at) To be on one's guard or raise one's defenses; to react with fear, suspicion, or distance. BRITTLED (11) [verb] Past tense of brittle, meaning to make or become brittle or fragile. | [adjective] Made brittle or having become brittle. BROACHED (16) [verb] To make a hole in, especially a cask of liquor, and put in a tap in order to draw the liquid. | [verb] To open, to make an opening into; to pierce. | [verb] To begin discussion about (something). BROCADED (14) [verb] Past tense of brocade; decorated or woven with a raised pattern or design, typically in gold or silver thread. BROKERED (15) [verb] To act as a broker; to mediate in a sale or transaction. | [verb] To act as a broker in; to arrange or negotiate. BROMATED (13) [verb] Past tense of bromate; treated or combined with bromine or a bromide compound. BROMIZED (22) BROWBAND (16) [noun] A band that passes over a horse's forehead as part of the bridle. | [noun] A decorative band worn across the forehead. BRUNCHED (16) [verb] Past tense of brunch; to eat brunch or to have eaten a meal between breakfast and lunch. BUCKETED (17) [verb] To place inside a bucket. | [verb] To draw or lift in, or as if in, buckets. | [verb] To rain heavily. BUDGETED (13) [verb] To construct or draw up a budget. | [verb] To provide funds, allow for in a budget. | [verb] To plan for the use of in a budget. BUFFERED (17) [verb] To use a buffer or buffers; to isolate or minimize the effects of one thing on another. | [verb] To store data in memory temporarily. | [verb] To maintain the acidity of a solution near a chosen value by adding an acid or a base. BUFFETED (17) [verb] To strike with a buffet; to cuff; to slap. | [verb] To aggressively challenge, denounce, or criticise. | [verb] To affect as with blows; to strike repeatedly; to strive with or contend against. BUGGERED (13) [verb] To have anal sex with, sodomize. | [verb] To break or ruin. | [verb] To be surprised. BULKHEAD (18) [noun] A vertical partition dividing the hull into separate compartments; often made watertight to prevent excessive flooding if the ship's hull is breached. | [noun] A similar partition in an aircraft or spacecraft. | [noun] Mechanically, a partition or panel through which connectors pass, or a connector designed to pass through a partition. BULLETED (11) [verb] To draw attention to (text) by, or as if by, placing a graphic bullet in front of it. | [verb] To speed, like a bullet. | [verb] To make a shot, especially with great speed. BULLHEAD (14) [noun] Any of a variety of related species of generally dark-colored catfish in the family Ictaluridae. | [noun] (Europe, Asia) Any of various sculpins of the suborder Scorpaenoidei | [noun] (Europe, Asia) The European bullhead, Cottus gobio. BULLWEED (14) BUMPERED (15) [verb] Past tense of bumper, meaning to equip with a bumper or to bump against something repeatedly. | [adjective] Unusually large or abundant (as in "a bumpered crop"). BUNKERED (15) [verb] To load a vessel with oil or coal for the engine. | [verb] To hit a golf ball into a bunker. | [verb] To fire constantly at a hiding opponent, preventing them from firing at other players and trapping them behind the barrier. This can also refer to eliminating an opponent behind cover by rushing the position and firing at extremely close range as the player becomes exposed. BURDENED (12) [verb] To encumber with a literal or figurative burden. | [verb] To impose, as a load or burden; to lay or place as a burden (something heavy or objectionable). BURROWED (14) [verb] To dig a tunnel or hole | [verb] (with adverbial of direction) to move underneath or press up against in search of safety or comfort | [verb] (with into) to investigate thoroughly BUSHELED (14) [verb] Past tense of bushel, meaning to repair or alter clothing, especially to mend or alter a garment. | [verb] To hide or conceal something. BUSHLAND (14) [noun] An area of land in a natural, uncultivated state; wilderness, open forest. BUSKINED (15) [adjective] Wearing buskins (a type of boot or half-boot, especially as worn by actors in classical drama). | [adjective] Dressed in the style of classical tragedy; elevated or dignified in manner. BUTTERED (11) [verb] To spread butter on. | [verb] To move one's weight backwards or forwards onto the tips or tails of one's skis or snowboard so only the tip or tail is in contact with the snow. | [verb] To increase (stakes) at every throw of dice, or every game. BUTTONED (11) [verb] To fasten with a button. | [verb] To be fastened by a button or buttons. | [verb] To stop talking. BUZZWORD (32) [noun] A word drawn from or imitative of technical jargon, and often rendered meaningless and fashionable through abuse by non-technical persons in a seeming show of familiarity with the subject. BYPASSED (16) [verb] To avoid an obstacle etc, by constructing or using a bypass | [verb] To ignore the usual channels or procedures CABALLED (13) [verb] Past tense of cabal; to engage in secret plotting or conspiracy with others. CABBAGED (16) [verb] Past tense of cabbage; to steal or pilfer, especially small items of fabric or material. | [verb] To form into a head like a cabbage plant. CABOCHED (18) [adjective] Showing the full face, but nothing of the neck; said of the head of a beast in armorial bearing. CABOSHED (16) [adjective] (of an animal) Shown face-on and cut off immediately behind the ears. CABSTAND (13) [noun] A place where taxis or cabs wait for passengers. CACHETED (16) [verb] Sealed or stamped with a cachet; marked with an official seal or distinguishing mark. CADENCED (14) [adjective] Having a rhythmic pattern or flow; marked by cadence. | [verb] Past tense of cadence; moved or progressed with a rhythmic or measured beat. CALCINED (13) [verb] To heat something without melting in order to drive off water etc., and to decompose carbonates into oxides or to oxidize or reduce it; especially to heat limestone to form quicklime, i.e. to calcinate. | [verb] To undergo such heating | [adjective] Converted by calcination. CALIBRED (13) [verb] Past tense of calibre; adjusted or set to a standard of quality or performance. | [verb] Past tense of caliber; determined the caliber or diameter of a firearm or tube. CALLUSED (11) [verb] To form such hardened tissue. | [adjective] Having calluses. CAMAILED (13) [verb] Past tense of camail, meaning to cover or furnish with a camail (a piece of armor for the neck and shoulders). CAMBERED (15) [adjective] Having a slight convex curve or arch, as in a road or aircraft wing. | [verb] Past tense of camber; to curve or arch slightly. CAMPUSED (15) [verb] Past tense of campus, meaning to restrict or confine a student to campus as a punishment. CANALLED (11) [verb] Past tense of canal; to provide with canals or to direct through canals. CANCELED (13) [verb] To cross out something with lines etc. | [verb] To invalidate or annul something. | [verb] To mark something (such as a used postage stamp) so that it can't be reused. CANCROID (13) [noun] Any disease that resembles cancer | [noun] Squamous cell carcinoma | [adjective] Resembling a crab CANFIELD (14) [noun] A type of solitaire card game, also known as Klondike solitaire. CANKERED (15) [adjective] Infected with a canker or having a cankerous part | [adjective] Ulcerated | [adjective] Corrupted; morally corrupt | [verb] To affect as a canker; to eat away; to corrode; to consume. CANNONED (11) [verb] To bombard with cannons. | [verb] To play the carom billiard shot. To strike two balls with the cue ball | [verb] To fire something, especially spherical, rapidly. CANOPIED (13) [adjective] Covered overhead with (or as if with) a canopy. | [verb] To cover with or as if with a canopy. | [verb] To go through the canopy of a forest on a zipline. CANTERED (11) [verb] To move at such pace. | [verb] To cause to move at a canter; to ride (a horse) at a canter. CANTONED (11) [verb] Divided into or assigned to cantons (districts or subdivisions). | [verb] Past tense of canton, meaning to quarter or lodge troops in a particular area. CANVASED (14) [verb] To cover an area or object with canvas. | [verb] Alternative spelling of canvass. CAPSIZED (22) [verb] To overturn. | [verb] To cause (a ship) to overturn. | [verb] (of knots) To deform under stress. CAPSULED (13) [adjective] Enclosed or sealed in a capsule. | [verb] Past tense of capsule, meaning to enclose in a capsule or to condense into a brief form. CAPTURED (13) [verb] To take control of; to seize by force or stratagem. | [verb] To store (as in sounds or image) for later revisitation. | [verb] To reproduce convincingly. CAPUCHED (18) [adjective] Wearing or having a capuche (a hood or hooded garment). CARANGID (12) [noun] Any fish belonging to the family Carangidae. CARBOYED (16) CARDIOID (12) [noun] An epicycloid with exactly one cusp; the plane curve with polar equation \rho = 1 + \cos\,\theta - approximately heart-shaped | [adjective] Having this characteristic shape | [adjective] (of a microphone) sensitive in front, but not behind or at the sides CAREENED (11) [verb] To heave a ship down on one side so as to expose the other, in order to clean it of barnacles and weed, or to repair it below the water line. | [verb] To tilt on one side. | [verb] To lurch or sway violently from side to side. CAREERED (11) [verb] To move rapidly straight ahead, especially in an uncontrolled way. CARESSED (11) [verb] To touch or kiss lovingly; to fondle. | [verb] To affect as if with a caress. CAROLLED (11) [verb] Past tense of carol; to sing carols or sing joyfully. CAROUSED (11) [verb] To engage in a noisy or drunken social gathering. | [verb] To drink to excess. CARPETED (13) [verb] To lay carpet, or to have carpet installed, in an area. | [verb] To substantially cover something, as a carpet does; to blanket something. | [verb] To reprimand. CARROMED (13) [verb] Past tense of carrom, meaning to strike and rebound; to collide and bounce off at an angle, especially in billiards or pool. CARTLOAD (11) [noun] The amount that a cart can carry. | [noun] (by extension) Any large amount. | [noun] (specifically) A load: various English units of weight or volume based upon standardized cartloads of certain commodities. CARTONED (11) [verb] Packed or placed in a carton. CARYATID (14) [noun] A sculpted female figure serving as an architectural element, used as a support for entablature. CASCADED (14) [verb] To fall as a waterfall or series of small waterfalls. | [verb] To arrange in a stepped series like a waterfall. | [verb] To occur as a causal sequence. CASEATED (11) [verb] Past tense of caseat, meaning to undergo caseation (the formation of a cheese-like substance in tissue, particularly in tuberculosis lesions). CASEFIED (14) CASELOAD (11) [noun] The workload of a person or group that handles cases; the relative volume of cases expected to be worked upon. CASKETED (15) [verb] Past tense of casket; to place or enclose in a casket. CATENOID (11) [noun] A three-dimensional surface formed by rotation of a catenary CAUCUSED (13) [verb] To meet and participate in caucus. | [verb] To bring into or treat in caucus. CAUDATED (12) [adjective] Having a tail or tail-like appendage. CAVEATED (14) [verb] Past tense of caveat; to make a qualification or express a warning or proviso about something. CAVERNED (14) [adjective] Having caverns; characterized by or containing caverns. | [verb] Past tense of cavern, meaning to form into or enclose in a cavern. CAVILLED (14) [verb] To criticise for petty or frivolous reasons. CAVITIED (14) [adjective] Having cavities; characterized by the presence of cavities or hollow spaces. CAVORTED (14) [verb] (originally intransitive) To prance, said of mounts | [verb] To move about carelessly, playfully or boisterously. CAYENNED (14) [adjective] Seasoned with cayenne pepper or containing cayenne as a flavoring ingredient. CELLARED (11) [verb] To store in a cellar. | [adjective] Provided with a cellar. CEMENTED (13) [verb] To affix with cement. | [verb] To overlay or coat with cement. | [verb] To unite firmly or closely. CENSORED (11) [verb] To review for, and if necessary to remove or suppress, content from books, films, correspondence, and other media which is regarded as objectionable (for example, obscene, likely to incite violence, or sensitive). | [adjective] Having had objectionable content removed. CENSURED (11) [verb] To criticize harshly. | [verb] To formally rebuke. | [verb] To form or express a judgment in regard to; to estimate; to judge. CENSUSED (11) [verb] Past tense of census; to conduct an official count or survey of a population or group. CENTERED (11) [verb] To cause (an object) to occupy the center of an area. | [verb] To cause (some attribute, such as a mood or voltage) to be adjusted to a value which is midway between the extremes. | [verb] To give (something) a central basis. CENTROID (11) [noun] The point at the centre of any shape, sometimes called centre of area or centre of volume. For a triangle, the centroid is the point at which the medians intersect. The co-ordinates of the centroid are the average (arithmetic mean) of the co-ordinates of all the points of the shape. For a shape of uniform density, the centroid coincides with the centre of mass which is also the centre of gravity in a uniform gravitational field. CEPHALAD (16) [adjective] Toward or situated at the head; in the direction of the head or anterior end of the body. CERATOID (11) [adjective] Resembling or having the form of a horn; horn-shaped. CHALICED (16) [adjective] Shaped like or having a chalice; cup-shaped. | [verb] Past tense of chalice, meaning to hold or serve in a chalice. CHAMMIED (18) [verb] Past tense of chammy, meaning to treat leather with oil to make it soft and pliable. CHARACID (16) CHARQUID (23) CHAUNTED (14) [verb] Past tense of chaunt, an archaic or poetic spelling of chant, meaning to sing or recite in a rhythmic manner. CHEERLED (14) CHELATED (14) [verb] To form a chelate compound by combining a metal atom to form a ring | [verb] To remove heavy metals from the bloodstream using a chelate (such as EDTA) | [adjective] (of a metal atom) bound with one or more chelates CHELIPED (16) [noun] A pincer-bearing limb of a crustacean, such as a crab or lobster. CHENOPOD (16) [noun] A plant of the goosefoot family, including species such as spinach and quinoa. CHICANED (16) [verb] To use chicanery, tricks or subterfuge. | [verb] To deceive. CHILDBED (17) [noun] The final stage of pregnancy; confinement | [noun] The bed in which a baby is born CHILOPOD (16) [noun] A centipede; any arthropod of the class Chilopoda characterized by a long segmented body with one pair of legs per segment. CHISELED (14) [verb] To use a chisel. | [verb] To work something with a chisel. | [verb] To cheat, to get something by cheating. CHIVVIED (20) [verb] To coerce or hurry along, as by persistent request. | [verb] To subject to harassment or verbal abuse. | [verb] To sneak up on or rapidly approach. CHOREOID (14) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of chorea, a neurological disorder characterized by involuntary jerky movements. | [adjective] Having a dance-like or jerky quality of movement. CHORIOID (14) [noun] The pigmented vascular layer of the eyeball between the retina and the sclera. CHORTLED (14) [verb] To laugh with a chortle or chortles. CHORUSED (14) [verb] To sing or recite in chorus. | [verb] To say in unison; to express in unison. | [verb] To echo (a particular sentiment). CHRESARD (14) CHUCKLED (20) [verb] To laugh quietly or inwardly. | [verb] To communicate through chuckling. | [verb] To make the sound of a chicken; to cluck. CHURCHED (19) [verb] To conduct a religious service for (a woman after childbirth, or a newly married couple). | [verb] To educate someone religiously, as in in a church. CILIATED (11) [adjective] Having cilia; covered with or possessing hair-like structures that move back and forth. CINDERED (12) [verb] Past tense of cinder; reduced to cinders or ashes. | [adjective] Reduced to or resembling cinders; burned to ash. CIPHERED (16) [verb] To calculate. | [verb] To write in code or cipher. | [verb] Of an organ pipe: to sound independent of the organ. CIRRIPED (13) [noun] Any barnacle or similar crustacean of the infraclass Cirripedia. CITIFIED (14) [adjective] Characteristic of the sophisticated customs or dress associated with city life. | [verb] To become more like or more in the character of a city. | [verb] To make more like or more in the character of a city. CITRATED (11) [adjective] Treated with or containing citrate, a salt or ester of citric acid. CITYFIED (17) [adjective] Characteristic of the sophisticated customs or dress associated with city life. CITYWARD (17) [adjective] Directed toward cities | [adverb] Toward a city or cities CLAMORED (13) [verb] To cry out and/or demand. | [verb] To demand by outcry. | [verb] To become noisy insistently. CLAVERED (14) CLEANSED (11) [verb] To free from dirt; to clean, to purify. | [verb] To spiritually purify; to free from guilt or sin; to purge. CLENCHED (16) [verb] To grip or hold fast. | [verb] To close tightly. | [adjective] Closed tightly. CLIMAXED (20) [verb] To reach or bring to a climax. | [verb] To orgasm; to reach orgasm. CLINCHED (16) [verb] To clasp; to interlock. | [verb] To make certain; to finalize. | [verb] To fasten securely or permanently. CLOCHARD (16) [noun] A beggar or tramp, especially in France. CLOSETED (11) [adjective] Not open about one's sexual orientation, romantic orientation, or gender identity. | [adjective] (by extension) Not open about some aspect of one's identity, tendency or fondness; secret. | [verb] To shut away for private discussion. CLOSURED (11) [verb] Past tense of closure, meaning to have closed or sealed something. | [verb] In legal or parliamentary contexts, to have ended debate or discussion on a matter. CLOTURED (11) [verb] To end legislative debate by this means. CLUBHAND (16) [noun] A congenital deformity of the hand in which it is permanently bent or twisted, typically inward and downward. CLUPEOID (13) [noun] Any of a group of fish closely related taxonomically to herring. | [adjective] Of or relating to fish closely related taxonomically to herring. CLUTCHED (16) [verb] To seize, as though with claws. | [verb] To grip or grasp tightly. | [verb] To hatch. COALSHED (14) [noun] A shed or storage structure used for keeping coal. COALYARD (14) [noun] A yard or storage area where coal is kept or sold. COATTEND (11) COCKADED (18) [adjective] Wearing or adorned with a cockade (a ribbon, badge, or knot of ribbons worn on a hat as a symbol of allegiance or office). COCKERED (17) [verb] Past tense of cocker; to treat with excessive indulgence or pampering. | [adjective] Spaniel breed designation, as in cocker spaniel. COCKEYED (20) [adjective] Having both eyes oriented inward, cross-eyed. | [adjective] Crooked or askew. | [adjective] Absurd, silly, or stupid; usually used in reference to ideas rather than people. COCOONED (13) [verb] To envelop in a protective case | [verb] To withdraw into such a case. CODIFIED (15) [verb] To reduce to a code, to arrange into a code. | [verb] To collect and arrange in a systematic form. COEDITED (12) [verb] Past tense of coedit; to edit something jointly with another person or persons. COEMPTED (15) [verb] Past tense of coempt, meaning to buy up or purchase entirely, especially to buy grain or other commodities before they reach the market. COEXTEND (18) COFFERED (17) [adjective] Decorated with a coffer or coffers (recessed panels in a ceiling or vault). | [verb] Past tense of coffer; to decorate with coffers or to store in a coffer. COFFINED (17) [verb] To place in a coffin. COGNISED (12) [verb] To know, perceive, or become aware of. | [verb] To make into an object of cognition (the process of acquiring knowledge through thought); to cogitate. COGNIZED (21) [verb] To know, perceive, or become aware of. | [verb] To make into an object of cognition (the process of acquiring knowledge through thought); to cogitate. COHEADED (15) COHOSTED (14) [verb] To act as a joint host. | [verb] To store data or applications on a shared server (as in web hosting). COJOINED (18) COKEHEAD (18) [noun] A person who is addicted to or regularly uses cocaine. COLESEED (11) [noun] The common rape or cole. COLLAGED (12) [verb] Past tense of collage; to make a collage by assembling and gluing various materials onto a surface. COLLARED (11) [verb] To grab or seize by the collar or neck. | [verb] To place a collar on, to fit with one. | [verb] To seize, capture or detain. COLLATED (11) [verb] To examine diverse documents and so on, to discover similarities and differences. | [verb] To assemble something in a logical sequence. | [verb] To sort multiple copies of printed documents into sequences of individual page order, one sequence for each copy, especially before binding. COLLETED (11) [verb] Past tense of collet; to hold or clamp something (such as a tool or gem) in a collet. | [verb] To set a gem in a collet setting. COLLIDED (12) [verb] To impact directly, especially if violent. | [verb] To come into conflict, or be incompatible. COLLUDED (12) [verb] To act in concert with; to conspire COLOGNED (12) COLOURED (11) [verb] To give something color. | [verb] To apply colors to the areas within the boundaries of a line drawing using colored markers or crayons. | [verb] (of a person or their face) To become red through increased blood flow. COLUBRID (13) [noun] Any snake in the family Colubridae, completely covered in scales and mostly nonvenomous. COLUMNED (13) [adjective] Having columns or arranged in columns. | [verb] Past tense of column (to arrange in columns). COMBATED (15) [verb] To fight; to struggle against. | [verb] To fight (with); to struggle for victory (against). COMBINED (15) [noun] An event in alpine skiing which combines runs on a downhill skiing course and a slalom course, for individual skiers. | [verb] To bring (two or more things or activities) together; to unite. | [verb] To have two or more things or properties that function together. COMMIXED (22) [verb] To mix separate things together. | [verb] To become mixed; to amalgamate. COMMOVED (18) [verb] Past tense of commove; to agitate, disturb, or excite emotionally. COMMUNED (15) [verb] To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. | [verb] (followed by with) To communicate (with) spiritually; to be together (with); to contemplate or absorb. | [verb] To receive the communion. COMMUTED (15) [verb] To exchange substantially; to abate but not abolish completely, a penalty, obligation, or payment in return for a great, single thing or an aggregate; to cash in; to lessen | [verb] Of an operation, to be commutative, i.e. to have the property that changing the order of the operands does not change the result. | [verb] To regularly travel from one's home to one's workplace or school, or vice versa. COMPARED (15) [verb] To assess the similarities and differences between two or more things ["to compare X with Y"]. Having made the comparison of X with Y, one might have found it similar to Y or different from Y. | [verb] To declare two things to be similar in some respect ["to compare X to Y"]. | [verb] (grammar) To form the three degrees of comparison of (an adjective). COMPERED (15) [verb] To emcee, to act as compere. COMPETED (15) [verb] To be in battle or in a rivalry with another for the same thing, position, or reward; to contend | [verb] To be in a position in which it is possible to win or triumph. | [verb] To take part in a contest, game or similar event COMPILED (15) [verb] To put together; to assemble; to make by gathering things from various sources. | [verb] To construct, build. | [verb] To use a compiler to process source code and produce executable code. COMPLIED (15) [verb] To yield assent; to accord; to acquiesce, agree, consent; to adapt oneself, to conform. | [verb] To accomplish, to fulfil. | [verb] To be ceremoniously courteous; to make one's compliments. COMPOSED (15) [verb] To make something by merging parts. | [verb] To make up the whole; to constitute. | [verb] To comprise. COMPOUND (15) [noun] An enclosure within which workers, prisoners, or soldiers are confined | [noun] A group of buildings situated close together, e.g. for a school or block of offices | [noun] Anything made by combining several things. COMPUTED (15) [verb] To reckon or calculate. | [verb] To make sense. | [adjective] Calculated, determined by computation. CONCAVED (16) [verb] Past tense of concave; curved inward like the interior of a sphere or bowl. CONCEDED (14) [verb] To yield or suffer; to surrender; to grant | [verb] To grant, as a right or privilege; to make concession of. | [verb] To admit to be true; to acknowledge. CONCHOID (16) [noun] Any of a family of curves defined as the locus of points p, such that each p is on a line that passes through a given fixed point P and intersects a given curve, C, and the distance from p to the point of intersection with C is a specified constant (note that for nontrivial cases two such points p satisfy the criteria, and the resultant curve has two parts). | [noun] A conchoidal fracture in rock. CONDOLED (12) [verb] To express sympathetic sorrow; to lament in sympathy (with someone on something). | [verb] To condole with (someone). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. CONDONED (12) [verb] To forgive, excuse or overlook (something that is considered morally wrong, offensive, or generally disliked). | [verb] To allow, accept or permit (something that is considered morally wrong, offensive, or generally disliked). | [verb] To forgive (marital infidelity or other marital offense). CONDUCED (14) [verb] To contribute or lead to a specific result. CONELRAD (11) CONFIDED (15) [verb] To trust, have faith (in). | [verb] To entrust (something) to the responsibility of someone. | [verb] To take (someone) into one's confidence, to speak in secret with. ( + in) CONFINED (14) [verb] To restrict; to keep within bounds; to shut or keep in a limited space or area. | [verb] To have a common boundary; to border; to lie contiguous; to touch; followed by on or with. | [adjective] Not free to move. CONFOUND (14) [noun] A confounding variable. | [verb] To perplex or puzzle. | [verb] To fail to see the difference; to mix up; to confuse right and wrong. CONFUSED (14) [verb] To puzzle, perplex, baffle, bewilder (somebody). | [verb] To mix up, muddle up (one thing with another); to mistake (one thing for another). | [verb] To mix thoroughly; to confound; to disorder. CONFUTED (14) [verb] To show (something or someone) to be false or wrong; to disprove or refute. CONJURED (18) [verb] To perform magic tricks. | [verb] To summon (a devil, etc.) using supernatural power. | [verb] To practice black magic. CONNIVED (14) [verb] Often followed by with: to secretly cooperate with another person or persons in order to commit a crime or other wrongdoing; to collude, to conspire. | [verb] Of parts of a plant: to be converging or in close contact; to be connivent. | [verb] Often followed by at: to pretend to be ignorant of something in order to escape blame; to ignore or overlook a fault deliberately. CONNOTED (11) [verb] To signify beyond its literal or principal meaning. | [verb] To possess an inseparable related condition; to imply as a logical consequence. | [verb] To express without overt reference; to imply. CONSOLED (11) [verb] To comfort (someone) in a time of grief, disappointment, etc. CONSUMED (13) [verb] To use up. | [verb] To eat. | [verb] To completely occupy the thoughts or attention of. CONTUSED (11) [verb] To injure without breaking the skin; to bruise. CONVENED (14) [verb] To come together; to meet; to unite. | [verb] To come together, as in one body or for a public purpose; to meet; to assemble. | [verb] To cause to assemble; to call together; to convoke. CONVEYED (17) [verb] To move (something) from one place to another. | [verb] To take or carry (someone) from one place to another. | [verb] To communicate; to make known; to portray. CONVOKED (18) [verb] To convene, to cause to assemble for a meeting. | [verb] To call together. CONVOYED (17) [verb] To escort a group of vehicles, and provide protection. COOPERED (13) [verb] To make and repair barrels etc. COPPERED (15) [verb] To sheathe or coat with copper. | [adjective] (of the hull of a wooden ship) sheathed below the waterline with thin sheets of copper to prevent the attack of teredo shipworms and limit the buildup of weed COPPICED (17) [verb] To manage (a wooded area) sustainably, as a coppice, by periodically cutting back woody plants to promote new growth. | [verb] To sprout from the stump. COPYHOLD (19) [noun] A former form of tenure in which the title deeds were a copy of the manorial roll. COPYREAD (16) [verb] To read text (of a newspaper etc.) and edit it to correct mistakes. CORACOID (13) [noun] Part of the scapula that projects towards the sternum in mammals; the coracoid process | [noun] A small bone linking the scapula and sternum in birds, reptiles and some other vertebrates | [adjective] Hooked like the beak of a crow CORBELED (13) [adjective] Having corbels. CORDONED (12) [verb] Past tense of cordon; to isolate or seal off an area with a cordon or barrier. | [verb] To arrange or form in a cordon. CORDWOOD (15) [noun] Wood suitable for use as firewood; firewood cut and split into conveniently sized pieces for easy stacking into cords. | [noun] Split and cut firewood as an economic commodity. CORKWOOD (18) [noun] Any of numerous plants with bark or wood resembling cork, of diverse orders: | [noun] The wood of Quercus suber, the cork oak. CORNERED (11) [verb] To drive (someone or something) into a corner or other confined space. | [verb] To trap in a position of great difficulty or hopeless embarrassment. | [verb] To put (someone) in an awkward situation. CORNICED (13) [verb] Past tense of cornice, meaning to furnish or decorate with a cornice (a decorative molding along the top of a wall or building). CORNUTED (11) [adjective] Wearing or having horns; horned. | [adjective] (of a man) cuckolded or betrayed by an unfaithful spouse. CORONOID (11) [noun] A slender bone that forms part of the lower jaw of primitive vertebrates. | [noun] Any polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon derived from coronene. | [adjective] Shaped like the beak of a crow. CORRADED (12) [verb] Past tense of corrade, meaning to wear away or erode by the action of abrasive material carried by water or wind. CORRODED (12) [verb] To eat away bit by bit; to wear away or diminish by gradually separating or destroying small particles of, as by action of a strong acid or a caustic alkali. | [verb] To consume; to wear away; to prey upon; to impair. | [verb] To have corrosive action; to be subject to corrosion. CORSETED (11) [verb] Past tense of corset; to dress in or constrain with a corset. | [adjective] Wearing or fitted with a corset; tightly restricted or compressed. CORYMBED (18) [adjective] Arranged in or forming a corymb, a flat-topped or convex flower cluster in which the outer flower stalks are longer than the inner ones, bringing all flowers to approximately the same level. COSHERED (14) [verb] Past tense of cosher; to treat with excessive indulgence or fondness; to pamper or coddle. COSIGNED (12) [verb] To sign a document jointly with another person, sometimes as an endorsement. | [verb] To agree with or endorse COSSETED (11) [verb] To treat like a pet; to overly indulge. | [verb] To fondle; to touch or stroke lovingly. | [adjective] Pampered. COSTUMED (13) [verb] To dress or adorn with a costume or appropriate garb. | [adjective] Wearing a costume; disguised. COTTERED (11) [verb] Past tense of cotter, meaning to fasten or secure with a cotter pin or wedge. COTTONED (11) [verb] To provide with cotton. | [verb] To make or become cotton-like | [verb] To protect from harsh stimuli, coddle, or muffle. COTYLOID (14) [adjective] Shaped like a cup or socket, especially referring to the acetabulum or hip socket. COVERLID (14) COWHIDED (18) [verb] Past tense of cowhide; to beat or flog with a cowhide whip. CRACKLED (17) [verb] To make a fizzing, popping sound. | [adjective] Having a crackle, or glaze resembling many small cracks. CRANCHED (16) CRANKLED (15) CRANNIED (11) [adjective] Having cracks or crevices; full of crannies. CRATERED (11) [verb] To form craters in a surface (of a planet or moon). | [verb] To collapse catastrophically; to become devastated or completely destroyed. | [verb] To crash or fall. CRAVENED (14) [verb] Past tense of craven, meaning to make cowardly or to behave in a cowardly manner. | [adjective] Made cowardly or showing cowardice. CRAYONED (14) [verb] To draw with a crayon. CREDITED (12) [verb] To believe; to put credence in. | [verb] To add to an account. | [verb] To acknowledge the contribution of. CREESHED (14) CREMATED (13) [verb] To burn something to ashes. | [verb] To incinerate a dead body (as an alternative to burial). CRENATED (11) [adjective] Having a scalloped or notched edge; possessing small rounded projections or indentations along the margin. CRENELED (11) [adjective] Having battlements or a series of open sections along the top of a wall or tower, typically for defensive purposes. CREVICED (16) [adjective] Having crevices; marked or split by narrow openings or fissures. CRIBBLED (15) CRICETID (13) [noun] A member of the rodent family Cricetidae, which includes hamsters, voles, and New World mice. CRIMPLED (15) [verb] Past tense of crimple, meaning to wrinkle or crease. | [adjective] Wrinkled or creased in appearance. CRINKLED (15) [verb] To fold, crease, crumple, or wad. | [verb] To rustle, as stiff cloth when moved. | [adjective] Having crinkles CRIPPLED (15) [verb] To make someone a cripple; to cause someone to become physically impaired | [verb] To damage seriously; to destroy | [verb] To release a product (especially a computer program) with reduced functionality, in some cases, making the item essentially worthless. CROPLAND (13) [noun] Arable land CROTCHED (16) [adjective] Having a crotch or crotches; divided into two or more branches or parts. | [verb] Past tense of crotch, meaning to grasp or hold in the crotch. CROUCHED (16) [verb] To bend down; to stoop low; to stand close to the ground with legs bent, like an animal when waiting for prey, or someone in fear. | [verb] To bend servilely; to bow in reverence or humility. | [verb] To sign with the cross; bless. CRUMBLED (15) [verb] To fall apart; to disintegrate. | [verb] To break into crumbs. | [verb] To mix (ingredients such as flour and butter) in such a way as to form crumbs. CRUMPLED (15) [verb] To rumple; to press into wrinkles by crushing together. | [verb] To cause to collapse. | [verb] To become wrinkled. CRUNCHED (16) [verb] To crush something, especially food, with a noisy crackling sound. | [verb] To be crushed with a noisy crackling sound. | [verb] To calculate or otherwise process (e.g. to crunch numbers: to perform mathematical calculations). Presumably from the sound made by mechanical calculators. CRUSADED (12) [verb] To go on a military crusade. | [verb] To make a grand concerted effort toward some purportedly worthy cause. CRUTCHED (16) [adjective] Supported by or as if by a crutch; having a crutch or crutches used for support. | [verb] Past tense of crutch; provided with a crutch or served as a crutch for. CUCKOOED (17) [verb] To make the call of a cuckoo. | [verb] To repeat something incessantly. CUDGELED (13) [verb] To strike with a cudgel. | [verb] To exercise (one's wits or brains). CUITTLED (11) CULTURED (11) [verb] To maintain in an environment suitable for growth (especially of bacteria) (compare cultivate) | [verb] To increase the artistic or scientific interest (in something) (compare cultivate) | [adjective] Learned in the ways of civilized society; civilized; refined. CUMBERED (15) [verb] To slow down; to hinder; to burden; to encumber. | [adjective] Hampered; encumbered. CUNEATED (11) [adjective] Wedge-shaped or narrowing to a point; having a cuneate form. CUPBOARD (15) [noun] A board or table used to openly hold and display silver plate and other dishware; a sideboard; a buffet. | [noun] Things displayed on a sideboard; dishware, particularly valuable plate. | [noun] A cabinet, closet, or other piece of furniture with shelves intended for storing cookware, dishware, or food; similar cabinets or closets used for storing other items. | [verb] To collect, as into a cupboard; to hoard. CUPELLED (13) [verb] To refine by means of a cupel. CUPOLAED (13) [adjective] Having a cupola or topped with a cupola; furnished with a dome-like roof or structure. CURETTED (11) [verb] To scrape with a curette. CURTSIED (11) [verb] To make a curtsey. CURVETED (14) [verb] Of a horse or, by extension, another animal: to leap about, to frolic. | [verb] To cause to leap about, dart or jump. | [verb] (of a bird) To fly or swim with darting movements. CUSPATED (13) CUSSWORD (14) CYANAMID (16) CYANIDED (15) CYANOSED (14) CYCLIZED (25) [verb] To undergo, or cause to undergo, a reaction resulting in the formation of an aromatic or ring structure. | [adjective] Formed into a ring CYPHERED (19) [verb] To calculate. | [verb] To write in code or cipher. | [verb] Of an organ pipe: to sound independent of the organ. CYPRINID (16) [noun] Any fish of this family. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to or characteristic of the Cyprinidae family of fish that includes carps and minnows. DACKERED (16) DAGGERED (12) DAIKERED (14) DAMASKED (16) [verb] To decorate or weave in damascene patterns DAMPENED (14) [verb] To make damp or moist; to make slightly wet. | [verb] To become damp or moist. | [verb] To depress; to check; to make dull; to lessen. DANDERED (11) [verb] To wander about. | [verb] To maunder, to talk incoherently. DANEGELD (11) DANEWEED (13) DANGERED (11) DARKENED (14) [verb] To make dark or darker by reducing light. | [verb] To become dark or darker (having less light). | [verb] To get dark (referring to the sky, either in the evening or as a result of cloud). DEACONED (12) [verb] For a choir leader to lead a hymn by speaking one or two lines at a time, which are then sung by the choir. | [verb] (animal husbandry) To kill a calf shortly after birth. | [verb] To place fresh fruit at the top of a barrel or other container, with spoiled or imperfect fruit hidden beneath. DEADENED (11) [verb] To render less lively; to diminish; to muffle. | [verb] To become less lively; to diminish (by itself). | [verb] To make soundproof. DEADHEAD (14) [noun] A fan of the rock band The Grateful Dead. | [noun] A person either admitted to a theatrical or musical performance without charge, or paid to attend. | [noun] An employee of a transportation company, especially a pilot, traveling as a passenger for logistical reasons, for example to return home or travel to their next assignment. DEADWOOD (14) [noun] Coarse woody debris. | [noun] People or things judged to be superfluous to an organization or project. | [noun] Money not realized by exiting a winning pump trade too early. DEAFENED (13) [verb] To make deaf, either temporarily or permanently. | [verb] To make soundproof. | [verb] (sometimes figurative) To stun, as with noise. DEALATED (10) DEATHBED (15) [noun] The bed on which someone dies. | [noun] The last hours before death. DEBARKED (16) [verb] To unload goods from an aircraft or ship. | [verb] To disembark. | [verb] To remove the bark from a tree, especially one that has been felled. DEBARRED (12) [verb] To exclude or shut out; to bar. | [verb] To hinder or prevent. | [verb] To prohibit (a person or company that has been convicted of criminal acts in connection with a government program) from future participation in that program. DEBEAKED (16) [verb] To remove part of the beak of a chicken or other bird to prevent pecking in chicken farms. DEBRIDED (13) [verb] To remove necrotic tissue or foreign matter from (a wound or the like). DEBUGGED (14) [verb] To search for and eliminate malfunctioning elements or errors in something, especially a computer program or machinery. | [verb] To remove a hidden electronic surveillance device from (somewhere). | [verb] To remove insects from (somewhere), especially lice. DEBUNKED (16) [verb] To discredit, or expose to ridicule the falsehood or the exaggerated claims of something. DECAMPED (16) [verb] To break up camp and move on. | [verb] To disappear suddenly and secretly. DECANTED (12) [verb] To pour off (a liquid) gently, so as not to disturb the sediment. | [verb] To pour from one vessel into another. | [verb] To flow. DECEASED (12) [noun] A dead person. | [noun] One who has died. In property law, the alternate term decedent is generally used in US English. In criminal law, “the deceased” refers to the victim of a homicide. | [adjective] No longer alive, dead DECEIVED (15) [verb] To trick or mislead. DECERNED (12) DECKHAND (19) [noun] A member of the crew of a merchant ship who performs manual labour. | [verb] To work on a boat as a deckhand; crew. DECLARED (12) [verb] To make clear, explain, interpret. | [verb] To make a declaration. | [verb] To show one's cards in order to score. DECLAWED (15) [verb] To surgically remove a cats claws; onychectomy. | [verb] To make harmless. DECLINED (12) [verb] To move downwards, to fall, to drop. | [verb] To become weaker or worse. | [verb] To bend downward; to bring down; to depress; to cause to bend, or fall. DECOCTED (14) [verb] To make an infusion. | [verb] To reduce, or concentrate by boiling down. | [verb] To heat as if by boiling. DECUPLED (14) DECURVED (15) [adjective] Curved downward DEDUCTED (13) [verb] To take one thing from another; remove from; make smaller by some amount. DEEPENED (12) [verb] To make deep or deeper | [verb] To make darker or more intense; to darken | [verb] To make more poignant or affecting; to increase in degree DEERWEED (13) DEERYARD (13) DEFANGED (14) [verb] To remove the fangs from (something). | [verb] To render harmless. DEFATTED (13) [verb] To remove fat from a material, especially by the use of solvents | [adjective] From which fat has been removed (often by use of solvents) DEFEATED (13) [verb] To overcome in battle or contest. | [verb] To reduce, to nothing, the strength of. | [verb] To nullify DEFECTED (15) [verb] To abandon or turn against; to cease or change one's loyalty, especially from a military organisation or political party. | [verb] To desert one's army, to flee from combat. | [verb] To join the enemy army. DEFENDED (14) [verb] To ward off attacks against; to fight to protect; to guard. | [verb] To support by words or writing; to vindicate, talk in favour of. | [verb] To make legal defence of; to represent (the accused). DEFENSED (13) DEFERRED (13) [verb] To delay or postpone | [verb] After winning the opening coin toss, to postpone until the start of the second half a team's choice of whether to kick off or receive (and to allow the opposing team to make this choice at the start of the first half). | [verb] To delay, to wait. DEFLATED (13) [verb] To remove air or some other gas from within an elastic container, e.g. a balloon or tyre | [verb] To cause an object to decrease or become smaller in some parameter, e.g. to shrink | [verb] To reduce the amount of available currency or credit and thus lower prices. DEFLEAED (13) DEFLEXED (20) [adjective] Bent downward, as branches, leaves, or hairs. DEFOAMED (15) DEFOGGED (15) DEFORCED (15) [verb] To withhold land unlawfully from its true owner or from any other person who has a right to the possession of it, after one has lawfully entered and taken possession of it. | [verb] To resist an officer of the law in the execution of his duty. DEFORMED (15) [verb] To change the form of, usually negatively; to give (something) an unusual or abnormal shape. | [verb] To change the looks of, usually negatively; to give something an unusual or abnormal appearance. | [verb] To mar the character of. DEFRAYED (16) [verb] To spend (money). | [verb] To pay or discharge (a debt, expense etc.); to meet (the cost of something). | [verb] To pay for (something). DEFUNDED (14) [verb] To cancel funding for. DEGASSED (11) [verb] To remove the gas from. | [adjective] From which the gas has been removed DEGERMED (13) DEGLAZED (20) [verb] To remove glaze from. | [verb] To abrade the cylinders of an engine to ensure a tight seal. | [verb] To detach small pieces of cooked food from a pan by adding liquid, so that they can be used in further cooking. DEGRADED (12) [verb] To lower in value or social position. | [verb] To reduce in quality or purity. | [verb] To reduce in altitude or magnitude, as hills and mountains; to wear down. DEGUMMED (15) DEGUSTED (11) [verb] To taste carefully to fully appreciate it. | [verb] To savour DEHISCED (15) [verb] To burst or split open at definite places, discharging seeds, pollen or similar content. | [verb] To rupture or break open, as a surgical wound. DEHORNED (13) [verb] To remove the horns from. DEHORTED (13) [verb] To dissuade. DEJECTED (19) [verb] Make sad or dispirited. | [verb] To cast down. | [adjective] Sad and dispirited. DELEADED (11) DELEAVED (13) DELISTED (10) [verb] To remove from an official register or list. DELOUSED (10) [verb] To remove lice from. | [verb] To apply insecticides or insect repellents to, in order to be sure that no lice or other parasites are present. | [verb] To remove malicious software, such as viruses, trojans, spyware, or worms, from. DEMANDED (13) [verb] To request forcefully. | [verb] To claim a right to something. | [verb] To ask forcefully for information. DEMARKED (16) [verb] To demarcate. DEMASTED (12) DEMEANED (12) [verb] To debase; to lower; to degrade. | [verb] To humble, humble oneself; to humiliate. | [verb] To mortify. DEMENTED (12) [verb] To drive mad; to craze | [adjective] Insane or mentally ill. | [adjective] Suffering from dementia. DEMERGED (13) [verb] To separate companies that were formerly combined; to reverse a merger. | [verb] To plunge down into; to sink; to immerse. DEMITTED (12) [verb] To let fall; to depress; to yield. | [verb] To relinquish an office, membership, authority, etc.; to resign, as from a Masonic lodge. DEMOBBED (16) [verb] To demobilize; to release someone from military service. DEMURRED (12) [verb] To linger; to stay; to tarry | [verb] To delay; to pause; to suspend proceedings or judgment in view of a doubt or difficulty; to hesitate; to put off the determination or conclusion of an affair. | [verb] To scruple or object; to take exception; to oppose; to balk DENDROID (11) [noun] An arcwise connected, hereditarily unicoherent continuum. | [adjective] Resembling a shrub or tree. DENTATED (10) DENTILED (10) DEPARTED (12) [verb] To leave. | [verb] To set out on a journey. | [verb] To die. DEPENDED (13) [verb] (followed by on or upon, formerly also by of) To be contingent or conditioned; to have something as a necessary condition; to hinge on. | [verb] (followed by on or upon) To trust; to have confidence; to rely. | [verb] To hang down; to be sustained by being fastened or attached to something above. DEPERMED (14) DEPICTED (14) [verb] To render a representation of something, using words, sounds, images, or other means. DEPLANED (12) [verb] To disembark from an airplane. DEPLETED (12) [verb] To empty or unload, as the vessels of the human system, by bloodletting or by medicine. | [verb] To reduce by destroying or consuming the vital powers of; to exhaust, as a country of its strength or resources, a treasury of money, etc. | [adjective] Used up, expended; of which nothing is left. DEPLORED (12) [verb] To bewail; to weep bitterly over; to feel sorrow for. | [verb] To condemn; to express strong disapproval of. | [verb] To regard as hopeless; to give up. DEPLOYED (15) [verb] To prepare and arrange (usually military unit or units) for use. | [verb] To unfold, open, or otherwise become ready for use. | [verb] To install, test and implement a computer system or application. DEPLUMED (14) [verb] To strip of feathers or plumage. | [verb] To lay bare; to expose. DEPORTED (12) [verb] To comport (oneself); to behave. | [verb] To evict, especially from a country. DEPRAVED (15) [verb] To speak ill of; to depreciate; to malign; to revile | [verb] To make bad or worse; to vitiate; to corrupt | [adjective] Perverted or extremely wrong in a moral sense. DEPRIVED (15) [verb] To take something away from (someone) and keep it away; to deny someone something. | [verb] To degrade (a clergyman) from office. | [verb] To bereave. DERAILED (10) [verb] To cause to come off the tracks. | [verb] To come off the tracks. | [verb] To deviate from the previous course or direction. DERANGED (11) [verb] (chiefly passive) To cause (someone) to go insane or become deranged. | [verb] To cause disorder in (something); to distort from its ideal state. | [verb] To disrupt somebody's plans, to inconvenience someone; derail. DERATTED (10) DESALTED (10) [verb] To remove salt from; to desalinate. DESANDED (11) DESCRIED (12) [verb] To see. | [verb] To discover (a distant or obscure object) by the eye; to espy; to discern or detect. | [verb] To discover: to disclose; to reveal. DESERTED (10) [verb] To leave (anything that depends on one's presence to survive, exist, or succeed), especially when contrary to a promise or obligation; to abandon; to forsake. | [verb] To leave one's duty or post, especially to leave a military or naval unit without permission. | [adjective] (of a place) Abandoned, without people. DESERVED (13) [verb] To be entitled to, as a result of past actions; to be worthy to have. | [verb] To earn, win. | [verb] To reward, to give in return for service. DESIGNED (11) [verb] To plan and carry out (a picture, work of art, construction etc.). | [verb] To plan (to do something). | [verb] To assign, appoint (something to someone); to designate. DESISTED (10) [verb] To cease to proceed or act; to stop (often with from). DESORBED (12) [verb] (of a substance) To remove (or be removed) from a surface onto which it was adsorbed or through which it was absorbed | [adjective] Removed by desorption DESPISED (12) [verb] To regard with contempt or scorn. | [verb] To disregard or ignore. | [adjective] Hated; viewed with scorn. DESPITED (12) DESTINED (10) [verb] To preordain | [verb] To assign something (especially finance) for a particular use | [verb] To have a particular destination DETACHED (15) [verb] To take apart from; to take off. | [verb] To separate for a special object or use. | [verb] To come off something. DETAILED (10) [verb] To explain in detail. | [verb] To clean carefully (particularly of road vehicles) (always pronounced. /ˈdiːteɪl/) | [verb] To assign to a particular task DETAINED (10) [verb] To keep someone from proceeding by holding them back or making claims on their attention. | [verb] To put under custody. | [verb] To keep back or from; to withhold. DETECTED (12) [verb] To discover or find by careful search, examination, or probing | [adjective] Having been noticed. DETERGED (11) [verb] To clean of undesirable material, especially a wound (technical). DETERRED (10) [verb] To prevent something from happening. | [verb] To persuade someone not to do something; to discourage. | [verb] To distract someone from something. DETESTED (10) [verb] To dislike intensely; to loathe. | [verb] To witness against; to denounce; to condemn. DETICKED (16) DETOURED (10) [verb] To make a detour. | [verb] To direct or send on a detour. DETRUDED (11) DEVALUED (13) [verb] To lower or remove the value of something. | [verb] To lose value; to depreciate. DEVEINED (13) [verb] To remove the vein-like colon from (shrimp). | [adjective] Having had the veins removed. DEVESTED (13) DEVIATED (13) [verb] To go off course from; to change course; to change plans. | [verb] To fall outside of, or part from, some norm; to stray. | [verb] To cause to diverge. DEVILLED (13) [verb] To make like a devil; to invest with the character of a devil. | [verb] To annoy or bother. | [verb] To work as a ‘devil’; to work for a lawyer or writer without fee or recognition. DEVOICED (15) [verb] To pronounce a word with little movement of the vocal cords | [verb] To remove the voice flag from a user on IRC, preventing them from sending messages to the channel. DEVOLVED (16) [verb] To roll (something) down; to unroll. | [verb] To be inherited by someone else; to pass down upon the next person in a succession, especially through failure or loss of an earlier holder. | [verb] To delegate (a responsibility, duty, etc.) on or upon someone. DEVOURED (13) [verb] To eat quickly, greedily, hungrily, or ravenously. | [verb] To rapidly destroy, engulf, or lay waste. | [verb] To take in avidly with the intellect or with one's gaze. DEWOOLED (13) DEWORMED (15) [verb] To cause an animal to excrete any worms in the digestive tract by the administration of drugs. DEZINCED (21) DIADEMED (13) DIALOGED (11) [verb] To discuss or negotiate so that all parties can reach an understanding. DIALYSED (13) [verb] To subject (something or someone) to dialysis. | [verb] To undergo dialysis. DIALYZED (22) [verb] To subject (something or someone) to dialysis. | [verb] To undergo dialysis. DIAPERED (12) [verb] To put diapers on someone. | [verb] To draw flowers or figures, as upon cloth. DICKERED (16) [verb] To bargain, haggle or negotiate over a sale. | [verb] To barter. DICTATED (12) [verb] To order, command, control. | [verb] To speak in order for someone to write down the words. DIESELED (10) DIFFERED (16) [verb] Not to have the same traits or characteristics; to be unalike or distinct. | [verb] (people, groups, etc.) To have diverging opinions, disagree. | [verb] To be separated in quantity. DIFFUSED (16) [verb] To spread over or through as in air, water, or other matter, especially by fluid motion or passive means. | [verb] To be spread over or through as in air, water, or other matter, especially by fluid motion or passive means. DIGESTED (11) [verb] To distribute or arrange methodically; to work over and classify; to reduce to portions for ready use or application. | [verb] To separate (the food) in its passage through the alimentary canal into the nutritive and nonnutritive elements; to prepare, by the action of the digestive juices, for conversion into blood; to convert into chyme. | [verb] To think over and arrange methodically in the mind; to reduce to a plan or method; to receive in the mind and consider carefully; to get an understanding of; to comprehend. DIHYBRID (18) [noun] A hybrid that is heterozygous with respect to two independent alleles DIPLOPOD (14) DIRECTED (12) [verb] To manage, control, steer. | [verb] To aim (something) at (something else). | [verb] To point out or show to (somebody) the right course or way; to guide, as by pointing out the way. DISABLED (12) [verb] To render unable; to take away an ability of, as by crippling. | [verb] (chiefly of a person) To impair the physical or mental abilities of; to cause a serious, permanent injury. | [verb] To deactivate, to make inoperational (especially of a function of an electronic or mechanical device). DISARMED (12) [verb] To deprive of weapons; to deprive of the means of attack or defense; to render defenseless. | [verb] To deprive of the means or the disposition to harm; to render harmless or innocuous | [verb] To lay down arms; to stand down. DISBOUND (12) [verb] To extend beyond its normal bounds | [adjective] (of a page) removed from a bound volume DISCASED (12) DISEASED (10) [verb] To cause unease; to annoy, irritate. | [verb] To infect with a disease. | [adjective] Affected with or suffering from disease. DISLIKED (14) [verb] To displease; to offend. (In third-person only.) | [verb] To have a feeling of aversion or antipathy towards; not to like. | [verb] To leave a vote to show disapproval of, or lack of support for, something posted on the Internet. DISMAYED (15) [verb] To cause to feel apprehension; great sadness, or fear; to deprive of energy | [verb] To render lifeless; to subdue; to disquiet. | [verb] To take dismay or fright; to be filled with dismay. DISOWNED (13) [verb] To refuse to own, or to refuse to acknowledge one’s own. | [verb] To repudiate any connection to; to renounce. | [verb] To detach (a job or process) so that it can continue to run even when the user who launched it ends his/her login session. DISPOSED (12) [verb] (used with "of") To eliminate or to get rid of something. | [verb] To distribute or arrange; to put in place. | [verb] To deal out; to assign to a use. DISPREAD (12) DISPUTED (12) [verb] To contend in argument; to argue against something maintained, upheld, or claimed, by another | [verb] To make a subject of disputation; to argue pro and con; to discuss | [verb] To oppose by argument or assertion; to controvert; to express dissent or opposition to; to call in question; to deny the truth or validity of DISRATED (10) [verb] To lower a rate or rating | [verb] To demote a sailor to a lower rank DISROBED (12) [verb] To undress someone or something. | [verb] To undress oneself. DISSAVED (13) DISULFID (13) DISYOKED (17) DITHERED (13) [verb] To tremble, shake, or shiver with cold. | [verb] To be uncertain or unable to make a decision about doing something. | [verb] To do something nervously. DIVERGED (14) [verb] (of lines or paths) To run apart; to separate; to tend into different directions. | [verb] (of interests, opinions, or anything else) To become different; to run apart; to separate; to tend into different directions. | [verb] (of a line or path) To separate, to tend into a different direction (from another line or path). DIVERTED (13) [verb] To turn aside from a course. | [verb] To distract. | [verb] To entertain or amuse (by diverting the attention) DIVESTED (13) [verb] To strip, deprive, or dispossess (someone) of something (such as a right, passion, privilege, or prejudice). | [verb] To sell off or be rid of through sale, especially of a subsidiary. | [verb] To undress. DIVIDEND (14) [noun] A number or expression that is to be divided by another. | [noun] A pro rata payment of money by a company to its shareholders, usually made periodically (eg, quarterly or annually). | [noun] Beneficial results from a metaphorical investment (of time, effort, etc.) DIVORCED (15) [verb] To legally dissolve a marriage between two people. | [verb] To end one's own marriage to (a person) in this way. | [verb] To obtain a legal divorce. DIVULGED (14) [verb] To make public or known; to communicate to the public; to tell (information, especially a secret) so that it may become generally known | [verb] To indicate publicly; to proclaim. DOCKETED (16) [verb] To enter or inscribe in a docket, or list of causes for trial. | [verb] To label a parcel, etc. | [verb] To make a brief abstract of (a writing) and endorse it on the back of the paper, or to endorse the title or contents on the back of; to summarize. DOCKHAND (19) DOCKLAND (16) [noun] The land area surrounding a dock, especially the renovated or gentrified areas surrounding a former dock. DOCKYARD (19) [noun] A place where ships are repaired or outfitted. DOCTORED (12) [verb] To act as a medical doctor to. | [verb] To act as a medical doctor. | [verb] To make (someone) into an (academic) doctor; to confer a doctorate upon. DODDERED (12) [verb] To shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age or childhood; to totter. DOGEARED (11) [verb] To fold the corner of a book's page. | [adjective] (of a page in a book) Bent or slightly ragged in appearance, especially due to having been read many times. | [adjective] (of a page in a book) Having the corner folded over, as a sort of bookmark. DOGGONED (12) [adjective] Damned by God. | [adjective] Used as an intensifier expressing anger. DOGNAPED (13) DOLLOPED (12) [verb] To apply haphazardly in generous lumps or scoops. | [verb] To dole out in a considerable quantity; to drip in a viscous form. DONNERED (10) [verb] To beat up; clobber; thrash. DOORYARD (13) [noun] The yard near the front or back door of a house DOPEHEAD (15) DOWELLED (13) [verb] To fasten together with dowels. | [verb] To furnish with dowels. DOWNLAND (13) [noun] An area of rolling hills (downs), often grassy pasture over chalk or limestone. DOWNLOAD (13) [noun] A file transfer to the local computer. | [noun] A file that has been, or will be transferred in this way. | [verb] To transfer data from a remote computer (server) to a local computer, usually via a network. DOWNTROD (13) DOWNWARD (16) [adjective] Moving, sloping or oriented downward. | [adjective] Located at a lower level. | [adverb] Toward a lower level, whether in physical space, in a hierarchy, or in amount or value. DOWNWIND (16) [adverb] In the same direction as the wind is blowing | [adverb] (+ from) positioned relative to something in such a way that it can be smelled in the wind | [adverb] In the direction opposite that of landing in a traffic pattern DRABBLED (14) [verb] To wet or dirty, especially by dragging through mud. | [verb] To fish with a long line and rod. DRAGGLED (12) [verb] To make, or to become, wet and muddy by dragging along the ground | [adjective] Bedraggled. DRENCHED (15) [verb] To soak, to make very wet. | [verb] To cause to drink; especially, to dose (e.g. a horse) with medicine by force. | [adjective] Completely wet; sodden DRIBBLED (14) [verb] (basketball, soccer) In various ball games, to move (with) the ball, controlling its path by kicking or bouncing it repeatedly | [verb] To let saliva drip from the mouth, to drool | [verb] To fall in drops or an unsteady stream, to trickle DRIVELED (13) [verb] To have saliva drip from the mouth; to drool. | [verb] To talk nonsense; to talk senselessly; to drool. | [verb] To be weak or foolish; to dote. DRIZZLED (28) [verb] To rain lightly. | [verb] To shed slowly in minute drops or particles. | [verb] To pour slowly and evenly, especially oil or honey in cooking. DROPHEAD (15) [noun] A drophead coupé. DROPSIED (12) DROWNDED (14) DRUMBLED (14) DRUMHEAD (15) [noun] The thin circle of material attached to the top of a drum shell for the purpose of striking, sometimes made of skin and in such occurrences sometimes referred to as a skin, or drum-skin, but often synthetic. | [noun] A drumhead cabbage. DRUNKARD (14) [noun] (somewhat derogatory) A person who is habitually drunk. DUALIZED (19) [verb] To make dual, to find or consider the dual item of a given one. DUCKWEED (19) [noun] Any of several reduced floating aquatic plants in the subfamily Lemnoideae of the family Araceae. DUMBHEAD (17) [noun] A stupid person. DUMFOUND (15) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUNELAND (10) DUPLEXED (19) DWINDLED (14) [verb] To decrease, shrink, diminish, reduce in size or intensity. | [verb] To fall away in quality; degenerate, sink. | [verb] To lessen; to bring low. EASTWARD (12) [noun] The direction or area lying to the east. | [adjective] Situated or directed towards the east. | [adverb] Towards the east. EBONISED (11) [verb] To give wood the color or texture of ebony. EBONIZED (20) [verb] To give wood the color or texture of ebony. ECHINOID (14) [noun] Any sea urchin or sea dollar of the class Echinoidea. | [adjective] Resembling a sea urchin. ECLIPSED (13) [verb] Of astronomical bodies, to cause an eclipse. | [verb] To overshadow; to be better or more noticeable than. | [verb] (Irish grammar) To undergo eclipsis. EDUCATED (12) [verb] To instruct or train | [adjective] Having attained a level of higher education, such as a college degree. | [adjective] Based on relevant information. EFFECTED (17) [verb] To make or bring about; to implement. | [adjective] Modified by effects. EFFULGED (16) EGRESSED (10) [verb] To exit or leave; to go or come out. ELATERID (9) ELEGISED (10) [verb] To compose an elegy for. | [verb] To compose an elegy. | [verb] To praise, as if in an elegy. ELEGIZED (19) [verb] To compose an elegy for. | [verb] To compose an elegy. | [verb] To praise, as if in an elegy. ELEVATED (12) [verb] To raise (something) to a higher position. | [verb] To promote (someone) to a higher rank. | [verb] To confer honor or nobility on (someone). ELICITED (11) [verb] To evoke, educe (emotions, feelings, responses, etc.); to generate, obtain, or provoke as a response or answer. | [verb] To draw out, bring out, bring forth (something latent); to obtain information from someone or something. | [verb] To use logic to arrive at truth; to derive by reason ELKHOUND (16) [noun] Norwegian Elkhound, a breed of dog from Norway for hunting elk. | [noun] Any Scandinavian breed of dog bred to hunt elk. ELOIGNED (10) ELYTROID (12) EMANATED (11) [verb] To come from a source; issue from. | [verb] To send or give out; manifest. EMBALMED (15) [verb] To treat a corpse with preservatives in order to prevent decomposition. | [verb] To perfume or add fragrance to something. EMBANKED (17) [verb] To throw up a bank so as to confine or to defend; to protect by a bank of earth or stone EMBARKED (17) [verb] To get on a boat or ship or (outside the USA) an aeroplane. | [verb] To start, begin. | [verb] To cause to go on board a vessel or boat; to put on shipboard. EMBARRED (13) EMBEDDED (15) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. EMBLAZED (22) EMBLEMED (15) EMBODIED (14) [verb] To represent in a physical or concrete form; to incarnate or personify. | [verb] To represent in some other form, such as a code of laws. | [verb] To comprise or include as part of a cohesive whole; to be made up of. EMBOSKED (17) EMBOSSED (13) [verb] To mark or decorate with a raised design or symbol. | [verb] To raise in relief from a surface, as an ornament, a head on a coin, etc. | [verb] Of a hunted animal: to take shelter in a wood or forest. EMBRACED (15) [verb] To clasp (someone or each other) in the arms with affection; to take in the arms; to hug. | [verb] To seize (something) eagerly or with alacrity; to accept or take up with cordiality; to welcome. | [verb] To submit to; to undergo. EMBRUTED (13) EMBRYOID (16) EMPLACED (15) EMPLANED (13) [verb] To board an airplane EMPLOYED (16) [verb] To hire (somebody for work or a job). | [verb] To use (somebody for a job, or something for a task). | [verb] To make busy. EMULATED (11) [verb] To attempt to equal or be the same as. | [verb] To copy or imitate, especially a person. | [verb] To feel a rivalry with; to be jealous of, to envy. EMULSOID (11) ENAMELED (11) [verb] To coat or decorate with enamel. | [verb] To variegate with colours, as if with enamel. | [verb] To form a glossy surface like enamel upon. ENAMORED (11) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. | [adjective] In love, amorous. ENCAMPED (15) [verb] To establish a camp or temporary shelter. | [verb] To form into a camp. ENCASHED (14) [verb] To convert a financial instrument or funding source into cash. ENCHASED (14) [verb] To set (a gemstone etc.) into. | [verb] To be a setting for. | [verb] To decorate with jewels, or with inlaid ornament. ENCLOSED (11) [verb] To surround with a wall, fence, etc. | [verb] To insert into a container, usually an envelope or package | [adjective] Contained; held within a container. ENCYSTED (14) [verb] To enclose within a cyst. | [verb] To be enclosed within a cyst. | [adjective] Contained in a cyst. ENDEARED (10) [verb] To make (something) more precious or valuable. | [verb] To make (something) more expensive; to increase the cost of. | [verb] To stress (something) as important; to exaggerate. ENDORSED (10) [verb] To support, to back, to give one's approval to, especially officially or by signature. | [verb] To write one's signature on the back of a cheque, or other negotiable instrument, when transferring it to a third party, or cashing it. | [verb] To give an endorsement. ENFLAMED (14) ENFOLDED (13) [verb] To fold something around; to envelop | [verb] To embrace ENFORCED (14) [verb] To keep up, impose or bring into effect something, not necessarily by force. | [verb] To give strength or force to; to affirm, to emphasize. | [verb] To strengthen (a castle, town etc.) with extra troops, fortifications etc. ENFRAMED (14) ENGILDED (11) ENGIRDED (11) [verb] To gird around; to ingirt. ENGORGED (11) [verb] To devour something greedily, gorge, glut. | [verb] To feed ravenously. | [verb] To fill excessively with a body liquid, especially blood. ENGRAVED (13) [verb] To carve text or symbols into (something), usually for the purposes of identification or art. | [verb] To carve (something) into a material. | [verb] To put in a grave, to bury. ENGULFED (13) [verb] To overwhelm. | [verb] To surround; to cover. | [verb] To cast into a gulf. ENHALOED (12) ENHANCED (14) [verb] To lift, raise up. | [verb] To augment or make something greater. | [verb] To improve something by adding features. ENJAMBED (20) [verb] To carry a sentence over to the next line without a pause. | [adjective] (grammar, of two syntactic units) continued without a pause ENJOINED (16) [verb] To lay upon, as an order or command; to give an injunction to; to direct with authority; to order; to charge. | [verb] To prohibit or restrain by a judicial order or decree; to put an injunction on. ENLARGED (10) [verb] To make larger. | [verb] To grow larger. | [verb] To increase the capacity of; to expand; to give free scope or greater scope to; also, to dilate, as with joy, affection, etc. ENLISTED (9) [verb] To enter on a list; to enroll; to register. | [verb] To join a cause or organization, especially military service. | [verb] To recruit the aid or membership of others. ENMESHED (14) [verb] To mesh; to tangle or interweave in such a manner as not to be easily separated, particularly in a mesh or net like manner. | [verb] To involve in such complications as to render extrication difficult | [verb] To involve in difficulties. ENNOBLED (11) [verb] To bestow with nobility, honour or grace. | [verb] To perform on a fabric the industrial processes of dry-cleaning, printing and embossing, and sizing and finishing. ENOUNCED (11) [verb] To say or pronounce; to enunciate. | [verb] To declare or proclaim. | [verb] To state unequivocally. ENPLANED (11) [verb] To board an airplane ENQUIRED (18) [verb] To make an enquiry. | [verb] To ask about (something). ENRICHED (14) [verb] To enhance. | [verb] To make (someone or something) rich or richer. | [verb] To adorn, ornate more richly. ENROLLED (9) [verb] To enter (a name, etc.) in a register, roll or list | [verb] To enlist (someone) or make (someone) a member of | [verb] To enlist oneself (in something) or become a member (of something) ENROOTED (9) ENSERFED (12) ENSHROUD (12) [verb] To cover with (or as if with) a shroud ENSLAVED (12) [verb] To make subservient; to strip one of freedom; enthrall. ENSNARED (9) [verb] To entrap; to catch in a snare or trap. | [verb] To entangle; to enmesh. ENSOULED (9) [verb] To give a soul or place in the soul. ENTAILED (9) [verb] To imply or require. | [verb] To settle or fix inalienably on a person or thing, or on a person and his descendants or a certain line of descendants; -- said especially of an estate; to bestow as a heritage. | [verb] To appoint hereditary possessor. ENTHUSED (12) [verb] To show enthusiasm | [verb] To cause (someone) to feel enthusiasm or to be enthusiastic ENTITLED (9) [verb] To give a title to. | [verb] To dignify by an honorary designation. | [verb] To give power or authority (to do something). ENTOILED (9) ENTOMBED (13) [verb] To deposit in a tomb. | [verb] To confine in restrictive surroundings. ENTWINED (12) [verb] To twist or twine around something (or one another). ENWOMBED (16) EQUALLED (18) [verb] To be equal to, to have the same value as; to correspond to. | [verb] To make equivalent to; to cause to match. | [verb] To have as its consequence. EQUIPPED (22) [verb] To supply with something necessary in order to carry out a specific action or task; to provide with (e.g. weapons, provisions, munitions, rigging) | [verb] To dress up; to array; to clothe. | [verb] To prepare (someone) with a skill. EROTIZED (18) ESCARPED (13) ESCHEWED (17) [verb] To avoid; to shun, to shy away from. ESCORTED (11) [verb] To attend to in order to guard and protect; to accompany as a safeguard (for the person escorted or for others); to give honorable or ceremonious attendance to | [verb] To accompany (a person) in order to compel them to go somewhere (e.g. to leave a building). | [verb] To go with someone as a partner, for example on a formal date. ESCROWED (14) [verb] To place in escrow. ESPOUSED (11) [verb] To become/get married to. | [verb] To accept, support, or take on as one’s own (an idea or a cause). ESQUIRED (18) ESTEEMED (11) [verb] To set a high value on; to regard with respect or reverence. | [verb] To regard something as valuable; to prize. | [verb] To look upon something in a particular way. ESTOPPED (13) [verb] To impede or bar by estoppel. | [verb] To stop up, to plug ESTRAYED (12) EUPATRID (11) EXAMINED (18) [verb] To observe or inspect carefully or critically | [verb] To check the health or condition of something or someone | [verb] To determine the aptitude, skills or qualifications of someone by subjecting them to an examination EXAMPLED (20) [verb] To be illustrated or exemplified (by). EXCEEDED (19) [verb] To be larger, greater than (something). | [verb] To be better than (something). | [verb] To go beyond (some limit); to surpass; to be longer than. EXCELLED (18) [verb] To surpass someone or something; to be better or do better than someone or something. | [verb] To be much better than others. | [verb] To exceed, to go beyond EXCEPTED (20) [verb] To exclude; to specify as being an exception. | [verb] To take exception, to object (to or against). EXCESSED (18) EXCLUDED (19) [verb] To bar (someone) from entering; to keep out. | [verb] To expel; to put out. | [verb] To omit from consideration. EXCRETED (18) [verb] To discharge material (including waste products) from a cell, body or system. EXECUTED (18) [verb] To kill as punishment for capital crimes. | [verb] To carry out; to put into effect. | [verb] To perform. EXEMPTED (20) [verb] To grant (someone) freedom or immunity from. EXHORTED (19) [verb] To urge; to advise earnestly. EXPANDED (19) [verb] To change (something) from a smaller form and/or size to a larger one; to spread out or lay open. | [verb] To increase the extent, number, volume or scope of (something). | [verb] To express (something) at length and/or in detail. EXPECTED (20) [verb] To predict or believe that something will happen | [verb] To consider obligatory or required. | [verb] To consider reasonably due. EXPELLED (18) [verb] To eject or erupt. | [verb] To fire (a bullet, arrow etc.). | [verb] To remove from membership. EXPENDED (19) [verb] To consume, exhaust (some resource) | [verb] (of money) to spend, disburse | [adjective] Spent; used up; exhausted. EXPENSED (18) [verb] To charge a cost against an expense account; to bill something to the company for which one works. EXPERTED (18) EXPIATED (18) [verb] To atone or make reparation for. | [verb] To make amends or pay the penalty for. | [verb] To relieve or cleanse of guilt. EXPLODED (19) [verb] To destroy with an explosion. | [verb] To destroy violently or abruptly. | [verb] To create an exploded view of. EXPLORED (18) [verb] To seek for something or after someone. | [verb] To examine or investigate something systematically. | [verb] To travel somewhere in search of discovery. EXPORTED (18) [verb] To carry away | [verb] To sell (goods) to a foreign country | [verb] To cause to spread in another part of the world EXPULSED (18) EXPUNGED (19) [verb] To erase or strike out. | [verb] To eliminate completely; annihilate. | [verb] To delete permanently (e-mail etc.) that was previously marked for deletion but still stored. EXSECTED (18) EXSERTED (16) [verb] To thrust out; to cause to protrude. | [adjective] Protruding, projecting EXTENDED (17) [verb] To increase in extent. | [verb] To possess a certain extent; to cover an amount of space. | [verb] To cause to increase in extent. EXTOLLED (16) [verb] To praise; to make high. EXTORTED (16) [verb] To take or seize off an unwilling person by physical force, menace, duress, torture, or any undue or illegal exercise of power or ingenuity | [verb] To obtain by means of the offense of extortion. | [verb] To twist outwards. EXTRUDED (17) [verb] To push or thrust out. | [verb] To form or shape (a metal, plastic etc.) by forcing it through a die or an opening. | [verb] To expel; to drive off. FACETTED (14) FACTORED (14) [verb] To find all the factors of (a number or other mathematical object) (the objects that divide it evenly). | [verb] (of a number or other mathematical object) To be a product of other objects. | [verb] (commercial) To sell a debt or debts to an agent (the factor) to collect. FAGGOTED (14) [verb] To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or bundle. FAHLBAND (17) FAIRLEAD (12) [noun] A device to guide a line, rope or cable around an object or out of the way, or to stop it from moving laterally FALCATED (14) FALLOWED (15) [verb] To make land fallow for agricultural purposes. | [adjective] Of land, ploughed but left unseeded. FALTERED (12) [verb] To waver or be unsteady; to weaken or trail off. | [verb] To stammer; to utter with hesitation, or in a weak and trembling manner. | [verb] To fail in distinctness or regularity of exercise; said of the mind or of thought. FAMISHED (17) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FARMHAND (17) [noun] A person who works on a farm. | [noun] A player in the minor leagues. FARMLAND (14) [noun] Land that is suitable for farming and agricultural production. FARMYARD (17) [noun] The area around a farm, excluding the fields. FARROWED (15) [verb] To give birth to a (litter of piglets). FASTENED (12) [verb] To attach or connect in a secure manner. | [verb] To cause to take close effect; to make to tell; to land. FATHERED (15) [verb] To be a father to; to sire. | [verb] To give rise to. | [verb] To act as a father; to support and nurture. FATHOMED (17) [verb] To encircle with outstretched arms, especially to take a measurement; to embrace. | [verb] To measure the depth of, take a sounding of. | [verb] To get to the bottom of; to manage to comprehend; understand (a problem etc.). FATIGUED (13) [verb] To tire or make weary by physical or mental exertion | [verb] To wilt a salad by dressing or tossing it | [verb] To lose so much strength or energy that one becomes tired, weary, feeble or exhausted FATTENED (12) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to be fat or fatter. | [verb] (of a person or animal) To become fat or fatter. | [verb] To make thick or thicker (something containing paper, often money). FAVOURED (15) [verb] To look upon fondly; to prefer. | [verb] To encourage, conduce to | [verb] To do a favor [noun sense 1] for; to show beneficence toward. FEATURED (12) [verb] To ascribe the greatest importance to something within a certain context. | [verb] To star, to contain. | [verb] To appear, to make an appearance. FELLATED (12) [verb] To perform oral sex on (a man); to stimulate (a penis or testicles) using the mouth. | [verb] (by extension) To suck (something) in a manner suggestive of fellatio. | [verb] To suck up to, to flatter or be shamefully subservient to. FELLOWED (15) FENAGLED (13) FENDERED (13) FERRELED (12) FERRETED (12) [verb] To hunt game with ferrets. | [verb] (by extension) To uncover and bring to light by searching; usually to ferret out. FERRULED (12) FESTERED (12) [verb] To become septic; to become rotten. | [verb] To worsen, especially due to lack of attention. | [verb] To cause to fester or rankle. FETTERED (12) [verb] To shackle or bind up with fetters. | [verb] To restrain or impede; to hamper. | [adjective] Bound by chains or shackles. FIDGETED (14) [verb] To wiggle or twitch; to move around nervously or idly. | [verb] To cause to fidget; to make uneasy. FILARIID (12) FILIATED (12) FILLETED (12) [verb] To slice, bone or make into fillets. | [verb] To apply, create, or specify a rounded or filled corner to. FILLIPED (14) [verb] To strike, project, or propel with a fillip (that is, a finger released quickly after being pressed against the thumb); to flick. | [verb] (by extension) To project quickly; to snap. | [verb] (by extension) To strike or tap smartly. FILMCARD (16) FILMLAND (14) FILTERED (12) [verb] To sort, sift, or isolate. | [verb] To diffuse; to cause to be less concentrated or focused. | [verb] To pass through a filter or to act as though passing through a filter. FINAGLED (13) [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by indirect, complicated and/or intensive efforts. | [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by deceitful methods, by trickery. | [verb] To cheat or swindle; to use crafty, deceitful methods. (often with "out of" preceding the object) FINANCED (14) [verb] To conduct, or procure money for, financial operations; manage finances. | [verb] To pay ransom. | [verb] To manage financially; be financier for; provide or obtain funding for a transaction or undertaking. FINESSED (12) [verb] To evade (a problem, situation, etc.) by using some clever argument or strategem. | [verb] To play (a card) as a finesse. | [verb] To handle or manage carefully or skilfully; to manipulate in a crafty way. FINGERED (13) [verb] To identify or point out. Also put the finger on. To report to or identify for the authorities, rat on, rat out, squeal on, tattle on, turn in. | [verb] To poke, probe, feel, or fondle with a finger or fingers. | [verb] To use the fingers to penetrate and sexually stimulate one's own or another person's vagina or anus; to fingerbang FINIALED (12) FINISHED (15) [verb] To complete (something). | [verb] To apply a treatment to (a surface or similar). | [verb] To change an animal's food supply in the months before it is due for slaughter, with the intention of fattening the animal. FIREBIRD (14) FIREWEED (15) [noun] A perennial herbaceous plant (Epilobium angustifolium or Chamaenerion angustifolium) in the willowherb family Onagraceae. FIREWOOD (15) [noun] Wood intended to be burned, typically for heat. FISHPOND (17) [noun] A freshwater pond stocked with fish; especially one formerly attached to a monastery etc as a source of food FISSIPED (14) FISSURED (12) [verb] To split, forming fissures. | [adjective] Having fissures. FIVEFOLD (18) [adjective] In fives; consisting of five in one; quintuple. | [adverb] By a factor of five. FLAMBEED (16) [verb] To cook with a showy technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. FLANCARD (14) FLATHEAD (15) [noun] Any fish in the Platycephalidae family. | [noun] (plural only "flatheads") A type of screw or bolt designed to fit in a countersink so that it sits flush with a surface. | [noun] (plural only "flatheads") A type of engine that has the valves placed in the engine block beside the piston, instead of in the cylinder head, as in an overhead valve engine. FLATLAND (12) [noun] A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; open country. | [noun] A wide, open space that is usually used to grow crops or to hold farm animals. | [noun] A place where competitive matches are carried out. FLAUNTED (12) [verb] To wave or flutter smartly in the wind. | [verb] To parade, display with ostentation. | [verb] To show off, as with flashy clothing. FLAVORED (15) [verb] To add flavoring to something. | [adjective] Having a specific taste, often due to the addition of flavouring. FLAXSEED (19) [noun] The seed of the flax plant; a source of linseed oil. FLEECHED (17) FLENCHED (17) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLETCHED (17) [verb] To feather, as an arrow. FLIGHTED (16) [verb] (of a spin bowler) To throw the ball in such a way that it has more airtime and more spin than usual. | [verb] (by extension) To throw or kick something so as to send it flying with more loft or airtime than usual. | [adjective] (of birds) Capable of flight. FLINCHED (17) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. | [verb] To make a sudden, involuntary movement in response to a (usually negative) stimulus; to cringe. | [verb] To dodge (a question), to avoid an unpleasant task or duty FLITCHED (17) FLOUNCED (14) [verb] To move in an exaggerated, bouncy manner. | [verb] To flounder; to make spastic motions. | [verb] To decorate with a flounce. FLOWERED (15) [verb] To put forth blooms. | [verb] To decorate with pictures of flowers. | [verb] To reach a state of full development or achievement. FLURRIED (12) [adjective] Agitated, confused. | [verb] To agitate, bewilder, fluster. | [verb] To move or fall in a flurry. FOCUSSED (14) [verb] (followed by on or upon) To concentrate one's attention. | [verb] To cause (rays of light, etc) to converge at a single point. | [verb] To adjust (a lens, an optical instrument) in order to position an image with respect to the focal plane. FODDERED (14) [verb] To feed animals (with fodder). FOGBOUND (15) [adjective] Enveloped in fog to such an extent that movement is dangerous or impossible FOLIAGED (13) FOLIATED (12) [verb] To form into leaves. | [verb] To beat into a leaf, or thin plate. | [verb] To spread over with a thin coat of tin and quicksilver. FOLLOWED (15) [verb] To go after; to pursue; to move behind in the same path or direction. | [verb] To go or come after in a sequence. | [verb] To carry out (orders, instructions, etc.). FOMENTED (14) [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOOTHOLD (15) [noun] A solid grip with the feet. | [noun] (by extension) A secure position from which it is difficult to be dislodged. | [noun] Airhead, beachhead, bridgehead, lodgement. FORBODED (15) FOREFEND (15) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FOREHAND (15) [noun] (racket sports) A stroke in which the palm of the hand faces the direction of the stroke. | [noun] (disc sports) A throw similar to a sidearm throw in baseball, where the disc remains on the throwing-arm side of the body and is led by the middle finger. | [noun] All of the part of a horse which is before the rider. FOREHEAD (15) [noun] The part of the face above the eyebrows and below the hairline. | [noun] Confidence; audacity | [noun] The upper part of a mobile phone, above the screen. FORELAND (12) [noun] A headland. | [noun] In plate tectonics, the zone adjacent to a mountain chain where material eroded from it is deposited. FORESAID (12) FORESTED (12) [verb] To cover an area with trees. | [adjective] Covered in forest. FORETOLD (12) [verb] To predict; to tell (the future) before it occurs; to prophesy. | [verb] To tell (a person) of the future. FOREWORD (15) [noun] An introductory section preceding the main text of a book or other document; a preface or introduction. FOREYARD (15) [noun] A yard in front; front yard | [noun] A yard on the lower mast of a square-rigged foremast of a ship used to support the foresail. FORTUNED (12) FOSTERED (12) [verb] To nurture or bring up offspring, or to provide similar parental care to an unrelated child. | [verb] To cultivate and grow something. | [verb] To nurse or cherish something. FOURFOLD (15) [noun] An algebraic variety of degree 4. | [verb] To increase to four times as much; to multiply by four | [adjective] Four times as great; quadruple. FOVEATED (15) FOXHOUND (22) [noun] A dog of a medium-sized breed developed for hunting. FRAZZLED (30) [verb] To fray or wear down, especially at the edges. | [verb] To drain emotionally or physically. | [adjective] Frayed at the edges FRECKLED (18) [adjective] Having freckles; covered with freckles. FREEHAND (15) [verb] To conduct a procedure involving use of the hands without any helping device or guide. | [adjective] Drawn using the hand without any helping device. FREEHOLD (15) [noun] The tenure of property held in fee simple for life. | [noun] An estate held by a tenure of this type. | [verb] To dispense property in this way. FREELOAD (12) [verb] To live off the generosity or hospitality of others FRENCHED (17) FRENZIED (21) [adjective] In a state of hurry, panic or wild activity. FRESCOED (14) [verb] To paint using fresco. | [adjective] Painted with frescos FRIBBLED (16) FRIENDED (13) [verb] To act as a friend to, to befriend; to be friendly to, to help. | [verb] To add (a person) to a list of friends on a social networking site; to officially designate (someone) as a friend. | [adjective] Supplied with friends. FRIGHTED (16) [verb] To frighten. FRIVOLED (15) [verb] To behave frivolously. | [verb] To trifle. FRIZZLED (30) [verb] To fry something until crisp and curled. | [verb] To scorch. | [verb] To fry noisily, sizzle. FROGEYED (16) FROUNCED (14) FROWSTED (15) [verb] To enjoy being in a warm, close, stuffy place. FUELWOOD (15) [noun] Wood grown or felled for use as commercial fuel FULLERED (12) [verb] To form a groove or channel in, by a fuller or set hammer. FULMINED (14) FUNNELED (12) [verb] To use a funnel. | [verb] To proceed through a narrow gap or passageway akin to a funnel; to condense or narrow. | [verb] To channel, direct, or focus (emotions, money, resources, etc.). FURCATED (14) [adjective] Forked or branched FURIBUND (14) FURNACED (14) FURROWED (15) [verb] To cut one or more grooves in (the ground, etc.). | [verb] To wrinkle. | [verb] To pull one's brows or eyebrows together due to concentration, worry, etc. GABBROID (14) GABELLED (12) GAINSAID (10) [verb] To say something in contradiction to. GALEATED (10) GALLETED (10) GALLIARD (10) [noun] A lively dance, popular in 16th- and 17th-century Europe. | [noun] The triple-time music for this dance. | [noun] A brisk, merry person. GALLOPED (12) [verb] (of a horse, etc) To run at a gallop. | [verb] To ride at a galloping pace. | [verb] To cause to gallop. GALLUSED (10) GALOSHED (13) GAMBOLED (14) [verb] To move about playfully; to frolic. | [verb] To do a forward roll. GAMMONED (14) [verb] To cure bacon by salting. | [verb] To beat by a gammon (without the opponent bearing off a stone). | [verb] To lash with ropes (on a ship). GANDERED (11) [verb] Ramble, wander GANGLAND (11) [noun] The underworld of organized crime. GAPESEED (12) GARBOARD (12) [noun] The board on a boat which attaches to the keel running fore and aft along the bottom. GARDENED (11) [verb] To grow plants in a garden; to create or maintain a garden. | [verb] Of a batsman, to inspect and tap the pitch lightly with the bat so as to smooth out small rough patches and irregularities. | [adjective] Having gardens or maintained like a garden. GARNERED (10) [verb] To reap grain, gather it up, and store it in a granary. | [verb] To gather, amass, hoard, as if harvesting grain. | [verb] To earn; to get; to accumulate or acquire by some effort or due to some fact GAROTTED (10) [verb] To execute by strangulation. | [verb] To suddenly render insensible by semi-strangulation, and then to rob. GARROTED (10) GARTERED (10) GASIFIED (13) [adjective] Converted into a gas | [verb] To convert into gas, or an aeriform fluid, as by the application of heat, or by chemical processes. GATEFOLD (13) [noun] An overlarge page that is folded into a book or magazine; a foldout GATHERED (13) [verb] To collect; normally separate things. | [verb] To bring parts of a whole closer. | [verb] To infer or conclude; to know from a different source. GAVELLED (13) [verb] To divide or distribute according to the gavel system. | [verb] To use a gavel. GAVOTTED (13) GAZETTED (19) [verb] To publish in a gazette. | [verb] To announce the status of in an official gazette. This pertained to both appointments and bankruptcies. GAZUMPED (23) [verb] To swindle; to extort. | [verb] To raise the selling price of something (especially property) after previously agreeing to a lower one. | [verb] To buy a property by bidding more than the price of an existing, accepted offer. GEEPOUND (12) GEMMATED (14) GENDERED (11) [verb] To assign a gender to (a person); to perceive as having a gender; to address using terms (pronouns, nouns, adjectives...) that express a certain gender. | [verb] To perceive (a thing) as having characteristics associated with a certain gender, or as having been authored by someone of a certain gender. | [verb] To engender. GESTATED (10) [verb] To carry offspring in the uterus from conception to delivery. | [verb] (by analogy) To develop an idea. GESTURED (10) [verb] To make a gesture or gestures. | [verb] To express something by a gesture or gestures. | [verb] To accompany or illustrate with gesture or action. GETTERED (10) GHERAOED (13) [verb] To surround for this purpose. GHETTOED (13) [verb] To confine (a specified group of people) to a ghetto. GIBBERED (14) [verb] To jabber, talk rapidly and unintelligibly or incoherently. GIBBETED (14) [verb] To execute (someone), or display (a body), on a gibbet. | [verb] To expose (someone) to ridicule or scorn. GILTHEAD (13) GIMBALED (14) GIMLETED (12) GINGERED (11) [verb] To add ginger to. | [verb] To enliven, to spice (up). | [verb] To apply ginger to the anus of a horse to encourage it to carry its tail high and move in a lively fashion. GIRLHOOD (13) [noun] The state of being a girl. | [noun] The childhood of a girl. GLIMPSED (14) [verb] To see or view briefly or incompletely. | [verb] To appear by glimpses. GLOBATED (12) GLOWERED (13) [verb] To look or stare with anger. GLUNCHED (15) GOALWARD (13) [adjective] Moving toward a goal, or which affects movement theretoward. | [adjective] Somehow abstractly associated with a goal. | [adverb] Toward a goal; toward the goal. GOATHERD (13) [noun] A person who herds, tends goats. GODCHILD (16) [noun] A child whose baptism is sponsored by a godparent. In some cases the relationship is maintained indefinitely, with the godchild being treated much like a niece or nephew. GOFFERED (16) [verb] To make wavy; to crimp. GORGETED (11) GOSSIPED (12) [verb] To talk about someone else's private or personal business, especially in a manner that spreads the information. | [verb] To talk idly. | [verb] To stand godfather to; to provide godparents for. GOURMAND (12) [noun] A person given to excess in the consumption of food and drink; a greedy or ravenous eater. | [noun] A person who appreciates good food. GOVERNED (13) [verb] To make and administer the public policy and affairs of; to exercise sovereign authority in. | [verb] To control the actions or behavior of; to keep under control; to restrain. | [verb] To exercise a deciding or determining influence on. GRABBLED (14) [verb] To search with one's hands and fingers; to attempt to grasp something. | [verb] To search in a similar way using an implement. | [verb] To touch (someone) with one's hands or fingers, sometimes in a sexual way. GRADATED (11) [verb] To change imperceptibly from one gradation of tone etc. to another. | [verb] To arrange in order of grades. | [verb] To bring to a certain strength or grade of concentration. GRADUAND (11) [noun] A student who has completed the requirements for, but has not yet been awarded, a particular degree. GRANDDAD (12) [noun] Grandfather | [noun] A familiar or disparaging term of address to an old man. GRANDKID (15) [noun] A grandchild. GRAPPLED (14) [verb] To seize something and hold it firmly. | [verb] To wrestle or tussle. | [verb] (with with) To ponder and intensely evaluate a problem. GRAVELED (13) [verb] To apply a layer of gravel to the surface of a road, etc. | [verb] To puzzle or annoy | [verb] To run (as a ship) upon the gravel or beach; to run aground; to cause to stick fast in gravel or sand. GRECIZED (21) [verb] To render Grecian, or cause (a word or phrase in another language) to take a Greek form. | [verb] To translate into Greek. | [verb] To conform to the Greek custom, especially in speech. GRIDDLED (12) [verb] To use a griddle, cook on a griddle GRIMACED (14) [verb] To make grimaces; to distort one's face; to make faces. | [adjective] Distorted; crabbed GRIZZLED (28) [verb] To make or become grey, as with age. | [verb] To cry continuously but not very loudly - especially of a young child. | [verb] To whinge or whine. GROUCHED (15) [verb] To be grumpy or irritable; to complain. GROUNDED (11) [verb] To connect (an electrical conductor or device) to a ground. | [verb] To punish, especially a child or teenager, by forcing him/her to stay at home and/or give up certain privileges. | [verb] To forbid (an aircraft or pilot) to fly. GROUPOID (12) GROVELED (13) [verb] To be prone on the ground. | [verb] To crawl. | [verb] To abase oneself before another person. GRUELLED (10) GRUMBLED (14) [verb] To make a low, growling or rumbling noise, like a hungry stomach or certain animals. | [verb] To complain; to murmur or mutter with discontent; to make ill-natured complaints in a low voice and a surly manner. | [verb] To utter in a grumbling fashion. GRUNTLED (10) [adjective] Grunted. | [adjective] Satisfied, pleased, contented. GRUTCHED (15) GUFFAWED (19) [verb] To laugh boisterously. GULFWEED (16) [noun] Sargassum; algae of the genus Sargassum. GUMSHOED (15) GUSSETED (10) GUTTATED (10) GUTTERED (10) [verb] To flow or stream; to form gutters. | [verb] (of a candle) To melt away by having the molten wax run down along the side of the candle. | [verb] (of a small flame) To flicker as if about to be extinguished. GYNECOID (15) HACHURED (17) HAIRBAND (14) [noun] A headband | [noun] A hair tie HALLIARD (12) HALLOAED (12) HALLOOED (12) [verb] To shout halloo. | [verb] To encourage with shouts; to egg (someone) on. | [verb] To chase with shouts or outcries. HALLOWED (15) [verb] To make holy, to sanctify. | [verb] To shout, especially to urge on dogs for hunting. | [adjective] Consecrated or sanctified; sacred, holy. HALTERED (12) [verb] To place a halter on. HAMBONED (16) HAMMERED (16) [verb] To strike repeatedly with a hammer, some other implement, the fist, etc. | [verb] To form or forge with a hammer; to shape by beating. | [verb] To emphasize a point repeatedly. HAMPERED (16) [verb] To put into a hamper. | [verb] To put a hamper or fetter on; to shackle | [verb] To impede in motion or progress. HANDHELD (16) [noun] A personal digital assistant or video game console that is small enough to be held in the hands. | [adjective] Held in one or both hands. | [adjective] Small and light enough to be operated while held in one or both hands. HANDHOLD (16) [verb] To hold in the hand. | [verb] To watch or attend unnecessarily closely (as if holding a child's hand to lead it along). | [noun] A projection that one may hold onto for support HANDMAID (15) [noun] A maid that waits at hand; a female servant or attendant. HANGARED (13) [verb] To store (an aircraft) in a hangar. | [adjective] Having a specified number or kind of hangars. HANGBIRD (15) HANKERED (16) [verb] To crave, want or desire. HANSELED (12) [verb] To give a handsel to. | [verb] To inaugurate by means of some ceremony; to break in. | [verb] To use or do for the first time, especially so as to make fortunate or unfortunate; to try experimentally. HAPPENED (16) [verb] To occur or take place. | [verb] To happen to; to befall. | [verb] (with infinitive) To do or occur by chance or unexpectedly. HARASSED (12) [verb] To fatigue or to tire with repeated and exhausting efforts. | [verb] To annoy endlessly or systematically; to molest. | [verb] To put excessive burdens upon; to subject to anxieties. HARBORED (14) [verb] To provide a harbor or safe place for. | [verb] To take refuge or shelter in a protected expanse of water. | [verb] To drive (a hunted stag) to covert. HARDENED (13) [verb] To become hard (tough, resistant to pressure). | [verb] To make something hard or harder (tough, resistant to pressure). | [verb] To strengthen. HARDHEAD (16) [noun] One who is practical or hardheaded. | [noun] A brown diving duck, Aythya australis, native to Australia. | [noun] Any of various freshwater cyprinid fishes of the genus Mylopharodon, or of saltwater sciaenid (Sciaenidae) fishes. HARDWOOD (16) [noun] (mostly in botany and forestry) The wood from any dicotyledonous tree, without regard to its hardness. | [noun] (in more general use) As the preceding but limited to those that are commercial timbers, and are at least average in hardness. | [noun] The tree or tree species that yields the preceding. HARKENED (16) [verb] To hark back, to return or revert (to a subject, etc.), to allude to, to evoke, to long or pine for (a past event or era). | [verb] (obsolete except poetic) To hear (something) with attention; to have regard to (something). | [verb] To listen; to attend or give heed to what is uttered; to hear with attention, compliance, or obedience. HARROWED (15) [verb] To drag a harrow over; to break up with a harrow. | [verb] To traumatize or disturb; to frighten or torment. | [verb] To break or tear, as if with a harrow; to wound; to lacerate; to torment or distress; to vex. HASHHEAD (18) HASTENED (12) [verb] To move or act in a quick fashion. | [verb] To make someone speed up or make something happen quicker. | [verb] To cause some scheduled event to happen earlier. HAULYARD (15) HAUNCHED (17) HAVOCKED (21) [verb] To pillage. | [verb] To cause havoc. HAWKEYED (22) HAWKWEED (22) [noun] Any species of plant of the genus Hieracium and its segregate genus Pilosella, in the sunflower family (Asteraceae). HAYFIELD (18) [noun] A field of hay. HAZARDED (22) [verb] To expose to chance; to take a risk. | [verb] To risk (something); to venture, to incur, or bring on. | [adjective] Having hazards. HEADBAND (15) [noun] A strip of fabric worn around the head. | [noun] A hair-accessory, made of a flexible material and curved like a horseshoe, for holding one's hair back. | [noun] A strip of fabric attached to the top of the spine of a book; used as decoration and reinforcement. HEADLAND (13) [noun] Coastal land that juts into the sea. | [noun] The unplowed boundary of a field. HEADWIND (16) [noun] A wind that blows directly against the course of a vehicle, like an aircraft, train, or ship. HEADWORD (16) [noun] A word used as the title of a section, particularly in a dictionary, encyclopedia, or thesaurus | [noun] (grammar) any word which may be modified by an adjunct HEBDOMAD (17) HECTORED (14) [verb] To dominate or intimidate in a blustering way; to bully, to domineer. | [verb] To behave like a hector or bully; to bluster, to swagger; to bully. HEEHAWED (18) [verb] To utter the cry of an ass or donkey. HELICOID (14) [noun] A minimal surface in the form of a flattened helix. | [adjective] Having the form of a flattened helix HELMETED (14) HEMATOID (14) HEMPSEED (16) [noun] The seed of the hemp plant, used as bait in angling HEMPWEED (19) HERALDED (13) [verb] To proclaim or announce an event. | [verb] (usually passive) To greet something with excitement; to hail. HEROIZED (21) [verb] To make someone into a hero. | [verb] To treat someone as if they were a hero. HICCUPED (18) [verb] To produce a hiccup; have the hiccups. | [verb] To say with a hiccup. | [verb] To produce an abortive sound like a hiccup. HIGHBRED (18) HIGHLAND (16) [noun] An area of land that is at elevation; mountainous land. | [adjective] Relating to highlands. HIGHROAD (16) [noun] A course of action which is dignified, honourable, or respectable. | [noun] A main road or highway. HIJACKED (25) [verb] To forcibly stop and seize control of some vehicle in order to rob it or to reach a destination (especially an airplane, truck or a boat). | [verb] To seize control of some process or resource to achieve a purpose other than its originally intended one. | [verb] To seize control of a networked computer by means of infecting it with a worm or other malware, thereby turning it into a zombie. HILLOAED (12) HINDERED (13) [verb] To make difficult to accomplish; to act as an obstacle; to frustrate. | [verb] To delay or impede; to keep back, to prevent. | [verb] To cause harm. HIRSELED (12) HOCUSSED (14) [verb] To play a trick on, to trick (someone); to hoax; to cheat. | [verb] To stupefy (someone) with drugged liquor (especially in order to steal from them). | [verb] To drug (liquor). HOGSHEAD (16) [noun] An English measure of capacity for liquids, containing 63 wine gallons, or about 52 1/2 imperial gallons; a half pipe. | [noun] A large barrel or cask of indefinite contents, especially one containing from 100 to 140 gallons. HOIDENED (13) HOLLERED (12) [verb] To yell or shout. | [verb] To call out one or more words | [verb] To complain, gripe HOLLOAED (12) HOLLOOED (12) HOLLOWED (15) [verb] To make a hole in something; to excavate | [verb] To call or urge by shouting; to hollo. HOMEBRED (16) [noun] A person or animal raised at home. | [noun] An inexperienced or unsophisticated person; a rustic. | [adjective] Born or raised in one's own home or country; native, indigenous. HOMELAND (14) [noun] The country that one regards as home. | [noun] One's country of residence. | [noun] One's country of birth. HOMEWARD (17) [adverb] Towards home. | [adjective] Oriented towards home HOMINOID (14) [noun] Any primate (including humans and apes) belonging to the superfamily Hominoidea HONCHOED (17) [verb] To lead or manage. HONORAND (12) [noun] One who receives an honor. HONOURED (12) [verb] To think of highly, to respect highly; to show respect for; to recognise the importance or spiritual value of | [verb] To conform to, abide by, act in accordance with (an agreement, treaty, promise, request, or the like) | [verb] To confer (bestow) an honour or privilege upon (someone) HOODOOED (13) [verb] To jinx; to bring bad luck or misfortune to. HOORAHED (15) HOORAYED (15) [verb] To shout an expression of excitement. HOSTELED (12) HOTBLOOD (14) HOUSELED (12) HOVELLED (15) HOYDENED (16) HULLOAED (12) HUMANOID (14) [noun] A being having the appearance or characteristics of a human. | [adjective] Having the appearance or characteristics of a human; being anthropomorphic under some criteria (physical, mental, genetical, ethological, ethical etc.). HUMIFIED (17) [verb] To convert into humus. HUMOURED (14) [verb] To pacify by indulging. | [adjective] (only in combination with good, bad or ill) Having a particular disposition or mood. HUNGERED (13) [verb] To be in need of food. | [verb] (usually with 'for' or 'after') To have a desire (for); to long; to yearn. | [verb] To make hungry; to famish. HUNKERED (16) [verb] To crouch or squat close to the ground or lie down | [verb] To apply oneself to a task HURRAHED (15) [verb] To give a hurrah (to somebody). HURRAYED (15) [verb] To cheer with a "hurray". HUZZAHED (33) [verb] To cheer with a huzzah sound. HYDRACID (18) HYDRATED (16) [verb] To take up, consume or become linked to water. | [verb] To drink water. | [verb] To load data from a database record into an object's variables HYPHENED (20) HYPOACID (19) HYRACOID (17) ICEBOUND (13) [adjective] Completely surrounded by ice and therefore unable to move. IDOLISED (10) [verb] To make an idol of, or to worship as an idol. | [verb] To adore excessively; to revere immoderately. IDOLIZED (19) [verb] To make an idol of, or to worship as an idol. | [verb] To adore excessively; to revere immoderately. IGNIFIED (13) ILLIQUID (18) [adjective] Lacking liquidity; unable to be converted into cash. IMAGINED (12) [verb] To form a mental image of something; to envision or create something in one's mind. | [verb] To believe in something created by one's own mind. | [verb] To assume IMBALMED (15) IMBARKED (17) IMBEDDED (15) [verb] To lay as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed. | [verb] (by extension) To include in surrounding matter. | [verb] To encapsulate within another document or data file. IMBLAZED (22) IMBODIED (14) IMBRUTED (13) IMITATED (11) [verb] To follow as a model or a pattern; to make a copy, counterpart or semblance of. IMMERGED (14) IMMERSED (13) [verb] To put under the surface of a liquid; to dunk. | [verb] To involve or engage deeply. | [verb] To map into an immersion. IMMESHED (16) IMPACTED (15) [verb] To collide or strike, the act of impinging. | [verb] To compress; to compact; to press into something or pack together. | [verb] To influence; to affect; to have an impact on. IMPAIRED (13) [verb] To weaken; to affect negatively; to have a diminishing effect on. | [verb] To grow worse; to deteriorate. | [noun] A criminal charge for driving a vehicle while impaired. IMPARKED (17) [verb] To enclose or confine in, or as if in, a park. | [verb] To enclose or fence in (land) to make a park. IMPARTED (13) [verb] To give or bestow (e.g. a quality or property). | [verb] To give a part or to share. | [verb] To make known; to show (by speech, writing etc.). IMPASTED (13) IMPAWNED (16) IMPELLED (13) [verb] To urge a person; to press on; to incite to action or motion via intrinsic motivation. | [verb] To drive forward; to propel an object, to provide an impetus for motion or action. IMPENDED (14) [verb] To hang or be suspended over (something); to overhang. | [verb] Figuratively to hang over (someone) as a threat or danger. | [verb] To threaten to happen; to be about to happen, to be imminent. IMPINGED (14) [verb] To make a physical impact on. | [verb] To interfere with. | [verb] To have an effect upon, especially a negative one. IMPLODED (14) [verb] To collapse or burst inward violently. | [verb] To compress (data) with a particular algorithm. | [adjective] That has collapsed inwards IMPLORED (13) [verb] To beg urgently or earnestly. | [verb] To call upon or pray to earnestly; to entreat. IMPORTED (13) [verb] To bring (something) in from a foreign country, especially for sale or trade. | [verb] To load a file into a software application from another version or system. | [verb] To be important; to be significant; to be of consequence. IMPOSTED (13) IMPROVED (16) [verb] To make (something) better; to increase the value or productivity (of something). | [verb] To become better. | [verb] To disprove or make void; to refute. IMPUGNED (14) [verb] To assault, attack. | [verb] To verbally assault, especially to argue against an opinion, motive, or action; to question the truth or validity of. IMPULSED (13) INARCHED (14) [verb] To graft by uniting, as a scion, to a stock, without separating either from its root before the union is complete. INCANTED (11) [verb] To state solemnly, to chant. | [verb] To recite an incantation. INCENSED (11) [verb] To anger or infuriate. | [verb] To incite, stimulate. | [verb] To offer incense to. INCEPTED (13) [verb] To take in or ingest. | [verb] To begin. | [verb] To begin a Master of Arts degree at a university. INCLINED (11) [verb] To bend or move (something) out of a given plane or direction, often the horizontal or vertical. | [verb] To slope. | [verb] (chiefly in the passive) To tend to do or believe something, or move or be moved in a certain direction, away from a point of view, attitude, etc. INCLOSED (11) [verb] To surround with a wall, fence, etc. | [verb] To insert into a container, usually an envelope or package | [adjective] Surrounded. INCLUDED (12) [verb] To bring into a group, class, set, or total as a (new) part or member. | [verb] To contain, as parts of a whole; to comprehend. | [verb] To enclose, confine. INCURRED (11) [verb] To bring upon oneself or expose oneself to, especially something inconvenient, harmful, or onerous; to become liable or subject to | [verb] To enter or pass into | [verb] To fall within a period or scope; to occur; to run into danger INCURVED (14) [adjective] Turned or curving inward, towards the center. INDEBTED (12) [verb] To bring into debt; to place under obligation. | [adjective] (usually with to) Obligated, especially financially. INDENTED (10) [verb] To notch; to jag; to cut into points like a row of teeth | [verb] To be cut, notched, or dented. | [verb] To dent; to stamp or to press in; to impress INDICTED (12) [verb] To accuse of wrongdoing; charge. | [verb] To make a formal accusation or indictment for a crime against (a party) by the findings of a jury, especially a grand jury. INDIGOID (11) [noun] Any compound having a structure related to indigotin | [adjective] Having a structure related to indigotin INDORSED (10) [verb] To support, to back, to give one's approval to, especially officially or by signature. | [verb] To write one's signature on the back of a cheque, or other negotiable instrument, when transferring it to a third party, or cashing it. | [verb] To give an endorsement. INDUCTED (12) [verb] To bring in as a member; to make a part of. | [verb] To formally or ceremoniously install in an office, position, etc. | [verb] To introduce into (particularly if certain knowledge or experience is required, such as ritual adulthood or cults). INDULGED (11) [verb] (often followed by "in"): To yield to a temptation or desire. | [verb] To satisfy the wishes or whims of. | [verb] To give way to (a habit or temptation); not to oppose or restrain. INEDITED (10) INFECTED (14) [verb] To bring into contact with a substance that causes illness (a pathogen). | [verb] To make somebody enthusiastic about one's own passion. | [adjective] Having an infection. INFECUND (14) [adjective] Infertile | [adjective] Unable or unwilling to produce children INFERRED (12) [verb] To introduce (something) as a reasoned conclusion; to conclude by reasoning or deduction, as from premises or evidence. | [verb] To lead to (something) as a consequence; to imply. (Now often considered incorrect, especially with a person as subject.) | [verb] To cause, inflict (something) upon or to someone. INFESTED (12) [verb] To inhabit a place in unpleasantly large numbers; to plague, harass. | [verb] (of a parasite) To invade a host plant or animal. INFIRMED (14) INFLAMED (14) [verb] To set on fire; to kindle; to cause to burn, flame, or glow. | [verb] To kindle or intensify (a feeling, as passion or appetite); to excite to an excessive or unnatural action or heat. | [verb] To provoke (a person) to anger or rage; to exasperate; to irritate; to incense; to enrage. INFLATED (12) [verb] To enlarge an object by pushing air (or a gas) into it; to raise or expand abnormally | [verb] To enlarge by filling with air (or a gas). | [verb] To swell; to puff up. INFLEXED (19) [adjective] Inflected INFOLDED (13) [verb] To fold inwards. | [verb] To wrap up or inwrap; involve; inclose; enfold or envelop. | [verb] To clasp with the arms; embrace. INFORMED (14) [verb] To instruct, train (usually in matters of knowledge). | [verb] To communicate knowledge to. | [verb] To impart information or knowledge. | [adjective] Created, given form. INFRARED (12) [noun] Electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength longer than visible light, but shorter than microwave radiation, having a wavelength between 700 nm and 1 mm | [adjective] Having the wavelength in the infrared. | [adjective] In the infrared spectrum. INGESTED (10) [verb] To take a substance (e.g. food) into the body of an organism, especially through the mouth and into the gastrointestinal tract. | [verb] To bring or import into a system. INGULFED (13) [verb] To overwhelm. | [verb] To surround; to cover. | [verb] To cast into a gulf. INJECTED (18) [verb] To push or pump (something, especially fluids) into a cavity or passage. | [verb] To introduce (something) suddenly or violently. | [verb] To administer an injection to (someone or something), especially of medicine or drugs. INKSTAND (13) [noun] A small tray containing pens and an inkwell; by extension, a pot for holding ink, inkpot, inkwell. INMESHED (14) INNERVED (12) INPOURED (11) INPUTTED (11) [verb] To put in; put on. | [verb] To enter data. | [verb] To accept data that is entered. INQUIRED (18) [verb] To ask (about something). | [verb] To make an inquiry or an investigation. | [verb] To call; to name. INSERTED (9) [verb] To put in between or into. | [adjective] Attached to or growing out of some part. INSETTED (9) [verb] To set in; infix or implant. | [verb] To insert something. | [verb] To add an inset to something. INSISTED (9) [verb] (with on or upon or (that + ordinary verb form)) To hold up a claim emphatically. | [verb] (sometimes with on or upon or (that + subjunctive)) To demand continually that something happen or be done. | [verb] To stand (on); to rest (upon); to lean (upon). INSNARED (9) INSOULED (9) INSPIRED (11) [verb] To infuse into the mind; to communicate to the spirit; to convey, as by a divine or supernatural influence; to disclose preternaturally; to produce in, as by inspiration. | [verb] To infuse into; to affect, as with a superior or supernatural influence; to fill with what animates, enlivens or exalts; to communicate inspiration to. | [verb] To draw in by the operation of breathing; to inhale. INSTATED (9) [verb] To install (someone) in office; to establish. INSULTED (9) [verb] To be insensitive, insolent, or rude to (somebody); to affront or demean (someone). | [verb] To assail, assault, or attack; (specifically) to carry out an assault, attack, or onset without preparation. | [verb] To behave in an obnoxious and superior manner (against or over someone). INTENDED (10) [verb] (usually followed by the particle "to") To hope; to wish (something, or something to be accomplished); be intent upon | [verb] To fix the mind on; attend to; take care of; superintend; regard. | [verb] To stretch to extend; distend. INTERBED (11) [verb] To interleave between other beds or strata having different characteristics INTERNED (9) [verb] To imprison somebody, usually without trial. | [verb] To internalize. | [verb] To work as an intern. Usually with little or no pay or other legal prerogatives of employment, for the purpose of furthering a program of education. INTERRED (9) [verb] To bury in a grave. | [verb] To confine, as in a prison. | [adjective] Having been interred. INTITLED (9) INTOMBED (13) INTORTED (9) INTREPID (11) [adjective] Fearless; bold; brave. INTRUDED (10) [verb] To thrust oneself in; to come or enter without invitation, permission, or welcome; to encroach; to trespass. | [verb] To force in. | [adjective] Intrusive. INTUITED (9) [verb] To know intuitively or by immediate perception. INTURNED (9) INTWINED (12) [verb] To twist or twine around something (or one another). INVECTED (14) [adjective] Having a border consisting of semicircles with the convex part outwards; scalloped INVENTED (12) [verb] To design a new process or mechanism. | [verb] To create something fictional for a particular purpose. | [verb] To come upon; to find; to discover. INVERTED (12) [verb] To turn (something) upside down or inside out; to place in a contrary order or direction. | [verb] To move (the root note of a chord) up or down an octave, resulting in a change in pitch. | [verb] To undergo inversion, as sugar. INVESTED (12) [verb] To spend money, time, or energy on something, especially for some benefit or purpose; used with in. | [verb] To clothe or wrap (with garments). | [verb] To put on (clothing). INVISCID (14) [adjective] Not viscid INVOICED (14) [verb] To bill; to issue an invoice to. | [verb] To make an invoice for (goods or services). INVOLVED (15) [verb] To roll or fold up; to wind round; to entwine. | [verb] To envelop completely; to surround; to cover; to hide. | [verb] To complicate or make intricate, as in grammatical structure. INWALLED (12) INWEAVED (15) IRONCLAD (11) [noun] A metal-plated ship, vessel, or vehicle. | [noun] An armor-plated warship. | [adjective] Covered with iron, steel, or some metal, armor-plated. IRONIZED (18) [verb] To use irony | [verb] To treat something in an ironic fashion IRONWEED (12) IRONWOOD (12) [noun] Any of a number of tree species known for having a particularly solid wood. | [noun] The wood of any ironwood tree. IRRUPTED (11) [verb] To break into. | [verb] To enter forcibly or uninvited. | [verb] To rapidly increase or intensify. ISLANDED (10) ISOLATED (9) [verb] To set apart or cut off from others. | [verb] To place in quarantine or isolation. | [verb] To separate a substance in pure form from a mixture. ISTHMOID (14) ITEMISED (11) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars ITEMIZED (20) [verb] To state in items, or by particulars ITERATED (9) [verb] To perform or repeat an action on each item in a set | [verb] To perform or repeat an action on the results of each such prior action | [verb] To utter or do a second time or many times; to repeat. JABBERED (20) [verb] To talk rapidly, indistinctly, or unintelligibly; to utter gibberish or nonsense. | [verb] To utter rapidly or indistinctly; to gabble. JACKETED (22) [verb] To enclose or encase in a jacket or other covering. | [adjective] Dressed in a jacket (of a specified kind). | [adjective] Encased or enclosed inside a jacket (of a specified kind). JACQUARD (27) [noun] Fabric woven on a Jacquard loom. | [noun] Fabric resembling a jacquard, but woven by a different process. | [noun] A Jacquard loom. JAILBIRD (18) [noun] A prisoner or an ex-prisoner JAPANNED (18) [verb] To varnish with japan. JARGONED (17) JAWBONED (21) [verb] To talk persistently in an attempt to persuade somebody to cooperate. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified kind of jawbone. JEREMIAD (18) [noun] A long speech or prose work that bitterly laments the state of society and its morals, and often contains a prophecy of its coming downfall. JERSEYED (19) JEWELLED (19) [verb] To bejewel; to decorate or bedeck with jewels or gems. | [adjective] Set with jewels JIGGERED (18) [verb] To alter or adjust, particularly in ways not originally intended. | [verb] To use a jigger. | [verb] To move, send, or drive with a jerk; to jerk; also, to drive or send over with a jerk, as a golf ball. JIGSAWED (20) JITTERED (16) [verb] To be nervous. | [verb] (data visualization) To randomly position of data points to avoid visual overlap. JOCKEYED (25) [verb] To ride (a horse) in a race. | [verb] To jostle by riding against. | [verb] To maneuver (something) by skill for one's advantage. JUDDERED (18) [verb] To spasm or shake violently. | [verb] To move with a stop-start motion, as if experiencing a strong resistance or when decelerating brusquely. JUNKETED (20) [verb] To attend a junket; to feast. | [verb] To go on a junket; to travel. | [verb] To regale or entertain with a feast. JUNKYARD (23) [noun] A place where rubbish is placed. | [noun] A business that sells used metal or items. KAILYARD (16) KALEYARD (16) KASHERED (16) KEESHOND (16) KENNELED (13) [verb] To house or board a dog (or less commonly another animal). | [verb] To lie or lodge; to dwell, as a dog or a fox. | [verb] To drive (a fox) to covert in its hole. KERATOID (13) KERNELED (13) KEYBOARD (18) [noun] (etc.) A set of keys used to operate a typewriter, computer etc. | [noun] A component of many instruments including the piano, organ, and harpsichord consisting of usually black and white keys that cause different tones to be produced when struck. | [noun] A device with keys of a musical keyboard, used to control electronic sound-producing devices which may be built into or separate from the keyboard device. KEYNOTED (16) KIBITZED (24) [verb] To make small talk or idle chatter. | [verb] To give unsolicited or unwanted advice or make unhelpful or idle comments, especially to someone playing a game. | [verb] To watch a card or board game. KIBOSHED (18) [verb] To decisively terminate. KIDNAPED (16) [verb] To seize and detain a person unlawfully; sometimes for ransom. KILOBAUD (15) KIMONOED (15) KINGBIRD (16) [noun] A group of large insectivorous passerine birds of the genus Tyrannus. KINGHOOD (17) KINGWOOD (17) KIPPERED (17) [verb] To prepare (a herring or similar fish) by splitting, salting, and smoking. KITTENED (13) [verb] To give birth to kittens. KNAPWEED (18) [noun] Any of various common weeds of the genus Centaurea KNIGHTED (17) [verb] To confer knighthood upon. | [verb] To promote (a pawn) to a knight. KNOTWEED (16) [noun] Any of several plants of the genus Polygonum, with jointed stems and inconspicuous flowers KNUCKLED (19) [verb] To apply pressure, or rub or massage with one's knuckles. | [verb] To bend the fingers. | [verb] To touch one's forehead as a mark of respect. KOSHERED (16) [verb] To kasher; to prepare (for example, meat) in conformity with the requirements of the Jewish law. KOWTOWED (19) [verb] To grovel, act in a very submissive manner. | [verb] To kneel and bow low enough to touch one’s forehead to the ground. | [verb] To bow very deeply. KVETCHED (21) [verb] To whine or complain, often needlessly and incessantly. KYANISED (16) [verb] To preserve wood from decay by soaking it in a solution of mercuric chloride KYANIZED (25) [verb] To preserve wood from decay by soaking it in a solution of mercuric chloride KYBOSHED (21) [verb] To decisively terminate. LAAGERED (10) [verb] To arrange in a circular formation for defence. | [verb] To camp in a circular formation. LABELLED (11) [verb] To put a label (a ticket or sign) on (something). | [verb] (ditransitive) To give a label to (someone or something) in order to categorise that person or thing. | [verb] To replace specific atoms by their isotope in order to track the presence or movement of this isotope through a reaction, metabolic pathway or cell. LABIATED (11) LABOURED (11) [verb] To toil, to work. | [verb] To belabour, to emphasise or expand upon (a point in a debate, etc). | [verb] To be oppressed with difficulties or disease; to do one's work under conditions which make it especially hard or wearisome; to move slowly, as against opposition, or under a burden. LACERTID (11) [noun] Any lizard of the family Lacertidae. | [noun] A type of blazar (highly variable active galactic nucleus) that lacks spectral emission lines characteristic of quasars. LACEWOOD (14) [noun] Any of several types of wood with a coarse texture, but especially that from several varieties of sycamore. LACKERED (15) LACKEYED (18) [verb] To attend, wait upon, serve obsequiously. | [verb] To toady, play the flunky. LACTATED (11) [verb] To secrete or produce milk LADDERED (11) [verb] To arrange or form into a shape of a ladder. | [verb] To ascend (a building, a wall, etc.) using a ladder. | [verb] Of a knitted garment: to develop a ladder as a result of a broken thread. LADYBIRD (15) [noun] Any of the Coccinellidae family of beetles, typically having a round shape and red or yellow spotted elytra. LADYHOOD (16) LAICISED (11) [verb] To convert from church controlled to independent of the church; to secularize. | [verb] To reduce from clergy to layman. | [verb] To convert to lay status. LAICIZED (20) [verb] To convert from church controlled to independent of the church; to secularize. | [verb] To reduce from clergy to layman. | [verb] To convert to lay status. LAMBDOID (14) [noun] The lambdoid suture. | [adjective] Shaped like the Greek letter lambda: LAMENTED (11) [verb] To express grief; to weep or wail; to mourn. | [verb] To feel great sorrow or regret; to bewail. | [adjective] Mourned for, or grieved for LAMPYRID (16) LANCETED (11) LANDLORD (10) [noun] A person who owns and rents land such as a house, apartment, or condo. | [noun] The owner or manager of a public house. | [noun] (with "the") A shark, imagined as the owner of the surf to be avoided. LANDSLID (10) LANDWARD (13) [noun] The side facing land. | [adjective] Located, facing or moving in the direction of the land, as opposed to the sea. | [adjective] Of the country as opposed to the city, rural; agricultural. LAPBOARD (13) LAPELLED (11) LAPPERED (13) LAPPETED (13) LARBOARD (11) [noun] The left side of a ship, looking from the stern forward to the bow; port side. LARIATED (9) LARRUPED (11) [verb] To beat or thrash | [adjective] Drunk; inebriated LATEWOOD (12) LATHERED (12) [verb] To cover with lather. | [verb] To beat or whip. | [verb] To form lather or froth, as a horse does when profusely sweating. LATTICED (11) [verb] To make a lattice of. | [verb] To close, as an opening, with latticework; to furnish with a lattice. | [adjective] Provided with latticework; having a pattern of fretwork. LAUNCHED (14) [verb] To throw (a projectile such as a lance, dart or ball); to hurl; to propel with force. | [verb] To pierce with, or as with, a lance. | [verb] To cause (a vessel) to move or slide from the land or a larger vessel into the water; to set afloat. LAURELED (9) [verb] To decorate with laurel, especially with a laurel wreath. | [verb] To enwreathe. | [verb] To award top honours to. LAVEERED (12) LAVISHED (15) [verb] To give out extremely generously; to squander. | [verb] To give out to (somebody) extremely generously. LAWYERED (15) [verb] To practice law. | [verb] To perform, or attempt to perform, the work of a lawyer. | [verb] To make legalistic arguments. LEAVENED (12) [verb] To add a leavening agent. | [verb] To cause to rise by fermentation. | [verb] To temper an action or decision. LECHERED (14) LECTURED (11) [verb] To teach (somebody) by giving a speech on a given topic. | [verb] To preach, to berate, to scold. LEEBOARD (11) [noun] A board, or frame of planks, lowered over the side of a sailboat to lessen its leeway. LEFTWARD (15) [adjective] To or from the left. | [adverb] To or from the left. LEISURED (9) [adjective] Having leisure time. | [adjective] Leisurely, filled with leisure. LEMUROID (11) LESIONED (9) LESSENED (9) [verb] To make less; to diminish; to reduce. | [verb] To become less. | [adjective] Having been lessened. LESSONED (9) [verb] To give a lesson to; to teach. LETTERED (9) [verb] To print, inscribe, or paint letters on something. | [verb] (scholastic) To earn a varsity letter (award). | [adjective] Marked with letters. LEVANTED (12) [verb] To abscond or run away, especially to avoid paying money or debts. LEVELLED (12) [verb] To adjust so as to make as flat or perpendicular to the ground as possible. | [verb] To destroy by reducing to ground level; to raze. | [verb] To progress to the next level. LIBELLED (11) [verb] To defame someone, especially in a manner that meets the legal definition of libel. | [verb] To proceed against (a ship, goods, etc.) by filing a libel. LIBRATED (11) [verb] To oscillate (like the beam of a balance) | [verb] To poise; to balance. LICENCED (13) [verb] To give a formal (usually written) authorization. | [verb] Authorize officially. | [adjective] (of a person or enterprise) having been issued with a licence (by the required authority) LICENSED (11) [verb] To give a formal (usually written) authorization. | [verb] Authorize officially. | [adjective] (of a person or enterprise) having been issued with a licence (by the required authority) LICHENED (14) LIGULOID (10) LIMBERED (13) [verb] To cause to become limber; to make flexible or pliant. | [verb] To prepare an artillery piece for transportation (i.e., to attach it to its limber.) LIMULOID (11) LINEATED (9) LINEBRED (11) LINGERED (10) [verb] To stay or remain in a place or situation, especially as if unwilling to depart or not easily able to do so; to loiter. | [verb] To remain alive or existent although still proceeding toward death or extinction; to die gradually. | [verb] (often followed by on) To consider or contemplate for a period of time; to engage in analytic thinking or discussion. LIONISED (9) [verb] To treat (a person) as if they were important, or a celebrity. | [verb] To visit famous places in order to revere them. | [verb] To behave as a lion. LIONIZED (18) [verb] To treat (a person) as if they were important, or a celebrity. | [verb] To visit famous places in order to revere them. | [verb] To behave as a lion. LIPPENED (13) LIPPERED (13) LIQUATED (18) [verb] To separate by fusion, as a more fusible from a less fusible material. | [verb] To melt; to become liquid (liquefy) LIQUORED (18) [verb] To drink liquor, usually to excess. | [verb] To cause someone to drink liquor, usually to excess. | [verb] To grease. LISTENED (9) [verb] To pay attention to a sound or speech. | [verb] To expect or wait for a sound, such as a signal. | [verb] To accept advice or obey instruction; to agree or assent. LITTERED (9) [verb] To drop or throw trash without properly disposing of it (as discarding in public areas rather than trash receptacles). | [verb] To scatter carelessly about. | [verb] To strew (a place) with scattered articles. LIVERIED (12) LOANWORD (12) [noun] A word directly taken into one language from another one with little or no translation. LOCOWEED (14) [noun] Any of several plants indigenous to the western United States, of genus Oxytropis or Astragalus. LOITERED (9) [verb] To stand about without any aim or purpose; to stand about idly. | [verb] To remain at a certain place instead of moving on. | [verb] For an aircraft to remain in the air near a target. LOLLOPED (11) [verb] To walk or move with a bouncing or undulating motion and at an unhurried pace. | [verb] To act lazily, loll, lie around. LONGHAND (13) [noun] The written characters used in the common method of writing; opposed to shorthand, or typing or printing; handwriting. | [adverb] Written by hand in normal characters, as opposed to shorthand. | [adverb] Written by hand (with pen or pencil), rather than printed out; handwritten. LONGHEAD (13) LOOSENED (9) [verb] To make loose. | [verb] To become loose. | [verb] To disengage (a device that restrains). LOPPERED (13) LOPSIDED (12) [adjective] Not even or balanced; not the same on one side as on the other. | [adjective] Biased; not balanced between points of view LOUDENED (10) [verb] To become louder. LOUVERED (12) LOVEBIRD (14) [noun] Any small parrot from one of the nine species within the genus Agapornis. Sometimes they are kept as cage birds and are noted for their affection towards each other. | [noun] (usually in the plural) One of the members of an openly affectionate couple. LUMBERED (13) [verb] To move clumsily and heavily; to move slowly. | [verb] (with with) To load down with things, to fill, to encumber, to impose an unwanted burden on | [verb] To heap together in disorder. LUNKHEAD (16) [noun] A fool or idiot. LUSTERED (9) [verb] To gleam, have luster. | [verb] To give luster, distinguish. | [verb] To give a coating or other treatment to impart physical luster. LYMPHOID (19) [adjective] Relating to, or found within the lymphatic system of the body LYREBIRD (14) [noun] Either of two large ground-dwelling Australian songbirds, of the genus Menura, named because of the beautiful tail feathers of the male of one species, the superb lyrebird (Menura novaehollandiae), which can be erected to look like a lyre, and notable for their extraordinary ability to mimic natural and artificial sounds from their environment. MACHINED (16) [verb] To make by machinery. | [verb] To shape or finish by machinery. | [adjective] Created by machine, or as though created by machine. MADDENED (13) [verb] To make angry. | [verb] To make insane; to inflame with passion. | [verb] To become furious. MAGICKED (18) [verb] To produce, transform (something), (as if) by magic. MAIDHOOD (15) MAINLAND (11) [noun] The continent; the principal land, as distinguished from islands or a peninsula. | [noun] The principal island of a group. MALIGNED (12) [verb] To make defamatory statements about; to slander or traduce. | [verb] To treat with malice; to show hatred toward; to abuse; to wrong. | [adjective] Assailed with contemptuous language MALPOSED (13) MAMMERED (15) MANACLED (13) [verb] To confine with manacles. MANATOID (11) MANDATED (12) [verb] To authorize | [verb] To make mandatory | [adjective] Required, mandatory MANIFOLD (14) [noun] A copy made by the manifold writing process. | [noun] A pipe fitting or similar device that connects multiple inputs or outputs. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The third stomach of a ruminant animal, an omasum. | [verb] To make manifold; multiply. MANNERED (11) [adjective] (often in combination) Having manners or (often excessive) mannerisms. MANYFOLD (17) [adjective] Many | [adverb] By many times. MARAUDED (12) [verb] To move about in roving fashion looking for plunder. | [verb] To go about aggressively or in a predatory manner. | [verb] To raid and pillage. MARGINED (12) [verb] To add a margin to. | [verb] To enter (notes etc.) into the margin. | [adjective] Having a margin. MARIGOLD (12) [noun] (genericised brand name, usually plural, sometimes with capital) A rubber glove, especially one for use in household cleaning. | [noun] Any of the Old World plants, of the genus Calendula, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. | [noun] Any of the New World plants, of the genus Tagetes, with orange, yellow or reddish flowers. MARKETED (15) [verb] To make (products or services) available for sale and promote them. | [verb] To sell | [verb] To deal in a market; to buy or sell; to make bargains for provisions or goods. MAROONED (11) [verb] To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a desert island. MARROWED (14) MARTYRED (14) [verb] To make someone into a martyr by putting him or her to death for adhering to, or acting in accordance with, some belief, especially religious; to sacrifice on account of faith or profession. | [verb] To persecute. | [verb] To torment; to torture. MARVELED (14) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MASSAGED (12) [verb] To rub and knead (someone's body or a part of a body), to perform a massage on (somebody). | [verb] To manipulate (data, a document etc.) to make it more presentable or more convenient to work with. | [verb] To falsify (data or accounts). MASTERED (11) [verb] To be a master. | [verb] To become the master of; to subject to one's will, control, or authority; to conquer; to overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To learn to a high degree of proficiency. MASTHEAD (14) [noun] The top of a mast. | [noun] A list of a newspaper or other periodical's main staff, contributing writers, publisher, circulation, advertising rates etc. | [noun] The title (normally in a large and distinctive font) of a newspaper at the top of the front page MATTERED (11) [verb] To be important. | [verb] (in negative constructions) To care about, to mind; to find important. | [verb] To form pus or matter, as an abscess; to maturate. MEASURED (11) [verb] To ascertain the quantity of a unit of material via calculated comparison with respect to a standard. | [verb] To be of (a certain size), to have (a certain measurement) | [verb] To estimate the unit size of something. MEATHEAD (14) [noun] An ungainly, dull or stupid person; someone who is lazy, disrespectful and/or whose beliefs and philosophies clash with another. | [noun] A large, muscular, stupid male, especially an athlete. | [noun] A member of the Canadian Forces Military Police. MEDALLED (12) [verb] To win a medal. | [verb] To award a medal to. MEDIATED (12) [verb] To resolve differences, or to bring about a settlement, between conflicting parties. | [verb] To intervene between conflicting parties in order to resolve differences or bring about a settlement. | [verb] To divide into two equal parts. MEDICAID (14) MEDUSOID (12) [noun] Jellyfish | [adjective] Having the shape of a jellyfish MELANOID (11) [adjective] Relating to, or resembling, melanin. | [adjective] Relating to, or afflicted with, melanosis. MELLOWED (14) [verb] To make mellow; to relax or soften. | [verb] To become mellow. MEMBERED (15) [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified number of members. | [adjective] (in combination) Having limbs. | [adjective] (of a bird) Having legs of a different tincture from that of the body. MENTORED (11) [verb] To act as someone's mentor | [adjective] Under the control of a mentor MESEEMED (13) MESSAGED (12) [verb] To send a message to; to transmit a message to, e.g. as text via a cell phone. | [verb] To send (something) as a message; usually refers to electronic messaging. | [verb] To send a message or messages; to be capable of sending messages. METALLED (11) [verb] To make a road using crushed rock, stones etc. | [adjective] (of a road) Surfaced, tarred, covered in stone or crushed rock (usually tar-coated). | [adjective] (of any object) Made of metal or having metal fittings or plating. MIDFIELD (15) [noun] The middle of the field of play MIDSIZED (21) [adjective] Of medium size, not particularly large or small MIDWIFED (18) [verb] To act as a midwife | [verb] To facilitate the emergence of MIDWIVED (18) MIGRATED (12) [verb] To relocate periodically from one region to another, usually according to the seasons. | [verb] To change one's geographic pattern of habitation. | [verb] To change habitations across a border; to move from one country or political region to another. MILDENED (12) MILDEWED (15) [verb] To taint with mildew. | [verb] To become tainted with mildew. MILKMAID (17) [noun] A girl or young woman who milks the cows on a farm MILKSHED (18) MILKWEED (18) [noun] Any of several plants that have a milky sap and have pods that split to release seeds with silky tufts. | [noun] A monarch butterfly (Danaus spp). MILKWOOD (18) MILLEPED (13) MILLIARD (11) [numeral] 109, a thousand (times a) million. (Now generally replaced by the short scale billion.) MILLIPED (13) MILLPOND (13) [noun] A pond or reservoir produced by damming a river or stream in order to provide a steady source of water for a millrace. MIMICKED (19) [verb] To imitate, especially in order to ridicule. | [verb] To take on the appearance of another, for protection or camouflage. MINIFIED (14) MINISHED (14) MIRRORED (11) [verb] Of an event, activity, behaviour, etc, to be identical to, to be a copy of. | [verb] To create something identical to (a web site, etc.). | [verb] To reflect, as in a mirror. MISACTED (13) MISADDED (13) MISAIMED (13) MISAWARD (14) MISBOUND (13) MISBRAND (13) MISBUILD (13) MISCITED (13) MISCODED (14) MISDATED (12) [verb] To date incorrectly; to mark with the wrong date. MISFIELD (14) [noun] A failure to field the ball properly. | [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFILED (14) [verb] To file incorrectly; to file in the wrong place or the wrong way. MISFIRED (14) [verb] To fail to discharge properly. | [verb] (of an engine) To fail to ignite in the proper sequence. | [verb] (by extension) To fail to achieve the anticipated result. MISHEARD (14) [verb] To hear wrongly. | [verb] To misunderstand. MISLIKED (15) [verb] To displease. | [verb] To dislike; to disapprove of; to have aversion to. MISLIVED (14) MISMATED (13) [verb] To mate or match wrongly or unsuitably; mismatch. | [adjective] Provided with an unsuitable mate MISMOVED (16) MISNAMED (13) [verb] To call by a wrong name. | [verb] To give an unsuitable or injurious name to; name incorrectly. MISPAGED (14) MISPLEAD (13) MISRATED (11) MISRULED (11) [verb] Of a trial judge, to make a bad decision in court. | [verb] To rule badly; to misgovern. MISSOUND (11) MISSPEND (13) [verb] To spend poorly, incorrectly or unwisely. MISTIMED (13) [verb] To do at the wrong time; especially to misjudge the timing of coordinated events. | [adjective] Done at the wrong time. MISTUNED (11) MISTYPED (16) [verb] To type incorrectly, introducing spelling mistakes or other errors. | [verb] To categorize incorrectly. MISYOKED (18) MODELLED (12) [verb] To display for others to see, especially in regard to wearing clothing while performing the role of a fashion model | [verb] To use as an object in the creation of a forecast or model | [verb] To make a miniature model of MODIFIED (15) [noun] Any vehicle used in modified racing. | [adjective] Changed; altered | [verb] To change part of. MOLDERED (12) [verb] To decay or rot. MOLESTED (11) [verb] To annoy intentionally. | [verb] To disturb or tamper with. | [verb] To sexually assault or sexually harass, especially a minor. MONGERED (12) MONISHED (14) MONKEYED (18) [verb] To meddle; to mess (with). | [verb] To mimic; to ape. MONKHOOD (18) MONOACID (13) [noun] Any acid that has only one replaceable hydrogen ion. MONOCLED (13) MONTAGED (12) MOONSEED (11) [noun] A twining plant of the genera Menispermum or Cocculus, in the family Menispermaceae. MOONWARD (14) MOORLAND (11) [noun] Open land that has an acidic peaty soil and is mostly covered with heather or bracken. MOPBOARD (15) [noun] A skirting board (to protect a wall from wet mops) MORIBUND (13) [noun] A person who is near to dying. | [adjective] Approaching death; about to die; dying; expiring. | [adjective] Almost obsolete, nearing an end. MORSELED (11) MORTARED (11) [verb] To use mortar or plaster to join two things together. | [verb] To pound in a mortar. | [verb] To fire a mortar (weapon). MORTICED (13) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MORTISED (11) [verb] To cut a mortise in. | [verb] To join by a mortise and tenon. | [verb] To adjust the horizontal space between selected pairs of letters; to kern. MOTHERED (14) [verb] To give birth to or produce (as its female parent) a child. (Compare father.) | [verb] To treat as a mother would be expected to treat her child; to nurture. | [verb] To cause to contain mother. | [adjective] Thick, like mother (film or membrane on fermented liquids); viscid. MOTIONED (11) [verb] To gesture indicating a desired movement. | [verb] To introduce a motion in parliamentary procedure. | [verb] To make a proposal; to offer plans. MUCINOID (13) MUDGUARD (13) [noun] A cover over the wheels of a vehicle, or a flap behind that wheel, to prevent water and mud being projected. MULTIFID (14) [adjective] Cleft into many parts or lobes. MULTIPED (13) MURAENID (11) MURDERED (12) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MURIATED (11) MURMURED (13) [verb] To grumble; to complain in a low, muttering voice, or express discontent at or against someone or something. | [verb] To speak or make low, indistinguishable noise; to mumble, mutter. | [verb] To say (something) indistinctly, to mutter. MUSTERED (11) [verb] To show, exhibit. | [verb] To be gathered together for parade, inspection, exercise, or the like (especially of a military force); to come together as parts of a force or body. | [verb] To collect, call or assemble together, such as troops or a group for inspection, orders, display etc. MUTINIED (11) [verb] To commit mutiny. MUTTERED (11) [verb] To utter words, especially complaints or angry expressions, indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed; to say under one's breath. | [verb] To speak softly and incoherently, or with imperfect articulations. | [verb] To make a sound with a low, rumbling noise. MYCELOID (16) MYRIAPOD (16) [noun] Any arthropod (such as centipedes and millipedes) of the subphylum Myriapoda MYRIOPOD (16) NAILFOLD (12) NAILHEAD (12) [noun] The head of a nail. NAPALMED (13) [verb] To spray or attack with this substance. NARRATED (9) [verb] To relate (a story or series of events) in speech or writing. | [verb] To give an account. NARROWED (12) [verb] To reduce in width or extent; to contract. | [verb] To get narrower. | [verb] (of a person or eyes) To partially lower one's eyelids in a way usually taken to suggest a defensive, aggressive or penetrating look. NATTERED (9) [verb] To talk casually; to discuss unimportant matters. | [verb] To nag. NAZIFIED (21) NEATENED (9) [verb] To make neat; arrange in an orderly, tidy way; to tidy. NEATHERD (12) NECKBAND (17) [noun] A band worn around the neck. | [noun] The part of a shirt encircling the neck. | [verb] To attach a band around the neck (especially of wild animals) NECROSED (11) [verb] To become necrotic. NEUTERED (9) [verb] To remove sex organs from an animal to prevent it from having offspring; to castrate or spay, particularly as applied to domestic animals. | [verb] To rid of sexuality. | [verb] To drastically reduce the effectiveness of something. NEWFOUND (15) [adjective] Recently found; newly discovered. NEWLYWED (18) [noun] A recently married person | [adjective] Recently married NICKELED (15) [verb] To plate with nickel. NICKERED (15) [verb] To make a soft neighing sound characteristic of a horse. | [verb] To produce a snigger or suppressed laugh. NICTATED (11) [verb] To wink or blink; (of certain animals) to close the nictating membrane. NIDIFIED (13) NIELLOED (9) NIFFERED (15) NIMBUSED (13) NINEFOLD (12) [adjective] Having nine parts | [adjective] Having nine times as much or as many | [adverb] By a factor of nine. NITRATED (9) [verb] To treat, or react, with nitric acid or a nitrate | [adjective] Reacted, or treated with, nitric acid or a nitrate. | [adjective] (of photographic material) Treated with silver nitrate. NITRIDED (10) [adjective] Subjected to the nitriding process. NOCTUOID (11) NONBRAND (11) NONFLUID (12) NONRATED (9) NONRIGID (10) [adjective] Not rigid; flexible | [adjective] (of an airship) That maintains its shape only by internal gas pressure NONSOLID (9) NONVALID (12) NOSEBAND (11) [noun] The part of a bridle or halter that goes over the nose of an animal, particularly a horse. NOTIFIED (12) [verb] To give (someone) notice (of some event). | [verb] To make (something) known. | [verb] To make note of (something). NUCLEOID (11) NUMBERED (13) [verb] To label (items) with numbers; to assign numbers to (items). | [verb] To total or count; to amount to. NURTURED (9) [verb] To nourish or nurse. | [verb] (by extension) To encourage, especially the growth or development of something. OBELISED (11) [verb] To mark (a written or printed passage) with an obelus; to judge as spurious or doubtful. | [adjective] (of a word or passage of text) Marked with an obelus or obelisk; condemned as spurious or corrupt. OBELIZED (20) [verb] To mark (a written or printed passage) with an obelus; to judge as spurious or doubtful. | [adjective] (of a word or passage of text) Marked with an obelus or obelisk; condemned as spurious or corrupt. OBJECTED (20) [verb] To disagree with or oppose something or someone; (especially in a Court of Law) to raise an objection. | [verb] To offer in opposition as a criminal charge or by way of accusation or reproach; to adduce as an objection or adverse reason. | [verb] To set before or against; to bring into opposition; to oppose. OBLIQUED (20) OBSCURED (13) [verb] To render obscure; to darken; to make dim; to keep in the dark; to hide; to make less visible, intelligible, legible, glorious, beautiful, or illustrious. | [verb] To hide, put out of sight etc. | [verb] To conceal oneself; to hide. OBSERVED (14) [verb] To notice or view, especially carefully or with attention to detail. | [verb] To follow or obey the custom, practice, or rules (especially of a religion). | [verb] To take note of and celebrate (a holiday or similar occurrence). OBSESSED (11) [verb] (passive, constructed with "with") To be preoccupied with a single topic or emotion. | [verb] To dominate the thoughts of someone. | [verb] (construed with over) To think or talk obsessively about. OBTAINED (11) [verb] To get hold of; to gain possession of, to procure; to acquire, in any way. | [verb] To secure (that) a specific objective or state of affairs be reached. | [verb] To prevail, be victorious; to succeed. OBTECTED (13) [adjective] Covered; protected | [adjective] Covered with a hard chitinous case, like the pupa of certain files. OBTESTED (11) OBTRUDED (12) [verb] To proffer (something) by force; to impose (something) on someone or into some area. | [verb] To become apparent in an unwelcome way, to be forcibly imposed; to jut in, to intrude (on or into). | [verb] To impose (oneself) on others; to cut in. OBTUNDED (12) [verb] To reduce the edge or effects of; to mitigate; to dull. | [adjective] Far from alert or oriented to time and space, and exhibiting other signs of being confused, a state just short of frank delirium. OBVERTED (14) [verb] To turn so as to show another side. | [verb] To turn towards the front. OBVIATED (14) [verb] To anticipate and prevent or bypass (something which would otherwise have been necessary or required). | [verb] To avoid (a future problem or difficult situation). OCCLUDED (14) [verb] To obstruct, cover, or otherwise block (an opening, a portion of an image, etc.). | [verb] To absorb, as a gas by a metal. | [adjective] Closed or obstructed OCCULTED (13) [verb] To cover or hide from view. | [verb] To dissimulate, conceal, or obfuscate. | [adjective] Hidden; secret. OCCUPIED (15) [adjective] Reserved, engaged. | [adjective] Busy, unavailable. | [adjective] Subjugated, under the control of a foreign military presence. OCCURRED (13) [verb] To happen or take place. | [verb] To present or offer itself. | [verb] To come or be presented to the mind; to suggest itself. OCTUPLED (13) [verb] To increase eightfold. | [verb] To increase or multiply something by eight. ODONTOID (10) [noun] A separate bone, in many reptiles, corresponding to the odontoid process. | [adjective] Resembling a tooth, especially in shape ODORIZED (19) [verb] To add an odorant to (especially a gas, so that leaks can be more easily detected). | [adjective] Modified by addition of an odorant OFFENDED (16) [verb] To hurt the feelings of; to displease; to make angry; to insult. | [verb] To feel or become offended; to take insult. | [verb] To physically harm, pain. OLYMPIAD (16) [noun] A period of four years, by which the ancient Greeks reckoned time, being the interval from one celebration of the Olympic games to another, beginning with the victory of Corbus in the foot race, which took place in the year 776 BC; as, the era of the olympiads. | [noun] An occurrence of the Olympic games. | [noun] A competition or series of competitions resembling an Olympiad, especially in science. OOMPAHED (16) [verb] To produce an oom-pah sound. OPERATED (11) [verb] To perform a work or labour; to exert power or strength, physical or mechanical; to act. | [verb] To produce an appropriate physical effect; to issue in the result designed by nature; especially to take appropriate effect on the human system. | [verb] To act or produce effect on the mind; to exert moral power or influence. OPPUGNED (14) [verb] To contradict or controvert; to oppose; to challenge or question the truth or validity of a given statement. OPTIONED (11) [verb] To purchase an option on something. | [verb] To configure, by setting an option. ORDAINED (10) [verb] To prearrange unalterably. | [verb] To decree. | [verb] To admit into the ministry of a religion, for example as a priest, bishop, minister or Buddhist monk, or to authorize as a rabbi. ORDINAND (10) [noun] A candidate for ordination ORIBATID (11) ORIENTED (9) [verb] To build or place (something) so as to face eastward. | [verb] (by extension) To align or place (a person or object) so that his, her, or its east side, north side, etc., is positioned toward the corresponding points of the compass; (specifically) to rotate (a map attached to a plane table) until the line of direction between any two of its points is parallel to the corresponding direction in nature. | [verb] To direct towards or point at a particular direction. ORPHANED (14) [verb] To deprive of parents (used almost exclusively in the passive) | [verb] To make unavailable, as by removing the last remaining pointer or reference to. | [adjective] Abandoned. OSSIFIED (12) [adjective] Having undergone the process of ossification (transformation into bone). | [adjective] (of ideas or attitudes) Inflexible, old-fashioned. | [adjective] Drunk OSTRACOD (11) [noun] Any of many small crustaceans, of the class Ostracoda, that resemble a shrimp enclosed in a bivalve shell. OUTACTED (11) [verb] To act (play a role in theatre, film etc.) better than. OUTADDED (11) OUTASKED (13) OUTBAKED (15) OUTBOARD (11) [noun] An outboard motor. | [noun] A vessel fitted with an outboard motor. | [noun] A studio having outboard gear (compressor, equalizer, etc.). OUTBOUND (11) [noun] (logistics) An outbound shipment. | [adjective] Leaving or departing; traveling away from; outward bound. OUTBOXED (18) [verb] To box better than. OUTBREED (11) [verb] To breed from parents not closely related. | [verb] To breed more successfully than. OUTBUILD (11) OUTCRIED (11) OUTDARED (10) OUTDATED (10) [adjective] Out of date, old-fashioned, antiquated. | [adjective] Out of date; not the latest; obsolete. OUTFACED (14) [verb] To disconcert someone with an unblinking face-to-face confrontation; to stare down; to withsay | [verb] To boldly confront a situation. OUTFIELD (12) [noun] The region of the field between the infield and the outer fence. | [noun] The region of the field roughly outside of the infield or the wicket-keeper, slips, gully, point, cover, mid off, mid on, midwicket and square leg. | [noun] Arable land continually cropped without being manured. OUTFIRED (12) OUTFOUND (12) OUTFOXED (19) [verb] To beat in a competition of wits OUTHEARD (12) OUTLAWED (12) [verb] To declare illegal. | [verb] To place a ban upon. | [verb] To remove from legal jurisdiction or enforcement. OUTLINED (9) [verb] To draw an outline of. | [verb] To summarize. OUTLIVED (12) [verb] To live longer than; continue to live after the death of; overlive; survive. | [verb] To live through or past (a given time). | [verb] To surpass in duration; outlast. OUTLOVED (12) OUTMODED (12) [verb] To render no longer fashionable. | [adjective] Unfashionable | [adjective] Obsolete OUTMOVED (14) OUTPACED (13) [verb] To go faster than; to exceed the pace of. OUTRACED (11) [verb] To travel faster than another in a competitive event. OUTRAGED (10) [verb] To cause or commit an outrage upon; to treat with violence or abuse. | [verb] To violate; to rape (a female). | [verb] To rage in excess of. OUTRATED (9) OUTRAVED (12) OUTROWED (12) OUTSCOLD (11) OUTSIZED (18) [verb] To exceed in size | [adjective] Of an unusually large size. OUTSPEED (11) OUTSPEND (11) [verb] To spend more than some limit or than another entity. OUTSTAND (9) OUTSTOOD (9) OUTVOTED (12) [verb] To cast more votes than another | [verb] To defeat another by obtaining more votes OUTWILED (12) OUTYIELD (12) [verb] To exceed or surpass in yielding. OVENBIRD (14) [noun] Any of several birds OVERAGED (13) [verb] To have too long an aging process. | [adjective] Aged too much OVERAWED (15) [verb] To restrain, subdue, or control by awe; to cow. OVERBOLD (14) [adjective] Too bold; impertinent or overreaching. OVERBRED (14) [verb] To breed excessively. OVERCOLD (14) OVERDYED (16) [verb] To dye (something already coloured) with another colour. OVERFEED (15) [verb] To feed a person or animal too much. | [verb] To eat more than is necessary. OVERFOND (15) [adjective] Excessively fond. OVERFUND (15) [verb] To supply with more funds than necessary or appropriate OVERGILD (13) OVERGIRD (13) OVERGLAD (13) OVERGOAD (13) OVERHAND (15) [noun] The upper hand; advantage; superiority; mastery. | [verb] Sew using an overhand stitch. | [adjective] Executed with the hand brought forward and down from above the shoulders OVERHARD (15) OVERHEAD (15) [noun] The expense of a business not directly assigned to goods or services provided. | [noun] The items or classes of expense not directly assigned to goods or services provided. | [noun] Any cost or expenditure (monetary, time, effort or otherwise) incurred in a project or activity, which does not directly contribute to the progress or outcome of the project or activity. | [noun] An overhead projector. OVERHELD (15) OVERHOLD (15) OVERKIND (16) OVERLAID (12) [verb] To lay, spread, or apply something over or across; cover. | [verb] To overwhelm; to press excessively upon. | [verb] To lie over (someone, especially a child) in order to smother it; to suffocate. OVERLAND (12) [noun] (travel) a trip by land between the UK and the Indian Sub-continent or Australia, or between the UK and South Africa. | [verb] To transport (especially sheep or other farm animals) over land | [verb] To travel across land OVERLEND (12) OVERLEWD (15) OVERLOAD (12) [noun] An excessive load. | [noun] The damage done, or the outage caused by such a load. | [noun] An overloaded version of a function. OVERLORD (12) [noun] A ruler of other rulers. | [noun] In the English feudal system, a lord of a manor who had subinfeudated a particular manor, estate or fee, to a tenant. | [noun] Anyone with overarching power or authority in a given domain. OVERLOUD (12) [adjective] Too loud. OVERMILD (14) OVERPAID (14) [verb] To pay too much. | [verb] To be more than an ample reward for. OVERSEED (12) OVERSOLD (12) [adjective] In a stock or commodity market condition where there has been significant trading driving prices down to lower levels, levels which seem overextended or excessive on a short-term basis. OVERUSED (12) [adjective] Used too much, or too often | [adjective] (of a word or phrase) hackneyed or clichéd OVERWIND (15) [verb] To wind (tighten a spring of) something excessively. | [verb] To twist itself more tightly. OVERWORD (15) OVULATED (12) [verb] To produce eggs or ova OXALATED (16) OXIDATED (17) [verb] To oxidize. OXIDISED (17) [verb] To combine with oxygen or otherwise make an oxide. | [verb] To increase the valence (or the positive charge) of an element by removing electrons. | [verb] To coat something with an oxide. OXIDIZED (26) [verb] To combine with oxygen or otherwise make an oxide. | [verb] To increase the valence (or the positive charge) of an element by removing electrons. | [verb] To coat something with an oxide. OYSTERED (12) [verb] To fish for oysters. OZONATED (18) OZONISED (18) [verb] To treat or react with ozone; to ozonate | [verb] To convert oxygen into ozone, especially by using an ozonizer OZONIZED (27) [verb] To treat or react with ozone; to ozonate | [verb] To convert oxygen into ozone, especially by using an ozonizer PACIFIED (16) [verb] To bring peace to (a place or situation), by ending war, fighting, violence, anger or agitation. | [verb] To appease (someone). PACKAGED (18) [verb] To pack or bundle something. | [verb] To travel on a package holiday. | [verb] To prepare (a book, a television series, etc.), including all stages from research to production, in order to sell the result to a publisher or broadcaster. PACKETED (17) [verb] To make up into a packet or bundle. | [verb] To send in a packet or dispatch vessel. | [verb] To ply with a packet or dispatch boat. PAILLARD (11) PAJAMAED (20) [adjective] Wearing pajamas. PALMATED (13) PALPATED (13) [verb] To examine or otherwise explore through touch, particularly in reference to an area or organ of the human body. PALTERED (11) [verb] To talk insincerely; to prevaricate or equivocate in speech or actions. | [verb] To trifle. | [verb] To haggle. PAMPERED (15) [verb] To treat with excessive care, attention or indulgence. | [verb] To feed luxuriously. PANCAKED (17) [verb] To make a pancake landing. | [verb] (demolition) To collapse one floor after another. | [verb] To flatten violently. PANDERED (12) [verb] To tempt with, to appeal or cater to (improper motivations, etc.); to assist in gratification. | [verb] To offer illicit sex with a third party; to pimp. | [verb] To act as a pander for (somebody). PANELLED (11) [verb] To fit with panels. | [adjective] Having panels. PANFRIED (14) [adjective] Alternative spelling of pan-fried PANICKED (17) [verb] To feel overwhelming fear. | [verb] To cause somebody to panic. | [verb] (by extension) To crash. PANICLED (13) PANTILED (11) PARANOID (11) [noun] Someone suffering from paranoia | [adjective] Of, related to, or suffering from paranoia | [adjective] Exhibiting extreme and irrational fear or distrust of others PARCELED (13) [verb] To wrap something up into the form of a package. | [verb] To wrap a strip around the end of a rope. | [verb] To divide and distribute by parts or portions; often with out or into. PARDONED (12) [verb] To forgive (a person). | [verb] To refrain from exacting as a penalty. | [verb] To grant an official pardon for a crime. PARENTED (11) [verb] To act as parent, to raise or rear. PARGETED (12) [verb] To coat with gypsum; to plaster, for example walls, or the interior of flues. | [verb] To paint; to cover over. | [adjective] Coated with parget or plaster. PARKLAND (15) [noun] Land suitable for use as a park. | [noun] A landscape characterized by a mixture of treed groves and open grasslands, akin to a Eurasian forest steppe PARLAYED (14) [verb] To carry forward the stake and winnings from a bet on to a subsequent wager or series of wagers. | [verb] (by extension) To increase (an asset, money, etc.) by gambling or investing in a daring manner. | [verb] (by extension, generally) To convert (a situation, thing, etc.) into something better. PARLEYED (14) [verb] To have a discussion, especially one between enemies. PARODIED (12) [verb] To make a parody of something. PAROTOID (11) PARROTED (11) [verb] To repeat (exactly what has just been said) without necessarily showing understanding, in the manner of a parrot. PARSLIED (11) PASSAGED (12) [verb] To pass something, such as a pathogen or stem cell, through a host or medium | [verb] To make a passage, especially by sea; to cross | [verb] To execute a passage movement PASSBAND (13) [noun] The range of frequencies or wavelengths that can pass through a filter without being reduced in amplitude. PASSWORD (14) [noun] A word used to gain admittance or to gain access to information; watchword. | [noun] A string of characters used to log in to a computer or network, to access a level in a video game, etc. | [verb] To protect with a password. PASTORED (11) [verb] To serve a congregation as pastor PASTURED (11) [verb] To move animals into a pasture. | [verb] To graze. | [verb] To feed, especially on growing grass; to supply grass as food for. PATENTED (11) [verb] To successfully register an invention with a government agency; to secure a letter patent. | [adjective] For which a patent has been granted. PATTERED (11) [verb] To make irregularly repeated sounds of low-to-moderate magnitude and lower-than-average pitch. | [verb] To spatter; to sprinkle. | [verb] To speak glibly and rapidly, as does an auctioneer or a sports commentator. PAUNCHED (16) [verb] To remove the internal organs of a ruminant, prior to eating. PAUPERED (13) PEASECOD (13) PECTIZED (22) PEDALLED (12) [verb] To operate a pedal attached to a wheel in a continuous circular motion. | [verb] To operate a bicycle. PEDICLED (14) PEGBOARD (14) [noun] A board that has a pattern of holes into which pegs are fitted; used especially to record the score in some card games. | [noun] A perforated form of hardboard. PELLETED (11) [verb] To form into pellets. | [verb] To strike with pellets. | [adjective] Formed into pellets PELLUCID (13) [adjective] Allowing the passage of light; transparent. | [adjective] Easily understood; clear. PELTERED (11) PENANCED (13) [verb] To impose penance; to punish. PENCILED (13) [verb] To write (something) using a pencil. | [verb] To mark with, or as if with, a pencil. PENNATED (11) PENNONED (11) PEPLUMED (15) PEPPERED (15) [verb] To add pepper to. | [verb] To strike with something made up of small particles. | [verb] To cover with lots of (something made up of small things). PEPTIZED (22) PERDURED (12) [verb] To continue to exist, last or endure, especially for a great length of time. | [verb] To exist in such a way as to possess distinct temporal parts (in perdurantism). PEREOPOD (13) PERFUMED (16) [verb] To apply perfume to; to fill or impregnate with a perfume; to scent. | [adjective] Scented, having been given a pleasant smell. PERFUSED (14) [verb] To permeate or suffuse something, especially with a liquid or with light. | [verb] To force a fluid to flow over or through something, especially through an organ of the body. PERILLED (11) [verb] To cause to be in danger; to imperil; to risk. PERIODID (12) PERISHED (14) [verb] To decay and disappear; to waste away to nothing. | [verb] To decay in such a way that it can't be used for its original purpose | [verb] To die; to cease to live. PERJURED (18) [verb] To knowingly and willfully make a false statement of witness while in court. | [verb] To cause to violate an oath or a vow; to cause to make oath knowingly to what is untrue; to make guilty of perjury; to forswear; to corrupt. | [verb] To make a false oath to; to deceive by oaths and protestations. PERMUTED (13) [verb] Change the order of | [verb] Make a permutation of PERVADED (15) [verb] To be in every part of; to spread through. PESTERED (11) [verb] To bother, harass, or annoy persistently. | [verb] To crowd together thickly. PETALLED (11) PETALOID (11) PETIOLED (11) PHILTRED (14) PHONATED (14) [verb] To make sounds with the voice. | [verb] To use the voice to make (specific sounds). PHONEYED (17) PHORONID (14) PHOSPHID (19) PHYLLOID (17) PICKAXED (24) [verb] To use a pickaxe. PICKETED (17) [verb] To protest, organized by a labour union, typically in front of the location of employment. | [verb] To enclose or fortify with pickets or pointed stakes. | [verb] To tether to, or as if to, a picket. PICRATED (13) PICTURED (13) [verb] To represent in or with a picture. | [verb] To imagine or envision. | [verb] To depict or describe vividly. PILCHARD (16) [noun] Any of various small oily fish related to herrings, family Clupeidae. PILEATED (11) PILFERED (14) [verb] To steal in small quantities, or articles of small value; to practise petty theft. PILLAGED (12) [verb] To loot or plunder by force, especially in time of war. PILLARED (11) PILLOWED (14) [verb] To rest as on a pillow. PINELAND (11) PINEWOOD (14) [noun] The wood of a pine | [noun] A forest or grove of pine trees, either natural or as a plantation PINIONED (11) [verb] To cut off the pinion of a bird’s wing, or otherwise disable or bind its wings, in order to prevent it from flying. | [verb] To bind the arms of someone, so as to deprive him of their use; to disable by so binding. | [verb] (transferred sense) To restrain; to limit. PINKENED (15) PINNATED (11) PINNIPED (13) [noun] Any of various large marine mammals belonging to the superfamily (formerly considered a suborder) Pinnipedia comprising walruses, eared seals and earless seals. | [adjective] Pertaining to or similar to such a mammal. PIPETTED (13) [verb] To transfer or measure the volume of a liquid using a pipette. PISTOLED (11) [verb] To shoot (at) a target with a pistol. PLACATED (13) [verb] To calm; to bring peace to; to influence someone who was furious to the point that they become content or at least no longer irate. PLASMOID (13) PLAYLAND (14) PLEACHED (16) [verb] To unite by interweaving, as branches of shrubs, trees, etc., to create a hedge; to interlock, to plash. | [adjective] Entwined, intertwined, interwoven, plaited. | [adjective] Of a hedge, trees, etc.: created by interweaving branches. PLICATED (13) PLIGHTED (15) [verb] To expose to risk; to pledge. | [verb] Specifically, to pledge (one's troth etc.) as part of a marriage ceremony. | [verb] To promise (oneself) to someone, or to do something. PLOUGHED (15) [verb] To use a plough on to prepare for planting. | [verb] To use a plough. | [verb] To have sex with, penetrate. PLOWHEAD (17) PLOWLAND (14) [noun] The notional area of land able to be farmed in a year by a team of 8 oxen pulling a carruca plow, usually reckoned at 120 acres. | [noun] Land that has been or is meant to be ploughed PLUMAGED (14) PLUMIPED (15) POCKETED (17) [verb] To put (something) into a pocket. | [verb] To cause a ball to go into one of the pockets of the table; to complete a shot. | [verb] To take and keep (something, especially money that is not one's own). POETISED (11) [verb] To write as a poet; to put into a poem POETIZED (20) [verb] To make poetic. | [verb] To compose poetry. POGROMED (14) POISONED (11) [verb] To use poison to kill or paralyse (somebody). | [verb] To pollute; to cause to become poisonous. | [verb] To cause to become much worse. POKEWEED (18) [noun] A poisonous North American plant, Phytolacca americana, with reddish stems, broad leaves, clusters of white flowers, and dark purple berries. POLEAXED (18) [verb] To fell someone with, or as if with, a poleaxe. | [verb] To astonish; to shock or surprise utterly. POLEWARD (14) [adjective] Towards a (north or south) pole | [adverb] Towards a pole of a planet POLISHED (14) [verb] To shine; to make a surface very smooth or shiny by rubbing, cleaning, or grinding. | [verb] To refine; remove imperfections from. | [verb] To apply shoe polish to shoes. POLLENED (11) POLLUTED (11) [verb] To make something harmful, especially by the addition of some unwanted product. | [verb] To make something or somewhere less suitable for some activity, especially by the introduction of some unnatural factor. | [verb] To corrupt or profane POLYBRID (16) POLYPOID (16) [adjective] Resembling a polyp. | [adjective] Marked by the presence of lesions suggesting polyps. POMMELED (15) [verb] To pound or beat. | [adjective] (often in combination) Having a pommel. PONDERED (12) [verb] To wonder, think of deeply | [verb] To consider (something) carefully and thoroughly; to chew over, mull over | [verb] To weigh PONDWEED (15) [noun] Any of several plants that grow in ponds or similar aquatic conditions: | [noun] Charales, an order of green algae PORKWOOD (18) PORTAGED (12) [verb] To carry a boat overland PORTALED (11) PORTERED (11) POSTCARD (13) [noun] A rectangular piece of thick paper or thin cardboard intended to be written on and mailed without an envelope. In the case of a picture postcard one side carries a picture or photograph. | [verb] To send a postcard to. | [verb] To send by means of a postcard. POSTPAID (13) [adjective] (postage) already paid or included in price | [adjective] Paid after the service (used especially of cellular phones) POSTURED (11) [verb] To put one's body into a posture or series of postures, especially hoping that one will be noticed and admired | [verb] To pretend to have an opinion or a conviction | [verb] To place in a particular position or attitude; to pose. POTHERED (14) POTHOLED (14) [adjective] Having potholes in its surface POTSHARD (14) POTSHERD (14) [noun] A piece of ceramic from pottery, often found on an archaeological site. POTTERED (11) [verb] To act in a vague or unmotivated way; to fuss about with unimportant things. | [verb] To move slowly or aimlessly. (Often potter about, potter around.) | [verb] To poke repeatedly. POWDERED (15) [verb] To reduce to fine particles; to pound, grind, or rub into a powder. | [verb] To sprinkle with powder, or as if with powder. | [verb] To use powder on the hair or skin. POWWOWED (20) [verb] (of Native Americans) To hold a meeting; to gather together in council. | [verb] (of Native Americans and by extension other groups, such as the Pennsylvania Dutch) To conduct a ritual in which magic is used. | [verb] To hold a private conference. PRATTLED (11) [verb] To speak incessantly and in a childish manner; to babble. PREACHED (16) [verb] To give a sermon. | [verb] To proclaim by public discourse; to utter in a sermon or a formal religious harangue. | [verb] To advise or recommend earnestly. PREACTED (13) PREARMED (13) PREBAKED (17) PREBOUND (13) PRECEDED (14) [verb] To go before, go in front of. | [verb] To cause to be preceded; to preface; to introduce. | [verb] To have higher rank than (someone or something else). PRECISED (13) [verb] (NNES or European Union documents) To make or render precise; to specify. | [verb] To write a précis of a work; to summarise, abridge PRECITED (13) PRECODED (14) PRECURED (13) PREDATED (12) [verb] To designate a date earlier than the actual one; to move a date, appointment, event, or period of time to an earlier point (contrast "postdate".) | [verb] To exist or to occur before something else; to antedate. | [verb] To prey upon something. PREFACED (16) [verb] To introduce or make a comment before (the main point). | [verb] To give a preface to. PREFADED (15) PREFILED (14) PREFIRED (14) PREFIXED (21) [verb] To determine beforehand; to set in advance. | [verb] To put or fix before, or at the beginning of something; to place at the start. | [adjective] Having a (specified) prefix. PRELUDED (12) [verb] To introduce something, as a prelude. | [verb] To play an introduction or prelude; to give a prefatory performance. PREMISED (13) [verb] To state or assume something as a proposition to an argument. | [verb] To make a premise. | [verb] To set forth beforehand, or as introductory to the main subject; to offer previously, as something to explain or aid in understanding what follows. PREMIXED (20) [verb] To blend in advance. | [adjective] Mixed prior to use or sale PREPARED (13) [verb] To make ready for a specific future purpose; to set up; to assemble or equip. | [verb] To make ready for eating or drinking; to cook. | [verb] To make oneself ready; to get ready, make preparation. PRESAGED (12) [verb] To predict or foretell something. | [verb] To make a prediction. | [verb] To have a presentiment of; to feel beforehand; to foreknow. PRESCIND (13) [verb] (with from) To abstract (from); to dismiss from consideration. | [verb] To pay exclusive attention to. PRESIDED (12) [verb] To act as president or chairperson. | [verb] To exercise authority or control, oversit. | [verb] To be a featured solo performer. PRESUMED (13) [verb] With infinitive object: to be so presumptuous as (to do something) without proper authority or permission. | [verb] To perform, do (something) without authority; to lay claim to without permission. | [verb] To assume or suggest to be true (without proof); to take for granted, to suppose. PRETAPED (13) PRETTIED (11) [verb] To make pretty; to beautify PRETYPED (16) PREVISED (14) [verb] To foresee. | [verb] To forewarn. PRICKLED (17) [verb] To feel a prickle. | [verb] To cause (someone) to feel a prickle; to prick. PRIESTED (11) [verb] To ordain as a priest. PRISMOID (13) [noun] A prismatoid that has planar sides, and the same number of vertices in both of its parallel planes. | [noun] An antiprism. | [adjective] Resembling a prism. PRISONED (11) [verb] To imprison. PROBATED (13) [verb] To establish the legality of (a will). PROCURED (13) [verb] To acquire or obtain. | [verb] To obtain a person as a prostitute for somebody else. | [verb] To induce or persuade someone to do something. PRODUCED (14) [verb] To yield, make or manufacture; to generate. | [verb] To make (a thing) available to a person, an authority, etc.; to provide for inspection. | [verb] To sponsor and present (a motion picture, etc) to an audience or to the public. PROFANED (14) [verb] To violate (something sacred); to treat with abuse, irreverence, obloquy, or contempt; to desecrate | [verb] To put to a wrong or unworthy use; to debase; to abuse; to defile. | [adjective] Treated with irreverence or without due respect. PROFILED (14) [verb] To create a summary or collection of information about (a person, etc.). | [verb] To act based on such a summary, especially one that is a stereotype; to engage in profiling. | [verb] To draw in profile or outline. PROFITED (14) [verb] To benefit (somebody), be of use to (somebody). | [verb] (construed with from) To benefit, gain. | [verb] (construed with from) To take advantage of, exploit, use. PROFOUND (14) [noun] The deep; the sea; the ocean. | [noun] An abyss. | [verb] To cause to sink deeply; to cause to dive or penetrate far down. PROLOGED (12) PROMISED (13) [verb] To commit to (some action or outcome), or to assure (a person) of such commitment; to make an oath or vow. | [verb] To give grounds for expectation, especially of something good. | [adjective] Predicted; expected; anticipated. PROMOTED (13) [verb] To raise (someone) to a more important, responsible, or remunerative job or rank. | [verb] To advocate or urge on behalf of (something or someone); to attempt to popularize or sell by means of advertising or publicity. | [verb] To encourage, urge or incite. PROMPTED (15) [verb] To lead (someone) toward what they should say or do. | [verb] To show or tell an actor/person the words they should be saying, or actions they should be doing. | [verb] To initiate; to cause or lead to. PRONATED (11) [verb] To turn or rotate one’s hand and forearm so that the palm faces down if the forearm is horizontal, back if the arm is pointing down, or forward if the forearm is pointing up; to twist the right forearm counterclockwise or the left forearm clockwise. | [verb] To twist the foot so that if walking the weight would be borne on the inner edge of the foot. | [verb] To become pronated. PROPINED (13) PROPONED (13) PROPOSED (13) [verb] To suggest a plan, course of action, etc. | [verb] (sometimes followed by to) To ask for a person's hand in marriage. | [verb] To intend. PROPOUND (13) [verb] To put forward; to offer for discussion or debate. PRORATED (11) [verb] To divide proportionately, especially by day; to divide pro rata. PROTOPOD (13) [noun] The basal segment of the limb of a crustacean PROTOXID (18) PROVIDED (15) [verb] To make a living; earn money for necessities. | [verb] To act to prepare for something. | [verb] To establish as a previous condition; to stipulate. PROVOKED (18) [verb] To cause someone to become annoyed or angry. | [verb] To bring about a reaction. | [verb] To appeal. PTEROPOD (13) [noun] Any of free-swimming pelagic sea snails and sea slugs, of the suborder Thecosomata, that have winglike lobes on the feet; a sea butterfly. PUCKERED (17) [verb] To pinch or wrinkle; to squeeze inwardly, to dimple or fold. PUDIBUND (14) PULPWOOD (16) [noun] Wood, usually softwood, used for pulping to make paper. PULSATED (11) [verb] To expand and contract rhythmically; to throb or to beat. | [verb] To quiver, vibrate, or flash; as to the beat of music. | [verb] To produce a recurring increase and decrease of some quantity. PUMMELED (15) [verb] To hit or strike heavily and repeatedly. PUNISHED (14) [verb] To cause to suffer for crime or misconduct, to administer disciplinary action. | [verb] To treat harshly and unfairly. | [verb] To handle or beat severely; to maul. PURBLIND (13) [adjective] Partially blind. | [adjective] Near-sighted or dim-sighted. | [adjective] Lacking in discernment or understanding. PUREBRED (13) PURIFIED (14) [adjective] Made or rendered pure or more pure. | [verb] To cleanse, or rid of impurities. | [verb] To free from guilt or sin. PURPOSED (13) [verb] To have set as one's purpose; resolve to accomplish; intend; plan. | [verb] (passive) To design for some purpose. | [verb] To discourse. PURVEYED (17) [verb] To prepare in advance (for or to do something); to plan, make provision. | [verb] To furnish or provide. | [verb] To procure; to get. PUSTULED (11) PUTTERED (11) [verb] To be active, but not excessively busy, at a task or a series of tasks. | [verb] To produce intermittent bursts of sound in the course of operating. PYRANOID (14) PYRENOID (14) QUARRIED (18) [adjective] Provided with quarry or prey. | [verb] To obtain (or mine) stone by extraction from a quarry. | [verb] To extract or slowly obtain by long, tedious searching. QUAVERED (21) [verb] To shake in a trembling manner. | [verb] To use the voice in a trembling manner, as in speaking or singing. | [verb] To utter quaveringly. QUENCHED (23) [verb] To satisfy, especially an actual or figurative thirst. | [verb] To extinguish or put out (as a fire or light). | [verb] To cool rapidly by dipping into a bath of coolant, as a blacksmith quenching hot iron. QUIBBLED (22) [verb] To complain or argue in a trivial or petty manner. QUIVERED (21) [verb] To shake or move with slight and tremulous motion; to tremble; to quake; to shudder; to shiver. | [adjective] Furnished with, or carrying, a quiver for arrows. | [adjective] Sheathed, as in a quiver. RABBETED (13) [verb] To cut a rabbet in a piece of material. RABBITED (13) [verb] To hunt rabbits. | [verb] To flee. | [verb] To talk incessantly and in a childish manner; to babble annoyingly. RACEMOID (13) RACKETED (15) [verb] To strike with, or as if with, a racket. | [verb] To make a clattering noise. | [verb] To be dissipated; to carouse. RADIATED (10) [verb] To extend, send or spread out from a center like radii. | [verb] To emit rays or waves. | [verb] To come out or proceed in rays or waves. RADICAND (12) RAFTERED (12) [adjective] Having rafters (often of a specified kind). RAGOUTED (10) RAILBIRD (11) [noun] A rail or similar bird | [noun] A gambler; originally specifically a horseracing enthusiast RAILHEAD (12) [noun] A point on a railway system where goods are loaded, unloaded or transferred to other transport. | [noun] The furthest point on a railroad/railway under construction to which rails have been laid. | [noun] The top surface (head) of a rail. RAILROAD (9) [noun] A permanent road consisting of fixed metal rails to drive trains or similar motorized vehicles on. | [noun] The transportation system comprising such roads and vehicles fitted to travel on the rails, usually with several vehicles connected together in a train. | [noun] A single, privately or publicly owned property comprising one or more such roads and usually associated assets RAINBAND (11) RAINBIRD (11) [noun] Any of the coucal species Centropus supercilliosus, Centropus cupreicadus, Centropus senegalensis. RAMIFIED (14) [verb] To divide into branches or subdivisions. | [verb] To spread or diversify into multiple fields or categories. RAMPAGED (14) [verb] To move about wildly or violently. RANCORED (11) RANSOMED (11) [verb] (14th century) To deliver, especially in context of sin or relevant penalties. | [verb] To pay a price to set someone free from captivity or punishment. | [verb] To exact a ransom for, or a payment on. RAPESEED (11) [noun] The seed of the rape plant, Brassica napus, used widely for animal feed and vegetable oil. | [noun] The rape plant itself. RAPIERED (11) RAPPELED (13) RAPTURED (11) [verb] To cause to experience great happiness or excitement. | [verb] To experience great happiness or excitement. | [verb] To take (someone) off the Earth and bring (them) to Heaven as part of the Rapture. RAREFIED (12) [adjective] Distant from the lives and everyday concerns of ordinary people; esoteric, exclusive, select. | [adjective] Elevated in style or nature, sublime; of high intellectual or moral value. | [adjective] (of a gas etc.) Less dense than usual; thin. RARIFIED (12) [adjective] Distant from the lives and everyday concerns of ordinary people; esoteric, exclusive, select. | [adjective] Elevated in style or nature, sublime; of high intellectual or moral value. | [adjective] (of a gas etc.) Less dense than usual; thin. RATIFIED (12) [verb] To give formal consent to; make officially valid, sign off on. RATIONED (9) [verb] To supply with a ration; to limit (someone) to a specific allowance of something. | [verb] To portion out (especially during a shortage of supply); to limit access to. | [verb] To restrict (an activity etc.) RATOONED (9) [verb] (of a plant) To sprout ratoons. | [verb] To cut a plant, especially sugar cane, so that it will produce ratoons. RATTENED (9) RAVELLED (12) [verb] To tangle; entangle; entwine confusedly, become snarled; thus to involve; perplex; confuse. | [verb] To undo the intricacies of; to disentangle or clarify. | [verb] To pull apart (especially cloth or a seam); unravel. RAVISHED (15) [verb] To seize and carry away by violence; to snatch by force. | [verb] (usually passive) To transport with joy or delight; to delight to ecstasy. | [verb] To rape. RAWBONED (14) [adjective] (of a person) thin and bony; having prominent bones; gaunt RAWHIDED (16) REALISED (9) [verb] To make real; to convert from the imaginary or fictitious into reality; to bring into real existence | [verb] To become aware of (a fact or situation, especially of something that has been true for a long time). | [verb] To cause to seem real; to sense vividly or strongly; to make one's own in thought or experience. REALIZED (18) [verb] To make real; to convert from the imaginary or fictitious into reality; to bring into real existence | [verb] To become aware of (a fact or situation, especially of something that has been true for a long time). | [verb] To cause to seem real; to sense vividly or strongly; to make one's own in thought or experience. REARGUED (10) REARWARD (12) [noun] The part that comes last or is situated in the rear; conclusion, wind-up. | [noun] The last troop; the rear of an army; a rear guard. | [adjective] Toward the back or rear of something. REASCEND (11) [verb] To ascend again. REASONED (9) [verb] To deduce or come to a conclusion by being rational | [verb] To perform a process of deduction or of induction, in order to convince or to confute; to argue. | [verb] To converse; to compare opinions. REAVOWED (15) REAWAKED (16) REBAITED (11) REBELLED (11) [verb] To resist or become defiant toward an authority. REBILLED (11) REBODIED (12) REBOILED (11) REBOOKED (15) [verb] To book again. REBOOTED (11) [verb] To execute a computer's boot process, effectively resetting the computer and causing the operating system to reload, possibly after a system failure. | [verb] To start afresh. | [verb] Restart; to return to a an initial configuration or state. REBUFFED (17) [verb] To refuse; to offer sudden or harsh resistance; to turn down or shut out. | [verb] To buff again. REBURIED (11) [verb] To bury again REBUTTED (11) [verb] To drive back or beat back; to repulse. | [verb] To deny the truth of something, especially by presenting arguments that disprove it. RECALLED (11) [verb] To withdraw, retract (one's words etc.); to revoke (an order). | [verb] To call back, bring back or summon (someone) to a specific place, station etc. | [verb] To bring back (someone) to or from a particular mental or physical state, activity etc. RECANTED (11) [verb] To withdraw or repudiate a statement or opinion formerly expressed, especially formally and publicly. RECAPPED (15) [verb] To seal (something) again with a cap. | [verb] To replace the worn tread on a tire by gluing a new outer portion. (US English only - Retread in UK English) | [verb] To recapitulate. RECEIVED (14) [verb] To take, as something that is offered, given, committed, sent, paid, etc.; to accept; to be given something. | [verb] To take goods knowing them to be stolen. | [verb] To act as a host for guests; to give admittance to; to permit to enter, as into one's house, presence, company, etc. RECESSED (11) [verb] To inset into something, or to recede. | [verb] To take or declare a break. | [verb] To appoint, with a recess appointment. RECHEWED (17) RECKONED (15) [verb] To count; to enumerate; to number; also, to compute; to calculate. | [verb] To count as in a number, rank, or series; to estimate by rank or quality; to place by estimation; to account; to esteem; to repute. | [verb] To charge, attribute, or adjudge to one, as having a certain quality or value. RECLINED (11) [verb] To cause to lean back; to bend back. | [verb] To put in a resting position. | [verb] To lean back. RECOALED (11) RECOCKED (17) RECOILED (11) [verb] To pull back, especially in disgust, horror or astonishment. | [verb] To retreat before an opponent. | [verb] To retire, withdraw. RECOINED (11) RECOMBED (15) RECOOKED (15) RECOPIED (13) RECORDED (12) [verb] To make a record of information. | [verb] To make an audio or video recording of. | [verb] To give legal status to by making an official public record. RECORKED (15) [verb] To replace a cork in (a bottle). RECOUPED (13) [verb] To make back, as an investment. | [verb] To recover from an error. | [verb] To keep back rightfully (a part), as if by cutting off, so as to diminish a sum due; to take off (a part) from damages; to deduct. RECRATED (11) RECURRED (11) [verb] To have recourse (to) someone or something for assistance, support etc. | [verb] To happen again. | [verb] To recurse. RECURVED (14) [verb] To curve again, to rebend. | [verb] To curve back on itself. | [verb] (of a storm) To change direction. RECYCLED (16) [verb] To break down and reuse component materials. | [verb] To reuse as a whole. | [verb] To collect or place in a bin for recycling. REDACTED (12) [verb] To censor, to black out or remove parts of a document while releasing the remainder. | [verb] To black out legally protected sections of text in a document provided to opposing counsel, typically as part of the discovery process. | [verb] To reduce to form, as literary matter; to digest and put in shape (matter for publication); to edit. REDDENED (11) [verb] To become red or redder. | [verb] To make red or redder. | [adjective] Made red. REDEEMED (12) [verb] To recover ownership of something by buying it back. | [verb] To liberate by payment of a ransom. | [verb] To set free by force. REDEFIED (13) REDEMAND (12) REDENIED (10) REDIALED (10) [verb] To dial again REDIPPED (14) REDLINED (10) [verb] To mark a drawing or document for correction or modification. | [verb] To run an internal combustion engine to its maximum or maximum recommended speed. | [verb] To deny or complicate access to services (such as banking, insurance, or healthcare) to residents in specific, often racially determined, areas. REDOCKED (16) REDONNED (10) REDUBBED (14) REDUVIID (13) REEARNED (9) REECHOED (14) REEDBIRD (12) REEDITED (10) [verb] Edit again REEVOKED (16) REFECTED (14) REFELLED (12) REFENCED (14) REFEREED (12) [verb] To act as a referee. | [adjective] Said of articles or books that have undergone peer review | [adjective] Said of a journal whose articles are submitted to peer review REFERRED (12) [verb] To direct the attention of. | [verb] To submit to (another person or group) for consideration; to send or direct elsewhere. | [verb] To place in or under by a mental or rational process; to assign to, as a class, a cause, source, a motive, reason, or ground of explanation. REFILLED (12) [verb] To fill up once again. | [verb] To repeat a prescription. REFILMED (14) REFITTED (12) [verb] To fit again; to put back into its place. | [verb] To prepare for use again; to repair or restore. | [verb] To fit out or supply again (with something). REFLATED (12) [verb] To reinflate, to inflate again. | [verb] To restore the general level of prices to a previous or desirable level. REFLEXED (19) [verb] To bend, turn back or reflect. | [verb] To respond to a stimulus. | [adjective] Turned backwards REFLOWED (15) [verb] To flow back again. | [verb] To cause to flow again, to remelt. | [verb] (wordprocessing) To modify the layout of text around other objects in a document. REFLUXED (19) [verb] To flow back or return. | [verb] To boil a liquid in a vessel having a reflux condenser REFOLDED (13) [verb] To fold again. REFORGED (13) [verb] Forge again REFORMED (14) [verb] To put into a new and improved form or condition; to restore to a former good state, or bring from bad to good; to change from worse to better | [verb] To return to a good state; to amend or correct one's own character or habits | [verb] To form again or in a new configuration. REFRAMED (14) [verb] To frame again. | [verb] To redescribe, from a different perspective; to relabel. REFUELED (12) [verb] To refill with fuel. REFUNDED (13) [verb] To return (money) to (someone); to reimburse. | [verb] To supply again with funds. | [verb] To pour back. REGAINED (10) [verb] To get back; to recover possession of. REGARDED (11) [verb] To look at; to observe. | [verb] To consider, look upon (something) in a given way etc. | [verb] To take notice of, pay attention to. REGAUGED (11) REGEARED (10) REGILDED (11) [verb] To gild again. REGLAZED (19) [verb] To glaze again REGLOWED (13) REGORGED (11) [verb] To disgorge or vomit. | [verb] To swallow again; to swallow back. REGRADED (11) [verb] To grade again, give a new grade or grading to. | [verb] To regroup or reassign. | [verb] To change the classification of (potentially secret documentation). REGRATED (10) REGROUND (10) REHABBED (16) [verb] To rehabilitate. REHANGED (13) REHASHED (15) [verb] To repeat with minor variation. | [verb] To analyze a prior contentious or embarrassing event. | [verb] To recompute the structure of a hash table, taking into account any newly added items. REHEATED (12) [verb] To heat something after it has cooled off, especially previously cooked food (also in figurative senses). | [verb] To become hot again after having cooled off (also in figurative senses). | [verb] Alternative form of rehete REHEELED (12) [verb] To fit (a shoe, stocking, etc.) with a replacement heel. REHEMMED (16) REHINGED (13) REHOUSED (12) [verb] To give a new house to; to relocate someone to a new house. | [verb] To store in a new location. REIMAGED (12) REISSUED (9) [verb] To issue again. | [verb] To reprint a series of postage stamps from old plates. | [verb] In patent law: to permit a patent with ministerial errors to be corrected and enforced for the remainder of the original term of the patent. REJECTED (18) [verb] To refuse to accept. | [verb] To block a shot, especially if it sends the ball off the court. | [verb] To refuse a romantic advance. REJOICED (18) [verb] To be very happy, be delighted, exult; to feel joy. | [verb] To have (someone) as a lover or spouse; to enjoy sexually. | [verb] To make happy, exhilarate. REJOINED (16) [verb] To join again; to unite after separation. | [verb] To come, or go, again into the presence of; to join the company of again. | [verb] To state in reply; -- followed by an object clause. REJUDGED (18) RELAPSED (11) [verb] To fall back again; to slide or turn back into a former state or practice. | [verb] (of a disease) To recur; to worsen, be aggravated (after a period of improvement). | [verb] To slip or slide back physically; to turn back. RELEASED (9) [verb] To let go (of); to cease to hold or contain. | [verb] To make available to the public. | [verb] To free or liberate; to set free. RELENTED (9) [verb] To become less severe or intense; to become less hard, harsh, or cruel; to soften in temper | [verb] To slacken; to abate. | [verb] To lessen, make less severe or intense. RELIEVED (12) [verb] To ease (a person, person's thoughts etc.) from mental distress; to stop (someone) feeling anxious or worried, to alleviate the distress of. | [verb] To ease (someone, a part of the body etc.) or give relief from physical pain or discomfort. | [verb] To alleviate (pain, distress, mental discomfort etc.). RELINKED (13) [verb] To link again or anew. RELISHED (12) [verb] To taste or eat with pleasure, to like the flavor of | [verb] To take great pleasure in. | [verb] To taste; to have a specified taste or flavour. RELISTED (9) [verb] To list again. RELOADED (10) [verb] To load (something) again | [verb] To refresh a copy of a program etc. in memory or of a web page etc. on screen | [verb] To load a gun again; or recharge a used cartridge. RELOANED (9) RELOCKED (15) [verb] To lock again. RELOOKED (13) [verb] To look again. RELUCTED (11) REMAILED (11) REMAINED (11) [verb] To stay behind while others withdraw; to be left after others have been removed or destroyed; to be left after a number or quantity has been subtracted or cut off; to be left as not included or comprised. | [verb] To continue unchanged in place, form, or condition, or undiminished in quantity; to abide; to stay; to endure; to last. | [verb] To await; to be left to. REMANDED (12) [verb] To send a prisoner back to custody. | [verb] To send a case back to a lower court for further consideration. | [verb] To send back. REMANNED (11) [verb] To supply with new personnel. REMAPPED (15) [verb] To assign differently; to relabel or repurpose. | [verb] To map again. REMARKED (15) [verb] To mark again. | [verb] To make a remark or remarks; to comment. | [verb] To express in words or writing; to state; to make a comment REMEDIED (12) [verb] To provide or serve as a remedy for. REMELTED (11) REMENDED (12) REMERGED (12) REMINDED (12) [verb] To cause one to experience a memory (of someone or something); to bring to the notice or consideration (of a person). REMINTED (11) REMITTED (11) [verb] To transmit or send (e.g. money in payment); to supply. | [verb] To forgive, pardon (a wrong, offence, etc.). | [verb] To refrain from exacting or enforcing. REMOLDED (12) [verb] Mold again, apply a new mold to RENAILED (9) RENDERED (10) [verb] (ditransitive) To cause to become. | [verb] To interpret, give an interpretation or rendition of. | [verb] To translate into another language. RENESTED (9) RENIGGED (11) RENOWNED (12) [adjective] Famous, celebrated, or well-known. REOPENED (11) [verb] To open (something) again. | [verb] To open again. REPACKED (17) [verb] To pack again. | [verb] To clean the bearings and replace the grease on a wheel. REPAIRED (11) [verb] To restore to good working order, fix, or improve damaged condition; to mend; to remedy. | [verb] To make amends for, as for an injury, by an equivalent; to indemnify for. | [verb] To transfer oneself to another place. REPARKED (15) REPASSED (11) [verb] To pass (back) again, especially in the opposite direction; to return. REPASTED (11) REPEALED (11) [verb] To cancel, invalidate, annul. | [verb] To recall; to summon (a person) again; to bring (a person) back from exile or banishment. | [verb] To suppress; to repel. REPEATED (11) [verb] To do or say again (and again). | [verb] To refill (a prescription). | [verb] To happen again; recur. REPEGGED (13) REPELLED (11) [verb] To turn (someone) away from a privilege, right, job, etc. | [verb] To reject, put off (a request, demand etc.). | [verb] To ward off (a malignant influence, attack etc.). REPENTED (11) [verb] To feel pain, sorrow, or regret for what one has done or omitted to do; the cause for repenting may be indicated with "of". | [verb] To be sorry for sin as morally evil, and to seek forgiveness; to cease to practice sin and to love. | [verb] To feel pain on account of; to remember with sorrow. REPERKED (15) REPETEND (11) [noun] A refrain (having repeated words, sounds or phrases). | [noun] A repeated part in repeating decimals. REPINNED (11) REPLACED (13) [verb] To restore to a former place, position, condition, etc.; to put back | [verb] To refund; to repay; to pay back | [verb] To supply or substitute an equivalent for REPLATED (11) REPLAYED (14) [verb] To play again. | [verb] To display a recording of a previous event, especially multiple times. REPOLLED (11) REPORTED (11) [verb] To relate details of (an event or incident); to recount, describe (something). | [verb] To repeat (something one has heard), to retell; to pass on, convey (a message, information etc.). | [verb] To take oneself (to someone or something) for guidance or support; to appeal. REPOTTED (11) [verb] To move a growing plant from one pot to a larger one to allow for further growth REPOURED (11) REPRICED (13) [verb] Give a new price to REPRISED (11) [verb] To take (something) up or on again. | [verb] To repeat or resume an action | [verb] To recompense; to pay. REPROBED (13) REPROVED (14) [verb] To express disapproval. | [verb] To criticise, rebuke or reprimand (someone), usually in a gentle and kind tone. | [verb] To deny or reject (a feeling, behaviour, action etc.). REPUGNED (12) REPULSED (11) [verb] To repel or drive back. | [verb] To reject or rebuff. | [verb] To cause revulsion in. REPUMPED (15) REQUIRED (18) [verb] To ask (someone) for something; to request. | [verb] To demand, to insist upon (having); to call for authoritatively. | [verb] Naturally to demand (something) as indispensable; to need, to call for as necessary. REQUITED (18) [verb] To return (usually something figurative) that has been given; to repay; to recompense | [verb] To retaliate. RERACKED (15) RERAISED (9) RERECORD (11) [noun] An instance of using a save state while recording a speedrun. | [verb] To record again. | [verb] The act of using a save state while recording a speedrun. REREMIND (11) REREWARD (12) RERIGGED (11) REROLLED (9) REROOFED (12) [verb] To roof again; to tear off an old roof and replace with a new roof. REROUTED (9) [verb] To change the route taken by something. RESAILED (9) RESCALED (11) [verb] To alter the scale of a drawing or project; to change the physical proportions. | [verb] To change the scope of a business or project to meet a change in demands. | [verb] To scale again RESCORED (11) [verb] To score again; to assign new marks to. | [verb] To arrange (music) again. RESEALED (9) [verb] To seal (something) again (in any sense of "apply a seal to"). RESEATED (9) [verb] To provide (e.g. a room) with more, or new, seats. | [verb] To seat (someone) again, to give somebody a different seat. | [verb] To sit down again. RESECTED (11) [verb] To remove (some part of an organ or structure) by surgical means. RESEEDED (10) [verb] To sow seeds again; to resow or replant. | [verb] Of a non-perennial plant, to produce seeds to ensure the following generation without human intervention; to self-sow. | [verb] To reset the input of an algorithm so as to ensure different results. RESEIZED (18) RESENTED (9) [verb] To feel resentment over; to consider as an affront. | [verb] To express displeasure or indignation at. | [verb] To be sensible of; to feel. RESERVED (12) [verb] To keep back; to retain. | [verb] To keep in store for future or special use. | [verb] To book in advance; to make a reservation. RESHAPED (14) [verb] To make into a different shape | [verb] To reorganize RESHAVED (15) RESHINED (12) RESHOWED (15) [verb] To show again. RESIFTED (12) RESIGNED (10) [verb] To sign again; to provide one's signature again. | [verb] (by extension) To sign a contract renewing or restarting a professional relationship, such as that of a professional athlete with a sports team. | [verb] To give up; to relinquish ownership of. RESINOID (9) RESISTED (9) [verb] To attempt to counter the actions or effects of. | [verb] To withstand the actions of. | [verb] To oppose. RESLATED (9) RESOAKED (13) RESODDED (11) RESOLVED (12) [verb] To find a solution to (a problem). | [verb] To reduce to simple or intelligible notions; to make clear or certain; to unravel; to explain. | [verb] To make a firm decision to do something. RESORBED (11) [verb] To absorb (something) again. | [verb] To undergo resorption. | [verb] To dissolve (bone, sinew, suture, etc.) and assimilate it. RESORTED (9) [verb] To have recourse (to), now especially from necessity or frustration. | [verb] To fall back; to revert. | [verb] To make one's way, go (to). RESPACED (13) RESPADED (12) RESPIRED (11) [verb] To breathe in and out; to engage in the process of respiration. | [verb] To recover one's breath or breathe easily following stress. | [verb] To (inhale and) exhale; to breathe. RESPITED (11) [verb] To delay or postpone (an event). | [verb] To allow (a person) extra time to fulfil some obligation. RESPREAD (11) RESTAGED (10) [verb] To stage a production again RESTATED (9) [verb] To state again (without changing) | [verb] To state differently; to rephrase RESTOKED (13) RESTORED (9) [verb] To reestablish, or bring back into existence. | [verb] To bring back to good condition from a state of decay or ruin. | [verb] To give or bring back (that which has been lost or taken); to bring back to the owner; to replace. RESTYLED (12) [verb] To refashion something in a new style or shape in order to fit another purpose. | [verb] To give another name, designation or title to something. RESULTED (9) [verb] To proceed, spring up or rise, as a consequence, from facts, arguments, premises, combination of circumstances, consultation, thought or endeavor. | [verb] (followed by "in") To have as a consequence; to lead to; to bring about | [verb] To return to the proprietor (or heirs) after a reversion. RESURGED (10) RETACKED (15) RETAGGED (11) RETAILED (9) [verb] To sell at retail, or in small quantities directly to customers. | [verb] To sell secondhand, or in broken parts. | [verb] To repeat or circulate (news or rumours) to others. RETAINED (9) [verb] To keep in possession or use. | [verb] To keep in one's pay or service. | [verb] To employ by paying a retainer. RETARDED (10) [verb] To keep delaying; to continue to hinder; to prevent from progress | [verb] To put off; to postpone. | [verb] To be slow or dilatory to perform (something). RETASTED (9) RETEAMED (11) RETESTED (9) [verb] To test again. RETHREAD (12) RETINOID (9) [adjective] Pertaining to or resembling a resin. | [noun] Any of a class of compounds whose structure or effects on the body resemble retinol (vitamin A). RETINTED (9) RETINUED (9) RETITLED (9) [verb] To provide with a new title. RETOOLED (9) [verb] To adjust; to optimize; to rebuild. RETORTED (9) [verb] To say something sharp or witty in answer to a remark or accusation. | [verb] To make a remark which reverses an argument upon its originator; to return, as an argument, accusation, censure, or incivility. | [verb] To bend or curve back. RETRACED (11) [verb] To trace (a line, etc. in drawing) again. | [verb] To go back over something, usually in an attempt of rediscovery. RETURNED (9) [verb] To come or go back (to a place or person). | [verb] To go back in thought, narration, or argument. | [verb] To turn back, retreat. REUNITED (9) [verb] To unite again. | [adjective] United again after being separated REVALUED (12) [verb] To value again, give a new value to. | [verb] To apply revaluation to a pension benefit. REVAMPED (16) [verb] To renovate, revise, improve or renew. REVEALED (12) [verb] To uncover; to show and display that which was hidden. | [verb] To communicate that which could not be known or discovered without divine or supernatural instruction. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the revelations of a divinity to humankind. REVELLED (12) [verb] To make merry; to have a happy, lively time. | [verb] To take delight (in something). | [verb] To draw back; to retract. REVENGED (13) [verb] To take revenge for (a particular harmful action) or on behalf of (its victim); to avenge. | [verb] To take one's revenge (on or upon someone). | [verb] To take vengeance; to revenge itself. REVENUED (12) REVERBED (14) REVEREND (12) [noun] A member of the Christian clergy; a minister. | [adjective] Worthy of reverence or respect; reverent. REVERSED (12) [verb] To turn something around so that it faces the opposite direction or runs in the opposite sequence. | [verb] To turn something inside out or upside down. | [verb] To transpose the positions of two things. REVERTED (12) [verb] (now rare) To turn back, or turn to the contrary; to reverse. | [verb] To throw back; to reflect; to reverberate. | [verb] To cause to return to a former condition. REVESTED (12) REVETTED (12) [verb] To face (an embankment, etc.) with masonry, wood, or other material. REVIEWED (15) [verb] To survey; to look broadly over. | [verb] To write a critical evaluation of a new art work etc.; to write a review. | [verb] To look back over in order to correct or edit; to revise. REVOICED (14) REVOLTED (12) [verb] To rebel, particularly against authority. | [verb] To repel greatly. | [verb] To cause to turn back; to roll or drive back; to put to flight. REVOLVED (15) [verb] (Physical movement.) | [verb] (Mental activity.) REVULSED (12) REWARDED (13) [verb] To give a reward to or for. | [verb] To recompense. | [verb] To give (something) as a reward. REWARMED (14) REWASHED (15) [verb] Wash again REWEAVED (15) REWEDDED (14) REWELDED (13) REWETTED (12) REWINDED (13) REWORDED (13) [verb] To change the wording of; to restate using different words. REWORKED (16) [adjective] Worked again RHIZOPOD (23) RHOMBOID (16) [noun] A parallelogram which is neither a rhombus nor a rectangle | [noun] Any of several muscles that control the shoulders | [noun] A solid shape which has rhombic faces RHUMBAED (16) [verb] To dance the rumba RIBBONED (13) [verb] To decorate with ribbon. | [verb] To stripe or streak. | [adjective] Adorned or ornamented with ribbons. RICEBIRD (13) RICHENED (14) [verb] To make or render rich or richer. | [verb] To become rich or richer; become superior in quality, condition or effectiveness. | [verb] (of a colour) To gain richness; become heightened or intensified in brilliancy. RICHWEED (17) RIPOSTED (11) [verb] To attempt to hit an opponent after parrying an attack. | [verb] To respond quickly; particularly if the response is humorous. RIVALLED (12) [verb] To oppose or compete with. | [verb] To be equal to, or match, or to surpass another. | [verb] To strive to equal or excel; to emulate. RIVERBED (14) [noun] The path where a river runs, or where a river once ran; the bottom earthen part of a river, not including the riverbanks. RIVETTED (12) ROCKETED (15) [verb] To accelerate swiftly and powerfully | [verb] To fly vertically | [verb] To rise or soar rapidly ROCKWEED (18) ROMANCED (13) [verb] To woo; to court. | [verb] To write or tell romantic stories, poetry, letters, etc. | [verb] To talk extravagantly and imaginatively; to build castles in the air. ROOTHOLD (12) ROQUETED (18) [verb] In croquet, to hit another live ball with the striker's ball, from which croquet is then taken. ROSEWOOD (12) [noun] The fragrant wood of Dalbergia nigra, a Brazilian tree in the legume family, which has a sweet smell. | [noun] Any of several dozen woods, resembling that of Dalbergia nigra in some respect. | [noun] The wood of a South American tree, Aniba rosaeodora, in the laurel family, with fragrant wood from which an essential oil is distilled. ROWELLED (12) [verb] To use a rowel on (something), especially to drain fluid. | [verb] To fit with spurs. | [verb] To apply the spur to. RUBBERED (13) RUBICUND (13) [adjective] Ruddy; possessing a red complexion. RUINATED (9) RUMMAGED (14) [verb] To arrange (cargo, goods, etc.) in the hold of a ship; to move or rearrange such goods. | [verb] To search a vessel for smuggled goods. | [verb] To search something thoroughly and with disregard for the way in which things were arranged. RUMOURED (11) [verb] (usually used in the passive voice) To tell a rumor about; to gossip. RUNROUND (9) RUPTURED (11) [verb] To burst, break through, or split, as under pressure. | [verb] To dehisce irregularly. | [adjective] Having a rupture; broken, leaking. SACHETED (14) SADDENED (11) [verb] To make sad or unhappy. | [verb] To become sad or unhappy. | [verb] To darken a color during dyeing. SAFARIED (12) SAFETIED (12) SAGGARED (11) SAGGERED (11) SALAAMED (11) [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). SALARIED (9) [adjective] Paid a salary, as opposed to being an hourly worker or a volunteer. Generally indicating a professional or manager. | [adjective] Paid monthly as opposed to weekly. | [verb] To pay on the basis of a period of a week or longer, especially to convert from another form of compensation. SALIFIED (12) SALLOWED (12) SALMONID (11) [noun] A fish of the Salmonidae family. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to fish of the salmon family (Salmonidae), including salmon, trout, chars, freshwater whitefishes and graylings. SALVAGED (13) [verb] (of property, people or situations at risk) to rescue. | [verb] (of discarded goods) to put to use. | [verb] To make new or restore for the use of being saved. SANDALED (10) [adjective] Wearing a sandal or sandals. SARABAND (11) [noun] A 16th century Spanish dance; the zarabanda | [noun] A stately Baroque dance in slow triple time | [noun] The music for either dance of the same name. SASHAYED (15) [verb] To walk casually, showily or in a flirty manner; to strut, swagger or flounce. | [verb] To chassé when dancing. | [verb] To move sideways. SASSWOOD (12) SATIATED (9) [verb] To fill to satisfaction; to satisfy. | [verb] To satisfy to excess. To fill to satiety. | [adjective] Pleasantly satisfied or full, as with food; sated SATINPOD (11) SAUROPOD (11) [noun] A member of the Sauropoda suborder of dinosaurs SAVOURED (12) [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. | [verb] To appreciate, enjoy or relish something. | [verb] To season. SCABBARD (15) [noun] The sheath of a sword. | [verb] To put an object (especially a sword) into its scabbard. SCABBLED (15) SCABLAND (13) SCAFFOLD (17) [noun] A structure made of scaffolding for workers to stand on while working on a building. | [noun] An elevated platform on which a criminal is executed. | [noun] An elevated platform on which dead bodies are ritually disposed of, as by some Native American tribes. SCAPHOID (16) [noun] Carpal navicular bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a boat, navicular. SCARPHED (16) SCEPTRED (13) SCHIZOID (23) [noun] Someone with schizoid personality disorder | [noun] Someone with schizophrenia | [adjective] Characterized by social withdrawal and emotional coldness or flattened affectivity. SCHOOLED (14) [verb] (of fish) To form into, or travel in a school. | [verb] To educate, teach, or train (often, but not necessarily, in a school). | [verb] To defeat emphatically, to teach an opponent a harsh lesson. SCHUSSED (14) [verb] To ski a schuss. SCIAENID (11) [noun] Any fish belonging to the family Sciaenidae. SCINCOID (13) SCIUROID (11) SCLAFFED (17) SCLEREID (11) SCLEROID (11) [adjective] Having a hard texture. SCORCHED (16) [verb] To burn the surface of something so as to discolour it | [verb] To wither, parch or destroy something by heat or fire, especially to make land or buildings unusable to an enemy | [verb] (To cause) to become scorched or singed SCOREPAD (13) SCOTCHED (16) [verb] To cut or score; to wound superficially. | [verb] To prevent (something) from being successful. | [verb] To debunk or discredit an idea or rumor. SCOURGED (12) [verb] To strike with a scourge; to flog. SCRAGGED (13) [adjective] Rough with irregular points or a broken surface; scraggy. | [adjective] Lean and rough; scraggy. SCRAMMED (15) [verb] To use the shutdown or safety device of a nuclear reactor. | [verb] (by extension) To use any emergency shutdown. | [verb] Leave in a hurry, go away. SCRAPPED (15) [verb] To discard. | [verb] (of a project or plan) To stop working on indefinitely. | [verb] To scrapbook; to create scrapbooks. SCRAWLED (14) [verb] To write something hastily or illegibly. | [verb] To write in an irregular or illegible manner. | [verb] To write unskilfully and inelegantly. SCREAKED (15) SCREAMED (13) [verb] To cry out with a shrill voice; to utter a sudden, sharp outcry, or shrill, loud cry, as in fright or extreme pain; to shriek; to screech. | [verb] To move quickly; to race. | [verb] To be very indicative of; clearly having the characteristics of. SCREEDED (12) [verb] To rend, to shred, to tear. | [verb] To read or repeat from memory fluently or glibly; to reel off. | [verb] To use a screed to produce a smooth, flat surface of concrete, plaster, or similar material; also (generally) to put down a layer of concrete, plaster, etc. SCREENED (11) [verb] To filter by passing through a screen. | [verb] To shelter or conceal. | [verb] To remove information, or censor intellectual material from viewing. SCRIEVED (14) SCRIMPED (15) [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. | [verb] To be frugal. SCRIPTED (13) [verb] To make or write a script. | [adjective] Planned. SCROLLED (11) [verb] To change one's view of data on a computer's display, typically using a scroll bar or a scroll wheel to move in gradual increments. | [verb] To move in or out of view horizontally or vertically. | [verb] To flood a chat system with numerous lines of text, causing legitimate messages to scroll out of view before they can be read. SCROOPED (13) SCROUGED (12) SCRUBBED (15) [verb] To rub hard; to wash with rubbing; usually, to rub with a wet brush, or with something coarse or rough, for the purpose of cleaning or brightening | [verb] To rub anything hard, especially with a wet brush; to scour | [verb] To be diligent and penurious SCRUMMED (15) SCRUPLED (13) [verb] To hesitate or be reluctant to act due to considerations of conscience or expedience. | [verb] To excite scruples in; to cause to scruple. | [verb] To regard with suspicion; to question. SCUFFLED (17) [verb] To fight or struggle confusedly at close quarters. | [verb] To walk with a shuffling gait. | [verb] To make a living with difficulty, getting by on a low income, to struggle financially. SCULPTED (13) [verb] To form by sculpture. | [verb] To work as a sculptor. | [adjective] Well shaped, as a good sculpture is. SCUMBLED (15) [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. SCURRIED (11) [verb] To run with quick light steps, to scamper. SCUTCHED (16) [verb] To beat or whip; to drub. | [verb] To separate the woody fibre from (flax, hemp, etc.) by beating; to swingle. SCUTTLED (11) [verb] To cut a hole or holes through the bottom, deck, or sides of (as of a ship), for any purpose. | [verb] To deliberately sink one's ship or boat by any means, usually by order of the vessel's commander or owner. | [verb] (by extension, in figurative use) Undermine or thwart oneself (sometimes intentionally), or denigrate or destroy one's position or property; compare scupper. SEABOARD (11) [noun] The area bordering the sea; a coastline; a sealine. SEARCHED (14) [verb] To look in (a place) for something. | [verb] (followed by "for") To look thoroughly. | [verb] To look for, seek. SEASONED (9) [verb] To make fit for any use by time or habit; to habituate; to accustom; to inure. | [verb] (by extension) To prepare by drying or hardening, or removal of natural juices. | [verb] To become mature; to grow fit for use; to become adapted to a climate. SECERNED (11) SECLUDED (12) [verb] To shut off or keep apart, as from company, society, etc.; withdraw (oneself) from society or into solitude. | [verb] To shut or keep out; exclude; preclude. | [adjective] Hidden, isolated, remote. SECONDED (12) [verb] To agree as a second person to (a proposal), usually to reach a necessary quorum of two. (See under #Etymology 3 for translations.) | [verb] To follow in the next place; to succeed. | [verb] To climb after a lead climber. SECRETED (11) [verb] To make or keep secret. | [verb] To hide secretly. | [verb] (of organs, glands, etc.) To extract a substance from blood, sap, or similar to produce and emit waste for excretion or for the fulfilling of a physiological function. SECTORED (11) SEESAWED (12) [verb] To use a seesaw. | [verb] (by extension) To fluctuate. | [verb] To cause to move backward and forward in seesaw fashion. SELECTED (11) [verb] To choose one or more elements of a set, especially a set of options. | [verb] To obtain a set of data from a database using a query. | [adjective] That have been selected or chosen. SELFHOOD (15) [noun] State of having a distinct identity, or being an individual distinct from others; individuality. | [noun] The fully developed self; one's personality, character. | [noun] The quality of being self-centered or egocentric; selfishness. SELFWARD (15) SELVAGED (13) SEMIARID (11) [adjective] Somewhat arid, receiving little rainfall but more than an arid area would. Typically defined as 25 to 50 cm or 10 to 20 inches of rainfall annually. SEMIBALD (13) SEMIHARD (14) SEMIWILD (14) SENSATED (9) SEPALLED (11) SEPALOID (11) SEQUINED (18) SERFHOOD (15) SERIATED (9) [verb] To arrange in serial order. SERIFFED (15) SERRANID (9) [noun] Any fish of the family Serranidae. SERRATED (9) [verb] To make serrate. | [verb] To cut or divide in a jagged way. | [adjective] Notched or cut like a saw. SERVICED (14) [verb] To serve. | [verb] To perform maintenance. | [verb] To inseminate through sexual intercourse SESAMOID (11) [noun] A sesamoid bone or sesamoid cartilage. | [adjective] Resembling a sesame seed in size or shape. | [adjective] Of or relating to a sesamoid bone. SHACKLED (18) [verb] To restrain using shackles; to place in shackles. | [verb] (by extension) To render immobile or incapable; to inhibit the progress or abilities of. | [verb] To shake, rattle. SHADOWED (16) [verb] To shade, cloud or darken. | [verb] To block light or radio transmission from. | [verb] To secretly or discreetly track or follow another, to keep under surveillance. SHAMBLED (16) [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. SHAMMIED (16) SHAMOYED (17) SHEATHED (15) [verb] To put (something such as a knife or sword) into a sheath. | [verb] To encase (something) with a protective covering. | [verb] Of an animal: to draw back or retract (a body part) into the body, such as claws into a paw. SHEETFED (15) SHEPHERD (17) [noun] A person who tends sheep, especially a grazing flock. | [noun] Someone who watches over, looks after, or guides somebody. | [noun] The pastor of a church; one who guides others in religion. SHETLAND (12) SHIELDED (13) [verb] To protect, to defend. | [verb] To protect from the influence of | [adjective] Provided with a shield SHIMMIED (16) [verb] To perform a shimmy (dance movement involving thrusting the shoulders back and forth alternately). | [verb] To climb something (e.g. a pole) gradually (e.g. using alternately one's arms then one's legs). | [verb] To vibrate abnormally, as a broken wheel. SHINGLED (13) [verb] To cover with small, thin pieces of building material, with shingles. | [verb] To cut, as hair, so that the ends are evenly exposed all over the head, like shingles on a roof. | [verb] To hammer and squeeze material in order to expel cinder and impurities from it, as in metallurgy. SHINNIED (12) [verb] To climb in an awkward manner. SHIPLOAD (14) [noun] The amount (of cargo) that a ship can carry. SHIPYARD (17) [noun] A place where ships are built and repaired. SHITHEAD (15) [noun] A stupid or contemptible person. | [noun] A card game, the aim of which is to lose one's cards SHIVERED (15) [verb] To tremble or shake, especially when cold or frightened. | [verb] To cause to shake or tremble, as a sail, by steering close to the wind. | [verb] To break into splinters or fragments. SHLEPPED (16) SHLUMPED (16) SHMOOZED (23) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHOVELED (15) [verb] To move materials with a shovel. | [verb] To move with a shoveling motion. SHOWERED (15) [verb] (followed by with) To spray with (a specified liquid). | [verb] To bathe using a shower. | [verb] To bestow liberally, to give or distribute in abundance SHREDDED (14) [verb] To cut or tear into narrow and long pieces or strips. | [verb] To reduce by a large percentage. | [verb] To lop; to prune; to trim. SHRIEKED (16) [verb] To utter a loud, sharp, shrill sound or cry, as do some birds and beasts; to scream, as in a sudden fright, in horror or anguish. | [verb] To utter sharply and shrilly; to utter in or with a shriek or shrieks. SHRIEVED (15) SHRILLED (12) [verb] To make a shrill noise. SHRIMPED (16) [verb] To fish for shrimp. | [verb] To contract; to shrink. SHROFFED (18) SHROUDED (13) [verb] To cover with a shroud. | [verb] To conceal or hide from view, as if by a shroud. | [verb] To take shelter or harbour. SHRUGGED (14) [verb] To raise (the shoulders) to express uncertainty, lack of concern, (formerly) dread, etc. SHUFFLED (18) [verb] To put in a random order. | [verb] To change; modify the order of something. | [verb] To move in a slovenly, dragging manner; to drag or scrape the feet in walking or dancing. SHUTTLED (12) [verb] To go back and forth between two places. | [verb] To transport by shuttle or by means of a shuttle service. SICKENED (15) [verb] To make ill. | [verb] To become ill. | [verb] To fill with disgust or abhorrence. SICKLIED (15) SIDEBAND (12) [noun] The band of frequencies each side of the frequency of a carrier wave; formed as a result of modulation of the carrier. SIDEWARD (13) [adjective] Toward a side. | [adverb] Toward a side. SIGNALED (10) [verb] To indicate; to convey or communicate by a signal. | [verb] To communicate with (a person or system) by a signal. SIGNETED (10) SILENCED (11) [verb] To make (someone or something) silent. | [verb] To repress the expression of something. | [verb] To suppress criticism, etc. SILKWEED (16) SILUROID (9) [noun] Any catfish of the Siluridae family. SILVERED (12) [verb] To acquire a silvery colour. | [verb] To cover with silver, or with a silvery metal. | [verb] To polish like silver; to impart a brightness to, like that of silver. SIMMERED (13) [verb] To cook or undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To cause to cook or to cause to undergo heating slowly at or below the boiling point. | [verb] To be on the point of breaking out into anger; to be agitated. SIMPERED (13) [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. SINTERED (9) [verb] To compact and heat a powder to form a solid mass. SINUATED (9) SINUSOID (9) [noun] A curve having the shape of a sine wave. | [noun] Any of several channels through which venous blood passes in various organs. | [adjective] Sinusoidal. SIPHONED (14) [verb] To transfer (liquid) by means of a siphon. | [verb] To steal or skim off in small amounts; to embezzle. SISTERED (9) SISTROID (9) SITUATED (9) [verb] To place on or into a physical location. | [verb] To place or put into an intangible place or position, such as social, ethical, fictional, etc. Most commonly used adjectivally in past participle and often used figuratively. | [adjective] Located in a specific place. SKETCHED (18) [verb] To make a brief, basic drawing. | [verb] To describe briefly and with very few details. SKEWBALD (18) [noun] A skewbald horse. | [adjective] (of horses) Marked with patches of white and non-black colours. SKEWERED (16) [verb] To impale on a skewer. | [verb] To attack a piece which has a less valuable piece behind it. | [verb] To severely mock or discredit. SKIDOOED (14) [verb] To depart, especially to depart quickly | [verb] A nonsense word, often an expression of disrespect | [verb] A light that flashes on and off to make it more eye-catching. SKIFFLED (19) SKINHEAD (16) [noun] Someone with a shaved head. | [noun] Member of the skinhead subculture arising in late 1960s England or its diaspora, often incorrectly associated with violence and white-supremacist or anti-immigrant principles. SKIVVIED (19) [verb] To perform menial work; to do chores, like a servant. SKLENTED (13) SKYDIVED (20) [verb] To be in freefall after jumping from an aircraft and landing safely by deploying a parachute. SLALOMED (11) [verb] To race in a slalom. | [verb] To move in a slalom-like manner. SLAVERED (12) [verb] To drool saliva from the mouth; to slobber. | [verb] To fawn. | [verb] To smear with saliva issuing from the mouth. SLEIGHED (13) [verb] To ride or drive a sleigh. SLEUTHED (12) [verb] To act as a detective; to try to discover who committed a crime, or, more generally, to solve a mystery. SLIGHTED (13) [verb] To treat as unimportant or not worthy of attention; to make light of. | [verb] To give lesser weight or importance to. | [verb] To treat with disdain or neglect, usually out of prejudice, hatred, or jealousy; to ignore disrespectfully. SLIPSHOD (14) [adjective] Done poorly or too quickly; slapdash. | [adjective] Wearing slippers or similarly open shoes. SLIVERED (12) [verb] To cut or divide into long, thin pieces, or into very small pieces; to cut or rend lengthwise; to slit. SLOUCHED (14) [verb] To hang or droop; to adopt a limp posture | [verb] To walk in a clumsy, lazy manner. | [verb] To cause to hang down or droop; to depress. SLOUGHED (13) [verb] To shed (skin). | [verb] To slide off (like a layer of skin). | [verb] To discard. SLUGABED (12) [noun] A lazy person who lies in bed after the usual time for getting up; a sluggard. SLUGGARD (11) [noun] A person who is lazy, stupid, or idle by habit. | [noun] A person slow to begin necessary work, a slothful person. | [noun] A fearful or cowardly person, a poltroon. SLUMLORD (11) [noun] A person who makes money by renting housing that is kept in poor condition. SLURRIED (9) SMIRCHED (16) [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [verb] To harm the reputation of; to smear or slander. SMOOCHED (16) [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOTHED (14) [verb] To make smooth or even. | [verb] To make straightforward or easy. | [verb] To calm or palliate. SMUGGLED (13) [verb] To import or export, illicitly or by stealth, without paying lawful customs charges or duties | [verb] To bring in surreptitiously | [verb] To fondle or cuddle. SMUTCHED (16) SNAFFLED (15) [verb] To put a snaffle on, or control with a snaffle. | [verb] To clutch by the bridle. | [verb] To grab or seize; to snap up. SNAPWEED (14) SNATCHED (14) [verb] To grasp and remove quickly. | [verb] To attempt to seize something suddenly. | [verb] To take or seize hastily, abruptly, or without permission or ceremony. SNIFFLED (15) [verb] To make a whimpering or sniffing sound when breathing, because of a runny nose. | [verb] To utter with a whimpering or sniffing sound. SNIGGLED (11) [verb] To chortle or chuckle; snicker (often used in contempt). | [verb] To fish for eels by thrusting a baited hook into their dens. | [verb] To catch by this means. SNITCHED (14) [verb] To inform on, especially in betrayal of others. | [verb] To contact or cooperate with the police for any reason. | [verb] To steal, quickly and quietly. SNIVELED (12) [verb] To breathe heavily through the nose while it is congested with nasal mucus. | [verb] To cry while sniffling; to whine or complain while crying. | [verb] To say (something) while sniffling or crying. SNOOZLED (18) SNOWBIRD (14) [noun] A bird, Junco hyemalis, the dark-eyed junco. | [noun] A bird seen primarily in the winter time. | [noun] The snow bunting (Plectrophenax nivalis). SNOWLAND (12) SNOWMOLD (14) SNOWSHED (15) SNUFFLED (15) [verb] To sniff or smell with the nose loudly and audibly. | [verb] To speak through the nose; to breathe through the nose when it is obstructed, so as to make a broken sound. SNUGGLED (11) [verb] To lie close to another person or thing, hugging or being cosy. | [verb] To move or arrange oneself in a comfortable and cosy position. SOCKETED (15) [adjective] Having a socket. SODDENED (11) [verb] To drench, soak or saturate. | [verb] To become soaked. SOFTENED (12) [verb] To make something soft or softer. | [verb] To undermine the morale of someone (often soften up). | [verb] To make less harsh SOFTHEAD (15) SOFTWOOD (15) [noun] The wood from any conifer (or from Ginkgo), without regard to how soft this wood is. | [noun] (in more general use) Wood of this kind but limited to those that are commercial timbers. | [noun] The tree or tree species that yields this wood. SOLDERED (10) [verb] To join items together, or to coat them with solder | [verb] To join things as if with solder. | [adjective] Fastened by means of solder. SOLENOID (9) [noun] A coil of wire that acts as a magnet when an electric current flows through it. | [noun] A mechanical switch consisting of such a coil containing a metal core, the movement of which is controlled by the current. SOLIQUID (18) SOLVATED (12) [verb] To form such a complex upon solution | [adjective] Combined with molecules of a solvent. SONGBIRD (12) [noun] A bird having a melodious song or call. SONNETED (9) [verb] To compose sonnets. | [verb] To celebrate in sonnets; to write a sonnet about. SOREHEAD (12) [noun] A person who has a tendency to be angry or to feel offended. | [noun] (political slang) A politician who is dissatisfied through failure, lack of recognition, etc. | [noun] Infection in sheep by the nematode Elaeophora schneideri; elaeophorosis. SORROWED (12) [verb] To feel or express grief. | [verb] To feel grief over; to mourn, regret. | [adjective] Made sad, caused to feel sorrow. SOUFFLED (15) SOURWOOD (12) [noun] A North American deciduous shrubby tree, of the genus Oxydendrum, having deep fissures in its bark, and sour-tasting leaves. | [noun] An Australian tree, of the genus Hibiscus; the sorrel tree. SOWBREAD (14) [noun] Cyclamen, plant of the genus Cyclamen SPACKLED (17) [verb] To fill or repair with a plastic paste. | [verb] To fill cracks or holes with a spackle. | [verb] To fill gaps with something, as if spackling; to speckle SPANGLED (12) [verb] To sparkle, flash or coruscate. | [verb] To fix spangles to; bespangle; to adorn with stars | [adjective] Having spangles. SPARKLED (15) [verb] To emit sparks; to throw off ignited or incandescent particles | [verb] (by extension) To shine as if throwing off sparks; to emit flashes of light; to scintillate; to twinkle | [verb] To manifest itself by, or as if by, emitting sparks; to glisten; to flash. SPAVINED (14) SPECKLED (17) [adjective] Marked with dots or spots, spotted. | [adjective] Sporadically and irregularly marked. SPHENOID (14) [noun] The sphenoid bone. | [noun] A wedge-shaped crystal bounded by four equal isosceles triangles; the hemihedral form of a square pyramid. | [adjective] Having a wedged shape. SPHEROID (14) [noun] A solid of revolution generated by rotating an ellipse about its major (prolate), or minor (oblate) axis. | [adjective] Of a shape similar to a squashed sphere. SPHINGID (15) [noun] Any of many hawk moths of the family Sphingidae | [adjective] Of or pertaining to these moths. SPICATED (13) SPINDLED (12) SPIRALED (11) [verb] To move along the path of a spiral or helix. | [verb] To cause something to spiral. | [verb] To increase continually. SPIRITED (11) [verb] To carry off, especially in haste, secrecy, or mystery. | [verb] To animate with vigor; to excite; to encourage; to inspirit; sometimes followed by up. | [adjective] Lively, vigorous, animated or courageous. SPLASHED (14) [verb] To hit or agitate liquid so that part of it separates from the principal liquid mass. | [verb] To disperse a fluid suddenly; to splatter. | [verb] To hit or expel liquid at SPLATTED (11) [verb] To hit a flat surface and deform into an irregular shape. | [verb] To splatter. | [verb] To combine different textures by applying an alpha channel map to the higher levels, revealing the layers underneath where the map is partially or completely transparent. SPLENDID (12) [adjective] Possessing or displaying splendor; shining; very bright. | [adjective] Showy; magnificent; sumptuous; pompous. | [adjective] Brilliant, excellent, of a very high standard. SPLINTED (11) [verb] To apply a splint to; to fasten with splints. | [verb] To support one's abdomen with hands or a pillow before attempting to cough. | [verb] To split into thin, slender pieces; to splinter. SPLODGED (13) [verb] To make a splodge; to render as a splodge. SPLOSHED (14) [verb] To make a heavy splashing sound. | [verb] To traverse mushy or marshy wetlands. | [verb] To spill or spill over. SPLURGED (12) [verb] To (cause to) gush; to flow or move in a rush. | [verb] To spend lavishly or extravagantly, especially money. | [verb] To produce an extravagant or ostentatious display. SPRAINED (11) [verb] To weaken, as a joint, ligament, or muscle, by sudden and excessive exertion, as by wrenching; to overstrain, or stretch injuriously, but without luxation SPRAWLED (14) [verb] To sit with the limbs spread out. | [verb] To spread out in a disorderly fashion; to straggle. SPRIGGED (13) [verb] To decorate with sprigs, or with representations of sprigs, as in embroidery or pottery. SPRINGED (12) SPRINTED (11) [verb] To run, cycle, etc. at top speed for a short period, SPRITZED (20) [verb] To spray, sprinkle, or squirt lightly. | [verb] To drizzle, to rain lightly. SPROUTED (11) [verb] To grow from seed; to germinate. | [verb] To cause to grow from a seed. | [verb] To deprive of sprouts. SQUADDED (20) SQUALLED (18) [verb] To cry or wail loudly. SQUASHED (21) [verb] To beat or press into pulp or a flat mass; to crush. | [verb] To compress or restrict (oneself) into a small space; to squeeze. | [verb] To suppress; to force into submission. SQUATTED (18) [verb] To bend deeply at the knees while resting on one's feet. | [verb] (exercise) To perform one or more callisthenic exercises by moving the body and bending at least one knee. | [verb] To occupy or reside in a place without the permission of the owner. SQUAWKED (25) [verb] To make a squawking noise; to yell, scream, or call out shrilly. | [verb] To speak out; to protest. | [verb] To report an infraction; to rat on or tattle; to disclose a secret. SQUEAKED (22) [verb] To emit a short, high-pitched sound. | [verb] To inform, to squeal. | [verb] To speak or sound in a high-pitched manner. SQUEALED (18) [verb] To scream with a shrill, prolonged sound. | [verb] To give sensitive information about someone to a third party; to rat on someone. SQUEEZED (27) [verb] To apply pressure to from two or more sides at once. | [verb] To embrace closely; to give a tight hug to. | [verb] To fit into a tight place. SQUEGGED (20) SQUIBBED (22) [verb] To make a sound like a small explosion. | [verb] To throw squibs; to utter sarcastic or severe reflections; to contend in petty dispute. SQUIDDED (20) [verb] To fish with the kind of hook called a squid. | [verb] (parachuting) To cause squidding (an improper, partial, parachute inflation, that results in the sides of the parachute folding in on the center, and pulsating back and forth). SQUIFFED (24) [adjective] Intoxicated SQUINTED (18) [verb] To look with the eyes partly closed, as in bright sunlight, or as a threatening expression. | [verb] To look or glance sideways. | [verb] To look with, or have eyes that are turned in different directions; to suffer from strabismus. SQUIRMED (20) [verb] To twist one's body with snakelike motions. | [verb] To twist in discomfort, especially from shame or embarrassment. | [verb] To evade a question, an interviewer etc. SQUIRTED (18) [verb] (of a liquid) To be thrown out, or ejected, in a rapid stream, from a narrow orifice. | [verb] (of a liquid) To cause to be ejected, in a rapid stream, from a narrow orifice. | [verb] To hit with a rapid stream of liquid. SQUISHED (21) [verb] To squeeze, compress, or crush (especially something moist). | [verb] To be compressed or squeezed. SQUUSHED (21) STAGGARD (11) STANCHED (14) [verb] To stop the flow of. | [verb] To cease, as the flowing of blood. | [verb] To prop; to make stanch, or strong. STANDARD (10) [noun] A principle or example or measure used for comparison. | [noun] A vertical pole with something at its apex. | [noun] A manual transmission vehicle. STANZAED (18) STARCHED (14) [verb] To apply or treat with laundry starch, to create a hard, smooth surface. | [adjective] Of a garment: having had starch applied. | [adjective] Stiff, formal, rigid; prim and proper. STARTLED (9) [verb] To move suddenly, or be excited, on feeling alarm; to start. | [verb] To excite by sudden alarm, surprise, or apprehension; to frighten suddenly and not seriously; to alarm; to surprise. | [verb] To deter; to cause to deviate. STEADIED (10) [verb] To stabilize something; to prevent from shaking. STEEPLED (11) [verb] To form something into the shape of a steeple. | [adjective] (of a building) having a steeple | [adjective] Formed into the shape of a steeple STENOSED (9) STEREOED (9) STICKLED (15) STINKARD (13) [noun] Any of various malodorous animals. | [noun] The teledu. | [noun] A person whose behavior is hurtful and unsavory; a stinker. STIPPLED (13) [verb] To use small dots to give the appearance of shading to. STIPULED (11) STITCHED (14) [verb] To form stitches in; especially, to sew in such a manner as to show on the surface a continuous line of stitches. | [verb] To sew, or unite or attach by stitches. | [verb] To practice/practise stitching or needlework. STITHIED (12) STOPPLED (13) [verb] To plug; to stop up. STOREYED (12) [adjective] Much talked or written about | [adjective] Historical | [adjective] Having multiple storeys; multistoried STOUNDED (10) STRAINED (9) [verb] To hold tightly, to clasp. | [verb] To apply a force or forces to by stretching out. | [verb] To damage by drawing, stretching, or the exertion of force. STRANDED (10) [verb] To run aground; to beach. | [verb] To leave (someone) in a difficult situation; to abandon or desert. | [verb] To cause the third out of an inning to be made, leaving a runner on base. STRAPPED (13) [verb] To beat or chastise with a strap; to whip, to lash. | [verb] To fasten or bind with a strap. | [verb] To sharpen by rubbing on a strap, or strop STREAKED (13) [verb] To have or obtain streaks. | [verb] To run naked in public. (Contrast flash) | [verb] To create streaks. STREAMED (11) [verb] To flow in a continuous or steady manner, like a liquid. | [verb] To extend; to stretch out with a wavy motion; to float in the wind. | [verb] To discharge in a stream. STREEKED (13) STREELED (9) [verb] To trail along; to saunter or be drawn along, carelessly, swaying in a kind of zigzag motion. STRESSED (9) [verb] To apply force to (a body or structure) causing strain. | [verb] To apply emotional pressure to (a person or animal). | [verb] To suffer stress; to worry or be agitated. STRIATED (9) [verb] To mark something with striations. | [adjective] Having parallel lines or grooves on the surface. STRINGED (10) [adjective] Having strings. STRIPPED (13) [verb] To remove or take away, often in strips or stripes. | [verb] (usually intransitive) To take off clothing. | [verb] To perform a striptease. STROLLED (9) [verb] To wander on foot; to ramble idly or leisurely; to rove. | [verb] To go somewhere with ease. | [verb] To walk the streets as a prostitute. STROPPED (13) [verb] To strap. | [verb] (recorded since 1842; now most used) To hone (a razor) with a strop. | [verb] To mark a sequence of letters syntactically as having a special property, such as being a keyword, e.g. by enclosing in apostrophes as in 'foo' or writing in uppercase as in FOO. STRUMMED (13) [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. STRUNTED (9) STRUTTED (9) [verb] To swell; protuberate; bulge or spread out. | [verb] (originally said of fowl) To stand or walk stiffly, with the tail erect and spread out. | [verb] To walk proudly or haughtily. STUBBLED (13) STUCCOED (13) [verb] To coat or decorate with stucco. STUMBLED (13) [verb] To trip or fall; to walk clumsily. | [verb] To make a mistake or have trouble. | [verb] To cause to stumble or trip. STURDIED (10) STYLISED (12) [verb] To represent in a particular style. | [verb] To represent abstractly in a conventional manner, commonly fancifully symbolic, to identify a particular item, by omitting most of the detail that is not unique to the item in question. | [adjective] Made to conform to some style. STYLIZED (21) [verb] To represent in a particular style. | [verb] To represent abstractly in a conventional manner, commonly fancifully symbolic, to identify a particular item, by omitting most of the detail that is not unique to the item in question. | [adjective] Made to conform to some style. SUBACRID (13) SUBBREED (13) SUBDUCED (14) SUBFIELD (14) SUBFLUID (14) SUBHUMID (16) SUBLATED (11) [verb] To negate, deny or contradict. | [verb] To take or carry away; to remove. SUBLIMED (13) [verb] To sublimate. | [verb] To raise on high. | [verb] To exalt; to heighten; to improve; to purify. SUBORNED (11) [verb] To induce to commit an unlawful or malicious act, or to commit perjury | [verb] To procure privately, or by collusion; to incite secretly; to instigate. SUBSIDED (12) [verb] To sink or fall to the bottom; to settle, as lees. | [verb] To fall downward; to become lower; to descend; to sink. | [verb] To fall into a state of calm; to be calm again; to settle down; to become tranquil; to abate. SUBSUMED (13) [verb] To place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include or contain something else. | [verb] To consider an occurrence as part of a principle or rule; to colligate SUBTREND (11) SUBURBED (13) SUBVENED (14) SUBWAYED (17) SUBWORLD (14) SUCCORED (13) [verb] To give aid, assistance, or help. | [verb] To provide aid or assistance in the form of military equipment and soldiers; in particular, for helping a place under siege. | [verb] (obsolete except dialectal) To protect, to shelter; to provide a refuge. SUCKERED (15) [verb] To strip the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of suckers. | [verb] To produce suckers, to throw up additional stems or shoots. | [verb] To move or attach itself by means of suckers. SUFFERED (15) [verb] To undergo hardship. | [verb] To feel pain. | [verb] To become worse. SUFFICED (17) [verb] To be enough or sufficient; to meet the need (of anything); to be adequate; to be good enough. | [verb] To satisfy; to content; to be equal to the wants or demands of. | [verb] To furnish; to supply adequately. SUFFIXED (22) [verb] To append (something) to the end of something else. SUFFUSED (15) [verb] To spread through or over something, especially as a liquid, colour or light; to bathe. | [verb] To spread through or over in the manner of a liquid. | [verb] To pour underneath. SUICIDED (12) [verb] To kill oneself intentionally. | [verb] To kill (someone) and make their death appear to have been a suicide rather than a homicide (now especially as part of a conspiracy). | [verb] To self-destruct. SULCATED (11) SULFATED (12) SULFURED (12) [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. | [adjective] Treated with sulfur SUMMATED (13) SUMMERED (13) [verb] To spend the summer, as in a particular place on holiday. SUMMITED (13) [verb] (hiking) To reach the summit of a mountain. | [adjective] Having a summit. SUMMONED (13) [verb] To call people together; to convene. | [verb] To ask someone to come; to send for. | [verb] To order (goods) and have delivered SUMPWEED (16) SUNBAKED (15) [verb] To bake in the sun. | [verb] To sunbathe. | [adjective] Baked by the heat of the sun. SUNDERED (10) [verb] To break or separate or to break apart, especially with force. | [verb] To part, separate. | [verb] To expose to the sun and wind. SUNSCALD (11) [noun] Localized damage to the tissues of trees or their fruits caused by bright sunlight | [verb] To suffer such damage. SUPERADD (12) [verb] To add on top of a previous addition. SUPERBAD (13) SUPPLIED (13) [verb] To provide (something), to make (something) available for use. | [verb] To furnish or equip with. | [verb] To fill up, or keep full. SUPPOSED (13) [verb] To take for granted; to conclude, with less than absolute supporting data; to believe. | [verb] To theorize or hypothesize. | [verb] To imagine; to believe; to receive as true. SURBASED (11) SURFACED (14) [verb] To provide something with a surface. | [verb] To apply a surface to something. | [verb] To rise to the surface. SURFBIRD (14) [noun] A small sandpiper, Aphriza virgata, endemic to the northwestern parts of North America. SURMISED (11) [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. SURNAMED (11) [verb] To give a surname to. | [verb] To call by a surname. SURROUND (9) [noun] Anything, such as a fence or border, that surrounds something. | [verb] To encircle something or simultaneously extend in all directions. | [verb] To enclose or confine something on all sides so as to prevent escape. SURTAXED (16) SURVEYED (15) [verb] To inspect, or take a view of; to view with attention, as from a high place; to overlook | [verb] To view with a scrutinizing eye; to examine. | [verb] To examine with reference to condition, situation, value, etc.; to examine and ascertain the state of SURVIVED (15) [verb] Of a person, to continue to live; to remain alive. | [verb] Of an object or concept, to continue to exist. | [verb] To live longer than; to outlive. SUSPIRED (11) [verb] To breathe. | [verb] To exhale. | [verb] To sigh. SWADDLED (14) [verb] To bind (a baby) with long narrow strips of cloth. | [verb] To beat; cudgel. SWANHERD (15) SWINDLED (13) [verb] To defraud. | [verb] To obtain (money or property) by fraudulent or deceitful methods. SWINGLED (13) [verb] To beat or flog, especially for extracting the fibres from flax stalks; to scutch. | [verb] To beat off the tops of (weeds) without pulling up the roots. | [verb] To dangle; to wave hanging. SWITCHED (17) [verb] To exchange. | [verb] To change (something) to the specified state using a switch. | [verb] To whip or hit with a switch. SWIVELED (15) [verb] To swing or turn, as on a pin or pivot. | [adjective] Having a swivel. SWIZZLED (30) [verb] To stir or mix. | [verb] To permute bits. | [verb] To convert portable symbols or positions to memory-dependent pointers during deserialization. SWOOSHED (15) [verb] To move with a rushing or swirling sound SWOUNDED (13) SYMBOLED (16) [verb] To symbolize. SYNAPSED (14) SYNAPSID (14) [noun] Any animal (including all mammals) of the class Synapsida. | [adjective] Pertaining to the class Synapsida, of animals which have an opening low in the skull roof behind each eye, leaving a bony arch beneath each. SYNERGID (13) SYPHERED (17) SYPHONED (17) [verb] To transfer (liquid) by means of a siphon. | [verb] To steal or skim off in small amounts; to embezzle. SYRINGED (13) [verb] To clean, or inject fluid, by means of a syringe. TABARDED (12) TABLETED (11) TABOURED (11) TACHINID (14) TAGBOARD (12) TAILORED (9) [verb] To make, repair, or alter clothes. | [verb] To make or adapt (something) for a specific need. | [verb] To restrict (something) in order to meet a particular need. TAILSKID (13) TAILWIND (12) [noun] A wind that blows in the same direction as the course of an aircraft or ship | [verb] Of wind, to blow on a windmill or wind turbine in such a way that wind pressure is exerted on the wrong side of the sail or turbine assembly. TALENTED (9) [adjective] Endowed with one or more talents. TALLAGED (10) TALLOWED (12) [verb] To grease or smear with tallow. | [verb] To cause to have a large quantity of tallow; to fatten. TAMARIND (11) [noun] A tropical tree, Tamarindus indica. | [noun] The fruit of this tree; the pulp is used as spice in Asian cooking and in Worcestershire sauce. | [noun] Other similar species: TAMPERED (13) [verb] To make unauthorized or improper alterations, sometimes causing deliberate damage; to meddle (with something). | [verb] To try to influence someone, usually in an illegal or devious way; to try to deal (with someone). | [verb] To meddle (with something) in order to corrupt or pervert it. TAMPONED (13) [verb] To plug (a wound) with a tampon or compress. TARGETED (10) [verb] To aim something, especially a weapon, at (a target). | [verb] To aim for as an audience or demographic. | [verb] To produce code suitable for. TARIFFED (15) [verb] To levy a duty on (something) TASSELED (9) [verb] To adorn with tassels. | [verb] To put forth a tassel or flower. | [adjective] Having tassels. TATTERED (9) [verb] To destroy an article of clothing etc. by shredding. | [verb] To fall into tatters. | [adjective] Rent in tatters, torn, hanging in rags; ragged TATTOOED (9) [verb] To apply a tattoo to (someone or something). | [verb] To hit the ball hard, as if to figuratively leave a tattoo on the ball. | [verb] To tap rhythmically on, to drum. TAUTENED (9) TEABOARD (11) TEAKWOOD (16) TEASELED (9) [verb] To raise the nap on cloth; to tease; to card. TEAZELED (18) TEENAGED (10) [adjective] Aged between thirteen and nineteen inclusive; teenage TEETERED (9) [verb] To tilt back and forth on an edge. | [verb] To be indecisive. | [verb] To be close to becoming a typically negative situation. TELFERED (12) TEMPERED (13) [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified disposition or temper. | [adjective] Pertaining to the metallurgical process for finishing metals. | [adjective] Pertaining to the industrial process for toughening glass, or to such toughened glass. | [verb] To moderate or control. TENANTED (9) [verb] To hold as, or be, a tenant. | [verb] To inhabit. TENDERED (10) [verb] To make tender or delicate; to weaken. | [verb] To feel tenderly towards; to regard fondly or with consideration. | [verb] To work on a tender. TENTERED (9) TEPEFIED (14) TERATOID (9) TERRACED (11) [verb] To provide something with a terrace. | [verb] To form something into a terrace. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or being a terraced house. TETANOID (9) TETHERED (12) [verb] To restrict something with a tether. | [verb] To connect a cellular smartphone to another personal computer in order to give it access to a hotspot. | [adjective] Tied, strapped, especially with tethers or hobbles. TETRACID (11) TETRAPOD (11) [noun] Any vertebrate with four limbs. | [noun] Any vertebrate (such as birds or snakes) that has evolved from early tetrapods; especially any member of the superclass Tetrapoda | [noun] A concrete structure with arms, used to arrest wave energy along the shore in sea defence projects. TETROXID (16) TEXTURED (16) [verb] To create or apply a texture | [adjective] Having texture, not smooth. THALLOID (12) THATCHED (17) [verb] To cover the roof with straw, reed, leaves, etc. THEROPOD (14) [noun] Any bipedal dinosaur, of the suborder Theropoda, from the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. THINCLAD (14) THIRSTED (12) [verb] To be thirsty. | [verb] (usually followed by "for") To desire vehemently. THOUSAND (12) [numeral] A numerical value equal to 1,000 = 10 × 100 = 103 THRALLED (12) THRASHED (15) [verb] To beat mercilessly. | [verb] To defeat utterly. | [verb] To thresh. THREADED (13) [verb] To put thread through. | [verb] To pass (through a narrow constriction or around a series of obstacles). | [verb] To screw on, to fit the threads of a nut on a bolt THREAPED (14) [verb] To contradict | [verb] To scold; rebuke | [verb] To cry out; complain; contend THREATED (12) THREEPED (14) THRESHED (15) [verb] To separate the grain from the straw or husks (chaff) by mechanical beating, with a flail or machinery. | [verb] To beat soundly, usually with some tool such as a stick or whip; to drub. THRILLED (12) [verb] To suddenly excite someone, or to give someone great pleasure; to (figuratively) electrify; to experience such a sensation. | [verb] To (cause something to) tremble or quiver. | [verb] To perforate by a pointed instrument; to bore; to transfix; to drill. THROATED (12) THROBBED (16) [verb] To pound or beat rapidly or violently. | [verb] To vibrate or pulsate with a steady rhythm. | [verb] (of a body part) To pulse (often painfully) in time with the circulation of blood. THRONGED (13) [verb] To crowd into a place, especially to fill it. | [verb] To congregate. | [verb] To crowd or press, as persons; to oppress or annoy with a crowd of living beings. THRUMMED (16) [verb] To cause a steady rhythmic vibration, usually by plucking. | [verb] To make a monotonous drumming noise. | [verb] To furnish with thrums; to insert tufts in; to fringe. THRUSTED (12) THWACKED (21) [verb] To hit with a flat implement. | [verb] To beat. | [verb] To fill to overflow. THWARTED (15) [verb] To cause to fail; to frustrate, to prevent. | [verb] To place (something) across (another thing); to position crosswise. | [verb] To hinder or obstruct by placing (something) in the way of; to block, to impede, to oppose. THYREOID (15) THYRSOID (15) TICKETED (15) [verb] To issue someone a ticket, as for travel or for a violation of a local or traffic law. | [verb] To mark with a ticket. TICKSEED (15) [noun] A seed or fruit resembling a tick in shape, or in clinging to the skin or hair/fur. | [noun] A plant producing such seed or fruit, such as those in the genera: TIDELAND (10) [noun] The area at the shore that is exposed to the effects of the tide. TIFFINED (15) TIGHTWAD (16) [noun] One who is stingy, overly cautious, or defensive with money (usually mildly derisive). TILLERED (9) [verb] To produce new shoots from the root or from around the bottom of the original stalk; stool. TILTYARD (12) [noun] A yard or place for tilting. TIMBERED (13) [verb] To fit with timbers. | [verb] To construct, frame, build. | [verb] To light or land on a tree. TIMECARD (13) TINKERED (13) [verb] To fiddle with something in an attempt to fix, mend or improve it, especially in an experimental or unskilled manner. | [verb] To work as a tinker. | [verb] To tinker with; to tweak or attempt to fix. TINSELED (9) [verb] To adorn with tinsel; to deck out with cheap but showy ornaments; to make gaudy. | [verb] To give a false sparkle to (something). TITRATED (9) [verb] To ascertain the amount of a constituent in a solution (or other mixture) by measuring the volume of a known concentration (the "standard solution") needed to complete a reaction. | [verb] To adjust the amount of a drug consumed until the desired effects are achieved. TITTERED (9) [verb] To laugh or giggle in a somewhat subdued or restrained way, as from nervousness or poorly-suppressed amusement. | [verb] To teeter; to seesaw. TITTUPED (11) [verb] To prance or frolic; of a horse, to canter easily. TOCHERED (14) TOILETED (9) [verb] To dress and groom oneself | [verb] To use the toilet | [verb] To assist another (a child etc.) in using the toilet TONSURED (9) [verb] To shave the crown of the head as a sign of humility and religious vocation. TOOLHEAD (12) TOOLSHED (12) TORTURED (9) [verb] To intentionally inflict severe pain or suffering on (someone). | [adjective] Having been subjected to torture, mental or physical. | [adjective] Involving suffering and difficulty. TOTALLED (9) [verb] To add up; to calculate the sum of. | [verb] To equal a total of; to amount to. | [verb] To demolish; to wreck completely. (from total loss) TOTTERED (9) [verb] To walk, move or stand unsteadily or falteringly; threatening to fall. | [verb] To be on the brink of collapse. | [verb] To collect junk or scrap. TOWELLED (12) [verb] To hit with a towel. | [verb] To dry by using a towel. | [verb] To block up (a door, etc.) with a towel, to conceal the fumes of a recreational drug. TRACHEID (14) [noun] A tracheid cell. TRACHLED (14) TRADUCED (12) [verb] To malign a person or entity by making malicious and false or defamatory statements. | [verb] To pass on (to one's children, future generations etc.); to transmit. | [verb] To pass into another form of expression; to rephrase, to translate. TRAIPSED (11) [verb] To walk in a messy or unattractively casual way; to trail through dirt. | [verb] To walk about, especially when expending much effort, or unnecessary effort. | [verb] To walk (a distance or journey) wearily or with effort; to walk about or over (a place). TRAMELED (11) TRAMPLED (13) [verb] To crush something by walking on it. | [verb] (by extension) To treat someone harshly. | [verb] To walk heavily and destructively. TRAMROAD (11) [noun] A road designed for use by trams or wagons. TRAPESED (11) [verb] To walk in a messy or unattractively casual way; to trail through dirt. | [verb] To walk about, especially when expending much effort, or unnecessary effort. | [verb] To walk (a distance or journey) wearily or with effort; to walk about or over (a place). TRAVELED (12) [verb] To be on a journey, often for pleasure or business and with luggage; to go from one place to another. | [verb] To pass from here to there; to move or transmit; to go from one place to another. | [verb] To move illegally by walking or running without dribbling the ball. TREADLED (10) [verb] To use a treadle. TREDDLED (11) TREMBLED (13) [verb] To shake, quiver, or vibrate. | [verb] To fear; to be afraid. TRENCHED (14) [verb] (usually followed by upon) To invade, especially with regard to the rights or the exclusive authority of another; to encroach. | [verb] (infantry) To excavate an elongated pit for protection of soldiers and or equipment, usually perpendicular to the line of sight toward the enemy. | [verb] To excavate an elongated and often narrow pit. TRICHOID (14) TRICKLED (15) [verb] To pour a liquid in a very thin stream, or so that drops fall continuously. | [verb] To flow in a very thin stream or drop continuously. | [verb] To move or roll slowly. TRILOBED (11) TRINDLED (10) TRIPLOID (11) [noun] A cell which is triploid. | [noun] An organism with triploid cells. | [adjective] Having three sets of chromosomes. TROCHOID (14) [noun] The curve traced by a point on a circle as it rolls along a straight line | [adjective] Capable of rolling | [adjective] Allowing rotation TROLLIED (9) [verb] To bring to by trolley. | [verb] To use a trolley vehicle to go from one place to another. | [adjective] Showing extreme intoxication from alcohol. TROPHIED (14) TROUBLED (11) [verb] To disturb, stir up, agitate (a medium, especially water). | [verb] To mentally distress; to cause (someone) to be anxious or perplexed. | [verb] In weaker sense: to bother or inconvenience. TROUNCED (11) [verb] To beat severely; to thrash. | [verb] To beat or overcome thoroughly, to defeat heavily; especially (games) to win against (someone) by a wide margin. | [verb] To chastise or punish physically or verbally; to scold with abusive language. TROWELED (12) [verb] To apply (a substance) with a trowel. | [verb] To pass over with a trowel. | [verb] To apply something heavily or unsubtly. TRUANTED (9) [verb] To play truant. | [verb] To idle away; to waste. | [verb] To idle away time. TRUCKLED (15) [verb] To roll or move upon truckles, or casters; to trundle. | [verb] To sleep in a truckle bed. | [verb] To act in a submissive manner; to fawn, submit to a superior. TRUEBRED (11) TRUFFLED (15) [adjective] Provided, cooked, or stuffed with truffles TRUNDLED (10) [verb] To wheel or roll (an object on wheels), especially by pushing, often slowly or heavily. | [verb] To transport (something or someone) using an object on wheels, especially one that is pushed. | [verb] To move heavily (on wheels). TRUSTEED (9) TSKTSKED (17) TUBEROID (11) TUCKERED (15) [verb] To tire out or exhaust a person or animal. TUMEFIED (14) [verb] To cause to swell. | [verb] To swell; to rise into a tumour. TUNNELED (9) [verb] To make a tunnel through or under something; to burrow. | [verb] To dig a tunnel. | [verb] To transmit something through a tunnel (wrapper for insecure or unsupported protocol). TURBANED (11) TURRETED (9) TUXEDOED (17) TWADDLED (14) [verb] To talk or write nonsense; to prattle. TWANGLED (13) TWATTLED (12) [verb] To talk in a digressive or long-winded way. | [verb] To make much of, as a domestic animal; to pet. TWEEDLED (13) TWIDDLED (14) [verb] To wiggle, fidget or play with; to move around. | [verb] To flip or switch two adjacent bits (binary digits). | [verb] To be in an equivalence relation with. TWINKLED (16) [verb] (of a source of light) to shine with a flickering light; to glimmer | [verb] (chiefly of eyes) to be bright with delight | [verb] To bat, blink or wink the eyes TWITCHED (17) TYPIFIED (17) [verb] To embody, exemplify; to represent by an image, form, model, or resemblance. | [verb] To portray stereotypically. | [verb] To serve as a typical or reference specimen of. UGLIFIED (13) ULTRARED (9) ULULATED (9) [verb] To howl loudly or prolongedly in lamentation or joy | [verb] To produce a rapid and prolonged series of sharp noises with one's voice. UMBELLED (13) UMLAUTED (11) [verb] To place an umlaut over (a vowel). | [verb] To modify (a word) so that an umlaut is required in it. | [adjective] Modified by the addition of an umlaut. UNABATED (11) [adjective] Continuing at full strength or intensity UNABUSED (11) UNAFRAID (12) [adjective] Not afraid. UNALLIED (9) [adjective] Not allied. UNAMUSED (11) [adjective] Not amused; thus often offended or put off. UNANELED (9) [adjective] In the Christian faith, not having taken the sacred unction before dying UNARGUED (10) UNATONED (9) [adjective] Not atoned for. UNAVOWED (15) [adjective] Not avowed. UNAWAKED (16) UNBACKED (17) [adjective] Having no back. | [adjective] Not supported or backed up (by someone or something). | [adjective] Having no (or few) backers. UNBANNED (11) [verb] To lift a ban against. UNBARBED (13) UNBARRED (11) [verb] To remove an impediment that obstructs the passage of (someone or something). | [verb] To remove a prohibition. | [verb] To unlock or unbolt a door that had been locked or bolted with a bar. UNBATHED (14) UNBEARED (11) UNBELTED (11) [adjective] Not belted | [adjective] Without a belt UNBENDED (12) UNBIASED (11) [adjective] Impartial or without bias or prejudice. UNBILLED (11) UNBITTED (11) UNBLAMED (13) UNBODIED (12) UNBOLTED (11) [verb] To unlock by undoing the bolts of. | [adjective] Not fastened with a bolt. | [adjective] Not sifted. UNBRACED (13) [verb] To undo, unfasten; to relax, loosen. | [adjective] Not braced UNBRAKED (15) UNBURIED (11) [adjective] Not having been buried. | [verb] To dig up, to remove from the ground. UNBURNED (11) [adjective] Not burned. UNBUSTED (11) UNCALLED (11) [adjective] Not called. UNCANDID (12) [adjective] Not candid; duplicitous, concealing or secretive. UNCAPPED (15) [adjective] Not capped (in various senses). | [adjective] Not having made an appearance in an international sports match. | [verb] To remove a cap or cover from. UNCASHED (14) [adjective] Not presented for payment; unredeemed. UNCASKED (15) UNCAUSED (11) UNCHEWED (17) UNCHOKED (18) UNCLOSED (11) [verb] To open; to unclench. | [adjective] Not closed; left open. UNCLOYED (14) UNCOATED (11) [verb] (of the capsid shell) to dissociate from the viral core in the host cell cytoplasm | [verb] To remove the viral capsid of a virus, leading to the release of the viral genomic nucleic acid. | [adjective] Not coated UNCOCKED (17) UNCOILED (11) [verb] To unwind or untwist (something). | [verb] To unwind or untwist oneself. | [adjective] Not (or no longer) coiled UNCOINED (11) UNCOMBED (15) [verb] To reverse the effect of combing; to muss. | [verb] To remove a backcomb from. | [verb] To comb out; to disentangle. UNCOOKED (15) [verb] To undo the act of cooking | [verb] To repair a file (specifically an MP3 audio file) that has been damaged ("cooked") by being converted through a text format and having line breaks applied to it. | [adjective] Raw and not cooked, especially of something that should be, or is sometimes cooked UNCOOLED (11) UNCORKED (15) [verb] To open (a bottle or other container sealed with a cork or stopper) by removing the cork or stopper from. | [verb] To release. | [adjective] Not corked; Allowing liquid to flow freely. UNCRATED (11) [adjective] Not contained in a crate. | [verb] To remove from a crate. UNCUFFED (17) UNCURBED (13) [adjective] Unlimited; unrestricted. UNCURLED (11) [verb] To straighten out from being curled up. UNCURSED (11) UNDAMPED (14) UNDECKED (16) UNDENIED (10) [adjective] Not denied UNDERBID (12) [noun] A bid that is lower than another. | [verb] To bid too low. | [verb] To bid lower than another. UNDERBUD (12) UNDERDID (11) UNDERFED (13) [adjective] Inadequately fed. | [verb] To feed inadequately or insufficiently UNDERGOD (11) UNDIMMED (14) [adjective] Not dimmed. UNDOCKED (16) [verb] To remove (a ship) from a dock. | [verb] To remove from a docking station. | [verb] To drag (a user interface element, such as a toolbar) away from its fixed position so that it floats freely. UNDOTTED (10) UNDRAPED (12) [adjective] Not draped. UNDUBBED (14) UNDULLED (10) UNEARNED (9) [adjective] Not earned. UNEDITED (10) [adjective] Not having been altered from the original version; not edited. UNENVIED (12) [adjective] Not envied. UNERASED (9) UNEVADED (13) UNFEARED (12) UNFENCED (14) [adjective] Not enclosed by a fence or other boundary; free to roam over a wider area. | [adjective] Without protection; defenseless. UNFILLED (12) [adjective] Not filled, especially occupational positions. | [verb] To empty. UNFILMED (14) UNFISHED (15) UNFITTED (12) [adjective] Not suited, not fit (for something). | [adjective] (of a garment) Not customized, tailored or cut to fit. | [adjective] Of trains, or wagons in the train, not having a through brake pipe, or brakes on the wagons that can be operated from the locomotive (the wagons did have handbrakes however). | [verb] To make unfit; to render unsuitable, spoil, disqualify. UNFLEXED (19) UNFOILED (12) UNFOLDED (13) [verb] To undo a folding. | [verb] To turn out; to happen; to develop. | [verb] To reveal. UNFORCED (14) [adjective] Not forced. UNFORGED (13) UNFORKED (16) UNFORMED (14) [adjective] Not formed or made. | [adjective] Not having a definite form; shapeless; amorphous. | [adjective] Not well developed. UNFRAMED (14) [adjective] Not framed; not having a frame. UNFUNDED (13) [adjective] Not funded; having received no funding. UNFURLED (12) [verb] To unroll or release something that had been rolled up, typically a sail or a flag. | [verb] To roll out or debut anything. | [verb] To open up by unrolling. UNGALLED (10) UNGIFTED (13) [adjective] Not gifted; lacking special talent. | [adjective] Not having received a gift. UNGIRDED (11) [verb] To loosen the girdle or band of. | [verb] To unbind or unload. UNGLAZED (19) [adjective] Not glazed. UNGLOVED (13) [adjective] Not wearing a glove; barehanded. UNGOWNED (13) UNGRACED (12) UNGRADED (11) [adjective] Not graded; having no grade. UNGROUND (10) [verb] To remove a connection to ground potential. | [verb] To free from the punishment of being grounded (restricted to home). | [adjective] Not having been ground; unpulverized. UNGUIDED (11) [adjective] Not guided; without a guide. UNHAILED (12) UNHAIRED (12) UNHALVED (15) UNHANDED (13) [verb] To release from the hand; to let go. UNHANGED (13) UNHARMED (14) [adjective] Which has not suffered harm; which has not been injured or damaged UNHATTED (12) UNHEALED (12) [adjective] Not healed. | [verb] To uncover, to reveal. UNHEATED (12) [adjective] Not heated UNHEDGED (14) [adjective] Without a hedge. | [adjective] Not hedged; not offset or counterbalanced. UNHEEDED (13) [adjective] Not heeded; not listened to; ignored | [adjective] (of advice) not followed. UNHELMED (14) UNHELPED (14) UNHINGED (13) [verb] To remove the leaf of a door or a window from its supporting hinges. | [verb] To mentally disturb. | [adjective] (usually humorous) Mentally ill or unstable. | [adjective] Not furnished with a hinge. UNHOODED (13) [verb] To remove the hood from. | [adjective] Not having or wearing a hood. UNHOOKED (16) [verb] To remove from a hook. | [verb] To unfasten by means of hooks. | [verb] To unfasten the bra of (its wearer). UNHORSED (12) [verb] To forcibly remove from a horse. | [verb] (by extension) To disrupt or unseat; to remove from a position. UNHOUSED (12) [verb] To displace one from one's housing or shelter. | [verb] To take a house away from. | [adjective] Driven from one's home UNHUSKED (16) [verb] To remove the husk of. | [adjective] Without a husk. | [adjective] Having the husk on; still on the husk. UNIDEAED (10) UNILOBED (11) UNIMBUED (13) UNIRONED (9) [adjective] Not ironed. UNISSUED (9) [adjective] That has not been issued UNITIZED (18) [verb] To manage as a unit | [verb] To convert, package, or organize into one or more units UNJOINED (16) [verb] To separate or detach (things that were joined). | [verb] To cease to be a member of; to leave. | [adjective] Not joined UNJUDGED (18) UNKENNED (13) UNKINKED (17) [verb] To remove the kinks from. | [adjective] Not kinked. UNKISSED (13) UNLASHED (12) [verb] To unfasten. | [adjective] Without eyelashes. UNLEADED (10) [verb] To take away the leaden seals from (the bales of transit goods). | [verb] To take out the leads from (printed matter that has been set up). | [noun] An unleaded fuel. UNLEASED (9) UNLETTED (9) UNLEVIED (12) UNLICKED (15) UNLINKED (13) [verb] To decouple; to remove a link from, or separate the links of. | [verb] To delete (a file). | [adjective] Not linked, physically or figuratively. UNLISTED (9) [verb] To undo the process of listing; to remove something from a list. | [adjective] Not included in a list. UNLOADED (10) [verb] To remove the load or cargo from (a vehicle, etc.). | [verb] To remove (the load or cargo) from a vehicle, etc. | [verb] To deposit one's load or cargo. | [adjective] Not loaded. UNLOCKED (15) [verb] To undo or open a lock or something locked by, for example, turning a key, or selecting a combination. | [verb] To obtain access to something. | [verb] To disclose or reveal previously unknown knowledge. UNLOOSED (9) [verb] To free (someone or something) from a constraint. | [verb] To undo or loosen something that fastens, holds, entangles, or interlocks. UNMANNED (11) [verb] To castrate; to remove the manhood of. | [verb] To sap (a person) of the strength, whether physical or emotional, required to deal with a situation. | [verb] To deprive of men. UNMAPPED (15) [adjective] Not mapped. UNMARKED (15) [adjective] Not bearing identification. | [adjective] Free from blemishes. | [adjective] Not noticed. UNMARRED (11) [adjective] Undamaged; not marred. UNMASKED (15) [verb] To remove a mask from someone. | [verb] To expose, or reveal the true character of someone. | [verb] To remove one's mask. UNMATTED (11) UNMELTED (11) [adjective] Not melted; in a solid state. UNMENDED (12) UNMESHED (14) UNMILLED (11) [adjective] Not milled. UNMITRED (11) UNMOLDED (12) UNMOORED (11) [adjective] Not moored. | [adjective] Mentally immature, unstable, or lacking in emotional connections. | [verb] To unfix or unsecure (a moored boat). UNNAILED (9) [verb] To remove the nails from. UNNEEDED (10) [adjective] Not needed. UNNERVED (12) [verb] To deprive of nerve, force, or strength; to weaken; to enfeeble. | [verb] To make somebody nervous, upset, alarm, shake the resolve of. | [adjective] Deprived of courage, strength, confidence, self-control, etc UNOPENED (11) [adjective] Not yet opened; still closed UNPACKED (17) [verb] To remove from a package or container, particularly with respect to items that had previously been arranged closely and securely in a pack. | [verb] To empty containers that had been packed. | [verb] To analyze a concept or a text. UNPAIRED (11) [verb] To go from a paired to a non-paired state; to disassociate. | [adjective] Not forming one of a pair UNPARTED (11) UNPEELED (11) [verb] To remove the peel from something; to peel. | [verb] To unwind something. | [adjective] Not peeled. UNPEGGED (13) [verb] To remove from a peg. | [adjective] Not pegged. UNPENNED (11) UNPICKED (17) [verb] To undo sewing stitches. | [verb] To undo knitting in order to reuse the wool. | [verb] To unravel or untangle the threads of a rope etc. UNPINNED (11) [verb] To unfasten by removing a pin. | [verb] To detach (an icon, application, etc.) from the place where it was previously pinned. | [verb] To get out of a pin UNPITIED (11) [adjective] Not pitied. UNPLACED (13) [adjective] Not assigned a place. | [adjective] Not among the first three horses to finish a race. UNPLAYED (14) [adjective] Not played. UNPLOWED (14) [adjective] (of a field or land) Unturned with a plough, and thus retaining its original vegetation (usually grass). | [adjective] Unexplored or unknown. UNPOISED (11) UNPOLLED (11) [adjective] Not polled (included in a vote). UNPOSTED (11) UNPOTTED (11) UNPRICED (13) [adjective] Not having a price set or shown; not priced. | [adjective] Valuable beyond price; priceless. UNPRIMED (13) [adjective] Not primed UNPRIZED (20) UNPROBED (13) UNPROVED (14) [adjective] Not proved. UNPRUNED (11) [adjective] Not having been pruned. UNPURGED (12) UNQUOTED (18) [adjective] Not quoted on the stock exchange. | [adjective] Not enclosed in quotation marks. | [adjective] Not having been quoted; whose words have not been repeated by others. UNRAISED (9) UNRANKED (13) [adjective] Not ranked. UNREELED (9) [verb] To remove or uncoil from a reel. UNREEVED (12) UNRENTED (9) UNREPAID (11) UNRESTED (9) [adjective] Not rested UNRHYMED (17) [adjective] Having no rhyme. | [verb] To remove the rhyme or expected rhyme from. UNRIFLED (12) UNRIGGED (11) [adjective] Not rigged; not having the rigging up. UNRINSED (9) UNRIPPED (13) [verb] To open something by ripping/tearing. | [adjective] Not ripped. UNROLLED (9) [verb] To straighten something that has been rolled, twisted or curled. | [verb] To emerge, be revealed or become apparent; to unfold. | [verb] To replace (a loop in a program) with a repetitive sequence of the individual instructions that the loop would carry out, sometimes used as an optimization. UNROOFED (12) [verb] To remove a roof from, e.g. a building. | [adjective] Not roofed, not having a roof. UNROOTED (9) [verb] To tear up by the roots; to uproot. | [adjective] Not rooted | [adjective] Uprooted UNRUSHED (12) [adjective] Not rushed UNRUSTED (9) UNSALTED (9) [adjective] To which salt has not been added. | [adjective] Without a cryptographic salt. UNSCALED (11) [adjective] That has not been scaled (climbed). UNSEALED (9) [verb] To break the seal of (something) in order to open it. | [verb] To open by having a seal broken. | [adjective] Not having been sealed. UNSEAMED (11) UNSEARED (9) UNSEATED (9) [verb] To throw from one's seat; to deprive of a seat. | [verb] To deprive of the right to sit in a legislative body, as for fraud in election, or simply by defeating them in an election. | [adjective] Not seated. UNSEEDED (10) [adjective] Not seeded (in any sense). | [adjective] Not being a seed, not being in a seed position. UNSEIZED (18) UNSERVED (12) [adjective] Not served. | [adjective] Yet to be served (prison sentence) UNSHADED (13) [adjective] Not shaded; lacking shade or a shade UNSHAMED (14) UNSHAPED (14) [adjective] Having no distinct shape; formless or amorphous UNSHARED (12) [adjective] Not shared; exclusive. UNSHAVED (15) [adjective] Not shaved. UNSIFTED (12) UNSIGNED (10) [noun] A numeric value or variable that has no sign and can only be positive. | [adjective] Not accepting negative numbers; having only a positive absolute value. | [adjective] Lacking a signature, unendorsed. UNSLAKED (13) UNSLICED (11) [adjective] Not sliced. UNSMOKED (15) [adjective] (of food) not preserved by treatment with smoke and thus retaining more of the original flavour, for example: unsmoked bacon or salmon. | [adjective] Of a cigarette, cigar or pipe not lit, not burnt. UNSOAKED (13) UNSOILED (9) [adjective] Uncontaminated, undirtied, pure, clean, immaculate. UNSOLVED (12) [adjective] Not yet solved. UNSORTED (9) [adjective] Not in any particular order or sequence. | [adjective] Mixed, jumbled, not separated by property into categories. | [adjective] Ill-chosen, inconvenient, unsuitable UNSOURED (9) [adjective] Not soured UNSTATED (9) [adjective] Not explicitly stated; unspoken. UNSTAYED (12) [adjective] Not stayed or held back. | [adjective] Not wearing stays. | [adjective] Without stays. UNSTONED (9) UNSUITED (9) [adjective] Not suited to a specific purpose. | [adjective] Not compatible; mismatched. | [adjective] Not wearing a suit. UNSWAYED (15) [adjective] Without being swayed, unconvinced, not having changed opinion. UNTACKED (15) [verb] To unfasten (something tacked). | [verb] To remove the tack from. UNTAGGED (11) [adjective] Not tagged; lacking a tag. UNTANNED (9) [adjective] Not tanned UNTAPPED (13) [adjective] Not tapped; not drawn on in terms of resources. UNTASTED (9) [adjective] Not tasted. UNTENDED (10) [adjective] Not tended UNTENTED (9) UNTESTED (9) [adjective] Not previously tested. UNTHAWED (15) [verb] To thaw out, to unfreeze; to become soft (of something which had been frozen). | [adjective] Which has not been thawed: still frozen. UNTHREAD (12) [verb] To draw or remove a thread from. | [verb] To loosen the connections of. | [verb] To make one's way through. UNTIDIED (10) UNTILLED (9) [adjective] Of land, having not been tilled. UNTILTED (9) UNTINGED (10) [adjective] Not tinged; untouched, unpolluted. UNTIPPED (13) UNTITLED (9) [adjective] Having no title. UNTOWARD (12) [adjective] Unfavourable, adverse, or disadvantageous. | [adjective] Unruly, troublesome; not easily guided. | [adjective] Unseemly, improper. UNTRACED (11) [adjective] Not having been traced. UNTUCKED (15) [verb] To remove something from a relatively hidden location or position where it is tucked. | [adjective] (of clothing) Not tucked in UNTUFTED (12) UNTURNED (9) [adjective] Not turned. UNTWINED (12) [verb] To untwist the strands of (something entwined). | [verb] To free (one thing that is entwined with another), disentangle, extricate. | [verb] To become untwisted or disentangled. UNUNITED (9) UNVALUED (12) [adjective] Not having been valued or appraised. | [adjective] Not considered to be of worth; deemed valueless. | [adjective] Having inestimable value; invaluable. UNVARIED (12) [adjective] Not varied; monotonous or homogeneous; samely UNVEILED (12) [verb] To remove a veil from; to uncover; to reveal something hidden. | [verb] To remove a veil; to reveal oneself. | [adjective] Not wearing, or not covered by, a veil. UNVEINED (12) UNVERSED (12) [adjective] Inexperienced, untrained. | [adjective] Not expressed in verse, unversified. UNVOICED (14) [adjective] Not spoken or expressed. | [adjective] Spoken without vibration of the vocal chords. | [adjective] (of a signal) That does not contain voice. UNWALLED (12) [adjective] Not walled, without walls. UNWANTED (12) [noun] One who or that which is not wanted; an undesirable. | [adjective] Not wanted; unwelcome. UNWARMED (14) [adjective] Not warmed UNWARNED (12) [adjective] Not warned UNWARPED (14) UNWASHED (15) [adjective] Not having been washed. | [adjective] Vulgar, plebeian, lowbrow. UNWASTED (12) UNWEANED (12) [adjective] (especially of an animal) Not yet weaned; still being suckled. | [adjective] Naive, wet behind the ears, green, inexperienced. UNWEDDED (14) [adjective] Not wedded. | [adjective] Not united together; poorly matched or discordant. UNWEEDED (13) [verb] To remove weeds from; to weed. | [adjective] Not weeded UNWELDED (13) UNWETTED (12) [adjective] Not wetted UNWILLED (12) UNWISHED (15) [verb] To wish not to be; to destroy by wishing. | [adjective] Unwished-for UNWITTED (12) UNWONTED (12) [adjective] Not customary or habitual; unusual; infrequent; strange. | [adjective] Unused (to); unaccustomed (to) something. UNWOODED (13) [adjective] Not wooded. UNWORKED (16) [adjective] Yet to be altered, carved, milled, worked, or otherwise changed from its natural or crude state. | [adjective] Describing an unaltered material found associated with human tool-making or other cultural activity. UNYEANED (12) UNZIPPED (22) [verb] To open something using a zipper. | [verb] To come open by means of a zipper. | [verb] To decompress (a zip file). UPBOILED (13) UPCOILED (13) UPCURLED (13) UPCURVED (16) UPDARTED (12) UPFLOWED (17) UPFOLDED (15) UPGIRDED (13) UPGRADED (13) [verb] To improve, usually applied to technology, generally by complete replacement of one or more components | [verb] To replace with something better. | [verb] To improve the equipment or furnishings of or services rendered to UPHEAPED (16) UPHEAVED (17) [verb] To heave or lift up; raise up or aloft. | [verb] To lift or thrust something upward forcefully, or be similarly lifted or thrust upward. | [verb] To be lifted up; rise. UPLEAPED (13) UPLIFTED (14) [verb] To raise something or someone to a higher physical, social, moral, intellectual, spiritual or emotional level. | [verb] (of a penalty) To aggravate; to increase. | [verb] (travel) To be accepted for carriage on a flight. UPLOADED (12) [verb] To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet. | [adjective] Having been uploaded; having been digitally sent from one's computer to someone else's. UPRAISED (11) [verb] To raise something up; to elevate. | [verb] To move something upright; to erect. | [adjective] Lifted, raised, held high. UPREARED (11) [verb] To raise something up; to rise up; to erect UPROOTED (11) [verb] To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the roots; to extirpate. | [verb] (by extension) To remove from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly. | [verb] To destroy utterly; to eradicate, exterminate. UPROUSED (11) UPRUSHED (14) UPSCALED (13) [verb] To increase in size, to scale up. | [adjective] That has been scaled up. UPSOARED (11) UPSTAGED (12) [verb] To draw attention away from others, especially on-stage. | [verb] To force other actors to face away from the audience by staying upstage. | [verb] To treat snobbishly. UPSTARED (11) UPSURGED (12) UPTILTED (11) UPTOSSED (11) UPTURNED (11) [adjective] Turned over; inverted; capsized | [adjective] (of a nose etc.) turned up at the end | [adjective] Looking upwards, turned upwards UPWAFTED (17) UPWELLED (14) URINATED (9) [verb] (urology) To pass urine from the body. UROCHORD (14) UTILISED (9) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. UTILIZED (18) [verb] To make use of; to use. | [verb] To make useful; to find a practical use for. | [verb] To make best use of; to use to its fullest extent, potential, or ability. VACUUMED (16) [verb] To clean (something) with a vacuum cleaner. | [verb] To use a vacuum cleaner. | [verb] To optimise a database or database table by physically removing deleted tuples. VAGABOND (15) [noun] A person on a trip of indeterminate destination and/or length of time. | [noun] One who wanders from place to place, having no fixed dwelling, or not abiding in it, and usually without the means of honest livelihood; a vagrant; a hobo. | [verb] To roam, as a vagabond VALANCED (14) VALUATED (12) [verb] To estimate the value of something; to appraise or to make a valuation. VAMOOSED (14) [verb] To run away (from); to flee. | [verb] To hurry. | [verb] To be expelled. VANDYKED (20) VANGUARD (13) [noun] The leading units at the front of an army or fleet. | [noun] (by extension) The person(s) at the forefront of any group or movement. VANISHED (15) [verb] To become invisible or to move out of view unnoticed. | [verb] To become equal to zero. | [verb] To disappear; to kidnap VANITIED (12) VAPOURED (14) [verb] To become vapor; to be emitted or circulated as vapor. | [verb] To turn into vapor. | [verb] To emit vapor or fumes. VARIATED (12) VAROOMED (14) VECTORED (14) [verb] To set (particularly an aircraft) on a course toward a selected point. | [verb] To redirect to a vector, or code entry point. VELVETED (15) VENEERED (12) [verb] To apply veneer to. | [verb] To disguise with apparent goodness. VENTURED (12) [verb] To undertake a risky or daring journey. | [verb] To risk or offer. | [verb] To dare to engage in; to attempt without any certainty of success. Used with at or on VERDURED (13) VERECUND (14) VERIFIED (15) [noun] A user of the Twitter microblogging service whose identity has been confirmed by Twitter. | [adjective] Subject to positive verification. | [verb] To substantiate or prove the truth of something VESSELED (12) VESTURED (12) VIBRATED (14) [verb] To shake with small, rapid movements to and fro. | [verb] To resonate. | [verb] To brandish; to swing to and fro. VIBRIOID (14) VILIFIED (15) [verb] To say defamatory things about someone or something; to speak ill of. | [verb] To belittle through speech; to put down. VILIPEND (14) VINEYARD (15) [noun] A grape plantation, especially one used in the production of wine. VINIFIED (15) [verb] To convert the juice of a fruit (especially that of the grape) into wine by fermentation. VIOLATED (12) [verb] To break or disregard (a rule or convention). | [verb] To rape. | [verb] To cite (a person) for a parole violation. VISIONED (12) [verb] To imagine something as if it were to be true. | [verb] To present as in a vision. | [verb] To provide with a vision. VITIATED (12) [verb] To spoil, make faulty; to reduce the value, quality, or effectiveness of something | [verb] To debase or morally corrupt | [verb] To violate, to rape VIVERRID (15) [noun] Any member of the family Viverridae VIVIFIED (18) [verb] To bring to life; to enliven. | [verb] To impart vitality. VIZARDED (22) VOLLEYED (15) [verb] To fire a volley of shots | [verb] To hit the ball before it touches the ground | [verb] To be fired in a volley VOODOOED (13) [verb] To bewitch someone or something using voodoo WAGGONED (14) WALLEYED (15) WALLOPED (14) [verb] To rush hastily. | [verb] To flounder, wallow. | [verb] To boil with a continued bubbling or heaving and rolling, with noise. WALLOWED (15) [verb] To roll oneself about in something dirty, for example in mud. | [verb] To move lazily or heavily in any medium. | [verb] To immerse oneself in, to occupy oneself with, metaphorically. WANDERED (13) [verb] To move without purpose or specified destination; often in search of livelihood. | [verb] To stray; stray from one's course; err. | [verb] To commit adultery. WANTONED (12) [verb] To rove and ramble without restraint, rule, or limit; to revel; to play loosely; to frolic. | [verb] To waste or squander, especially in pleasure (most often with away). | [verb] To act wantonly; to be lewd or lascivious. WARSTLED (12) WATERBED (14) [noun] A bed with a tough plastic mattress filled with water. WAUCHTED (17) WAUGHTED (16) WAVEBAND (17) [noun] A range of electromagnetic wavelengths or frequencies; for example shortwave or mediumwave radio. WEAKENED (16) [verb] To make weaker or less strong. | [verb] To become weaker or less strong. | [adjective] Reduced, made less strong. WEAPONED (14) WEASELED (12) [verb] To achieve by clever or devious means. | [verb] To gain something for oneself by clever or devious means. | [verb] To engage in clever or devious behavior. WEEVILED (15) WEIGHTED (16) [verb] To add weight to something; to make something heavier. | [verb] To load, burden or oppress someone. | [verb] To assign weights to individual statistics. WELCOMED (16) [verb] To affirm or greet the arrival of someone, especially by saying "Welcome!". | [verb] To accept something willingly or gladly. | [adjective] Having received a warm welcome. WELLHEAD (15) [noun] The place where a spring breaks out of the ground; the source of water for a stream or well. | [noun] The source of something; a fountainhead. | [noun] The surface structure of an oil well etc. WELTERED (12) [verb] To roll around; to wallow. | [verb] To revel, luxuriate. | [verb] (of waves, billows) To rise and fall, to tumble over, to roll. WEREGILD (13) WESTERED (12) WESTWARD (15) [noun] The western region or countries; the west. | [adjective] Lying toward the west. | [adjective] Moving or oriented toward the west. WHEEDLED (16) [verb] To cajole or attempt to persuade by flattery. | [verb] To obtain by flattery, guile, or trickery. WHEEPLED (17) WHERRIED (15) WHIFFLED (21) [verb] To blow a short gust. | [verb] To waffle, talk aimlessly. | [verb] To waste time. WHIMSIED (17) WHINNIED (15) [verb] (of a horse) To make a gentle neigh. WHIPCORD (19) [noun] A hard, twisted cord used for making whiplashes. | [noun] A type of catgut. | [noun] A strong worsted fabric, with a diagonal rib. WHIRRIED (15) WHISHTED (18) WHISTLED (15) [verb] To make a shrill, high-pitched sound by forcing air through the mouth. To produce a whistling sound, restrictions to the flow of air are created using the teeth, tongue and lips. | [verb] To make a similar sound by forcing air through a musical instrument or a pipe etc. | [verb] To move in such a way as to create a whistling sound. WHITENED (15) [verb] (To cause) to become white or whiter; to bleach or blanch. WHITTLED (15) [verb] To cut or shape wood with a knife. | [verb] To reduce or gradually eliminate something (such as a debt). | [verb] To make eager or excited; to excite with liquor; to inebriate. WHOOSHED (18) [verb] To make a breathy sound like a whoosh. WIDEBAND (15) [adjective] Describing a communications transmission rate between that of narrowband and broadband WIFEHOOD (18) WILDERED (13) [verb] To bewilder, perplex WILDLAND (13) WILDWOOD (16) [noun] Woodland that has developed naturally, especially where a suitable climate has developed with it. WILLOWED (15) WILLYARD (15) WINDOWED (16) [verb] To furnish with windows. | [verb] To place at or in a window. | [adjective] Fitted with windows (often of a particular kind). WINDWARD (16) [noun] The direction from which the wind blows. | [noun] The side receiving the wind's force. | [adjective] Towards the wind, or the direction from which the wind is blowing. WINNOWED (15) [verb] To subject (granular material, especially food grain) to a current of air separating heavier and lighter components, as grain from chaff. | [verb] To separate, sift, analyze, or test by separating items having different values. | [verb] To blow upon or toss about by blowing; to set in motion as with a fan or wings. WINTERED (12) [verb] To spend the winter (in a particular place). | [verb] To store something (for instance animals) somewhere over winter to protect it from cold. WITHERED (15) [verb] To shrivel, droop or dry up, especially from lack of water. | [verb] To cause to shrivel or dry up. | [verb] To lose vigour or power; to languish; to pass away. WITHHELD (18) [adjective] That one has withheld; kept from the possession or knowledge of another. | [verb] To keep (a physical object that one has obtained) to oneself rather than giving it back to its owner. | [verb] To keep (information, assent etc) to oneself rather than revealing it. WITHHOLD (18) [verb] To keep (a physical object that one has obtained) to oneself rather than giving it back to its owner. | [verb] To keep (information, assent etc) to oneself rather than revealing it. | [verb] To stay back. WONDERED (13) [verb] To be affected with surprise or admiration; to be struck with astonishment; to be amazed; to marvel; often followed by at. | [verb] To ponder; to feel doubt and curiosity; to query in the mind. | [adjective] Wonderful, extraordinary. WOODBIND (15) WOODLAND (13) [noun] Land covered with woody vegetation. | [adjective] Of a creature or object: growing, living, or existing in a woodland. | [adjective] Having the character of a woodland. WOODSHED (16) [noun] An enclosed, roofed structure, often an outbuilding, used primarily to store firewood. | [noun] A place where punishments or reprimands are administered. | [verb] To practice or rehearse using a musical instrument. WOODWIND (16) [noun] Any (typically wooden) musical instrument that produces sound by the player blowing into it, through a reed, or across an opening. Woodwind instruments include the recorder, flute, piccolo, clarinet, oboe, cor anglais and bassoon. WOOLSHED (15) [noun] A shed where sheep are shorn. WORKLOAD (16) [noun] The amount of work assigned to a particular worker, normally in a specified time period | [noun] The amount of work that a machine can handle or produce WORMSEED (14) [noun] An aromatic tropical plant (Dysphania ambrosioides, syn. Chenopodium ambrosioides) that yields an anthelmintic oil | [noun] Santonica or Levant wormseed, Seriphidium cinum, syn. Artemisia cina, an Asian plant related to wormwood. WORMWOOD (17) [noun] An intensely bitter herb (Artemisia absinthium and similar plants in genus Artemisia) used in medicine, in the production of absinthe and vermouth, and as a tonic. | [noun] Something that causes bitterness or affliction; a cause of mortification or vexation. WORRITED (12) [verb] To worry; to be anxious. | [verb] To worry (someone); to cause to be anxious. WORSENED (12) [verb] To make worse; to impair. | [verb] To become worse; to get worse. | [verb] To get the better of; to worst. WRANGLED (13) [verb] To bicker, or quarrel angrily and noisily. | [verb] To herd (horses or other livestock); to supervise, manage (people). | [verb] To involve in a quarrel or dispute; to embroil. WRASSLED (12) WRASTLED (12) WREATHED (15) [verb] To place an entwined circle of flowers upon or around something. | [verb] To wrap around something in a circle. | [verb] To curl, writhe or spiral in the form of a wreath. WRENCHED (17) [verb] To violently move in a turn or writhe. | [verb] To pull or twist violently. | [verb] To turn aside or deflect. WRESTLED (12) [verb] To contend, with an opponent, by grappling and attempting to throw, immobilize or otherwise defeat him, depending on the specific rules of the contest | [verb] To struggle or strive | [verb] To take part in a wrestling match with someone WRETCHED (17) [adjective] Very miserable; feeling deep affliction or distress. | [adjective] Worthless; paltry; very poor or mean; miserable. | [adjective] Hatefully contemptible; despicable; wicked. WRIGGLED (14) [verb] To twist one's body to and fro with short, writhing motions; to squirm. | [verb] To cause to or make something wriggle. | [verb] To use crooked or devious means. WRINKLED (16) [verb] To make wrinkles in; to cause to have wrinkles. | [verb] To pucker or become uneven or irregular. | [verb] (of skin) To develop irreversibly wrinkles; to age. WUTHERED (15) YABBERED (16) [verb] To talk, jabber. YAMMERED (16) [verb] To complain peevishly. | [verb] To talk loudly and persistently. | [verb] To repeat on and on, usually loudly or in complaint. YARDBIRD (15) [noun] A chicken. | [noun] A person who is imprisoned. | [noun] A soldier who is required to perform menial work on the grounds of a military base. YARDLAND (13) YARDWAND (16) YATTERED (12) [verb] To natter; to prattle; to chatter mindlessly. YELLOWED (15) [verb] To become yellow or more yellow. | [verb] To make (something) yellow or more yellow. | [adjective] Having a yellow color (or discoloration), especially when due to age; having been made yellow. YODELLED (13) [verb] To sing (a song) in such a way that the voice fluctuates rapidly between the normal chest voice and falsetto. ZIPPERED (22) [verb] To close a zipper. | [verb] To put a zipper on an article. | [adjective] Fitted with a zipper.

9-Letter Words (2696)

ABANDONED (13) [verb] To give up or relinquish control of, to surrender or to give oneself over, or to yield to one's emotions. | [verb] To desist in doing, practicing, following, holding, or adhering to; to turn away from; to permit to lapse; to renounce; to discontinue. | [verb] To leave behind; to desert as in a ship or a position, typically in response to overwhelming odds or impending dangers; to forsake, in spite of a duty or responsibility. ABDICATED (15) [verb] To disclaim and expel from the family, as a father his child; to disown; to disinherit. | [verb] To formally separate oneself from or to divest oneself of. | [verb] To depose. ABERRATED (12) ABNEGATED (13) [verb] To deny (oneself something); to renounce or give up (a right, a power, a claim, a privilege, a convenience). | [verb] To relinquish; to surrender; to abjure. ABOLISHED (15) [verb] To end a law, system, institution, custom or practice. | [verb] To put an end to or destroy, as a physical object; to wipe out. ABREACTED (14) [verb] To eliminate previously repressed emotions by reliving past experiences. ABROGATED (13) [verb] To annul by an authoritative act; to abolish by the authority of the maker or her or his successor; to repeal; — applied to the repeal of laws, decrees, ordinances, the abolition of customs, etc. | [verb] To put an end to; to do away with. | [verb] To block a process or function. ABSCESSED (14) ABSCONDED (15) [verb] To flee, often secretly; to steal away, particularly to avoid arrest or prosecution. | [verb] To withdraw from. | [verb] To evade, to hide or flee from. ABSTAINED (12) [verb] Keep or withhold oneself. | [verb] Refrain from (something or doing something); keep from doing, especially an indulgence. | [verb] Fast (not eat for a period). ABSTERGED (13) [verb] Past tense of absterge; to cleanse or wipe away. ACCLAIMED (16) [verb] To shout; to call out. | [verb] To express great approval (for). | [verb] To salute or praise with great approval; to compliment; to applaud; to welcome enthusiastically. ACCOUNTED (14) [verb] To provide explanation. | [verb] To count. ACCOUTRED (14) [verb] To furnish with dress, or equipment, especially those for military service; to equip. | [adjective] Supplied with essential equipments for a certain intention, particularly military. | [adjective] Provided with vital supplies for a precise aim, more specifically for the armed forces. ACERBATED (14) [verb] Past tense of acerbate; to make sour, bitter, or harsh in manner or taste. | [verb] To intensify or worsen (a problem or situation). ACETIFIED (15) [verb] Converted into vinegar or acetic acid; made sour by acetification. ACIDIFIED (16) [verb] To make something (more) acidic or sour; to convert into an acid. | [verb] To neutralize alkalis, as to acidify sugar | [verb] To sour, to embitter. ACIERATED (12) [adjective] Converted into or containing steel; hardened with steel. ACQUITTED (21) [verb] To declare or find innocent or not guilty. | [verb] To discharge (for example, a claim or debt); to clear off, to pay off; to fulfil. | [verb] Followed by of (and formerly by from): to discharge, release, or set free from a burden, duty, liability, or obligation, or from an accusation or charge. ACTIVATED (15) [verb] To encourage development or induce increased activity; to stimulate. | [verb] To put a device, mechanism (alarm etc.) or system into action or motion; to trigger, to actuate, to set off, to enable. | [verb] To render more reactive; excite. ACTIVIZED (24) ADDRESSED (12) [verb] To prepare oneself. | [verb] To direct speech. | [verb] To aim; to direct. ADHIBITED (16) [verb] To allow in; to admit. | [verb] To apply or administer (something, such as a remedy). | [verb] To affix. ADJOURNED (18) [verb] To postpone. | [verb] To defer; to put off temporarily or indefinitely. | [verb] To end or suspend an event. ADULTHOOD (14) [noun] The state or condition of a human being once it has reached physical maturity, and is presumed to have reached a state of psychological maturity, to wit: once it has become an adult. | [noun] The time period of a human being's majority; the time during which a human being has reached physical maturity, and ending with its death. ADVOCATED (16) [verb] To plead in favour of; to defend by argument, before a tribunal or the public; to support, vindicate, or recommend publicly. | [verb] To encourage support for something. | [verb] (with for) To engage in advocacy. AFFIANCED (18) [verb] To be betrothed to; to promise to marry. AFFLICTED (18) [verb] To cause (someone) pain, suffering or distress. | [verb] To strike or cast down; to overthrow. | [verb] To make low or humble. AFFRONTED (16) [verb] To insult intentionally, especially openly. | [verb] To meet defiantly; to confront. | [verb] To meet or encounter face to face. AFORESAID (13) [adjective] Previously stated; said or named before. AFTERWARD (16) [adverb] (temporal location) At a later or succeeding time. AFTERWORD (16) [noun] An epilogue. | [noun] (of a letter) a postscript. | [noun] (to a book) an appendix. AGGRESSED (12) [verb] To set upon; to attack. | [verb] (construed with on) To commit the first act of hostility or offense against; to begin a quarrel or controversy with someone; to make an attack against someone. AGGRIEVED (15) [verb] To cause someone to feel pain or sorrow to; to afflict | [verb] To grieve; to lament. | [adjective] Angry or resentful due to unjust treatment. AIRHEADED (14) [adjective] Silly, foolish | [adjective] Unintelligent AIRLIFTED (13) [verb] To transport (troops etc) in an airlift. | [adjective] Having been the subject of an airlift. AIRMAILED (12) [verb] To send mail by air. | [verb] To (unintentionally) throw the ball well over a fielder's head where that fielder is unable to make a play on the ball. ALIENATED (10) [verb] To convey or transfer to another, as title, property, or right; to part voluntarily with ownership of. | [verb] To estrange; to withdraw affections or attention from; to make indifferent or averse, where love or friendship before subsisted. | [adjective] Isolated; excluded; estranged. ALIMENTED (12) ALKALISED (14) [verb] To cause to become alkaline, more basic and less acidic. ALKALIZED (23) [verb] To cause to become alkaline, more basic and less acidic. ALKYLATED (17) [verb] To add one or more alkyl groups to a compound, especially by reacting with an alkylating agent | [adjective] That has been modified by alkylation ALLOCATED (12) [verb] To set aside for a purpose. | [verb] To distribute according to a plan, generally followed by the adposition to. | [verb] To reserve a portion of memory for use by a computer program. AMBULATED (14) [verb] To walk; to relocate oneself under the power of one's own legs. AMNESTIED (12) [adjective] That has been given amnesty; whose past offences have been forgiven. | [verb] To grant a pardon (to a group) AMORTISED (12) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMORTIZED (21) [verb] To alienate (property) in mortmain. | [verb] To wipe out (a debt, liability etc.) gradually or in installments. | [verb] To even out the costs of running an algorithm over many iterations, so that high-cost iterations are much less frequent than low-cost iterations, which lowers the average running time. AMPERSAND (14) [noun] The symbol "&". | [verb] To add an ampersand to. AMPLIFIED (17) [adjective] Having been made the subject of amplification; more potent or stronger, louder | [verb] To render larger, more extended, or more intense. | [verb] To enlarge by addition or commenting; to treat copiously by adding particulars, illustrations, etc.; to expand. AMPUTATED (14) [verb] To surgically remove a part of the body, especially a limb | [adjective] Having been removed or cut off. ANALYSAND (13) [noun] A person who undergoes psychoanalysis; one who is analysed. ANEUPLOID (12) [noun] A cell or an organism having such a number of chromosomes. | [adjective] Having a number of chromosomes that is not a multiple of the haploid number. ANGUISHED (14) [verb] To suffer pain. | [verb] To cause to suffer pain. | [adjective] Feeling anguish; experiencing extreme discomfort or discontent. ANGULATED (11) [verb] To make, or to become, angular. ANKYLOSED (17) [verb] To cause bony structures to fuse or stiffen as a result of ankylosis. | [verb] To suffer from ankylosis. | [adjective] Stiffened or inflexible, with regard to the bones or joints; figuratively, stiff, cramped, rigid. ANNOTATED (10) [verb] To add annotation to. | [adjective] Contains or is accompanied by annotations or labelled notes. ANNOUNCED (12) [verb] To give public notice, especially for the first time; to make known | [verb] To pronounce; to declare by judicial sentence ANTECEDED (13) [verb] To go before; to precede. | [verb] To predate or antedate. ANTEDATED (11) [verb] To occur before an event or time; to exist further back in time. | [verb] To assign a date to a document or action earlier than the actual date; to backdate. | [verb] To find earlier citational evidence for a term. ANTIDOTED (11) [verb] Past tense of antidote, meaning to counteract or neutralize the effects of poison or harm. ANTIFRAUD (13) [adjective] Acting against fraud. APARTHEID (15) [noun] The policy of racial separation used by South Africa from 1948 to 1990. | [noun] (by extension) Any similar policy of racial separation/segregation and discrimination. | [noun] (by extension) A policy or situation of segregation based on some specified attribute. APHORISED (15) [verb] To create an aphorism from. | [verb] To use aphorisms. APHORIZED (24) [verb] To create an aphorism from. | [verb] To use aphorisms. APPARELED (14) [verb] To dress or clothe; to attire. | [verb] To furnish with apparatus; to equip; to fit out. | [verb] To dress with external ornaments; to cover with something ornamental APPLAUDED (15) [verb] To express approval (of something) by clapping the hands. | [verb] To praise, or express approval for something or someone. APPLIQUED (23) [verb] To decorate something in this way APPOINTED (14) [verb] To set, fix or determine (a time or place for something such as a meeting, or the meeting itself) by authority or agreement. | [verb] To name (someone to a post or role). | [verb] To furnish or equip (a place) completely; to provide with all the equipment or furnishings necessary; to fit out. APPRAISED (14) [verb] To determine the value or worth of something, particularly as a person appointed for this purpose. | [verb] To consider comprehensively. | [verb] To judge the performance of someone, especially a worker. APPREHEND (17) [verb] To take or seize; to take hold of. | [verb] To take hold of with the understanding, that is, to conceive in the mind; to become cognizant of; to understand; to recognize; to consider. | [verb] To anticipate; especially, to anticipate with anxiety, dread, or fear; to fear. APPRESSED (14) [verb] To press close to. | [adjective] Closely flattened down. ARACHNOID (15) [noun] An arachnid | [noun] The arachnoid mater, the middle layer of the meninges, the three membranes that protect the brain | [noun] A round network of fractures in the crust of Venus ARBORIZED (21) [adjective] Having a branching structure resembling a tree; branched like the limbs of a tree. ARCHAISED (15) [verb] To give an archaic quality or character to; make archaic, to suggest the past. | [verb] To speak, write, etc. in an archaic manner. ARCHAIZED (24) [verb] To give an archaic quality or character to; make archaic, to suggest the past. | [verb] To speak, write, etc. in an archaic manner. ARCHFIEND (18) [noun] A chief fiend | [noun] Satan | [noun] (transferred sense) A diabolically evil person. ARMATURED (12) [adjective] Fitted with or having an armature; equipped with a protective covering or framework. ARRAIGNED (11) [verb] To officially charge someone in a court of law. | [verb] To call to account, or accuse, before the bar of reason, taste, or any other tribunal. ARROGATED (11) [verb] To appropriate or lay claim to something for oneself without right. | [adjective] Claimed falsely ARROWHEAD (16) [noun] The pointed part of an arrow. | [noun] (symbol) The pointed part of an arrow. | [noun] Any plant in the genus Sagittaria. ARROWWOOD (16) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Viburnum, having straight stems formerly used for arrow shafts. ARTHROPOD (15) [noun] An invertebrate animal of the phylum Arthropoda, characterized by a chitinous exoskeleton and multiple jointed appendages ARYTENOID (13) [noun] Either of a pair of cartilages at the back of the larynx, used in the production of different kinds of voice quality (for example, creaky voice). | [noun] Arytenoid muscle | [adjective] Relating to or being either of two small laryngeal cartilages to which the vocal cords are attached. ASCLEPIAD (14) [noun] A metrical line consisting of four dactylic feet followed by two trochaic feet, used in classical poetry. | [noun] A member of the genus Asclepias, commonly known as milkweed plants. ASPERATED (12) ASPHALTED (15) [verb] To pave with asphalt. ASPIRATED (12) [verb] To remove a liquid or gas by means of suction. | [verb] To inhale so as to draw something other than air into one's lungs. | [verb] To produce an audible puff of breath. especially following a consonant. ASSAGAIED (11) [verb] To spear with an assegai. ASSAULTED (10) [verb] To attack, physically or figuratively. | [verb] To threaten or harass. ASSEGAIED (11) [verb] To spear with an assegai. ASSEMBLED (14) [verb] To put together. | [verb] To gather as a group. | [verb] To translate from assembly language to machine code ASTOUNDED (11) [verb] To astonish, bewilder or dazzle. | [adjective] Surprised, amazed, astonished or bewildered. ASTRICTED (12) [verb] Past tense of astrict; to bind or restrict closely. | [adjective] Bound or confined; restricted. ASTRINGED (11) [verb] Past tense of astringent; to bind or constrict, especially in reference to the contraction of body tissues or the styptic action of certain substances. ATROPHIED (15) [adjective] Characterized by atrophy. | [verb] To wither or waste away. | [verb] To cause to waste away or become abortive; to starve or weaken. ATTAINTED (10) [verb] To subject to attainder; to condemn (someone) to death and extinction of all civil rights. | [verb] To subject to calumny; to accuse of a crime or dishonour. | [verb] To taint; to corrupt, sully. ATTEMPTED (14) [verb] To try. | [verb] To try to move, by entreaty, by afflictions, or by temptations; to tempt. | [verb] To try to win, subdue, or overcome. ATTRACTED (12) [verb] To pull toward without touching. | [verb] To arouse interest. | [verb] To draw by moral, emotional or sexual influence; to engage or fix, as the mind, attention, etc.; to invite or allure. AUCTIONED (12) [verb] To sell at an auction. AUGMENTED (13) [verb] To increase; to make larger or supplement. | [verb] To grow; to increase; to become greater. | [verb] To slow the tempo or meter, e.g. for a dramatic or stately passage. AUSFORMED (15) [verb] Past tense of ausform, which means to heat treat steel or other metal by a special process involving controlled cooling. | [adjective] Treated by the ausforming process. AUTOLYSED (13) [verb] Past tense of autolyse; to undergo or cause autolysis, which is the breakdown of cells or tissues by their own enzymes. AUTOLYZED (22) [verb] Past tense of autolyze; to undergo or cause autolysis, the breakdown of cells or tissues by their own enzymes. AUTOMATED (12) [verb] To replace or enhance human labor with machines. | [adjective] Made automatic | [adjective] Done by machine. AUTOPSIED (12) [verb] To perform an autopsy on. | [verb] To perform an after-the-fact analysis of, especially of a failure. AVIANIZED (22) [adjective] Made to resemble or characteristic of birds; having bird-like qualities. | [verb] Past tense of avianize; to modify or treat something to have avian characteristics. BABBITTED (16) [verb] Past tense of babbit, meaning to line or coat with babbitt metal (a soft alloy used to reduce friction in bearings). BACKBOARD (20) [noun] The flat vertical surface to which the basket is attached. | [noun] A flat vertical wall with the image of a tennis net drawn or painted on it. Designed to practice hitting against such that the ball bounces back. | [noun] (first aid) A spine board. | [noun] The port or larboard side of a ship BACKDATED (19) [verb] To give or assign a date to a document that is earlier than the current or true date. BACKFIELD (21) [noun] The area of play behind either the offensive or defensive line. | [noun] The players positioned in this area. BACKFIRED (21) [verb] (of a gun, cannon, Bunsen burner, etc.) To fire in the opposite direction, for example due to an obstruction in the barrel. | [verb] (of an engine) To experience a premature ignition of fuel or an ignition of exhaust gases, making a popping sound. | [verb] To fail in a manner that brings down further misfortune. BACKSWORD (21) [noun] A sword with one sharp edge. | [noun] A stick with a basket handle, used in rustic amusements. | [noun] The game in which the stick is used. BACTEROID (14) [adjective] Resembling or relating to bacteria in form or characteristics. BADINAGED (14) [verb] Past tense of badinage; engaged in playful, teasing banter or witty conversation. BALCONIED (14) [adjective] Having a balcony or balconies. BALLASTED (12) [verb] To stabilize or load a ship with ballast. | [verb] To lay ballast on the bed of a railroad track. BALLOONED (12) [verb] To increase or expand rapidly. | [verb] To go up or voyage in a balloon. | [verb] To take up in, or as if in, a balloon. BANALIZED (21) [verb] Past tense of banalize; to make banal or commonplace; to reduce something to a trite or ordinary state. BANDSTAND (13) [noun] A small, open-air platform or enclosure for bands to play on, usually roofed. | [noun] A small, informal stage, usually located in nightclubs, where local and amateur musicians perform. BANQUETED (21) [verb] To participate in a banquet; to feast. | [verb] To have dessert after a feast. | [verb] To treat with a banquet or sumptuous entertainment of food; to feast. BARBECUED (16) [verb] To cook food on a barbecue; to smoke it over indirect heat from high-smoke fuels. | [verb] To grill. | [adjective] Cooked on a barbecue. BARBEQUED (23) [verb] To cook food on a barbecue; to smoke it over indirect heat from high-smoke fuels. | [verb] To grill. | [adjective] Cooked on a barbecue. BAREFACED (17) [adjective] Undisguisedly offensive and bold; crude; coarse; brazen | [adjective] Open, undisguised | [adjective] Unbearded (not having a beard or other facial hair); clean-shaven. BARGAINED (13) [verb] To make a bargain; to make a deal or contract for the exchange of property or services; to negotiate | [verb] To transfer for a consideration; to barter; to trade BARHOPPED (19) [verb] To drink at a number of bars during a single day or evening. BARNACLED (14) [adjective] Covered with or encrusted by barnacles. | [verb] Past tense of barnacle, meaning to cling to or attach oneself persistently like a barnacle. BARRACKED (18) [verb] To house military personnel; to quarter. | [verb] To live in barracks. | [verb] To jeer and heckle; to attempt to disconcert by verbal means. BARRELLED (12) [verb] To put or to pack in a barrel or barrels. | [verb] To move quickly or in an uncontrolled manner. | [adjective] Having a barrel or specified number of barrels. BARTENDED (13) [verb] To tend a bar; to act as a barman. BASEBOARD (14) [noun] (finish carpentry, interior decorating) A panel or molding between the floor and the interior wall of a structure | [noun] A similar panel at the base of a piece of furniture or equipment. BASSETTED (12) BASTIONED (12) [adjective] Furnished with or protected by bastions; having bastions as defensive structures. BATFOWLED (18) [verb] To catch birds at night by blinding them with light and noise, or to trick or confuse someone. | [verb] Past tense of batfowl. BAYONETED (15) [verb] To stab with a bayonet. | [verb] To compel or drive by the bayonet. | [adjective] Fitted with a bayonet. BEACHHEAD (20) [noun] An area of hostile territory (especially on a beach) that, when captured, serves for the continuous landing (or movement into position) of further troops and material | [noun] (by extension) An initial success that ensures the possibility of further advances in a project; a foothold. BEATIFIED (15) [adjective] Having been recognized and declared, by the church, that a deceased has entered heaven; having attained this step in the process of canonization. | [verb] To make blissful. | [verb] To pronounce or regard as happy, or supremely blessed, or as conferring happiness. BEBLOODED (15) [adjective] Stained or covered with blood. BECHALKED (21) BECHANCED (19) [verb] To happen; chance. | [verb] To happen (to); befall to. BECHARMED (19) [verb] Past tense of becharm; to charm or enchant. BECLASPED (16) [verb] Past tense of beclasps; to fasten or hold with a clasp or clasps. BECLOAKED (18) [verb] Past tense of becloak; to cover or conceal with or as if with a cloak. BECLOGGED (16) [verb] Past tense of beclog; to clog up or obstruct completely. BECLOTHED (17) [verb] Dressed or clothed in garments; past tense of beclothе, meaning to cover with clothing. BECLOUDED (15) [verb] To cause to become obscure or muddled. | [verb] (usually passive) To cover or surround with clouds. | [verb] To cast in a negative light, cast a pall over, darken. BECLOWNED (17) [verb] To make a fool of; to treat or dress as a clown. | [verb] To behave in a ridiculous or foolish manner. BECRAWLED (17) BECROWDED (18) BECRUSTED (14) [adjective] Covered with or having a crust formed on the surface. BEDABBLED (17) [verb] To dabble about or all over with moisture; make something wet by sprinkling or spattering water, paint, or other liquid on it. BEDAZZLED (31) [verb] To confuse or disarm by dazzling. | [verb] To decorate with sequins or other sparkly material; to bespangle. BEDEVILED (16) [verb] To harass or cause trouble for; to plague. | [verb] To perplex or bewilder. BEDIGHTED (17) [verb] Dressed up or adorned in a showy or elaborate manner; decked out. BEDIMPLED (17) [adjective] Having dimples or marked with small indentations. BEDIRTIED (13) [verb] Past tense of bedirty; to make dirty or soil something. BEDIZENED (22) [verb] To ornament something in showy, tasteless, or gaudy finery. | [verb] To dirty; cover with dirt. BEDROOMED (15) [adjective] Having a specified number of bedrooms, as in "a three-bedroomed house." BEDRUGGED (15) [adjective] Under the influence of drugs; intoxicated or affected by medication. | [verb] Past tense of bedrug, meaning to administer drugs to or intoxicate with drugs. BEDSPREAD (15) [noun] The topmost covering of a bed, often functioning as a blanket. | [noun] A coverlet. BEDWARFED (19) BEFLAGGED (17) [adjective] Decorated or marked with flags. BEFLECKED (21) BEFRETTED (15) [verb] Past tense of befret, meaning to fret or worry excessively about something. BEFRINGED (16) [adjective] Trimmed or decorated with fringe; having fringe attached to the edges. BEFUDDLED (17) [verb] To perplex, confuse (someone). | [verb] To stupefy (someone), especially with alcohol. | [adjective] Confused or perplexed BEGIRDLED (14) [verb] Past tense of begirdle; to encircle or gird about. BEGLADDED (15) BEGLOOMED (15) BEGRIMMED (17) [adjective] Covered or made dirty with grime; soiled or blackened. BEGROANED (13) [verb] Past tense of begroan; to cover or fill with groans. BEGRUDGED (15) [verb] To grudge about or over; be envious or covetous. | [verb] To be reluctant | [verb] To give reluctantly. BEJEWELED (22) [verb] To decorate or bedeck with jewels or gems. | [adjective] Covered in jewels, especially as decoration BEJUMBLED (23) BEKNOTTED (16) [adjective] Tied in knots; knotted together in a confused or tangled manner. BELABORED (14) [verb] To labour about; labour over; work hard upon; ply diligently. | [verb] To beat soundly; thump; beat someone. | [verb] To attack someone verbally. BELITTLED (12) [verb] To knowingly say that something is smaller or less important than it actually is, especially as a way of showing contempt or deprecation. BELLYBAND (17) [noun] A strap around the belly of a horse or other draft animal used to secure a saddle or the shafts of a cart. | [noun] Various constrictive bands worn around the belly, particularly: | [noun] A band of canvas used to strengthen a sail. BEMADAMED (17) BEMEDALED (15) [adjective] Decorated with or wearing medals. BEMINGLED (15) [verb] Past tense and past participle of "bemingle," meaning to mingle or mix together with others. BEMUDDLED (16) [verb] Confused or bewildered; made unclear or muddled. BEMUZZLED (32) [verb] Past tense of bemuzzle; to confuse or perplex. | [verb] To put a muzzle on; to silence or restrain. BENCHLAND (17) BENEFICED (17) [adjective] Holding or having received a benefice; endowed with an ecclesiastical office or living. | [verb] Past tense of benefice; having granted a benefice to someone. BENEFITED (15) [verb] To be or to provide a benefit to. | [verb] To receive a benefit (from); to be a beneficiary. BENEMPTED (16) BENIGHTED (16) [verb] (chiefly in passive) To overtake (a traveller etc) with the darkness of night, especially before shelter is reached. | [verb] To darken; to shroud or obscure. | [verb] To plunge or be overwhelmed in moral or intellectual darkness. BENZENOID (21) [noun] A compound of this kind. | [adjective] Having an electronic structure analogous to that of benzene; Containing at least one benzene ring BEPAINTED (14) [verb] Past tense of bepaint; to paint or cover with paint. BEPIMPLED (18) BESCOURED (14) [verb] Past tense of bescour; to scour thoroughly or scrub vigorously. BESEECHED (17) [verb] To beg or implore (a person) | [verb] To request or beg for BESHOUTED (15) [verb] Past tense of beshout, meaning to shout at or overwhelm with shouting. BESHREWED (18) [verb] Past tense of beshrew; to curse or wish evil upon someone. BESMEARED (14) [verb] To smear over; smear all over; sully. BESMUDGED (16) [verb] Past tense of besmudge; to smudge or soil with dirt or marks. BESMUTTED (14) [adjective] Marked or soiled with smut; covered with soot or grime. BESOOTHED (15) BESPOUSED (14) BESTEADED (13) BESTIRRED (12) [verb] To put into brisk or vigorous action; to move with life and vigor. | [verb] To make active; to rouse oneself. BESTREWED (15) [verb] To strew or scatter about; throw or drop here and there. | [verb] To strew anything upon; strew over or about; cover or partially cover with things strewn; cover with straw or strewing. BESTROWED (15) [verb] Past tense of bestrow, meaning to scatter or strew about. BESTUDDED (14) [adjective] Decorated or adorned with studs or studded ornaments. BESWARMED (17) [verb] Past tense of bswarm; to surround or crowd around in large numbers like a swarm. BETHANKED (19) BETHORNED (15) BETHUMPED (19) BETOKENED (16) [verb] To signify by some visible object; show by signs or tokens. | [verb] To foreshow by present signs; indicate something future by that which is seen or known. BETROTHED (15) [verb] To promise to give in marriage. | [verb] To promise to take (as a future spouse); to plight one's troth to. | [noun] One who is betrothed, i.e. a fiancé or fiancée. BEVOMITED (17) BEWEARIED (15) [verb] Past tense of beweary; to make weary or tired. BEWITCHED (20) [verb] To cast a spell upon. | [verb] To fascinate or charm. | [verb] To astonish, amaze. BEWORRIED (15) BEWRAPPED (19) [verb] Past tense of bewrap; to wrap up or cover completely. BICOLORED (14) [adjective] Having two colors or two-colored; marked or decorated with two distinct colors. BIGHEADED (17) [adjective] Arrogant, having an exaggerated perception of one's positive qualities. BILLBOARD (14) [noun] A very large outdoor sign, generally used for advertising. | [noun] A flat surface, such as a panel or fence, on which bills are posted; a bulletin board. | [noun] A piece of thick plank, armed with iron plates, and fixed on the bow or fore-channels of a vessel, for the bill or fluke of the anchor to rest on. BIOHAZARD (24) [noun] A biological hazard; a source of risk due to some biological factor such as bacteria or human waste. BIPYRAMID (19) [noun] A geometric solid formed by joining two pyramids base-to-base, having two apex points and a polygonal base in the middle. BIRDLIMED (15) [verb] Past tense of birdlime; to trap or catch with birdlime (a sticky substance used to catch birds). | [adjective] Smeared with or trapped by birdlime. BLABBERED (16) [verb] To blather; to talk foolishly or incoherently. | [verb] To blab; to reveal a secret. | [verb] To stick out one's tongue. BLACKBIRD (20) [noun] A common true thrush, Turdus merula, found in woods and gardens over much of Eurasia, and introduced elsewhere. | [noun] A variety of New World birds of the family Icteridae (26 species of icterid bird). | [noun] (among slavers and pirates) A native of the South Pacific islands. BLACKENED (18) [verb] (causative) To cause to be or become black. | [verb] To become black. | [verb] (causative) To make dirty. BLACKHEAD (21) [noun] A comedo, a skin blemish, a type of acne vulgaris, where a pore becomes clogged with a dark, hard, cheesy keratin-filled substance forming a hard black "head" on the skin's surface. | [noun] A form of histomoniasis in poultry, characterized by cyanotic discoloration on the bird's head. | [noun] A scaup: any of various ducks of the genus Aythya. BLACKLAND (18) BLACKLEAD (18) [noun] The metal lead. | [verb] To cover, treat or polish with graphite | [noun] An allotrope of carbon, consisting of planes of carbon atoms arranged in hexagonal arrays with the planes stacked loosely, that is used as a dry lubricant and in "lead" pencils. BLACKWOOD (21) [noun] Any of several trees yielding a very dark wood | [noun] The very dark wood of such trees BLANKETED (16) [verb] To cover with, or as if with, a blanket. | [verb] To traverse or complete thoroughly. | [verb] To toss in a blanket by way of punishment. BLARNEYED (15) [verb] To beguile with flattery. BLATHERED (15) [verb] To talk rapidly without making much sense. | [verb] To say (something foolish or nonsensical); to say (something) in a foolish or overly verbose way. BLATTERED (12) [verb] To blather. | [verb] To hurry or rush noisily. BLEMISHED (17) [verb] To spoil the appearance of. | [verb] To tarnish (reputation, character, etc.); to defame. | [adjective] Having blemishes; flawed. BLETHERED (15) [verb] To talk rapidly without making much sense. | [verb] To say (something foolish or nonsensical); to say (something) in a foolish or overly verbose way. BLINDFOLD (16) [noun] A covering, usually a bandage, for the eyes, blocking light to the eyes. | [noun] Something that obscures vision (literally or metaphorically). | [verb] To cover the eyes, in order to make someone unable to see. BLINKERED (16) [verb] To put blinkers on. | [adjective] Wearing blinkers or blinders. | [adjective] Having tunnel vision; unable to see what is happening around one. BLISTERED (12) [verb] To raise blisters on. | [verb] To have a blister form. | [verb] To criticise severely. BLITHERED (15) [verb] To talk foolishly; to blather BLOCKADED (19) [verb] To create a blockade against. BLOCKHEAD (21) [noun] A stupid person. | [noun] A sideshow performer who hammers nails or similar items through his or her nostril into the nasal cavity; human blockhead. | [verb] To perform as a human blockhead. BLOODSHED (16) [noun] The shedding or spilling of blood. | [noun] A slaughter; destruction of life, notably on a large scale. | [noun] The shedding of one's own blood; specifically, the death of Christ. BLOSSOMED (14) [verb] To have, or open into, blossoms; to bloom. | [verb] To begin to thrive or flourish. BLOVIATED (15) [verb] To speak or discourse at length in a pompous or boastful manner. BLUBBERED (16) [verb] To make noises or broken words while crying. | [verb] To swell or disfigure (the face) with weeping; to wet with tears. | [adjective] Of the face: swollen from weeping. BLUEBEARD (14) [noun] A man who murders his wives, from the title character of a French folktale; used to describe a serial killer or a man who has had multiple wives under suspicious circumstances. BLUNDERED (13) [verb] To make a clumsy or stupid mistake. | [verb] To move blindly or clumsily. | [verb] To cause to make a mistake. BLUSTERED (12) [verb] To speak or protest loudly. | [verb] To act or speak in an unduly threatening manner. | [verb] To blow in strong or sudden gusts. BOBTAILED (14) [adjective] Having the tail cut short or naturally shortened, as in certain dog breeds. | [verb] Past tense of bobtail; to cut short or dock a tail. BODYGUARD (17) [noun] A person or group of persons, often armed, responsible for protecting an individual. | [verb] To act as bodyguard for (someone); figuratively, to protect. BOLDFACED (18) [verb] To print or write in a boldfaced font. | [adjective] Impudent, brazen. | [adjective] Of text emphasized by being set in a font having thicker strokes, yielding a heavier or darker appearance. BOLSTERED (12) [verb] To brace, reinforce, secure, or support. | [adjective] Padded BOMBARDED (17) [verb] To continuously attack something with bombs, artillery shells or other missiles or projectiles. | [verb] To attack something or someone by directing objects at them. | [verb] To direct at a substance an intense stream of high-energy particles, usually sub-atomic or made of at most a few atoms. BOTANISED (12) [verb] To do the work of a botanist, as to inventory the plant life in an area and to collect plants for research purposes. BOTANIZED (21) [verb] To do the work of a botanist, as to inventory the plant life in an area and to collect plants for research purposes. BOULDERED (13) [verb] Past tense of boulder, meaning to climb on boulders or over rocky terrain without ropes. | [verb] Past tense of boulder, meaning to move a large rock or boulder. BOULEVARD (15) [noun] A broad, well-paved and landscaped thoroughfare. | [noun] The landscaping on the sides of a boulevard or other thoroughfare. BOWERBIRD (17) [noun] Any of the family Ptilonorhynchidae of Australasian bird noted for building a large nest decorated with bright objects such as shells and glass. | [noun] A person who collects objects for display. BOWLEGGED (17) [adjective] Having a bowleg BOXHAULED (22) [verb] Past tense of boxhaul, a nautical maneuver in which a sailing ship is turned around by putting the helm hard alee and backing the sails to force the bow through the wind. BOYCOTTED (17) [verb] To abstain, either as an individual or a group, from using, buying, or dealing with someone or some organization as an expression of protest. BOYFRIEND (18) [noun] A male partner in an unmarried romantic relationship. | [noun] A male friend. BRACKETED (18) [verb] To support by means of mechanical brackets. | [verb] To enclose in typographical brackets. | [verb] To bound on both sides, to surround, as enclosing with brackets. BRATTICED (14) [verb] Past tense of brattice; to furnish with a brattice (a partition or wooden structure, especially in a mine or building). BREVETTED (15) [verb] To promote by brevet. BRICKYARD (21) [noun] A factory where bricks are produced or distributed BROADBAND (15) [noun] A wide band of electromagnetic frequencies | [noun] An internet connection provisioned over an existing service using alternate signal frequencies such as ADSL or cable modem. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or carrying a wide band of electromagnetic frequencies BROADENED (13) [verb] To make broad or broader. | [verb] To become broad or broader. BROIDERED (13) [verb] Past tense of broider, an archaic or dialectal form of embroider, meaning to decorate with needlework or embroidery. BROMELIAD (14) [noun] Any of various tropical or subtropical New World herbaceous plants in the family Bromeliaceae. BROTHERED (15) BRUSHLAND (15) [noun] Land covered with dense shrubs and small trees; scrubland. BRUSHWOOD (18) [noun] Branches and twigs fallen from trees and shrubs. | [noun] Small trees and shrubs. BRUTIFIED (15) BUCKBOARD (20) [noun] A simple, distinctively American four-wheeled horse-drawn wagon designed for personal transport as well as for transporting animal fodder and domestic goods, often with a spring-mounted seat for the driver. BUCKLERED (18) BUCKRAMED (20) BUFFALOED (18) [verb] To hunt buffalo. | [verb] To outwit, confuse, deceive, or intimidate. | [verb] To pistol-whip. BUGLEWEED (16) [noun] Any of the aromatic herbs in genus Lycopus, especially Lycopus virginicus, water horehound | [noun] Ajuga, a group of herbs used for ground cover; bugle BULLDOZED (22) [verb] To destroy with a bulldozer. | [verb] To push someone over by heading straight over them. Often used in conjunction with "over". | [verb] To push through forcefully. BULWARKED (19) [verb] Past tense of bulwark; protected or defended with or as if with a bulwark. | [adjective] Fortified or strengthened with a bulwark. BURGEONED (13) [verb] To grow or expand. | [verb] To swell to the point of bursting. | [verb] Of plants, to bloom, bud. BURNISHED (15) [verb] To make smooth or shiny by rubbing; to polish; to shine. | [verb] To shine forth; to brighten; to become smooth and glossy, as from swelling or filling out; hence, to grow large. | [verb] (metaphoric) To make appear positive and highly respected. BURNOOSED (12) [verb] Wearing or dressed in a burnous (a long hooded cloak worn in North Africa and the Middle East). BURTHENED (15) [verb] Past tense of burden; to load with a heavy load or responsibility. | [adjective] Weighed down; oppressed. BUSHELLED (15) [verb] Past tense of bushel; to repair or alter clothing, especially to mend or alter a garment. | [verb] To hide or conceal something. BUTCHERED (17) [verb] To slaughter (animals) and prepare (meat) for market. | [verb] To kill brutally. | [verb] To ruin (something), often to the point of defamation. BUTYLATED (15) [adjective] Treated or combined with butyl, a chemical group derived from butane, typically used in preservatives, plasticizers, and other chemical compounds. CALAMINED (14) CALCIFIED (17) [adjective] Hardened from the deposit of calcium salts. | [adjective] Made unchanging or inflexible. | [verb] To make something hard and stony by impregnating with calcium salts. CALIPERED (14) [verb] Past tense of caliper; measured or fitted using a caliper or calipers (a precision measuring instrument). CALLOUSED (12) [adjective] Having calluses. CALORIZED (21) [verb] Past tense of calorize; to coat or treat (a metal surface) with aluminum or an aluminum alloy to increase heat and corrosion resistance. CANALISED (12) [verb] To convert (a river or other waterway) into a canal. | [verb] To build a canal through. | [verb] To channel the flow of. CANALIZED (21) [verb] To convert (a river or other waterway) into a canal. | [verb] To build a canal through. | [verb] To channel the flow of. CANCELLED (14) [verb] To cross out something with lines etc. | [verb] To invalidate or annul something. | [verb] To mark something (such as a used postage stamp) so that it can't be reused. CANONISED (12) [verb] To declare (a deceased person) as a saint, and enter them into the canon of saints. | [verb] To regard as a saint; to glorify, to exalt to the highest honour. | [verb] To formally declare (a piece of religious writing) to be part of the biblical canon. CANONIZED (21) [verb] To declare (a deceased person) as a saint, and enter them into the canon of saints. | [verb] To regard as a saint; to glorify, to exalt to the highest honour. | [verb] To formally declare (a piece of religious writing) to be part of the biblical canon. CANOODLED (13) [verb] To caress, pet, feel up, or make love. | [verb] To cajole or persuade. CANULATED (12) [verb] Past tense of cannulate; to insert a cannula (a small tube) into a vessel or cavity of the body. CANVASSED (15) [verb] Past tense of canvass; to solicit votes, opinions, or orders from people. | [verb] To examine or discuss thoroughly. CAPONIZED (23) [verb] To castrate (a cockerel) in order to fatten it for table use. CAPRIOLED (14) [verb] Past tense of capriole; performed a capriole (a horse's leap or bound where all four feet leave the ground). CAPTAINED (14) [verb] To act as captain | [verb] To exercise command of a ship, aircraft or sports team. CAPTIONED (14) [verb] To add captions to a text or illustration. | [verb] To add captions to a film or broadcast. CARACOLED (14) [verb] To execute a caracole. CARAVANED (15) [verb] Past tense of caravan; traveled in a caravan or group of vehicles/people moving together. CARCINOID (14) [noun] A form of slow-growing tumour originating in the neuroendocrine system. CARDBOARD (15) [noun] A wood-based material resembling heavy paper, used in the manufacture of boxes, cartons and signs. | [adjective] Made of or resembling cardboard; flat or flavorless. CARINATED (12) [adjective] Having a carina or keel-like structure; shaped like or having a ridge or keel. CARNIFIED (15) CARPOOLED (14) [verb] To travel together in such a pool. CARTOONED (12) [verb] To draw a cartoon, a humorous drawing. | [verb] To make a preliminary sketch. CASHIERED (15) [verb] To dismiss (someone, especially military personnel) from service | [verb] To discard, put away | [verb] To annul CASTRATED (12) [verb] To remove the testicles of an animal. | [verb] To remove the ovaries and/or uterus of an animal. | [verb] To take something from; to render imperfect or ineffectual. CATALOGED (13) [adjective] Sorted, classified. | [verb] To put into a catalogue. | [verb] To make a catalogue of. CATALYZED (24) [verb] To bring about the catalysis of a chemical reaction. | [verb] To accelerate a process. | [verb] To inspire significantly by catalysis. CATCALLED (14) [verb] To make such an exclamation. CATCHWORD (20) [noun] A word under the right-hand side of the last line on a book page that repeats the first word on the following page. | [noun] A word or expression repeated until it becomes representative of a party, school, business, or point of view. | [noun] Among theatrical performers, the last word of the preceding speaker, serving as a cue for the next speaker. CATENATED (12) [verb] To connect things together, especially to form a chain. CATHECTED (17) [verb] Past tense of cathect; to invest emotional energy or desire in a person, object, or idea. CATNAPPED (16) [verb] To take a catnap, to take a short sleep or nap. | [verb] To kidnap a cat. CAUCUSSED (14) [verb] Past tense of caucus; to meet in a caucus or to hold a caucus meeting. CAUTIONED (12) [verb] To warn; to alert, advise that caution is warranted. | [verb] To give a yellow card CAVITATED (15) [verb] Formed a cavity or cavities in (something, such as a tooth or material). | [adjective] Having a cavity or cavities. CEDARBIRD (15) [noun] A waxwing, especially the cedar waxwing, a North American bird with soft plumage and a distinctive crest. CEDARWOOD (16) [noun] A fragrant wood from cedar trees, used in making furniture, chests, and aromatic products. | [noun] The tree that produces this wood, typically an evergreen conifer. CEILINGED (13) [adjective] Having a ceiling; fitted or furnished with a ceiling. CELLULOID (12) [noun] Any of a variety of thermoplastics created from nitrocellulose and camphor, once used as photographic film. | [noun] (often used attributively) The genre of cinema; film. CENTUPLED (14) [verb] To increase a hundredfold. | [verb] To increase or multiply something by a hundred. CERTIFIED (15) [verb] To attest to (a fact) as the truth. | [verb] To authenticate or verify in writing. | [verb] To attest that a product, service, organization, or person has met an official standard. CHAFFERED (21) [verb] To haggle or barter. | [verb] To buy. | [verb] To talk much and idly; to chatter. CHAGRINED (16) [verb] To bother or vex; to mortify. | [verb] To be vexed or annoyed. | [adjective] Feeling chagrin (at something); vexed; fretful. CHAMBERED (19) [adjective] (often in combination) Having chambers. | [verb] To enclose in a room. | [verb] To reside in or occupy a chamber or chambers. CHAMFERED (20) [verb] To cut off the edge or corner of something. | [verb] To cut a groove in something. CHAMOISED (17) [verb] Past tense of chamois, meaning to treat leather with oil to make it soft and pliable, or to clean and polish with chamois leather. CHANCROID (17) [noun] A sexually transmitted infection, caused by bacteria of species Haemophilus ducreyi, characterized by painful sores on the genitalia. | [noun] A sore characteristic of this infection. CHANNELED (15) [verb] To make or cut a channel or groove in. | [verb] To direct or guide along a desired course. | [verb] (of a spirit, as of a dead person) To serve as a medium for. CHAPLETED (17) [adjective] Wearing or decorated with a chaplet (a wreath or garland for the head, or a string of beads). CHAPTERED (17) [verb] Divided into chapters or sections. | [verb] Past tense of chapter, meaning to organize or arrange into chapters. CHARIOTED (15) [adjective] Furnished with, or located in, a chariot. CHARTERED (15) [verb] To grant or establish a charter. | [verb] To lease or hire something by charter. | [verb] (of a peace officer) To inform (an arrestee) of their constitutional rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms upon arrest. CHASTENED (15) [verb] To punish (in order to bring about improvement in behavior, attitude, etc.); to restrain, moderate. | [verb] To make chaste; to purify. | [verb] To punish or reprimand for the sake of improvement; to discipline. CHASTISED (15) [verb] To punish (someone), especially by corporal punishment. | [verb] To castigate; to severely scold or censure (someone). | [verb] To lightly criticize or correct (someone). CHATTERED (15) [verb] To talk idly. | [verb] Of teeth, machinery, etc, to make a noise by rapid collisions. | [verb] To utter sounds which somewhat resemble language, but are inarticulate and indistinct. CHEAPENED (17) [verb] To decrease the value of; to make cheap | [verb] To make vulgar | [verb] To become cheaper CHECKERED (21) [verb] To mark in a pattern of alternating light and dark positions, like a checkerboard. | [verb] To develop markings in a pattern of alternating light and dark positions, like a checkerboard. | [adjective] Divided into squares, or into light and dark patches. CHEERLEAD (15) [verb] To lead or conduct cheers for a sports team or at an event. | [verb] To encourage or support someone enthusiastically. CHEQUERED (24) [verb] To mark in a pattern of alternating light and dark positions, like a checkerboard. | [verb] To develop markings in a pattern of alternating light and dark positions, like a checkerboard. | [adjective] Divided into squares, or into light and dark patches. CHERISHED (18) [verb] To treat with affection, care, and tenderness; to nurture or protect with care. | [verb] To have a deep appreciation of; to hold dear. | [verb] To cheer, to gladden. CHICKENED (21) [verb] To avoid a situation one is afraid of. CHICKWEED (24) [noun] Any of several small-leaved herbs of the genera Cerastium and Stellaria. | [noun] Other plants of similar appearance and habit: CHILDHOOD (19) [noun] The state of being a child. | [noun] The time during which one is a child, from between infancy and puberty. | [noun] (by extension) The early stages of development of something. CHIPBOARD (19) [noun] A building material made from wood chips compressed and bound with synthetic resin. CHIPPERED (19) CHIRRUPED (17) [verb] To make a series of chirps, clicks or clucks. | [verb] To express by chirping. | [verb] To quicken or animate by chirping. CHISELLED (15) [verb] To use a chisel. | [verb] To work something with a chisel. | [verb] To cheat, to get something by cheating. CHITTERED (15) [verb] To make a series of high-pitched sounds; to twitter, chirp or chatter. | [verb] To shiver or chatter with cold. CHIVAREED (18) CHIVARIED (18) CHOPPERED (19) [verb] Past tense of "chopper," meaning to cut or chop with an axe or similar tool. | [verb] Transported by helicopter. CHORUSSED (15) [verb] Past tense of chorus; to sing or speak in unison, or to repeat the same thing in unison as a group. CHOWDERED (19) CHOWHOUND (21) [noun] A foodie or glutton. CHROMATID (17) [noun] After DNA replication either of the two connected double-helix strands of a metaphase chromosome that separate during mitosis CHROMIZED (26) [verb] Treated or coated with chromium or a chromium compound to increase hardness, corrosion resistance, or wear resistance. CHRYSALID (18) [adjective] Of or relating to a chrysalis. | [noun] The pupa of a butterfly or moth, enclosed inside a cocoon, in which metamorphosis takes place. | [noun] The cocoon itself. CHUNTERED (15) [verb] To speak in a soft, indistinct manner, mutter. | [verb] To grumble, complain. CINCTURED (14) [adjective] Encircled or bound with a belt or band; wearing a cincture. CIRCUITED (14) [verb] To move in a circle; to go round; to circulate. | [verb] To travel around. CIVILISED (15) [verb] To educate or enlighten a person or people to a perceived higher standard of behaviour. | [verb] To introduce or impose the standards of one civilisation upon another civilization, group or person, arguably with the intent of achieving a perceived higher standard of behavior. | [verb] To bring from a state of savagery to an educated or refined state. CIVILIZED (24) [verb] To educate or enlighten a person or people to a perceived higher standard of behaviour. | [verb] To introduce or impose the standards of one civilisation upon another civilization, group or person, arguably with the intent of achieving a perceived higher standard of behavior. | [verb] To bring from a state of savagery to an educated or refined state. CLABBERED (16) [verb] To sour or curdle. | [adjective] Thickened or curdled. CLAMBERED (16) [verb] To climb (something) with some difficulty, or in a haphazard fashion. CLAMOURED (14) [verb] To cry out and/or demand. | [verb] To demand by outcry. | [verb] To become noisy insistently. CLANGORED (13) [verb] Past tense of clang; made a loud, resonant metallic sound. CLAPBOARD (16) [noun] A narrow board, usually thicker at one edge than the other, used as siding for houses and similar structures of frame construction. | [noun] Such boards, arranged horizontally and overlapping with thick edge down, collectively, as siding. | [noun] An oak board of a size used for barrel staves. | [noun] A clapper board; a device used in film production, having hinged boards that are brought together with a clap, used to synchronize picture and sound at the start of each take of a motion picture or other video production. CLARIFIED (15) [adjective] Made clear. | [verb] (of liquids, such as wine or syrup) To make clear or bright by freeing from feculent matter | [verb] To make clear or easily understood; to explain in order to remove doubt or obscurity CLARIONED (12) [verb] Past tense of clarion; to make a clear, shrill sound or to announce loudly and clearly. CLATTERED (12) [verb] To make a rattling sound. | [verb] To cause to make a rattling noise. | [verb] To chatter noisily or rapidly. CLAUGHTED (16) CLINKERED (16) [verb] Past tense of clink, meaning to make a sharp ringing sound or to collide with a clinking noise. | [verb] (informal) To clink glasses together in a toast. CLIPBOARD (16) [noun] A flat piece of rigid material, such as card or plastic, with a clip at one end under which papers can be held. | [noun] A buffer in memory where the user can store data temporarily while transferring it from one place within an application to another or between applications. CLOBBERED (16) [verb] To hit or bash severely; to seriously harm or damage. | [verb] To overwrite (data) or override (an assignment of a value), often unintentionally or unexpectedly. | [adjective] Drunk. CLOUDLAND (13) [noun] Fantasy land, dreamland CLUSTERED (12) [verb] To form a cluster or group. | [verb] To collect into clusters. | [verb] To cover with clusters. CLUTTERED (12) [verb] To fill something with clutter. | [verb] To clot or coagulate, like blood. | [verb] To make a confused noise; to bustle. COADAPTED (15) [adjective] (of traits, genes, or organisms) Adapted together through evolution to function effectively in relation to each other. | [verb] Past tense of coadapt; to become mutually adapted. COADMIRED (15) COALESCED (14) [verb] (of separate elements) To join into a single mass or whole. | [verb] (of a whole or a unit) To form from different pieces or elements. | [verb] To bond pieces of metal into a continuous whole by liquefying parts of each piece, bringing the liquids into contact, and allowing the combined liquid to solidify. COALFIELD (15) [noun] Any region containing deposits of coal that may be mined. COALIFIED (15) [verb] Converted into coal or treated with coal; past tense of coalify. COANNEXED (19) COARSENED (12) [verb] To make (more) coarse. | [verb] To become (more) coarse. COASSUMED (14) COASTLAND (12) [noun] Coastal land COASTWARD (15) [adjective] Towards the coast | [adverb] Towards the coast COBWEBBED (21) [adjective] Covered with cobwebs or resembling cobwebs. | [adjective] Neglected or abandoned for a long time. COCHAIRED (17) [verb] To chair (a meeting) jointly. COCREATED (14) [verb] Past tense of cocreate; to create something jointly with another person or entity. CODERIVED (16) COENACTED (14) [verb] Past tense of coenact; to enact or perform jointly with another or others. COENDURED (13) COEQUATED (21) COERECTED (14) COEVOLVED (18) [verb] To evolve, along with another organism, via coevolution. | [adjective] That has evolved, along with another organism, via coevolution COEXERTED (19) COEXISTED (19) [verb] (of two or more things, people, concepts, etc.) To exist contemporaneously or in the same area. COFOUNDED (16) [verb] To found at the same time as another. | [verb] To found with one or more other people. | [adjective] Founded at the same time as another, or by two or more people COGITATED (13) [verb] To meditate, to ponder, to think deeply. | [verb] To consider, to devise. COHABITED (17) [verb] To live together with someone else, especially in a romantic and sexual relationship but without being married. | [verb] To coexist in common environs with. | [verb] To engage in sexual intercourse; see coition. COHOBATED (17) [verb] Past tense of cohobate, meaning to subject to repeated distillation by pouring the distilled liquid back over the remaining matter in the alembic. COIFFURED (18) [adjective] Having the hair arranged or styled in a particular way. COINCIDED (15) [verb] To occupy exactly the same space. | [verb] To occur at the same time. | [verb] To correspond, concur, or agree. COINHERED (15) [verb] Past tense of coinhering; to inherit jointly or together with another person or party. COINSURED (12) [adjective] Insured jointly with another party or parties under the same insurance policy. COLDBLOOD (15) COLLAPSED (14) [verb] To break apart and fall down suddenly; to cave in. | [verb] To cease to function due to a sudden breakdown; to fail suddenly and completely. | [verb] To fold compactly. COLLECTED (14) [verb] To gather together; amass. | [verb] To get; particularly, get from someone. | [verb] To accumulate (a number of similar or related objects), particularly for a hobby or recreation. COLLOGUED (13) [verb] To simulate belief. | [verb] To coax; to flatter. | [verb] To talk privately or secretly; to conspire. COLOCATED (14) [verb] To locate or be located at the same site, for two things or groups, military units, etc. | [verb] To locate hardware within another company’s facilities. | [verb] To be in two places at once. COLONISED (12) [verb] To settle (a place) with colonists, and hence make (a place) into a colony. | [verb] To settle (a group of people, a species, or the like) in a place as a colony. | [verb] To settle among and establish control over (the indigenous people of an area). COLONIZED (21) [verb] To settle (a place) with colonists, and hence make (a place) into a colony. | [verb] To settle (a group of people, a species, or the like) in a place as a colony. | [verb] To settle among and establish control over (the indigenous people of an area). COLORBRED (14) COLORIZED (21) [verb] To add color to. | [verb] To convert black and white media to color by digital post production (as is often done in digital photography and in video special effects). COMANAGED (15) [verb] Managed jointly by two or more parties or entities. COMBATTED (16) [verb] To fight; to struggle against. | [verb] To fight (with); to struggle for victory (against). COMBUSTED (16) [verb] To burn; to catch fire. | [verb] To erupt with enthusiasm or boisterousness. COMFORTED (17) [verb] To relieve the distress or suffering of; to provide comfort to. | [verb] To make comfortable. | [verb] To make strong; to invigorate; to fortify; to corroborate. COMINGLED (15) [verb] Past tense of commingle; to mix together or blend with something else. COMMANDED (17) [verb] To order, give orders; to compel or direct with authority. | [verb] To have or exercise supreme power, control or authority over, especially military; to have under direction or control. | [verb] To require with authority; to demand, order, enjoin. COMMENCED (18) [verb] To begin, start. | [verb] To begin to be, or to act as. | [verb] To take a degree at a university. COMMENDED (17) [verb] To congratulate or reward. | [verb] To praise or acclaim. | [verb] To entrust or commit to the care of someone else. COMMENTED (16) [verb] To remark. | [verb] (with "on" or "about") To make remarks or notes. | [verb] To comment or remark on. COMMERCED (18) COMMITTED (16) [verb] To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to entrust; to consign; used with to or formerly unto. | [verb] To put in charge of a jailer; to imprison. | [verb] To have (a person) enter an establishment, such as a hospital or asylum, as a patient. COMMUNARD (16) [noun] A person who lives in a commune COMPACTED (18) [verb] To make more dense; to compress. | [verb] To unite or connect firmly, as in a system. | [adjective] Closely or densely packed together. COMPANIED (16) [verb] To accompany, keep company with. | [verb] To associate. | [verb] To be a lively, cheerful companion. COMPARTED (16) COMPASSED (16) [verb] To surround; to encircle; to environ; to stretch round. | [verb] To go about or round entirely; to traverse. | [verb] To accomplish; to reach; to achieve; to obtain. COMPEERED (16) [verb] Past tense of "compeers," meaning to be equal with or to match; to associate with as a peer or equal. COMPELLED (16) [verb] To drive together, round up | [verb] To overpower; to subdue. | [verb] To force, constrain or coerce. COMPLETED (16) [verb] To finish; to make done; to reach the end. | [verb] To make whole or entire. | [verb] To call from the small blind in an unraised pot. COMPLEXED (23) [verb] To form a complex with another substance | [verb] To complicate. | [adjective] Combined in the form of a complex COMPORTED (16) [verb] To tolerate, bear, put up (with). | [verb] To be in agreement (with); to be of an accord. | [verb] To behave (in a given manner). COMPOSTED (16) [verb] To produce compost, let organic matter decay into fertilizer. COMPRISED (16) [verb] To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts). | [verb] To contain or embrace. | [verb] (sometimes proscribed, usually in the passive) To compose, to constitute. See usage note below. COMPRIZED (25) [verb] Past tense of comprise; to consist of or be made up of. CONCEALED (14) [verb] To hide something from view or from public knowledge, to try to keep something secret. CONCEITED (14) [adjective] Having an excessively favorable opinion of one's abilities, appearance, etc.; vain and egotistical. | [adjective] Having an ingenious expression or metaphorical idea, especially in extended form or used as a literary or rhetorical device. | [adjective] Endowed with fancy or imagination. | [verb] To form an idea; to think. CONCEIVED (17) [verb] To develop an idea; to form in the mind; to plan; to devise; to originate. | [verb] To understand (someone). | [verb] To become pregnant (with). CONCERNED (14) [verb] To relate or belong to; to have reference to or connection with; to affect the interest of; to be of importance to. | [verb] To engage by feeling or sentiment; to interest. | [verb] To make somebody worried. CONCERTED (14) [verb] To plan together; to settle or adjust by conference, agreement, or consultation. | [verb] To plan; to devise; to arrange. | [verb] To act in harmony or conjunction; to form combined plans. CONCLUDED (15) [verb] To end; to come to an end. | [verb] To bring to an end; to close; to finish. | [verb] To bring about as a result; to effect; to make. CONCOCTED (16) [verb] To prepare something by mixing various ingredients, especially to prepare food for cooking. | [verb] To contrive something using skill or ingenuity. | [verb] To digest. CONCRETED (14) [verb] (usually transitive) To cover with or encase in concrete (building material). | [verb] (usually transitive) To solidify: to change from being abstract to being concrete (actual, real). | [verb] To unite or coalesce into a mass or a solid body. CONCURRED (14) [verb] To unite or agree (in action or opinion); to have a common opinion; to coincide; to correspond. | [verb] To meet in the same point; to combine or conjoin; to contribute or help towards a common object or effect. | [verb] To run together; to meet. CONCUSSED (14) [verb] To injure the brain of, usually temporarily, by violent impact. | [verb] To force to do something, or give up something, by intimidation; to coerce. | [adjective] Knocked out, temporarily confused or unconscious due to a blow to the head CONDEMNED (15) [verb] To strongly criticise or denounce; to excoriate the perpetrators of. | [verb] To judicially pronounce (someone) guilty. | [verb] To confer eternal divine punishment upon. CONDENSED (13) [verb] To concentrate toward the essence by making more close, compact, or dense, thereby decreasing size or volume. | [verb] To transform from a gaseous state into a liquid state via condensation. | [verb] To be transformed from a gaseous state into a liquid state. CONDUCTED (15) [verb] To lead, or guide; to escort. | [verb] To lead; to direct; to be in charge of (people or tasks) | [verb] (reflexively to conduct oneself) To behave. CONDYLOID (16) [adjective] Relating to or denoting a type of joint (condyloid joint) that allows movement in two planes, such as the wrist or fingers. CONFABBED (19) [verb] To speak casually with; to chat. | [verb] To confer. | [verb] To fabricate memories in order to fill gaps in one's memory. CONFECTED (17) [verb] To make up, prepare, or compound; to produce by combining ingredients or materials; to concoct. | [verb] To make into a confection; to prepare as a candy, sweetmeat, preserve, or the like. CONFERRED (15) [verb] To grant as a possession; to bestow. | [verb] To talk together, to consult, discuss; to deliberate. | [verb] To compare. CONFESSED (15) [verb] To admit to the truth, particularly in the context of sins or crimes committed. | [verb] To acknowledge faith in; to profess belief in. | [verb] To unburden (oneself) of sins to God or a priest, in order to receive absolution. CONFIRMED (17) [verb] To strengthen; to make firm or resolute. | [verb] To administer the sacrament of confirmation on (someone). | [verb] To assure the accuracy of previous statements. CONFLATED (15) [verb] To bring (things) together and fuse (them) into a single entity. | [verb] To mix together different elements. | [verb] (by extension) To fail to properly distinguish or keep separate (things); to mistakenly treat (them) as equivalent. CONFORMED (17) [verb] (of persons, often followed by to) To act in accordance with expectations; to behave in the manner of others, especially as a result of social pressure. | [verb] (of things, situations, etc.) To be in accordance with a set of specifications or regulations, or with a policy or guideline. | [verb] To make similar in form or nature; to make suitable for a purpose; to adapt. CONGEALED (13) [verb] To change from a liquid to solid state perhaps by cold | [verb] To coagulate, make curdled or semi-solid as gel or jelly | [verb] To make rigid or immobile CONGESTED (13) [verb] To hinder or block the passage of something moving, for example a fluid, mixture, traffic, people, etc. (due to an excess of this or due to a partial or complete obstruction), resulting in overfilling or overcrowding. | [adjective] Overcrowded CONGLOBED (15) [verb] Formed or gathered into a ball or spherical mass; clustered together in a rounded shape. CONJOINED (19) [verb] To join together; to unite; to combine. | [verb] To marry. | [verb] (grammar) To join as coordinate elements, often with a coordinating conjunction, such as coordinate clauses. CONNECTED (14) [verb] (of an object) To join (to another object): to attach, or to be intended to attach or capable of attaching, to another object. | [verb] (of two objects) To join: to attach, or to be intended to attach or capable of attaching, to each other. | [verb] (of an object) To join (two other objects), or to join (one object) to (another object): to be a link between two objects, thereby attaching them to each other. CONQUERED (21) [verb] To defeat in combat; to subjugate. | [verb] To acquire by force of arms, win in war. | [verb] To overcome an abstract obstacle. CONSENTED (12) [verb] To express willingness, to give permission. | [verb] To cause to sign a consent form. | [verb] To grant; to allow; to assent to. CONSERVED (15) [verb] To save for later use, sometimes by the use of a preservative. | [verb] To protect an environment. | [verb] To remain unchanged during a process CONSIGNED (13) [verb] To transfer to the custody of, usually for sale, transport, or safekeeping. | [verb] To entrust to the care of another. | [verb] To send to a final destination. CONSISTED (12) [verb] To be. | [verb] To exist. | [verb] (with in) To be comprised or contained. CONSORTED (12) [verb] To associate or keep company (with). | [verb] To be in agreement. CONSPIRED (14) [verb] To secretly plot or make plans together, often with the intention to bring bad or illegal results. | [verb] To agree, to concur to one end. | [verb] To try to bring about. CONSTRUED (12) [verb] To interpret or explain the meaning of something. | [verb] (grammar) To analyze the grammatical structure of a clause or sentence; to parse. | [verb] (grammar) To admit of grammatical analysis. CONSULTED (12) [verb] To seek the opinion or advice of another; to take counsel; to deliberate together; to confer. | [verb] To advise or offer expertise. | [verb] To work as a consultant or contractor rather than as a full-time employee of a firm. CONTACTED (14) [verb] To touch; to come into physical contact with. | [verb] To establish communication with something or someone CONTAINED (12) [verb] To hold inside. | [verb] To include as a part. | [verb] To put constraint upon; to restrain; to confine; to keep within bounds. CONTEMNED (14) [verb] To disdain; to value at little or nothing; to treat or regard with contempt. | [verb] To commit an offence of contempt, such as contempt of court; to unlawfully flout (e.g. a ruling). CONTENDED (13) [verb] To strive in opposition; to contest; to dispute; to vie; to quarrel; to fight. | [verb] To struggle or exert oneself to obtain or retain possession of, or to defend. | [verb] To strive in debate; to engage in discussion; to dispute; to argue. CONTENTED (12) [verb] To give contentment or satisfaction; to satisfy; to make happy. | [verb] To satisfy the expectations of; to pay; to requite | [adjective] Satisfied. CONTESTED (12) [verb] To contend. | [verb] To call into question; to oppose. | [verb] To strive earnestly to hold or maintain; to struggle to defend. CONTINUED (12) [verb] To proceed with (doing an activity); to prolong (an activity). | [verb] To make last; to prolong. | [verb] To retain (someone or something) in a given state, position, etc. CONTORTED (12) [verb] To twist in a violent manner. | [verb] To twist into or as if into a strained shape or expression. CONTOURED (12) [verb] To form a more or less curved boundary or border upon. | [verb] To mark with contour lines. | [verb] To practise the makeup technique of contouring. CONTRIVED (15) [verb] To invent by an exercise of ingenuity; to devise | [verb] To invent, to make devices; to form designs especially by improvisation. | [verb] To project, cast, or set forth, as in a projection of light. CONVECTED (17) [verb] To carry or convey; to move (a warm fluid) upward through a cooler fluid, to transfer heat or a fluid by convection. CONVENTED (15) CONVERGED (16) [verb] Of two or more entities, to approach each other; to get closer and closer. | [verb] Of a sequence, to have a limit. | [verb] Of an iterative process, to reach a stable end point. CONVERSED (15) [verb] To talk; to engage in conversation | [verb] To keep company; to hold intimate intercourse; to commune; followed by with | [verb] To have knowledge of (a thing), from long intercourse or study CONVERTED (15) [verb] To transform or change (something) into another form, substance, state, or product. | [verb] To change (something) from one use, function, or purpose to another. | [verb] To induce (someone) to adopt a particular religion, faith, ideology or belief (see also sense 11). CONVICTED (17) [verb] To find guilty | [verb] (esp. religious) to convince, persuade; to cause (someone) to believe in (something) CONVINCED (17) [verb] To make someone believe, or feel sure about something, especially by using logic, argument or evidence. | [verb] To persuade. | [verb] To overcome, conquer, vanquish. CONVOLVED (18) [verb] To roll together, or one part on another | [verb] To form the convolution of something with something else | [verb] To compute the convolution function CONVULSED (15) [verb] To violently shake or agitate. | [verb] To create great laughter. | [verb] To suffer violent involuntary contraction of the muscles, producing contortions of the body or limbs. COONHOUND (15) [noun] Any of several American breeds of dog originally used in hunting raccoons. COPLOTTED (14) [verb] Past tense of coplot; to plot together with another person or to create a plot jointly. COPULATED (14) [verb] To engage in sexual intercourse. COQUETTED (21) [verb] To act as a flirt or coquet. | [verb] To waste time; to dally. | [verb] To attempt to attract the notice, admiration, or love of; to treat with a show of tenderness or regard, with a view to deceive and disappoint; to lead on. CORALLOID (12) [noun] A small node of calcite, aragonite or gypsum that forms on surfaces in caves, especially limestone caves. | [adjective] Having the shape or form of coral. CORBELLED (14) [adjective] Having corbels. CORDELLED (13) [verb] Past tense of cordelle, meaning to tow a boat upstream by means of a rope from the shore. CORELATED (12) [verb] Past tense of correlate; to have a mutual relationship or connection with something else. CORKBOARD (18) [noun] A kind of strawboard or cardboard in which ground cork is mixed with the paper pulp. CORNFIELD (15) [noun] A field of corn, wheat or other cereal crop CORNROWED (15) [verb] Past tense of cornrow; to braid hair in tight rows close to the scalp. | [adjective] Having hair styled in cornrows. CORONATED (12) [verb] Past tense of "coronate," meaning to crown or place a crown upon someone's head as a symbol of sovereignty or honor. COROTATED (12) [verb] Past tense of corotate; rotated together or simultaneously with another object. CORRALLED (12) [verb] To capture or round up. | [verb] To place inside of a corral. | [verb] To make a circle of vehicles, as of wagons so as to form a corral. CORRECTED (14) [verb] To make something that was wrong become right; to remove error from. | [verb] (by extension) To grade (examination papers). | [verb] To inform (someone) of their error. CORRUPTED (14) [verb] To make corrupt; to change from good to bad; to draw away from the right path; to deprave; to pervert. | [verb] To become putrid, tainted, or otherwise impure; to putrefy; to rot. | [verb] To debase or make impure by alterations or additions; to falsify. CORTICOID (14) [noun] A steroid hormone produced by the adrenal cortex, or a synthetic substance with similar effects. | [adjective] Relating to or derived from the cortex of the adrenal gland. COSTARRED (12) [verb] To perform with the billing of a costar. COUNSELED (12) [verb] To give advice, especially professional advice, to (somebody). | [verb] To recommend (a course of action). COUNTERED (12) [verb] To contradict, oppose. | [verb] To return a blow while receiving one, as in boxing. | [verb] To take action in response to; to respond. COURTYARD (15) [noun] An area, open to the sky, partially or wholly surrounded by walls or buildings. CRAUNCHED (17) [verb] Past tense of craunch, meaning to chew or bite with a crunching sound. CRAZYWEED (27) [noun] A poisonous plant of the legume family, also known as locoweed, that causes livestock to behave erratically when ingested. CRENELLED (12) [adjective] Having crenellations; furnished with a series of squared notches or indentations along the top of a wall or parapet, typically for defensive purposes. CREOLISED (12) [verb] To cause a pidgin language rapidly expanding in vocabulary and grammatical rules to become ultimately a creole. | [verb] To render an imported object 'localised'; to produce variations which give an object a regional flavour. CREOLIZED (21) [verb] To cause a pidgin language rapidly expanding in vocabulary and grammatical rules to become ultimately a creole. | [verb] To render an imported object 'localised'; to produce variations which give an object a regional flavour. CREOSOTED (12) [verb] To apply creosote. CREVASSED (15) [adjective] Having crevasses; marked or split by deep cracks or fissures, especially in glaciers or ice fields. CRICKETED (18) CRIMSONED (14) [verb] To become crimson or deep red; to blush. | [verb] To dye with crimson or deep red; to redden. CRISPENED (14) [verb] Past tense of "crispen," meaning to make or become crisp. CRITIQUED (21) [verb] To review something. CROCHETED (17) [verb] To make (a piece of) needlework using a hooked needle; to make interlocking loops of thread. CROCKETED (18) [adjective] Decorated with crockets (small ornamental projections) in architecture, particularly in Gothic style. | [verb] Past tense of crochet, the craft of making fabric with a hooked needle. CROQUETED (21) [verb] (games) To play a shot in the game of croquet in which the striker's ball and another ball are moved by hitting the striker's ball when they have been placed in contact following a roquet. CROSSBRED (14) [noun] Any organism produced by breeding from two breeds, varieties, or species. | [adjective] Produced by breeding from two breeds, varieties or species. | [verb] To produce (an organism) by the mating of individuals of different breeds, varieties, or species; hybridize. CROSSHEAD (15) [noun] A metal beam that connects a piston to a connecting rod in an engine. | [noun] Large text, like a headline but typically drawn from the article, placed partway through the article to break it up visually. CROSSROAD (12) [noun] A crossroads (place where one road crosses another). | [noun] A road that crosses another. CROSSWIND (15) [noun] A wind blowing across a line of travel. CROSSWORD (15) [noun] (games, puzzles) A word puzzle in which interlocking words are entered usually horizontally and vertically into a grid based on clues given for each word. CRUCIFIED (17) [adjective] That has been subject to crucifixion | [verb] To execute (a person) by nailing to a cross. | [verb] To punish or otherwise express extreme anger at, especially as a scapegoat or target of outrage. CUCKOLDED (19) [verb] To make a cuckold or cuckquean of someone by being unfaithful, or by seducing their partner or spouse. CUDGELLED (14) [verb] To strike with a cudgel. | [verb] To exercise (one's wits or brains). CUIRASSED (12) [adjective] Wearing or protected by a cuirass (a piece of armor covering the torso). | [verb] Past tense of cuirass, meaning to dress or equip with a cuirass. CUMULATED (14) [verb] To accumulate; to amass. | [verb] To be accumulated. CURARIZED (21) CURLICUED (14) [verb] To make or adorn (something) with curlicues, or as if with curlicues. CURTAILED (12) [verb] To cut short the tail of an animal | [verb] To shorten or abridge the duration of something; to truncate. | [verb] To limit or restrict, keep in check. CURTAINED (12) [verb] To cover (a window) with a curtain; to hang curtains. | [verb] To hide, cover or separate as if by a curtain. | [adjective] Covered or partitioned with a curtain or curtains. CURTSEYED (15) [verb] To make a curtsey. CURVETTED (15) [verb] Of a horse or, by extension, another animal: to leap about, to frolic. | [verb] To cause to leap about, dart or jump. | [verb] (of a bird) To fly or swim with darting movements. CUSHIONED (15) [verb] To furnish with cushions. | [verb] To seat or place on, or as on a cushion. | [verb] To absorb or deaden the impact of. CUTINISED (12) CUTINIZED (21) CYCADEOID (18) DACHSHUND (19) [noun] A certain breed of dog having short legs and a long trunk, including miniature, long-haired, and short-haired varieties. DAIRYMAID (16) [noun] A woman who works in a dairy. DAMNIFIED (16) [verb] To damage physically; to injure. | [verb] To cause injuries or loss to. DANDIFIED (15) [adjective] Characteristic (in dress and habits) of a dandy | [verb] To dress as, or to adopt the style of, a dandy. DARTBOARD (13) [noun] A board used as a target for throwing darts. DASHBOARD (16) [noun] A panel under the windscreen of a motor car or aircraft, containing indicator dials, compartments, and sometimes controls. | [noun] An upturned screen of wood or leather placed on the front of a horse-drawn carriage, sleigh or other vehicle that protected the driver from mud, debris, water and snow thrown up by the horse's hooves. | [noun] A graphical user interface in the form of or resembling a motor car dashboard. DATELINED (11) [verb] To attach a dateline to a particular document DAUNDERED (12) DEAERATED (11) [verb] To remove the air or gas from something | [adjective] From which the air or gas has been removed DEBAUCHED (18) [verb] To morally corrupt (someone); to seduce. | [verb] To debase (something); to lower the value of (something). | [verb] To indulge in revelry. DEBOUCHED (18) [verb] (of a body of soldiers) To enter into battle. | [verb] (of a river or stream) To discharge into a larger body of water such as a lake or sea. DEBRIEFED (16) [verb] To question someone after a military mission in order to obtain intelligence. | [verb] To question someone, or a group of people, after the implementation of a project in order to learn from mistakes etc. | [verb] To inform subjects of an experiment about what has happened in a complete and accurate manner. DEBRUISED (13) [adjective] Surmounted by an ordinary. DECENTRED (13) [verb] To remove the centre from. | [verb] To place away from the centre; to make eccentric. | [verb] To displace from the centre. DECIMATED (15) [verb] To kill one-tenth of a group, (specifically) as a military punishment in the Roman army selected by lot, usually carried out by the surviving soldiers. | [verb] To destroy or remove one-tenth of anything. | [verb] To devastate: to reduce or destroy significantly but not completely. DECLAIMED (15) [verb] To object to something vociferously; to rail against in speech. | [verb] To recite, e.g., poetry, in a theatrical way; to speak for rhetorical display; to speak pompously, noisily, or theatrically; bemouth; to make an empty speech; to rehearse trite arguments in debate; to rant. | [verb] To speak rhetorically; to make a formal speech or oration; specifically, to recite a speech, poem, etc., in public as a rhetorical exercise; to practice public speaking. DECLASSED (13) [verb] To lower the class or social standing of. | [verb] To remove from a class. DECOLORED (13) [verb] To deprive of colour; to bleach. DECORATED (13) [verb] To furnish with decorations. | [verb] To improve the appearance of an interior of, as a house, room, or office. | [verb] To decorate an interior space, as a house, room, or office. DECOUPLED (15) [verb] To unlink; to take or come apart. DECREASED (13) [verb] Of a quantity, to become smaller. | [verb] To make (a quantity) smaller. DECROWNED (16) DECRYPTED (18) [verb] To convert (an encrypted or coded message) back into plain text. DEDICATED (14) [verb] To set apart for a deity or for religious purposes; consecrate. | [verb] To set apart for a special use | [verb] To commit (oneself) to a particular course of thought or action DEERHOUND (14) [noun] A dog, rather like a large greyhound, originally bred in Scotland for hunting deer DEFAULTED (14) [verb] To fail to meet an obligation. | [verb] To lose a competition by failing to compete. | [verb] To assume a value when none was given; to presume a tentative value or standard. DEFECATED (16) [verb] To excrete feces from one's bowels. | [verb] To purify, to clean of dregs etc. | [verb] To purge; to pass (something) as excrement. DEFILADED (15) [verb] To fortify (something) as a protection from enfilading fire. DEFLECTED (16) [verb] To make (something) deviate from its original path. | [verb] (ball games) To touch the ball, often unwittingly, after a shot or a sharp pass, thereby making it unpredictable for the other players. | [verb] To deviate from its original path. DEFOCUSED (16) [verb] To cause (a lens, or a beam of light or particles, etc.) to be out of focus. | [adjective] Produced by defocusing DEFRAUDED (15) [verb] To obtain money or property from (a person) by fraud; to swindle. | [verb] To deprive. DEFROCKED (20) [verb] To divest of a frock. | [verb] To formally remove the rights and authority of a member of the clergy. | [verb] (by extension) To formally remove the rights and authority of someone, e.g. a government official or a medical practitioner. DEFROSTED (14) [verb] To remove frost from. | [verb] To thaw something. | [verb] To recover from something tiresome. DEGAUSSED (12) [verb] To reduce or eliminate the magnetic field from (the hull of a ship, or a computer monitor, etc.). DEGREASED (12) [verb] To remove grease from something. DEIONIZED (20) [verb] To remove the ions from | [adjective] That has been prepared by deionization DELEGATED (12) [verb] To authorize someone to be a delegate | [verb] To commit a task to someone, especially a subordinate | [verb] (of a subdomain) to give away authority over a subdomain; to allow someone else to create sub-subdomains of a subdomain of one's own DELIGHTED (15) [verb] To give delight to; to affect with great pleasure; to please highly. | [verb] To have or take great pleasure. | [adjective] Greatly pleased. DELIMITED (13) [verb] To mark or fix the limits of. | [verb] To demarcate. | [adjective] With specified conditions. DELIVERED (14) [verb] To set free from restraint or danger. | [verb] (process) To do with birth. | [verb] To free from or disburden of anything. DEMAGOGED (15) DEMANTOID (13) [noun] A green garnet. DEMERITED (13) DEMIWORLD (16) DEMONISED (13) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMONIZED (22) [verb] To turn into a demon. | [verb] To describe or represent as evil or diabolic. DEMOUNTED (13) [verb] To remove from its mounting; to take down from a mounted position. | [verb] To dismount. DENATURED (11) [verb] To take away a natural characteristic or inherent property of (a thing or a person). | [verb] To add something to (alcohol) that makes it unsuitable for consumption but leaves it suitable for other purposes. | [verb] To alter its original form or state, especially of a protein, by heat, acidity etc. DENIZENED (20) DENOUNCED (13) [verb] To make known in a formal manner; to proclaim; to announce; to declare. | [verb] To criticize or speak out against (someone or something); to point out as deserving of reprehension, etc.; to openly accuse or condemn in a threatening manner; to invoke censure upon; to stigmatize; to blame. | [verb] To make a formal or public accusation against; to inform against; to accuse. DENSIFIED (14) [verb] To make dense. | [verb] To become dense. DENUDATED (12) DEORBITED (13) DEPAINTED (13) DEPILATED (13) [verb] To remove hair from the body. DEPOSITED (13) [verb] To lay down; to place; to put. | [verb] To lay up or away for safekeeping; to put up; to store. | [verb] To entrust one's assets to the care of another. Sometimes done as collateral. DEPRESSED (13) [verb] To press down. | [verb] To make depressed, sad or bored. | [verb] To cause a depression or a decrease in parts of the economy. DEPURATED (13) [verb] To remove impurities from; to purify. | [verb] To make impure. DEPUTIZED (22) [verb] To make (someone) a deputy; to officially empower. | [verb] To make or name as a substitute. | [verb] To act as a deputy. DERAIGNED (12) DERMESTID (13) [noun] Any beetle of the family Dermestidae, most of which are scavengers that feed on dry animal or plant material. DEROGATED (12) [verb] To partially repeal (a law etc.). | [verb] To detract from (something); to disparage, belittle. | [verb] To take away (something from something else) in a way which leaves it lessened. DESCANTED (13) [verb] To discuss at length. | [verb] To sing or play a descant. DESCENDED (14) [verb] To pass from a higher to a lower place; to move downwards; to come or go down in any way, for example by falling, flowing, walking, climbing etc. | [verb] To enter mentally; to retire. | [verb] (with on or upon) To make an attack, or incursion, as if from a vantage ground; to come suddenly and with violence. DESCRIBED (15) [verb] To represent in words. | [verb] To represent by drawing; to draw a plan of; to delineate; to trace or mark out. | [verb] To give rise to a geometrical structure. DESKBOUND (17) [adjective] (of an employee) Whose work confines him or her to a desk. DESOLATED (11) [verb] To deprive of inhabitants. | [verb] To devastate or lay waste somewhere. | [verb] To abandon or forsake something. DESPAIRED (13) [verb] To give up as beyond hope or expectation; to despair of. | [verb] To cause to despair. | [verb] (often with “of”) To be hopeless; to have no hope; to give up all hope or expectation. DESPOILED (13) [verb] To plunder; to pillage; take spoil from. | [verb] To violently strip (someone), with indirect object of their possessions etc.; to rob. | [verb] To strip (someone) of their clothes; to undress. DESPONDED (14) [verb] To give up the will, courage, or spirit; to become dejected, lose heart. DESTAINED (11) [verb] To remove a chemical stain from. | [verb] To lose a chemical stain. | [adjective] From which a stain has been removed DESTROYED (14) [verb] To damage beyond use or repair. | [verb] To neutralize, undo a property or condition. | [verb] To put down or euthanize. DESUGARED (12) DETHRONED (14) [verb] To depose; to forcibly relieve a monarch of the monarchy. | [verb] To remove any governing authority from power. | [verb] To remove from any position of high status or power. DETONATED (11) [verb] To explode; to blow up. Specifically, to combust supersonically via shock compression. | [verb] To cause to explode. DETRACTED (13) [verb] To take away; to withdraw or remove. | [verb] To take credit or reputation from; to defame or decry. DETRAINED (11) [verb] To exit from a train; to disembark | [verb] To remove a passenger or passengers from a train; to evacuate passengers from a train. | [verb] (of an athlete) to reduce one's training, particularly during the offseason, in preparation for a cycle of retraining. DEVELOPED (16) [verb] To change with a specific direction, progress. | [verb] To progress through a sequence of stages. | [verb] To advance; to further; to promote the growth of. DEVILWOOD (17) DEWATERED (14) [verb] To remove water from. DEWLAPPED (18) DEZINCKED (26) DIAGNOSED (12) [verb] To determine which disease is causing a sick person's signs and symptoms; to find the diagnosis. | [verb] (by extension) To determine the cause of a problem. DIAGRAMED (14) [verb] To represent or indicate something using a diagram. | [verb] To schedule the operations of a locomotive or train according to a diagram. DIALOGUED (12) [verb] To discuss or negotiate so that all parties can reach an understanding. | [verb] To put into dialogue form. | [verb] To take part in a dialogue; to dialogize. DIAMONDED (14) DIAPAUSED (13) [adjective] Undergoing diapause DIGITIZED (21) [verb] To represent something (such as an image or sound) as a structured sequence of binary digits | [verb] To quantize a continuous or analog value; to convert it into a discrete value | [verb] To finger. DIGNIFIED (15) [adjective] Having an attitude or bearing that connotes respectability and poise. | [verb] To invest with dignity or honour. | [verb] To give distinction to. DIGRESSED (12) [verb] To step or turn aside; to deviate; to swerve; especially, to turn aside from the main subject of attention, or course of argument, in writing or speaking. | [verb] To turn aside from the right path; to transgress; to offend. DIMERIZED (22) [verb] To produce, or to undergo dimerization | [adjective] That have been reacted to form a dimer DIPLOMAED (15) DIPNETTED (13) DISABUSED (13) [verb] To free (someone) of a misconception or misapprehension; to unveil a falsehood held by (somebody). DISACCORD (15) [noun] The absence or reverse of accord. | [noun] Disharmony. | [verb] To fail to be in accord; to dissent. DISAGREED (12) [verb] To fail to agree; to have a different opinion or belief. | [verb] To fail to conform or correspond with. DISAVOWED (17) [verb] To strongly and solemnly refuse to own or acknowledge; to deny responsibility for, approbation of, and the like. | [verb] To deny; to show the contrary of; to deny legitimacy or achievement of any kind. | [adjective] Strongly disowned or denied. DISBANDED (14) [verb] To break up or (cause to) cease to exist; to disperse. | [verb] To loose the bands of; to set free. | [verb] To divorce. DISBARRED (13) [verb] To expel from the bar, or the legal profession; to deprive (an attorney, barrister, or counselor) of his or her status and privileges as such. | [verb] To exclude (a person) from something. DISBUDDED (15) [verb] To remove buds from a plant in order to promote growth and health in the remaining buds. | [verb] To remove horn-buds from a young calf, lamb or goat kid, to prevent growth of horns. DISBURSED (13) [verb] To pay out, expend; usually from a public fund or treasury. DISCALCED (15) [adjective] Pertaining to a religious order that historically forswore the wearing of shoes. | [adjective] (more generally) Shoeless; without shoes on; barefoot, or wearing sandals rather than shoes. DISCANTED (13) DISCARDED (14) [verb] To throw away, to reject. | [verb] To make a discard; to throw out a card. | [verb] To dismiss from employment, confidence, or favour; to discharge. DISCEPTED (15) DISCERNED (13) [verb] To detect with the senses, especially with the eyes. | [verb] To perceive, recognize, or comprehend with the mind; to descry. | [verb] To distinguish something as being different from something else; to differentiate. DISCIPLED (15) DISCLOSED (13) [verb] To open up, unfasten. | [verb] To uncover, physically expose to view. | [verb] To expose to the knowledge of others; to make known, state openly, reveal. DISCORDED (14) [verb] To disagree; to fail to agree or harmonize; clash. DISCUSSED (13) [verb] To converse or debate concerning a particular topic. | [verb] To communicate, tell, or disclose (information, a message, etc.). | [verb] To break to pieces; to shatter. DISDAINED (12) [verb] To regard (someone or something) with strong contempt. | [verb] To be indignant or offended. DISGORGED (13) [verb] To vomit or spew, to discharge. | [verb] To surrender (stolen goods or money, for example) unwillingly. | [verb] To remove traces of yeast from sparkling wine by the méthode champenoise. DISGRACED (14) [verb] To put someone out of favor; to bring shame or ignominy upon. | [adjective] Having been disgraced. DISGUISED (12) [verb] To change the appearance of (a person or thing) so as to hide, or to assume an identity. | [verb] To avoid giving away or revealing (something secret); to hide by a false appearance. | [verb] To affect or change by liquor; to intoxicate. DISGUSTED (12) [verb] To cause an intense dislike for something. | [adjective] Filled with disgust | [adjective] Irritated and out of patience DISHELMED (16) DISJECTED (20) DISJOINED (18) [verb] To separate; to disunite. | [verb] To become separated. DISLIMNED (13) DISLODGED (13) [verb] To remove or force out from a position or dwelling previously occupied. | [verb] To move or go from a dwelling or former position. | [verb] To force out of a secure or settled position. DISMASTED (13) [verb] To break off the mast (of a ship), especially by gunfire. DISMISSED (13) [verb] To discharge; to end the employment or service of. | [verb] To order to leave. | [verb] To dispel; to rid one’s mind of. DISOBEYED (16) [verb] To refuse or (intentionally) fail to obey an order of (somebody). | [verb] To refuse or (intentionally) fail to obey. DISPARTED (13) DISPELLED (13) [verb] To drive away or cause to vanish by scattering. | [verb] To remove (fears, doubts, objections etc.) by proving them unjustified. DISPENDED (14) DISPENSED (13) [verb] To issue, distribute, or give out. | [verb] To apply, as laws to particular cases; to administer; to execute; to manage; to direct. | [verb] To supply or make up a medicine or prescription. DISPERSED (13) [verb] To scatter in different directions | [verb] To break up and disappear; to dissipate | [verb] To disseminate DISPLACED (15) [verb] To put out of place; to disarrange. | [verb] To move something, or someone, especially to forcibly move people from their homeland. | [verb] To supplant, or take the place of something or someone; to substitute. DISPLAYED (16) [verb] To show conspicuously; to exhibit; to demonstrate; to manifest. | [verb] To make a display; to act as one making a show or demonstration. | [verb] To extend the front of (a column), bringing it into line. DISPLODED (14) DISPLUMED (15) [verb] To deprive of feathers or plumes. | [verb] To strip of an award. DISPORTED (13) [verb] To amuse oneself divertingly or playfully; in particular, to cavort or gambol. DISPRIZED (22) DISPROVED (16) [verb] To prove to be false or erroneous; to confute; to refute. DISREGARD (12) [noun] The act or state of deliberately not paying attention or caring about; misregard. | [verb] To ignore; pay no attention to. DISROOTED (11) DISRUPTED (13) [verb] To throw into confusion or disorder. | [verb] To interrupt or impede. | [verb] To improve a product or service in ways that displace an established one and surprise the market. DISSEATED (11) DISSECTED (13) [verb] To study an animal's anatomy by cutting it apart; to perform a necropsy or an autopsy. | [verb] To study a plant or other organism's anatomy similarly. | [verb] To analyze an idea in detail by separating it into its parts. DISSEISED (11) [verb] To deprive of seizin or possession; to dispossess or oust wrongfully (one in freehold possession of land). DISSEIZED (20) [verb] To deprive of seizin or possession; to dispossess or oust wrongfully (one in freehold possession of land). DISSENTED (11) [verb] To disagree; to withhold assent. Construed with from (or, formerly, to). | [verb] To differ from, especially in opinion, beliefs, etc. | [verb] To be different; to have contrary characteristics. DISSERTED (11) DISSERVED (14) DISSOLVED (14) [verb] To terminate a union of multiple members actively, as by disbanding. | [verb] To destroy, make disappear. | [verb] To liquify, melt into a fluid. DISSUADED (12) [verb] To convince not to try or do. DISTAINED (11) DISTANCED (13) [verb] To move away (from) someone or something. | [verb] To leave at a distance; to outpace, leave behind. DISTASTED (11) DISTENDED (12) [verb] To extend or expand, as from internal pressure; to swell | [verb] To extend; to stretch out; to spread out. | [verb] To cause to swell. DISTILLED (11) [verb] To subject to distillation. | [verb] To undergo or be produced by distillation. | [verb] To make by means of distillation, especially whisky. DISTORTED (11) [verb] To bring something out of shape, to misshape. | [verb] To become misshapen. | [verb] To give a false or misleading account of DISTURBED (13) [verb] To confuse a quiet, constant state or a calm, continuous flow, in particular: thoughts, actions or liquids. | [verb] To divert, redirect, or alter by disturbing. | [verb] To have a negative emotional impact; to cause emotional distress or confusion. DISUNITED (11) [verb] To cause disagreement or alienation among or within. | [verb] To separate, sever, or split. | [verb] To disintegrate; to come apart. DISVALUED (14) [verb] To regard something as having little or no value. | [verb] To undervalue; to depreciate. DIVAGATED (15) [verb] To wander about. | [verb] To stray from a subject or theme. DIVINISED (14) [verb] To make divine; to make godlike. DIVINIZED (23) [verb] To make divine; to make godlike. DOGLEGGED (14) DOGNAPPED (16) [verb] To abduct (a dog). DOMICILED (15) [verb] To have a domicile in a particular place. | [adjective] Living, residing or (of a company) based (in a particular place). DOMINATED (13) [verb] To govern, rule or control by superior authority or power | [verb] To exert an overwhelming guiding influence over something or someone | [verb] To enjoy a commanding position in some field DOWNFIELD (17) [adjective] Toward the defending team's end of the playing field | [adjective] Describing an NMR resonance at a higher frequency to that of a reference signal | [adverb] Towards the lower part of a field DOWNSIZED (23) [verb] To reduce in size or number. | [verb] To reduce the workforce of. | [verb] To terminate the employment of. DOWNTREND (14) [noun] Any gradual movement towards a lower state or value. | [verb] To undergo a downward trend. DRAGOONED (12) [verb] To force (someone) into doing something; to coerce. | [verb] To surrender (a person) to the fury of soldiers. DRAUGHTED (15) [verb] To write a first version, make a preliminary sketch. | [verb] To draw in outline; to make a draught, sketch, or plan of, as in architectural and mechanical drawing. | [verb] To write a law. DREAMLAND (13) [noun] An imaginary world experienced while dreaming. | [noun] An imagined world that is ideal yet unrealistic; a fantasy. DRIFTWOOD (17) [noun] A floating piece, or pieces, of wood that drifts with the current. | [noun] Such a piece of wood that has been cast ashore. DRIVELLED (14) [verb] To have saliva drip from the mouth; to drool. | [verb] To talk nonsense; to talk senselessly; to drool. | [verb] To be weak or foolish; to dote. DUCKBOARD (19) [noun] One of a long series of boards laid from side to side as a path across wet or muddy ground; normally used in plural. | [noun] Wooden, low walkway or short part of a path with one or more planks, logs, or boards laid after each other lengthwise, often two planks wide; also called bog board, bog bridge, or puncheon. DULCIFIED (16) [adjective] Sweetened; mollified DUMBFOUND (18) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. DUNGEONED (12) [verb] To imprison in a dungeon. DYNAMITED (16) [verb] To blow up with dynamite or other high explosive. EARLYWOOD (16) EARMARKED (16) [verb] To mark (as of sheep) by slitting the ear. | [verb] (by extension) To specify or set aside for a particular purpose, to allocate. EARTHWARD (16) [adjective] Towards or in the direction of the earth. | [adverb] Towards or in the direction of the earth. EARWIGGED (15) [verb] To fill the mind of with prejudice by insinuations. | [verb] To attempt to influence by persistent confidential argument or talk. | [verb] To eavesdrop. EASTBOUND (12) [adjective] Moving or heading towards the east. | [adverb] Toward the east. ECHELONED (15) [verb] To form troops into an echelon. ECHIUROID (15) EGGHEADED (16) EIGHTFOLD (17) [adjective] Eight times as much; multiplied by eight. | [adjective] Containing eight parts. | [adverb] By a factor of eight. ELECTROED (12) ELLIPSOID (12) [noun] A surface, all of whose cross sections are elliptic or circular (including the sphere), that generalises the ellipse and in Cartesian coordinates (x, y, z) is a quadric with equation x2/a2 + y2/b2 + z2/c2 = 0. | [noun] Such a surface used as a model of the shape of the earth. | [adjective] Shaped like an ellipse; elliptical. ELONGATED (11) [verb] To make long or longer by pulling and stretching; to make elongated. | [verb] To become long or longer by being pulled or stretched; to become elongated. | [verb] To move to or place at a distance (from something). ELUVIATED (13) EMACIATED (14) [verb] To make extremely thin or wasted. | [verb] To become extremely thin or wasted. | [adjective] Thin or haggard, especially from hunger or disease. EMBARGOED (15) [verb] To impose an embargo on trading certain goods with another country. | [verb] To impose an embargo on a document. EMBATTLED (14) [verb] To arrange in order of battle; to array for battle | [verb] To prepare or arm for battle; to equip as for battle. | [verb] To be arrayed for battle. EMBEZZLED (32) [verb] To steal or misappropriate money that one has been trusted with, especially to steal money from the organisation for which one works. EMBOSOMED (16) [verb] To draw to or into one's bosom; to treasure. | [verb] To enclose, surround, or protect. EMBOWELED (17) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. EMBOWERED (17) [verb] To enclose something or someone as if in a bower; shelter with foliage. | [verb] To lodge or rest in or as in a bower. | [verb] To form a bower. EMBROILED (14) [verb] To draw into a situation; to cause to be involved. | [verb] To implicate in confusion; to complicate; to jumble. EMBROWNED (17) EMENDATED (13) EMIGRATED (13) [verb] To leave the country in which one lives, especially one's native country, in order to reside elsewhere. EMPANELED (14) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPOWERED (17) [verb] To give permission, power, or the legal right to do something. | [verb] To give someone more confidence and/or strength to do something, often by enabling them to increase their control over their own life or situation. | [noun] One who is empowered. EMPURPLED (16) [verb] To make purple. | [verb] To enrage or anger, referring to making the face purple or red with blood. | [verb] Of writing, to make overly flowery or showy; to embellish unduly. ENAMELLED (12) [verb] To coat or decorate with enamel. | [verb] To variegate with colours, as if with enamel. | [verb] To form a glossy surface like enamel upon. ENAMOURED (12) [verb] (mostly in the passive, followed by "of" or "with") To cause to be in love. | [verb] (mostly in the passive) To captivate. | [adjective] In love, amorous. ENCHAINED (15) [verb] To restrain with, or as if with, chains. | [verb] To link together. ENCHANTED (15) [verb] To attract and delight, to charm. | [verb] To cast a spell upon (often one that attracts or charms). | [verb] To magically enhance or degrade an item. ENCIRCLED (14) [verb] To surround, form a circle around. | [verb] To move or go around completely. ENCLASPED (14) [verb] To hold in (or as if in) a clasp; to embrace ENCRUSTED (12) [verb] To cover with a hard crust. | [verb] To form a crust. | [verb] To inset or affix decorative materials upon (a surface); to inlay into, as a piece of carving or other ornamental object. ENCRYPTED (17) [verb] To conceal information by means of a code or cipher. | [adjective] Being in code; having been encrypted. ENDAMAGED (14) ENERGISED (11) [adjective] Alternative spelling of energized | [verb] To invigorate; to make energetic. | [verb] To supply with energy, especially electricity; to turn on power to (something). ENERGIZED (20) [verb] To invigorate; to make energetic. | [verb] To supply with energy, especially electricity; to turn on power to (something). | [verb] To use strength in action; to act or operate with force or vigor; to act in producing an effect. ENERVATED (13) [verb] To reduce strength or energy; debilitate. | [verb] To weaken morally or mentally. | [verb] To partially or completely remove a nerve. ENFEEBLED (15) [verb] To make feeble. ENFEOFFED (19) [verb] To transfer a fief to, to endow with a fief; to put (a person) in legal possession of a freehold interest. | [verb] To give up completely; to surrender, to yield. ENFEVERED (16) [verb] To excite fever in ENFILADED (14) [verb] To rake (something) with gunfire. | [verb] To be directed toward (something) like enfilading gunfire. | [verb] To arrange (rooms or other structures) in a row. ENGARLAND (11) ENGIRDLED (12) [verb] To encircle as if with a girdle. ENGLISHED (14) ENGLUTTED (11) ENGRAFTED (14) [verb] To insert, as a scion of one tree or plant into another, for the purpose of propagation; graft onto a plant | [verb] To fix firmly into place ENGRAILED (11) [noun] A European moth, Ectropis crepuscularia. | [adjective] Having an edge or border indented with semicircles with points outwards. Usually the saltire and the dexter edge of the border of the shield both have cuts along their entire length the shape of crescent moons. ENGRAINED (11) [verb] To dye with a fast or lasting colour. | [verb] To make (something) deeply part of something else. ENGROSSED (11) [verb] To write (a document) in large, aesthetic, and legible lettering; to make a finalized copy of. | [verb] To buy up wholesale, especially to buy the whole supply of (a commodity etc.). | [verb] To monopolize; to concentrate (something) in the single possession of someone, especially unfairly. ENKINDLED (15) [verb] To kindle; to arouse or evoke. ENLIVENED (13) [verb] To give life or spirit to; to revive or animate. | [verb] To make more lively, cheerful or interesting. ENSCONCED (14) [verb] To place in a secure environment. | [verb] To settle comfortably. | [adjective] Placed in a secure environment. ENSHRINED (13) [verb] To enclose (a sacred relic etc.) in a shrine or chest. | [verb] To preserve or cherish (something) as though in a shrine; to preserve or contain, especially with some reverence. | [verb] To protect an idea, ideal, or philosophy within an official law or treaty ENSILAGED (11) [verb] To preserve in a silo. ENSNARLED (10) [verb] To entangle; to trap. ENSPHERED (15) ENSWATHED (16) [verb] To swathe; to envelop, as in swaddling clothes. ENTANGLED (11) [verb] To tangle up; to twist or interweave in such a manner as not to be easily separated | [verb] To involve in such complications as to render extrication difficult | [verb] , to ensnare ENTHRONED (13) [verb] To put on the throne in a formal installation ceremony called enthronement, equivalent to (and often combined with) coronation and/or other ceremonies of investiture | [verb] To help a candidate to the succession of a monarchy (as a kingmaker does), or by extension in any other major organisation. | [adjective] Placed upon a throne. ENTRAINED (10) [verb] To draw along as a current does. | [verb] To suspend small particles in the current of a fluid. | [verb] To set up or propagate a signal, such as an oscillation. ENTRANCED (12) [verb] To delight and fill with wonder. | [verb] To put into a trance. | [adjective] Held at attention, as if by magic. ENTRAPPED (14) [verb] To catch in a trap or snare. | [verb] To lure (someone), either into a dangerous situation, or into performing an illegal act. ENTREATED (10) [verb] To treat with, or in respect to, a thing desired; hence, to ask for earnestly. | [verb] To beseech or supplicate (a person); to prevail upon by prayer or solicitation; to try to persuade. | [verb] To invite; to entertain. ENTRUSTED (10) [verb] To trust to the care of. ENTWISTED (13) ENVELOPED (15) [verb] To surround or enclose. | [adjective] Entwined, as with snakes, laurels, etc. ENVENOMED (15) [verb] To poison, to put or inject venom onto or into. | [verb] To acerbate. ENVIRONED (13) [verb] To surround; to encircle. ENVISAGED (14) [verb] To conceive or see something within one's mind; to imagine or envision. | [adjective] Visualized, conceived, imagined ENWHEELED (16) ENWRAPPED (17) [verb] To wrap around, surround; to envelop | [verb] To absorb completely or engross EPHEMERID (17) EPILOGUED (13) EQUALISED (19) [verb] To make equal; to cause to correspond in amount or degree. | [verb] To be equal to; to equal, to rival. | [verb] To make the scoreline equal by scoring points. EQUALIZED (28) [verb] To make equal; to cause to correspond in amount or degree. | [verb] To be equal to; to equal, to rival. | [verb] To make the scoreline equal by scoring points. ERADIATED (11) ERGOTIZED (20) ERIOPHYID (18) ERUCTATED (12) [verb] To burp; to belch. ERYTHROID (16) [adjective] Having a red colour; reddish | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the erythrocytes, especially to their development | [noun] An erythroblast in its normal course of maturation. ESCALADED (13) ESCALATED (12) [verb] To increase (something) in extent or intensity; to intensify or step up. | [verb] In technical support, to transfer a customer, a problem, etc. to the next higher level of authority ESCALOPED (14) ESCHEATED (15) [verb] To put (land, property) in escheat; to confiscate. | [verb] To revert to a state or lord because its previous owner died without an heir. ESTIMATED (12) [verb] To calculate roughly, often from imperfect data. | [verb] To judge and form an opinion of the value of, from imperfect data. ESTIVATED (13) [verb] To go into stasis or torpor in the summer months. ESTRANGED (11) [verb] To cause to feel less close or friendly; alienate. To cease contact with (particularly of a family member or spouse, especially in form estranged). | [verb] To remove from an accustomed place or set of associations. | [adjective] Having become a stranger, of one who formerly was close, as a relative, friend, lover, or spouse. ESTREATED (10) [verb] To extract or take out from the records of a court, and send up to the court of exchequer to be enforced; said of a forfeited recognizance. | [verb] To bring in to the exchequer, as a fine. ETERNISED (10) [verb] To make or render eternal. | [verb] To prolong indefinitely. | [verb] To immortalize; to make eternally famous. ETERNIZED (19) [adjective] Immortalized. ETHERIZED (22) [verb] To convert into ether. | [verb] To render insensible by means of ether, as by inhalation. ETHICIZED (24) [verb] To make ethical. ETHYLATED (16) ETIOLATED (10) [adjective] Of a plant or part of a plant: pale and weak because of sunlight deprivation or excessive exposure to sunlight. | [adjective] Of a plant: intentionally grown in the dark. | [adjective] (by extension) Of an animal or person: having an ashen or pale appearance; also, haggard or thin; physically weak. | [verb] To make pale through lack of light, especially of a plant. EUGLENOID (11) [noun] A kind of flagellate distinguished mainly by the presence of a pellicle composed of proteinaceous strips underneath the cell membrane, supported by dorsal and ventral microtubules. EULOGISED (11) [verb] To praise, celebrate or pay homage to someone, especially in an eloquent formal eulogy. EULOGIZED (20) [verb] To praise, celebrate or pay homage to (someone), especially in an eloquent formal eulogy. EUNUCHOID (15) [noun] An organism exhibiting eunuchoidism. | [adjective] Resembling a eunuch. EUTECTOID (12) [noun] An alloy of a composition that undergoes the eutectoid transformation. | [adjective] Describing the phase-change reaction of an alloy in which, on cooling, a single solid phase transforms into two other solid phases. EUTHYROID (16) [noun] A person with a normally functioning thyroid. | [adjective] Having normal thyroid function. EVACUATED (15) [verb] To leave or withdraw from; to quit; to retire from | [verb] To cause to leave or withdraw from. | [verb] To make empty; to empty out; to remove the contents of, including to create a vacuum. EVALUATED (13) [verb] To draw conclusions from examining; to assess. | [verb] To compute or determine the value of (an expression). | [verb] To return or have a specific value. EVANESCED (15) [verb] To disappear into a mist or dissipate in vapor | [verb] To transition from the solid state to gaseous state without ever becoming a liquid EVANISHED (16) [verb] To vanish. EVIDENCED (16) [verb] To provide evidence for, or suggest the truth of. EXCAVATED (22) [verb] To make a hole in (something); to hollow. | [verb] To remove part of (something) by scooping or digging it out. | [verb] To uncover (something) by digging. EXCERPTED (21) [verb] To select or copy sample material (excerpts) from a work. | [adjective] Consisting of excerpts. EXCHANGED (23) [verb] To trade or barter. | [verb] To replace with, as a substitute. EXCLAIMED (21) [verb] To cry out suddenly, from some strong emotion. | [verb] To say suddenly and with strong emotion. EXECRATED (19) [verb] To feel loathing for; to abhor | [verb] To declare to be hateful or abhorrent; to denounce | [verb] To invoke a curse; to curse or swear EXERCISED (19) [verb] To exert for the sake of training or improvement; to practice in order to develop. | [verb] To perform physical activity for health or training. | [verb] To use (a right, an option, etc.); to put into practice. EXHAUSTED (20) [verb] To draw or let out wholly; to drain off completely | [verb] To empty by drawing or letting out the contents | [verb] To drain; to use up or expend wholly, or until the supply comes to an end EXHIBITED (22) [verb] To display or show (something) for others to see, especially at an exhibition or contest. | [verb] To demonstrate. | [verb] To submit (a physical object) to a court as evidence. EXORCISED (19) [verb] To drive out (an evil spirit) from a person, place or thing, especially by an incantation or prayer. | [verb] To rid (a person, place or thing) of an evil spirit. | [adjective] That has undergone exorcism. EXORCIZED (28) [verb] To drive out supposed evil spirits from a person, place or thing, especially by an incantation or prayer | [verb] To rid a person, place or thing of an evil spirit EXPEDITED (20) [verb] To accelerate the progress of. | [verb] To perform (a task) fast and efficiently. | [adjective] Accelerated EXPLAINED (19) [verb] To make plain, manifest, or intelligible; to clear of obscurity; to illustrate the meaning of. | [verb] To give a valid excuse for past behavior. | [verb] To make flat, smooth out. EXPLANTED (19) [verb] To remove something, such as a medical device, that has been implanted. | [adjective] Removed from a natural site of growth, and placed in a culture medium (especially in relation to plants) | [adjective] Removed from the body (especially in relation to organs) EXPLOITED (19) [verb] To use for one’s own advantage. | [verb] To forcibly deprive someone of something to which she or he has a natural right. EXPOSITED (19) EXPOUNDED (20) [verb] To set out the meaning of; to explain or discuss at length | [verb] To make a statement, especially at length. EXPRESSED (19) [verb] To convey or communicate; to make known or explicit. | [verb] To press, squeeze out (especially said of milk). | [verb] To translate messenger RNA into protein. EXSCINDED (20) EXTINCTED (19) EXTRACTED (19) [verb] To draw out; to pull out; to remove forcibly from a fixed position, as by traction or suction, etc. | [verb] To withdraw by expression, distillation, or other mechanical or chemical process. Compare abstract (transitive verb). | [verb] To take by selection; to choose out; to cite or quote, as a passage from a book. EXTUBATED (19) [verb] To remove a tube from a hollow organ or from an airway. EXUVIATED (20) [verb] To shed or cast off a covering, especially a skin; to slough; to molt (moult). EYEBALLED (15) [verb] To gauge, estimate or judge by eye, rather than measuring precisely; to look or glance at. | [verb] To scrutinize | [verb] To stare at intently EYELETTED (13) FAIRYLAND (16) [noun] The imaginary land or abode of fairies. | [adjective] Having qualities ascribed to fairies and their realm; fanciful, delicate, surreal, or diminutive. FALSEHOOD (16) [noun] The property of being false. | [noun] A false statement, especially an intentional one; a lie. | [noun] Mendacity, deceitfulness; the trait of a person who is mendacious and deceitful. FALSIFIED (16) [adjective] Demonstrated to be false. | [verb] To alter so as to make false; to make incorrect. | [verb] To misrepresent. FANCIFIED (18) FANFOLDED (17) FANTASIED (13) [adjective] Filled with imaginations or fancies. | [verb] To fantasize (about). | [verb] To have a fancy for; to be pleased with; to like. FARADISED (14) FARADIZED (23) FARMSTEAD (15) [noun] The main building of a farm. | [noun] A farm, including its buildings. FASCIATED (15) [verb] To bind. | [verb] To apply fascia. | [adjective] Fasciate FASCICLED (17) FASHIONED (16) [verb] To make, build or construct, especially in a crude or improvised way. | [verb] To make in a standard manner; to work. | [verb] To fit, adapt, or accommodate to. FATHEADED (17) [adjective] Characteristic of a fathead; stupid FEATHERED (16) [verb] To cover or furnish with feathers. | [verb] To arrange in the manner or appearance of feathers. | [verb] To rotate the oars while they are out of the water to reduce wind resistance. FEDERATED (14) [verb] To unite in a federation. | [adjective] United, as a federation, under a central government FEMINISED (15) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Made feminine; made to have more feminine behaviour, traits or physiology. FEMINIZED (24) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Made feminine; made to have more feminine behaviour, traits or physiology. FERMENTED (15) [verb] To react, using fermentation; especially to produce alcohol by aging or by allowing yeast to act on sugars; to brew. | [verb] To stir up, agitate, cause unrest or excitement in. | [adjective] Produced by fermentation. FERRELLED (13) FESTOONED (13) [verb] To decorate with ornaments, such as garlands or chains, which hang loosely from two tacked spots. | [verb] To make festoons. | [verb] To decorate or bedeck abundantly. FIBERIZED (24) FIBRINOID (15) FILAGREED (14) [verb] To decorate something with intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver twisted wire. FILIGREED (14) [verb] To decorate something with intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver twisted wire. | [adjective] Having filigree ornamentation FILTRATED (13) [verb] To filter. | [adjective] Filtered FINALISED (13) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINALIZED (22) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FIREBRAND (15) [noun] An argumentative troublemaker or revolutionary; one who agitates against the current situation. | [noun] A torch or other burning stick with a flame at one end. FIREGUARD (14) [noun] A mesh screen around a fire to prevent sparks or falling embers. FIRSTHAND (16) [adjective] Direct, without intermediate stages. | [adjective] Not previously owned or used; contrasted with secondhand. FISSIONED (13) [verb] To cause to undergo fission. | [verb] To undergo fission. FLANNELED (13) [adjective] Covered or wrapped in flannel. FLATTENED (13) [verb] To make something flat or flatter. | [verb] To press one's body tightly against a surface, such as a wall or floor, especially in order to avoid being seen or harmed. | [verb] To knock down or lay low. FLATTERED (13) [verb] To compliment someone, often insincerely and sometimes to win favour. | [verb] To enhance someone's vanity by praising them. | [verb] To portray someone to advantage. FLAVONOID (16) [noun] Any of many compounds that are plant metabolites, being formally derived from flavone; they have antioxidant properties, and sometimes contribute to flavor. FLAVOURED (16) [verb] To add flavoring to something. | [adjective] Having a specific taste, often due to the addition of flavouring. FLEMISHED (18) FLICKERED (19) [verb] To burn or shine unsteadily, or with a wavering light. | [verb] To keep going on and off; to appear and disappear for short moments; to flutter. | [verb] To flutter; to flap the wings without flying. FLITTERED (13) [verb] To scatter in pieces. | [verb] To move about rapidly and nimbly. | [verb] To move quickly from one condition or location to another. FLORIATED (13) [adjective] Having floral ornaments FLUIDISED (14) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUIDIZED (23) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas | [adjective] Given the properties of a fluid (by shaking or injection of gas) FLUMMOXED (24) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. | [adjective] Confused, perplexed or flustered. FLUSTERED (13) [verb] To make hot and rosy, as with drinking. | [verb] (by extension) To confuse; befuddle; throw into panic by making overwrought with confusion. | [verb] To be in a heat or bustle; to be agitated and confused. FLUTTERED (13) [verb] To flap or wave quickly but irregularly. | [verb] Of a winged animal: to flap the wings without flying; to fly with a light flapping of the wings. | [verb] To cause something to flap. FOCALISED (15) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCALIZED (24) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOOTBOARD (15) [noun] An upright board across the foot of a bedstead. | [noun] A board or small raised platform on which to support or rest the feet, such as that found in a carriage. | [noun] A place to stand on a scooter or skateboard. FOOTNOTED (13) [verb] To add footnotes to a text. FOREARMED (15) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To arm in preparation. | [adjective] (in combination) Having some specific type of forearm. FOREBODED (16) [verb] To predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device). | [verb] To be prescient of (some ill or misfortune); to have an inward conviction of, as of a calamity which is about to happen; to augur despondingly. FOREDATED (14) FORENAMED (15) FORFEITED (16) [verb] To suffer the loss of something by wrongdoing or non-compliance | [verb] To lose a contest, game, match, or other form of competition by voluntary withdrawal, by failing to attend or participate, or by violation of the rules | [verb] To be guilty of a misdeed; to be criminal; to transgress. FORFENDED (17) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FORJUDGED (22) FORMATTED (15) [verb] To create or edit the layout of a document. | [verb] Change a document so it will fit onto a different type of page. | [verb] To prepare a mass storage medium for initial use, erasing any existing data in the process. FORTIFIED (16) [noun] A fortified wine. | [verb] To increase the defenses of; to strengthen and secure by military works; to render defensible against an attack by hostile forces. | [verb] To impart strength or vigor to. FORWARDED (17) [verb] To advance, promote. | [verb] To send (a letter, email etc.) to a third party. | [verb] To assemble (a book) by sewing sections, attaching cover boards, and so on. FOSSICKED (19) [verb] To search for something; to rummage. | [verb] (British dialect) To be troublesome. FOULBROOD (15) [noun] A bacterial disease of bees. FOUNDERED (14) [verb] Of a ship, to fill with water and sink. | [verb] To fall; to stumble and go lame, as a horse. | [verb] To fail; to miscarry. FOXHUNTED (23) FRACTURED (15) [verb] To break, or cause something to break. | [verb] To amuse (a person) greatly; to split someone's sides. | [adjective] Broken into sharp pieces. FRAUGHTED (17) FREEBASED (15) [verb] To purify a drug by crystallization. | [verb] To use a purified drug, especially cocaine, by heating it and inhaling the fumes produced. FREEBOARD (15) [noun] The vertical distance between the waterline and the uppermost watertight deck of a vessel. | [noun] The distance between a water level and the top of something that contains or restrains it (such as a dam). | [noun] The distance between the top of sea ice and the water level. | [noun] A type of skateboard which simulates the movement of a snowboard when used on a downhill coarse, allowing snowboarding techniques, which has an addition of two centerline casters that extend below the traditional skateboard wheels and bogies. FREIGHTED (17) [verb] To transport (goods). | [verb] To load with freight. Also figurative. | [adjective] Loaded; charged FRESHENED (16) [verb] To become fresh. | [verb] (of wind) To become stronger. | [verb] (of a cow) To begin or resume giving milk, especially after calving; to cause to resume giving milk. FRITTERED (13) [verb] (often with about, around, or away) To squander or waste time, money, or other resources; e.g. occupy oneself idly or without clear purpose, to tinker with an unimportant part of a project, to dally, sometimes as a form of procrastination. | [verb] To sinter. | [verb] To cut (meat etc.) into small pieces for frying. FRIVOLLED (16) [verb] To behave frivolously. | [verb] To trifle. FROLICKED (19) [verb] To make merry; to have fun; to romp; to behave playfully and uninhibitedly. | [verb] To cause to be merry. FRONTWARD (16) [adjective] Frontwards. | [adverb] Frontwards. FRUITWOOD (16) [noun] The wood of any fruit tree, particularly hardwood from species such as pear and cherry, that is valued for furniture, woodcuts and other applications. | [noun] In orchard culture, the woody growth of the scion of any grafted fruit tree above the graft, as opposed to the rootstock, which is the part of the plant below the graft. | [noun] Particular branches or twigs in particular positions, or of particular types or ages, that may be expected to bear fruit in most types of orchard trees, since fruit is not borne randomly all over the tree. FULFILLED (16) [verb] To satisfy, carry out, bring to completion (an obligation, a requirement, etc.). | [verb] To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest. | [verb] To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.). FUMIGATED (16) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUNNELLED (13) [verb] To use a funnel. | [verb] To proceed through a narrow gap or passageway akin to a funnel; to condense or narrow. | [verb] To channel, direct, or focus (emotions, money, resources, etc.). FURBISHED (18) [verb] To polish or burnish. | [verb] To renovate or recondition. | [adjective] Polished, burnished. FURNISHED (16) [verb] To provide a place with furniture, or other equipment. | [verb] To supply or give (something). | [verb] To supply (somebody) with something. FURTHERED (16) [verb] To help forward; to assist. | [verb] To encourage growth; to support progress or growth of something; to promote. FUSULINID (13) GADROONED (12) GALLANTED (11) [verb] To attend or wait on (a lady). | [verb] To handle with grace or in a modish manner. GALLERIED (11) GALUMPHED (18) [verb] To move heavily and clumsily, or with a sense of prancing and triumph. GAMBOLLED (15) [verb] To move about playfully; to frolic. | [verb] To do a forward roll. GANGRENED (12) [verb] To produce gangrene in. | [verb] To be affected with gangrene. | [verb] To corrupt; To cause to become degenerate. GANTLETED (11) GARGOYLED (15) GARLANDED (12) [verb] To deck or ornament something with a garland | [verb] To form something into a garland GARLICKED (17) GARMENTED (13) GARNISHED (14) [verb] To decorate with ornaments; to adorn; to embellish. | [verb] To ornament with something placed around it. | [verb] To furnish; to supply. GARROTTED (11) [verb] To execute by strangulation. | [verb] To suddenly render insensible by semi-strangulation, and then to rob. GASTROPOD (13) [noun] Any member of a class of mollusks (Gastropoda) that includes snails and slugs; univalve mollusk. GAUFFERED (17) [verb] To plait, crimp, or flute; to goffer, as lace. | [verb] In fine bookbinding, to decorate the edges of a text block with a heated iron. GAVELKIND (18) [noun] A system of inheritance associated with the county of Kent in England whereby, at the death of a tenant, intestate estate is divided equally among all his sons; also, a similar system employed in Ireland GAZEHOUND (23) GEMINATED (13) [verb] To arrange in pairs. | [verb] To occur in pairs. | [adjective] Of a consonant, pronounced longer and considered as being doubled; geminate. GENERATED (11) [verb] To bring into being; give rise to. | [verb] To produce as a result of a chemical or physical process. | [verb] To procreate, beget. GEOMETRID (13) [noun] Any of the family Geometridae of moths. | [noun] A larva of such moth, which when walking alternate legs and prolegs, giving the appearance of measuring. GESNERIAD (11) [noun] Any of the family Gesneriaceae of tropical and subtropical flowering plants, valued as ornamentals. GIBBETTED (15) GIMBALLED (15) GIMMICKED (21) [verb] To rig or set up with a trick or device. | [adjective] Furnished with gimmicks GLACIATED (13) [verb] To cover with ice or a glacier | [verb] To erode with a glacier | [verb] To freeze GLADDENED (13) [verb] To cause (something) to become more glad. | [verb] To become more glad in one's disposition. GLAMOURED (13) GLANDERED (12) GLIMMERED (15) [verb] To shine with a faint, unsteady light. GLISSADED (12) [verb] To perform a glissade. GLISTENED (11) [verb] (of a wet or greasy surface) To reflect light with a glittering luster; to sparkle, coruscate, glint or flash. GLISTERED (11) [verb] To gleam, glisten or coruscate. GLITTERED (11) [verb] To sparkle with light; to shine with a brilliant and broken light or showy luster; to gleam. | [verb] To be showy, specious, or striking, and hence attractive. GLORIFIED (14) [adjective] Transformed into something glorious (often used sarcastically) | [verb] To exalt, or give glory or praise to (something or someone). | [verb] To make (something) appear to be more glorious than it is; regard something or someone as excellent baselessly. GNEISSOID (11) GODDAMMED (17) GODDAMNED (15) [adjective] Damned by God. | [adjective] Used as an intensifier expressing anger. GOLDENROD (12) [noun] Any tall-stemmed plant principally from genus Solidago (also Oligoneuron), usually with clusters of small yellow flowers. | [noun] A golden-yellow colour, like that of the goldenrod plant. | [adjective] Of a golden-yellow colour, like that of the goldenrod plant. GOLDFIELD (15) [noun] An area where gold ore is found GOSSIPPED (15) GRADUATED (12) [verb] To be recognized by a school or university as having completed the requirements of a degree studied at the institution. | [verb] To be certified as having earned a degree from; to graduate from (an institution). | [verb] To certify (a student) as having earned a degree GRAECIZED (22) [verb] To render Grecian, or cause (a word or phrase in another language) to take a Greek form. | [verb] To translate into Greek. | [verb] To conform to the Greek custom, especially in speech. GRANITOID (11) GRASSLAND (11) [noun] An area dominated by grass or grasslike vegetation. GRATIFIED (14) [verb] To please. | [verb] To make content; to satisfy. GRATINEED (11) GRAVELLED (14) [verb] To apply a layer of gravel to the surface of a road, etc. | [verb] To puzzle or annoy | [verb] To run (as a ship) upon the gravel or beach; to run aground; to cause to stick fast in gravel or sand. GRAVEYARD (17) [noun] A tract of land in which the dead are buried. | [noun] (by extension) A final storage place for collections of things that are no longer useful or useable. GRAYBEARD (16) [noun] An old man. | [noun] Any of the members of a group who have been there the longest, often implying experience. | [noun] A coarse earthenware vessel for holding liquor; a bellarmine. GREATENED (11) GREENHEAD (14) [noun] Tabanus nigrovittatus, a biting horsefly. | [noun] The mallard. | [noun] A fish, the striped bass. GREENSAND (11) [noun] A greenish sandstone containing glauconite. GREENWOOD (14) [noun] A forest in full leaf, as in summer. | [noun] Wood that is green; in other words, not seasoned. | [noun] Certain half-shrubby species of genista. GREYHOUND (17) [noun] A lean breed of dog used in hunting and racing. | [noun] A highball cocktail of vodka and grapefruit juice. | [noun] A swift steamer, especially an ocean steamer. GROVELLED (14) [verb] To be prone on the ground. | [verb] To crawl. | [verb] To abase oneself before another person. GUDGEONED (13) GUERDONED (12) [verb] To give such a reward to. GUNKHOLED (18) HACKNEYED (22) [verb] To make uninteresting or trite by frequent use. | [verb] To use as a hackney. | [verb] To carry in a hackney coach. HAMADRYAD (19) [noun] A wood-nymph who was physically a part of her tree; she would die if her tree were felled. | [noun] The king cobra. | [noun] A kind of baboon, Papio hamadryas, venerated by the ancient Egyptians. HANDSELED (14) [verb] To give a handsel to. | [verb] To inaugurate by means of some ceremony; to break in. | [verb] To use or do for the first time, especially so as to make fortunate or unfortunate; to try experimentally. HANDSTAND (14) [noun] A movement or position in which a person is upside down, supported by their arms with their hands on the ground. HANSELLED (13) [verb] To give a handsel to. | [verb] To inaugurate by means of some ceremony; to break in. | [verb] To use or do for the first time, especially so as to make fortunate or unfortunate; to try experimentally. HAPHAZARD (27) [adjective] Random; chaotic; incomplete; not thorough, constant, or consistent. HARANGUED (14) [verb] To give a forceful and lengthy lecture or criticism to someone. HARBOURED (15) [verb] To provide a harbor or safe place for. | [verb] To take refuge or shelter in a protected expanse of water. | [verb] To drive (a hunted stag) to covert. HARDBOARD (16) [noun] A high-density chipboard. HARDBOUND (16) HARDIHOOD (17) [noun] Unyielding boldness and daring; firmness in doing something that exposes one to difficulty, danger, or calamity; intrepidness. | [noun] Excessive boldness; foolish daring; offensive assurance. | [noun] (of a plant) Ability to withstand extreme conditions, hardiness. HARDSTAND (14) HARDWIRED (17) [verb] To connect components by means of permanent electrical wires. | [verb] To implement a feature in hardware rather than in software so that it cannot easily be changed. | [verb] (by extension) To make a pattern of behaviour automatic. HARNESSED (13) [verb] To place a harness on something; to tie up or restrain. | [verb] To capture, control or put to use. | [verb] To equip with armour. HARPOONED (15) [verb] To shoot something with a harpoon. HARSHENED (16) [verb] To make, or to become harsh; render hard and rough. | [verb] To render peevish, morose, or austere. HARUMPHED (20) HARVESTED (16) [verb] To bring in a harvest; reap; glean. | [verb] To be occupied bringing in a harvest | [verb] To win, achieve a gain. HATCHELED (18) [verb] To separate (flax fibers) with a hatchel, or comb. HEADBOARD (16) [noun] A vertical panel, either plain or upholstered, attached to the head of a bed. | [noun] A panel, usually of metal, attached to the head of a fore-and-aft sail for additional strength. | [noun] A board on the front of a train, carrying the train's name or that of the service it is on. HEADLINED (14) [verb] (entertainment) To have top billing; to be the main attraction. HEADSTAND (14) HEARKENED (17) [verb] (obsolete except poetic) To hear (something) with attention; to have regard to (something). | [verb] To listen; to attend or give heed to what is uttered; to hear with attention, compliance, or obedience. | [verb] To enquire; to seek information. HEARTENED (13) [verb] To give heart to; to encourage, urge on, cheer, give confidence to. HEARTLAND (13) [noun] The central part of a region defined by geographical or non-geographical criteria, such as support for a political party, faith or similar. | [noun] The part of a region considered essential to the viability and survival of the whole. HEARTWOOD (16) [noun] The wood nearer the heart of a stem or branch, different in color from the sapwood HEATHLAND (16) [noun] A tract of scrubland habitats characterised by open, low growing woody vegetation, found on mainly infertile acidic soils. Similar to moorland but with warmer and drier climate. HEBETATED (15) HEBRAIZED (24) HELLHOUND (16) [noun] A demonic dog of hell, typically of unnatural size, strength or speed, with black fur, glowing eyes, and ghostly or phantom characteristics. HEMOLYZED (27) HENPECKED (21) [adjective] (particularly of husbands or boyfriends) Intimidated or overwhelmed by a nagging or overbearing wife or girlfriend. HEPATIZED (24) HERNIATED (13) [verb] Of a tissue, structure, or part of an organ: to protrude through the muscular tissue or the membrane by which it is normally contained, causing a hernia. | [adjective] Having or forming a hernia. HESITATED (13) [verb] To stop or pause respecting decision or action; to be in suspense or uncertainty as to a determination. | [verb] To stammer; to falter in speaking. | [verb] To utter with hesitation or to intimate by a reluctant manner. HEXACHORD (25) [noun] A series of six tones denoted with the syllables ut-re-mi-fa-sol-la separated by seconds, the only of which that is a minor second being mi-fa. HEXAPLOID (22) [noun] A cell or organism that has six complete sets of chromosomes | [adjective] Having six complete sets of chromosomes in a single cell HICCUPPED (21) [verb] To produce a hiccup; have the hiccups. | [verb] To say with a hiccup. | [verb] To produce an abortive sound like a hiccup. HIDEBOUND (16) [adjective] Bound with the hide of an animal. | [adjective] (of a domestic animal) Having the skin adhering so closely to the ribs and back as not to be easily loosened or raised; emaciated. | [adjective] (of trees) Having the bark so close and constricting that it impedes the growth. HIRSELLED (13) HOARSENED (13) [verb] To make or become hoarse. HOBNAILED (15) HOBNOBBED (19) [verb] To drink together. | [verb] To associate with in a friendly manner, often with those of a higher class or status. | [verb] To have or have not; to give or take. HOLIDAYED (17) [verb] To take a period of time away from work or study. | [verb] To spend a period of time for travel. HOMEBOUND (17) [adjective] Confined to one's home, unable to leave it for some reason. | [adjective] Heading homeward, homeward bound. HOMESTEAD (15) [noun] A house together with surrounding land and buildings, especially on a farm; the property comprising these. | [noun] The place that is one's home. | [noun] A cluster of several houses occupied by an extended family. HOMINIZED (24) HOREHOUND (16) [noun] Any plant of the genus Marrubium. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Ballota. | [noun] A herb, Marrubium vulgare, of the mint family, traditionally used as a cough remedy and to make a type of hard candy. HORRIFIED (16) [adjective] Struck with horror. | [verb] To cause to feel extreme apprehension or unease; to cause to experience horror. HORSESHOD (16) HORSEWEED (16) HOSANNAED (13) HOSTELLED (13) HOSTESSED (13) HOTDOGGED (16) [verb] To show off, especially in surfing and other sports. HOTFOOTED (16) [verb] To run (a distance). HOTHEADED (17) [adjective] Pertaining to or characteristic of a hothead or hotheadedness; (of a person) easily excited or angered. HOUSEHOLD (16) [noun] Collectively, all the persons who live in a given house; a family including attendants, servants etc.; a domestic or family establishment. | [noun] A line of ancestry; a race or house. | [adjective] Belonging to the same house and family. HOUSELLED (13) HOUSEMAID (15) [noun] A female domestic worker attached to the non-servant quarter part of the house, as opposed to a scullery maid. | [noun] A housewife. | [verb] To be a housemaid. HUMANISED (15) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANIZED (24) [verb] To make human; to give or cause to have the fundamental properties of a human. | [verb] To make sympathetic or relatable. | [verb] To become humane or civilized. HUMANKIND (19) [noun] The human race; mankind, humanity; Homo sapiens. HUMBUGGED (19) [verb] To play a trick on someone, to cheat, to swindle, to deceive. | [verb] (African American Vernacular) To fight; to act tough. | [verb] To waste time talking. HUMMOCKED (23) HUSBANDED (16) [verb] To manage or administer carefully and frugally; use to the best advantage; economise. | [verb] To conserve. | [verb] To till; cultivate; farm; nurture. HYPERACID (20) HYPERARID (18) HYPOPLOID (20) HYSTEROID (16) IDEALISED (11) [verb] To regard something as ideal. | [verb] To conceive or form an ideal. | [verb] To portray using idealization. IDEALIZED (20) [verb] To regard something as ideal. | [verb] To conceive or form an ideal. | [verb] To portray using idealization. ILLUMINED (12) [verb] To illuminate. | [verb] To light up. | [adjective] Illuminated IMBOSOMED (16) IMBOWERED (17) IMBROWNED (17) IMMINGLED (15) IMMOLATED (14) [verb] To kill as a sacrifice. | [verb] To destroy, especially by fire. IMMUNISED (14) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMMUNIZED (23) [verb] To make someone or something immune to something. | [verb] To inoculate someone, and thus produce immunity from a disease. IMPAINTED (14) IMPANELED (14) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPASTOED (14) IMPEACHED (19) [verb] To hinder, impede, or prevent. | [verb] To bring a legal proceeding against a public official. | [verb] To charge with impropriety; to discredit; to call into question. IMPEARLED (14) IMPERILED (14) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. | [adjective] (biological conservation) at risk of becoming extinct IMPLANTED (14) [verb] To fix firmly or set securely or deeply. | [verb] To insert (something) surgically into the body. | [verb] Of an embryo, to become attached to and embedded in the womb. IMPLEADED (15) [verb] To sue in court, raise an action against a defendant IMPLEDGED (16) IMPOUNDED (15) [verb] To shut up or place in an enclosure called a pound | [verb] To hold back (for example water by a dam) | [verb] To hold in the custody of a court or its delegate IMPOWERED (17) IMPREGNED (15) IMPRESSED (14) [verb] To affect (someone) strongly and often favourably. | [verb] To make an impression, to be impressive. | [verb] To produce a vivid impression of (something). IMPRINTED (14) [verb] To leave a print, impression, image, etc. | [verb] To learn something indelibly at a particular stage of life, such as who one's parents are. | [verb] To mark a gene as being from a particular parent so that only one of the two copies of the gene is expressed. INBOUNDED (13) [verb] To pass a ball inbounds INCLASPED (14) INCLIPPED (16) INCORPSED (14) INCREASED (12) [verb] (of a quantity, etc.) To become larger or greater. | [verb] To make (a quantity, etc.) larger. | [verb] To multiply by the production of young; to be fertile, fruitful, or prolific. INCROSSED (12) INCRUSTED (12) [adjective] Having an incrustation INCUBATED (14) [verb] To brood, raise, or maintain eggs, organisms, or living tissue through the provision of ideal environmental conditions. | [verb] To incubate metaphorically; to ponder an idea slowly and deliberately as if in preparation for hatching it. INDAGATED (12) INDICATED (13) [verb] To point out; to discover; to direct to a knowledge of; to show; to make known. | [verb] To show or manifest by symptoms; to point to as the proper remedies. | [verb] To signal in a vehicle the desire to turn right or left. INDURATED (11) [verb] To harden or to grow hard. | [verb] To make callous or unfeeling. | [verb] To inure; to strengthen; to make hardy or robust. INEARTHED (13) [verb] To put into the earth; inter. INFARCTED (15) INFEOFFED (19) INFLECTED (15) [verb] To cause to curve inwards. | [verb] To change the tone or pitch of the voice when speaking or singing. | [verb] (grammar) To vary the form of a word to express tense, gender, number, mood, etc. INFLICTED (15) [verb] To thrust upon; to impose. INFRACTED (15) [verb] To infringe, violate or disobey (a rule). | [verb] To break off. INFRINGED (14) [verb] Break or violate a treaty, a law, a right etc. | [verb] Break in or encroach on something. INGRAFTED (14) [verb] To insert, as a scion of one tree or plant into another, for the purpose of propagation; graft onto a plant | [verb] To fix firmly into place INGRAINED (11) [verb] To dye with a fast or lasting colour. | [verb] To make (something) deeply part of something else. | [adjective] Being an element; present in the essence of a thing INHABITED (15) [adjective] Having inhabitants; lived in | [adjective] (of a set) containing at least one element | [adjective] Uninhabited INHERITED (13) [verb] To take possession of as a right (especially in Biblical translations). | [verb] To receive (property, a title, etc.), by legal succession or bequest after the previous owner's death. | [verb] To receive a characteristic from one's ancestors by genetic transmission. INHIBITED (15) [verb] To hold in or hold back; to keep in check; restrain. | [verb] To recuse. | [adjective] (of a person) Reserved or repressed, prone to quiet, inexpressive behavior. INITIALED (10) [verb] To sign one's initial(s), as an abbreviated signature. INITIATED (10) [verb] To begin; to start. | [verb] To instruct in the rudiments or principles; to introduce. | [verb] To confer membership on; especially, to admit to a secret order with mysterious rites or ceremonies. INNOVATED (13) [verb] To alter, to change into something new; to revolutionize. | [verb] To introduce something new to a particular environment; to do something new. | [verb] To introduce (something) as new. INQUIETED (19) INSCRIBED (14) [verb] To write or cut (words) onto (something, especially a hard surface, or a book to be given to another person); to engrave. | [verb] To draw a circle, sphere, etc. inside a polygon, polyhedron, etc. and tangent to all its sides. INSCULPED (14) INSHRINED (13) INSOLATED (10) INSPANNED (12) [verb] To yoke (oxen). | [verb] To bring or force into service. INSPECTED (14) [verb] To examine critically or carefully; especially, to search out problems or determine condition; to scrutinize. | [verb] To view and examine officially. INSPHERED (15) INSTALLED (10) [verb] To connect, set up or prepare something for use. | [verb] To admit formally into an office, rank or position. | [verb] To establish or settle in. INSTANCED (12) [verb] To mention as a case or example; to refer to; to cite | [verb] To cite an example as proof; to exemplify. INSTARRED (10) INSTILLED (10) [verb] To cause a quality to become part of someone's nature. | [verb] To pour in (medicine, for example) drop by drop. INSULATED (10) [verb] To separate, detach, or isolate. | [verb] To separate a body or material from others, e.g. by non-conductors to prevent the transfer of electricity, heat, etc. | [adjective] Protected from heat, cold, noise etc, by being surrounded with an insulating material. INSWATHED (16) INTEGRAND (11) [noun] The function that is to be integrated INTERBRED (12) [verb] To breed or reproduce within an isolated community. | [verb] To breed or reproduce within a heterogenous community, the products of which produce hybrids. INTERFOLD (13) INTERLAID (10) [verb] To insert layers of a different material. INTERLARD (10) [verb] Bloat or embellish (something) by including (often minor and extraneous) details at regular intervals. INTERLEND (10) INTERPLED (12) INTHRONED (13) INTIMATED (12) [verb] To suggest or disclose (something) discreetly. | [verb] To notify. INTITULED (10) [verb] To entitle; to give a title to. INTONATED (10) [verb] To intone or recite (words), especially emphatically or in a chanting manner. | [verb] To say or speak with a certain intonation. | [verb] To intone or vocalize (musical notes); to sound the tones of the musical scale; to practise the sol-fa. INTREATED (10) INTRIGUED (11) [verb] To conceive or carry out a secret plan intended to harm; to form a plot or scheme. | [verb] To arouse the interest of; to fascinate. | [verb] To have clandestine or illicit intercourse. INTROFIED (13) INTRUSTED (10) [verb] To trust to the care of. INTUBATED (12) [verb] To insert a tube into. INTWISTED (13) INUNDATED (11) [verb] To cover with large amounts of water; to flood. | [verb] To overwhelm. | [adjective] Flooded INVALIDED (14) [verb] To exempt from duty because of injury or ill health. | [verb] To make invalid or affect with disease. INVEIGHED (17) [verb] (with against or occasionally about, formerly also with on, at, upon) To complain loudly, to give voice to one's censure or criticism | [verb] To draw in or away; to entice, inveigle. INVEIGLED (14) [verb] To convert, convince, or win over with flattery or wiles. | [verb] To obtain through guile or cunning. INVOCATED (15) INVOLUTED (13) [verb] To roll or curl inwards. | [adjective] Difficult to understand; complicated. | [adjective] Having the edges rolled with the adaxial side outward. INWRAPPED (17) [verb] To wrap around, surround; to envelop | [verb] To absorb completely or engross IODINATED (11) [verb] To treat, or to combine, with iodine | [adjective] Treated or reacted with iodine or hydroiodic acid | [adjective] Formally derived from another compound by the replacement of one or more atoms of hydrogen with iodine IRONBOUND (12) [adjective] (sometimes figurative) Bound with, or as if with, iron. | [adjective] Rugged. | [adjective] Rigid; unyielding IRRIGATED (11) [verb] To supply (farmland) with water, by building ditches, pipes, etc. | [verb] To clean (a wound) with a fluid. IRRITATED (10) [verb] To provoke impatience, anger, or displeasure in. | [verb] To cause or induce displeasure or irritation. | [verb] To induce pain in (all or part of a body or organism). ISONIAZID (19) [noun] A medication used in the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis, having the chemical formula C6H7N3O JACULATED (19) JAPANIZED (28) JAROVIZED (29) JAUNDICED (20) [adjective] Affected with jaundice. | [adjective] Prejudiced; envious. JAVELINED (20) JAYWALKED (27) [verb] To behave as a jaywalker; to violate pedestrian traffic regulations by crossing a street away from a designated crossing or to walk in the part of the street intended for vehicles rather than on the sidewalk. JELLIFIED (20) [verb] To form a jelly; to gel. | [verb] To make into a jelly. JEOPARDED (20) JEWELWEED (23) JOINTURED (17) JOLLIFIED (20) JOURNEYED (20) [verb] To travel, to make a trip or voyage. JOYPOPPED (26) JUBILATED (19) [verb] To show elation or triumph; to rejoice. JUGULATED (18) [verb] To cut the throat of. JUICEHEAD (22) [noun] An alcoholic. | [noun] A bodybuilder that uses, or appears to use, steroids and is of poor intellect or by extension any large male. JULIENNED (17) [verb] To prepare by cutting in this way. JUSTIFIED (20) [adjective] Having a justification. | [adjective] Of text, arranged on a page or a computer screen such that the left and right ends of all lines within paragraphs are aligned. | [verb] To provide an acceptable explanation for. KEELHALED (17) KENNELLED (14) [verb] To house or board a dog (or less commonly another animal). | [verb] To lie or lodge; to dwell, as a dog or a fox. | [verb] To drive (a fox) to covert in its hole. KERNELLED (14) KIBBITZED (27) KICKBOARD (22) KICKSTAND (20) [noun] A levered bar that can be folded down from the frame of a bicycle or motorcycle to prop it upright when not being ridden. | [noun] A similar folding bar to prop up a mobile phone or similar device when it is being used on a surface. KIDNAPPED (19) [verb] To seize and detain a person unlawfully; sometimes for ransom. | [adjective] Subjected to kidnapping KNACKERED (20) [verb] (UK slang) To tire out, exhaust. | [verb] (UK slang) To reprimand. | [adjective] Tired or exhausted. | [adjective] Broken, inoperative. KURBASHED (19) LACERATED (12) [verb] To tear, rip or wound. | [verb] To defeat thoroughly; to thrash. | [adjective] Having lacerations LACQUERED (21) [verb] To apply a lacquer to something or to give something a smooth, glossy finish. LACQUEYED (24) [verb] To attend, wait upon, serve obsequiously. | [verb] To toady, play the flunky. LAMBASTED (14) [verb] To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly. | [verb] (dated in UK English but not US English) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely. LAMINATED (12) [verb] To assemble from thin sheets glued together. | [verb] To cover something flat, usually paper, in adhesive protective plastic. | [verb] To form, as metal, into a thin plate, as by rolling. LAMPOONED (14) [verb] To satirize or poke fun at. LANCEWOOD (15) [noun] A tough, elastic and heavy wood obtained from the West Indies and Guiana, formerly much used for carriage shafts (Oxandra lanceolata). | [noun] New Zealand trees in the genus Pseudopanax. | [noun] Australian lancewood LAPIDATED (13) LATERALED (10) LATERIZED (19) LATINIZED (19) [verb] To translate something into the Latin language; or make a word similar in appearance or form to a Latin word. | [verb] To transliterate something into the characters of the Latin script; to Romanize | [verb] To make like the Roman Catholic Church or diffuse its ideas in. LAUNCHPAD (17) [noun] The surface or structure from which a launch is made. | [noun] A starting point. LAUNDERED (11) [verb] To wash; to wash, and to smooth with a flatiron or mangle; to wash and iron. | [verb] To lave; to wet. | [verb] (money) To disguise the source of (ill-gotten wealth) by various means. LAUREATED (10) LAURELLED (10) [verb] To decorate with laurel, especially with a laurel wreath. | [verb] To enwreathe. | [verb] To award top honours to. LEAFLETED (13) [verb] To distribute leaflets to. | [verb] To distribute leaflets. LEAGUERED (11) LEASEHOLD (13) [noun] The tenure of property held by a lessee under a lease. | [noun] A property held by such tenure. LEATHERED (13) [verb] To cover with leather. | [verb] To strike forcefully. | [verb] To beat with a leather belt or strap. LEGALISED (11) [verb] To make legal or permit under law. Either by decriminalising something that has been illegal or by specifically permitting it. LEGALIZED (20) [verb] To make legal or permit under law. Either by decriminalising something that has been illegal or by specifically permitting it. LEISTERED (10) [verb] To catch or spear (fish) with a leister. LEOTARDED (11) LEUKEMOID (16) LEVERAGED (14) [verb] To use; to exploit; to manipulate in order to take full advantage (of something). LEVIGATED (14) [verb] To make smooth or polish | [verb] To make into a smooth paste or fine powder | [verb] To separate finer grains from coarser ones by suspension in a liquid LEVITATED (13) [verb] To cause to rise in the air and float, as if in defiance of gravity. | [verb] To be suspended in the air, as if in defiance of gravity. LIBERATED (12) [verb] To set free, to make or allow to be free, particularly | [verb] To acquire from an enemy during wartime, used especially of cities, regions, and other population centers. | [verb] To acquire from another by theft or force: to steal, to rob. LIFEBLOOD (15) [noun] Blood that is needed for continued life; blood regarded as the seat of life. | [noun] That which is required for continued existence or function. LIFEGUARD (14) [noun] A bodyguard or unit of bodyguards, a guard of someone's (especially a king's) life or person. | [noun] An attendant, usually an expert swimmer, employed to save swimmers in trouble or near drowning at a body of water. | [noun] A lifesaver. LIGATURED (11) [adjective] Joined in a ligature. LIGHTENED (14) [verb] To make brighter or clearer; to illuminate. | [verb] To become brighter or clearer; to brighten. | [verb] To burst forth or dart, as lightning; to shine with, or like, lightning; to flash. LIGHTERED (14) LIGHTWOOD (17) [noun] Any wood used to light a fire; kindlings; especially, very resinous pine wood. | [noun] Any of various trees with pale-coloured wood, especially the Australian tree Acacia melanoxylon. LIGNIFIED (14) [verb] To become wood. | [verb] To develop woody tissue as a result of incrustation of lignin during secondary growth. | [verb] (by extension) To become rigid or fixed, like something made of wood. LIQUEFIED (22) [verb] To make into a liquid. | [verb] To become liquid. | [verb] (image manipulation, especially Adobe Photoshop) To distort and warp an image. LIQUIFIED (22) [verb] To make into a liquid. | [verb] To become liquid. | [verb] (image manipulation, especially Adobe Photoshop) To distort and warp an image. LITHIFIED (16) [verb] To turn sediment into solid rock LITIGATED (11) [verb] (construed with on) To go to law; to carry on a lawsuit. | [verb] To contest in law. | [verb] (transferred sense) To dispute; to fight over. LOBSTERED (12) [verb] To fish for lobsters. LOBULATED (12) LOCALISED (12) [verb] To make local; to fix in, or assign to, a definite place. | [verb] To adapt a product for use in a particular country or region, typically by translating text into the language of that country and modifying currencies, date formats, etc. | [verb] To determine where something takes place or is to be found. LOCALIZED (21) [verb] To make local; to fix in, or assign to, a definite place. | [verb] To adapt a product for use in a particular country or region, typically by translating text into the language of that country and modifying currencies, date formats, etc. | [verb] To determine where something takes place or is to be found. LOCOMOTED (14) [verb] To move or travel (from one location to another). LOGICISED (13) LOGICIZED (22) LOGROLLED (11) LOOPHOLED (15) [verb] To prepare a building for defense by preparing slits or holes through which to fire on attackers | [verb] To exploit (a law, etc.) by means of loopholes. | [adjective] Having a loophole. LOTUSLAND (10) LOWBALLED (15) [verb] To give an intentionally low estimate of anything, not necessarily with deceptive intent. | [verb] To give (a customer) a deceptively low price or cost estimate that one has no intention of honoring or to prepare a cost estimate deliberately and misleadingly low. | [verb] To make an offer well below an item's true value, often to take advantage of the seller's desperation or desire to sell the item quickly. LOWLIHEAD (16) LULLABIED (12) [verb] To sing a lullaby to. LUSTIHOOD (13) LUSTRATED (10) [verb] To make clear or pure by means of a propitiatory offering; to purify. LYOPHILED (18) LYRICISED (15) LYRICIZED (24) MACERATED (14) [verb] To soften (something) or separate it into pieces by soaking it in a heated or unheated liquid. | [verb] To make lean; to cause to waste away. | [verb] To subdue the appetite by poor or scanty diet; to mortify. MACULATED (14) [verb] To spot; to stain; to blur. | [adjective] Having spots or blotches; maculate. MAFFICKED (24) MAGNIFIED (16) [adjective] Having been visually enlarged by the process of magnification. | [verb] To praise, glorify (someone or something, especially God). | [verb] To make (something) larger or more important. MAINLINED (12) [verb] To inject (a drug) directly into a vein. | [verb] To integrate (code, etc.) into the main repository for a software project, rather than separate forks. MALFORMED (17) [adjective] Not formed correctly; misshapen; deformed. MAMMOCKED (22) MANICURED (14) [verb] To trim the fingernails MANSARDED (13) MARCELLED (14) [verb] To wave (hair) by the marcel method. | [verb] To wave. MARGENTED (13) MARINADED (13) [verb] To marinate. MARINATED (12) [verb] To allow a sauce or flavoring mixture to absorb into something; to steep or soak something in a marinade to flavor or prepare it for cooking. MARSHALED (15) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARSHLAND (15) [noun] Marshy land; bog or fen MARVELLED (15) [verb] To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something. | [verb] To marvel at. | [verb] (used impersonally) To cause to marvel or be surprised. MASCARAED (14) MASSACRED (14) [verb] To kill in considerable numbers where little or no resistance can be made, with indiscriminate violence, without necessity, and contrary to civilized norms. (Often limited to the killing of human beings.) | [verb] To win so decisively it is in the manner of so slaughtering one's opponent. | [verb] To give a performance so poorly it is in the manner of so slaughtering the musical piece, play etc being performed. MATCHWOOD (20) [noun] Wood, often in the form of splinters, suitable for making matches MATURATED (12) [verb] To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. | [verb] To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | [verb] To undergo perfect suppuration. MAUNDERED (13) [verb] To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle. | [verb] To wander or walk aimlessly. | [verb] To beg; to whine like a beggar. MAXIMISED (21) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MAXIMIZED (30) [verb] To make as large as possible | [verb] To expand (a window) to fill the main display area MEANDERED (13) [verb] To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate. | [verb] To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous. MEDICATED (15) [verb] To prescribe or administer medication to. MEDICINED (15) MEDITATED (13) [verb] To contemplate; to keep the mind fixed upon something; to study. | [verb] To sit or lie down and come to a deep rest while still remaining conscious. | [verb] To consider; to reflect on. MELANIZED (21) MELODISED (13) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MELODIZED (22) [verb] To compose or play melodies. | [verb] To make melodious; to write a melody for (existing text). MEMBRANED (16) MEMORISED (14) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MEMORIZED (23) [verb] To learn by heart, commit to memory. MENTIONED (12) [verb] To make a short reference to something. | [verb] To utter a word or expression in order to refer to the expression itself, as opposed to its usual referent. METALISED (12) METALIZED (21) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METALLOID (12) [noun] An element, such as silicon or germanium, intermediate in properties between that of a metal and a nonmetal; especially one that exhibits the external characteristics of a metal, but behaves chemically more as a nonmetal. | [noun] The metallic base of a fixed alkali, or alkaline earth; applied to sodium, potassium, and some other metallic substances whose metallic character was supposed to be not well defined. | [adjective] Of or relating to the metalloids. METEOROID (12) [noun] A relatively small (sand- to boulder-sized) fragment of debris in a star system that produces a meteor when it hits the atmosphere METRIFIED (15) MICRIFIED (17) MILITATED (12) [verb] To give force or effect toward; to influence. | [verb] To fight. MINEFIELD (15) [noun] An area in which land mines have been laid. | [noun] (by extension) A dangerous situation. | [noun] A pitch that has dried out and crumbled and on which the ball is bouncing and spinning unpredictably. MINIMISED (14) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MINIMIZED (23) [verb] To make (something) as small or as insignificant as possible. | [verb] To remove (a window) from the main display area, collapsing it to an icon or caption. | [verb] To treat (someone) slightingly. MISALLIED (12) MISATONED (12) MISBIASED (14) MISBILLED (14) MISCALLED (14) [verb] To call (someone) bad names; to insult, abuse. | [verb] To call (something) by the wrong name. | [verb] To make a wrong call; to announce (one's hand of cards) incorrectly. MISCOINED (14) MISCOOKED (18) MISCOPIED (16) [verb] To copy incorrectly; to copy with mistakes. MISDEEMED (15) MISDIALED (13) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISEDITED (13) MISFITTED (15) MISFORMED (17) MISFRAMED (17) MISGAUGED (14) MISGRADED (14) MISGUIDED (14) [verb] To guide poorly or incorrectly. | [verb] To lead astray; to lead into error. | [adjective] Ill-conceived or not thought through MISJOINED (19) MISJUDGED (21) [verb] To make an error in judging, to incorrectly assess. MISKICKED (22) [verb] To kick incorrectly or badly. MISLEARED (12) MISLODGED (14) MISMARKED (18) MISPARSED (14) MISPARTED (14) MISPENNED (14) MISPLACED (16) [verb] To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay | [verb] To apply one's talents inappropriately. | [verb] To put something in the wrong location. MISPLAYED (17) [verb] To play incorrectly or poorly. MISPOISED (14) MISPRICED (16) MISPRIZED (23) [verb] To despise or hold in contempt; to undervalue. MISQUOTED (21) [verb] To incorrectly recite a quote. | [verb] To incorrectly record a quote. MISRAISED (12) MISRECORD (14) MISRELIED (12) MISROUTED (12) [verb] To route incorrectly; to send the wrong way. MISSEATED (12) MISSHAPED (17) [verb] To shape badly or incorrectly. MISSIONED (12) MISSORTED (12) MISSPACED (16) MISSTATED (12) [verb] To make a statement that is in error, inadvertently; to say incorrectly, through a slip of the tongue. MISSTYLED (15) MISSUITED (12) MISTENDED (13) MISTERMED (14) MISTITLED (12) [verb] To title incorrectly; to give the wrong name to. MISTRACED (14) MISVALUED (15) MISWORDED (16) MITIGATED (13) [verb] To reduce, lessen, or decrease; to make less severe or easier to bear. | [verb] To downplay. | [adjective] Lessened, reduced, diminished MOBILISED (14) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MOBILIZED (23) [verb] To make something mobile. | [verb] To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war. | [verb] To become made ready for war. MODERATED (13) [verb] To reduce the excessiveness of (something) | [verb] To become less excessive | [verb] To preside over (something) as a moderator MODULATED (13) [verb] To regulate, adjust or adapt | [verb] To change the pitch, intensity or tone of one's voice or of a musical instrument | [verb] To vary the amplitude, frequency or phase of a carrier wave in proportion to the amplitude etc of a source wave (such as speech or music) MOISTENED (12) [verb] To make moist or moister. | [verb] To become moist or moister. MOLDBOARD (15) [noun] A curved piece of metal on a plow or bulldozer that clears the free dirt from the blade. | [noun] (founding) A follow board. MOLLIFIED (15) [verb] To ease a burden, particularly worry; make less painful; to comfort. | [verb] To appease (anger), pacify, gain the good will of. | [verb] To soften; to make tender MONETISED (12) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONETIZED (21) [verb] To convert something (especially a security) into currency. | [verb] To mint money. | [verb] To establish a currency as legal tender. MONGOLOID (13) [noun] A member of the racial classification of humanity composed of peoples native to North Asia, East Asia, Pacific Oceania, and the Americas, as well as their diaspora in other parts of the world. | [noun] A person with Down syndrome. | [noun] Idiot, retard; a general term of abuse, due to association with Down syndrome. MONITORED (12) [verb] To watch over; to guard. MONKEYPOD (21) MONKSHOOD (19) [noun] Any of various poisonous plants, of the genus Aconitum, with blue or white flowers in the shape of a hood | [noun] The dried leaves or flowers of these plants formerly used as a source of medicinal alkaloids MONOCHORD (17) [noun] A musical instrument for experimenting with the mathematical relations of musical sounds, consisting of a single string stretched between two bridges, one or both of which can be moved, and which stand upon a graduated rule for the purpose of changing and measuring the length of the part of the string between them. | [noun] A stringed instrument with only one string. MONOPLOID (14) [noun] An organism having a single set of chromosomes. | [adjective] Having a single set of chromosomes. MONORCHID (17) [noun] An individual having only one testicle within the scrotum. | [adjective] Having only one testicle within the scrotum. MOONFACED (17) MORALISED (12) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORALIZED (21) [verb] To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral. | [verb] To say (something) expressing a moral reflection or judgment. | [verb] To render moral; to correct the morals of; to give the appearance of morality to. MORDANTED (13) [verb] To subject to the action of, or imbue with, a mordant. MORSELLED (12) MORTGAGED (14) [verb] To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan. | [verb] To pledge and make liable; to make subject to obligation; to achieve an immediate result by paying for it in the long term. MORTIFIED (15) [adjective] Acutely embarrassed. | [verb] To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. | [verb] (usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. MOSAICKED (18) [adjective] Composed of a mosaic | [adjective] Formed from a "mosaic" of images MOTIVATED (15) [verb] To provide someone with an incentive to do something; to encourage. | [verb] To animate; to propel; to cause to take action | [adjective] Enthusiastic, especially about striving toward a goal. MOTORISED (12) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOTORIZED (21) [verb] To fit something with a motor. | [verb] To supply something or someone with motor vehicles. | [verb] To supply armoured vehicles; to mechanize. MOULDERED (13) [verb] To decay or rot. MUCKRAKED (22) [verb] To search for and expose corruption or scandal, especially as a form of investigative journalism. MUDCAPPED (19) MUFFLERED (18) MULLIONED (12) MULTIBAND (14) MULTIFOLD (15) [adjective] Many; very diverse; manifold. MULTIGRID (13) MULTIHUED (15) MUMMIFIED (19) [adjective] Preserved, for a dead body, by mummification. | [verb] To make into a mummy, by preserving a dead body. | [verb] To become a mummy. MURTHERED (15) [verb] To deliberately kill (a person or persons) without justification, especially with malice aforethought. | [verb] To defeat decisively. | [verb] To kick someone's ass or chew someone out (used to express one’s anger at somebody). MUSTACHED (17) MUTILATED (12) [verb] To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb. | [verb] To destroy beyond recognition. | [verb] To render imperfect or defective. MYSTIFIED (18) [adjective] Puzzled or confused | [adjective] State of enchantment as concerns person or event | [verb] To thoroughly confuse, befuddle, or bewilder. NASALISED (10) [verb] To speak through the nose. | [verb] To make a nasal sound when speaking. | [verb] To lower the uvula so that air flows through the nose during the articulation of a speech sound. NASALIZED (19) [verb] To speak through the nose. | [verb] To make a nasal sound when speaking. | [verb] To lower the uvula so that air flows through the nose during the articulation of a speech sound. NAUSEATED (10) [verb] To cause nausea in. | [verb] To disgust. | [verb] To become squeamish; to feel nausea; to turn away with disgust. NAUTILOID (10) [noun] A mollusc resembling a nautilus; specifically, a cephalopod of the subclass Nautiloidea. | [adjective] Resembling a nautilus; pertaining to the subclass Nautiloidea. NAVIGATED (14) [verb] To plan, control and record the position and course of a vehicle, ship, aircraft, etc., on a journey; to follow a planned course. | [verb] To give directions, as from a map, to someone driving a vehicle. | [verb] To travel over water in a ship; to sail. NEBULISED (12) [verb] To convert liquid into a fine spray of aerosols, by using a nebulizer; to atomize | [verb] To treat a patient with medicine applied using a nebulizer NEBULIZED (21) [verb] To convert liquid into a fine spray of aerosols, by using a nebulizer; to atomize | [verb] To treat a patient with medicine applied using a nebulizer | [adjective] Produced by nebulization; turned from liquid to a spray or mist. NEGATIVED (14) [verb] To refuse; to veto. | [verb] To contradict. | [verb] To disprove. NEGLECTED (13) [verb] To fail to care for or attend to something. | [verb] To omit to notice; to forbear to treat with attention or respect; to slight. | [verb] To fail to do or carry out something due to oversight or carelessness. NETWORKED (17) [verb] To interact socially for the purpose of getting connections or personal advancement. | [verb] To connect two or more computers or other computerized devices. | [verb] To interconnect a group or system. NEWSHOUND (16) [noun] An investigative reporter. NEWSSTAND (13) [noun] An open stall, often on a street, where newspapers and magazines are on sale to the public NICKELLED (16) [verb] To plate with nickel. NICKNAMED (18) [verb] To give a nickname to (a person or thing). NIGGARDED (13) NIGRIFIED (14) NITPICKED (18) [verb] To correct minutiae or find fault in unimportant details. | [verb] To pick nits (lice eggs) from someone’s hair. NITRIFIED (13) [verb] To treat, or react with nitrogen or a nitrogen-containing compound. | [verb] To convert ammonia or similar compound to a nitrate by oxidation, especially by the action of a microorganism. | [verb] To become nitre. NOMINATED (12) [verb] To name someone as a candidate for a particular role or position, including that of an office. | [verb] To entitle, confer a name upon. | [adjective] Having received a nomination. NONBONDED (13) NONGRADED (12) NONLEADED (11) NONLIQUID (19) NONPLUSED (12) NONSUITED (10) [verb] To dismiss (a suit or plaintiff) on the grounds of his or her lawsuit having been brought without cause, prior to an adjudication on the merits. NORTHLAND (13) [noun] A land that lies to the north. NORTHWARD (16) [noun] The direction or area lying to the north of a place. | [adjective] Situated or directed towards the north; moving or facing towards the north. | [adverb] Towards the north; in a northerly direction. NOSEBLEED (12) [noun] A haemorrhage from the nose; most specifically, blood flow exiting the nostrils that originates from the nasal cavity. | [noun] A nerd or a geek or a dork NOSEGUARD (11) NOTARIZED (19) [verb] To be witness of the authenticity of a document and its accompanying signatures in one's capacity as notary public NOTOCHORD (15) [noun] A flexible rodlike structure that forms the main support of the body in the lowest chordates; a primitive spine | [noun] A similar structure found in the embryos of vertebrates from which the spine develops NOURISHED (13) [verb] To feed and cause to grow; to supply with matter which increases bulk or supplies waste, and promotes health; to furnish with nutriment. | [verb] To support; to maintain. | [verb] To supply the means of support and increase to; to encourage; to foster NOVELISED (13) [verb] To adapt something to a fictional form, especially to adapt into a novel. | [verb] To innovate. NOVELIZED (22) [verb] To adapt something to a fictional form, especially to adapt into a novel. | [verb] To innovate. NUCLEATED (12) [verb] To form (into) a nucleus, or to act as a nucleus. | [adjective] Having a nucleus or nuclei. NULLIFIED (13) [adjective] That has been declared null | [adjective] Whose value has been set to null | [verb] To make legally invalid. NUMERATED (12) NURSEMAID (12) [noun] A woman or girl employed to care for children | [verb] To tend to as a nursemaid. | [verb] To care for or look after. NYMPHALID (20) [noun] Any butterfly of the family Nymphalidae. OBLIGATED (13) [verb] To bind, compel, constrain, or oblige by a social, legal, or moral tie. | [verb] To cause to be grateful or indebted; to oblige. | [verb] To commit (money, for example) in order to fulfill an obligation. OBSOLETED (12) [verb] To cause to become obsolete. OBTURATED (12) [verb] To block up or obstruct. OCTOPLOID (14) OFFHANDED (20) [adjective] In a casual or curt style, without preparation or thought; Impromptu, offhand. OFFICERED (18) [verb] To supply with officers. | [verb] To command like an officer. OFFLOADED (17) [verb] To unload. | [verb] To get rid of things, work, or problems by passing them on to someone or something else. | [verb] To pass the ball. OPACIFIED (17) [verb] To make opaque. OPALESCED (14) OPHIUROID (15) [noun] An echinoderm of the class Ophiuroidea; the brittlestar. OPINIONED (12) OPPILATED (14) OPPRESSED (14) [verb] To keep down by unjust force. | [verb] To make sad or gloomy. | [verb] Physically to press down on (someone) with harmful effects; to smother, crush. OPSONIZED (21) [verb] To make (bacteria or other cells) more susceptible to the action of phagocytes by use of opsonins. OPTIMISED (14) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. OPTIMIZED (23) [verb] (originally intransitive) To act optimistically or as an optimist. | [verb] To make (something) optimal. | [verb] To make (something) more efficient, such as a computer program. ORGANISED (11) [verb] To arrange in working order. | [verb] To constitute in parts, each having a special function, act, office, or relation; to systematize. | [verb] (chiefly used in the past participle) To furnish with organs; to give an organic structure to; to endow with capacity for the functions of life ORGANIZED (20) [verb] To arrange in working order. | [verb] To constitute in parts, each having a special function, act, office, or relation; to systematize. | [verb] (chiefly used in the past participle) To furnish with organs; to give an organic structure to; to endow with capacity for the functions of life OSCULATED (12) [verb] To kiss someone or something. | [verb] To touch so as to have a common tangent at the point of contact. | [verb] To make contact. OUTARGUED (11) OUTBARKED (16) OUTBAWLED (15) OUTBEAMED (14) OUTBEGGED (14) OUTBLAZED (21) OUTBRAVED (15) [verb] To stand out bravely against; to face up to courageously. | [verb] To surpass or outrival. | [verb] To be more brave than. OUTBRIBED (14) OUTBULKED (16) OUTBURNED (12) OUTCHIDED (16) OUTCOOKED (16) OUTCROWED (15) OUTCURSED (12) OUTDANCED (13) [verb] To dance better than; to outdo in dancing. OUTDODGED (13) OUTDUELED (11) OUTEARNED (10) [verb] To make more money than, to earn more than. OUTECHOED (15) OUTFABLED (15) OUTFASTED (13) OUTFAWNED (16) OUTFISHED (16) OUTFITTED (13) [verb] To provide with, usually for a specific purpose. OUTFLOWED (16) OUTFOOLED (13) OUTFOOTED (13) OUTGAINED (11) OUTGASSED (11) [verb] To release gaseous substances into the air, especially of a polymer material as it is aged or heated. OUTGLARED (11) OUTGLOWED (14) OUTGNAWED (14) OUTGUIDED (12) OUTGUNNED (11) [verb] To defeat in terms of firepower. | [adjective] Having insufficient weapons. OUTHOWLED (16) OUTHUNTED (13) OUTJINXED (24) OUTJUMPED (21) [verb] To jump better than; particularly higher than, or further than. OUTJUTTED (17) OUTKICKED (20) OUTKILLED (14) OUTKISSED (14) OUTLASTED (10) [verb] To live, last or remain longer than. OUTLEAPED (12) OUTMANNED (12) [verb] To have more people than (one's competitor); to outnumber in men. | [verb] To outdo in manliness. OUTPASSED (12) OUTPITIED (12) OUTPLAYED (15) [verb] To excel or defeat in a game; to play better than. OUTPOLLED (12) [verb] To defeat in a poll. OUTPOURED (12) OUTPRAYED (15) OUTPRICED (14) OUTPULLED (12) OUTPUSHED (15) OUTPUTTED (12) [verb] To produce, create, or complete. | [verb] To send data out of a computer, as to an output device such as a monitor or printer, or to send data from one program on the computer to another. | [verb] To putt better than OUTQUOTED (19) OUTRAISED (10) [verb] To raise more of something than (someone else); often used specifically in reference to fundraising OUTRANGED (11) [verb] To have a longer range than (another projectile or weapon). OUTRANKED (14) [verb] To be of a higher rank than. | [verb] (transitive) To be more important than. OUTROARED (10) OUTROCKED (16) OUTROLLED (10) OUTROOTED (10) OUTRUSHED (13) [verb] To rush outward; to issue forcibly. | [verb] To rush more than the other team. OUTSAILED (10) [verb] To sail faster or further than. OUTSCORED (12) [verb] To score more than. OUTSERVED (13) OUTSHAMED (15) OUTSHINED (13) OUTSINNED (10) OUTSKATED (14) [verb] To skate better than. OUTSMILED (12) OUTSMOKED (16) OUTSNORED (10) OUTSOARED (10) OUTSPREAD (12) [verb] To spread out; expand; extend. | [adjective] Extended outward, as one's arms OUTSTARED (10) [verb] To stare at (someone) so hard or long that they look away. OUTSTATED (10) OUTSTAYED (13) [verb] To stay beyond or longer than. OUTSULKED (14) OUTTALKED (14) [verb] To overpower, outdo, or surpass in talking. | [verb] To outwit by talking. OUTTASKED (14) OUTTRADED (11) OUTVALUED (13) [verb] To have a higher value than; to exceed in worth. OUTVOICED (15) OUTWAITED (13) [verb] To wait for something to end | [verb] To gain an advantage by simply waiting OUTWALKED (17) [verb] To walk further than another OUTWARRED (13) OUTWASTED (13) OUTWILLED (13) OUTWINDED (14) OUTWISHED (16) OUTWITTED (13) [verb] To get the better of; to outsmart, to beat in a competition of wits. OUTWORKED (17) OUTYELLED (13) OUTYELPED (15) OVERACTED (15) [verb] To act in an exaggerated manner. | [verb] To act upon, or influence, unduly. OVERALLED (13) OVERBAKED (19) [verb] To bake for too long. OVERBOARD (15) [verb] To throw over the edge of a boat into the water. | [adjective] Outside of a boat, in the water | [adverb] Over the edge; especially, off or outside of a boat. OVERBROAD (15) OVERBUILD (15) [verb] To perform excessive construction on a building or in an area. | [verb] To build over or on top of another structure. | [verb] To build with excessive size or elaboration. OVERCLOUD (15) [verb] To cover, or become covered, with clouds. | [verb] To cast sorrow or gloom over. OVERCROWD (18) [verb] To fill beyond reasonable limits, with people, animals, objects or information. OVERCURED (15) OVERDARED (14) OVERDOSED (14) [verb] To dose excessively, to take an overdose. | [verb] To indulge in something excessively. | [verb] To dose to excess; to give an overdose, or too many doses, to. OVERDRIED (14) [verb] To dry too much. OVERHATED (16) OVERHEARD (16) [verb] To hear something that was not meant for one's ears. OVERHOPED (18) OVERHYPED (21) [verb] To promote or publicize excessively. | [adjective] That has been promoted or publicized excessively OVERJOYED (23) [verb] To give great joy, delight or pleasure to | [adjective] Very happy. OVERLADED (14) OVERLIVED (16) OVERLOVED (16) OVERMINED (15) OVERMIXED (22) OVERPLAID (15) OVERPLIED (15) OVERRATED (13) [verb] To esteem too highly; to give greater praise than due. | [adjective] Given an undue amount of credit for quality or merit in a field; not necessarily related to popularity. OVERRIGID (14) OVERRULED (13) [verb] To rule over; to govern or determine by superior authority. | [verb] To rule or determine in a contrary way; to decide against; to abrogate or alter. | [verb] To nullify a previous ruling by a higher power. OVERSAVED (16) OVERSEWED (16) [verb] To sew together the edges of two pieces of fabric, with every stitch passing over the join. OVERSEXED (20) [adjective] Having a greater than normal sexual appetite OVERSIZED (22) [adjective] Very large; especially of something larger than normal for its type. OVERSPEND (15) [noun] The amount by which someone or something is overspent | [verb] To spend too much money; especially, to spend more than one earns. OVERTAXED (20) [verb] To tax to an excessive degree | [verb] To overburden OVERTIMED (15) OVERTIRED (13) [verb] To tire excessively. | [verb] To become excessively tired. | [adjective] Overly tired OVERTURED (13) OVERURGED (14) OVERVIVID (19) OVERVOTED (16) OVERWOUND (16) [verb] To wind (tighten a spring of) something excessively. | [verb] To twist itself more tightly. | [adjective] Nervous, tense, jumpy. PACKBOARD (20) PADDOCKED (20) [verb] To provide with a paddock. | [verb] To keep in, or place in, a paddock. PADLOCKED (19) [verb] To lock using a padlock. PAGANISED (13) [verb] To convert (someone) to paganism. | [verb] To behave like a pagan. PAGANIZED (22) [verb] To convert (someone) to paganism. | [verb] To behave like a pagan. PAGINATED (13) [verb] To number the pages of (a book or other document); to foliate. | [verb] To separate (data) into batches, so that it can be retrieved with a number of smaller requests. | [adjective] (of text) Whose pages have been numbered PALAVERED (15) [verb] To discuss with much talk. | [verb] To flatter. PALISADED (13) [verb] (usually in the passive) To equip with a palisade. PALLIATED (12) [verb] To relieve the symptoms of; to ameliorate. | [verb] To hide or disguise. | [verb] To cover or disguise the seriousness of (a mistake, offence etc.) by excuses and apologies. PANOPLIED (14) PARAGONED (13) PARALYSED (15) [verb] To afflict with paralysis. | [verb] To make unable to move; to immobilize. | [verb] To make unable to function properly. PARALYZED (24) [verb] To afflict with paralysis. | [verb] To render unable to move; to immobilize. | [verb] To render unable to function properly. PARAPETED (14) PARBOILED (14) [verb] To boil food briefly so that it is partly cooked. | [adjective] Partially boiled PARCELLED (14) [verb] To wrap something up into the form of a package. | [verb] To wrap a strip around the end of a rope. | [verb] To divide and distribute by parts or portions; often with out or into. PARGETTED (13) PARQUETED (21) PARSLEYED (15) PARTNERED (12) [verb] To join as a partner. | [verb] (often with with) To work or perform as a partner. PATINATED (12) [verb] To coat with a patina. | [verb] To become coated with a patina. | [adjective] Bearing a patina PATINIZED (21) PATROLLED (12) [verb] To go the rounds along a chain of sentinels; to traverse a police district or beat. | [verb] To go the rounds of, as a sentry, guard, or policeman | [adjective] Having regular patrols. PATTERNED (12) [verb] To apply a pattern. | [verb] To make or design (anything) by, from, or after, something that serves as a pattern; to copy; to model; to imitate. | [verb] To follow an example. PEACOCKED (20) PEARLIZED (21) [adjective] Made to resemble pearl PECULATED (14) [verb] To embezzle PEDICURED (15) [verb] To apply such treatment to the feet PEDIGREED (14) PEDUNCLED (15) PELECYPOD (19) [noun] Any of the Pelecypoda. PENALISED (12) [adjective] Subject to a penalty as a punishment | [verb] To subject to a penalty, especially for the infringement of a rule or regulation. | [verb] To impose a handicap on. PENALIZED (21) [verb] To subject to a penalty, especially for the infringement of a rule or regulation. | [verb] To impose a handicap on. PENCILLED (14) [verb] To write (something) using a pencil. | [verb] To mark with, or as if with, a pencil. | [adjective] Written or marked with a pencil. PENSIONED (12) [verb] To grant a pension to. | [verb] To force (someone) to retire on a pension. PERCEIVED (17) [verb] To become aware of, through the physical senses or by thinking; to see; to understand. | [adjective] Generally recognized to be true. | [adjective] As seen or understood by an individual. PERCUSSED (14) [verb] To strike; to hit; to knock; to give a blow to | [verb] To impact | [verb] To attempt to divine the location or other quality of something by tapping on (an overlying surface) PEREIOPOD (14) [noun] Any of the thoracic appendages of a decapod that are used for walking (and for gathering food) PERFECTED (17) [verb] To make perfect; to improve or hone. | [verb] To take an action, usually the filing of a document in the correct venue, that secures a legal right. PERFERVID (18) [adjective] Extremely, excessively, or feverishly passionate; zealous. PERFORMED (17) [verb] To do something; to execute. | [verb] To do (something) in front of an audience, such as acting or music, often in order to entertain. PERMEATED (14) [verb] To pass through the pores or interstices of; to penetrate and pass through without causing rupture or displacement; applied especially to fluids which pass through substances of loose texture | [verb] To enter and spread through; to pervade. PERMITTED (14) [verb] To allow (something) to happen, to give permission for. | [verb] To allow (someone) to do something; to give permission to. | [verb] To allow for, to make something possible. PERORATED (12) [verb] To speak or declaim at great length, especially in a pompous or grandiloquent manner; to harangue. | [verb] To make a peroration; to make a formal recapitulation at the end of a speech. PEROXIDED (20) [verb] To treat (something) with hydrogen peroxide, especially hair in order to bleach it PERPENDED (15) PERPLEXED (21) [verb] To cause to feel baffled; to puzzle. | [verb] To involve; to entangle; to make intricate or complicated. | [verb] To plague; to vex; to torment. PERSISTED (12) [verb] To go on stubbornly or resolutely. | [verb] To repeat an utterance. | [verb] To continue to exist. PERSPIRED (14) [verb] To emit (sweat or perspiration) through the skin's pores. | [verb] To be evacuated or excreted, or to exude, through the pores of the skin. PERSUADED (13) [verb] To successfully convince (someone) to agree to, accept, or do something, usually through reasoning and verbal influence. | [verb] To convince of by argument, or by reasons offered or suggested from reflection, etc.; to cause to believe (something). | [verb] To urge, plead; to try to convince (someone to do something). PERTAINED (12) [verb] To belong to or be a part of; be an adjunct, attribute, or accessory of | [verb] To relate, to refer, be relevant to | [verb] To apply; to be or remain in place; to continue to be applicable PERTURBED (14) [verb] To disturb; to bother or unsettle. | [verb] To slightly modify the motion of an object. | [verb] To modify the motion of a body by exerting a gravitational force. PERVERTED (15) [verb] To turn another way; to divert. | [verb] To corrupt; to cause to be untrue; corrupted or otherwise impure | [verb] To misapply, misuse, use for a nefarious purpose PETNAPPED (16) PETRIFIED (15) [adjective] Extremely afraid. | [verb] To harden organic matter by permeating with water and depositing dissolved minerals. | [verb] To produce rigidity akin to stone. PHILTERED (15) PHRENSIED (15) PHYSICKED (24) [verb] To cure or heal. | [verb] To administer medicine to, especially a purgative. PICKEERED (18) PICNICKED (20) [verb] To take part in a picnic. PICOFARAD (17) PIGHEADED (17) [adjective] Obstinate and stubborn to the point of stupidity. PIGMENTED (15) [verb] To add color or pigment to something. PIGTAILED (13) PILLORIED (12) [verb] To put in a pillory. | [verb] To subject to humiliation, scorn, ridicule or abuse. | [verb] To criticize harshly. PINAFORED (15) PINFOLDED (16) [verb] To confine (animals) in a pinfold. PINHEADED (16) [adjective] Having a head that is unusually tapered or small. | [adjective] Foolish; ignorant. PINNACLED (14) [verb] To put something on a pinnacle. | [verb] To build or furnish with a pinnacle or pinnacles. | [adjective] Having one or more pinnacles. PIONEERED (12) [verb] To be the first to do or achieve (something), preparing the way for others to follow. PIPELINED (14) [verb] To design (a microchip etc.) so that processing takes place in efficient stages, the output of each stage being fed as input to the next. | [verb] To convey something by a system of pipes | [verb] To lay a system of pipes through something PISTOLLED (12) PIXILATED (19) [adjective] Behaving in an eccentric manner, as though led by pixies. | [adjective] Whimsical | [adjective] Drunk PLACARDED (15) [verb] To affix a placard to. | [verb] To announce with placards. PLANELOAD (12) [noun] As much, or as many, as a plane can carry PLANETOID (12) [noun] An asteroid of any size | [noun] An asteroid-like body in an orbit beyond the asteroid belt, such as a centaur or Kuiper belt object | [noun] A larger, planetary, body in orbit around the Sun, such as Vesta or (candidate) dwarf planets such Eris or Sedna PLANISHED (15) [verb] To repeatedly hammer (a sheet of metal) so as to shape and smooth it or create a decorative indented finish. PLASTERED (12) [verb] To cover or coat something with plaster; to render. | [verb] To apply a plaster to. | [verb] To smear with some viscous or liquid substance. PLATEAUED (12) [verb] To reach a stable level; to level off. PLATOONED (12) [verb] To alternate starts with a teammate of opposite handedness, depending on the handedness of the opposing pitcher | [verb] Of self-driving vehicles: to travel in a close convoy, each vehicle communicating electronically with the others. PLAYACTED (17) [verb] To perform on, or as if on, a stage. PLAYFIELD (18) PLEASURED (12) [verb] To give or afford pleasure to. | [verb] To give sexual pleasure to. | [verb] To take pleasure; to seek or pursue pleasure. PLENISHED (15) [verb] To fill up, to stock or supply (something). | [verb] Specifically, to stock land or a house (with livestock or furniture). PLUMMETED (16) [verb] To drop swiftly, in a direct manner; to fall quickly. PLUMPENED (16) PLUNDERED (13) [verb] To pillage, take or destroy all the goods of, by force (as in war); to raid, sack. | [verb] To take (goods) by pillage. | [verb] To take by force or wrongfully; to commit robbery or looting, to raid. POLARISED (12) [verb] To cause to have a polarization. | [verb] To cause a group to be divided into extremes. | [adjective] Having a distinctive polarization. POLARIZED (21) [verb] To cause to have a polarization. | [verb] To cause a group to be divided into extremes. | [adjective] Having a distinctive polarization. POLEMIZED (23) POLLARDED (13) [verb] To prune a tree heavily, cutting branches back to the trunk, so that it produces dense new growth. | [adjective] (of a tree) That has been cut back heavily in order to produce dense new growth POLYPLOID (17) [noun] A cell that has more than the usual number of complete sets of chromosomes. | [noun] An organism whose cells have more than the usual number of complete sets of chromosomes. | [adjective] Having more than the usual number of complete sets of chromosomes in a single cell. POMMELLED (16) [verb] To pound or beat. | [adjective] (often in combination) Having a pommel. PONIARDED (13) POPPYHEAD (22) POPULATED (14) [verb] To supply with inhabitants; to people. | [verb] To live in; to inhabit. | [verb] To increase in number; to breed. PORTENDED (13) [verb] To serve as a warning or omen of. | [verb] To signify; to denote. PORTIONED (12) [verb] To divide into amounts, as for allocation to specific purposes. | [verb] To endow with a portion or inheritance. PORTRAYED (15) [verb] To paint or draw the likeness of. | [verb] To describe in words; to convey. | [verb] To play a role; to depict a character, person, situation, or event. POSSESSED (12) [verb] To have; to have ownership of. | [verb] To take control of someone's body or mind, especially in a supernatural manner. | [verb] (chiefly with of) To vest ownership in (someone, or oneself); to give someone power or knowledge; to acquaint; to inform. POSTDATED (13) [verb] To occur after an event or time; to exist later on in time | [verb] To assign an effective date to a document or action later than the actual date | [verb] To affix a date to after the event. POSTFIXED (22) [verb] To suffix. | [verb] To subject a sample to postfixation | [adjective] Subjected to postfixation POSTPONED (14) [verb] To delay or put off an event, appointment etc. | [adjective] Done later than originally planned; delayed. POTBOILED (14) POULTICED (14) [verb] To treat with a poultice. PRACTICED (16) [adjective] Skillful, proficient, knowledgeable or expert as a result of practice | [verb] To repeat (an activity) as a way of improving one's skill in that activity. | [verb] To repeat an activity in this way. PRACTISED (14) [verb] To repeat (an activity) as a way of improving one's skill in that activity. | [verb] To repeat an activity in this way. | [verb] To perform or observe in a habitual fashion. PREBILLED (14) PREBOILED (14) PREBOOKED (18) [adjective] Booked in advance PRECENTED (14) [verb] To act as precentor, leading songs or prayers in a place of worship. PRECESSED (14) [verb] (of an axis of rotation) To have an angle that varies cyclically. | [verb] (of a rotating object) To wobble; to rotate about an axis that precesses. PRECLUDED (15) [verb] Remove the possibility of; rule out; prevent or exclude; to make impossible. PRECOOKED (18) [adjective] Partially or completely cooked in advance | [verb] To partially or completely cook in advance PRECOOLED (14) [verb] To cool in advance. PREDICTED (15) [verb] To make a prediction: to forecast, foretell, or estimate a future event on the basis of knowledge and reasoning; to prophesy a future event on the basis of mystical knowledge or power. | [verb] (of theories, laws, etc.) To imply. | [verb] To make predictions. PREEDITED (13) PREEMPTED (16) [verb] To appropriate something (before someone else does). | [verb] To displace something, or take precedence over something. | [verb] To secure (land, etc.) by the right of preemption. PREFABBED (19) PREFERRED (15) [verb] To be in the habit of choosing something rather than something else; to favor; to like better. | [verb] To advance, promote (someone or something). | [verb] To present or submit (something) to an authority (now usually in "to prefer charges"). PREFILLED (15) PREFORMED (17) [verb] To shape something before some other operation. | [adjective] Formed, constructed or assembled in advance PREHEATED (15) [verb] To heat something in preparation for further action, especially cooking | [adjective] Heated up beforehand. PREJUDGED (21) [verb] To form a judgment of (something) in advance. PRELECTED (14) PREMIERED (14) [verb] To perform, display or exhibit for the first time. | [verb] To govern in the role of premier. | [verb] Of a film or play, to play for the first time. PREMOLDED (15) PRENTICED (14) [verb] To apprentice. PREPACKED (20) [adjective] Packed in advance PREPASTED (14) PREPLACED (16) PREPRICED (16) PRESCORED (14) PRESENTED (12) [verb] To bring (someone) into the presence of (a person); to introduce formally. | [verb] To nominate (a member of the clergy) for an ecclesiastical benefice; to offer to the bishop or ordinary as a candidate for institution. | [verb] To offer (a problem, complaint) to a court or other authority for consideration. PRESERVED (15) [verb] To protect; to keep from harm or injury. | [verb] To save from decay by the use of some preservative substance, such as sugar or salt; to season and prepare (fruits, meat, etc.) for storage. | [verb] To maintain throughout; to keep intact. PRESHAPED (17) PRESHOWED (18) PRESIFTED (15) PRESLICED (14) PRESOAKED (16) [verb] To soak in advance. | [verb] To soak laundry in cold water prior to washing, sometimes with the addition of a biological or other preparation. PRESORTED (12) PRESSURED (12) [verb] To encourage or heavily exert force or influence. PRETASTED (12) PRETENDED (13) [verb] To claim, to allege, especially when falsely or as a form of deliberate deception. | [verb] To feign, affect (a state, quality, etc.). | [verb] To lay claim to (an ability, status, advantage, etc.). (originally used without to) PRETESTED (12) [verb] To administer a pretest to. | [verb] To carry out a pretest. PRETEXTED (19) PREUNITED (12) PREVAILED (15) [verb] To be superior in strength, dominance, influence or frequency; to have or gain the advantage over others; to have the upper hand; to outnumber others. | [verb] To be current, widespread or predominant; to have currency or prevalence. | [verb] To succeed in persuading or inducing. PREVENTED (15) [verb] To stop (an outcome); to keep from (doing something). | [verb] To take preventative measures. | [verb] To come before; to precede. PREVIEWED (18) [verb] To show or watch something, or part of it, before it is complete. PREWARMED (17) PREWARNED (15) [verb] To warn beforehand; to forewarn. PREWASHED (18) [verb] To rinse something before washing it properly. PRINTHEAD (15) [noun] That part of a printer that transfers a character or image to the paper. PROCEEDED (15) [verb] To move, pass, or go forward or onward; to advance; to carry on | [verb] To pass from one point, topic, or stage, to another. | [verb] To come from; to have as its source or origin. PROCESSED (14) [verb] To perform a particular process on a thing. | [verb] To retrieve, store, classify, manipulate, transmit etc. (data, signals, etc.), especially using computer techniques. | [verb] To think about a piece of information, or a concept, in order to assimilate it, and perhaps accept it in a modified state. PROCTORED (14) [verb] To function as a proctor | [verb] To manage as an attorney or agent PROFESSED (15) [verb] To administer the vows of a religious order to (someone); to admit to a religious order. (Chiefly in passive.) | [verb] To declare oneself (to be something). | [verb] To declare; to assert, affirm. PROFFERED (18) [verb] To offer for acceptance; to propose to give; to make a tender of. | [verb] To attempt or essay of one's own accord; to undertake or propose to undertake. PROGNOSED (13) PROGRAMED (15) PROJECTED (21) [verb] To extend beyond a surface. | [verb] To cast (an image or shadow) upon a surface; to throw or cast forward; to shoot forth. | [verb] To extend (a protrusion or appendage) outward. PROLAPSED (14) [verb] To move out of place; especially for an internal organ to protrude beyond its normal position. PROLOGUED (13) PROLONGED (13) [verb] To extend in space or length. | [verb] To lengthen in time; to extend the duration of | [verb] To put off to a distant time; to postpone. PROMULGED (15) [verb] To promulgate; to publish or teach. PROOFREAD (15) [verb] To check a written text for errors in spelling and grammar. PROPELLED (14) [verb] To provide an impetus for motion or physical action, to cause to move in a certain direction; to drive forward. | [verb] To provide an impetus for non-physical change, to make to arrive to a certain situation or result. PROPENDED (15) PROROGUED (13) [verb] To suspend (a parliamentary session) or to discontinue the meetings of (an assembly, parliament etc.) without formally ending the session. | [verb] To defer. | [verb] To prolong or extend. PROSECTED (14) PROSPERED (14) [verb] To favor; to render successful. | [verb] To be successful; to succeed; to be fortunate or prosperous; to thrive; to make gain. | [verb] To grow; to increase. PROTECTED (14) [verb] To keep safe; to defend; to guard; to prevent harm coming to. | [verb] (travel) To book a passenger on a later flight if there is a chance they will not be able to board their earlier reserved flight. | [adjective] Defended PROTENDED (13) PROTESTED (12) [verb] To make a strong objection. | [verb] To affirm (something). | [verb] To object to. PROTRUDED (13) [verb] To extend from, above or beyond a surface or boundary; to bulge outward; to stick out. | [verb] To cause to extend from a surface or boundary; to cause to stick out. | [verb] To thrust forward; to drive or force along. PROVERBED (17) PSEUDOPOD (15) [noun] A temporary projection of the cytoplasm of certain cells, such as phagocytes, or of certain unicellular organisms, such as amoebas, that serves in locomotion. | [noun] A projection acting as a foot in certain insect larvae. | [noun] By extension, an extension or projection from something. PTERYGOID (16) PUBLISHED (17) [verb] To issue (something, such as printed work) for distribution and/or sale. | [verb] To announce to the public. | [verb] To issue the work of (an author). PUMMELLED (16) [verb] To hit or strike heavily and repeatedly. PUNCTURED (14) [verb] To pierce; to break through; to tear a hole. PUPPYHOOD (22) PURCHASED (17) [verb] To buy, obtain by payment of a price in money or its equivalent. | [verb] To pursue and obtain; to acquire by seeking; to gain, obtain, or acquire. | [verb] To obtain by any outlay, as of labor, danger, or sacrifice, etc. PUREBLOOD (14) [noun] A person or animal of unmixed ancestry PURLOINED (12) [verb] To take the property of another, often in breach of trust; to appropriate wrongfully; to steal. | [verb] To commit theft; to thieve. PURPORTED (14) [verb] To convey, imply, or profess outwardly (often falsely). | [verb] (construed with to) To intend. | [adjective] Supposed, or assumed to be. PUTREFIED (15) [verb] To become filled with a pus-like or bile-like substance. | [verb] To reach an advanced stage of decomposition. | [verb] To become gangrenous. PYRAMIDED (18) [verb] To build up or be arranged in the form of a pyramid. | [verb] To combine (a series of genes) into a single genotype. | [verb] To employ, or take part in, a pyramid scheme. PYROLIZED (24) PYROLYZED (27) [verb] To undergo pyrolysis. | [verb] To decompose or transform a substance by subjecting it to heat. QUADRATED (20) [verb] To adjust (a gun) on its carriage. | [verb] To train (a gun) for horizontal firing. | [verb] To square. QUADRUPED (22) [noun] A four-footed or four-legged animal | [noun] A mammal ambulating on all fours QUALIFIED (22) [adjective] Meeting the standards, requirements, and training for a position. | [adjective] Restricted or limited by conditions. | [verb] To describe or characterize something by listing its qualities. QUANTIZED (28) [verb] To limit the number of possible values of a quantity, or states of a system, by applying the rules of quantum mechanics | [verb] To approximate a continuously varying signal by one whose amplitude can only have a set of discrete values | [verb] To shift each beat in a rhythmic pattern to the nearest beat of a given resolution (eighth note, sixteenth note, etc.), or to adjust the frequency or pitch of a note to the nearest perfect tone in a given musical scale QUARRELED (19) [verb] To disagree. | [verb] To contend, argue fiercely, squabble. | [verb] To find fault; to cavil. QUARTERED (19) [verb] To divide into quarters; to divide by four. | [verb] To provide housing for military personnel or other equipment. | [verb] To lodge; to have a temporary residence. QUICKENED (25) [verb] To give life to; to animate, make alive, revive. | [verb] To come back to life, receive life. | [verb] To take on a state of activity or vigour comparable to life; to be roused, excited. QUICKSAND (25) [noun] Wet sand that things readily sink in, often found near rivers or coasts | [noun] Anything that pulls one down or buries one metaphorically QUIETENED (19) [verb] To make quiet. | [verb] To become quiet. QUINONOID (19) RACEMIZED (23) [verb] To convert (an enantiomer) into a racemic mixture. RADICATED (13) RAMPARTED (14) [adjective] Provided with a rampart. RAMRODDED (14) [verb] To force. RANGELAND (11) [noun] Unimproved land that is suitable for the grazing of livestock RANSACKED (16) [verb] To loot or pillage. See also sack. | [verb] To make a vigorous and thorough search of (a place, person) with a view to stealing something, especially when leaving behind a state of disarray. | [verb] To examine carefully; to investigate. RAPPELLED (14) [verb] To abseil. | [verb] To call back a hawk. RATCHETED (15) [verb] To cause to become incremented or decremented. | [verb] To increment or decrement. RATTOONED (10) REACCEDED (15) REACCUSED (14) READAPTED (13) [verb] To adapt again; to adapt for a new purpose READOPTED (13) [verb] Adopt again READORNED (11) REAFFIXED (23) REALIGNED (11) [verb] To bring back into alignment. | [verb] To align again or anew. REALTERED (10) REANNEXED (17) REAPPLIED (14) [verb] To apply again. REARGUARD (11) [noun] The rearmost part of a force, especially a detachment of troops that protect the rear of a retreating force. | [noun] The defence, collectively the defenders. REAROUSED (10) REASSUMED (12) [verb] To resume, to carry on (a practice, thought, occupation etc.) again. | [verb] To take on or adopt again. | [verb] To take back into one's possession. REASSURED (10) [verb] To assure anew; to restore confidence to; to free from fear or self-doubt. | [verb] To reinsure. REAVAILED (13) REBLENDED (13) REBLOOMED (14) REBOARDED (13) [verb] To board (a vehicle, etc.) again. | [verb] To replace the wooden boards of. REBOTTLED (12) REBOUNDED (13) [verb] To bound or spring back from a force. | [verb] To give back an echo. | [verb] To jump up or get back up again. REBUILDED (13) RECARRIED (12) RECEIPTED (14) [verb] To give or write a receipt (for something). | [verb] To put a receipt on, as by writing or stamping; to mark a bill as having been paid. RECHANGED (16) RECHARGED (16) [verb] To charge an electric battery after its power has been consumed. | [verb] To invigorate and revitalize one's energy level by removing stressful agents for a period of time. | [verb] To reload a gun with ammunition. RECHARTED (15) RECHECKED (21) [verb] To check again. RECIRCLED (14) RECLAIMED (14) [verb] To return land to a suitable condition for use. | [verb] To obtain useful products from waste; to recycle. | [verb] To claim something back; to repossess. RECLASPED (14) RECLEANED (12) RECLOTHED (15) [verb] To clothe again or anew. RECOLORED (12) [verb] To color again or differently. RECOMMEND (16) [verb] To bestow commendation on; to represent favourably; to suggest, endorse or encourage as an appropriate choice. | [verb] To make acceptable; to attract favor to. | [verb] To advise, propose, counsel favorably RECOUNTED (12) [verb] To tell; narrate; to relate in detail | [verb] To rehearse; to enumerate. | [verb] To count again. RECOUPLED (14) RECOVERED (15) [verb] To get back, to regain (a physical thing; in astronomy and navigation, sight of a thing or a signal). | [verb] To salvage, to extricate, to rescue (a thing or person) | [verb] To replenish to, resume (a good state of mind or body). RECREATED (12) [verb] To give new life, energy or encouragement (to); to refresh, enliven. | [verb] To enjoy or entertain oneself. | [verb] To take recreation. RECROSSED (12) [verb] To cross again. | [adjective] Crossed a second time | [adjective] Having the ends crossed. RECROWNED (15) RECRUITED (12) [verb] To enroll or enlist new members or potential employees on behalf of an employer, organization, sports team, the military, etc. | [verb] To supply with new men, as an army; to fill up or make up by enlistment; also, to muster | [verb] To replenish, renew, or reinvigorate by fresh supplies; to remedy a lack or deficiency in. RECTIFIED (15) [verb] To heal (an organ or part of the body). | [verb] To restore (someone or something) to its proper condition; to straighten out, to set right. | [verb] To remedy or fix (an undesirable state of affairs, situation etc.). REDAMAGED (14) REDARGUED (12) REDBAITED (13) REDECIDED (14) REDEFINED (14) [verb] To define again or differently. REDHEADED (15) [adjective] Having red hair | [adjective] Having a red head REDIALLED (11) [verb] To dial again REDIVIDED (15) [verb] To divide again. REDNECKED (17) REDOUBLED (13) [verb] To double, especially to double again; to increase considerably; to multiply; to intensify. | [verb] To double an opponent's doubling bid. | [verb] To become twice as big. REDOUNDED (12) [verb] To swell up (of water, waves etc.); to overflow, to surge (of bodily fluids). | [verb] To contribute to an advantage or disadvantage for someone or something. | [verb] To contribute to the honour, shame etc. of a person or organisation. REDRAFTED (14) [verb] To draft again REDREAMED (13) REDRESSED (11) [verb] To put in order again; to set right; to revise. | [verb] To set right (a wrong); to repair, (an injury); to make amends for; to remedy; to relieve from. | [verb] To make amends or compensation to; to relieve of anything unjust or oppressive; to bestow relief upon. REDRILLED (11) REEDIFIED (14) REEJECTED (19) REELECTED (12) [verb] To elect for a second or subsequent time. REEMERGED (13) [verb] To emerge again, to come into view after having hidden. | [verb] To come out of a situation, object or a liquid after having entered it. REEMITTED (12) REENACTED (12) [verb] To enact again. | [verb] To recreate an event, especially a historical battle. REENDOWED (14) REENGAGED (12) [verb] To engage again REENJOYED (20) REENTERED (10) [verb] To enter again; return into. | [verb] To enter again; retype, reinput. | [verb] (engraving) To cut deeper where the aqua fortis has not bitten sufficiently. REERECTED (12) REEXPOSED (19) REFIGURED (14) REFLECTED (15) [verb] To bend back (light, etc.) from a surface. | [verb] To be bent back (light, etc.) from a surface. | [verb] To mirror, or show the image of something. REFLOATED (13) [verb] To cause to float again. REFLOODED (14) REFOCUSED (15) [verb] To focus on something else | [verb] To change the focus of | [verb] To change one's priorities REFOUNDED (14) [verb] To found again; to reestablish. | [verb] To found or cast anew. REFRACTED (15) [verb] (of light) To change direction as a result of entering a different medium | [verb] To cause (light) to change direction as a result of entering a different medium. | [adjective] Turned out of its straight course. REFRAINED (13) [verb] To hold back, to restrain (someone or something). | [verb] To show restraint; to hold oneself back. | [verb] To repress (a desire, emotion etc.); to check or curb. REFRESHED (16) [verb] To renew or revitalize. | [verb] To become fresh again; to be revitalized. | [verb] To reload (a document, especially a webpage) and show any new changes. REFRONTED (13) REFUELLED (13) [verb] To refill with fuel. REGELATED (11) [verb] To undergo regelation. REGLOSSED (11) REGRAFTED (14) REGRANTED (11) REGREENED (11) REGREETED (11) REGRESSED (11) [verb] To move backwards to an earlier stage; to devolve. | [verb] To move from east to west. | [verb] To perform a regression on an explanatory variable. REGRETTED (11) [verb] To feel sorry about (a thing that has or has not happened), afterthink: to wish that a thing had not happened, that something else had happened instead. | [verb] (more generally) To feel sorry about (any thing). | [verb] To miss; to feel the loss or absence of. REGROOMED (13) REGROOVED (14) REGROUPED (13) [verb] To pause and get organized before trying again. | [verb] To group or categorize again. REGULATED (11) [verb] To dictate policy. | [verb] To control or direct according to rule, principle, or law. | [verb] To adjust to a particular specification or requirement: regulate temperature. REHANDLED (14) [verb] To handle again. REHEARSED (13) [verb] To repeat, as what has been already said; to tell over again; to recite. | [verb] To narrate; to relate; to tell. | [verb] To practise by recitation or repetition in private for experiment and improvement, prior to a public representation, especially in theater REIGNITED (11) [verb] Ignite again | [verb] To start again, especially animosity or argument REIMPOSED (14) [verb] To impose again, a further time. REINCITED (12) REINDEXED (18) REINDUCED (13) REINFUSED (13) REINJURED (17) REINSURED (10) [verb] To insure again (extending or replacing prior insurance). | [verb] To place insurance on the contract that insures something (allowing the insurer to offset risk in the same way the insuree did). REINVADED (14) [verb] To invade again. REINVITED (13) REINVOKED (17) REJUGGLED (19) REKINDLED (15) [verb] To kindle again. | [verb] To be kindled or ignited again. | [verb] To revive. REKNITTED (14) RELABELED (12) [verb] Label again, apply a new label to RELEARNED (10) [verb] To learn (something) again. RELEGATED (11) [verb] Exile, banish, remove, or send away. | [verb] (in extended use) Consign or assign. | [verb] Refer or submit. RELIGHTED (14) [verb] To light or kindle anew. | [verb] To render again with different simulated lighting conditions. RELOCATED (12) [verb] To move (something) from one place to another. | [verb] To change one's domicile or place of business. RELUMINED (12) REMARRIED (12) [noun] A person who has remarried. | [verb] To marry a second or subsequent time. REMATCHED (17) REMODELED (13) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. REMOUNTED (12) [verb] To go up again; to rise another time. | [verb] To help (someone) back on a horse. | [verb] To get back on a horse, bicycle etc. RENATURED (10) RENEGADED (12) [verb] To desert one's cause, or change one's loyalties; to commit betrayal. RENOUNCED (12) [verb] To give up, resign, surrender, atsake. | [verb] To cast off, repudiate. | [verb] To decline further association with someone or something, disown. RENOVATED (13) [verb] To renew; to revamp something to make it look new again. | [verb] To restore to freshness or vigor. REOFFERED (16) REOPPOSED (14) REORDERED (11) [verb] To place in a new order; to rearrange. | [verb] To order (a product, etc.) again. | [verb] To order or command again; to repeat an instruction to. REPAINTED (12) [verb] To paint anew or again, especially if recently painted. | [verb] To draw or render again on the display. REPANELED (12) REPAPERED (14) [verb] To apply new wallpaper to, either by first stripping the old wallpaper off, or by papering over the top. REPATCHED (17) REPEOPLED (14) [verb] To repopulate. REPHRASED (15) [verb] To say or write something with different wording. REPLANNED (12) [verb] To plan again; to make a different plan. REPLANTED (12) [verb] To plant again, especially to plant in a different place, using different plants, or in a different design. REPLEADED (13) REPLEDGED (14) REPLEVIED (15) [verb] To return goods to their rightful owner by replevin; to recover goods. | [verb] To bail. REPLOTTED (12) REPLUMBED (16) REPLUNGED (13) REPOSITED (12) REPOWERED (15) REPREHEND (15) [verb] To criticize, to reprove REPRESSED (12) [verb] To press again. | [adjective] Subjected to repression. | [adjective] Showing the suppression of emotions or impulses. REPRIEVED (15) [verb] To cancel or postpone the punishment of someone, especially an execution. | [verb] To bring relief to someone. | [verb] To take back to prison (in lieu of execution). REPRIMAND (14) [noun] A severe, formal or official reproof; reprehension, rebuke, private or public. | [verb] To reprove in a formal or official way. REPRINTED (12) [verb] To print (something) that has been published in print before. | [verb] To renew the impression of. | [adjective] Printed again, especially in a different format. REPURSUED (12) REQUESTED (19) [verb] To ask for (something). | [verb] To ask (somebody) to do something. RESADDLED (12) RESALUTED (10) RESAMPLED (14) RESCINDED (13) [verb] To repeal, annul, or declare void; to take (something such as a rule or contract) out of effect. | [verb] To cut away or off. RESECURED (12) RESEMBLED (14) [verb] To be like or similar to (something); to represent as similar. | [verb] To compare; to regard as similar, to liken. | [verb] To counterfeit; to imitate. RESETTLED (10) [verb] To settle in a different place | [verb] To force someone to settle in a different place RESHIPPED (17) RESIGHTED (14) RESINATED (10) [verb] To treat with resin, e.g. by impregnation in order to impart flavour, typically of wine RESMELTED (12) RESONATED (10) [verb] To vibrate or sound, especially in response to another vibration. | [verb] To have an effect or impact; to influence; to engender support. RESOUNDED (11) [verb] To echo (a sound) or again sound. | [verb] To reverberate with sound or noise. | [verb] To make a reverberating sound. RESPECTED (14) [verb] To have respect for. | [verb] To have regard for something, to observe a custom, practice, rule or right. | [verb] To abide by an agreement. RESPELLED (12) [verb] To spell again. RESPLICED (14) RESPONDED (13) [verb] To say something in return; to answer; to reply. | [verb] To act in return; to carry out an action or in return to a force or stimulus; to do something in response. | [verb] To correspond with; to suit. RESPOTTED (12) RESPRAYED (15) [verb] To spray again. RESTACKED (16) RESTAFFED (16) RESTAMPED (14) RESTARTED (10) [verb] To start again. | [verb] To reboot. RESTOCKED (16) [verb] To stock again; to resupply with stocks. RESTUDIED (11) [verb] To study again. RESTUFFED (16) RETACKLED (16) RETOUCHED (15) [verb] To improve something (especially a photograph), by adding or correcting details, or by removing flaws. | [verb] To colour the roots of hair to match hair previously coloured. | [verb] To modify a flint tool by making secondary flaking along the cutting edge. RETRACKED (16) RETRACTED (12) [verb] To pull back inside. | [verb] To draw back; to draw up. | [verb] To take back or withdraw something one has said. RETRAINED (10) [verb] To train again; especially, to train or study in a new subject or job RETREADED (11) [verb] To replace the traction-providing surface of a vehicle that employs tires, tracks or treads. | [verb] To renew the tread of a tyre, providing a cheap, and possibly dangerous, product. RETREATED (10) [verb] To treat or deal with (a topic) again or differently. | [verb] To apply treatment to (an injury, a surface, etc.) again | [verb] To withdraw from a position, go back. RETRIEVED (13) [verb] To regain or get back something. | [verb] To rescue (a creature). | [verb] To salvage something RETRIMMED (14) RETWISTED (13) REUNIFIED (13) [verb] To unify again; to bring back together, or come back together, after separation. REUTTERED (10) REVISITED (13) [verb] To visit again. | [verb] To reconsider or re-experience something. REWAKENED (17) REWEIGHED (17) [verb] To weigh again; to weigh something that has already been weighed. REWIDENED (14) REWRAPPED (17) [verb] To wrap again. RIDICULED (13) [verb] To criticize or disapprove of someone or something through scornful jocularity; to make fun of RIFLEBIRD (15) RIGHTWARD (17) [adjective] To or from the right. | [adverb] To or from the right. RIPRAPPED (16) [verb] To form a riprap in or upon. RIVERWARD (16) ROADSTEAD (11) [noun] A partly-sheltered anchorage; a stretch of water near the shore where vessels may ride at anchor, but with less protection than a harbour. ROBOTIZED (21) [verb] To give something (or someone) the characteristics of a robot. | [verb] To automate, especially by making use of robots. | [adjective] Like or having characteristics of a robot; automated. ROCKBOUND (18) ROISTERED (10) [verb] To engage in noisy, drunken, or riotous behavior. | [verb] To walk with a swaying motion. ROLLICKED (16) [verb] To behave in a playful or carefree manner; to frolic or romp. | [verb] (Euphemism for bollock; also spelled rollock) To reprimand. ROMANISED (12) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROMANIZED (21) [verb] To put letters or words written in another writing system into the Latin (Roman) alphabet. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To bring under the authority or influence of Rome. | [verb] (usually capitalized) To make or become Roman in character or style. ROSINWEED (13) ROUGHENED (14) [verb] To make rough. | [verb] To become rough. ROUGHSHOD (17) [adjective] Of a horse: having hooves shod with calks or horseshoes that have projecting nails to prevent slipping. | [adjective] (by extension) Brutal or domineering. ROULETTED (10) [verb] To separate or decorate by incisions made with a small toothed wheel. ROUNDWOOD (14) [noun] Timber as it is cut from the tree, including the bark and without any processing or shaping into planks. ROYSTERED (13) RUMINATED (12) [verb] To chew cud. (Said of ruminants.) Involves regurgitating partially digested food from the rumen. | [verb] To meditate or reflect. | [verb] To meditate or ponder over; to muse on. RUNAROUND (10) [noun] An evasive explanation in the form of multiple excuses. | [noun] A detour or route that bypasses an obstacle. | [noun] A section of type that is narrower than that of the column it is part of; typically next to an illustration. RURALISED (10) [verb] To make rural. | [verb] To become rural; to rusticate. RURALIZED (19) [verb] To make rural. | [verb] To become rural; to rusticate. RUSSIFIED (13) SABOTAGED (13) [verb] To deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful. SAFEGUARD (14) [noun] Something that serves as a guard or protection; a defense. | [noun] One who, or that which, defends or protects; defence; protection. | [noun] A safe-conduct or passport, especially in time of war. SAILBOARD (12) [noun] A recreational device consisting of a surfboard with a small sail on a flexible mast. | [verb] To practice the sport of using a sailboard. SAINTHOOD (13) [noun] The state of being a saint | [noun] Saints collectively SALINIZED (19) SALIVATED (13) [verb] To produce saliva. | [verb] To show eager anticipation at the expectation of something. SALMONOID (12) [noun] Any of these fish. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the family Salmonidae of salmon and close relatives. SANDALLED (11) [adjective] Wearing a sandal or sandals. SANGFROID (14) [noun] Composure, self-possession or imperturbability especially when in a dangerous situation. SANITATED (10) SANITISED (10) [verb] To rid of microorganisms by cleaning or disinfecting. | [verb] (by extension) To make something, such as a dramatic work, more acceptable by removing potentially offensive material. | [verb] To filter (text) to ensure it does not contain any characters that will cause problems for or be interpreted in an adverse way by the receiving system. SANITIZED (19) [verb] To rid of microorganisms by cleaning or disinfecting. | [verb] (by extension) To make something, such as a dramatic work, more acceptable by removing potentially offensive material. | [verb] To filter (text) to ensure it does not contain any characters that will cause problems for or be interpreted in an adverse way by the receiving system. SAPHEADED (16) SATINWOOD (13) [noun] Woody trees in family Rutaceae | [noun] Wood used for crafting fine furniture, particularly for inlay and marquetry, from either Chloroxylon swietenia or Zanthoxylum flavum. SATIRISED (10) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATIRIZED (19) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATISFIED (13) [verb] To do enough for; to meet the needs of; to fulfill the wishes or requirements of. | [verb] To cause (a sentence) to be true when the sentence is interpreted in one's universe. | [verb] To convince by ascertaining; to free from doubt. | [adjective] In a state of satisfaction. SATURATED (10) [verb] To cause to become completely impregnated, or soaked (especially with a liquid). | [verb] To fill to excess. | [verb] To satisfy the affinity of; to cause a substance to become inert by chemical combination with all that it can hold. SATURNIID (10) [noun] Any moth of the family Saturniidae SAUNTERED (10) [verb] To stroll, or walk at a leisurely pace. SCALLOPED (14) [verb] To create or form an edge in the shape of a crescent or multiple crescents. | [verb] To bake in a casserole (gratin), originally in a scallop shell; especially used in form scalloped | [verb] To harvest scallops SCAMPERED (16) [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. | [adjective] Achieved by a scampering motion. SCANDALED (13) SCAREHEAD (15) SCARIFIED (15) [adjective] Damaged, barren, denuded, scarred, wasted | [verb] To remove thatch (build-up of organic matter on the soil) from a lawn, to dethatch. | [verb] To make scratches or cuts on. SCARPERED (14) [verb] To run away; to flee; to escape. SCATTERED (12) [verb] To (cause to) separate and go in different directions; to disperse. | [verb] To distribute loosely as by sprinkling. | [verb] To deflect (radiation or particles). SCAVENGED (16) [verb] To collect and remove refuse, or to search through refuse, carrion, or abandoned items for useful material | [verb] To remove unwanted material from something, especially to purify molten metal by removing impurities | [verb] To expel the exhaust gases from the cylinder of an internal combustion engine, and draw in air for the next cycle SCEPTERED (14) SCHEDULED (16) [verb] To create a time-schedule. | [verb] To plan an activity at a specific date or time in the future. | [verb] To admit (a person) to hospital as an involuntary patient under the Mental Health Act. SCHLEPPED (19) [verb] To carry, drag, or lug. | [verb] To go, as on an errand; to carry out a task. | [verb] To act in a slovenly, lazy, or sloppy manner. SCHLUMPED (19) SCHMEERED (17) [verb] To spread something, often a bagel spread. | [verb] To bribe. SCHMOOSED (17) SCHMOOZED (26) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHOOLKID (19) [noun] A schoolchild, a kid who attends school; a schoolboy or schoolgirl. SCISSORED (12) [verb] To cut using, or as if using, scissors. | [verb] To excise or expunge something from a text. | [verb] To reproduce (text) as an excerpt, copy. SCLEROSED (12) [adjective] Hardened by sclerosis | [adjective] Lignified SCOLLOPED (14) [verb] To create or form an edge in the shape of a crescent or multiple crescents. | [verb] To bake in a casserole (gratin), originally in a scallop shell; especially used in form scalloped | [verb] To harvest scallops SCOMBROID (16) [noun] Any fish of the family Scombridae, of which the mackerel (Scomber) is the type. | [adjective] Pertaining to mackerel. SCORECARD (14) [noun] A printed card allowing spectators of a game to identify players and record progress. | [noun] A tabular representation of the most important statistics of an innings or match. SCORIFIED (15) SCOWDERED (16) SCRABBLED (16) [verb] To scrape or scratch powerfully with hands or claws. | [verb] To gather hastily. | [verb] To move with difficulty by making rapid movements back and forth with the hands or paws. SCRAICHED (17) SCRAIGHED (16) SCRAMBLED (16) [verb] To move hurriedly to a location, especially by using all limbs against a surface. | [verb] To proceed to a location or an objective in a disorderly manner. | [verb] (of food ingredients, usually including egg) To thoroughly combine and cook as a loose mass. SCRATCHED (17) [verb] To rub a surface with a sharp object, especially by a living creature to remove itching with nails, claws, etc. | [verb] To rub the skin with rough material causing a sensation of irritation; to cause itching. | [verb] To mark a surface with a sharp object, thereby leaving a scratch (noun). SCREECHED (17) [verb] To make such a sound. | [verb] To travel very fast, as if making the sounds of brakes being released SCRIBBLED (16) [verb] To write or draw carelessly and in a hurry | [verb] To doodle | [verb] To card or tease (wool) coarsely; to run through a scribbler. SCROOCHED (17) [verb] To crouch, or hunker down. SCROUNGED (13) [verb] To hunt about, especially for something of nominal value; to scavenge or glean. | [verb] To obtain something of moderate or inconsequential value from another. SCRUBLAND (14) [noun] A plant community characterized by scrub vegetation, consisting of low shrubs, mixed with grasses, herbs, and geophytes. SCRUNCHED (17) [verb] To grind with the teeth, and with a crackling sound; to craunch. | [verb] To crumple and squeeze to make more compact. SCUNNERED (12) [verb] To be sick of. | [verb] To dislike. | [verb] To cause to loathe, or feel disgust at. SCUPPERED (16) [verb] Thwart or destroy, especially something belonging or pertaining to another; compare scuttle. SCUTTERED (12) [verb] To void thin excrement. | [verb] To run with a light pattering noise; to skitter. | [adjective] Drunk SEASTRAND (10) SECTIONED (12) [verb] To cut, divide or separate into pieces. | [verb] To reduce to the degree of thinness required for study with the microscope. | [verb] To commit (a person, to a hospital, with or without their consent), as for mental health reasons. So called after various sections of legal acts regarding mental health. SEGMENTED (13) [verb] To divide into segments or sections. | [adjective] Having or made of segments. SELVEDGED (15) SEMIDOMED (15) SEMIFLUID (15) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. | [adjective] Having properties intermediate between liquids and solids SEMINOMAD (14) SEMIRIGID (13) [adjective] Partially rigid SEMISOLID (12) [noun] Any substance with such properties. | [adjective] Having properties that partially resemble those of a solid; having properties between those of a solid and those of a liquid. SENTENCED (12) [verb] To declare a sentence on a convicted person; to doom; to condemn to punishment. | [verb] To decree or announce as a sentence. | [verb] To utter sententiously. SEPARATED (12) [verb] To divide (a thing) into separate parts. | [verb] To disunite from a group or mass; to disconnect. | [verb] To cause (things or people) to be separate. SEPTUPLED (14) [verb] To multiply by seven. | [verb] To increase by a factor of seven. SEQUENCED (21) [verb] To arrange in an order | [verb] To determine the order of things, especially of amino acids in a protein, or of bases in a nucleic acid | [verb] To produce (music) with a sequencer SEQUINNED (19) SERENADED (11) [verb] To sing or play a serenade for (someone). SEVENFOLD (16) [adjective] Seven times as much; multiplied by seven. | [adjective] Having seven parts; composed of seven items. | [adverb] By a factor of seven. SEXTUPLED (19) [verb] To make, or to become, six times as much (or as many). SHALLOWED (16) [verb] To make or become less deep. SHAMPOOED (17) [verb] To wash one's own hair with shampoo. | [verb] To wash (i.e. the hair, carpet, etc.) with shampoo. | [verb] To press or knead the whole surface of the body of (a person), and at the same time to stretch the limbs and joints, in connection with the hot bath. SHARPENED (15) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To make sharp. | [verb] To become sharp. | [adjective] Having a sharp point or edge. SHATTERED (13) [verb] To violently break something into pieces. | [verb] To destroy or disable something. | [verb] To smash, or break into tiny pieces. SHEEPFOLD (18) [noun] An enclosure for keeping sheep. | [noun] A flock of sheep. SHELTERED (13) [verb] To provide cover from damage or harassment; to shield; to protect. | [verb] To take cover. | [adjective] Protected, as from wind or weather. SHEWBREAD (18) [noun] Twelve loaves of bread placed on the alter in Jewish Temples and renewed periodically. See showbread. SHIKARRED (17) SHIMMERED (17) [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. SHINNEYED (16) SHIPBOARD (17) [noun] The side of a ship. | [adjective] Occurring or existing on board a ship. | [adjective] Casual or ephemeral (e.g. a shipboard romance) SHIVAREED (16) SHOREBIRD (15) [noun] A bird, or species of birds, that is found near the edge of bodies of water. SHOREWARD (16) [noun] The side facing the shore. | [adjective] In the direction of the shoreline, relatively speaking. | [adjective] Facing the shore. SHORTENED (13) [verb] To make shorter; to abbreviate. | [verb] To become shorter. | [verb] To make deficient (as to); to deprive (of). SHORTHAND (16) [noun] A rough and rapid method of writing by substituting symbols for letters, words, etc. | [noun] (by extension) Any brief or shortened way of saying or doing something. | [verb] To render (spoken or written words) into shorthand. SHOVELLED (16) [verb] To move materials with a shovel. | [verb] To move with a shoveling motion. SHOWBREAD (18) [noun] The twelve loaves of bread placed daily by the Jewish priests in the Holy Place on the table. SHOWCASED (18) [verb] To display, demonstrate, show, or present. SHRIVELED (16) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SHUDDERED (15) [verb] To shake nervously, often from fear or horror. | [verb] To vibrate jerkily. SHUNPIKED (19) SHUTTERED (13) [verb] To close shutters covering. | [verb] To close up (a building) for a prolonged period of inoccupancy. | [verb] To cancel or terminate. SHYLOCKED (22) SIBILATED (12) [verb] To hiss. | [verb] To speak with a hissing sound. SIDEBOARD (13) [noun] (furniture) A piece of dining room furniture having drawers and shelves for linen and tableware; originally for serving food. | [noun] A board or similar barrier that forms part of the side of something. | [noun] (collectible card games) A set of cards that are separate from a player's primary deck, used to customize a match strategy against an opponent by enabling a player to change the composition of the playing deck. SIDELINED (11) [verb] To place on the sidelines; to bench or to keep someone out of play. | [verb] To remove or keep out of circulation or out of the focus. SIGNALLED (11) [verb] To indicate; to convey or communicate by a signal. | [verb] To communicate with (a person or system) by a signal. SIGNBOARD (13) [noun] A board carrying a sign, or on which signs may be posted. SIGNIFIED (14) [noun] (structuralism) The concept or idea evoked by a sign. | [verb] To create a sign out of something. | [verb] To give (something) a meaning or an importance. SIMONIZED (21) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMULATED (12) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. | [adjective] Invented in imitation of a particular thing or of a specific condition; artificial. SINICIZED (21) [verb] To make something Chinese in form or character. | [verb] To convert to Chinese characters or to enable to work with the Chinese script. SISSIFIED (13) [adjective] Made like a sissy; effete. | [verb] To make sissy; to emasculate. SJAMBOKED (25) SKELTERED (14) SKIDDOOED (16) [verb] To depart, especially to depart quickly | [verb] A nonsense word, often an expression of disrespect | [verb] A light that flashes on and off to make it more eye-catching. SKIPPERED (18) [verb] To captain a ship or a sports team. | [verb] To take shelter in a barn or shed. SKITTERED (14) [verb] To move hurriedly or as by bouncing or twitching; to scamper, to scurry. | [verb] To make a scratching or scuttling noise while, or as if, skittering. | [verb] To move or pass (something) over a surface quickly so that it touches only at intervals; to skip, to skite. SKREEGHED (18) SKREIGHED (18) SKYJACKED (30) [verb] To steal or commandeer (hijack) an airplane, usually by threat of violence to the passengers. SKYLARKED (21) [verb] (originally nautical) To jump about joyfully, frolic; to play around, play tricks. SLABBERED (14) [verb] To let saliva or other liquid fall from the mouth carelessly; drivel; slaver. | [verb] To eat hastily or in a slovenly manner, as liquid food. | [verb] To wet and befoul by liquids falling carelessly from the mouth; slaver; slobber. SLACKENED (16) [verb] To gradually decrease in intensity or tautness; to become slack. | [verb] To make slack, less taut, or less intense. | [verb] To deprive of cohesion by combining chemically with water; to slake. SLANDERED (11) [verb] To utter a slanderous statement about; baselessly speak ill of. SLATHERED (13) [verb] To spread something thickly on something else; to coat well. | [verb] (often followed by with) To apply generously upon. | [verb] To squander. SLEEKENED (14) SLIPCASED (14) SLIPPERED (14) [verb] To spank with a plimsoll as corporal punishment. | [adjective] Wearing slippers. SLITHERED (13) [verb] To move about smoothly and from side to side. | [verb] To slide SLOBBERED (14) [verb] To allow saliva or liquid to run from one's mouth; to drool. SLUBBERED (14) SLUMBERED (14) [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [verb] To be inactive or negligent. | [verb] To lay to sleep. SMARTENED (12) [verb] To make smarter in appearance; to refurbish or spruce up. | [verb] To increase the speed of (one's travel on foot, etc.). | [verb] To augment with computer technology. SMARTWEED (15) [noun] Any of a number of plants in the genus Persicaria (formerly Polygonum). SMATTERED (12) SMOLDERED (13) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SMOTHERED (15) [verb] To suffocate; stifle; obstruct, more or less completely, the respiration of something or someone. | [verb] To extinguish or deaden, as fire, by covering, overlaying, or otherwise excluding the air. | [verb] To reduce to a low degree of vigor or activity; suppress or do away with; extinguish SNAKEBIRD (16) [noun] A darter: any bird of the genus Anhinga. | [noun] A wryneck SNAKEWEED (17) [noun] Any of various unrelated plants reputed to cure snakebite. | [noun] A poisonous American plant of the genus Gutierrezia. SNEAKERED (14) SNICKERED (16) [verb] To emit a snicker, a stifled or broken laugh. | [verb] To utter through a laugh of this kind. | [verb] (of a horse) To whinny. SNIGGERED (12) [verb] To emit a snigger. SNIVELLED (13) [verb] To breathe heavily through the nose while it is congested with nasal mucus. | [verb] To cry while sniffling; to whine or complain while crying. | [verb] To say (something) while sniffling or crying. SNOOKERED (14) [verb] To play the game of snooker. | [verb] To fool or bamboozle. | [verb] To place the cue ball in such a position that (the opponent) cannot directly hit the required ball with it. SNORKELED (14) [verb] To use a snorkel. SNOWBOARD (15) [noun] A board, somewhat like a broad ski, or a very long skateboard with no wheels, used in the sport of snowboarding. | [verb] To ride a snowboard. SNOWBOUND (15) [adjective] Unable to move, because of heavy snow. SNOWFIELD (16) [noun] A large permanent expanse of snow on a mountain or at the head of a glacier. SNOWSHOED (16) [verb] To travel using snowshoes. SOBERIZED (21) SODOMIZED (22) [verb] To perform anal or oral sex upon a person, especially if against his or her will. | [verb] To perform sexual intercourse with an animal. SOFTBOUND (15) SOJOURNED (17) [verb] To reside somewhere temporarily, especially as a guest or lodger. SOLARISED (10) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLARIZED (19) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLDIERED (11) [verb] To continue steadfast; to keep striving. | [verb] To serve as a soldier. | [verb] To intentionally restrict labor productivity; to work at the slowest rate that goes unpunished. SOLECISED (12) SOLECIZED (21) SOLICITED (12) [verb] To persistently endeavor to obtain an object, or bring about an event. | [verb] To woo; to court. | [verb] To persuade or incite one to commit some act, especially illegal or sexual behavior. SONICATED (12) [verb] To disrupt with ultrasonic sound waves. SONNETTED (10) SOOTHSAID (13) SOUFFLEED (16) SOUTHLAND (13) SOUTHWARD (16) [noun] The direction or area lying to the south of a place. | [adjective] Situated or directed towards the south; moving or facing towards the south. | [adverb] Towards the south; in a southerly direction. SPACEBAND (16) SPACEWARD (17) SPANCELED (14) SPATTERED (12) [verb] To splash (someone or something) with small droplets. | [verb] To cover, or lie upon (something) by having been scattered, as if by splashing. | [verb] To distribute (a liquid) by sprinkling; to sprinkle around. SPEARHEAD (15) [noun] The pointed head, or end, of a spear. | [noun] One who leads or initiates an activity (such as an attack or a campaign). | [noun] The leading military unit in an attack. SPECIATED (14) [verb] To form new biological species by the division of an existing one SPECIFIED (17) [adjective] Thoroughly explained. | [verb] To state explicitly, or in detail, or as a condition. | [verb] To include in a specification. SPECTATED (14) [verb] To attend an event as a spectator; to observe. SPELLBIND (14) [verb] To captivate, or hold the attention of, as if by a magic spell; to entrance. SPELUNKED (16) SPERMATID (14) [noun] A haploid cell, produced by meiosis of a spermatocyte, that develops into a spermatozoon SPIKENARD (16) [noun] A perfumed ointment, extracted from the plant Nardostachys jatamansi that belongs to the Valerian family and grows in the Himalayas. | [noun] The plant Nardostachys jatamansi (syn. Nardostachys grandiflora). | [noun] Lavandula stoechas, another species used in antiquity to produce an aromatic oil. SPIRALLED (12) [verb] To move along the path of a spiral or helix. | [verb] To cause something to spiral. | [verb] To increase continually. SPLOTCHED (17) [verb] To mark with splotches. SPOLIATED (12) [verb] To plunder | [verb] To engage in robbery; to plunder. SPONSORED (12) [verb] To be a sponsor for. SPRADDLED (14) [verb] To spread apart (the legs). | [verb] To spread apart the legs of (someone or something). | [verb] To lie, move, or stand with legs spread. SPRATTLED (12) SPRINGALD (13) SPRINKLED (16) [verb] To cause (a substance) to fall in fine drops (for a liquid substance) or small pieces (for a solid substance). | [verb] To cover (an object) by sprinkling a substance on to it. | [verb] To drip in fine drops, sometimes sporadically. SPUTTERED (12) [verb] To emit saliva or spit from the mouth in small, scattered portions, as in rapid speaking. | [verb] To speak so rapidly as to emit saliva; to utter words hastily and indistinctly, with a spluttering sound, as in rage. | [verb] To throw out anything, as little jets of steam, with a noise like that made by one sputtering. SQUABBLED (23) [verb] To participate in a minor fight or argument. | [verb] To disarrange, so that the letters or lines stand awry and require readjustment. SQUEEGEED (20) [verb] To use a squeegee. SQUELCHED (24) [verb] To halt, stop, eliminate, stamp out, or put down, often suddenly or by force | [verb] (radio technology) to suppress the unwanted hiss or static between received transmissions by adjusting a threshold level for signal strength, below which the signal is suppressed by applying a gain of zero, and above which a positive (and linear from zero) gain is applied. | [verb] To make a sucking, splashing noise as when walking on muddy ground SQUIGGLED (21) [verb] To wriggle or squirm | [verb] To make a squiggle | [verb] To write (something) illegibly SQUILGEED (20) SQUINCHED (24) [verb] To scrunch up (one's face, etc.). SQUINNIED (19) [verb] To squint. SQUOOSHED (22) STAGEHAND (14) [noun] A person who works behind the scenes at a theatre or in other theatrical media. STAGGERED (12) [verb] Sway unsteadily, reel, or totter. | [verb] Doubt, waver, be shocked. | [verb] Have multiple groups doing the same thing in a uniform fashion, but starting at different, evenly-spaced, times or places (attested from 1856). STAGHOUND (14) [noun] Any of several large dogs once bred to hunt stags. STAGNATED (11) [verb] To cease motion, activity, or progress: STAMMERED (14) [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. | [adjective] Of speech: irregular or halting. STAMPEDED (15) [verb] To run away in a panic; said of cattle, horses, etc., also of armies. | [verb] To disperse by causing sudden fright, as a herd or drove of animals. | [verb] (of people) To move rapidly in a mass. STARBOARD (12) [noun] The righthand side of a ship, boat or aircraft when facing the front, or fore or bow. Used to unambiguously refer to directions according to the sides of the vessel, rather than those of a crew member or object. | [noun] One of the two traditional watches aboard a ship standing a watch in two. | [verb] To put to the right, or starboard, side of a vessel. STARGAZED (20) [verb] To look at the stars at night. STATEHOOD (13) [noun] The property of being a state. | [noun] The condition of being a country. STATIONED (10) [verb] (usually passive) To put in place to perform a task. | [verb] To put in place to perform military duty. STAUNCHED (15) [verb] To stop the flow of (blood). | [verb] To stop, check, or deter an action. STEAMERED (12) STEELHEAD (13) [noun] The anadromous form of the rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. | [noun] The ruddy duck. STEELYARD (13) [noun] A transportable balance with unequal arm lengths. | [noun] A place where steel (and possibly other metals as well) is stored and sold. STEEPENED (12) [verb] To make steeper. | [verb] To become steeper. STENCILED (12) [verb] To print with a stencil. STEPCHILD (17) [noun] The child of one's spouse but not one's own. | [noun] A bereaved child; one who has lost father or mother. STERNWARD (13) STEWARDED (14) [verb] To act as the steward or caretaker of (something) STICKSEED (16) [noun] Any of several plants with fruits that stick to hair, fur or clothes STICKWEED (19) [noun] Any of various unrelated plants that have seeds that stick to clothing STIFFENED (16) [verb] To make stiff. | [verb] To become stiff. STINKWEED (17) [noun] Tree of heaven (Ailanthus altissima). | [noun] Jimson weed (Datura stramonium). | [noun] Any other noxious plant. STINKWOOD (17) [noun] Any of several unrelated trees whose wood has an unpleasant smell, but especially Ocotea bullata, a south African tree yielding hard, heavy wood STOCKADED (17) [verb] To enclose in a stockade. STOCKYARD (19) [noun] An enclosed yard, with pens, sheds etc. or stables, where livestock is kept temporarily before being slaughtered, treated, sold, or shipped etc. STOKEHOLD (17) [noun] A chamber where a ship's furnaces are stoked. STOMACHED (17) [verb] To tolerate (something), emotionally, physically, or mentally; to stand or handle something. | [verb] To be angry. | [verb] To resent; to remember with anger; to dislike. STONISHED (13) STOPPERED (14) [verb] To close a container by using a stopper. | [adjective] Fitted with a stopper STOUTENED (10) STRADDLED (12) [verb] To sit or stand with a leg on each side of something; to sit astride. | [verb] To be on both sides of something; to have parts that are in different places, regions, etc. | [verb] To consider or favor two apparently opposite sides; to be noncommittal. STRAGGLED (12) [verb] To stray from the road, course or line of march. | [verb] To wander about; ramble. | [verb] To spread at irregular intervals. STRANGLED (11) [verb] To kill someone by squeezing the throat so as to cut off the oxygen supply; to choke, suffocate or throttle. | [verb] To stifle or suppress. | [verb] To be killed by strangulation, or become strangled. STRAVAGED (14) STREAMBED (14) STRETCHED (15) [verb] To lengthen by pulling. | [verb] To lengthen when pulled. | [verb] To pull tight. STRICKLED (16) STRUGGLED (12) [verb] To strive, to labour in difficulty, to fight (for or against), to contend. | [verb] To strive, or to make efforts, with a twisting, or with contortions of the body. STUPEFIED (15) [adjective] Experiencing stupefaction. | [adjective] Experiencing the influence of an ingested mind-altering substance. | [verb] To dull the senses or capacity to think thereby reducing responsiveness; to dazzle or stun. STUTTERED (10) [verb] To speak with a spasmodic repetition of vocal sounds. | [verb] To exhaust a gas with difficulty SUBCOOLED (14) SUBDUCTED (15) SUBEDITED (13) [verb] To perform the work of a subeditor or copy editor. SUBERISED (12) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBERIZED (21) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBJECTED (21) [verb] (construed with to) To cause (someone or something) to undergo a particular experience, especially one that is unpleasant or unwanted. | [verb] To make subordinate or subservient; to subdue or enslave. SUBJOINED (19) [verb] To add something to the end; to append or annex SUBLEASED (12) [verb] To lease something that is already leased; to sublet. SUBMERGED (15) [verb] To sink out of sight. | [verb] To put into a liquid; to immerse; to plunge into and keep in. | [verb] To be engulfed in or overwhelmed by something. SUBMERSED (14) [verb] To submerge. SUBMITTED (14) [verb] To yield or give way to another. | [verb] To yield (something) to another, as when defeated. | [verb] To enter or put forward for approval, consideration, marking etc. SUBPENAED (14) SUBPERIOD (14) SUBSERVED (15) [verb] To serve to promote (an end); to be useful to. | [verb] To assist in carrying out. SUBSISTED (12) [verb] To survive on a minimum of resources. | [verb] To have ontological reality; to exist. | [verb] To retain a certain state; to continue. SUBSOILED (12) [verb] To turn up the subsoil of. SUBTENDED (13) [verb] To use an angle to delimit (mark off, enclose) part of a straight or curved line, for example an arc or the opposite side of a triangle. | [verb] (also mathematics) To extend or stretch opposite something; to be part of a straight or curved line that is opposite to and delimits an angle. | [verb] To form the central angle of a circle underneath an arc SUBTITLED (12) [adjective] (of a film) in which the dialogue is translated into another language, and displayed, in text, at the bottom of the screen. SUBVERTED (15) [verb] To overturn from the foundation; to overthrow; to ruin utterly. | [verb] To pervert, as the mind, and turn it from the truth; to corrupt; to confound. | [verb] To upturn convention from the foundation by undermining it (literally, to turn from beneath). SUCCEEDED (15) [verb] To follow in order; to come next after; hence, to take the place of. | [verb] To obtain the object desired; to accomplish what is attempted or intended; to have a prosperous issue or termination; to be successful. | [verb] To fall heir to; to inherit. SUCCOURED (14) [verb] To give aid, assistance, or help. | [verb] To provide aid or assistance in the form of military equipment and soldiers; in particular, for helping a place under siege. | [verb] (obsolete except dialectal) To protect, to shelter; to provide a refuge. SUCCUMBED (18) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUCCUSSED (14) [verb] To shake with vigor. SUCTIONED (12) [verb] To create an imbalance in pressure between one space and another in order to draw matter between the spaces. | [verb] To draw out the contents of a space. SUFFLATED (16) SUGGESTED (12) [verb] To imply but stop short of saying explicitly. | [verb] To make one suppose; cause one to suppose (something). | [verb] To mention something as an idea, typically in order to recommend it SULPHATED (15) SULPHURED (15) [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. SUMMONSED (14) [verb] To serve someone with a summons. SUNBATHED (15) [verb] To expose one's body to the sun in order to relax or to obtain a suntan. SUNBURNED (12) [verb] To receive a sunburn. | [verb] To burn or tan (someone's skin) by the sun; to allow (a part of one's body) to become sunburnt. | [adjective] (of human skin) Having a sunburn or dark tan; having been burned by the sun's rays. SUNTANNED (10) [verb] To obtain a suntan by exposure to ultraviolet light. | [verb] To attempt to obtain a suntan. | [adjective] Having a suntan. SUPERFUND (15) SUPERGOOD (13) SUPERMIND (14) SUPERROAD (12) SUPERSTUD (12) SUPINATED (12) [verb] To twist the forearm so as to turn the palm of the hand backwards if the forearm is pointing up, upwards if the forearm is horizontal, or forwards if the arm is pointing down; to twist the forearm by contracting the biceps brachii; to twist the right forearm clockwise or the left forearm counterclockwise. | [verb] To twist the foot so the weight is on the outer edge. | [adjective] Having one's hand and forearm rotated so that the palm faces in the same direction as the interior angle of the elbow, thereby contracting the biceps brachii. SUPPORTED (14) [verb] To keep from falling. | [verb] To answer questions and resolve problems regarding something sold. | [verb] To back a cause, party, etc., mentally or with concrete aid. SURCEASED (12) [verb] To come to an end; to desist. | [verb] To bring to an end. SURFBOARD (15) [noun] A shaped waterproof plank, usually made of wood or foam and reinforced plastic, used to surf on waves. | [verb] To use a surfboard; to surf. SURFEITED (13) [verb] To fill (something) to excess. | [verb] To feed (someone) to excess (on, upon or with something). | [verb] To make (someone) sick as a result of overconsumption. SURPASSED (12) [verb] To go beyond, especially in a metaphoric or technical manner; to exceed. SURPRISED (12) [verb] To cause (someone) to feel unusually alarmed or delighted by something unexpected. | [verb] To do something to (a person) that they are not expecting, as a surprise. | [verb] To undergo or witness something unexpected. SURPRIZED (21) SUSPECTED (14) [verb] To imagine or suppose (something) to be true, or to exist, without proof. | [verb] To distrust or have doubts about (something or someone). | [verb] To believe (someone) to be guilty. SUSPENDED (13) [verb] To halt something temporarily. | [verb] To hold in an undetermined or undecided state. | [verb] To discontinue or interrupt a function, task, position, or event. SUSTAINED (10) [verb] To maintain, or keep in existence. | [verb] To provide for or nourish. | [verb] To encourage or sanction (something). SWAGGERED (15) [verb] To walk with a swaying motion; hence, to walk and act in a pompous, consequential manner. | [verb] To boast or brag noisily; to be ostentatiously proud or vainglorious; to bluster; to bully. SWALLOWED (16) [verb] To cause (food, drink etc.) to pass from the mouth into the stomach; to take into the stomach through the throat. | [verb] To take (something) in so that it disappears; to consume, absorb. | [verb] To take food down into the stomach; to make the muscular contractions of the oesophagus to achieve this, often taken as a sign of nervousness or strong emotion. SWAMPLAND (17) [noun] Low-lying land that is regularly flooded; especially such land that is drier than a bog or a marsh. | [noun] The set of all possible string theories. SWEARWORD (16) [noun] A word considered taboo and impolite or offensive. SWEATBAND (15) [noun] A band of fabric, inside the crown of a hat, designed to absorb perspiration. | [noun] A band of fabric worn around the wrist or head during sports to absorb perspiration. SWEETENED (13) [verb] To make sweet to the taste. | [verb] To make (more) pleasant or to the mind or feelings. | [verb] To make mild or kind; to soften. SWELLHEAD (16) SWELTERED (13) [verb] To suffer terribly from intense heat. | [verb] To perspire greatly from heat. | [verb] To cause to faint, to overpower, as with heat. SWINEHERD (16) [noun] A person who herds and tends swine, a keeper of swine (pigs). SWITHERED (16) [verb] To be indecisive or in a state of confusion; to dither. SWIVELLED (16) [verb] To swing or turn, as on a pin or pivot. SYLLABLED (15) [verb] To utter in syllables. | [adjective] Having a specified number of syllables. SYMBOLLED (17) [verb] To symbolize. TABLELAND (12) [noun] A relatively flat region of terrain, particularly in reference to surrounding terrain. TABLETTED (12) TABULATED (12) [verb] To arrange in tabular form; to arrange into a table. | [verb] To set out as a list; to enumerate, to list. | [verb] To enter into an official register or roll. TACKBOARD (18) TACKIFIED (19) TAILBOARD (12) [noun] A hinged board or hatch at the rear of a vehicle that can be lowered for loading and unloading; a tailgate. TAILGATED (11) [verb] To drive dangerously close behind another vehicle. | [verb] To follow another person through access control on their access, rather than on one’s own credentials, especially when entering a door controlled by a card reader. | [verb] (of a broker) To privately purchase or sell a security immediately after trading in the same security for a client. TALLYHOED (16) [verb] To articulate the interjection. TAMBOURED (14) TARNISHED (13) [verb] To oxidize or discolor due to oxidation. | [verb] To soil, sully, damage or compromise | [verb] To lose its lustre or attraction; to become dull. TASSELLED (10) [adjective] Having tassels. TEASELLED (10) TEAZELLED (19) TELEVISED (13) [verb] To broadcast, or be broadcast, by television | [adjective] Broadcast by television. TELPHERED (15) TEMPESTED (14) TENDRILED (11) TENSIONED (10) [verb] To place an object in tension, to pull or place strain on. | [adjective] In tension; strained or pulled on. TENTACLED (12) TERPENOID (12) [noun] A very large class of naturally occurring and synthetic organic compounds formally derived from the hydrocarbon isoprene; they include many volatile compounds used in perfume and food flavours, turpentine, the steroids, the carotene pigments and rubber. TERRIFIED (13) [adjective] Extremely frightened. | [verb] To frighten greatly; to fill with terror. | [verb] To menace or intimidate. TESTIFIED (13) [verb] To make a declaration, or give evidence, under oath. | [verb] To make a statement based on personal knowledge or faith. TETANISED (10) TETANIZED (19) THEORISED (13) [verb] To formulate a theory, especially about some specific subject. | [verb] To speculate. THEORIZED (22) [verb] To formulate a theory, especially about some specific subject. | [verb] To speculate. THERAPSID (15) [noun] Any extinct reptile of the order Therapsida; thought to be direct ancestors of the mammals THICKENED (19) [verb] To make thicker (in the sense of wider). | [verb] To make thicker (in the sense of more viscous). | [verb] To become thicker (in the sense of wider). THICKETED (19) THICKHEAD (22) [noun] Someone stupid. | [noun] Any of several species of Australian songbirds of the genus Pachycephala. THIRDHAND (17) [adjective] Having been relayed by two intermediate sources. | [adjective] Having had two previous owners. | [adverb] By two intermediates. THREEFOLD (16) [noun] An algebraic variety of degree 3. | [adjective] Three times as great | [adjective] Triple THRESHOLD (16) [noun] The bottom-most part of a doorway that one crosses to enter; a sill. | [noun] (by extension) An entrance; the door or gate of a house. | [noun] (by extension) Any end or boundary. THROTTLED (13) [verb] To cut back on the speed of (an engine, person, organization, network connection, etc.). | [verb] To strangle or choke someone. | [verb] To have the throat obstructed so as to be in danger of suffocation; to choke; to suffocate. THUNDERED (14) [verb] To produce thunder; to sound, rattle, or roar, as a discharge of atmospheric electricity; often used impersonally. | [verb] To make a noise like thunder. | [verb] To talk with a loud, threatening voice. THYLAKOID (20) [noun] A folded membrane within plant chloroplasts from which grana are made, used in photosynthesis TICTACKED (18) TICTOCKED (18) TIGHTENED (14) [verb] To make tighter. | [verb] To become tighter. | [verb] To make money harder to borrow or obtain. TINCTURED (12) [verb] To stain or impregnate (something) with color. | [verb] To tinge; to taint. | [verb] To soak (an organic substance) in alcohol or another liquid to produce a tincture. TINSELLED (10) [verb] To adorn with tinsel; to deck out with cheap but showy ornaments; to make gaudy. | [verb] To give a false sparkle to (something). TIPPYTOED (17) TITIVATED (13) [verb] To make small improvements or alterations to (one's appearance etc.); to add some finishing touches to. TITTUPPED (14) [verb] To prance or frolic; of a horse, to canter easily. TOENAILED (10) [verb] To fasten two pieces of lumber together by applying nails or screws into both boards at an angle. TOLERATED (10) [verb] To accept hardship without objection. | [adjective] Endured | [adjective] Permitted TOMCATTED (14) [verb] To prowl for sexual gratification. TOPSOILED (12) TOPWORKED (19) TORCHWOOD (18) TORMENTED (12) [verb] To cause severe suffering to (stronger than to vex but weaker than to torture.) | [adjective] Miserable or anguished, especially with anxiety or guilt. | [adjective] Damned; accursed. TORPEDOED (13) [verb] To send a torpedo, usually from a submarine, that explodes below the waterline of the target ship. | [verb] To sink a ship with one of more torpedoes. | [verb] To undermine or destroy any endeavor with a stealthy, powerful attack. TORREFIED (13) [adjective] Having undergone torrefaction; dried or roasted. | [verb] To subject to intense heat; to parch, to roast. TORRIFIED (13) TORTRICID (12) TOTALISED (10) [verb] To combine parts to make a total. TOTALIZED (19) [verb] To combine parts to make a total. TOUCHWOOD (18) [noun] Decayed wood used as tinder; punk. TOUGHENED (14) [verb] To make tough. | [verb] To become tough. TOURNEYED (13) [verb] To take part in a tournament. TOWHEADED (17) [adjective] Having pale blond hair, resembling tow. TRABEATED (12) TRACERIED (12) TRAILERED (10) [verb] To load on a trailer or to transport by trailer. TRAILHEAD (13) TRAINBAND (12) [noun] A company of trained civilian militia operating in England and North America between the 16th and the 18th centuries. TRAINLOAD (10) [noun] The amount that can be transported by a train. | [noun] (by extension) A large amount. TRAJECTED (19) TRAMELLED (12) TRAMMELED (14) [verb] To entangle, as in a net. | [verb] To confine; to hamper; to shackle. TRANSCEND (12) [verb] To pass beyond the limits of something. | [verb] To surpass, as in intensity or power; to excel. | [verb] To climb; to mount. TRANSITED (10) [verb] To pass over, across or through something. | [verb] To revolve an instrument about its horizontal axis so as to reverse its direction. | [verb] To make a transit. TRANSUDED (11) [verb] To pass through a pore, membrane or interstice. TRAPANNED (12) TRAPEZOID (21) [noun] A (convex) quadrilateral with two (non-adjacent) parallel sides. | [noun] A convex quadrilateral with no sides parallel and no equal sides. | [noun] The trapezoid bone of the wrist. TRAUCHLED (15) TRAVAILED (13) [verb] To toil. | [verb] To go through the labor of childbirth. TRAVELLED (13) [verb] To be on a journey, often for pleasure or business and with luggage; to go from one place to another. | [verb] To pass from here to there; to move or transmit; to go from one place to another. | [verb] To move illegally by walking or running without dribbling the ball. TRAVERSED (13) [verb] To travel across, often under difficult conditions. | [verb] To visit all parts of; to explore thoroughly. | [verb] To lay in a cross direction; to cross. TREASURED (10) [verb] (of a person or thing) To consider to be precious; to value highly. | [verb] To store or stow in a safe place. | [verb] To enrich. TRELLISED (10) [verb] To train or arrange (plants) so that they grow against a trellis. | [adjective] Having, or formed as, a trellis. TREPANNED (12) [verb] To create a large hole by making a narrow groove outlining the shape of the hole and then removing the plug of material remaining by less expensive means. | [verb] To use a trepan; to trephine. | [verb] To ensnare; to seduce, to trick. TREPHINED (15) [verb] To use a trephine during surgery. | [verb] To perforate with a trephine. TRICUSPID (14) [noun] A molar tooth that has three cusps | [adjective] Having three cusps, e.g. a molar tooth | [adjective] Describing the valve, between the right atrium and ventricle of the heart, that has three triangular segments TRIGGERED (12) [verb] To fire a weapon. | [verb] To initiate something. | [verb] To spark a response, especially a negative emotional response, in (someone). TRIHYBRID (18) TRINKETED (14) TRISECTED (12) [verb] To cut into three pieces | [verb] To divide a quantity, angle etc into three equal parts TRITIATED (10) [verb] To modify (a compound) by replacing some of its normal hydrogen (protium) with the heavy isotope tritium | [adjective] Describing a compound which has had some of its normal hydrogen (protium) replaced with the heavy isotope tritium. TRIUMPHED (17) [verb] To celebrate victory with pomp; to rejoice over success; to exult in an advantage gained; to exhibit exultation. | [verb] To prevail over rivals, challenges, or difficulties. | [verb] To succeed, win, or attain ascendancy. TROLLEYED (13) [verb] To bring to by trolley. | [verb] To use a trolley vehicle to go from one place to another. TROWELLED (13) [verb] To apply (a substance) with a trowel. | [verb] To pass over with a trowel. | [verb] To apply something heavily or unsubtly. TRUCKLOAD (16) [noun] The contents of a full truck or lorry. | [noun] A large number. TRUMPETED (14) [verb] To sound loudly, be amplified | [verb] To play the trumpet. | [verb] Of an elephant, to make its cry. TRUNCATED (12) [verb] To shorten (something) by, or as if by, cutting part of it off. | [verb] To shorten (a decimal number) by removing trailing (or leading) digits. | [verb] To replace a corner by a plane (or to make a similar change to a crystal). TUBIFICID (17) TUBULATED (12) TULIPWOOD (15) [noun] The striped, variegated wood of the tulip tree. TUNICATED (12) [adjective] Tunicate TUNNELLED (10) [verb] To make a tunnel through or under something; to burrow. | [verb] To dig a tunnel. | [verb] To transmit something through a tunnel (wrapper for insecure or unsupported protocol). TURBANNED (12) TURMOILED (12) TUTOYERED (13) TWITTERED (13) [verb] (sometimes proscribed) To tweet; to post an update to Twitter. | [verb] To utter a succession of chirps. | [verb] (of a person) To talk in an excited or nervous manner. ULCERATED (12) [adjective] Affected with ulcers ULTIMATED (12) ULTRACOLD (12) [adjective] Of a temperature close to absolute zero, especially one at which quantum-mechanical properties are observed. | [adjective] Extremely cold. UNABASHED (15) [adjective] Not disconcerted or embarrassed. | [adjective] Of actions, emotions, facts, etc.: that are not concealed or disguised, or not eliciting shame. UNABRADED (13) UNADAPTED (13) [adjective] Not adapted UNADMIRED (13) UNADORNED (11) [verb] To add a feature or embellishment that makes something uglier; uglify. | [verb] To remove the adornments from. | [adjective] Having no additional decoration or embellishment; plain and simple UNADVISED (14) UNALIGNED (11) [adjective] Not aligned UNALLOYED (13) [adjective] (of metal) Not alloyed; not in mixture with other metals; pure. | [adjective] Complete and unreserved; pure; unadulterated; not restricted, modified, or qualified by reservations. UNALTERED (10) [adjective] Remaining in its initial state; not changed. UNAMENDED (13) [adjective] Without amendments. UNARMORED (12) UNASHAMED (15) [adjective] Feeling or showing no shame, embarrassment or remorse UNATTUNED (10) UNAUDITED (11) [adjective] Not audited. UNAWARDED (14) UNBELOVED (15) [adjective] Not beloved; unloved. UNBEMUSED (14) UNBLENDED (13) [adjective] In a pure state; not mixed with other substances. UNBLESSED (12) [verb] To deprive of blessings; to make wretched. | [verb] (Perl) To convert (a previously blessed object) back to a simple reference. | [adjective] Not blessed. UNBLINDED (13) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To free from blindness. | [verb] To remove the secrecy from (a bid). | [verb] To convert (a blind signature) back to the unblinded state (as opposed to the blinded state). UNBLOCKED (18) [adjective] Not blocked | [verb] To remove or clear a block or obstruction from. | [verb] To free or make available. UNBLOODED (13) UNBOSOMED (14) [verb] To tell someone about (one's troubles), and thus obtain relief. | [verb] To free (oneself) of the burden of one's troubles by telling of them. | [verb] To confess a misdeed. UNBOUNDED (13) [adjective] Having no boundaries or limits. UNBRAIDED (13) [adjective] Not braided UNBRANDED (13) [adjective] Not branded; lacking a brand | [adjective] Not associated with a brand name UNBRIDGED (14) UNBRIDLED (13) [verb] To remove the bridle, and other tack, from (a horse or other animal). | [verb] To remove restraint from. | [adjective] Not fitted with a bridle. UNBRIEFED (15) UNBRUISED (12) [adjective] Not bruised UNBRUSHED (15) [verb] To undo the result of brushing. | [adjective] Not brushed UNBUCKLED (18) [verb] To unfasten (the buckle of (a belt, shoe, etc)) | [adjective] Not buckled. UNBUNDLED (13) [verb] To separate parts which have been bundled together. | [verb] To break down a product or service into a number of separate elements that can be charged for individually. UNCHAINED (15) [verb] To remove chains from; to free; to liberate. | [adjective] Free from chains or fetters; unencumbered. UNCHANGED (16) [verb] To revert or reverse a change | [verb] To not change; be unchanging; remain constant | [adjective] Not changed or altered; remaining in an original state. UNCHARGED (16) [adjective] Not carrying an overall electric charge; neutral. | [adjective] Not charged with a criminal act. | [adjective] Not charged for; given away for free. UNCHARTED (15) [adjective] Not surveyed or mapped UNCHECKED (21) [adjective] Unrestrained, not held back. | [adjective] Not examined for accuracy, efficiency, etc. | [adjective] Of a check box: not checked (ticked or enabled). | [verb] To remove a checkmark. UNCLAIMED (14) [adjective] Not claimed. UNCLAMPED (16) [adjective] Not clamped. | [verb] To remove a clamp from. UNCLASPED (14) [adjective] Not clasped UNCLEANED (12) UNCLICHED (17) UNCLIPPED (16) [adjective] Not clipped. | [adjective] Uncircumcised | [verb] To release something by removing a clip. UNCLOAKED (16) [verb] To remove a cloak or cover from; to deprive of a cloak or cover; to unmask; to reveal. | [verb] To remove one's cloak. | [verb] To become visible again by turning off a cloaking device. UNCLOGGED (14) [verb] To remove a blockage from. | [verb] To have a blockage removed. | [adjective] Not clogged; without a blockage or obstruction. UNCLOTHED (15) [verb] To strip of clothes or covering; to make naked. | [adjective] Not wearing clothes; nude or naked; with the clothes removed; stripped. UNCLOUDED (13) [adjective] Not cloudy; clear. UNCOERCED (14) UNCOLORED (12) [adjective] Not treated with a dye or other colour. UNCOUNTED (12) [adjective] Not counted. UNCOUPLED (14) [adjective] Not coupled to something; disconnected; detached. | [verb] To disconnect or detach one thing from another. | [verb] To come loose. UNCOVERED (15) [verb] To remove a cover from. | [verb] To reveal the identity of. | [verb] To show openly; to disclose; to reveal. | [adjective] Not covered or protected from the weather, etc. UNCRACKED (18) UNCREATED (12) [verb] To kill; to destroy; to deprive of existence; to annihilate. | [verb] To undo the act of creating. | [adjective] Not having been created, thus not existing. UNCROPPED (16) [adjective] Not having been cropped or cut. | [adjective] (of land) Not used to grow crops. UNCROSSED (12) [verb] To move something, especially one's arms or legs, from a crossed position. | [verb] To undo the crossing or traversal of. | [adjective] Not crossed (in various senses). UNCROWDED (16) [adjective] Not crowded UNCROWNED (15) [adjective] Not (yet) crowned. | [adjective] Deprived of the monarchy. UNDAMAGED (14) [adjective] Not damaged, harmed or injured UNDAUNTED (11) [adjective] Showing courage and resolution. | [adjective] Not shaken, discouraged or disheartened. UNDECIDED (14) [verb] To reverse or recant (a previous decision). | [noun] A voter etc. who has not yet come to a decision. | [adjective] Open and not yet settled or determined. UNDEFILED (14) [adjective] Free from stain, blemish, evil or corruption; immaculate; uncorrupted. UNDEFINED (14) [adjective] Lacking a definition or value. | [adjective] That does not have a meaning and is thus not assigned an interpretation. UNDELUDED (12) UNDERBRED (13) [adjective] Of inferior breeding or upbringing; vulgar, lacking in manners or finesse. | [adjective] (of animals) Not purebred; of an inferior strain. | [verb] To breed insufficiently. UNDERCARD (13) [noun] A list of minor or supporting contests printed on the same bill as the main event (primarily fighting or racing, such as the main fight at a boxing match or wrestling, horse or car racing, etc.), occurring before or after the main event. | [noun] The events so listed. | [noun] A card lower than another given card or pair. UNDERFEED (14) [verb] To feed inadequately or insufficiently UNDERFUND (14) [verb] To provide insufficient funds (for). UNDERGIRD (12) [verb] To strengthen, secure, or reinforce by passing a rope, cable, or chain around the underside of an object. | [verb] To give fundamental support; provide with a sound or secure basis; provide supportive evidence for. | [verb] To lend moral support to. UNDERGRAD (12) [noun] An undergraduate. UNDERHAND (14) [noun] The lower of two hands, the hand under the work. | [verb] To toss or lob with an underhand movement. | [verb] To trick, deceive or gull. UNDERLAID (11) [verb] To lay (something) underneath something else; to put under. | [verb] To provide a support for something; to raise or support by something laid under. | [verb] To put a tap on (a shoe). UNDERPAID (13) [adjective] Getting too little financial compensation for one's work UNDERSOLD (11) [verb] To sell goods for a lower price than a competitor. | [verb] To sell something for less than its value. | [verb] To put forward an idea, or to market a new product, with insufficient enthusiasm. UNDERUSED (11) [verb] To use (something) less than expected | [adjective] Used less than normal or desirable. UNDERWOOD (14) [noun] Underbrush, undergrowth. UNDESIRED (11) [adjective] Not desired; unwanted. UNDILUTED (11) [adjective] Not diluted or mixed with other substances. | [adjective] Unadulterated; free from extraneous elements. UNDIVIDED (15) [adjective] Unified, whole UNDOUBLED (13) UNDOUBTED (13) [adjective] Without doubt; without question; certain. UNDRAINED (11) [verb] To restore that which has drained away. | [adjective] Not drained. UNDREAMED (13) [adjective] Not dreamed; not dreamt. UNDRESSED (11) [verb] To remove one's clothing. | [verb] To remove one’s clothing. | [verb] To remove the clothing of (someone). UNDRILLED (11) UNDULATED (11) [verb] To cause to move in a wavelike motion. | [verb] To cause to resemble a wave | [verb] To move in wavelike motions. UNEARTHED (13) [verb] To drive or draw from the earth. | [verb] To uncover or find; to bring out from concealment | [verb] To dig up. UNELECTED (12) [adjective] Not elected UNEQUALED (19) [adjective] Unmatched, superlative, the best ever done, record setting. UNEXCITED (19) [adjective] Not feeling excitement or keen interest; placid; bored. | [adjective] Not in a state of excitation. UNEXCUSED (19) UNEXPIRED (19) [adjective] Not having expired. | [adjective] Of food: not having reached its expiry date. | [adjective] Of an agreement, coupon, or law, still in force. UNEXPOSED (19) [adjective] That has not been exposed UNFEIGNED (14) [adjective] Not feigned. | [adjective] Genuine. | [adjective] Not false or hypocritical. UNFLEDGED (15) [adjective] Not having feathers; (of a bird) not yet having developed its wings and feathers and become able to fly. | [adjective] Not yet fully grown or developed; not yet mature. | [adjective] Inexperienced, like a tyro or novice. UNFOCUSED (15) [adjective] Not focused UNFOUNDED (14) [adjective] Having no strong foundation; not based on solid reasons or facts. | [adjective] Not having been founded or instituted. | [adjective] Bottomless. UNFROCKED (19) [verb] To remove from the clergy; to revoke the clergical status of. | [adjective] Not official or not (yet) uniformed UNGROUPED (13) [adjective] Not assembled into a group. UNGUARDED (12) [adjective] Having no guard or protection; vulnerable. | [adjective] Displaying a lack of caution or thought. UNHATCHED (18) [adjective] Not yet hatched. | [adjective] Not shaded with hatching. UNHITCHED (18) [verb] To disconnect; to detach; to undo that which is hitched. | [adjective] Unattached. | [adjective] Unmarried; single. UNHONORED (13) UNHURRIED (13) [adjective] Not hurried; not rushed. UNIFORMED (15) [verb] To clothe in a uniform. | [adjective] Dressed in a uniform. | [adjective] In an occupation that requires a uniform, such as the police force or military. UNIMPEDED (15) [adjective] Free from obstructions. UNINDEXED (18) UNINJURED (17) [noun] One or many people or objects that have not suffered injury. | [adjective] That did not suffer injury. UNINSURED (10) [noun] One who is not insured. | [adjective] Not insured; not having insurance. UNINVITED (13) [adjective] Not invited | [verb] To cancel or withdraw an invitation. UNIONISED (10) UNIONIZED (19) [verb] To organize workers into a union. | [adjective] Organized into a trades union or trades unions. | [adjective] Not ionized. UNJOINTED (17) [adjective] Not jointed. UNKNITTED (14) [verb] To unravel. | [verb] To undo knitted stitches by reversing the knitting motion. | [adjective] Not knitted. UNKNOTTED (14) [verb] To unfasten (a knot). | [adjective] Not knotted. UNLABELED (12) [adjective] Not labeled; having no label. UNLATCHED (15) [verb] Remove from a latch | [adjective] Of a gate, etc, not latched, or that has been unlatched. UNLEARNED (10) [verb] To discard the knowledge of. | [verb] To break a habit. | [adjective] Of a person, ignorant, uneducated, untaught, untrained. UNLEASHED (13) [verb] To free from a leash, or as from a leash. | [verb] To let go; to release. | [verb] To precipitate; to bring about. UNLEVELED (13) UNLIMITED (12) [adjective] Limitless or without bounds; unrestricted UNMANAGED (13) [adjective] Not managed. UNMARRIED (12) [noun] An unmarried person. | [adjective] Having no husband or wife. UNMATCHED (17) [verb] To separate a matching pair. | [adjective] (of a pair of things) not matched; odd | [adjective] (of a single thing) not matched with anything else UNMERITED (12) [adjective] Not merited. UNMINGLED (13) UNMITERED (12) UNMOUNTED (12) [verb] To reverse a mount operation; to instruct the operating system that the file system should be disassociated from its mount point, making it no longer accessible. | [adjective] Not mounted (in various senses). UNMUFFLED (18) [adjective] Not muffled. UNMUZZLED (30) [verb] Remove a muzzle from | [adjective] Not wearing a muzzle. UNNOTICED (12) [adjective] Not noticed. UNOPPOSED (14) [adjective] With no or little opposition | [adjective] Without an opponent. UNORDERED (11) [adjective] Not having been ordered. | [adjective] Not in any sorted order. UNPAINTED (12) [adjective] Not painted UNPEOPLED (14) [adjective] Not inhabited by people. UNPLAITED (12) [verb] To undo or untwist plaited hair; to unbraid | [adjective] Not plaited. UNPLANNED (12) [adjective] Unintentional; not intended | [adjective] Spontaneous and not thought through in advance | [adjective] Not having any structure or organization UNPLEASED (12) UNPLUGGED (14) [verb] To disconnect from a supply, especially an electrical socket. | [verb] To stop using electronic devices, especially for relaxation or to reduce stress. | [verb] To remove a blockage from (especially a water pipe or drain). UNPLUMBED (16) [adjective] Not measured for depth, as if with a plumb. UNPOLICED (14) UNPRESSED (12) [adjective] Not pressed. UNPUZZLED (30) UNRAVELED (13) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNREACHED (15) [adjective] Not reached. | [adjective] (of peoples) not yet reached by the Christian gospel UNREFINED (13) [adjective] Crude, raw or unprocessed | [adjective] (of a person) lacking refinement; uncouth UNRELATED (10) [adjective] Not connected or associated | [adjective] Not related by kinship UNRELAXED (17) [adjective] Not relaxed UNREVISED (13) [adjective] Not revised; unmodified. UNRIDDLED (12) [verb] To figure out the answer to (a riddle). | [verb] (by extension) To solve (a perplexing problem). | [adjective] Not having been riddled. UNRIPENED (12) [adjective] Not ripened; still unripe. UNRIVALED (13) [adjective] Beyond compare, far surpassing any other, unparalleled, without rival. UNROUNDED (11) [adjective] Not rounded. UNRUFFLED (16) [adjective] Not ruffled or tousled. | [adjective] Calm, not ruffled, serene, at peace, unbothered. UNSADDLED (12) [verb] To remove a saddle. | [verb] To throw (a rider) from the saddle. | [adjective] Not saddled. UNSCARRED (12) [adjective] Not scarred. UNSCATHED (15) [adjective] Not harmed or damaged in any way; untouched. UNSCENTED (12) [adjective] Unperfumed; having no scent. | [adjective] That has not been scented (detected by smell); undetected. UNSCREWED (15) [verb] To loosen a screw or thing by turning it. | [adjective] Not having been screwed. UNSECURED (12) [adjective] Not physically secured; not fastened; not attached. | [adjective] Not made secure in any sense. | [adjective] Of a loan or guarantee, without collateral. UNSETTLED (10) [verb] To make upset or uncomfortable | [verb] To bring into disorder or disarray | [adjective] Disturbed, upset. UNSHELLED (13) [adjective] Not having had the shell removed. | [adjective] Not bombarded with military shells. | [verb] To strip the shell from; to take out of the shell; to hatch. UNSHIFTED (16) UNSHIPPED (17) [verb] To unload cargo from a ship or other vessel | [verb] To remove an oar or mast from its normal position | [verb] To throw from a horse; to unseat | [adjective] Not having been shipped. UNSIGHTED (14) [adjective] Not sighted; unseen. | [adjective] Not furnished with a sight. UNSKILLED (14) [adjective] Of a person or workforce: not having a skill or technical training. | [adjective] Of a job: not requiring skill or training. | [adjective] Of a made object: inexpertly made or showing a lack of skill. UNSNAPPED (14) [verb] To unfasten (something held by snaps). | [adjective] Not having been snapped. UNSNARLED (10) [verb] To remove or undo a snarl or tangle. UNSOUNDED (11) [adjective] Unfathomed UNSPHERED (15) UNSPOILED (12) [adjective] Not spoiled or touched; pure. UNSPOTTED (12) [adjective] Not having spots. | [adjective] Unseen. | [adjective] Without stains or blots; sinless. UNSPRAYED (15) [adjective] Not having been sprayed. UNSTACKED (16) UNSTAINED (10) [adjective] Not dyed or discolored. | [adjective] Pure, pristine, clean, immaculate, unadulterated. UNSTEELED (10) UNSTEPPED (14) [verb] To remove (the mast) from a sailing vessel. | [adjective] Not stepped; without steps. UNSTINTED (10) [adjective] Not constrained, not restrained, or not confined. UNSTOPPED (14) [verb] To remove a stoppage; to clear a blockage. | [verb] To unplug or uncork a container. | [verb] To draw out the stops of (an organ). UNSTUDIED (11) [adjective] Free of artifice or cunning; innocent, spontaneous and unaffected. | [adjective] Not gained by study. | [adjective] Not studied. UNSUBDUED (13) [adjective] Unconquered, not vanquished. | [adjective] Restless, not calm. UNSULLIED (10) [adjective] Not sullied. UNSWATHED (16) [verb] To remove a swathe from. UNTAINTED (10) [adjective] Not tainted; free of contamination; pure. UNTANGLED (11) [verb] To remove tangles or knots from. | [verb] (by extension) To remove confusion or mystery from. | [adjective] Not tangled. UNTENURED (10) [adjective] Lacking tenure (permanence at an academic job). UNTHRONED (13) [verb] To dethrone. UNTOUCHED (15) [adjective] Remaining in its original, pristine state, undamaged; not altered. | [adjective] Not eaten. | [adjective] Not influenced, affected or swayed. UNTRAINED (10) [adjective] Lacking training, not having been instructed in something. UNTREATED (10) [adjective] Not treated. UNTRIMMED (14) [adjective] Not trimmed; not made tidy by cutting. | [adjective] Not adorned with trimmings. UNTRUSSED (10) [adjective] Not trussed. UNTUTORED (10) [adjective] Untrained, not taught or educated in a field of knowledge UNTWISTED (13) [verb] To remove a twist from. | [verb] To become untwisted. UNVISITED (13) [adjective] Not visited. | [adjective] (of a node in a graph) Never visited. UNWEARIED (13) [adjective] Not wearied, not tired. | [adjective] Never tiring; tireless. | [adjective] Not stopping; persistent, relentless. UNWORRIED (13) [adjective] Free of worries. UNWOUNDED (14) [adjective] Not wounded. UNWRAPPED (17) [verb] To open or undo, as what is wrapped or folded. | [verb] To become unwrapped. | [verb] To remove word wrap from. UPBRAIDED (15) [verb] To criticize severely. | [verb] (followed by with or for, and formerly of before the object) To charge with something wrong or disgraceful; to reproach | [verb] To treat with contempt. UPCHUCKED (23) [verb] To vomit. UPCLIMBED (18) UPHOARDED (16) UPLIGHTED (16) UPPROPPED (18) UPREACHED (17) UPRIGHTED (16) UPSHIFTED (18) [verb] To shift to a higher gear | [verb] To shift to a higher level, such as of frequency, growth rate, economic level, etc. UPSTARTED (12) UPSTEPPED (16) UPSTIRRED (12) UPSWELLED (15) URBANISED (12) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URBANIZED (21) [verb] To make something more urban in character. | [verb] To take up an urban way of life. URTICATED (12) [verb] To have or produce a stinging sensation, as of nettles or urticating hair. VALIDATED (14) [verb] To render valid. | [verb] To check or prove the validity of; verify. | [verb] To have its validity successfully proven. VALORISED (13) [verb] To assess (something) as being valuable or admirable. | [verb] To fix the price of (something) at an artificially high level, usually by government action. VALORIZED (22) [verb] To assess (something) as being valuable or admirable. | [verb] To fix the price of (something) at an artificially high level, usually by government action. VAPORISED (15) [adjective] Alternative spelling of vaporized | [verb] To turn into vapor. VAPORIZED (24) [verb] To turn into vapor. VARICOSED (15) VARISIZED (22) VARNISHED (16) [verb] To apply varnish. | [verb] To cover up with varnish. | [verb] To gloss over a defect. VEGETATED (14) [verb] (of a plant) To grow or sprout. | [verb] (of a wart etc) To spread abnormally. | [verb] To live or spend a period of time in a dull, inactive, unchallenging way. VELARIZED (22) [verb] To raise the back of the tongue toward the velum while articulating another consonant, such as the l of English pool. | [verb] To replace a (usually more front) consonant with a velar. VENENATED (13) VENERATED (13) [verb] To treat with great respect and deference. | [verb] To revere or hold in awe. VERANDAED (14) VERBIFIED (18) VERSIFIED (16) [verb] To make or compose verses | [verb] To tell in verse; deal with in verse form | [verb] To turn (prose) into poetry; rewrite in verse form VESICATED (15) [verb] To blister; to raise blisters on. VICTUALED (15) [verb] To provide with food; to provision. | [verb] To lay in food supplies. | [verb] To eat. VIDEOLAND (14) VIGNETTED (14) [verb] To make, as an engraving or a photograph, with a border or edge gradually fading away. VINEGARED (14) VITALISED (13) [verb] To give life to something; to animate. | [verb] To make more vigorous; to invigorate or stimulate. VITALIZED (22) [verb] To give life to something; to animate. | [verb] To make more vigorous; to invigorate or stimulate. VITRIFIED (16) [adjective] Converted into glass | [verb] To convert into, or cause to resemble, glass or a glassy substance, by heat and fusion. | [verb] To be converted into glass, especially through heat. VITRIOLED (13) VOCALISED (15) [verb] To express with the voice, to utter. | [verb] (of animals) To produce noises or calls from the throat. | [verb] To sing without using words. VOCALIZED (24) [verb] To express with the voice, to utter. | [verb] (of animals) To produce noises or calls from the throat. | [verb] To sing without using words. VOLKSLIED (17) VOLPLANED (15) [verb] To make a volplane. VOUCHERED (18) VOWELIZED (25) [verb] To give the quality, sound, or office of a vowel to. | [verb] To insert a vowel or vowels into. WADSETTED (14) WAISTBAND (15) [noun] A band of fabric encircling the waist, especially a part of a pair of pants or a skirt. WALLBOARD (15) [noun] A construction material of pre-made boards used for walls and ceilings, usually a gypsum core with a paper surface. WAMPISHED (20) WARRANTED (13) [verb] To protect, keep safe (from danger). | [verb] To give (someone) an assurance or guarantee (of something); also, with a double object: to guarantee (someone something). | [verb] To guarantee (something) to be (of a specified quality, value, etc.). WASHBOARD (18) [noun] A board with a corrugated surface against which laundry may be rubbed. | [noun] Such a board used as a simple percussion instrument. | [noun] A board fastened along a ship's gunwale to prevent splashing; a splashboard. WASHSTAND (16) [noun] (furniture) A table containing a basin and a pitcher of water for washing | [noun] In a stable or garage, a place in the floor prepared so that carriages or automobiles may be washed there and the water run off. WASSAILED (13) [verb] To toast, to drink to the health of another. | [verb] To drink wassail. | [verb] To go from house to house at Christmastime, singing carols. WASTELAND (13) [noun] A region with no remaining resources; a desert. | [noun] Any barren or uninteresting place. WATCHBAND (20) WATCHWORD (21) [noun] A word used as a motto, as expressive of a principle, belief or rule of action; a rallying cry. | [noun] A prearranged reply to the challenge of a sentry or a guard; a password or signal by which friends can be known from enemies. WATERBIRD (15) [noun] Any bird that inhabits a freshwater environment. WATERSHED (16) [noun] The topographical boundary dividing two adjacent catchment basins, such as a ridge or a crest. | [noun] A region of land within which water flows down into a specified body, such as a river, lake, sea, or ocean; a drainage basin. | [noun] A critical point marking a change in course or development. WATERWEED (16) [noun] Any of several aquatic herbs of the genus Elodea. WEASELLED (13) [verb] To achieve by clever or devious means. | [verb] To gain something for oneself by clever or devious means. | [verb] To engage in clever or devious behavior. WEATHERED (16) [verb] To expose to the weather, or show the effects of such exposure, or to withstand such effects. | [verb] (by extension) To sustain the trying effect of; to bear up against and overcome; to endure; to resist. | [verb] To break down, of rocks and other materials, under the effects of exposure to rain, sunlight, temperature, and air. WEEKENDED (18) [verb] To spend the weekend. WESTBOUND (15) [adjective] Which is, or will be, moving towards the west. | [adverb] Towards the west; in a westerly direction. WHICKERED (22) [verb] Of a horse, to neigh softly, to make a breathy whinny. WHIMPERED (20) [verb] To cry or sob softly and intermittently. | [verb] To cry with a low, whining, broken voice; to whine; to complain. | [verb] To say something in a whimpering manner. WHIPSAWED (21) [verb] To operate a whipsaw. | [verb] To cause (a trader) to lose potential profit by buying shares just before the price falls, or by selling them just before the price rises. | [verb] To defeat someone in two different ways at once. WHIRLWIND (19) [noun] A violent windstorm of limited extent, as the tornado, characterized by an inward spiral motion of the air with an upward current in the center; a vortex of air. It usually has a rapid progressive motion. | [noun] A person or body of objects or events sweeping violently onward. | [adjective] Rapid and minimal: a whirlwind tour, a whirlwind romance. WHISKERED (20) WHISPERED (18) [verb] To speak softly, or under the breath, so as to be heard only by one near at hand; to utter words without sonant breath; to talk without that vibration in the larynx which gives sonorous, or vocal, sound. | [verb] To mention privately and confidentially, or in a whisper. | [verb] To make a low, sibilant sound. WHITEHEAD (19) [noun] A pimple formed by a clogged sebaceous gland, usually with a milky-white cap. | [noun] A species of passerine bird, endemic to New Zealand (Mohoua albicilla) | [noun] The blue-winged snow goose, Anser caerulescens caerulescens. WHITEWOOD (19) [noun] Any of several deciduous trees that are used for furniture, especially the tulip tree. | [noun] The wood of these trees. | [noun] A prototype version of a pinball table, without the final artwork. WIDOWHOOD (20) [noun] The state or period of being a widow or widower. WIGWAGGED (19) [verb] To move gently in one direction and then another; to wig or wiggle, to wag or waggle. | [verb] To oscillate between two states. | [verb] To send a signal by waving a flag to and fro. WINDROWED (17) WITCHWEED (21) [noun] Any of several flowering plants of the genus Striga, from Africa and Asia, some of which are parasitic to crops. WITHSTAND (16) [verb] To resist or endure (something) successfully. | [verb] To oppose (something) forcefully. WITHSTOOD (16) [verb] To resist or endure (something) successfully. | [verb] To oppose (something) forcefully. WITNESSED (13) [verb] To furnish proof of, to show. | [verb] To take as evidence. | [verb] To see or gain knowledge of through experience. WOLFHOUND (19) [noun] A dog of various breeds originally developed to hunt wolves. WOMANHOOD (18) [noun] The state or condition of being an adult female human being, as distinguished from a child or a man Compare adulthood. Contrast manhood and childhood. | [noun] All of the adult female human beingss of a given locality, region, district, country, nation or state, or all of the adult female humans pertaining to a given human subgroup (culture, ethnicity, race, etc.), regarded collectively | [noun] The idealized nature of an adult female human: all of the characteristics traditionally and ideally ascribed to womanliness, as regarded collectively WOMANISED (15) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANIZED (24) [verb] (said of a man) To flirt with and/or seduce, or attempt to seduce, women, especially lecherously. | [verb] (usually figurative) To turn into a woman; to feminize. WOMANKIND (19) [noun] Women, taken collectively. WOMENKIND (19) [noun] All women around the world viewed as one entity. WORSHIPED (18) [verb] To reverence (a deity, etc.) with supreme respect and veneration; to perform religious exercises in honour of. | [verb] To honour with extravagant love and extreme submission, as a lover; to adore; to idolize. | [verb] To participate in religious ceremonies. WRISTBAND (15) [noun] The cuff of a sleeve that wraps around the wrist | [noun] A strip of material worn around the wrist, e.g. to absorb perspiration, especially in sports | [noun] A band that supports a wristwatch YOUTHENED (16) ZEBRAWOOD (24) [noun] Any wood with a figure (grain pattern) like the striping of a zebra, most often wood of the genus Microberlinia. ZIGZAGGED (31) [verb] To move or to twist in a zigzag manner. ZINCIFIED (24) ZINKIFIED (26) ZOMBIFIED (26) [adjective] Having been made into a zombie, or induced to behave in a zombie-like fashion. | [verb] (fictional) To turn into a zombie (a member of the living dead or undead). | [verb] To take control of (a computer) in order to use it covertly and illicitly.

10-Letter Words (2016)

ABOMINATED (15) [verb] To feel disgust towards; to loathe or detest thoroughly; to hate in the highest degree, as if with religious dread. | [verb] To dislike strongly. ABOVEBOARD (18) [adjective] In open sight; without trick, concealment, or deception. ABSTRACTED (15) [verb] To separate; to disengage. | [verb] To remove; to take away; withdraw. | [verb] To steal; to take away; to remove without permission. ABSTRICTED (15) ACCLIMATED (17) [verb] To habituate to a climate not native; to acclimatize. | [verb] To adjust to a new environment; not necessarily a wild, natural, earthy one. | [verb] To become accustomed to a new climate or environment. ACCOUTERED (15) [verb] To furnish with dress or equipments, especially those for military service ACCREDITED (16) [verb] To ascribe; attribute; credit with. | [verb] To put or bring into credit; to invest with credit or authority; to sanction. | [verb] To send with letters credential, as an ambassador, envoy, or diplomatic agent; to authorize, as a messenger or delegate. | [adjective] Given official approval after meeting certain standards, as an accredited university; or as disease free cattle. ACCUSTOMED (17) [adjective] (of a person) Familiar with something through repeated experience; adapted to existing conditions. | [adjective] (of a thing, condition, activity, etc.) Familiar through use; usual; customary. | [adjective] Frequented by customers. ACETANILID (13) [noun] A white crystalline compound derived from aniline, used as a mild analgesic and antipyretic drug. ACETYLATED (16) [verb] To react with acetic acid or one of its derivatives; to introduce one or more acetyl groups into a substance | [adjective] That has been reacted with acetic acid (or one of its derivatives), or has been modified by the attachment of acetyl groups. ACIDULATED (14) [verb] To make slightly or moderately acid; to acidify. | [verb] To make sour in a moderate degree; to sour somewhat. | [verb] To use an acidic catalyst, with the chemical change being emphasised over the importance of the change in pH. Used in the processing of biodiesel co-products. ACQUAINTED (22) [verb] (followed by with) To furnish or give experimental knowledge of; to make (one) to know; to make familiar. | [verb] (followed by of or that) To communicate notice to; to inform; to make cognizant. | [verb] To familiarize; to accustom. ACQUIESCED (24) [verb] (with in (or sometimes with, to)) To rest satisfied, or apparently satisfied, or to rest without opposition and discontent (usually implying previous opposition or discontent); to accept or consent by silence or by omitting to object. | [verb] To concur upon conviction; as, to acquiesce in an opinion; to assent to; usually, to concur, not heartily but so far as to forbear opposition. ACTUALIZED (22) [verb] To make real; to realize. | [verb] To become actual or real. | [verb] To realize one's full potential. ADDLEPATED (15) [adjective] Confused, scatterbrained, or silly; having impaired mental faculties. ADMEASURED (14) [verb] Past tense of admeasure; to measure out or apportion. ADMONISHED (17) [verb] To warn or notify of a fault; to reprove gently or kindly, but seriously; to exhort. | [verb] To counsel against wrong practices; to caution or advise; to warn against danger or an offense; — followed by of, against, or a subordinate clause. | [verb] To instruct or direct; to inform; to notify. ADUMBRATED (16) [verb] To foreshadow vaguely. | [verb] To give a vague outline. | [verb] To obscure or overshadow. ADVANTAGED (16) [verb] To provide (someone) with an advantage, to give an edge to | [verb] To do something for one's own benefit; to take advantage of | [adjective] Having been given an advantage, such as by biased referees in a competition. ADVENTURED (15) [verb] To risk or hazard; jeopard; venture. | [verb] To venture upon; to run the risk of; to dare. | [verb] To try the chance; to take the risk. ADVERTISED (15) [verb] To give (especially public) notice of (something); to announce publicly. | [verb] To provide information about a person or goods and services to influence others. | [verb] To provide public information about (a product, service etc.) in order to attract public awareness and increase sales. ADVERTIZED (24) [verb] Past tense of advertize, an alternative spelling of advertise, meaning to make something publicly known or promote a product or service. AEROBRAKED (17) [verb] To perform aerobraking. AESTIVATED (14) [verb] To go into stasis or torpor in the summer months. AFFILIATED (17) [verb] To adopt; to receive into a family as one's offspring | [verb] To bring or receive into close connection; to ally. | [verb] (said of an illegitimate child) To fix the paternity of AFFORESTED (17) [verb] To make into forest | [adjective] Created by afforestation. AFFRIGHTED (21) [verb] To terrify, to frighten, to inspire fright in. | [adjective] Terrified. AFTERWORLD (17) [noun] A supposed world that is entered after death; the realm of the afterlife. AGGRAVATED (16) [verb] To make (an offence) worse or more severe; to increase in offensiveness or heinousness. | [verb] (by extension) To make worse; to exacerbate. | [verb] To give extra weight or intensity to; to exaggerate, to magnify. AGGREGATED (14) [verb] To bring together; to collect into a mass or sum. | [verb] To add or unite (e.g. a person), to an association. | [verb] To amount in the aggregate to. AIRBRUSHED (16) [verb] To paint using an airbrush. | [verb] To touch up or enhance a photograph or person, often with intent to mislead. | [adjective] Having been manipulated with an airbrush. AIRDROPPED (16) [verb] To delivery goods, equipment, or personnel by dropping them from an aircraft in flight. | [adjective] Dropped from an aircraft AIRPROOFED (16) ALCHEMIZED (27) [verb] To change something's properties by means of alchemy. ALKALIFIED (18) ALLEVIATED (14) [verb] To make less severe, as a pain or difficulty. | [adjective] Made more bearable. ALLOWANCED (16) [verb] To put upon a fixed allowance (especially of provisions and drink). | [verb] To supply in a fixed and limited quantity. ALPHABETED (18) ALTERCATED (13) [verb] To argue, quarrel or wrangle. ALTERNATED (11) [verb] To perform by turns, or in succession; to cause to succeed by turns; to interchange regularly. | [verb] To happen, succeed, or act by turns; to follow reciprocally in place or time; followed by with. | [verb] To vary by turns. ALUMINIZED (22) [verb] To coat with a layer of aluminium. AMBITIONED (15) AMBUSCADED (18) [verb] To lie in wait for, or to attack from a covert or lurking place; to waylay. AMMONIATED (15) [verb] To treat with ammonia. AMMONIFIED (18) [verb] Past tense of ammonify; converted into ammonia or ammonium compounds through the action of bacteria or other agents. AMPHIPLOID (20) [noun] An organism that contains chromosome sets from two or more different species, typically arising from hybridization followed by chromosome doubling. AMYGDALOID (18) [noun] A variety of trap or basaltic rock, containing small cavities, occupied, wholly or in part, by nodules or geodes of different minerals, especially agates, quartz, calcite, and the zeolites. When the imbedded minerals are detached or removed by decomposition, it is porous, like lava. | [adjective] Shaped like an almond | [adjective] Relating to the amygdala ANAGRAMMED (16) [verb] Past tense of anagram; to rearrange the letters of a word or phrase to form another word or phrase. | [adjective] Formed by rearranging letters from another word or phrase. ANALOGIZED (21) [verb] To express as an analogy. | [verb] To treat one thing as analogous to another. ANATOMISED (13) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANATOMIZED (22) [verb] To inspect or investigate by dissection. | [verb] To scrutinize down to the most minute detail. ANCESTORED (13) ANGLICISED (14) [verb] To make English, as to customs, culture, pronunciation, spelling, or style. | [verb] To dub or translate into English. | [verb] To become English. ANGLICIZED (23) [verb] To make English, as to customs, culture, pronunciation, spelling, or style. | [verb] To dub or translate into English. | [verb] To become English. ANIMALIZED (22) [verb] To represent in the form of an animal. | [verb] To brutalize. | [verb] To convert or produce material rich in animal substance. ANNUALIZED (20) [verb] To express (a quantity such as an interest rate, profit, expenditure etc.) as if it applied or were measured over one year. ANTEVERTED (14) [verb] To prevent. | [verb] To displace by anteversion. | [adjective] Turned or tipped forward. ANTHROPOID (16) [noun] An anthropoid animal. | [adjective] Having characteristics of a human, usually in terms of shape or appearance | [adjective] Having characteristics of an ape ANTIQUATED (20) [adjective] Old-fashioned, out of date APOLOGISED (14) [verb] (often followed by “for”) To make an apology or excuse; to acknowledge some fault or offense, with expression of regret for it, by way of amends | [verb] To express regret that a certain event has occurred. | [verb] To make an apologia or defense; to act as apologist. APOLOGIZED (23) [verb] (often followed by “for”) To make an apology or excuse; to acknowledge some fault or offense, with expression of regret for it, by way of amends | [verb] To express regret that a certain event has occurred. | [verb] To make an apologia or defense; to act as apologist. APPARELLED (15) [verb] To dress or clothe; to attire. | [verb] To furnish with apparatus; to equip; to fit out. | [verb] To dress with external ornaments; to cover with something ornamental APPROACHED (20) [verb] To come or go near, in place or time; to draw nigh; to advance nearer. | [verb] To draw near, in a figurative sense; to make advances; to approximate. | [verb] To come near to in place, time, character or value; to draw nearer to. APPROBATED (17) [verb] To give official sanction, consent or authorization to. AQUAPLANED (22) [verb] To ride such a board | [verb] For a car or similar vehicle to slide along the road on a thin film of water between the road and the tyres. This occurs when a car has some speed and comes to somewhere with more water on the road than the weight of the car and the grooves in the tyre tread pattern (if any) can push away. The result is almost no traction at all for steering or braking. AQUATINTED (20) [verb] To make such etchings. ARABICIZED (24) [verb] Converted to or influenced by Arabic language, culture, or customs. ARBITRAGED (14) [verb] To employ arbitrage | [verb] To engage in arbitrage in, between, or among ARBITRATED (13) [verb] To make a judgment (on a dispute) as an arbitrator or arbiter | [verb] To submit (a dispute) to such judgment | [verb] To assign an arbitrary value to, or otherwise determine arbitrarily. AROMATIZED (22) [verb] To make aromatic, fragrant, or spicy. | [verb] To convert into an aromatic compound by means of a chemical reaction. ASSOCIATED (13) [verb] To join in or form a league, union, or association. | [verb] To spend time socially; keep company. | [verb] (with with) To join as a partner, ally, or friend. ASTARBOARD (13) ASTERIATED (11) [adjective] Marked with or containing asterisks; having a star-shaped pattern or appearance. ASTERISKED (15) [verb] To mark or replace with an asterisk symbol (*); star. ASTONISHED (14) [verb] To surprise greatly. | [adjective] Amazed; surprised. ATTEMPERED (15) [verb] Past tense of attemper; to moderate or regulate the temperature or consistency of something, especially in metallurgy or music. ATTENUATED (11) [verb] To reduce in size, force, value, amount, or degree. | [verb] To make thinner, as by physically reshaping, starving, or decaying. | [verb] To become thin or fine; to grow less. ATTRIBUTED (13) [verb] To ascribe (something) to a given cause, reason etc. | [verb] To associate ownership or authorship of (something) to someone. | [adjective] Decorated with an attribute AUDITIONED (12) [verb] To evaluate one or more performers in through an audition. | [verb] To take part in such a performance. AUTHORISED (14) [verb] To grant (someone) the permission or power necessary to do (something). | [verb] To permit (something), to sanction or consent to (something). | [adjective] Explicitly allowed. AUTHORIZED (23) [verb] To grant (someone) the permission or power necessary to do (something). | [verb] To permit (something), to sanction or consent to (something). | [adjective] Explicitly allowed. AUTOCLAVED (16) [verb] To sterilize laboratory equipment in an autoclave. AVALANCHED (19) [verb] To descend like an avalanche. | [verb] To come down upon; to overwhelm. | [verb] To propel downward like an avalanche. BACKFILLED (22) [verb] To refill a hole with the material dug out of it. | [verb] To refill an excavation unit to restore the former ground surface and/or to preserve the unit and make it recognizable as having been excavated. | [verb] To provide reserve support. BACKFITTED (22) [verb] Past tense of backfit; to fit or install something, especially equipment or a system, into an existing structure or device that was not originally designed for it. BACKGROUND (20) [noun] One's social heritage, or previous life; what one did in the past. | [noun] A part of the picture that depicts scenery to the rear or behind the main subject; context. | [noun] Information relevant to the current situation about past events; history. BACKHANDED (23) [verb] To execute a backhand stroke or throw | [verb] To slap with the back of one's hand | [adjective] With the back of the hand. BACKHAULED (22) [verb] Past tense of backhaul; to return a vehicle or transport that would otherwise travel empty by carrying cargo on the return journey. | [verb] To transport goods on a return journey at a reduced rate to avoid traveling empty. BACKLASHED (22) [verb] Past tense of backlash; to have a strong adverse reaction or recoil. | [verb] To strike or whip with a backlash (a sudden jerking movement of a rope or cord). BACKLISTED (19) BACKLOGGED (21) [adjective] Having a large accumulation of unfinished work or tasks waiting to be processed. | [verb] Past tense of backlog; accumulated in or formed a backlog. BACKPACKED (27) [verb] To hike and camp overnight in backcountry with one's gear carried in a backpack | [verb] To engage in low-cost, generally urban, travel with minimal luggage and frugal accommodations | [verb] To place or carry (an item or items) in a backpack BACKSPACED (23) [verb] To remove a character behind a cursor. | [verb] To move a magnetic tape to a previous block. BACKWASHED (25) [verb] To operate a water filter in the reverse direction in order to clean it. | [verb] To affect with backwash. | [verb] To clean the oil from wool after combing. BACTERIZED (24) [verb] Past tense of bacterize; to treat or inoculate with bacteria, or to subject to bacterial action. BADMOUTHED (19) [verb] To criticize or malign, especially unfairly or spitefully. BAKSHISHED (23) [verb] Past tense of bakshish, meaning to give a gratuity or bribe, particularly in Middle Eastern or South Asian contexts. BALKANIZED (26) [verb] To break up into small, mutually hostile units, especially on a political basis. BALLYHOOED (19) [verb] To sensationalise or make grand claims. | [adjective] Sensationalised; presented with grand claims. BAMBOOZLED (26) [verb] To con, defraud, trick, to make a fool of, to humbug or impose on someone. | [verb] To confuse, frustrate or perplex. BANISTERED (13) [adjective] Fitted with a banister or banisters (railings on stairs or balconies). BANKROLLED (17) [verb] To fund a project; to underwrite something. BANKRUPTED (19) [verb] To force into bankruptcy. BARBARIZED (24) [verb] To cause to become savage or uncultured. | [verb] To become savage or uncultured. | [verb] To adopt a foreign or barbarous mode of speech. BAREBACKED (21) [adjective] Riding a horse without a saddle. | [adjective] Done or undertaken without protective equipment or precautions. BAREFOOTED (16) [adjective] Wearing nothing on the feet; barefoot. | [adverb] Wearing nothing on the feet; barefoot. BAREHEADED (17) [adjective] Having no covering on the head. | [adverb] With no covering on the head. BARGEBOARD (16) [noun] A board fastened to the projecting gables of a roof to protect and hide other timbers. BARRELHEAD (16) [noun] The flat top of a barrel that has been stood vertically. BARRICADED (16) [verb] To close or block a road etc., using a barricade | [verb] To keep someone in (or out), using a blockade, especially ships in a port BAYONETTED (16) [verb] Past tense of bayonet; to stab or pierce with a bayonet. | [adjective] Equipped with or having a bayonet attached. BEAUTIFIED (16) [adjective] Having been made beautiful. | [verb] To make beautiful, or to increase the beauty of. | [verb] To become beautiful. BECARPETED (17) [adjective] Covered with or as if with carpet. BECLAMORED (17) BECOWARDED (19) BECUDGELED (17) BEDARKENED (18) [verb] Past tense of bedarkened; made dark or darkened. BEDEAFENED (17) BEDEVILLED (17) [verb] To harass or cause trouble for; to plague. | [verb] To perplex or bewilder. BEDIAPERED (16) BEDRAGGLED (16) [verb] To make (something) wet and limp, especially by dragging it along the ground. | [adjective] Wet and limp; unkempt. | [adjective] Decaying, decrepit or dilapidated. BEDRENCHED (19) [verb] Drenched thoroughly; soaked completely with liquid. BEDRIVELED (17) BEFINGERED (17) BEFLOWERED (19) [verb] To cover with flowers. BEFOREHAND (19) [adjective] In comfortable circumstances as regards property; forehanded. | [adjective] (often followed by with) In a state of anticipation or preoccupation. | [adverb] At an earlier or preceding time. BEFRIENDED (17) [verb] To become a friend of, to make friends with. | [verb] To act as a friend to, to assist. | [verb] To favor. BEGGARWEED (18) [noun] A tropical American plant of the legume family with purple flowers, also known as beggar-lice or tick clover. | [noun] Any of various plants with burrs or seeds that cling to clothing. BEGLAMORED (16) BEHINDHAND (20) [adjective] (of a person) Late, tardy, overdue, behind (in accomplishing a task, etc.). | [adjective] (of a task or the object of a task) Not at the expected point of completion. | [adjective] Behind (someone or something moving, a trend, etc.), lagging behind, not keeping up. BEJEWELLED (23) [verb] To decorate or bedeck with jewels or gems. BEKNIGHTED (21) BELABOURED (15) [verb] To labour about; labour over; work hard upon; ply diligently. | [verb] To beat soundly; thump; beat someone. | [verb] To attack someone verbally. BELIQUORED (22) BELLYACHED (21) [verb] To unnecessarily complain or whine, often about simple matters. BEMADDENED (17) [verb] Past tense of bemadden; driven to madness or made extremely angry. BEMEDALLED (16) [adjective] Decorated with or wearing medals, especially military decorations. BEMURMURED (17) BENEFITTED (16) [verb] To be or to provide a benefit to. | [verb] To receive a benefit (from); to be a beneficiary. BEQUEATHED (25) [verb] To give or leave by will; to give by testament. | [verb] To hand down; to transmit. | [verb] To give; to offer; to commit. BERASCALED (15) BERIBBONED (17) [verb] To trim with ribbon BESCORCHED (20) BESCREENED (15) BESHADOWED (20) [verb] Past tense of beshadow; to cast a shadow over or to darken. | [adjective] Covered or darkened by shadow; overshadowed. BESHIVERED (19) BESHROUDED (17) [verb] Past tense of beshroud; to cover or envelop completely, as if with a shroud. BESMIRCHED (20) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To tarnish something, especially someone's reputation. BESMOOTHED (18) BETATTERED (13) BEWILDERED (17) [verb] To confuse, disorientate, or puzzle someone, especially with many different choices. | [adjective] Baffled, confused, mystified, at a loss, not thinking clearly, or uncertain. BIFURCATED (18) [verb] To divide or fork into two channels or branches. | [verb] To cause to bifurcate. | [adjective] Divided into two branches; twoforked, twiforked. BIGHEARTED (17) [adjective] Noble, kind and generous BIGMOUTHED (19) [adjective] Loudmouthed or inclined to talk too much; characterized by indiscreet or boastful speech. BIOASSAYED (16) [verb] Past tense of bioassay; to perform a bioassay, which is a test to determine the concentration or potency of a substance by measuring its effect on living organisms or biological systems. BITTERWEED (16) [noun] A plant of the aster family with small yellow flowers, found in North America and known for its bitter taste. | [noun] Any of various plants considered weeds that have a bitter flavor or taste. BIVOUACKED (22) [verb] To set up camp. | [verb] To watch at night or be on guard, as a whole army. | [verb] To encamp for the night without tents or covering. BLACKBOARD (21) [noun] A large flat surface, finished with black slate or a similar material, that can be written upon with chalk and subsequently erased; a chalkboard. | [verb] To use a blackboard to assist in an informal discussion. BLACKGUARD (20) [noun] (old-fashioned, usually used only of men) A scoundrel; an unprincipled contemptible person; an untrustworthy person. | [noun] A man who uses foul language in front of a woman, typically a woman of high standing in society. | [verb] To revile or abuse in scurrilous language. BLANDISHED (17) [verb] To persuade someone by using flattery; to cajole. | [verb] To praise someone dishonestly; to flatter or butter up. BLASPHEMED (20) [verb] To commit blasphemy; to speak against God or religious doctrine. | [verb] To speak of, or address, with impious irreverence; to revile impiously (anything sacred). | [verb] To calumniate; to revile; to abuse. BLINDSIDED (15) [verb] To attack (a person) on his or her blind side. | [verb] To catch off guard; to take by surprise. BLOODHOUND (17) [noun] A large scenthound famed for its ability to follow a scent many days old, over vast distances. This dog is often used as a police dog to track missing people, fleeing suspects, or escaped prisoners. | [noun] A detective or other person skilled at finding people or clues. | [noun] A bloodthirsty person. BLUDGEONED (15) [verb] To strike or hit with something hard, usually on the head; to club. | [verb] To coerce someone, as if with a bludgeon. BOBSLEDDED (17) [verb] Past tense of bobsled; to ride or race in a bobsled. BODYSURFED (20) [verb] To ride waves or surf without equipment, such as a surfboard. BOMBINATED (17) [verb] To buzz or hum BONEHEADED (17) [adjective] Stupid or foolish; lacking intelligence or good sense. BOOTLEGGED (15) [verb] To make, transport and/or sell illegal alcoholic liquor. | [verb] To make, transport and/or sell an illegal version or copy of a copyrighted product. | [verb] To engage in bootlegging. BOOTLICKED (19) [verb] To seek favor from by fawning, servile behavior. | [verb] To engage in fawning, servile behavior. BORDERLAND (14) [noun] Land near a border; marches BOTTOMLAND (15) [noun] Flat land along a river, lying few feet above normal high water, often consisting of alluvial deposits and naturally fertile. BOURGEONED (14) [verb] Past tense of bourgeon; to grow, flourish, or bud forth rapidly. BRACHIATED (18) [verb] To move like a brachiator; to swing from branch to branch, advance by brachiation. BRACHIOPOD (20) [noun] Any of many marine invertebrates, of the phylum Brachiopoda, that have bivalve dorsal and ventral shells with two tentacle-bearing arms that capture food BRAINCHILD (18) [noun] A creation, original idea, or innovation, usually used to indicate the originators BRANDISHED (17) [verb] To move or swing a weapon back and forth, particularly if demonstrating anger, threat or skill. | [verb] To bear something with ostentatious show. BRASSBOUND (15) [adjective] Bound or reinforced with brass; having brass fittings or bands. | [adjective] Inflexible or rigid in manner or attitude. BRAZILWOOD (25) [noun] A tropical American tree that yields a red dye, formerly used in dyeing fabrics and in the production of dye. BREADBOARD (16) [noun] A cutting board, especially for cutting bread. | [noun] A pull-out cutting board underneath a counter, found in many kitchens. | [noun] A reusable solderless device used to build a (usually temporary) prototype of an electronic circuit and for experimenting with circuit designs. BRECCIATED (17) [adjective] Formed or broken into breccia BRICKFIELD (22) [noun] A place where bricks are made; a brickyard. BRIDESMAID (16) [noun] A woman who attends a bride during her wedding ceremony, as part of the main wedding party. | [noun] (entertainment) A person or team that perennially finishes well, but never first. | [verb] To act as a bridesmaid for; to attend a bride during her wedding ceremony. BRIDGEHEAD (18) [noun] An area around the end of a bridge. | [noun] A fortification around the end of a bridge. | [noun] An area of ground on the enemy's side of a river or other obstacle, especially one that needs to be taken and defended in order to secure an advance. BRIGHTENED (17) [verb] To make bright or brighter in color. | [verb] To make illustrious, or more distinguished; to add luster or splendor to | [verb] To make more cheerful and pleasant; to enliven BRIQUETTED (22) [verb] Past tense of briquette; formed into briquettes (compressed blocks of coal dust or charcoal used as fuel). BROADSIDED (15) [verb] To collide with something sideways on BROADSWORD (17) [noun] (history) A type of early modern sword that has a broad double-edged blade for cutting (as opposed to the more slender thrust-oriented rapier) and a basket hilt. | [noun] A person armed with such a sword. | [noun] Any type of sword that is comparatively long; depending on context, applied to swords of the Bronze Age, Migration period, Viking Age and Renaissance era. BROMINATED (15) [verb] To treat or react with bromine or hydrobromic acid, to introduce bromine into a compound. | [adjective] Treated or reacted with bromine or hydrobromic acid. | [adjective] Formally derived from another compound by the replacement of one or more atoms of hydrogen with bromine. BROWNFIELD (19) [noun] A site, to be used for housing or commerce, that has been previously used for industry and may be contaminated or need extensive clearing | [adjective] Being a development that has to integrate with legacy systems. BROWNNOSED (16) [verb] To flatter someone (especially a superior) in an obsequious manner, and to support their every opinion. BRUTALISED (13) [verb] To inflict brutal violence on. | [verb] To make brutal, cruel or harsh. | [verb] To live or behave like a brute. BRUTALIZED (22) [verb] To inflict brutal violence on. | [verb] To make brutal, cruel or harsh. | [verb] To live or behave like a brute. BUBBLEHEAD (20) [noun] A stupid person. | [noun] A submariner; bubble-head. | [noun] A navy hard hat or salvage diver (inspired by the shape of the old spun-copper diving helmet). BUFFLEHEAD (22) [noun] A duck in the goldeneye genus, Bucephala albeola. | [noun] One who has a large head; a heavy, stupid fellow. BULLDOGGED (16) [verb] To chase (a steer) on horseback and wrestle it to the ground by twisting its horns (as a rodeo performance). BULLETINED (13) [verb] Past tense of "bulletin," meaning to publish or announce something in a bulletin or official notice. BULLHEADED (17) [adjective] Unreasonably stubborn. BULLNECKED (19) [adjective] Having a short, thick neck; characterized by a heavily muscled or bull-like neck. BURLESQUED (22) [verb] To make a burlesque parody of. | [verb] To ridicule, or to make ludicrous by grotesque representation in action or in language. BUTTERWEED (16) [noun] A North American wildflower of the aster family with yellow flowers, typically found in moist areas. | [noun] Any of various plants with yellow flowers, particularly those in the genus Actinomeris or Helenium. BUTTONWOOD (16) [noun] The common name given to at least three species of shrub or tree. BUTTRESSED (13) [verb] To support something physically with, or as if with, a prop or buttress. | [verb] (by extension) To support something or someone by supplying evidence; to corroborate or substantiate. | [adjective] Having buttresses or supports. CAKEWALKED (24) [verb] To perform the cakewalk dance. CALCIMINED (17) [verb] To coat with this substance. CALCULATED (15) [verb] To determine the value of something or the solution to something by a mathematical process. | [verb] To determine values or solutions by a mathematical process; reckon. | [verb] To plan; to expect; to think. CALENDARED (14) [verb] To set a date for a proceeding in court, usually done by a judge at a calendar call. | [verb] To enter or write in a calendar; to register. CALENDERED (14) [verb] To press between rollers for the purpose of making smooth and glossy, or wavy, as woolen and silk stuffs, linens, paper etc., as in a calender. CALIBRATED (15) [verb] To check or adjust by comparison with a standard. | [verb] To mark the scale of a measuring instrument. | [verb] To measure the caliber of a tube or gun. CALLIPERED (15) [verb] Past tense of caliper; measured or compared using calipers. | [adjective] Equipped with or measured by calipers. CAMELOPARD (17) [noun] A giraffe. CAMPAIGNED (18) [verb] To take part in a campaign. | [verb] Consistently ride in races for a racing season. CAMPGROUND (18) [noun] An area where tents are pitched. | [noun] An area where a camp meeting (a retreat) (trail ride and party) is held. CANDLEWOOD (17) CANNONADED (14) [verb] To discharge artillery fire upon. CAPSULATED (15) [adjective] Enclosed in or formed into a capsule; having a capsule around it. CAPSULIZED (24) [verb] To enclose (a medication etc) in a capsule. | [verb] To make into a concise form; to encapsulate. CAPTIVATED (18) [verb] To attract and hold interest and attention of; charm. | [verb] To take prisoner; to capture; to subdue. CARACOLLED (15) [verb] Past tense of caracol; to move in a caracol (a half-turn or spiral movement, especially of a horse in dressage). CARAVANNED (16) [verb] Past tense of caravan; traveled in a caravan or group of vehicles/people moving together. CARBONATED (15) [adjective] Containing carbon dioxide gas under pressure, especially pertaining to beverages, as natural mineral water or man-made drinks. CARBONIZED (24) [verb] To turn something to carbon, especially by heating it; to scorch or blacken. | [verb] To react something with carbon. CARBUNCLED (17) [adjective] Having carbuncles; affected with or characterized by carbuncles (inflamed swellings or clusters of boils on the skin). CARBURETED (15) [verb] To react with carbon. | [verb] To mix (air) with hydrocarbons, especially with petroleum, as in an internal combustion engine. CARBURISED (15) [verb] To treat or react with carbon | [verb] To carbonize CARBURIZED (24) [verb] To treat or react with carbon | [verb] To carbonize CAROTENOID (13) [noun] Any of a class of yellow to red plant pigments including the carotenes and xanthophylls. | [adjective] Of or relating to such a class of pigments. CAROTINOID (13) [noun] Any of a class of yellow, orange, or red pigments found in plants, including carotenoids that serve as precursors to vitamin A. | [adjective] Relating to or containing carotenoids. CARPETWEED (18) [noun] A common annual weed (Phyla nodiflora or similar plants) with small flowers, found in lawns and disturbed areas. CARTELISED (13) [verb] To have an industry become controlled by a cartel. CARTELIZED (22) [verb] To have an industry become controlled by a cartel. CASTIGATED (14) [verb] To punish or reprimand someone severely. | [verb] To execrate or condemn something in a harsh manner, especially by public criticism. | [verb] To revise or make corrections to a publication. CATALOGUED (14) [verb] To put into a catalogue. | [verb] To make a catalogue of. | [verb] To add items (e.g. books) to an existing catalogue. CATAPULTED (15) [verb] To fire a missile from a catapult. | [verb] To fire or launch something, as if from a catapult. | [verb] To increase the status of something rapidly. CATECHIZED (27) [verb] To give oral instruction, especially of religion; now specifically by the formal question-and-answer method; in the Church of England, to teach the catechism as preparation for confirmation. | [verb] To question at length. CAUSEWAYED (19) [adjective] Having a causeway; constructed with or connected by a causeway. | [verb] Past tense of causeway, meaning to build a causeway across or to connect with a causeway. CAUTERIZED (22) [verb] To burn, sear, or freeze tissue using a hot iron, electric current or a caustic agent. CAVALIERED (16) CELEBRATED (15) [verb] To extol or honour in a solemn manner. | [verb] To honour by rites, by ceremonies of joy and respect, or by refraining from ordinary business; to observe duly. | [verb] To engage in joyful activity in appreciation of an event. CENTERFOLD (16) [noun] The single sheet of paper that forms the middle two pages of a magazine or other publication. | [noun] A large photograph printed on this sheet, typically in the form of a nude, or provocatively dressed, sexually attractive woman or man. | [noun] The person appearing in such a photograph. CEPHALOPOD (20) [noun] Any mollusc, of the class Cephalopoda, which includes squid, cuttlefish, octopus, nautiloids etc. CEREBRATED (15) [verb] To think or cogitate, especially so as to make inferences or decisions or to solve problems. CHAGRINNED (17) [adjective] Having a feeling of chagrin CHAINSAWED (19) [verb] Past tense of chainsaw; to cut with a chainsaw. CHAIRMANED (18) CHALKBOARD (22) [noun] A slate or enamel board for writing on with chalk; a predecessor to a whiteboard. CHALLENGED (17) [verb] To invite (someone) to take part in a competition. | [verb] To dare (someone). | [verb] To dispute (something). CHAMPIONED (20) [verb] To promote, advocate, or act as a champion for (a cause, etc.). | [verb] To challenge. CHANDELLED (17) [verb] Past tense of chandelle, an aerial maneuver in which an aircraft climbs steeply in a controlled turn to gain altitude while changing direction. CHANNELLED (16) [verb] To make or cut a channel or groove in. | [verb] To direct or guide along a desired course. | [verb] (of a spirit, as of a dead person) To serve as a medium for. CHAPERONED (18) [verb] To act as a chaperone. CHARCOALED (18) [verb] To draw with charcoal. | [verb] To cook over charcoal. CHARGEHAND (20) [noun] A person who is in charge of a small group of workers; a lesser foreman CHECKMATED (24) [verb] To put the king of an opponent into checkmate. | [verb] (by extension) To place in a losing situation that has no escape. | [adjective] Having a king in check with no possible move to escape check, thus losing the game. CHECKROWED (25) CHESSBOARD (18) [noun] The square board used in the game of chess, subdivided into eight rows of eight squares each, the squares in each row and column being of alternating colours. | [noun] A mathematical construction based on this pattern of squares CHIRONOMID (18) [noun] Any of the non-biting midges or Chironomidae, a family of true flies within the order Diptera. CHRISTENED (16) [verb] To perform the religious act of the baptism, to baptise. | [verb] To name. | [verb] To Christianize. CHRONICLED (18) [verb] To record in or as in a chronicle. CHURCHYARD (24) [noun] A patch of land adjoining a church, often used as a graveyard. CICATRIZED (24) [verb] To form a scar | [verb] To treat or heal a wound by causing a scar or cicatrix to form CIRCULATED (15) [verb] To move in circles or through a circuit | [verb] To cause (a person or thing) to move in circles or through a circuit | [verb] To move from person to person, as at a party CLANGOURED (14) [verb] Past tense of clangour; made a loud, resonant, metallic sound or series of sounds. CLASSIFIED (16) [adjective] Sorted into classes or categories | [adjective] Formally assigned by a government to one of several levels of sensitivity, usually (in English) top secret, secret, confidential, and, in some countries, restricted; thereby making disclosure to unauthorized persons illegal. | [adjective] Not meant to be disclosed by a person or organization. | [noun] A classified advertisement in a newspaper or magazine. CLAVICHORD (21) [noun] An early keyboard instrument producing a soft sound by means of metal blades (called tangents) attached to the inner ends of the keys gently striking the strings. CLOISTERED (13) [verb] To become a Roman Catholic religious. | [verb] To confine in a cloister, voluntarily or not. | [verb] To deliberately withdraw from worldly things. CLOTHBOUND (18) [adjective] (of a book) bound with cloth rather than leather or paper boards. CLUBFOOTED (18) [adjective] Having a club foot; affected with clubfoot, a congenital deformity of the foot. CLUBHAULED (18) [verb] Past tense of clubhaul; to turn a sailing ship around by hauling the foresail aback and swinging the stern around using the anchor. COADMITTED (16) [verb] Past tense of coadmit; to admit jointly or together with another person or entity. COAGULATED (14) [verb] To become congealed; to convert from a liquid to a semisolid mass. | [verb] To cause to congeal. | [adjective] Subject to coagulation. COANCHORED (18) COAPPEARED (17) [verb] Past tense of coappear; appeared together or simultaneously with another person or thing. COASSISTED (13) COASTGUARD (14) [noun] The organisation or officer enforcing maritime law and policing the seas within territorial waters. COATTENDED (14) COATTESTED (13) COAUTHORED (16) [verb] To write something in collaboration with another author. COCAINIZED (24) [adjective] Treated with or containing cocaine; under the influence of cocaine. COCKBILLED (21) [adjective] (of a hat) tilted or turned to one side; worn at an angle. COCKTAILED (19) [verb] Past tense of cocktail; to mix or combine different elements or substances, typically in the context of preparing a cocktail drink or figuratively blending various components together. COCULTURED (15) [verb] To culture together, usually with another type of cell CODESIGNED (15) [verb] Past tense of codesign; to design something jointly with one or more other people or entities. | [adjective] Designed jointly by multiple parties. CODIRECTED (16) [verb] Past tense of codirect; directed jointly with another person or persons. COEMBODIED (18) COEMPLOYED (20) COENAMORED (15) COEXTENDED (21) COFEATURED (16) [verb] Appeared or performed together as a featured attraction or main element. COFINANCED (18) [verb] Financed jointly by two or more parties or sources. | [adjective] Involving financial support from multiple sources or participants. COINFERRED (16) COINTERRED (13) [verb] Past tense of cointer, meaning to bury together in the same grave or tomb. COINVENTED (16) COLDCOCKED (22) [verb] Past tense of coldcock, meaning to punch someone suddenly and unexpectedly, typically rendering them unconscious. | [adjective] Knocked out or stunned by a sudden punch. COLLIGATED (14) [verb] To tie or bind together. | [verb] To formally link or connect together logically; to bring together by colligation; to sum up in a single proposition. | [adjective] Tied together COLLIMATED (15) [verb] To focus into a narrow beam or column; to adjust a focusing device so that it produces a narrow beam. | [adjective] (of a light beam) Composed of rays that are parallel, thus having a wavefront that is planar. COLLOCATED (15) [verb] (said of certain words) To be often used together, form a collocation; for example strong collocates with tea. | [verb] To arrange or occur side by side. | [verb] To set or place; to station. COLONNADED (14) [adjective] Having or characterized by a colonnade; featuring a row of columns supporting a roof or entablature. COMMINGLED (18) [verb] To mix, to blend. | [verb] To become mixed or blended. COMMINUTED (17) [verb] To pulverize; to smash. | [verb] To cause fragmentation (of bone). | [verb] To break into smaller portions. COMMUNISED (17) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUNIZED (26) [verb] To make something the property of a community. | [verb] To impose Communist ideals on people. | [verb] To become or be made communistic. COMMUTATED (17) [verb] To reverse the direction of (a current). | [verb] To convert from being or using an alternating current into being or using a direct current. | [verb] To commute; to be invariant under a reversal of the positions of operands. COMPLAINED (17) [verb] To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment. | [verb] To make a formal accusation or bring a formal charge. | [verb] To creak or squeak, as a timber or wheel. COMPLECTED (19) [verb] To join by weaving. | [verb] To embrace. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified complexion; complexioned. COMPLOTTED (17) [verb] Past tense of complot; to plot or conspire together. COMPOSITED (17) [verb] To make a composite. COMPOUNDED (18) [verb] To form (a resulting mixture) by combining different elements, ingredients, or parts. | [verb] To assemble (ingredients) into a whole; to combine, mix, or unite. | [verb] To modify or change by combination with some other thing or part; to mingle with something else. COMPREHEND (20) [verb] To include, comprise; to contain. | [verb] To understand or grasp fully and thoroughly. COMPRESSED (17) [verb] To make smaller; to press or squeeze together, or to make something occupy a smaller space or volume. | [verb] To be pressed together or folded by compression into a more economic, easier format. | [verb] To condense into a more economic, easier format. CONDESCEND (16) [verb] To come down from one's superior position; to deign (to do something). | [verb] To treat (someone) as though inferior; to be patronizing (toward someone); to talk down (to someone). | [verb] (possibly nonstandard) To treat (someone) as though inferior; to be patronizing toward (someone); to talk down to (someone). CONFIGURED (17) [verb] To set up or arrange something in such a way that it is ready for operation for a particular purpose, or to someone's particular liking CONFIRMAND (18) [noun] A candidate for confirmation or affirmation of baptism. CONFLICTED (18) [verb] To be at odds (with); to disagree or be incompatible | [verb] To overlap (with), as in a schedule. | [adjective] In a state of personal or emotional conflict. CONFOUNDED (17) [verb] To perplex or puzzle. | [verb] To fail to see the difference; to mix up; to confuse right and wrong. | [verb] To make something worse. CONFRONTED (16) [verb] To stand or meet facing, especially in competition, hostility or defiance; to come face to face with | [verb] To deal with. | [verb] To something bring face to face with. CONGRESSED (14) [verb] Past tense of congress, meaning to meet together or assemble in a group. | [verb] Past tense of congress, meaning to have sexual intercourse (archaic usage). CONJUGATED (21) [verb] (grammar) To inflect (a verb) for each person, in order, for one or more tenses. | [verb] To multiply on the left by one element and on the right by its inverse. | [verb] To join together, unite; to juxtapose. CONSCRIBED (17) [verb] To enroll; to enlist. CONSIDERED (14) [verb] To think about seriously. | [verb] To think about something seriously or carefully: to deliberate. | [verb] To think of doing. CONTRABAND (15) [noun] Any goods which are illicit or illegal to possess | [noun] Goods which are prohibited from being traded, smuggled goods | [noun] A black slave during the American Civil War who had escaped to, or been captured by, Union forces. CONTRACTED (15) [verb] To draw together or nearer; to shorten, narrow, or lessen. | [verb] (grammar) To shorten by omitting a letter or letters or by reducing two or more vowels or syllables to one. | [verb] To enter into a contract with. CONTRASTED (13) [verb] To set in opposition in order to show the difference or differences between. | [verb] To form a contrast. | [adjective] Set in contrast (of two or more things). CONTROLLED (13) [verb] To exercise influence over; to suggest or dictate the behavior of. | [verb] (construed with for) To design (an experiment) so that the effects of one or more variables are reduced or eliminated. | [adjective] Inhibited or restrained in one's words and actions. CONVOLUTED (16) [verb] To make unnecessarily complex. | [verb] To fold or coil into numerous overlapping layers. | [adjective] Having numerous overlapping coils or folds; convolute. COOLHEADED (17) [adjective] Having an even temper; calm and collected COOPERATED (15) [verb] To work or act together, especially for a common purpose or benefit. | [verb] To allow for mutual unobstructed action | [verb] To function in harmony, side by side COPPERHEAD (20) [noun] Any of various types of snakes having a copper-colored head. | [noun] Someone with ginger hair. COPRODUCED (18) [verb] To produce a creative work together with someone else COPURIFIED (18) [verb] Past tense of copurify; to purify together or simultaneously with another substance. COPYCATTED (20) [verb] Past tense of copycat; to imitate or copy someone's actions, style, or ideas. COPYEDITED (19) [verb] To correct the spelling, grammar, formatting, etc. of printed material and prepare it for typesetting, printing, or online publishing. CORDUROYED (17) [verb] To make (a road) by laying down split logs or tree-trunks over a marsh, swamp etc. | [adjective] Having a ribbed pattern, like corduroy. COREDEEMED (16) CORRELATED (13) [verb] To compare things and bring them into a relation having corresponding characteristics | [verb] To be related by a correlation | [adjective] Mutually related in a correlation CORRESPOND (15) [verb] (constructed with to) To be equivalent or similar in character, quantity, quality, origin, structure, function etc. | [verb] (constructed with with) to exchange messages, especially by postal letter, over a period of time. | [verb] To have sex with. CORRUGATED (14) [verb] (of the skin) To wrinkle. | [verb] To fold into parallel folds, grooves or ridges. | [adjective] Marked with parallel folds, ridges or furrows. CORUSCATED (15) [verb] To give off light; to reflect in flashes; to sparkle. | [verb] To exhibit brilliant technique or style. COSCRIPTED (17) [verb] Past tense of coscript; to write or create something jointly with another person or persons. COTTONSEED (13) [noun] The seed of the cotton plant, used to produce cottonseed oil and meal for livestock feed. COTTONWEED (16) [noun] Any of several unrelated plants that have downy heads COTTONWOOD (16) [noun] A tree from one of number of species of tree in the genus Populus (poplars), typically growing along watercourses, with fluffy catkins. | [noun] Populus sect. Aigeiros, a taxonomic section of the poplar genus | [noun] Cottonwood hibiscus (Talipariti tiliaceum, syn. Hibiscus tiliaceus), a flowering shrub or tree in the mallow family COUNSELLED (13) [verb] To give advice, especially professional advice, to (somebody). | [verb] To recommend (a course of action). COUNTERBID (15) [noun] A bid made in response to an opponent's bid, typically offering better terms. | [verb] To make a counterbid in response to another's bid. COURTESIED (13) [verb] Past tense of curtsey; to make a respectful greeting or acknowledgment by bending the knees with one foot forward, typically performed by women or girls. COUSINHOOD (16) COVENANTED (16) [verb] To enter into, or promise something by, a covenant. | [verb] To enter a formal agreement. | [verb] To bind oneself in contract. COVERALLED (16) [adjective] Wearing or dressed in coveralls; covered with a protective garment or suit. COXSWAINED (23) [verb] Past tense of coxswain; to act as coxswain (the person who steers and commands a rowing boat) or to steer a boat as coxswain. CRAWFISHED (22) [verb] To backpedal, desert or withdraw (also used with out). CRENELATED (13) [verb] To furnish with crenelles. | [verb] To indent; to notch. | [adjective] Having crenellations or battlements CRENULATED (13) [adjective] Having a finely notched, scalloped, or wavy edge or margin. CREPITATED (15) [verb] To crackle, to make a crackling sound. CRIMINATED (15) [verb] Past tense of criminate; to incriminate or accuse of a crime. | [verb] To involve in criminal activity or guilt. CRINOLINED (13) [adjective] Wearing or dressed in a crinoline; having the stiffness or fullness characteristic of a crinoline skirt. CRISPBREAD (17) [noun] A type of flat, dry bread or cracker, usually baked of rye flour, popular in the Nordic countries. CRITICISED (15) [verb] To find fault (with something). | [verb] To evaluate (something), assessing its merits and faults. CRITICIZED (24) [verb] To find fault (with something). | [verb] To evaluate (something), assessing its merits and faults. CROSSBREED (15) [noun] An organism produced by mating of individuals of different varieties or breeds. | [verb] To produce (an organism) by the mating of individuals of different breeds, varieties, or species; hybridize. | [verb] To mate so as to produce a hybrid; interbreed. CROWBARRED (18) [verb] To use force to move. To prise. CULMINATED (15) [verb] Of a heavenly body, to be at the highest point, reach its greatest altitude. | [verb] To reach the (physical) summit, highest point, peak etc. | [verb] To reach a climax; to come to the decisive point (especially as an end or conclusion). CULTIVATED (16) [verb] To grow plants, notably crops | [verb] To nurture; to foster; to tend. | [verb] To turn or stir soil in preparation for planting. CUMBERBUND (19) [noun] A broad sash worn around the waist, typically as part of formal evening wear. CUMMERBUND (19) [noun] A broad sash, especially one that is pleated lengthwise and worn as an article of formal dress, as around a man's waist together with a tuxedo or dinner jacket. CUSTOMISED (15) CUSTOMIZED (24) [verb] To build or alter according to personal preferences or specifications. CYBERNATED (18) CYLINDERED (17) DAMASCENED (16) [adjective] Decorated with wavy patterns of inlay or etching DAYDREAMED (18) [verb] To have such a series of thoughts; to woolgather. DAYLIGHTED (19) DEADHEADED (17) [verb] To admit to a performance without charge. | [verb] To travel as a deadhead, or non-paying passenger. | [verb] To drive an empty vehicle. DEADLIFTED (16) DEADLOCKED (19) [verb] To cause or to come to a deadlock. DEADPANNED (15) [verb] To express (oneself) in an impassive or expressionless manner. DEAMINATED (14) DECENTERED (14) [verb] To remove the centre from. | [verb] To place away from the centre; to make eccentric. | [verb] To displace from the centre. DECIPHERED (19) [verb] To decode or decrypt a code or cipher to plain text. | [verb] To read text that is almost illegible or obscure. | [verb] To find a solution to a problem. DECISIONED (14) DECOLLATED (14) [verb] To behead. | [verb] To separate the copies of multipart computer printout. | [adjective] Rounded off, as the apex of a shell. DECOLOURED (14) [adjective] From which the colour has been removed; bleached DECOMPOSED (18) [verb] To separate or break down something into its components; to disintegrate or fragment | [verb] To rot, decay or putrefy DECOMPOUND (18) DECOUPAGED (17) DECUSSATED (14) [verb] To form an X or to cross or intersect. DEFALCATED (17) [verb] To misappropriate funds; to embezzle. | [verb] To cut off; to take away or deduct a part of (money, rents, income, etc.). DEFLOWERED (18) [verb] To take the virginity of (somebody), especially a woman or girl. | [verb] To deprive of flowers. | [verb] To deprive of grace and beauty. DEFOCUSSED (17) [verb] To cause (a lens, or a beam of light or particles, etc.) to be out of focus. DEFOLIATED (15) [verb] To remove foliage from (one or more plants), most often with a chemical agent. DEFORESTED (15) [verb] To clear (an area) of forest. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to deforestation. DEHYDRATED (19) [verb] To lose or remove water; to dry | [adjective] From which the water has been removed. | [adjective] Suffering from dehydration. DELINEATED (12) [verb] To sketch out, draw or trace an outline. | [verb] To depict, represent with pictures. | [verb] To describe or depict with words or gestures. DELUSTERED (12) [verb] To remove the lustre from yarn, typically by adding a pigment at spinning time DEMAGOGUED (16) [verb] To speak or act in the manner of a demagogue; to speak about (an issue) in the manner of a demagogue. DEMARCATED (16) [verb] To mark the limits or boundaries of something; to delimit. | [verb] To mark the difference between two causes of action; to distinguish. DEMERGERED (15) DEMOLISHED (17) [verb] To destroy. | [verb] To defeat or consume utterly (as a theory, belief or opponent). DENAZIFIED (24) [verb] To free from Nazi influence. DENERVATED (15) [verb] To deprive (an organ) of a nerve supply. | [adjective] (of an organ) deprived of a nerve supply DENIGRATED (13) [verb] To criticise so as to besmirch; traduce, disparage or defame. | [verb] To treat as worthless; belittle, degrade or disparage. | [verb] To blacken. DEODORIZED (22) [verb] To mask or eliminate the odor of, or an odor in, (something). DEOXIDIZED (29) [verb] To remove oxygen from. DEPOLISHED (17) DEPRECATED (16) [verb] To belittle or express disapproval of. | [verb] To declare something obsolescent; to recommend against a function, technique, command, etc. that still works but has been replaced. | [verb] To pray against. DEPREDATED (15) [verb] To ransack or plunder; to prey upon. DESECRATED (14) [verb] To profane or violate the sacredness or sanctity of something. | [verb] To remove the consecration from someone or something; to deconsecrate. | [verb] To change in an inappropriate and destructive way. DESELECTED (14) [verb] To not select; to rule out of selection. | [verb] To reject (an MP) as constituency candidate at a forthcoming election. | [verb] To remove from an existing selection. DESICCATED (16) [verb] To remove moisture from; to dry. | [verb] To preserve by drying. | [verb] To become dry; to dry up. DESIGNATED (13) [verb] To mark out and make known; to point out; to indicate; to show; to distinguish by marks or description | [verb] To call by a distinctive title; to name. | [verb] To indicate or set apart for a purpose or duty; — with to or for; to designate an officer for or to the command of a post or station. DESILVERED (15) DESPATCHED (19) [verb] To send (a shipment) with promptness. | [verb] To send (a person) away hastily. | [verb] To send (an important official message) promptly, by means of a diplomat or military officer. DESTRUCTED (14) [verb] To intentionally cause the destruction of. | [verb] To self-destruct. DESULFURED (15) DETASSELED (12) DETERMINED (14) [verb] To set the boundaries or limits of. | [verb] To ascertain definitely; to figure out, find out, or conclude by analyzing, calculating, or investigating. | [verb] To fix the form or character of; to shape; to prescribe imperatively; to regulate; to settle. DETOXIFIED (22) [verb] To remove foreign and harmful substances from something. DEUTERATED (12) [verb] To replace one or more hydrogen atoms in (a molecule) with deuterium. | [adjective] Describing a compound which has had some of its normal hydrogen (protium) replaced with the heavy isotope deuterium. DEVALUATED (15) [verb] To reduce in value. DEVASTATED (15) [verb] To ruin many or all things over a large area, such as most or all buildings of a city, or cities of a region, or trees of a forest. | [verb] To destroy a whole collection of related ideas, beliefs, and strongly held opinions. | [verb] To break beyond recovery or repair so that the only options are abandonment or the clearing away of useless remains (if any) and starting over. DIABOLIZED (23) [verb] To represent as diabolical DIAGRAMMED (17) [verb] To represent or indicate something using a diagram. | [verb] To schedule the operations of a locomotive or train according to a diagram. DIAZOTIZED (30) DIESELIZED (21) [verb] To convert or adapt an engine to diesel fuel. DIFFRACTED (20) [verb] To cause diffraction | [verb] To undergo diffraction DIMINISHED (17) [verb] To make smaller. | [verb] To become smaller. | [verb] To lessen the authority or dignity of; to put down; to degrade; to abase; to weaken; to nerf (in gaming). DINGDONGED (15) DISALLOWED (15) [verb] To refuse to allow | [verb] To reject as invalid, untrue, or improper | [adjective] Forbidden DISARRAYED (15) [verb] To throw into disorder; to break the array of. | [verb] To take off the dress of; to unrobe. DISBOSOMED (16) DISBOWELED (17) DISCHARGED (18) [verb] To accomplish or complete, as an obligation. | [verb] To free of a debt, claim, obligation, responsibility, accusation, etc.; to absolve; to acquit; to forgive; to clear. | [verb] To send away (a creditor) satisfied by payment; to pay one's debt or obligation to. DISCLAIMED (16) [verb] To renounce all claim to; to deny ownership of or responsibility for; to disown; to disavow; to reject. | [verb] To deny, as a claim; to refuse. | [verb] To relinquish or deny having a claim; to disavow another's claim; to decline accepting, as an estate, interest, or office. DISCOLORED (14) [verb] To change or lose color. | [adjective] Deprived of color, or given the wrong color; pale, stained. | [adjective] Multicolored. DISCOMMEND (18) DISCOUNTED (14) [verb] To deduct from an account, debt, charge, and the like. | [verb] To lend money upon, deducting the discount or allowance for interest | [verb] To take into consideration beforehand; to anticipate and form conclusions concerning (an event). DISCOURSED (14) [verb] To engage in discussion or conversation; to converse. | [verb] To write or speak formally and at length. | [verb] To debate. DISCOVERED (17) [verb] To find or learn something for the first time. | [verb] To remove the cover from; to uncover (a head, building etc.). | [verb] To expose, uncover. DISCROWNED (17) DISENDOWED (16) [verb] To deprive of an endowment. DISENGAGED (14) [verb] To release or loosen from something that binds, entangles, holds, or interlocks. | [adjective] Unconnected; detached. | [adjective] Not (socially) engaged; available, free. DISFAVORED (18) [adjective] Not favored | [verb] To show lack of favour or antipathy towards. DISFIGURED (16) [verb] Change the appearance of something/someone to the negative. DISFROCKED (21) [verb] To remove from status as a member of a clergy; to unfrock. DISHERITED (15) DISHEVELED (18) [verb] To throw into disorder; upheave. | [verb] To disarrange or loosen (hair, clothing, etc.). | [verb] To spread out in disorder. DISHONORED (15) [adjective] Disgraced, defiled, treated with dishonor. | [verb] To bring disgrace upon someone or something; to shame. | [verb] To refuse to accept something, such as a cheque; to not honor. DISINVITED (15) [verb] To cancel an invitation to (someone). DISJOINTED (19) [adjective] Not connected, coherent, or continuous. DISLOCATED (14) [verb] To put something out of its usual place. | [verb] To (accidentally) dislodge a skeletal bone from its joint. DISMANTLED (14) [verb] To divest, strip of dress or covering. | [verb] To remove fittings or furnishings from. | [verb] To take apart; to disassemble; to take to pieces. DISMOUNTED (14) [verb] To (cause to) get off (something). | [verb] To make (a mounted drive) unavailable for use. | [verb] To come down; to descend. DISOBLIGED (15) [verb] To be unwilling to oblige; to disappoint, to inconvenience, not to cooperate. | [verb] To offend by an act of unkindness or incivility. DISORDERED (13) [verb] To throw into a state of disorder. | [verb] To knock out of order or sequence. | [adjective] Chaotic; without clear order; in a state of disorder. DISPARAGED (15) [verb] To match unequally; to degrade or dishonor. | [verb] To dishonor by a comparison with what is inferior; to lower in rank or estimation by actions or words; to speak slightingly of; to depreciate; to undervalue. | [verb] To ridicule, mock, discredit. DISPATCHED (19) [verb] To send (a shipment) with promptness. | [verb] To send (a person) away hastily. | [verb] To send (an important official message) promptly, by means of a diplomat or military officer. DISPEOPLED (16) DISPERSOID (14) DISPIRITED (14) [verb] To lower the morale of; to make despondent; to dishearten. | [adjective] Without energy, gusto or drive, enervated, without the will to accomplish, disheartened. DISPLANTED (14) DISPLEASED (14) [verb] To make not pleased; to cause a feeling of disapprobation or dislike in; to be disagreeable to; to vex slightly. | [verb] To give displeasure or offense. | [verb] To fail to satisfy; to miss of. DISPRAISED (14) [verb] To notice with disapprobation or some degree of censure; to disparage, to criticize. DISQUIETED (21) [verb] To make (someone or something) worried or anxious. DISRELATED (12) DISSEMBLED (16) [verb] To disguise or conceal something. | [verb] To feign. | [verb] To deliberately ignore something; to pretend not to notice. DISSEVERED (15) [verb] To separate; to split apart. | [verb] To divide into separate parts. DISSIPATED (14) [verb] To drive away, disperse. | [verb] To use up or waste; squander. | [verb] To vanish by dispersion. DISTRACTED (14) [verb] To divert the attention of. | [verb] To make crazy or insane; to drive to distraction. | [adjective] Having one's attention diverted; preoccupied DISTRAINED (12) [verb] To squeeze, press, embrace; to constrain, oppress. | [verb] To force (someone) to do something by seizing their property. | [verb] To seize somebody's property in place of, or to force, payment of a debt. DISTRESSED (12) [verb] To cause strain or anxiety to someone. | [verb] To retain someone’s property against the payment of a debt; to distrain. | [verb] To treat a new object to give it an appearance of age. DISTRICTED (14) [verb] To divide into administrative or other districts. DISTRUSTED (12) [verb] To put no trust in; to have no confidence in. DIVEBOMBED (21) [verb] (of an aircraft) To bomb whilst in a steep dive. | [verb] (of a bird) To attack (especially the head of) a person or animal that strays into their territory. | [verb] (of a motorist) To overtake slower traffic by way of a more circuitous route, such as a pair of freeway exit and entrance ramps. DOCUMENTED (16) [verb] To record in documents. | [verb] To furnish with documents or papers necessary to establish facts or give information. DOGMATIZED (24) [verb] To treat something as dogma. | [verb] To speak or write dogmatically. DOGSLEDDED (15) DOGTROTTED (13) [verb] To move at the pace of a dogtrot DOMINEERED (14) [verb] To rule over or control arbitrarily or arrogantly; to tyrannize. DOVETAILED (15) [adjective] Having a dovetail joint. | [adjective] Involving a wavy line in the form of triangles, resembling a dovetail. DOWNGRADED (17) [verb] To place lower in position. | [verb] To 'dumb down', reduce in complexity, or remove unnecessary parts. | [verb] To disparage. DOWNLOADED (16) [verb] To transfer data from a remote computer (server) to a local computer, usually via a network. | [verb] To upload; to copy a file from a local computer to a remote computer via a network. | [verb] To transfer a file to or from removable media. DOWNPLAYED (20) [verb] To de-emphasize; to present or portray as less important or consequential. DOWNSCALED (17) [verb] To reduce in size; to downsize. DRAGONHEAD (16) DRAMATISED (14) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DRAMATIZED (23) [verb] To adapt a literary work so that it can be performed in the theatre, or on radio or television | [verb] To present something in a dramatic or melodramatic manner DREAMWORLD (17) [noun] An imaginary world, such as experienced while dreaming. DUCKWALKED (25) [verb] To jump on one leg while moving the other back and forth, a motion sometimes employed by guitar players in popular music. | [verb] To walk while squatting. DUMFOUNDED (18) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. | [adjective] Shocked and speechless. DUNDERHEAD (16) [noun] (somewhat obsolete) A stupid person; a dunce. DUPLICATED (16) [verb] To make a copy of. | [verb] To do repeatedly; to do again. | [verb] To produce something equal to. EARTHBOUND (16) [adjective] Confined to the Earth. | [adjective] Unimaginative or mundane. | [adjective] Heading towards Earth. ECONOMISED (15) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. ECONOMIZED (24) [verb] To practice being economical (by using things sparingly or in moderation, and by avoiding waste or extravagance). | [verb] To use frugally. EICOSANOID (13) EISTEDDFOD (16) [noun] Any of several annual festivals in which Welsh poets, dancers, and musicians compete for recognition. EJACULATED (20) [verb] To eject abruptly; to throw out suddenly and swiftly. | [verb] To say abruptly. | [verb] To eject or suddenly throw fluid or some other substance from a duct or other body structure. ELABORATED (13) [verb] To develop in detail or complexity | [verb] (sometimes followed by on or upon, and then the object of the preposition) to expand/enlarge in detail | [adjective] Expanded ELIMINATED (13) [verb] To completely remove, get rid of, put an end to. | [verb] To kill (a person or animal). | [verb] To excrete (waste products). ELUCIDATED (14) [verb] To make clear; to clarify; to shed light upon. ELUTRIATED (11) [verb] To decant; to purify something by straining it | [verb] To separate great and small particles through an upwardly flowing liquid or vapid stream EMBITTERED (15) [verb] To cause to be bitter. EMBLAZONED (24) [verb] To adorn with prominent markings. | [verb] To inscribe upon. | [verb] To draw (a coat of arms). EMBOLDENED (16) [verb] To render (someone) bolder or more courageous. | [verb] To encourage, inspire, or motivate. | [verb] To format text in boldface. EMBORDERED (16) EMBOWELLED (18) [verb] To enclose or bury. | [verb] To remove the bowels; disembowel. EMBRANGLED (16) EMBRITTLED (15) [verb] To become or make brittle. EMPANELLED (15) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. EMPATHISED (18) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPATHIZED (27) [verb] To feel empathy for another person EMPHASISED (18) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPHASIZED (27) [verb] To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something). EMPOISONED (15) EMULSIFIED (16) [verb] To make into an emulsion. ENCAPSULED (15) ENCIPHERED (18) [verb] To convert plain text into cipher; to encrypt ENCOURAGED (14) [verb] To mentally support; to motivate, give courage, hope or spirit. | [verb] To spur on, strongly recommend. | [verb] To foster, give help or patronage ENCROACHED (18) [verb] To seize, appropriate | [verb] To intrude unrightfully on someone else’s rights or territory | [verb] To advance gradually beyond due limits ENCUMBERED (17) [verb] To load down something with a burden | [verb] To restrict or block something with a hindrance or impediment | [verb] To burden with a legal claim or other obligation ENDANGERED (13) [verb] To put (someone or something) in danger; to risk causing harm to. | [verb] To incur the hazard of; to risk; to run the risk of. | [adjective] In danger, at risk, said of something where there is a strong possibility something bad will happen to it (for example, a species in danger of going extinct) ENDEAVORED (15) [verb] To exert oneself. | [verb] To attempt through application of effort (to do something); to try strenuously. | [verb] To attempt (something). ENFETTERED (14) [verb] To bind in fetters; to enchain. ENGENDERED (13) [verb] To beget (of a man); to bear or conceive (of a woman). | [verb] To give existence to, to produce (living creatures). | [verb] To bring into existence (a situation, quality, result etc.); to give rise to, cause, create. ENGINEERED (12) [verb] To design, construct or manage something as an engineer. | [verb] To alter or construct something by means of genetic engineering. | [verb] To plan or achieve some goal by contrivance or guile; to wangle or finagle. ENRAPTURED (13) [verb] To fill with great delight or joy; to fascinate or captivate. | [adjective] Marked by fondness; filled with delight ENRAVISHED (17) ENSCROLLED (13) ENSHEATHED (17) [verb] To cover with or as if with a sheath. | [adjective] Enclosed in a sheath ENSHROUDED (15) [verb] To cover with (or as if with) a shroud ENSORCELED (13) [verb] To bewitch or enchant. | [verb] To captivate, entrance, fascinate. ENTHRALLED (14) [verb] To hold spellbound; to bewitch, charm or captivate. | [verb] To make subservient; to enslave or subjugate. | [adjective] Fascinated; captivated. ENTRENCHED (16) [verb] To dig or excavate a trench; to trench. | [verb] To surround or provide with a trench, especially for defense; to dig in. | [verb] To establish a substantial position in business, politics, etc. ENUCLEATED (13) [verb] To remove the nucleus from (a cell). | [verb] To remove without cutting into it; especially, to remove or gouge out (an eyeball or tumor). | [verb] To explain; to lay bare. ENUMERATED (13) [verb] To specify each member of a sequence individually in incrementing order. | [verb] To determine the amount of. ENUNCIATED (13) [verb] To make a definite or systematic statement of. | [verb] To announce, proclaim. | [verb] To articulate, pronounce. ENVISIONED (14) [verb] To conceive or see something within one's mind. To imagine. ENWREATHED (17) [verb] To surround or encompass as with a wreath. EPAULETTED (13) EPICYCLOID (20) [noun] The locus of a point on the circumference of a circle that rolls without slipping on the circumference of another circle. EPIDERMOID (16) EPILEPTOID (15) EPITOMISED (15) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPITOMIZED (24) [verb] To make an epitome of; to shorten; to condense. | [verb] To be an epitome of. EPOXIDIZED (30) EQUIPOISED (22) [verb] To act or make to act as an equipoise. | [verb] To cause to be or stay in equipoise. ERADICATED (14) [verb] To pull up by the roots; to uproot. | [verb] To destroy completely; to reduce to nothing radically; to put an end to; to extirpate. | [adjective] Eliminated, utterly destroyed EROTICIZED (22) [verb] To make erotic. | [adjective] Having had erotic quality, character, or nuance added. ESCALLOPED (15) [adjective] Cut or marked in the form of an escalop; scalloped. | [adjective] Covered with a scaly pattern resembling a series of escalop shells, each of which issues from between two others. ESPALIERED (13) [verb] To train a plant in this manner. ESTERIFIED (14) ETHERIFIED (17) EUPHAUSIID (16) [noun] Any member of the taxonomic order Euphausiacea of krill. EUPHEMISED (18) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EUPHEMIZED (27) [verb] To utter one or more euphemisms; to speak euphemistically. | [verb] To describe in euphemistic terms. EURYPTERID (16) [noun] A large, prehistoric, carnivorous arthropod, of the class †Eurypterida, thought to be one of the first animals to venture onto land. EUTHANIZED (23) [verb] To carry out euthanasia on (a person or animal). EVAPORATED (16) [verb] To transition from a liquid state into a gaseous state | [verb] To expel moisture from (usually by means of artificial heat), leaving the solid portion | [verb] To give vent to; to dissipate EVENHANDED (18) [adjective] Fair and having no partiality; unbiased; just. EVENTUATED (14) [verb] To have a given result; to turn out (well, badly etc.); to result in. | [verb] To happen as a result; to come about. EXCORIATED (20) [verb] To wear off the skin of; to chafe or flay. | [verb] To strongly denounce or censure. EXCULPATED (22) [verb] To clear of or to free from guilt; exonerate. EXFOLIATED (21) [verb] To remove the leaves from a plant. | [verb] To remove a layer of skin, as in cosmetic preparation. | [verb] To split into scales, especially to become converted into scales as the result of heat or decomposition. EXONERATED (18) [verb] To relieve (someone or something) of a load; to unburden (a load). | [verb] Of a body of water: to discharge or empty (itself). | [verb] To free from an obligation, responsibility or task. EXPATIATED (20) [verb] To range at large, or without restraint. | [verb] To write or speak at length; to be copious in argument or discussion. | [verb] To expand; to spread; to extend; to diffuse; to broaden. EXPERTIZED (29) [verb] To act as an expert. | [verb] To give an expert opinion on; to assess. EXPLICATED (22) [verb] To explain meticulously or in great detail; to elucidate; to analyze. EXPURGATED (21) [verb] To edit out (incorrect, offensive, or otherwise undesirable information) from a book or other publication; to cleanse; to purge. | [verb] To undertake editing out incorrect, offensive, or otherwise undesirable information from (a book or other publication); to cleanse; to purge. | [adjective] Having had erroneous, obscene, or other objectionable material removed. EXSICCATED (22) EXTENUATED (18) [verb] To lessen; to palliate; to lessen or weaken the force of; to diminish the conception of, as crime, guilt, faults, ills, accusations, etc. | [verb] To make thin or slender; to draw out so as to lessen the thickness. | [verb] To become thinner. EXTERMINED (20) EXTIRPATED (20) [verb] To clear an area of roots and stumps. | [verb] To pull up by the roots; uproot. | [verb] To destroy completely; to annihilate. EXTRADITED (19) [verb] To remove a person from one state to another by legal process. EXTRICATED (20) [verb] To free, disengage, loosen, or untangle. | [verb] To free from intricacies or perplexity EXUBERATED (20) FABRICATED (18) [verb] To form into a whole by uniting its parts; to construct; to build. | [verb] To form by art and labor; to manufacture; to produce. | [verb] To invent and form; to forge; to devise falsely. FACTORIZED (25) [verb] To create a list of the factors of. | [verb] To divide an expression into a list of items that, when multiplied together, will produce the original quantity. | [verb] To warn not to pay or give up goods. FAIRGROUND (15) [noun] An area where a fair (an event for public entertainment) or other public event is held; a showground. | [noun] A commercially-operated collection of rides, games and other entertainment attractions; an amusement park. FANTASISED (14) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASIZED (23) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FAREWELLED (17) [verb] To bid farewell or say goodbye. FARSIGHTED (18) [adjective] Unable to focus with one's eyes on near objects; presbyopic. | [adjective] Considering the future with respect to one's own plans or deeds; showing anticipation. FASCINATED (16) [verb] To evoke an intense interest or attraction in someone. | [verb] To make someone hold motionless; to spellbind. | [verb] To be irresistibly charming or attractive to. FATHERHOOD (20) [noun] The state of being a father. FATHERLAND (17) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth, origin. FEATHERBED (19) [noun] A mattress stuffed with feathers. | [noun] (Dartmoor) A bog covered by a layer of moss, presenting a hazard to walkers. | [verb] To treat someone with excessive indulgence; to pamper, cosset or mollycoddle. FECUNDATED (17) [verb] To make fertile. | [verb] To inseminate. FERTILIZED (23) [verb] To make (the soil) more fertile by adding nutrients to it. | [verb] To make more creative or intellectually productive. | [verb] To cause to produce offspring through insemination; to inseminate. FESTINATED (14) FEUDALIZED (24) [verb] To make something feudal. FIBERBOARD (18) [noun] A material made from wood chips or shavings, which are compressed and bonded with resin and formed into stiff sheets, and used in building or making furniture. FIBREBOARD (18) [noun] A material made from wood chips or shavings, which are compressed and bonded with resin and formed into stiff sheets; often laminated with melamine and used in building or making furniture. FIDDLEHEAD (19) [noun] The scroll-shaped decoration at the tip of a fiddle. | [noun] A similar scroll-shaped ornament on a ship's bow. | [noun] The furled fronds of a young fern harvested for food consumption. FIGUREHEAD (18) [noun] A carved figure on the prow of a sailing ship. | [noun] (by extension) Someone in a nominal position of leadership who has no actual power; a front or front man. FIMBRIATED (18) [adjective] Having a fringed border. | [adjective] Bordered with hair or hair-like material. | [adjective] Having a narrow borderline of another tincture. FINGERHOLD (18) [noun] A grip with the fingers. FIREBOMBED (20) [verb] To attack with a firebomb. FIREFANGED (18) FIREPLACED (18) FISHTAILED (17) [verb] To swing the back of a vehicle (originally an aircraft) from side to side. | [verb] To cause the back of (a vehicle) to swing from side to side. | [verb] To move with the tail swinging from side to side in this way. FLANNELLED (14) [adjective] Wearing clothes made of flannel; especially wearing cricket whites. FLASHBOARD (19) [noun] A board placed temporarily upon a milldam, to raise the water in the pond above its usual level. FLATFOOTED (17) [verb] To walk around in the course of work, especially when investigating. | [verb] To dance in the style of Appalachian clogging. | [verb] To gulp an entire drink (bottle, glass, can, etc.) without pausing between swallows. FLICHTERED (19) FLOORBOARD (16) [noun] Any of the long boards laid over joists to make a floor. | [noun] The floor of a car. | [verb] To sink the gas pedal into the floorboard of the car, in order to bring the car to the highest possible speed. FLOUNDERED (15) [verb] To flop around as a fish out of water. | [verb] To make clumsy attempts to move or regain one's balance. | [verb] To act clumsily or confused; to struggle or be flustered. FLOURISHED (17) [verb] To thrive or grow well. | [verb] To prosper or fare well. | [verb] To be in a period of greatest influence. FLUCTUATED (16) [verb] To vary irregularly; to swing. | [verb] To undulate. | [verb] To be irresolute; to waver. FLUORESCED (16) [verb] To emit electromagnetic radiation, especially visible light, when absorbing radiation of some other wavelength. | [verb] Of colours, to be very bright; to be so bright as to appear to radiate as a light source. FLYSPECKED (25) FORECASTED (16) [verb] To estimate how something will be in the future. | [verb] To foreshadow; to suggest something in advance. | [verb] To contrive or plan beforehand. FORECLOSED (16) [verb] To repossess a mortgaged property whose owner has failed to make the necessary payments; used with on. | [verb] To cut off (a mortgager) by a judgment of court from the power of redeeming the mortgaged premises. | [verb] To shut up or out; to prevent from doing something. FOREDOOMED (17) [verb] To predestine to a doom. FOREFENDED (18) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FOREGROUND (15) [noun] The elements of an image which lie closest to the picture plane. | [noun] The subject of an image, often depicted at the bottom in a two-dimensional work. | [noun] The application the user is currently interacting with; the application window that appears in front of all others. FOREHANDED (18) [adjective] Looking to the future; displaying foresight; prudent. | [adjective] Wealthy. | [adjective] Executed with a forehand stroke. FOREJUDGED (23) [verb] To judge beforehand; prejudge. | [verb] To exclude, oust, or dispossess by a judgment; prohibit (from). | [verb] To condemn judicially (to a penalty). FORELOCKED (20) FOREPASSED (16) [adjective] (timewise) That has previously passed; past, bygone FORESHOWED (20) [verb] To show in advance; to foretell, predict. | [verb] To foreshadow or prefigure. FORESTLAND (14) FORETASTED (14) FOREWARNED (17) [verb] To warn in advance. FORKLIFTED (21) [verb] To move or stack with, or as if with, such a vehicle. FORMALISED (16) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALIZED (25) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMULATED (16) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULIZED (25) FORNICATED (16) [verb] To engage in fornication; to have sex, especially illicit sex. | [adjective] Fornicate; shaped like an arch FORTRESSED (14) FOSSILISED (14) [adjective] In a state of fossilization; preserved in rock | [adjective] Outmoded | [adjective] Having become a fossil: no longer productive FOSSILIZED (23) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOUNTAINED (14) [verb] To flow or gush as if from a fountain. FOXTROTTED (21) [verb] To dance the foxtrot. FRACTIONED (16) FRAGMENTED (17) [verb] To break apart. | [verb] To cause to be broken into pieces. | [verb] To break up and disperse (a file) into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRANCHISED (19) [verb] To confer certain powers on; grant a franchise to; authorize. | [verb] To set free; invest with a franchise or privilege; enfranchise. FREEBOOTED (16) [verb] To pillage or plunder. | [verb] To rehost (online media) without legal authorization. FREEHANDED (18) [verb] To conduct a procedure involving use of the hands without any helping device or guide. | [adjective] Openhanded; generous. | [adjective] Freehand, unassisted. FREELANCED (16) [verb] To work as a freelance. | [verb] To produce or sell services as a freelance. FREELOADED (15) [verb] To live off the generosity or hospitality of others FREQUENTED (23) [verb] To visit often. FRICASSEED (16) [verb] To cook meat or poultry in this manner. FRIGHTENED (18) [verb] To cause to feel fear; to scare; to cause to feel alarm or fright. | [adjective] Afraid; suffering from fear. FRUCTIFIED (19) [verb] To bear fruit; to generate useful products or ideas. | [verb] To make productive or fruitful. | [verb] To be satisfied sexually. FRUSTRATED (14) [verb] To disappoint or defeat; to vex by depriving of something expected or desired. | [verb] To hinder or thwart. | [verb] To cause stress or annoyance. FULGURATED (15) [verb] To flash or emit flashes like lightning. | [verb] To cauterize with electricity; to carry out electrofulguration or to electrocauterize. FULMINATED (16) [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. | [verb] To thunder or make a loud noise. FUNCTIONED (16) [verb] To have a function. | [verb] To carry out a function; to be in action. FURBELOWED (19) [verb] To adorn with a furbelow; to ornament. FURLOUGHED (18) [verb] To grant a furlough to (someone). | [verb] To have (an employee) not work in order to reduce costs; to send (someone) on furlough. FUSTIGATED (15) GALAVANTED (15) GALIVANTED (15) GALLICIZED (23) [verb] To make French as the culture, customs, pronunciation, or style. | [verb] To translate into French. GALVANISED (15) [adjective] Of metal, coated with zinc as a form of protection against rust. | [adjective] Having been subjected to galvanism; electrified. | [verb] To coat with a thin layer of metal by electrochemical means. GALVANIZED (24) [adjective] Of metal, coated with zinc as a form of protection against rust. | [adjective] Having been subjected to galvanism; electrified. | [verb] To coat with a thin layer of metal by electrochemical means. GARNISHEED (15) [verb] To have (money) set aside by court order (particularly for the payment of alleged debts); to garnish. GARRISONED (12) [verb] To assign troops to a military post. | [verb] To convert into a military fort. | [verb] To occupy with troops. GASCONADED (15) GAUNTLETED (12) GENTRIFIED (15) [verb] To renovate or improve something, especially housing or district, to make it more appealing to the middle classes (often with the negative association of pricing out existing residents) GEOLOGIZED (22) [verb] To study the geology of a location in the field. GERMANIZED (23) GERMINATED (14) [verb] Of a seed, to begin to grow, to sprout roots and leaves. | [verb] To cause to grow; to produce. GHETTOIZED (24) [verb] To put (someone) in a ghetto, or to isolate as if in a ghetto. | [verb] To make (a place) into a ghetto, or to add the characteristics of a ghetto. GILLNETTED (12) GIRLFRIEND (15) [noun] A female partner in an unmarried romantic relationship. | [noun] A female friend. GLAMORISED (14) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLAMORIZED (23) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GLOBALISED (14) [adjective] Influenced by globalisation. | [verb] To make something global in scope GLOBALIZED (23) [verb] To make something global in scope GLYCOLIPID (19) GOODWILLED (16) GORGONIZED (22) GOTHICIZED (26) GRAINFIELD (15) GRANDCHILD (18) [noun] A child of someone's child. GRANDSTAND (13) [noun] The seating area at a stadium or arena; the bleachers. | [noun] The audience at a public event. | [verb] To behave dramatically or showily to impress an audience or observers; to pander to a crowd. GRANULATED (12) [verb] To segment into tiny grains or particles. | [verb] To collect or be formed into grains. | [adjective] Formed into, or composed of granules GRATULATED (12) GRAVITATED (15) [verb] To move under the force of gravity. | [verb] To tend or drift towards someone or something, as though being pulled by gravity. GREASEWOOD (15) [noun] Spiny shrubs containing oil, of the genus Sarcobatus, native to the United States, especially Sarcobatus vermiculatus. | [noun] Any of several other North American desert shrubs with glossy or resinous leaves GREENFIELD (15) [noun] A site, to be used for housing or commerce, whose previous use (if any) was agricultural | [adjective] Being a completely new development, without the need to integrate with legacy systems etc. | [adjective] Previously untapped; free for the taking. GREENSWARD (15) [noun] A tract of land that is green with grass. GRIDLOCKED (19) GROUNDWOOD (16) GRUBSTAKED (18) [verb] To supply such funds to. GUARANTEED (12) [verb] To give an assurance that something will be done right. | [verb] To assume or take responsibility for a debt or other obligation. | [verb] To make something certain. GUARANTIED (12) HABITUATED (16) [verb] To make accustomed; to accustom; to familiarize. | [verb] To settle as an inhabitant. HALLMARKED (20) [verb] To provide or stamp with a hallmark. | [adjective] Stamped with a hallmark HAMMERHEAD (21) [noun] The portion of a hammer containing the metal striking face (also including the claw or peen if so equipped). | [noun] Any of various sharks of the genus Sphyrna or Zygaena having the eyes set on projections from the sides of the head, which gives it a hammer shape. | [noun] A fresh-water fish; the stone-roller, in the minnow family Cyprinidae. HANDCUFFED (23) [verb] To apply handcuffs to | [verb] To restrain or restrict. HANDFASTED (18) [verb] To pledge; to bind | [verb] (obsolete or historical except Wicca) To betroth by joining hands, in order to allow for cohabitation before the celebration of marriage; to marry provisionally. HANDPICKED (23) HANDSELLED (15) [verb] To give a handsel to. | [verb] To inaugurate by means of some ceremony; to break in. | [verb] To use or do for the first time, especially so as to make fortunate or unfortunate; to try experimentally. HARDFISTED (18) HARDHANDED (19) HARDHEADED (19) [adjective] Stubborn; wilful. | [adjective] Realistic; pragmatic. HARMONISED (16) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARMONIZED (25) [verb] To be in harmonious agreement. | [verb] To play or sing in harmony. | [verb] To provide parts to. HARRUMPHED (21) [verb] To dislike, protest, or dismiss. HATCHELLED (19) [verb] To separate (flax fibers) with a hatchel, or comb. HEADHUNTED (18) [verb] To cut off, and preserve, the heads of one's enemies | [verb] To actively recruit executive personnel | [verb] To pitch at a batter's head. HEAVENWARD (20) [adjective] Which leads toward heaven | [adverb] Toward heaven HEIGHTENED (18) [verb] To make high; to raise higher; to elevate. | [verb] To advance, increase, augment, make larger, more intense, stronger etc. | [adjective] Increased in intensity or concentration; elevated, stepped-up HELICOPTED (18) HELILIFTED (17) HELLENIZED (23) HEMORRHOID (19) [noun] (often in the plural) An engorged, dilated and easily broken varicosity in the perianal area, often accompanied by intense itching and throbbing pain: piles. HIBERNATED (16) [verb] To spend winter time in hibernation. | [verb] To live in seclusion. | [verb] To enter a standby state which conserves power without losing the contents of memory. HICCOUGHED (22) [verb] To produce a hiccup; have the hiccups. | [verb] To say with a hiccup. | [verb] To produce an abortive sound like a hiccup. HIGHBALLED (20) [verb] To make an estimate which tends toward exaggeration. | [verb] (possibly obsolete) To move quickly; to hightail. HIGHBROWED (23) HIGHJACKED (31) [verb] To forcibly stop and seize control of some vehicle in order to rob it or to reach a destination (especially an airplane, truck or a boat). | [verb] To seize control of some process or resource to achieve a purpose other than its originally intended one. | [verb] To seize control of a networked computer by means of infecting it with a worm or other malware, thereby turning it into a zombie. HIGHTAILED (18) [verb] (usually transitive) To move at full speed, especially in retreat. HINTERLAND (14) [noun] The land immediately next to, and inland from, a coast. | [noun] The rural territory surrounding an urban area, especially a port. | [noun] A remote or undeveloped area, a backwater. HISPANIDAD (17) HITCHHIKED (26) [verb] To try to get a ride in a passing vehicle while standing at the side of a road, generally by either sticking out one's finger or thumb or holding a sign with one's stated destination. | [verb] To be carried along with something else, for example Genetic Hitchhiking where a gene is propagated because it occurs in conjunction with a favourable mutation, or Cultural Hitchhiking where a cultural trait spreads with a technologically advanced population. HITHERWARD (20) [adverb] Toward this place HOLYSTONED (17) [verb] To use a holystone. HOMEPORTED (18) HOODWINKED (22) [verb] To deceive by disguise; to dupe, bewile, mislead. | [verb] To cover the eyes with a hood; to blindfold. | [verb] To overshadow something in a way that one is blind or oblivious to it. HORSESHOED (17) HOTPRESSED (16) HOUSEBOUND (16) [adjective] Restricted to one's home, as by physical infirmity. HUCKSTERED (20) [verb] To haggle, to wrangle, or to bargain. | [verb] To sell or offer goods from place to place, to peddle. | [verb] To promote or sell goods in an aggressive, showy manner. HUMIDIFIED (20) [adjective] Modified by humidification | [verb] To increase the humidity in the air. HUMILIATED (16) [verb] To injure the dignity and self-respect of. | [verb] To make humble; to lower in condition or status. | [adjective] Deprived of dignity or self-respect HUMPBACKED (26) HYBRIDIZED (29) [verb] To form a mixture of any kind. | [verb] To cross-breed animals or plants to form hybrids. | [verb] To produce hybrid offspring; to interbreed. HYDROLYZED (30) [verb] To subject to hydrolysis. | [verb] To undergo hydrolysis. HYPERPLOID (21) HYPHENATED (22) [verb] To break a word at the end of a line according to the hyphenation rules by adding a hyphen on the end of the line. | [verb] To join words or syllables with a hyphen. | [adjective] Written with a hyphen. HYPNOTIZED (28) [verb] To induce a state of hypnosis in. | [adjective] Under hypnosis IDENTIFIED (15) [verb] To establish the identity of someone or something. | [verb] To disclose the identity of someone. | [verb] To establish the taxonomic classification of an organism. ILLUVIATED (14) IMBALANCED (17) IMBITTERED (15) IMBOLDENED (16) IMBRICATED (17) [adjective] Overlapping, like scales or roof-tiles; intertwined. IMMIGRATED (16) [verb] To move into a foreign country to stay permanently. IMPANELLED (15) [verb] To enrol (jurors), e.g. from a jury pool; to register (the names of jurors) on a "panel" or official list. IMPERILLED (15) [verb] To put into peril; to place in danger. | [verb] To risk or hazard. IMPETRATED (15) [verb] To obtain by asking; to procure upon request. | [verb] To ask for; to demand. IMPLICATED (17) [verb] (with “in”) To show to be connected or involved in an unfavorable or criminal way. | [verb] To imply, to have as a necessary consequence or accompaniment. | [verb] To imply without entailing; to have as an implicature. IMPORTUNED (15) [verb] To bother, trouble, irritate. | [verb] To harass with persistent requests. | [verb] To approach to offer one's services as a prostitute, or otherwise make improper proposals. IMPRECATED (17) [verb] To call down by prayer, as something hurtful or calamitous. IMPRISONED (15) [verb] To put in or as if in prison; confine. IMPROVISED (18) [verb] To make something up or invent it as one goes on; to proceed guided only by imagination, instinct, and guesswork rather than by a careful plan. | [adjective] Created by improvisation; impromptu; unrehearsed. INBREATHED (16) [verb] To breathe (something) in; imbreathe. | [verb] To inspire (a person); communicate by inspiration; infuse by breathing. | [verb] To draw in as breath; inhale; inspire. INCARNATED (13) [verb] To embody in flesh, invest with a bodily, especially a human, form. | [verb] To incarn; to become covered with flesh, to heal over. | [verb] To make carnal; to reduce the spiritual nature of. INCOMMODED (18) [verb] To disturb, to discomfort, to hinder. INCULCATED (15) [verb] To teach by repeated instruction. | [verb] To induce understanding or a particular sentiment in a person or persons. INCULPATED (15) [verb] To imply the guilt of; to blame or incriminate. INCUMBERED (17) INCURVATED (16) [verb] To bend (especially inwards); to give a curved shape to. | [verb] To have a curved or bent shape; to bend or curve inwards. INDENTURED (12) [verb] To bind a person under such a contract. | [verb] To indent; to make hollows, notches, or wrinkles in; to furrow. | [noun] A person who is subject to an indenture. INDIGESTED (13) [adjective] Not resolved; not regularly disposed and arranged; unmethodical, crude. | [adjective] Not digested in the stomach; undigested. | [adjective] Of wounds: not in a state suitable for healing; (specifically) of an abscess or its contents: not ripened or suppurated. INDISPOSED (14) [adjective] Mildly ill. | [adjective] Not disposed, predisposed, or inclined; unwilling. | [adjective] Not yet ready (especially with regard to receiving a visitor) because not yet arranged into a state of readiness (i.e., not disposed); (especially, more specifically): INEBRIATED (13) [verb] To cause to be drunk; to intoxicate. | [verb] To disorder the senses of; to exhilarate, elate or stupefy as if by spirituous drink. | [verb] To become drunk. INFATUATED (14) [verb] To inspire with unreasoning love, attachment or enthusiasm. | [verb] To make foolish. | [adjective] Foolishly or unreasoningly attracted to or in love with (someone) INFLUENCED (16) [verb] To have an effect on by using gentle or subtle action; to exert an influence upon; to modify, bias, or sway; to persuade or induce. | [verb] To exert, make use of one's influence. | [verb] To cause to flow in or into; infuse; instill. INFURIATED (14) [verb] To make furious or mad with anger; to fill with fury. | [adjective] Extremely angry. INGATHERED (15) [verb] To collect or gather in | [verb] To gather together INITIALLED (11) [verb] To sign one's initial(s), as an abbreviated signature. INNERVATED (14) [verb] To supply (part of the body) with nerves. | [verb] To imbue with nervous energy; to give increased force or courage to. INNUENDOED (12) INOCULATED (13) [verb] To introduce an antigenic substance or vaccine into something (e.g. the body) or someone, such as to produce immunity to a specific disease. | [verb] (by extension) To safeguard or protect something as if by inoculation. | [verb] To add one substance to another; to spike. INSCROLLED (13) INSHEATHED (17) INSINUATED (11) [verb] To hint; to suggest tacitly (usually something bad) while avoiding a direct statement. | [verb] To creep, wind, or flow into; to enter gently, slowly, or imperceptibly, as into crevices. | [verb] (by extension) To ingratiate; to obtain access to or introduce something by subtle, cunning or artful means. INSPIRITED (13) [verb] To strengthen or hearten; give impetus or vigour. | [verb] To fill or imbue with spirit. INSTIGATED (12) [verb] To incite; to bring about by urging or encouraging | [verb] To goad or urge (a person) forward, especially to wicked actions; to provoke INSTITUTED (11) [verb] To begin or initiate (something); to found. | [verb] To train, instruct. | [verb] To nominate; to appoint. INSTRUCTED (13) [verb] To teach by giving instructions. | [verb] To tell (someone) what they must or should do. INTAGLIOED (12) [verb] To engrave or etch using intaglio. INTEGRATED (12) [verb] To form into one whole; to make entire; to complete; to renew; to restore; to perfect. | [verb] To include as a constituent part or functionality. | [verb] To indicate the whole of; to give the sum or total of; as, an integrating anemometer, one that indicates or registers the entire action of the wind in a given time. INTERACTED (13) [verb] To act upon each other. INTERBREED (13) [verb] To breed or reproduce within an isolated community. | [verb] To breed or reproduce within a heterogenous community, the products of which produce hybrids. INTERCEDED (14) [verb] To plead on someone else's behalf. | [verb] To act as a mediator in a dispute; to arbitrate or mediate. | [verb] To pass between; to intervene. INTERESTED (11) [verb] To engage the attention of; to awaken interest in; to excite emotion or passion in, in behalf of a person or thing. | [verb] To be concerned with or engaged in; to affect; to concern; to excite. | [verb] To cause or permit to share. INTERFACED (16) [verb] To construct an interface for. | [verb] To connect through an interface. | [verb] To serve as an interface. INTERFERED (14) [verb] To get involved or involve oneself, causing disturbance. | [verb] (of waves) To be correlated with each other when overlapped or superposed. | [verb] (mostly of horses) To strike one foot against the opposite foot or ankle in using the legs. INTERFILED (14) [verb] To file (something) between or among existing entries. INTERFUSED (14) [verb] To fuse or blend together INTERLACED (13) [verb] To cross one with another. | [verb] To mingle; to blend. | [verb] To cross one another as if woven together; to intertwine; to blend intricately. INTERLINED (11) [verb] To write or insert between lines already written or printed, as for correction or addition. | [verb] To arrange in alternate lines. | [verb] To mark or imprint with lines. INTERLOPED (13) [verb] To intrude, meddle, or trespass in others' affairs. INTERMIXED (20) [verb] To mix together; to intermingle or blend. | [adjective] Mixed together INTERPLEAD (13) INTERPOSED (13) [verb] To insert something (or oneself) between other things. | [verb] To interrupt a conversation by introducing a different subject or making a comment. | [verb] To offer (one's help or services). INTERVENED (14) [verb] To become involved in a situation, so as to alter or prevent an action. | [verb] To occur, fall, or come between, points of time, or events. | [verb] To occur or act as an obstacle or delay. INTHRALLED (14) [verb] To hold spellbound; to bewitch, charm or captivate. | [verb] To make subservient; to enslave or subjugate. | [verb] To hold spellbound; to bewitch, charm or captivate. INTRENCHED (16) [verb] To dig or excavate a trench; to trench. | [verb] To surround or provide with a trench, especially for defense; to dig in. | [verb] To establish a substantial position in business, politics, etc. INTRODUCED (14) [verb] (of people) To cause (someone) to be acquainted (with someone else). | [verb] To make (something or someone) known by formal announcement or recommendation. | [verb] To add (something) to a system, a mixture, or a container. IPRONIAZID (22) [noun] A hydrazine drug formerly used as an antidepressant. IRONFISTED (14) [adjective] Characterized by ruthless control IRONHANDED (15) [adjective] Strict and dictatorial; exercising ruthless control; iron-fisted. IRRADIATED (12) [verb] To throw rays of light upon; to illuminate; to brighten; to adorn with luster. | [verb] To enlighten intellectually; to illuminate. | [verb] To animate by heat or light. ISOGRAFTED (15) ISOMERIZED (22) [adjective] Converted from one isomer to another ISOPRENOID (13) ITALICISED (13) [verb] To put into italics. | [verb] To emphasize. ITALICIZED (22) [verb] To put into italics. | [verb] To emphasize. ITINERATED (11) [verb] To travel from place to place, especially to preach or lecture. JACKBOOTED (26) JACKKNIFED (31) [verb] To fold in the middle, as a jackknife does. | [verb] To cause a semi-trailer truck to fold like a jackknife in a traffic accident. JACKROLLED (24) JARGONIZED (28) [verb] To speak or write using jargon. | [verb] To convert into jargon; to express using jargon. JETTISONED (18) [verb] To eject from a boat, submarine, aircraft, spaceship or hot-air balloon, so as to lighten the load. | [verb] To let go or get rid of as being useless or defective. JIMSONWEED (23) [noun] A poisonous plant of the Datura stramonium species, part of the nightshade (Solanaceae) family. A hallucinogen occasionally ingested by those looking for a cheap high. | [noun] (by extension) Any poisonous plant of the Datura genus. JUXTAPOSED (27) [verb] To place side by side, especially for contrast or comparison. | [adjective] Placed side by side often for comparison or contrast. KARYOTYPED (23) KEELHAULED (18) [verb] To punish by dragging under the keel of a ship. | [verb] To rebuke harshly. KERCHIEFED (23) KERPLUNKED (21) KEYBOARDED (21) [verb] To type on a computer keyboard. KEYPUNCHED (25) [verb] To use such a device or machine KEYSTROKED (22) KINESCOPED (19) KNAPSACKED (23) KNEECAPPED (21) [verb] To destroy the knees of (a person), usually by shooting at the knees, as a punishment carried out by criminals or terrorists. KNIGHTHOOD (22) [noun] An honour whereby one is made into a knight, and one can thereafter be called "Sir" | [noun] The quality of being a knight. | [noun] The knights collectively, the body of knights. LABIALIZED (22) [verb] To round, make (a sound, notably a consonant) labial. LANDLOCKED (18) [adjective] (of a country, geographical region, etc.) Surrounded by land (having no borders with the sea). | [adjective] Living in freshwater, such as landlocked salmon. | [adjective] (of a property or parcel) Surrounded by other property and having no access to a public road. LANDSCAPED (16) [verb] To create or maintain a landscape. LANGUISHED (15) [verb] To lose strength and become weak; to be in a state of weakness or sickness. | [verb] To pine away in longing for something; to have low spirits, especially from lovesickness. | [verb] To live in miserable or disheartening conditions. LAPIDIFIED (17) [verb] To become stone or stony. | [verb] To convert into stone or stony material; to petrify. | [verb] To cause to become permanent; to solidify. LAVENDERED (15) [verb] To decorate or perfume with lavender. | [adjective] Perfumed with lavender. LEAFLETTED (14) LEGISLATED (12) [verb] To pass laws (including the amending or repeal of existing laws). | [adjective] Created through legislation. LENGTHENED (15) [verb] To make longer, to extend the length of. | [verb] To become longer. LETTERHEAD (14) [noun] A portion of text at the top of a letter, identifying the sender and often giving their address etc., used for formal correspondence. | [noun] Paper marked with a letterhead. LIGHTFACED (20) LIKELIHOOD (18) [noun] The probability of a specified outcome; the chance of something happening; probability; the state or degree of being probable. | [noun] The probability that some fixed outcome was generated by a random distribution with a specific parameter. | [noun] Likeness, resemblance. LINEARISED (11) [verb] To make linear | [verb] To treat in a linear manner | [adjective] Made linear, or treated in a linear manner. LINEARIZED (20) [verb] To make linear | [verb] To treat in a linear manner | [adjective] Made linear, or treated in a linear manner. LINERBOARD (13) LIPSTICKED (19) LIQUIDATED (21) [verb] To settle (a debt) by paying the outstanding amount. | [verb] To settle the affairs of (a company), by using its assets to pay its debts. | [verb] To convert (assets) into cash; to redeem. LIQUIDIZED (30) [verb] To make liquid usually refering to solid food in a food processor. | [verb] To convert assets into liquid (cash) form; to liquidate LIVELIHOOD (17) [noun] A means of providing the necessities of life for oneself (for example, a job or income). | [noun] Property which brings in an income; an estate. | [noun] Liveliness; appearance of life. LIXIVIATED (21) [verb] To separate (a substance) into soluble and insoluble components through percolation; to leach. LOGGERHEAD (16) [noun] A stupid person; a blockhead, a dolt. | [noun] A metal tool consisting of a long rod with a bulbous end that is made hot in a fire, then plunged into some material (such as pitch or a liquid) to melt or heat it. | [noun] A post on a whaling boat used to secure the harpoon rope. LONGHAIRED (15) [adjective] Having long hair. | [adjective] (sometimes derogatory) Artistic or intellectual. | [adjective] Hippie-like. LONGHEADED (16) LOWERCASED (16) LUBRICATED (15) [verb] To make slippery or smooth (normally to minimize friction) by applying a lubricant. | [adjective] Treated with a lubricant | [adjective] Drunk LUMBERYARD (18) [noun] A facility dedicated to the preparation and/or sale of lumber. LUMINESCED (15) [verb] To give off light, including in the invisible electromagnetic radiation frequencies, or become luminescent. LUNKHEADED (19) LUTEINIZED (20) LUXURIATED (18) [verb] To enjoy luxury, to indulge. | [verb] To be luxuriant; to grow exuberantly. MACHINATED (18) [verb] To devise a plot or secret plan; to conspire. MAGNETISED (14) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAGNETIZED (23) [verb] To make magnetic. | [verb] To become magnetic. | [verb] To hypnotize using mesmerism. MAIDENHEAD (17) [noun] Virginity. | [noun] The hymen. MAIDENHOOD (17) [noun] The condition of being a maiden; the time when one is a maiden or young girl. | [noun] A woman's virginity or maidenhead. | [noun] Freshness; newness. MAINTAINED (13) [verb] To support (someone), to back up or assist (someone) in an action. | [verb] To keep up; to preserve; to uphold (a state, condition etc.). | [verb] To declare or affirm (a clause) to be true; to assert. MALADAPTED (16) [adjective] Of any evolving or learning entity, not well adapted for its environment. MALEDICTED (16) MALINGERED (14) [verb] To feign illness, injury, or incapacitation in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. | [verb] To self-inflict real injury or infection (to inflict self-harm) in order to avoid work, obligation, or perilous risk. MALTREATED (13) [verb] To treat badly, to abuse. MANDAMUSED (16) MANEUVERED (16) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANHANDLED (17) [verb] To move something heavy by force of men, without aid of levers, pulleys, machine, or tackles. | [verb] To assault or beat up a person. | [verb] To mishandle; to handle roughly; to mangle. MANIFESTED (16) [verb] To show plainly; to make to appear distinctly, usually to the mind; to put beyond question or doubt; to display; to exhibit. | [verb] To exhibit the manifests or prepared invoices of; to declare at the customhouse. MANIFOLDED (17) MANOEUVRED (16) [verb] To move (something, or oneself) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position. | [verb] To guide, steer, manage purposefully | [verb] To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme MANUMITTED (15) [verb] To release from slavery, to free. MARBLEISED (15) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARBLEIZED (24) [verb] To make (something) look like marble; to marble. | [verb] To come to look like marble; to marble. MARGINATED (14) [adjective] Having a distinct margin MARSHALLED (16) [verb] To arrange (troops, etc.) in line for inspection or a parade. | [verb] (by extension) To arrange (facts, etc.) in some methodical order. | [verb] To ceremoniously guide, conduct or usher. MARTYRIZED (25) [verb] To make a martyr of (someone). MASTERMIND (15) [noun] A person with an extraordinary intellect or skill that is markedly superior to his or her peers. | [noun] A person responsible for the highest level of planning and execution of a major operation. | [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MASTHEADED (17) [verb] To send to the masthead as a punishment. MASTICATED (15) [verb] To chew (food). | [verb] To grind or knead something into a pulp. MATCHBOARD (20) [noun] A type of wooden board that connects with others using a tongue and groove system | [noun] (sand casting) A thin piece of material (such as wood, plaster, or metal) that forms and aligns the matched parting surfaces for the two parts (the cope and the drag) of a molding box or flask, to which board patterns are attached in some casting methods. MAXILLIPED (22) [noun] One of the appendages on the heads of centipedes and some crustaceans behind the maxillae, used for feeding. The maxillipeds, known as forcipules, give centipedes their scientific name, Chilopoda (lip-foot). MEADOWLAND (17) [noun] A tract of land cultivated as a meadow. MECHANIZED (27) [verb] To equip something with machinery. | [verb] To equip a military unit with tanks and other armed vehicles. | [verb] To make something routine, automatic or monotonous. MEDEVACKED (23) [verb] To transport (patients) by medevac. MEDULLATED (14) MEGAPHONED (19) [verb] To use a megaphone; to speak through a megaphone. MELIORATED (13) [verb] To make better; to improve; to solve a problem. | [verb] To become better. | [adjective] Made better; improved MERCERISED (15) [verb] To treat cotton fabric with sodium hydroxide to make it more lustrous and accepting of dyes. MERCERIZED (24) [verb] To treat cotton fabric with sodium hydroxide to make it more lustrous and accepting of dyes. MERCHANTED (18) MERCURATED (15) MESMERISED (15) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. MESMERIZED (24) [verb] To exercise mesmerism on; to affect another person, such as to heal or soothe, through the use of animal magnetism. | [verb] To spellbind; to enthrall. | [adjective] Spellbound or enthralled. METALLIZED (22) [verb] To coat, treat or impregnate a non-metallic object with metal. METHODISED (17) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHODIZED (26) [verb] To reduce to method or order; to arrange in an orderly or systematic manner. | [verb] To make someone orderly or methodical. | [verb] To convert someone to Methodism. METHYLATED (19) [verb] To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits) | [verb] To add a methyl group to a compound | [verb] To add a methyl group to a nucleic acid as part of the process of gene expression METRICIZED (24) MICROFARAD (18) [noun] One millionth ( 10-6 ) of a farad, abbreviated as µF. MICRONIZED (24) [verb] To reduce in size, often to micrometer scale. MICROWAVED (21) [verb] To cook (something) in a microwave oven. MICROWORLD (18) MICTURATED (15) [verb] To urinate. MINISTERED (13) [verb] To attend to (the needs of); to tend; to take care (of); to give aid; to give service. | [verb] To function as a clergyman or as the officiant in church worship | [verb] To afford, to give, to supply. MISADAPTED (16) MISADVISED (17) MISALIGNED (14) [verb] To align incorrectly | [adjective] Out of alignment. MISALTERED (13) MISAPPLIED (17) [verb] To apply incorrectly; to misuse. MISASSAYED (16) MISAVERRED (16) MISAWARDED (17) MISBEHAVED (21) [verb] To act or behave in an inappropriate, improper, incorrect, or unexpected manner. MISBIASSED (15) MISBRANDED (16) MISCARRIED (15) [verb] To have an unfortunate accident of some kind; to be killed, or come to harm. | [verb] To go astray; to do something wrong. | [verb] To have a miscarriage; to abort a foetus, usually without intent to do so. MISCHARGED (19) MISCLAIMED (17) MISCLASSED (15) MISCOLORED (15) MISCOUNTED (15) [verb] To incorrectly count or add up. MISCREATED (15) [verb] To create wrongly or poorly | [adjective] Misshapen, deformed; created unnaturally or wrongly. MISDEFINED (17) MISDIALLED (14) [verb] To dial or use a keypad incorrectly, especially on a telephone. MISDOUBTED (16) [verb] To doubt the existence or reality of. | [verb] To have suspicions about. MISENTERED (13) MISERICORD (15) [noun] Relaxation of monastic rules. | [noun] The room in a monastery for monks granted such relaxation. | [noun] A ledge, sometimes ornately carved, attached to a folding church seat to provide support for a person standing for long periods; a subsellium. MISFIELDED (17) [verb] To field the ball clumsily or ineptly; in cricket this can result in the batsman scoring another run. MISFOCUSED (18) MISGRAFTED (17) MISGUESSED (14) MISHANDLED (17) [verb] To manipulate something roughly, causing physical damage. | [verb] To deal with a situation incorrectly or ineffectively; to make a mistake in handling a situation. MISLABELED (15) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISLABORED (15) MISLEARNED (13) MISLIGHTED (17) MISLOCATED (15) MISMANAGED (16) [verb] To manage an area of responsibility in a way which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. | [verb] To behave, in a management capacity, in a manner which is inept, incompetent, or dishonest. MISMATCHED (20) [verb] To match unsuitably; to fail to match | [adjective] Unsuitably matched; ill joined. MISNOMERED (15) MISORDERED (14) MISPAINTED (15) MISPATCHED (20) MISPLANNED (15) MISPLANTED (15) MISPLEADED (16) MISPOINTED (15) MISPRINTED (15) [verb] To make a misprint. MISRELATED (13) MISSOUNDED (14) MISSPELLED (15) [verb] To spell incorrectly. MISSTARTED (13) MISSTEERED (13) MISSTOPPED (17) MISTOUCHED (18) MISTRAINED (13) MISTREATED (13) [verb] To treat someone, or something roughly or badly. MISTRUSTED (13) [verb] To have no confidence in (something or someone). | [verb] To be wary, suspicious or doubtful of (something or someone). | [verb] To suspect, to imagine or suppose (something) to be the case. MISTRYSTED (16) MISTUTORED (13) MODERNISED (14) [adjective] That has undergone modernisation. | [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MODERNIZED (23) [verb] To make (something old or outdated) up to date, or modern in style or function by adding or changing equipment, designs, etc. | [verb] To become modern in appearance, or adopt modern ways MONOGRAMED (16) MONOHYBRID (21) [noun] A hybrid between two species that only have a difference of one gene. MONORHYMED (21) MONTAGNARD (14) MOSSBACKED (21) MOTHBALLED (18) [verb] To store or shelve something no longer used. | [verb] To stop using (something), but keep it in good condition. | [adjective] (of something out of use) Kept in good condition for possible future use. MOTHERHOOD (19) [noun] The state of being a mother. | [noun] Mothers, considered as a group. MOTHERLAND (16) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth. | [noun] Country of origin. MOTORBIKED (19) MOTORCADED (16) MULTIARMED (15) MULTILOBED (15) MULTIPANED (15) MULTIPLIED (15) [verb] To increase the amount, degree or number of (something). | [verb] (with by) To perform multiplication on (a number). | [verb] To grow in number. MULTISIDED (14) MULTISPEED (15) MUNITIONED (13) [verb] To supply with munitions. MUSHROOMED (18) [verb] To grow quickly to a large size. | [verb] To gather mushrooms. | [verb] To form the shape of a mushroom. MUTINEERED (13) MUTUALIZED (22) [verb] To make, or to become mutual | [verb] To organize a business (especially a financial business) so that it is owned by its customers (or its employees) MYELINATED (16) [adjective] Of nerves, having a coating of myelin. MYTHICIZED (30) [verb] To make into a myth. | [verb] To interpret in terms of mythology. NANOSECOND (13) [noun] A measure of time equal to one billionth of a second. Abbreviation: ns NARCOTIZED (22) [verb] To use a narcotic in order to make (someone) drowsy or insensible; to anesthetize, to drug. | [verb] To dull the senses of (a person, place etc.). | [verb] To make into a narcotic. NARROWBAND (16) [adjective] Describing communication systems with a smaller bandwidth than wideband. NATIONHOOD (14) [noun] The quality of being a nation. | [noun] The fact of achieving national independence or autonomy. NECROPSIED (15) NEGOTIATED (12) [verb] To confer with others in order to come to terms or reach an agreement. | [verb] To arrange or settle something by mutual agreement. | [verb] To succeed in coping with, or getting over something. NEIGHBORED (17) [verb] To be adjacent to | [verb] (followed by "on"; figurative) To be similar to, to be almost the same as. | [verb] To associate intimately with; to be close to. NEWFANGLED (18) [adjective] (usually derogatory or humorous) Modern, unfamiliar, or different. NICTITATED (13) [verb] To wink or blink NIGHTSTAND (15) [noun] A small table or cabinet, typically with drawers, placed at the head side of a bed. NONALIGNED (12) [adjective] Not allied with any particular nation, or to any side in a dispute | [adjective] Neutral, impartial. NONCOLORED (13) NONELECTED (13) NONEXPOSED (20) NONINSURED (11) NONPLUSSED (13) [verb] To perplex or bewilder someone; to confound or flummox | [adjective] Bewildered; unsure how to respond or act. | [adjective] Unfazed, unaffected, or unimpressed. NONPROSSED (13) NONSTEROID (11) NONTENURED (11) NORMALISED (13) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORMALIZED (22) [verb] To make normal, to make standard. | [verb] To format in a standardized manner, to make consistent. | [verb] To reduce to variations by excluding irrelevant aspects. NORTHBOUND (16) [adjective] Heading or moving in a northerly direction. | [adverb] Towards the north. OBFUSCATED (18) [verb] To make dark; overshadow | [verb] To deliberately make more confusing in order to conceal the truth. | [verb] To alter code while preserving its behavior but concealing its structure and intent. OBJURGATED (21) [verb] To rebuke or scold strongly. OBSOLESCED (15) [verb] To become obsolete. OBSTRUCTED (15) [verb] To block or fill (a passage) with obstacles or an obstacle. | [verb] To impede, retard, or interfere with; hinder. | [verb] To get in the way of so as to hide from sight. OCCASIONED (15) [verb] To cause; to produce; to induce OFFICIATED (19) [verb] To perform the functions of some office. | [verb] To serve as umpire or referee. OFFPRINTED (19) OLDFANGLED (16) [adjective] Old-fashioned OPENHANDED (17) [adjective] Done with the hand open rather than clenched | [adjective] Liberal and generous. | [adjective] Frank, honest, and tolerant. OPSONIFIED (16) ORANGEWOOD (15) ORIENTATED (11) [verb] To face a given direction. | [verb] To determine one's position relative to the surroundings; to orient (oneself). | [verb] To arrange in order; to dispose or place (a body) so as to show its relation to other bodies, or the relation of its parts among themselves. ORIGINATED (12) [verb] To cause to be, to bring into existence; to produce, initiate. | [verb] To come into existence; to have origin or beginning; to spring, be derived (from, with). ORNAMENTED (13) [verb] To decorate. | [verb] To add to. ORNITHOPOD (16) [noun] A type of bipedal, herbivorous, bird-hipped dinosaur from the Cretaceous period, found on all seven continents. ORPHANHOOD (19) OSCILLATED (13) [verb] To swing back and forth, especially if with a regular rhythm. | [verb] To vacillate between conflicting opinions, etc. | [verb] To vary above and below a mean value. OSTRACISED (13) [verb] To ban a person from a city for five or ten years through the procedure of ostracism. | [verb] (by extension) To exclude a person from a community or from society by not communicating with them or by refusing to acknowledge their presence; to refuse to associate with or talk to; to shun. | [adjective] Banished by ostracism. OSTRACIZED (22) [verb] To ban a person from a city for five or ten years through the procedure of ostracism. | [verb] (by extension) To exclude a person from a community or from society by not communicating with them or by refusing to acknowledge their presence; to refuse to associate with or talk to; to shun. | [adjective] Banished by ostracism. OTHERWORLD (17) [noun] A world beyond death; an afterlife. | [noun] A world other than the everyday world. | [noun] Mythical abode of otherworldy beings. OUTBITCHED (18) OUTBLEATED (13) OUTBLESSED (13) OUTBLOOMED (15) OUTBLUFFED (19) OUTBLUSHED (16) OUTBOASTED (13) OUTBRAGGED (15) OUTBRAWLED (16) OUTBULLIED (13) OUTCAPERED (15) OUTCAVILED (16) OUTCHARGED (17) OUTCHARMED (18) OUTCHEATED (16) OUTCLASSED (13) [verb] To surpass something or somebody else, so as to appear to be in a higher class OUTCLIMBED (17) OUTCOACHED (18) OUTCOUNTED (13) OUTCRAWLED (16) OUTCROPPED (17) [verb] (of a stratum) To come out to the surface of the ground. OUTCROSSED (13) [verb] To crossbreed different strains of a plant or animal OUTDAZZLED (30) OUTDEBATED (14) OUTDRAGGED (14) OUTDREAMED (14) OUTDRESSED (12) OUTDROPPED (16) OUTDUELLED (12) OUTFEASTED (14) OUTFIGURED (15) OUTFLANKED (18) [verb] To maneuver around and behind the flank of (an opposing force). | [verb] To gain a tactical advantage over (a competitor, for example). OUTFROWNED (17) OUTFUMBLED (18) OUTGRINNED (12) OUTGROSSED (12) [verb] To make a larger gross income or profit than. OUTGUESSED (12) [verb] To beat through accurate anticipation of someone's plans and actions. OUTHOMERED (16) [verb] To score more home runs than another player. OUTHUMORED (16) OUTHUSTLED (14) OUTLAUGHED (15) OUTLEARNED (11) OUTMARCHED (18) OUTMATCHED (18) [verb] To surpass or be better than something or someone else OUTMUSCLED (15) [verb] To surpass in a contest involving strength. | [adjective] Overcome by superior strength. OUTPAINTED (13) OUTPITCHED (18) OUTPLANNED (13) OUTPLODDED (15) OUTPLOTTED (13) OUTPOINTED (13) [verb] To score more points than (especially, in boxing, to achieve victory by scoring more points that one's opponent). | [verb] To sail closer to the wind than (another ship). OUTPOWERED (16) OUTPREENED (13) OUTPRESSED (13) OUTPUNCHED (18) [verb] To punch harder or better than. OUTREACHED (16) [verb] To reach further than. | [verb] To surpass or exceed. | [verb] To go too far. OUTREBOUND (13) [verb] To get more rebounds than OUTRIVALED (14) [verb] To outperform; to outdo. OUTSAVORED (14) OUTSCHEMED (18) OUTSCOLDED (14) OUTSCOOPED (15) OUTSCORNED (13) OUTSHOUTED (14) [verb] To shout louder or for longer than another. | [verb] To merit the most attention or praise. OUTSLICKED (17) OUTSMARTED (13) [verb] To beat in a competition of wits. OUTSPANNED (13) [verb] To release oxen from harness. OUTSPEEDED (14) OUTSPELLED (13) OUTSTARTED (11) OUTSTEERED (11) OUTSTUDIED (12) OUTSTUNTED (11) OUTTHANKED (18) OUTTOWERED (14) OUTTRICKED (17) OUTTROTTED (11) OUTTRUMPED (15) OUTVAUNTED (14) OUTWATCHED (19) [verb] To watch more than someone else. | [verb] To maintain a vigil beyond the end. OUTWEARIED (14) OUTWEIGHED (18) [verb] To exceed in weight or mass. | [verb] To exceed in importance or value. OUTWHIRLED (17) OUTYIELDED (15) [verb] To exceed or surpass in yielding. OVERARCHED (19) [verb] To form an arch over something. OVERBETTED (16) OVERBILLED (16) OVERBOILED (16) OVERBOOKED (20) [verb] To sell or guarantee more seats for (an event) than actually exist. | [adjective] Having had more seats or tickets sold or guaranteed then were available. OVERBURNED (16) OVERCALLED (16) [verb] To call a bet after another player has already called | [verb] To diagnose a condition that does not, in fact, exist. OVERCASTED (16) OVERCOOKED (20) [verb] To cook for too long or at too high a temperature. | [verb] To do something to excess; to overdo. | [adjective] Made unpalatable or inedible by cooking for too long. OVERCOOLED (16) OVERDECKED (21) OVERDUBBED (19) [verb] (sound engineering) To record a part along with an already recorded part or parts. OVEREDITED (15) OVEREMOTED (16) OVEREXPAND (23) OVEREXTEND (21) [verb] To expand or extend to an excessive degree, especially to do so beyond a safe limit. | [verb] To apply (a term) to too many referents, by overextension. | [verb] To push a pawn too far, so that it becomes vulnerable to the opponent's attacks. OVERFEARED (17) OVERFILLED (17) [verb] To fill beyond capacity or beyond what is appropriate. OVERFISHED (20) [verb] To fish excessively, often substantially reducing over several years the supply of one or more species of fish in an area. | [adjective] Fished to the point of sustained reduction of fish species population. OVERFLOWED (20) [verb] To flow over the brim of (a container). | [verb] To cover with a liquid, literally or figuratively. | [verb] To cause an overflow. OVERFUNDED (18) [verb] To supply with more funds than necessary or appropriate OVERGILDED (16) OVERGIRDED (16) OVERGOADED (16) OVERGRAZED (24) [verb] To graze land excessively, to the detriment of the land and its vegetation | [verb] To allow animals to graze excessively OVERHANDED (18) OVERHAULED (17) [verb] To modernize, repair, renovate, or revise completely. | [verb] To pass, overtake, or travel past. | [verb] To keep (running rigging) clear, and see that no hitch occurs. OVERHEAPED (19) OVERHEATED (17) [verb] To heat excessively. | [verb] To become excessively hot. | [adjective] Excessively heated OVERHUNTED (17) OVERISSUED (14) [verb] To issue shares or banknotes to an extent beyond the ability to pay, or in excess of authorization OVERKILLED (18) OVERLAPPED (18) [verb] To extend over and partly cover something. | [verb] To have an area, range, character or function in common. | [verb] Of sets: to have some elements in common. OVERLEAPED (16) [verb] To leap over, to jump over, to cross by jumping. | [verb] To pass over; to omit, leave out. | [verb] To make too much effort in leaping; to leap too far. OVERLOADED (15) [verb] To load excessively | [verb] To provide too much power to a circuit | [verb] To create different functions for the same name, to be used in different contexts OVERLOOKED (18) [verb] To offer a view (of something) from a higher position. | [verb] To fail to notice; to look over and beyond (anything) without seeing it. | [verb] To pretend not to have noticed (something, especially a mistake or flaw); to pass over (something) without censure or punishment. OVERLORDED (15) OVERMANNED (16) [verb] To provide with too many personnel; overstaff. | [adjective] Excessively manned; overstaffed OVERMELTED (16) OVERMILKED (20) OVERPASSED (16) [verb] To pass above something, as when flying or moving on a higher road. | [verb] To exceed, overstep, or transcend a limit, threshold, or goal. | [verb] To disregard, skip, or miss something. OVERPLAYED (19) [verb] To overdo or overact one's effect or role. | [verb] To play (a song or record) too frequently. | [verb] To overestimate one's strength in a game or event, which ultimately may end in a defeat. OVERPRICED (18) [verb] To give a commodity an excessive price. | [adjective] Priced higher than what it is really worth. OVERPRIZED (25) [verb] To prize excessively; to overvalue. OVERPUMPED (20) OVERRUFFED (20) [verb] To ruff with a higher trump following a prior ruff on the same trick OVERSALTED (14) [verb] To add too much salt to (something) OVERSAUCED (16) OVERSCALED (16) OVERSEEDED (15) OVERSMOKED (20) OVERSOAKED (18) OVERSPREAD (16) [verb] To spread over or across (something); cover over; be scattered over; permeate, overrun. | [verb] To be spread or scattered about. OVERSTATED (14) [verb] To exaggerate; to state or claim too much. | [adjective] Having been overstated; exaggerated; stated, displayed, or presented too grandly or prominently. OVERSTAYED (17) [verb] To remain present after the agreed or appropriate departure time. | [verb] To remain present beyond the limits of. OVERSUDSED (15) OVERSUPPED (18) OVERTALKED (18) OVERTASKED (18) [verb] To task too heavily; to give someone or something too many tasks; to overburden. OVERTIPPED (18) [verb] To leave a tip that is too large. OVERTOILED (14) OVERTOPPED (18) [verb] To be higher than; to rise over the top of. | [verb] To place too many toppings on. OVERTRADED (15) [verb] To trade beyond one's capital; to buy goods beyond the means of paying for or selling them; to overstock the market. OVERTURNED (14) [verb] To turn over, capsize or upset. | [verb] To overthrow or destroy. | [verb] To reverse (a decision); to overrule or rescind. OVERVALUED (17) [verb] To assign an excessive value to something. OVERWARMED (19) OVERWEENED (17) OVERWETTED (17) OVERWORKED (21) [verb] To make (someone) work too hard. | [verb] To work too hard. | [verb] To fill too full of work; to crowd with labour. OVIPOSITED (16) [verb] To lay eggs OXYGENATED (22) [verb] To treat or infuse with oxygen | [verb] To give (a patient) oxygen therapy. | [adjective] Containing oxygen, or oxygen-containing radicals, as substituents PACKTHREAD (22) [noun] A strong thread or twine used in tying up parcels. PALLETISED (13) [verb] To place on a pallet or pallets. PALLETIZED (22) [verb] To place on a pallet or pallets. PALPITATED (15) [verb] To beat strongly or rapidly; said especially of the heart. | [verb] To cause to beat strongly or rapidly. | [verb] To shake tremulously PANBROILED (15) PANHANDLED (17) [verb] To beg for money, especially with a container in hand for receiving loose change, especially on the street, and particularly, as a bum. PANTOMIMED (17) [verb] To make (a gesture) without speaking. | [verb] To entertain others by silent gestures or actions. PANTSUITED (13) PAPERBOARD (17) [noun] A thick paper, or thin cardboard. PAPERBOUND (17) PARABOLOID (15) [noun] A surface having a parabolic cross section parallel to an axis, and circular or elliptical cross section perpendicular to the axis; especially the surface of revolution of a parabola. PARACHUTED (18) [verb] To jump, fall, descend, etc. using such a device. | [verb] To introduce into a place using such a device. | [verb] To place (somebody) in an organisation in a position of authority without their having previous experience there; used with in or into. PARAFFINED (19) PARALLELED (13) [verb] To construct or place something parallel to something else. | [verb] Of a path etc: To be parallel to something else. | [verb] Of a process etc: To be analogous to something else. PARASITOID (13) [noun] Any organism that is parasitic during part of its life cycle, especially one that eventually kills its host. PARBUCKLED (21) [verb] To hoist or lower by means of a parbuckle PARENTHOOD (16) [noun] The state of being a parent PASSIVATED (16) [verb] To reduce the chemical reactivity of a surface by applying a coating PASTEBOARD (15) [noun] (usually uncountable) Card stock. | [noun] A widget allowing multiple users to paste and share text or other items. | [noun] A person's visiting card. PATCHBOARD (20) [noun] A component of a manual telephone switchboard, or of various early data processing equipment, in which circuits are completed with cords on a matrix of connections. PATRONISED (13) [verb] To act as a patron of; to defend, protect, or support. | [verb] To make oneself a customer of a business, especially a regular customer. | [verb] To assume a tone of unjustified superiority toward; to talk down to, to treat condescendingly. PATRONIZED (22) [verb] To act as a patron of; to defend, protect, or support. | [verb] To make oneself a customer of a business, especially a regular customer. | [verb] To assume a tone of unjustified superiority toward; to talk down to, to treat condescendingly. PAUPERIZED (24) [verb] To make someone a pauper; to impoverish PAVILIONED (16) PECKERWOOD (22) [noun] A woodpecker. | [noun] A peckerwood sawmill. | [noun] A white person, especially a Southerner, or one who is ignorant, rustic, or bigoted. PEDESTALED (14) [verb] To set or support on (or as if on) a pedestal. PEDIMENTED (16) PELLETISED (13) [verb] To form into pellets. PELLETIZED (22) [verb] To form into pellets. PENETRATED (13) [verb] To enter into; to make way into the interior of; to pierce. | [verb] To achieve understanding of, despite some obstacle; to comprehend; to understand. | [verb] To affect profoundly through the senses or feelings; to move deeply. PENTAPLOID (15) [noun] A cell or organism with five haploid sets of chromosomes. | [adjective] That has five haploid sets of chromosomes PEOPLEHOOD (18) [noun] The collective sense of being part of a distinct people. PERCOLATED (15) [verb] To pass a liquid through a porous substance; to filter. | [verb] To drain or seep through a porous substance. | [verb] To make (coffee) in a percolator. PERENNATED (13) [verb] To survive from one growing season to the next PERFORATED (16) [verb] To pierce; to penetrate. | [verb] To make a line of holes in (a thin material) to allow separation at the line. | [adjective] Pierced with holes. PERIWIGGED (18) PERSECUTED (15) [verb] To pursue in a manner to injure, grieve, or afflict; to beset with cruelty or malignity; to harass; especially, to afflict, harass, punish, or put to death for one's race, sexual identity, adherence to a particular religious creed, or mode of worship. | [verb] To harass with importunity; to pursue with persistent solicitations; to annoy. PERSEVERED (16) [verb] To persist steadfastly in pursuit of an undertaking, task, journey, or goal, even if hindered by distraction, difficulty, obstacles, or discouragement. | [verb] To stay constant; to continue in a certain state; to remain. PERSONATED (13) [verb] To fraudulently portray another person; to impersonate. | [verb] To portray a character (as in a play); to act. | [verb] To attribute personal characteristics to something; to personify. PERSONHOOD (16) [noun] The state or period of being a person. | [noun] The status of being considered as a person. PETITIONED (13) [verb] To make a request to, commonly in written form. PHANTASIED (16) PHENOLATED (16) PHOTOFLOOD (19) PHOTOLYZED (28) [verb] To cause photolysis. | [adjective] That has been subjected to photolysis. PICAROONED (15) PICOSECOND (17) [noun] An SI unit of time equal to 10-12 seconds. Symbol: ps PICTURIZED (24) [verb] To represent in a picture or a motion picture; to depict. | [verb] To adorn with pictures; to illustrate. PIDGINIZED (24) PIGSTICKED (20) PINNATIFID (16) [adjective] (of leaves) Having lobes with incisions that extend less than half-way toward the midrib. PINPOINTED (15) [verb] To identify or locate precisely or with great accuracy. PINPRICKED (21) PINWHEELED (19) [verb] To spin. PIROUETTED (13) [verb] To perform a pirouette; to whirl on the toes, like a dancer. PITAPATTED (15) PITCHPOLED (20) [verb] (of a boat) To capsize end over end, as in heavy surf. PIXILLATED (20) [adjective] Behaving in an eccentric manner, as though led by pixies. | [adjective] Whimsical | [adjective] Drunk PLAISTERED (13) PLATINIZED (22) [verb] To coat with platinum. PLAYGROUND (17) [noun] (outdoors) A large open space for children to play on, usually having dedicated play equipment (such as swings and slides). | [noun] Any physical or metaphysical space in which a person or organization has free rein to do as they please. PLURALIZED (22) [verb] To make plural. | [verb] To take a plural; to assume a plural form. | [verb] To multiply; to make manifold. POCKMARKED (25) [adjective] Having pockmarks | [adjective] Pitted, or scarred with holes | [adjective] Incomplete, lacking, having holes PODZOLIZED (32) [verb] To transform into podzol. | [verb] To become podzol. POETICIZED (24) [verb] To make poetic, or express in poetry. | [verb] To write or speak in the manner of a poet. POISONWOOD (16) POLITICKED (19) [verb] To engage in political activity; politick. | [verb] To engage in political activity. POLLINATED (13) [verb] To apply pollen to (a stigma). PONYTAILED (16) POSITIONED (13) [verb] To put into place. POSTFORMED (18) POSTMARKED (19) [verb] To apply a postmark on. POSTSYNCED (18) POSTULATED (13) [verb] To assume as a truthful or accurate premise or axiom, especially as a basis of an argument. | [verb] To appoint or request one's appointment to an ecclesiastical office. | [verb] To request, demand or claim for oneself. POTBELLIED (15) POTLATCHED (18) [verb] To give; especially, to give as a gift during a potlatch ceremony. | [verb] To carry out or take part in a potlatch ceremony. POUSSETTED (13) PRAELECTED (15) PREADAPTED (16) [adjective] Modified by preadaptation. PREADOPTED (16) PREAVERRED (16) PREBLESSED (15) PRECHECKED (24) PRECHILLED (18) PRECLEANED (15) PRECLEARED (15) PRECREASED (15) PREDEFINED (17) [verb] To define in advance. | [adjective] Having been defined or established previously. PREDICATED (16) [verb] To announce, assert, or proclaim publicly. | [verb] To assume or suppose; to infer. | [verb] (originally United States) to base (on); to assert on the grounds of. PREDRILLED (14) PREELECTED (15) PREENACTED (15) PREERECTED (15) PREEXISTED (20) [verb] To exist before something else. PREFIGURED (17) [verb] To show or suggest ahead of time; to represent beforehand (often used in a Biblical context). | [verb] To predict or foresee. PREFOCUSED (18) [verb] To focus in advance PREFRANKED (20) PREHOMINID (18) PREJUDICED (23) [verb] To have a negative impact on (someone's position, chances etc.). | [verb] To cause prejudice in; to bias the mind of. | [adjective] Having prejudices. PRELIMITED (15) PREORDERED (14) [verb] To order (goods or services) in advance, before they are available. | [verb] To sort or arrange beforehand. | [adjective] (of a set) Equipped with a preorder. PREPLANNED (15) [verb] To plan in advance | [adjective] Planned in advance PREPRINTED (15) [verb] To print in advance. PREPUNCHED (20) PRESCINDED (16) [verb] (with from) To abstract (from); to dismiss from consideration. | [verb] To pay exclusive attention to. PRESCRIBED (17) [verb] To order (a drug or medical device) for use by a particular patient (under licensed authority). | [verb] To specify by writing as a required procedure or ritual; to lay down authoritatively as a guide, direction, or rule of action. PRESSBOARD (15) [noun] A kind of highly sized rag paper or board, sometimes containing a small admixture of wood pulp. PRESTAMPED (17) PRETRAINED (13) PRETREATED (13) [verb] To give something a treatment prior to another operation | [adjective] That has been subject to pretreatment PRETRIMMED (17) PRETTIFIED (16) [verb] To make pretty or prettier, to make more attractive, especially only in a superficial way. PREWRAPPED (20) PRIESTHOOD (16) [noun] The role or office of a priest. | [noun] Priests as a group; the clergy. | [noun] Authority to act in the name of God. PRINCIPLED (17) [verb] To equip with principles; to establish, or fix, in certain principles; to impress with any tenet or rule of conduct. | [adjective] Based on, having or manifesting principles. PRISMATOID (15) PRIVATISED (16) [verb] To release government control of (a business or industry) to private industry. | [verb] To make (a variable, etc.) private in scope. PRIVATIZED (25) [verb] To release government control of (a business or industry) to private industry. | [verb] To make (a variable, etc.) private in scope. PRIVILEGED (17) [verb] To grant some particular right or exemption to; to invest with a peculiar right or immunity; to authorize | [verb] To bring or put into a condition of privilege or exemption from evil or danger; to exempt; to deliver. | [adjective] Having special privileges. PROBENECID (17) [noun] A particular pharmaceutical drug used to treat hyperuricemia. PROCERCOID (17) PROCLAIMED (17) [verb] To announce or declare. PROCREATED (15) [verb] To beget or conceive (offspring). | [verb] To originate, create or produce something. | [verb] To reproduce. PROGLOTTID (14) [noun] Any of the segments of a tapeworm; they contain both male and female reproductive organs PROGRAMMED (18) [verb] To enter a program or other instructions into (a computer or other electronic device) to instruct it to do a particular task. | [verb] To develop (software) by writing program code. | [verb] To put together the schedule of an event. PROGRESSED (14) [verb] To move, go, or proceed forward; to advance. | [verb] To improve; to become better or more complete. | [verb] To move (something) forward; to advance, to expedite. PROHIBITED (18) [verb] To forbid, disallow, or proscribe officially; to make illegal or illicit. | [adjective] Forbidden; unallowed PROLOGIZED (23) PROMENADED (16) [verb] To walk for amusement, show, or exercise. | [verb] To perform the stylized walk of a square dance. PRONOUNCED (15) [verb] To declare formally, officially or ceremoniously. | [verb] To declare authoritatively, or as a formal expert opinion. | [verb] To pass judgment. PROPAGATED (16) [verb] (of animals or plants) To cause to continue or multiply by generation, or successive production | [verb] To cause to spread to extend; to impel or continue forward in space | [verb] To spread from person to person; to extend the knowledge of; to originate and spread; to carry from place to place; to disseminate PROPERTIED (15) [adjective] Owning property, especially land or real estate that yields an income. PROPHESIED (18) [verb] To speak or write with divine inspiration; to act as prophet. | [verb] To predict, to foretell (with or without divine inspiration). | [verb] To foreshow; to herald; to prefigure. PROPLASTID (15) PROPOUNDED (16) [verb] To put forward; to offer for discussion or debate. PROROGATED (14) PROSCRIBED (17) [verb] To forbid or prohibit. | [verb] To denounce. | [verb] To banish or exclude. PROSECUTED (15) [verb] To start criminal proceedings against. | [verb] To charge, try. | [verb] To seek to obtain by legal process. PROSELYTED (16) [verb] To proselytize. PROSPECTED (17) [verb] To search, as for gold. | [verb] To determine which minerals or metals are present in a location. PROSTRATED (13) [verb] To lie flat or face-down. | [verb] To throw oneself down in submission. | [verb] To cause to lie down, to flatten. PROTOCOLED (15) PROTONATED (13) [verb] To add one or more protons to (a molecule, ion or radical). | [verb] To acquire an additional proton. PROTRACTED (15) [verb] To draw out; to extend, especially in duration. | [verb] To use a protractor. | [verb] To draw to a scale; to lay down the lines and angles of, with scale and protractor; to plot. PUBLICISED (17) [verb] To make widely known to the public. | [verb] To advertise, create publicity for. PUBLICIZED (26) [verb] To make widely known to the public. | [verb] To advertise, create publicity for. PULLULATED (13) [verb] To multiply rapidly. | [verb] To germinate. | [verb] To teem; to be filled (with). PULVERISED (16) [verb] To render into dust or powder. | [verb] To completely destroy, especially by crushing to fragments or a powder. | [verb] To defeat soundly, thrash. PULVERIZED (25) [verb] To render into dust or powder. | [verb] To completely destroy, especially by crushing to fragments or a powder. | [verb] To defeat soundly, thrash. PUNCHBOARD (20) [noun] A board, having a number of holes filled with slips of paper, once used as a form of lottery PUNCTUATED (15) [verb] To add punctuation to. | [verb] To add or to interrupt at regular intervals. | [verb] To emphasize; to stress. PUSTULATED (13) [adjective] Having pustules; pustular or pustulate PYCNOGONID (19) PYRETHROID (19) [noun] Any of several synthetic insecticides having a structure based on pyrethrin. PYROXENOID (23) QUADRUPLED (23) [verb] To multiply by four. | [verb] To increase by a factor of four. | [verb] To provide four parallel running lines on a given stretch of railway. QUANTIFIED (23) [adjective] Measured | [adjective] Used as a quantifier | [verb] To assign a quantity to. QUARRELLED (20) [verb] To disagree. | [verb] To contend, argue fiercely, squabble. | [verb] To find fault; to cavil. QUESTIONED (20) [verb] To ask questions about; to interrogate; to enquire for information. | [verb] To raise doubts about; have doubts about. | [verb] To argue; to converse; to dispute. QUINTUPLED (22) [verb] To multiply something (or be multiplied) by five RAILROADED (12) [verb] To transport via railroad. | [verb] To operate a railroad. | [verb] To work for a railroad. RAINWASHED (17) RANDOMIZED (23) [verb] To arrange randomly; to make random | [adjective] Obtained by randomization REABSORBED (15) [verb] To absorb again. REACCENTED (15) REACCEPTED (17) [verb] To accept again. REACQUIRED (22) [verb] Acquire again READDICTED (15) READJUSTED (19) [verb] To adjust again READMITTED (14) [verb] To admit, or allow to enter, again. REAFFIRMED (19) [verb] To affirm again. | [verb] To bolster or support. REALLOTTED (11) [verb] To allot for a second or subsequent time REANALYZED (23) [verb] To analyze again. | [verb] To analyze a lexeme with a different structure from its original, often by misunderstanding. REANIMATED (13) [verb] To animate again. REANOINTED (11) REAPPEARED (15) [verb] To appear again. REAPPROVED (18) REARRANGED (12) [verb] To change the order or arrangement of (one or more items). REARRESTED (11) [verb] To arrest again. REASCENDED (14) [verb] To ascend again. REASSAILED (11) REASSERTED (11) [verb] Assert again REASSESSED (11) [verb] To assess again; to revise an earlier assessment; to reevaluate REASSIGNED (12) [verb] To assign again or anew. | [verb] To transfer back what was previously assigned. REASSORTED (11) REATTACHED (16) REATTACKED (17) REATTAINED (11) [verb] Attain again REAWAKENED (18) [verb] To wake after an extended period of sleep. | [verb] To reactivate or reanimate. REBALANCED (15) [verb] To balance again. REBAPTIZED (24) REBRANCHED (18) REBUTTONED (13) RECAPTURED (15) [verb] To capture something for a second or subsequent time, especially after a loss. RECODIFIED (17) RECOGNISED (14) [verb] To match (something or someone which one currently perceives) to a memory of some previous encounter with the same person or thing. | [verb] To acknowledge the existence or legality of; to treat as valid or worthy of consideration. | [verb] (or with clause) To acknowledge or consider (as being a certain thing or having a certain quality or property). RECOGNIZED (23) [verb] To match (something or someone which one currently perceives) to a memory of some previous encounter with the same person or thing. | [verb] To acknowledge the existence or legality of; to treat as valid or worthy of consideration. | [verb] (or with clause) To acknowledge or consider (as being a certain thing or having a certain quality or property). RECOMBINED (17) [verb] To combine again, especially to reassemble the parts of something previously taken apart in a different manner. | [verb] To undergo recombination. | [adjective] Formed by recombination RECOMPILED (17) [verb] To compile again. RECOMPOSED (17) [verb] To compose or construct again. | [verb] To bring (oneself) back to a state of calm. RECOMPUTED (17) RECONCILED (15) [verb] To restore a friendly relationship; to bring back to harmony. | [verb] To make things compatible or consistent. | [verb] To make the net difference in credits and debits of a financial account agree with the balance. RECONVENED (16) [verb] To resume something that has been convened and then paused. | [verb] To come together again. RECONVEYED (19) REDEFEATED (15) REDEFECTED (17) REDEMANDED (15) REDEPLOYED (17) [verb] To deploy again. | [verb] To rearrange (military forces). REDESIGNED (13) [verb] To lay out or plan a new version of something previously laid out or planned. REDIGESTED (13) REDIRECTED (14) [verb] To give new direction to, change the direction of. | [verb] To instruct to go, inquire, elsewhere. | [verb] To substitute an address or pointer to a new location. REDISPOSED (14) REDSHIFTED (18) REDSHIRTED (15) [verb] To place an athlete in a status wherein the athlete will spend a year not participating in official athletic activities, but will not lose his or her eligibility to participate in following years. | [verb] To take on a status wherein one will spend a year not participating in official athletic activities. | [verb] To hold a child out of kindergarten for one year in the hope that the child will do better academically and socially. REEDUCATED (14) [verb] To educate or teach again, especially in order to remove bad practices. | [verb] To rehabilitate. REEMBARKED (19) REEMBODIED (16) REEMPLOYED (18) [verb] To employ again. REENFORCED (16) REENGRAVED (15) REENLISTED (11) [verb] To enlist again. REENROLLED (11) REEQUIPPED (24) [verb] To equip again; to provide with new equipment REEXAMINED (20) [verb] To examine again. | [adjective] Examined again REEXPELLED (20) REEXPLORED (20) REEXPORTED (20) [verb] To export again; to export something that has been imported REFASTENED (14) [verb] Fasten again REFERENCED (16) [verb] To provide a list of references for (a text). | [verb] To refer to, to use as a reference. | [verb] To mention, to cite. REFILTERED (14) REFINANCED (16) [verb] To renew the terms of a loan. REFINISHED (17) [verb] To finish again; especially, to apply a fresh finish, as a new coat of varnish or paint. REFLOWERED (17) REFOCUSSED (16) [verb] To focus on something else | [verb] To change the focus of | [verb] To change one's priorities REFORESTED (14) [verb] To replant a forest, especially after clearcutting. | [verb] To afforest. REGATHERED (15) [verb] Gather again, gather back together REGIMENTED (14) [verb] To form soldiers into a regiment. | [verb] To systematize, or put in rigid order. | [adjective] Organised, ordered, formed into regiments. REGISTERED (12) [verb] To enter in a register. | [verb] To enroll, especially to vote. | [verb] To record, especially in writing. REHAMMERED (18) REHARDENED (15) REHYDRATED (18) [verb] To resupply with water that has been removed or lost; to moisten something that has dried. REIMAGINED (14) [verb] To imagine or conceive something in a new way REIMBURSED (15) [verb] To compensate with payment; especially, to repay money spent on one's behalf. REIMMERSED (15) REIMPORTED (15) [verb] To import again. | [verb] To import goods which have previously been exported, particularly pharmaceutical products, back into the country of origin. REINCURRED (13) REINDICTED (14) REINDUCTED (14) REINFECTED (16) [verb] Infect again REINFLATED (14) [verb] To inflate or fill with air again. REINFORCED (16) [verb] To strengthen, especially by addition or augmentation. | [verb] To emphasize or review. | [verb] To encourage (a behavior or idea) through repeated stimulus. REINFORMED (16) REINJECTED (20) REINSERTED (11) [verb] To insert again. REINSPIRED (13) REINSTATED (11) [verb] To restore to a former position or rank. | [verb] To bring back into use or existence; resurrect. REINTERRED (11) [verb] To bury again, in the same or another grave. REINVENTED (14) [verb] To invent again something that has already been invented. | [verb] To adapt into a different form; to give a new style or image to. REINVESTED (14) [verb] To invest again, give another investment. REITERATED (11) [verb] To say or do (something) for a second time, such as for emphasis. | [verb] To say or do (something) repeatedly. REJACKETED (24) REJIGGERED (20) [verb] To rejig. REKEYBOARD (20) RELABELLED (13) [verb] Label again, apply a new label to RELAUNCHED (16) [verb] To launch again. RELETTERED (11) RELICENSED (13) [verb] To issue a renewed license RELUCTATED (13) REMARKETED (17) REMASTERED (13) [verb] To produce a new version of a recording by remixing the original master recordings. | [verb] To create a new master copy by enhancing sound or picture quality of an older recording. | [verb] To produce a new version of a video game with updated graphics, often re-recorded music, and added features and content. REMEASURED (13) [verb] To measure again. REMEDIATED (14) [verb] To correct or improve (a deficiency or problem). | [adjective] Corrected; improved REMEMBERED (17) [verb] To reconstitute or reassemble that which has been dismembered. | [verb] To recall from one's memory; to have an image in one's memory. | [verb] To memorize; to put something into memory. REMINISCED (15) [verb] To recall the past in a private moment, often fondly or nostalgically. | [verb] To talk or write about memories of the past, especially pleasant memories. | [verb] To remember fondly; to reminisce about. REMODELLED (14) [verb] To change the appearance, layout, or furnishings of. REMODIFIED (17) [verb] To modify again RENOTIFIED (14) RENUMBERED (15) [verb] To number again, to assign new numbers to. REOBJECTED (22) REOBSERVED (16) REOBTAINED (13) REOCCUPIED (17) [verb] To occupy again. REOCCURRED (15) [verb] To occur again; to recur. REOPERATED (13) REORDAINED (12) REORIENTED (11) [verb] To orient again; to make or become oriented after dislocation or disorientation. REOXIDIZED (28) REPACIFIED (18) REPACKAGED (20) [verb] To package again, to give new packaging to. REPANELLED (13) REPLEVINED (16) REPLICATED (15) [verb] To make a copy (replica) of. | [verb] To repeat (an experiment or trial) with a consistent result. | [verb] To reply. REPOLISHED (16) [verb] To polish again. REPROACHED (18) [verb] To criticize or rebuke (someone). | [verb] To disgrace, or bring shame upon. REPROBATED (15) [verb] To have strong disapproval of something; to reprove; to condemn. | [verb] Of God: to abandon or reject, to deny eternal bliss. | [verb] To refuse, set aside. REPRODUCED (16) [verb] To produce an image or copy of. | [verb] To generate offspring (sexually or asexually), or organisms. | [verb] To produce again; to recreate. REPUDIATED (14) [verb] To reject the truth or validity of; to deny. | [verb] To refuse to have anything to do with; to disown. | [verb] To refuse to pay or honor (a debt). REPURIFIED (16) [verb] To purify again RERADIATED (12) RERECORDED (14) [verb] To record again. | [verb] The act of using a save state while recording a speedrun. RERELEASED (11) [verb] To release (a film, video game, etc.) again. REREMINDED (14) REREPEATED (13) REREVIEWED (17) RESCHOOLED (16) RESCREENED (13) RESCULPTED (15) RESEARCHED (16) [verb] To search or examine with continued care; to seek diligently. | [verb] To make an extensive investigation into. | [verb] To search again. RESEASONED (11) RESERVICED (16) RESHINGLED (15) RESHUFFLED (20) [verb] To shuffle something again, especially playing cards | [verb] To reorganize or rearrange something, especially government posts RESILVERED (14) RESINIFIED (14) RESKETCHED (20) RESMOOTHED (16) RESOLDERED (12) RESPROUTED (13) RESTITCHED (16) RESTITUTED (11) RESTRAINED (11) [verb] To control or keep in check. | [verb] To deprive of liberty. | [verb] To restrict or limit. RESTRESSED (11) RESTRICTED (13) [verb] To restrain within boundaries; to limit; to confine | [verb] (specifically) To consider (a function) as defined on a subset of its original domain. | [adjective] Limited within bounds. RESUMMONED (15) RESUPPLIED (15) [verb] To supply again. RESURFACED (16) [verb] To come once again to the surface | [verb] To provide a new surface, to replace or remodel the surface of something, or to restore a surface. To put a new coating or finish on a surface. | [verb] To arise or become evident again. To re-occur or reappear. RESURVEYED (17) [verb] To survey again; to perform another survey on. RETAILORED (11) RETALIATED (11) [verb] To do something harmful or negative to get revenge for some harm; to fight back or respond in kind to an injury or affront. | [verb] To repay or requite by an act of the same kind. RETARGETED (12) RETEMPERED (15) RETEXTURED (18) [verb] To give a new texture to. RETHREADED (15) RETRENCHED (16) [verb] To dig or redig a trench where one already exists. RETROACTED (13) [verb] To act backward, or in return; to act in opposition; to be retrospective. RETROCEDED (14) [verb] To grant back. | [verb] To go back. RETROFIRED (14) REUTILIZED (20) [verb] To use or utilize something again, or for another purpose REVALUATED (14) REVERENCED (16) [verb] To show or feel reverence to. REVERIFIED (17) REVIVIFIED (20) [verb] To reanimate, bring back to life. | [verb] To reinvigorate or revitalize. | [verb] To reactivate (a catalyst, reagent etc.). RHEUMATOID (16) [adjective] Presenting analogies with rheumatism. RHYTHMIZED (31) RICOCHETED (18) [verb] To rebound off something wildly in a seemingly random direction. | [verb] To operate upon by ricochet firing. RIGIDIFIED (16) [verb] To make rigid, to cause to be or become rigid. RINGBARKED (18) [verb] To remove the bark from a tree in a ring all the way around its trunk, normally killing the tree (because nutrients are carried through the phloem, the layers immediately under the bark, which layers are damaged by the process). RITUALIZED (20) [verb] To make into a ritual. ROTOTILLED (11) [verb] To break up and turn soil using a rototiller. | [verb] To make extensive and pervasive changes to a piece of code without altering its functionality. ROUGHDRIED (16) ROUGHHEWED (21) ROUTINIZED (20) [verb] To make routine, to make common by repetition. | [adjective] Carried out as part of a routine RUBBERIZED (24) [verb] To coat with rubber or a similar material. | [adjective] Coated or treated with rubber. RUBRICATED (15) [verb] To write in the form of a rubric. | [verb] To create rubrication; to illuminate a manuscript with red letters. RUGGEDIZED (23) [verb] To produce a more rugged version of something, so that it will withstand rough treatment | [adjective] Modified to be more rugged, and to withstand rough treatment RUSTICATED (13) [verb] To suspend or expel from a college or university. | [verb] To construct in a manner so as to produce jagged or heavily textured surfaces. | [verb] To compel to live in or to send to the countryside; to cause to become rustic. SACCULATED (15) SACRIFICED (18) [verb] To offer (something) as a gift to a deity. | [verb] To give away (something valuable) to get at least a possibility of gaining something else of value (such as self-respect, trust, love, freedom, prosperity), or to avoid an even greater loss. | [verb] To trade (a value of higher worth) for something of lesser worth in order to gain something else valued more, such as an ally or business relationship, or to avoid an even greater loss; to sell without profit to gain something other than money. SADDLEBRED (15) [noun] A horse of the American Saddlebred breed. SAILPLANED (13) SANCTIFIED (16) [adjective] Made holy; set aside for sacred or ceremonial use. | [adjective] Sanctimonious. | [verb] To make holy; to consecrate; to set aside for sacred or ceremonial use. SANCTIONED (13) [verb] To ratify; to make valid. | [verb] To give official authorization or approval to; to countenance. | [verb] To penalize (a State etc.) with sanctions. SANDALWOOD (15) [noun] Any of various tropical trees of the genus Santalum, native or long naturalized in India, Australia, Hawaii, and many south Pacific islands. | [noun] The aromatic heartwood of these trees used in ornamental carving, in the construction of insect-repellent boxes and chests, and as a source of certain perfumes. SANDBAGGED (16) [verb] To construct a barrier of sandbags around. | [verb] To strike someone with a sandbag or other object to disable or render unconscious. | [verb] To conceal or misrepresent one's true position, potential, or intent in order to gain an advantage. SANDWICHED (20) [verb] To place one item between two other, usually flat, items | [verb] To put or set something between two others, in time. SAPONIFIED (16) [adjective] Treated by saponification | [verb] To convert (a fat or oil) into soap. | [verb] To be converted into soap. SCABBARDED (18) SCAFFOLDED (20) [verb] To set up a scaffolding; to surround a building with scaffolding. | [verb] To sustain; to provide support for. | [verb] To dispose of the bodies of the dead on a scaffold or raised platform, as by some Native American tribes. SCANDALLED (14) SCIENTIZED (22) SCOREBOARD (15) [noun] A large board that displays the score in a game or contest. | [noun] A similar board that also displays each batsman's score, and many statistics and pieces of information. | [noun] (by extension) A listing of various similar entities along with their properties, such as status or rank. SCORPAENID (15) SCOUTHERED (16) SCREENLAND (13) SCRIMMAGED (18) [verb] To have, or be involved in, a scrimmage. SCROOTCHED (18) SCRUMMAGED (18) [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SCULPTURED (15) [adjective] Made like a sculpture. | [adjective] Attractively formed. SECONDHAND (17) [adjective] (of goods) Not new; previously owned and used by another. | [adjective] (of a dealer) Dealing in such merchandise. | [adjective] Indirect; from a secondary source; not firsthand. SEDIMENTED (14) [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. | [adjective] (of a strata) Deposited from sediment SEGREGATED (13) [verb] To separate, especially by social policies that directly or indirectly keep races or ethnic groups apart. | [adjective] (of a person or thing) Separated or isolated from others, or from another group. | [adjective] (of an institution) Having access restricted to certain groups, or excluding certain groups. SEMAPHORED (18) [verb] To signal using, or as if using, a semaphore, with the implication that it is done nonverbally. SEMIFITTED (16) [adjective] Partially fitted (with appliances etc) | [adjective] That partially conforms to the outlines of the body SEMILIQUID (22) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. | [adjective] Having properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. | [adjective] Somewhat liquid; able to flow or change, but not completely freely. SEMISACRED (15) SENSITISED (11) [verb] To make (someone or something) sensitive or responsive to certain stimuli. | [verb] To make (someone) increasingly aware of, in a concerned or sensitive way. | [verb] To render capable of being acted on by actinic rays of light. SENSITIZED (20) [verb] To make (someone or something) sensitive or responsive to certain stimuli. | [verb] To make (someone) increasingly aware of, in a concerned or sensitive way. | [verb] To render capable of being acted on by actinic rays of light. SENTINELED (11) [verb] To watch over as a guard. | [verb] To post as guard. | [verb] To post a guard for. SEPULCHRED (18) [verb] To place in a sepulchre. SERIALISED (11) [verb] To convert an object into a sequence of bytes that can later be converted back into an object with equivalent properties. | [verb] To write a television program, novel, or other form of entertainment as a sequence of shorter works with a common story. SERIALIZED (20) [verb] To convert an object into a sequence of bytes that can later be converted back into an object with equivalent properties. | [verb] To write a television program, novel, or other form of entertainment as a sequence of shorter works with a common story. | [adjective] Of a television series whose episodes are strongly connected and are intended to be watched in a linear sequence (as opposed to procedural). SERMONIZED (22) [verb] To speak in the manner of a sermon; to preach; to propagate one's morality or opinions with speech. | [verb] To preach a sermon to (somebody); to give (somebody) instruction or admonishment on the basis of one's morality or opinions. | [verb] To say in the manner of a sermon or lecture. SEXUALIZED (27) [verb] To make sexual, or give sex appeal to. | [verb] To distinguish as belonging to separate sexes. SHAMEFACED (21) [adjective] Bashful, showing modesty or embarrassment. | [adjective] Ashamed, displaying shame, especially by blushing in the face. SHANGHAIED (18) [verb] To force or trick (someone) into joining a ship as part of the crew. | [verb] To abduct or coerce. | [verb] To trick (a person) into entering a jurisdiction where they can lawfully be arrested. SHEEPSHEAD (19) [noun] A fish of the species Archosargus probatocephalus. | [noun] A trick-taking card game. SHELLACKED (20) [adjective] Coated in shellac. SHEPHERDED (20) [verb] To watch over; to guide | [verb] For a player to obstruct an opponent from getting to the ball, either when a teammate has it or is going for it, or if the ball is about to bounce through the goal or out of bounds. SHOEHORNED (17) [verb] To use a shoehorn. | [verb] To force (something) into (a tight space); to squeeze (something) into (a schedule, etc); to exert great effort to insert or include (something); to include (something) despite potent reasons not to. | [verb] To force some current event into alignment with a some (usually unconnected) agenda, especially when it is fallacious. SHOPLIFTED (19) [verb] To steal something from a shop / store during trading hours. | [verb] To steal from shops / stores during trading hours. SHORTBREAD (16) [noun] A type of biscuit (cookie), popular in Britain, traditionally made from one part sugar, two parts butter and three parts flour. SHOTGUNNED (15) [verb] (smoking) To inhale from a pipe or other smoking device, followed shortly by an exhalation into someone else’s mouth. | [verb] To verbally lay claim to (something) | [verb] To hit the ball directly back at the pitcher. SHOULDERED (15) [verb] To push (a person or thing) using one's shoulder. | [verb] To put (something) on one's shoulders. | [verb] To place (something) against one's shoulders. SHOWBOATED (19) [verb] To show off. SHOWERHEAD (20) SHRIVELLED (17) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SIDEBURNED (14) SIDESWIPED (17) [verb] To give a blow with the side, as to strike with the side of a car when turning. SIGNALISED (12) [verb] To distinguish, to make noteworthy. | [verb] To display or make known (a quality, attribute etc.); to call attention to. | [verb] To point out; to take special note of. SIGNALIZED (21) [verb] To distinguish, to make noteworthy. | [verb] To display or make known (a quality, attribute etc.); to call attention to. | [verb] To point out; to take special note of. SIGNPOSTED (14) [verb] To install signposts on. | [verb] To direct (somebody) to services, resources, etc. | [verb] To indicate logical progress of a discourse using words or phrases such as now, right, to recap, to sum up, as I was saying, etc. SILICIFIED (16) [adjective] Combined with silicon | [adjective] Impregnated with silica; petrified | [verb] To impregnate something with silica. SILVERWEED (17) [noun] Any of several species of low-growing flowering plants, the leaves of which are silvery underneath, some now assigned to the genus Argentina, most previously assigned to genus Potentilla. SIMPLIFIED (18) [noun] Short for simplified Chinese. | [adjective] Made more simple; having its complexity reduced. | [adjective] Relating to simplified Chinese. SISTERHOOD (14) [noun] The state, or kinship of being sisters | [noun] The quality of being sisterly; sisterly companionship; especially, the sense that women have of being in solidarity with one another. | [noun] A religious society of women SKATEBOARD (17) [noun] A narrow, wooden or plastic platform mounted on pairs of wheels, on which one stands and propels oneself by pushing along the ground with one foot. | [verb] To use a skateboard. SKEDADDLED (18) [verb] To move or run away quickly. | [verb] To spill; to scatter. SKIRMISHED (20) [verb] To engage in a minor battle or dispute SKYLIGHTED (22) [adjective] Furnished with one or more skylights SLEEPYHEAD (19) [noun] A sleepy person. | [noun] The ruddy duck. SLIPFORMED (18) SLOGANIZED (21) SMALLSWORD (16) [noun] A light one-handed sword, designed for thrusting, which evolved out of the longer and heavier rapier of the late Renaissance. SMOOTHENED (16) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMOULDERED (14) [verb] To burn with no flame and little smoke. | [verb] To show signs of repressed anger or suppressed mental turmoil or other strong emotion, such as passion. | [verb] To exist in a suppressed or hidden state. SNEEZEWEED (23) [noun] A plant of the genus Helenium, especially Helenium autumnale. | [noun] A plant of the genus Centipeda; either of the species Centipeda cunninghami or Centipeda minima, which induce sneezing and are known as a folk remedy for colds and allergic reactions. SNOWBALLED (16) [verb] To rapidly grow out of proportion or control. | [verb] To play at throwing snowballs. | [verb] To pelt with snowballs; to throw snowballs at. SNOWCAPPED (20) [adjective] Covered with snow at the top, especially of a hill or mountain. SNOWPLOWED (19) [verb] To clear (roads, etc) using a snow plow. | [verb] To perform a snow plow in skiing. SOBERSIDED (14) [adjective] Serious and sedate SOCIALISED (13) [verb] To interact with others | [verb] To instruct somebody, usually subconsciously, in the etiquette of a society | [verb] To take something into collective or governmental ownership SOCIALIZED (22) [verb] To interact with others | [verb] To instruct somebody, usually subconsciously, in the etiquette of a society | [verb] To take something into collective or governmental ownership SOFTHEADED (18) [adjective] Lacking sound judgment or resolve; stupid; weak-minded. SOLEMNIZED (22) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLIDIFIED (15) [verb] To make solid; convert into a solid body. | [verb] To concentrate; consolidate. | [verb] To become solid; to freeze, set. SOMERSETED (13) SOREHEADED (15) SOUNDBOARD (14) [noun] A board placed within a musical instrument to improve vibrations. | [noun] (audio engineering) A mixing console used to combine and blend different audio sources to a single output. | [noun] A sounding board. SOUTHBOUND (16) [adjective] Which is (or will be) travelling south. | [adverb] Toward the south. SOVIETIZED (23) SPANCELLED (15) SPECTACLED (17) [adjective] Wearing spectacles. | [adjective] Having the appearance of wearing spectacles, especially of animals. SPECULATED (15) [verb] To think, meditate or reflect on a subject; to consider, to deliberate or cogitate. | [verb] To make an inference based on inconclusive evidence; to surmise or conjecture. | [verb] To make a risky trade in the hope of making a profit; to venture or gamble. SPELLBOUND (15) [adjective] Fascinated by something; entranced as if by a spell. SPHENOPSID (18) SPLATTERED (13) [verb] To splash; to scatter; to land or strike in an uneven, distributed mess. | [verb] To cause (something) to splatter. | [verb] To spatter (something or somebody). SPLINTERED (13) [verb] To come apart into long sharp fragments. | [verb] To cause to break apart into long sharp fragments. | [verb] (of a group) To break, or cause to break, into factions. SPLUTTERED (13) [verb] To sputter. | [verb] To spray droplets of saliva from the mouth while speaking. | [verb] To speak hurriedly and confusedly. SPORULATED (13) [verb] To produce spores SPRINGHEAD (17) SPRINGWOOD (17) SPUNBONDED (16) SPURGALLED (14) SQUADRONED (21) SQUANDERED (21) [verb] To waste, lavish, splurge; to spend lavishly or profusely; to dissipate. | [verb] To scatter; to disperse. | [verb] To wander at random; to scatter. SQUATTERED (20) SQUIRRELED (20) [verb] To store in a secretive manner, to hide something for future use STABILIZED (22) [verb] To make stable. | [verb] To become stable. STABLISHED (16) [verb] To establish. STALEMATED (13) [verb] To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves. | [verb] To bring about a stalemate, in which no advance in an argument is achieved. STELLIFIED (14) STENCILLED (13) [verb] To print with a stencil. STENOTYPED (16) STERILIZED (20) [verb] To deprive of the ability to procreate. | [verb] To make unable to produce; to make unprofitable. | [verb] To kill, deactivate (denature), or destroy (break apart) all living, viable microorganisms and spores on a surface, in a fluid, or contained in a compound, such as culture media or a medical product. STEVEDORED (15) STILETTOED (11) STIMULATED (13) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. | [adjective] In a condition or state of stimulation. STIPULATED (13) [verb] To require (something) as a condition of a contract or agreement. | [verb] To specify, promise or guarantee something in an agreement. | [verb] To acknowledge the truth of; not to challenge. E.g. "The defense stipulates that the witness has identified my client." STOCKINGED (18) STOCKPILED (19) [verb] To accumulate a stockpile. STOMATOPOD (15) STORMBOUND (15) [adjective] (of a ship) Caught in a storm, so that proper navigation is impossible. STORYBOARD (16) [noun] A series of drawings that lay out the sequence of scenes in a film or series, especially an animated one. | [noun] Any sequence of drawings or diagrams which illustrate a sequence of events, e.g. in an accident or as a flowsheet for computer programming. | [verb] To create and arrange storyboard drawings. STRAIGHTED (15) STRAITENED (11) [verb] To make strait; to narrow or confine to a smaller space. | [verb] To restrict or diminish, especially financially. | [adjective] Squeezed or confined STRANGERED (12) STRATIFIED (14) [adjective] Arranged in a sequence of layers or strata | [adjective] (of society) having a class structure STRAVAIGED (15) [verb] To stroll, meander STRONGHOLD (15) [noun] A place built to withstand attack; a fortress. | [noun] A place of domination by, or refuge or survival of, a particular group or idea. STRUCTURED (13) [verb] To give structure to; to arrange. | [adjective] Having structure; organized STULTIFIED (14) [verb] To prove to be of unsound mind or demonstrate someone's incompetence. | [verb] To cause to appear foolish. | [verb] To deprive of strength or efficacy; make useless or worthless. SUBCLASSED (15) SUBDIVIDED (18) [verb] To divide into smaller sections. | [verb] To divide divisions into smaller divisions. | [adjective] Having divisions that are themselves divided into smaller divisions SUBJUGATED (21) [verb] To forcibly impose obedience or servitude upon. SUBLIMATED (15) [verb] To change state from a solid to a gas without passing through the liquid state. | [verb] To purify or refine a substance through such a change of state. | [verb] To modify the natural expression of a sexual or primitive instinct in a socially acceptable manner; to divert the energy of such an instinct into some acceptable activity. SUBMARINED (15) SUBPOENAED (15) [verb] To summon with a subpoena. SUBROGATED (14) SUBSAMPLED (17) [adjective] Divided into subsamples SUBSCRIBED (17) [verb] To sign up to have copies of a publication, such as a newspaper or a magazine, delivered for a period of time. | [verb] To pay for the provision of a service, such as Internet access or a cell phone plan. | [verb] To believe or agree with a theory or an idea (used with to). SUBSIDISED (14) [adjective] That receives subsidy. | [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. SUBSIDIZED (23) [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. | [adjective] That receives a subsidy SUBTILIZED (22) [verb] To make subtle; to make thin or fine; to make less gross or coarse. | [verb] To refine; to spin into niceties. | [verb] To use subtle arguments or distinctions. SUBTOTALED (13) [verb] To calculate a subtotal. SUBTRACTED (15) [verb] To remove or reduce; especially to reduce a quantity or number SUBTRAHEND (16) [noun] A number or quantity to be subtracted from another. SUFFOCATED (19) [verb] To suffer, or cause someone to suffer, from severely reduced oxygen intake to the body. | [verb] To die due to, or kill someone by means of, insufficient oxygen supply to the body. | [verb] To overwhelm, or be overwhelmed (by a person or issue), as though with oxygen deprivation. SULFONATED (14) [verb] To treat or react with a sulfonic acid, or to introduce such a group into a compound. | [adjective] Treated or reacted with a sulfonic acid | [adjective] Modified by the addition of a sulfonate group SULFURETED (14) SULFURIZED (23) [verb] To treat or react with sulfur or sulfur dioxide. | [adjective] Reacted or treated with sulfur or sulfur dioxide SUMMARISED (15) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARIZED (24) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMERWOOD (18) SUPERADDED (15) [verb] To add on top of a previous addition. SUPERBOARD (15) SUPERCEDED (16) SUPERFLUID (16) SUPERHYPED (21) SUPERPOSED (15) [verb] To place (one thing) on top of another. | [verb] To place (one geometric figure) on top of another in such a way that all common parts coincide. | [adjective] Superimposed SUPERSEDED (14) [verb] To take the place of. | [verb] To displace in favour of itself. SUPERSIZED (22) [verb] To increase the size of something, especially to unusual proportions. SUPERVENED (16) [verb] To follow (something) closely, either as a consequence or in contrast. | [verb] To supersede. | [verb] To be dependent on an earlier event. SUPERVISED (16) [verb] To oversee or direct a task or organization. | [verb] To look over so as to read; to peruse. | [adjective] Done under supervision; watched. SUPPLANTED (15) [verb] To take the place of; to replace, to supersede. | [verb] To uproot, to remove violently. SUPPRESSED (15) [verb] To put an end to, especially with force, to crush, do away with; to prohibit, subdue. | [verb] To restrain or repress, such as laughter or an expression. | [verb] To exclude undesirable thoughts from one's mind. SUPPURATED (15) [verb] To form or discharge pus. | [verb] To cause to generate pus. SURCHARGED (17) [verb] To apply a surcharge. | [verb] To overload; to overburden. | [verb] To overstock; especially, to put more cattle into (e.g. a common) than one has a right to do, or more than the herbage will sustain. SUREFOOTED (14) [adjective] Walking steadily, without stumbling; capable of finding good footing. | [adjective] Confident and capable. SURMOUNTED (13) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. | [adjective] Of an arch or dome: rising higher than a semicircle. SURPRINTED (13) SURROGATED (12) SURROUNDED (12) [verb] To encircle something or simultaneously extend in all directions. | [verb] To enclose or confine something on all sides so as to prevent escape. | [verb] To pass around; to travel about; to circumnavigate. SURVEILLED (14) [verb] To keep someone or something under surveillance. SWAYBACKED (25) SWEETBREAD (16) [noun] The pancreas or thymus gland of an animal, especially a lamb or calf, as food. SWITCHYARD (22) [noun] Part of a railway with an arrangement of switches (or points) allowing trains to be diverted and reassembled. SYLLOGIZED (24) [verb] To reason by means of syllogisms. | [verb] To deduce consequences from. SYMBOLISED (18) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYMBOLIZED (27) [verb] To be symbolic of; to represent. | [verb] To use symbols; to represent ideas symbolically. | [verb] To resemble each other in qualities or properties; to correspond; to harmonize. SYNCOPATED (18) [verb] To omit a vocalic or consonantal sound or a syllable from a word; to use syncope | [verb] To stress or accentuate the weak beat of a rhythm; to use syncopation | [adjective] (grammar) of a word, shortened by syncope SYNDICATED (17) [verb] To become a syndicate. | [verb] To put under the control of a group acting as a unit. | [verb] (mass media) To release media content through a syndicate to be broadcast or published through multiple outlets. SYNOPSIZED (25) SYSTEMIZED (25) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems. TAFFETIZED (26) TAILCOATED (13) TAILORBIRD (13) [noun] A small warbler of the genus Orthotomus, usually brightly coloured, with green or grey upperparts and yellow white or grey underparts. TANTALISED (11) [verb] To tease (someone) by offering something desirable but keeping it out of reach | [verb] To bait (someone) by showing something desirable but leaving them unsatisfied TANTALIZED (20) [verb] To tease (someone) by offering something desirable but keeping it out of reach | [verb] To bait (someone) by showing something desirable but leaving them unsatisfied TAPESTRIED (13) TEARGASSED (12) [verb] To use tear gas. TEETOTALED (11) TELECASTED (13) TELEPHONED (16) [verb] To (attempt to) contact someone using the telephone. | [verb] To convey (a message) by telephoning. TELEPORTED (13) [verb] To travel, often instantaneously, from one point to another without physically crossing the distance between the two points. | [verb] To move (an object) in this fashion, as by telekinesis. TELESCOPED (15) [verb] To extend or contract in the manner of a telescope. | [verb] To slide or pass one within another, after the manner of the sections of a small telescope or spyglass. | [verb] To come into collision, as railway cars, in such a manner that one runs into another. TELEVIEWED (17) TEMPORISED (15) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TEMPORIZED (24) [verb] To deliberately act evasively or prolong a discussion in order to gain time or postpone a decision, sometimes in order to reach a compromise or simply to make a conversation more temperate; to stall for time. | [verb] To apply a temporary piece of dental work that will later be removed. | [verb] To comply with the time or occasion; to humor, or yield to, the current of opinion or circumstances; also, to trim, as between two parties. TENDERIZED (21) [verb] To make (something, especially meat) tender. | [adjective] Having been made tender. TENDRILLED (12) TERMINATED (13) [verb] To end, especially in an incomplete state. | [verb] To set or be a limit or boundary to. | [verb] To kill. TERRORISED (11) [verb] To inflict someone with terror; to terrify. | [verb] To coerce (someone) by using threats or violence. TERRORIZED (20) [verb] To fill (someone) with terror; to terrify. | [verb] To coerce (someone) by using threats or violence. TETRACHORD (16) [noun] Any set of four different pitch classes. | [noun] A series of four sounds, forming a scale of two-and-a-half tones. TETRAPLOID (13) [noun] A tetraploid cell. | [noun] A tetraploid organism. | [adjective] Having four times the haploid number of chromosomes in a cell nucleus. TEUTONIZED (20) TEXTURIZED (27) [verb] To apply a physical texture to. | [verb] To apply a visual texture to. THREATENED (14) [verb] To make a threat against someone; to use threats. | [verb] To menace, or be dangerous. | [verb] To portend, or give a warning of. TICKTACKED (23) TICKTOCKED (23) TIMBERHEAD (18) TIMBERLAND (15) [noun] Forested land thought of in terms of its potential and value as timber. TIMBRELLED (15) TITILLATED (11) [verb] To stimulate or excite sensually TITTIVATED (14) [verb] To make small improvements or alterations to (one's appearance etc.); to add some finishing touches to. TOBOGGANED (15) [verb] To slide down a hill on a toboggan or other object. | [verb] To go downhill unstoppably until one reaches the bottom. TOMAHAWKED (23) [verb] To strike with a tomahawk. | [adjective] Carrying or bearing a tomahawk. TRACHEATED (16) TRAFFICKED (23) [verb] To pass goods and commodities from one person to another for an equivalent in goods or money; to buy or sell goods | [verb] To trade meanly or mercenarily; to bargain. | [verb] To exchange in traffic; to effect by a bargain or for a consideration. TRAMMELLED (15) [verb] To entangle, as in a net. | [verb] To confine; to hamper; to shackle. TRANSACTED (13) [verb] To do, carry through, conduct or perform some action. | [verb] To carry over, hand over or transfer something. | [verb] To conduct business. TRANSDUCED (14) TRANSECTED (13) [verb] To divide something by cutting transversely TRANSFIXED (21) [verb] To render motionless, by arousing terror, amazement or awe. | [verb] To pierce with a sharp pointed weapon. | [verb] To fix or impale. TRANSFUSED (14) [verb] To administer a transfusion of. | [verb] To pour liquid from one vessel into another. | [verb] To diffuse or permeate through something. TRANSLATED (11) [verb] Senses relating to the change of information, etc., from one form to another. | [verb] Senses relating to a change of position. | [verb] To entrance, to cause to lose recollection or sense. TRANSMUTED (13) [verb] To change, transform or convert one thing to another, or from one state or form to another. TRANSPIRED (13) [verb] To give off (vapour, waste matter etc.); to exhale (an odour etc.). | [verb] To perspire. | [verb] Of plants, to give off water and waste products through the stomata. TRANSPOSED (13) [verb] To reverse or change the order of (two or more things); to swap or interchange. | [verb] To rewrite or perform (a piece) in another key. | [verb] To move (a term) from one side of an algebraic equation to the other, reversing the sign of the term. TRAPNESTED (13) TRAVESTIED (14) [verb] To make a travesty of; to parody. TRESPASSED (13) [verb] To commit an offence; to sin. | [verb] To offend against, to wrong (someone). | [verb] To go too far; to put someone to inconvenience by demand or importunity; to intrude. TRIBULATED (13) TRICOLORED (13) [adjective] Having three colours; tricolor. TRITURATED (11) [verb] To grind to a fine powder, to pulverize. | [verb] To mix two solid reactants by repeated grinding and stirring. | [verb] To break up biological tissue into individual cells via passage through a narrow opening such as a hypodermic needle. TUMBLEWEED (18) [noun] Any plant which habitually breaks away from its roots in the autumn, and is driven by the wind, as a light, rolling mass, over the fields and prairies; as witch grass, wild indigo, Amaranthus albus, etc. | [noun] Describing unwanted silence and inactivity. Often used of a situation when one makes a statement that is ignored or ill-received by one's audience, as the resultant silence is likened to that of a desolate desert with rolling tumbleweeds. | [noun] A tan colour, like that of a tumbleweed. TURBINATED (13) TURNAROUND (11) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) An emigrant heading west on the Oregon Trail who gave up and turned back to the east. | [noun] A section of honeycomb that is unfinished and returned to the hive. | [noun] The act of turning to face in the other direction. TURTLEHEAD (14) [noun] The white turtlehead, an American perennial herb (Chelone glabra) with white flowers. | [noun] Other members of the genus Chelone. TYRANNISED (14) [verb] To oppress (someone). | [verb] To rule as a tyrant. TYRANNIZED (23) [verb] To oppress (someone). | [verb] To rule as a tyrant. ULTRARAPID (13) ULTRASOUND (11) [noun] Sound with a frequency greater than the upper limit of human hearing, which is approximately 20 kilohertz. | [noun] The use of ultrasonic waves for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes. | [verb] To treat with ultrasound. UMBRELLAED (15) UNABRIDGED (15) [noun] An unabridged publication, especially a reference work | [adjective] (of a book or document) Not abridged, shortened, expurgated or condensed; complete. UNABSORBED (15) [adjective] Not having been absorbed. UNACCENTED (15) [adjective] Of a word, having no diacritical mark; accentless. | [adjective] Of a vowel or syllable, pronounced with no, or little stress. | [adjective] Not pronounced with a distinctive accent. UNACCEPTED (17) UNACHIEVED (19) UNADJUSTED (19) [adjective] Not adjusted, especially not altered to fit new or changed data or circumstances UNADMITTED (14) UNAFFECTED (19) [verb] (very rare) To not affect. | [noun] Someone not affected, as by a disease. | [adjective] Not affected or changed. UNANALYZED (23) [adjective] Opposite of analyzed, not tested or scrutinized. UNANCHORED (16) [verb] To raise an anchor or to free a vessel from an anchor. | [verb] (by extension) To liberate. | [verb] To become loose or physically unattached. UNANSWERED (14) [adjective] That has not been answered or addressed. UNAPPEASED (15) [adjective] That has not been appeased UNAPPROVED (18) [adjective] Not approved. | [adjective] Not proven. UNASSAILED (11) UNASSIGNED (12) [adjective] Not assigned. | [adjective] Without a value assigned to it. UNASSISTED (11) [adjective] Not assisted; without assistance | [adverb] Without assistance. UNASSUAGED (12) [adjective] Not assuaged; not calmed, appeased, mitigated, alleviated, satisfied or diminished. UNATTACHED (16) [adjective] Not attached or joined; disconnected. | [adjective] Not married or involved in a romantic relationship. | [adjective] Not connected with or belonging to a particular group or organization. UNATTENDED (12) [adjective] Not attended; without persons present. | [adjective] Not attended to; not receiving attention. UNATTESTED (11) [adjective] Not supported by attestation; lacking supporting evidence in the form of assurance from an authority. UNAWAKENED (18) [adjective] Not awakened; sleeping; unconscious; unaware. UNBALANCED (15) [verb] To cause to be out of balance. | [adjective] Not balanced, without equilibrium; dizzy | [adjective] Irrational or mentally deranged UNBANDAGED (15) UNBAPTIZED (24) [adjective] Not baptized. UNBARBERED (15) UNBLEACHED (18) [adjective] Not bleached. UNBLENCHED (18) UNBONNETED (13) [verb] To remove a bonnet from. | [verb] To take off one's bonnet. | [adjective] Not wearing a bonnet. UNBRANCHED (18) [adjective] Having no branches | [adjective] Straight-chain UNBREECHED (18) UNBUDGETED (15) UNBUFFERED (19) UNBURDENED (14) [verb] To free from burden, or relieve from trouble. | [adjective] Not burdened; without a burden UNBUTTERED (13) [adjective] Not buttered. UNBUTTONED (13) [verb] To open (something) by undoing its buttons. | [verb] To come open by having its buttons unfastened. | [adjective] In disarray. UNCALCINED (15) UNCANCELED (15) UNCARPETED (15) [adjective] Not carpeted. UNCENSORED (13) [adjective] Unedited; not having had objectionable content removed UNCENSURED (13) UNCHURCHED (21) [adjective] Who does not generally attend church. UNCILIATED (13) UNCLENCHED (18) [verb] To open (something that was clenched). | [verb] To relax, especially one's muscles. | [adjective] Not clenched UNCLINCHED (18) UNCODIFIED (17) UNCOFFINED (19) UNCOMBINED (17) [adjective] Not combined with another UNCONFINED (16) [adjective] Not confined; free from physical restraint. UNCONFUSED (16) UNCONSUMED (15) [adjective] Not consumed. UNCONVOYED (19) UNCORSETED (13) UNCREDITED (14) [adjective] Unacknowledged. | [adjective] Not believed. | [adjective] Not appearing in the credits. UNCRIPPLED (17) UNCRUMPLED (17) [verb] To return something that has been crumpled closer to its original state. | [verb] Having been crumpled, to return closer to its original state. UNCULTURED (13) [adjective] Not cultured or civilized; lacking in delicacy or refinement. UNDECEIVED (17) [verb] To free from misconception, deception or error. | [adjective] Not having been deceived. UNDECLARED (14) [adjective] Not declared UNDEFEATED (15) [adjective] Never defeated; always victorious UNDEFENDED (16) [adjective] Not defended. UNDEFORMED (17) UNDERACTED (14) [verb] To act in an understated manner or with little expressiveness UNDERLINED (12) [verb] To draw a line underneath something, especially to add emphasis; to underscore | [verb] To emphasise or stress something | [verb] To influence secretly. UNDERMINED (14) [verb] To dig underneath (something), to make a passage for destructive or military purposes; to sap. | [verb] To weaken or work against; to hinder, sabotage. | [verb] To erode the base or foundation of something, e.g. by the action of water. UNDERRATED (12) [verb] To underestimate; to make too low a rate or estimate | [adjective] Not given enough recognition for its quality UNDERSEXED (19) [adjective] Lacking sufficient sexual desire or activity; sexually unfulfilled; sexually frustrated. UNDERSIZED (21) [adjective] Below the usual or expected size UNDERSTAND (12) [verb] To grasp a concept fully and thoroughly, especially (of words, statements, art, etc.) to be aware of the meaning of and (of people) to be aware of the intent of. | [verb] To believe, to think one grasps sufficiently despite potentially incomplete knowledge. | [verb] (obsolete outside circus, acrobatics) To stand underneath, to support. UNDERSTOOD (12) [verb] To grasp a concept fully and thoroughly, especially (of words, statements, art, etc.) to be aware of the meaning of and (of people) to be aware of the intent of. | [verb] To believe, to think one grasps sufficiently despite potentially incomplete knowledge. | [verb] (obsolete outside circus, acrobatics) To stand underneath, to support. UNDERTAXED (19) UNDERWORLD (15) [noun] The world of the dead, located underneath the world of the living; the afterlife. | [noun] That part of society that is engaged in crime or vice. | [noun] The portion of a game that is set below ground. UNDESERVED (15) [adjective] Not deserved, earned or merited; unjustifiable or unfair. UNDETECTED (14) [adjective] Not found; undiscovered. UNDETERRED (12) [adjective] Not deterred or put off; undiscouraged UNDIGESTED (13) [adjective] Not digested UNDIRECTED (14) [adjective] Not directed UNDISMAYED (17) [adjective] Not dismayed; hopeful; calm. UNDISPUTED (14) [adjective] Universally agreed upon; not disputed | [adjective] Unchallenged and accepted without question UNDOCTORED (14) UNEDUCATED (14) [adjective] Not educated UNEMPLOYED (18) [noun] Unemployed people. | [adjective] Having no job despite being able and willing to work. | [adjective] Having no use, not doing work UNENCLOSED (13) [adjective] Not enclosed. UNENFORCED (16) UNENLARGED (12) UNENRICHED (16) [adjective] Not enriched. UNEQUALLED (20) [adjective] Without equal; unmatched. UNEXAMINED (20) [adjective] That which has not been examined UNEXAMPLED (22) [adjective] Lacking prior examples; unprecedented. UNEXCELLED (20) [adjective] Excelling all others in some way. UNEXPECTED (22) [adjective] Not expected, anticipated or foreseen. UNEXPENDED (21) UNEXPLODED (21) [adjective] Not exploded UNEXPLORED (20) [adjective] Which has not been explored. UNFASTENED (14) [verb] To detach from any connecting agency or link; to disconnect. | [verb] To come unloosed or untied. | [adjective] Not fastened. UNFATHERED (17) [verb] To cause someone to become less of a father. | [verb] To cause someone to be fatherless. | [adjective] Not raised by or acknowledged by a father. UNFETTERED (14) [verb] To release from fetters; to unchain; to let loose; to free. | [adjective] Not bound by chains or shackles. | [adjective] (by extension) Not restricted. UNFILTERED (14) [adjective] Without a filter (e.g., a cigarette). | [adjective] Having not been filtered (e.g., coffee grounds). | [adjective] (by extension) unrestrained, unrestricted, frank UNFINISHED (17) [adjective] Not finished, not completed. UNFOCUSSED (16) [adjective] Not focused UNFORESTED (14) [adjective] Not covered with forest. UNFRIENDED (15) [verb] To sever as friends. | [verb] To defriend; to remove from one's friends list (e.g. on a social networking website). | [adjective] Having no friends; friendless. UNHALLOWED (17) [adjective] Not hallowed or blessed; unholy. UNHAMPERED (18) [adjective] Not hampered. UNHERALDED (15) [adjective] Without prior warning; unexpected or unannounced. | [adjective] Not greeted with excitement or acclaim. UNHINDERED (15) [adjective] Not hindered, slowed, blocked or hampered. | [adjective] Pertaining to a molecule where the reactive center is not blocked from chemical attack due to the surrounding uncreative substituents not preventing reactive agents accessing the reactive site. UNHOUSELED (14) [adjective] Not having taken the housel. UNIMPAIRED (15) [adjective] Not impaired. UNIMPROVED (18) [adjective] Not improved UNINDICTED (14) UNINFECTED (16) [adjective] Not infected. UNINFLATED (14) UNINFORMED (16) [adjective] Not informed; ignorant. | [adjective] Not imbued with life or activity. UNINSPIRED (13) [verb] To divest of inspiration. | [adjective] Lacking inspiration; dull or dry UNINTENDED (12) [adjective] Not intended; unplanned UNINVOLVED (17) [adjective] Not involved. | [adjective] Emotionally distant. | [adjective] Of potential mates, available because not in a committed relationship. UNKENNELED (15) UNLAMENTED (13) [adjective] Not lamented. UNLEAVENED (14) [adjective] Without any yeast or other raising agent UNLETTERED (11) [adjective] Not instructed in letters; not well educated; unable to read | [adjective] Not expressed in or marked with letters UNLEVELLED (14) UNLICENSED (13) [adjective] Not licensed; not officially authorized. | [adjective] Without permission. | [adjective] Free from requiring a license. UNLIMBERED (15) [verb] To deploy an artillery piece for firing (ie, to detach it from its limber). | [verb] (by extension) To clumsily put into employ a large weapon or object. | [verb] To unsling something, as a backpack, carried on the body with a strap; to bring something carried into the hands for use. UNLOOSENED (11) [verb] To unloose; to loosen. UNMANNERED (13) [adjective] Having poor manners or social skills; ill-mannered; rude. UNMEASURED (13) [adjective] Not having been measured. | [adjective] Beyond measure; vast; measureless. UNMEDIATED (14) [adjective] Not mediated UNMODIFIED (17) [adjective] Not modified UNMOLESTED (13) [adjective] Not molested UNNUMBERED (15) [adjective] Not identified with a number | [adjective] Too numerous to be counted; countless or innumerable UNOBSERVED (16) [adjective] Not seen or observed | [adverb] Whilst not being seen or observed UNOCCUPIED (17) [adjective] (of a house etc) Not inhabited, especially by a tenant | [adjective] Not being used; vacant or free | [adjective] Not employed on a task; idle UNPOLISHED (16) [adjective] Not polished; not brought to a polish. | [adjective] Deprived of polish. | [adjective] Not refined in manners or style UNPOLLUTED (13) [verb] To remove pollutants from; to purify. | [adjective] Not polluted; uncontaminated UNPREPARED (15) [noun] A black mark given to a pupil who arrives at a lesson without the necessary items or preparation. | [adjective] Not prepared; caught by surprise. UNPRODUCED (16) UNPROMPTED (17) [adjective] Not prompted UNPROVOKED (20) [verb] To undo or counter a provocation. | [adjective] Happening without provocation or motivation. | [adverb] Happening without provocation or motivation. UNPUCKERED (19) UNPUNISHED (16) [adjective] Not punished UNRAVELLED (14) [verb] To separate the threads (of); disentangle. | [verb] (of threads, etc.) To become separated; (of something woven, knitted, etc.) to come apart. | [verb] To clear from complication or difficulty; to unfold; to solve. UNRAVISHED (17) UNREALIZED (20) [adjective] Not realized; possible to obtain or achieve, yet not obtained or achieved. UNREASONED (11) [adjective] Not reasoned; irrational. UNRECORDED (14) [adjective] Not recorded. UNREDEEMED (14) [verb] To fall from grace; to change from a state of virtuousness to sinfulness or wrongdoing. | [adjective] (of a person) Not redeemed; not granted redemption or salvation; unsaved. | [adjective] (of a coupon or offer) Unspent; not used in a purchase, and thus still usable. UNREFORMED (16) [adjective] Not reformed UNRELIEVED (14) [adjective] Utter; complete; without relief. UNREMARKED (17) [adjective] (often with "upon") Not the subject of any remark | [adjective] Not remarked or noticed; unnoticed. UNREPORTED (13) [adjective] Not reported UNREQUITED (20) [adjective] Unanswered; not returned; not reciprocated; not repaid. UNRESERVED (14) [adjective] (of a person) Not reserved, without reservations. | [adjective] Not booked in advance. | [verb] To undo or cancel a reservation. UNRESOLVED (14) [verb] To undo a resolution. | [adjective] Not resolved. UNRESTORED (11) [verb] To undo work that was done to restore something. | [adjective] Not having been restored UNREVEALED (14) [adjective] Not revealed; hidden; secret. UNREVIEWED (17) UNREWARDED (15) [adjective] Not rewarded UNRIVALLED (14) [adjective] Having no rival; better than any possible competitor UNSALARIED (11) [adjective] Without a salary. UNSCHOOLED (16) [adjective] Not schooled; not having been to school. | [adjective] Inexperienced; not having developed skill or knowledge in some area. | [verb] To educate (a child) in an alternative to the regular school method, focused on the learner-chosen activities as a primary means for learning. UNSCREENED (13) [adjective] Not screened, or not having been screened | [adjective] (of cables etc.) not protected by a built-in screen. UNSCRIPTED (15) [adjective] Not scripted; without a script. | [adjective] (by extension) Unplanned, unexpected, spontaneous. UNSEASONED (11) [adjective] Not sprinkled with seasoning. | [adjective] Lacking experience. | [adjective] Unseasonable UNSELECTED (13) [verb] To cancel a previous selection, especially by removing a mark from a tick box | [verb] To reverse the previous selection of. | [adjective] Not selected. UNSHACKLED (20) [verb] To remove shackles from someone or something. | [verb] To remove restrictions or inhibitions; to allow full freedom and power. | [adjective] Not shackled. UNSHEATHED (17) [verb] To deprive of a sheath; to draw from the sheath or scabbard, as a sword. | [adjective] Not protected by a sheath. UNSMOOTHED (16) UNSOLDERED (12) [verb] To reverse the process of soldering, such as by breaking the joint and removing the solder UNSTEADIED (12) UNSTITCHED (16) [adjective] Not stitched | [verb] To take out stitches from. | [verb] To unravel or disunite; to cause to come apart. UNSTRAINED (11) [adjective] Not strained or tense. | [adjective] Not having been forced through a strainer. UNSTRAPPED (15) [verb] To loosen or remove the straps from (something). | [adjective] Not strapped. UNSTRESSED (11) [adjective] (of a vowel) not stressed or accentuated | [adjective] Not subject to stress UNTALENTED (11) [adjective] Not talented; lacking in talent. UNTEMPERED (15) [adjective] Not tempered; not conditioned by a process. | [adjective] In the case of a person, inexperienced; untested. UNTENANTED (11) [adjective] Not leased to or occupied by a tenant; unoccupied. UNTETHERED (14) [adjective] Not tethered; not tied down. | [adjective] Unrestrained. UNTHREADED (15) [verb] To draw or remove a thread from. | [verb] To loosen the connections of. | [verb] To make one's way through. UNTRAVELED (14) [adjective] (of a road etc) Bearing few travellers | [adjective] (of a person) Not having travelled UNTROUBLED (13) [adjective] Without worries; free from care. UNUTILIZED (20) [adjective] Not utilized; unused. UNWEIGHTED (18) [adjective] Not weighted (used especially of an average or other statistic) UNWREATHED (17) UPGATHERED (17) UPPERCASED (17) VACATIONED (16) [verb] To spend or take a vacation. VACCINATED (18) [verb] Treat with a vaccine to produce immunity against a disease. VACILLATED (16) [verb] To sway unsteadily from one side to the other; oscillate. | [verb] To swing indecisively from one course of action or opinion to another. VACUOLATED (16) VAGABONDED (18) [verb] To roam, as a vagabond VANDALISED (15) [verb] To needlessly destroy or deface other people’s property or public property; to commit vandalism. | [adjective] Referring to something that has been struck by vandalism VANDALIZED (24) [verb] To needlessly destroy or deface other people’s property or public property; to commit vandalism. | [adjective] Damaged by vandalism. VANQUISHED (26) [verb] To defeat, to overcome. | [adjective] Defeated. VARIEGATED (15) [verb] To add variety to something. | [verb] To change the appearance of something, especially by covering with patches or streaks of different colour. | [verb] To dapple. VENTILATED (14) [verb] To replace stale or noxious air with fresh. | [verb] To circulate air through a building, etc. | [verb] To provide with a vent. VERANDAHED (18) VERBALIZED (25) [verb] To speak or to use words to express. | [verb] (grammar) To adapt (a word of another part of speech) as a verb. VERNALIZED (23) [verb] To subject to vernalization VESTIBULED (16) VICTIMHOOD (21) [noun] The state or perception of being a victim. VICTIMISED (18) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTIMIZED (27) [verb] To make someone a victim or sacrifice. | [verb] To punish someone unjustly. | [verb] To swindle or defraud someone. VICTUALLED (16) [verb] To provide with food; to provision. | [verb] To lay in food supplies. | [verb] To eat. VIDEOTAPED (17) [verb] To make a recording of something on videotape | [adjective] Having been recorded on videotape. VILIPENDED (17) VINDICATED (17) [verb] To clear of an accusation, suspicion or criticism. | [verb] To justify by providing evidence. | [verb] To maintain or defend (a cause) against opposition. VISUALISED (14) [verb] To envisage, or form a mental picture (of something). | [verb] To make (something) visible. VISUALIZED (23) [verb] To envisage, or form a mental picture (of something). | [verb] To make (something) visible. | [adjective] Having been the subject of visualization; having had (its) appearance or existence imagined or designed. VITRIOLLED (14) VIVISECTED (19) [verb] To perform vivisection upon; to dissect alive. VOUCHSAFED (22) [verb] To graciously give, to condescendingly grant a right, benefit, outcome, etc.; to deign to acknowledge. | [verb] To receive or accept in condescension. | [verb] To disclose or divulge. VULCANISED (16) [verb] To treat rubber with heat and (usually) sulphur to harden it and make it more durable. | [verb] To undergo such treatment. VULCANIZED (25) [verb] To treat rubber with heat and (usually) sulphur to harden it and make it more durable. | [verb] To undergo such treatment. VULGARISED (15) [verb] To make commonplace, lewd, or vulgar. VULGARIZED (24) [verb] To make commonplace, lewd, or vulgar. WAINSCOTED (16) [adjective] Having a wainscot. WAITRESSED (14) WAREHOUSED (17) [verb] To store in a warehouse or similar. | [verb] To confine (a person) to an institution for a long period. | [verb] To acquire and then shelve, simply to prevent competitors from acquiring it. WATERFLOOD (17) WATTLEBIRD (16) [noun] Any of a group of Australian birds in the genus Anthochaera of the honeyeater family Meliphagidae. | [noun] Any of three birds in the family Callaeidae, endemic to New Zealand. WEAVERBIRD (19) [noun] Any of various Old World passerine birds in either of two families known for building nests of intricately woven vegetation. WHIRLYBIRD (22) [noun] A helicopter. WHITEBEARD (19) WHOLESALED (17) [verb] To sell at wholesale. WIDESPREAD (17) [adjective] Affecting a large area (e.g. the entire land or body); broad in extent; widely diffused. WILDCATTED (17) [verb] To drill for oil in an area where no oil has been found before. WINDBURNED (17) [adjective] Of people or body parts: suffering from windburn. | [adjective] Of plants: dried or damaged by the wind. WINDLASSED (15) [verb] To raise with, or as if with, a windlass; to use a windlass. | [verb] To take a roundabout course; to work warily or by indirect means. WINDMILLED (17) [verb] To rotate with a sweeping motion. | [verb] Of a rotating part of a machine, to (become disengaged and) rotate freely. WINDSHIELD (18) [noun] A transparent screen made of glass, located at the front and back of a vehicle in front of its occupants to protect them from the wind and weather. | [noun] A cover for a microphone to exclude airy noises such as wind and breathing. | [verb] To install a windshield on. WINDSURFED (18) [verb] To ride a surfboard that has an attached sail WINGSPREAD (17) [noun] The distance between the extreme tips of the wings of a bird, insect or aircraft. WINTERIZED (23) [verb] To prepare (something) for winter weather. | [verb] To remove the saturated fats from (a vegetable oil) by cooling and filtering it, so that it does not go cloudy in the winter. WIREHAIRED (17) [adjective] Having wiry hair. WIRELESSED (14) WIRETAPPED (18) [verb] To install or to use such a connection. WONDERLAND (15) [noun] An imaginary or real place full of wonder or marvels. WOODENHEAD (18) WORSHIPPED (21) [verb] To reverence (a deity, etc.) with supreme respect and veneration; to perform religious exercises in honour of. | [verb] To honour with extravagant love and extreme submission, as a lover; to adore; to idolize. | [verb] To participate in religious ceremonies. WRAPAROUND (16) [noun] A garment that is wrapped around the body and tied. | [noun] A label or advertising display that wraps around a container. | [noun] A segment where material featuring one person (such as a reporter) is introduced and concluded by another person. WUNDERKIND (19) [noun] A child prodigy; a phenom. | [noun] A highly talented or gifted individual; one who is successful at a young age. YELLOWWOOD (20) [noun] Any of the tree genus Cladrastis. | [noun] Flindersia xanthoxyla, a tall rainforest tree of Australia. | [noun] The osage orange tree.

11-Letter Words (1252)

ABBREVIATED (19) [verb] To shorten by omitting parts or details. | [verb] To speak or write in a brief manner. | [verb] To make shorter; to shorten (in time); to abridge; to shorten by ending sooner than planned. ABOVEGROUND (18) [adjective] Alternative spelling of above ground ABSOLUTIZED (23) [verb] To make absolute. ACCELERATED (16) [verb] To cause to move faster; to quicken the motion of; to add to the speed of. | [verb] To quicken the natural or ordinary progression or process of. | [verb] To cause a change of velocity. ACCENTUATED (16) [verb] To pronounce with an accent or vocal stress. | [verb] To bring out distinctly; to make more noticeable or prominent; to emphasize. | [verb] To mark with a written accent. ACCESSIONED (16) [verb] To make a record of (additions to a collection). ACCOMPANIED (20) [adjective] Having accompaniment; being part of a group of at least two. | [verb] To go with or attend as a companion or associate; to keep company with; to go along with. | [verb] To supplement with; add to. ACCUMULATED (18) [verb] To heap up in a mass; to pile up; to collect or bring together (either literally or figuratively) | [verb] To grow or increase in quantity or number; to increase greatly. | [verb] To take a higher degree at the same time with a lower degree, or at a shorter interval than usual. ADJUDICATED (23) [verb] To settle a legal case or other dispute. | [verb] To act as a judge. ADRENALIZED (22) [verb] To render frightening or thrilling, such as to stimulate the production of adrenalin. ADULTERATED (13) [verb] To corrupt. | [verb] To spoil by adding impurities. | [verb] To commit adultery. AEROBICIZED (25) [adjective] (of a person's body) toned by the use of aerobics AEROSOLIZED (21) [verb] To disperse a material, usually a solid or liquid, as an aerosol. | [adjective] Dispersed as an aerosol; particulate. AFFECTIONED (20) AGGRANDISED (15) [verb] To make great; to enlarge; to increase. | [verb] To make great or greater in power, rank, honor, or wealth (applied to persons, countries, etc.). | [verb] To make appear great or greater; to exalt. AGGRANDIZED (24) [verb] To make great; to enlarge; to increase. | [verb] To make great or greater in power, rank, honor, or wealth (applied to persons, countries, etc.). | [verb] To make appear great or greater; to exalt. ALKALINIZED (25) [verb] To convert, or be converted, to an alkali ALLEGORISED (13) [verb] To create an allegory from some event or situation. | [verb] To use allegory. ALLEGORIZED (22) [verb] To create an allegory from some event or situation. | [verb] To use allegory. ALLITERATED (12) [verb] To exhibit alliteration. | [verb] To use (a word or sound) so as to make alliteration. ALLOGRAFTED (16) AMALGAMATED (17) [verb] To merge, to combine, to blend, to join. | [verb] To make an alloy of a metal and mercury. | [verb] To combine (free groups) by identifying respective isomorphic subgroups. AMELIORATED (14) [verb] To make better, or improve, something perceived to be in a negative condition. | [verb] To become better; improve. | [adjective] Having had problem(s) improved upon; having been the subject of amelioration. ANASTOMOSED (14) [verb] (of streams and rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join (two or more things) by anastomosis, to interconnect forming a network. | [verb] (of rivers, blood vessels, etc) To join by anastomosis. | [adjective] Joined by anastomosis ANNIHILATED (15) [verb] To reduce to nothing, to destroy, to eradicate. | [verb] To react with antimatter, producing gamma radiation. | [verb] To treat as worthless, to vilify. ANNUNCIATED (14) [verb] To announce. ANTAGONIZED (22) [verb] To work against; to oppose (especially to incite reaction) | [adjective] (especially describing a muscle) Having been acted on by antagonistic forces. | [adjective] (of a person or group) Having been aggravated or made into an enemy. ANTICIPATED (16) [verb] To act before (someone), especially to prevent an action. | [verb] To take up or introduce (something) prematurely. | [verb] To know of (something) before it happens; to expect. ANTITHYROID (18) [adjective] Acting against or inhibiting the function of the thyroid gland. ANTITYPHOID (20) APOSTATISED (14) [verb] To give up or renounce one's position or belief. APOSTATIZED (23) [verb] To give up or renounce one's position or belief. APPERCEIVED (21) [verb] Past tense of apperceive; to become conscious of or perceive clearly and distinctly. APPERTAINED (16) [verb] To belong to or be a part of, whether by right, nature, appointment, or custom; to relate to. | [verb] To belong as a part, right, possession, attribute, etc.. APPORTIONED (16) [verb] To divide and distribute portions of a whole. | [verb] Specifically, to do so in a fair and equitable manner; to allocate proportionally. APPRECIATED (18) [verb] To be grateful or thankful for. | [verb] To view as valuable. | [verb] To be fully conscious of; understand; be aware of; detect. APPREHENDED (20) [verb] To take or seize; to take hold of. | [verb] To take hold of with the understanding, that is, to conceive in the mind; to become cognizant of; to understand; to recognize; to consider. | [verb] To anticipate; especially, to anticipate with anxiety, dread, or fear; to fear. APPRENTICED (18) [verb] To put under the care and supervision of a master, for the purpose of instruction in a trade or business. | [verb] To be an apprentice to. ARPEGGIATED (16) [verb] To play (a chord) as an arpeggio. | [verb] (of the notes of a chord) To represent separately on a score. ARTICULATED (14) [verb] To make clear or effective. | [verb] To speak clearly; to enunciate. | [verb] To explain; to put into words; to make something specific. ASCERTAINED (14) [verb] To find out definitely; to discover or establish. | [verb] To make (someone) certain or confident about something; to inform. | [verb] To establish, to prove. ASPHYXIATED (27) [verb] To smother or suffocate someone. | [verb] To be smothered or suffocated. ASSEVERATED (15) [verb] To declare earnestly, seriously, or positively; to affirm. ASSIMILATED (14) [verb] To incorporate nutrients into the body, especially after digestion. | [verb] To incorporate or absorb (knowledge) into the mind. | [verb] To absorb (a person or people) into a community or culture. ATMOSPHERED (19) AUSCULTATED (14) [verb] To listen (for example to the heart or lungs) by auscultation; to examine by auscultation. AUTOGRAFTED (16) [verb] Past tense of autograft; to transplant tissue from one part of a person's body to another part of the same person's body. AUTOGRAPHED (18) [verb] To sign, or write one’s name or signature on a book etc | [verb] To write something in one's own handwriting AUTOMATIZED (23) [verb] To make or become automatic. | [verb] To cause to be automated; to automate. AUTOMOBILED (16) AUTOROTATED (12) [verb] To undergo autorotation. AUTOTOMIZED (23) [verb] Past tense of autotomize; to shed or cast off a body part (such as a tail or limb) as a defense mechanism, typically used of certain animals like lizards or starfish. AXIOMATIZED (30) [verb] To establish a set of axioms that describe or govern certain phenomena BACKCROSSED (22) [verb] To cross a hybrid with one of its parents. BACKDROPPED (25) [verb] To serve as a backdrop for. BACKLIGHTED (24) [verb] To illuminate something from behind. BACKPEDALED (23) [verb] To pedal backwards on a bicycle. | [verb] To step backwards. | [verb] To distance oneself from an earlier claim or statement; back off from an idea. BACKSLAPPED (24) [verb] Past tense of backslap; to slap someone on the back, typically as a gesture of friendship or congratulation. | [verb] To engage in excessive flattery or insincere praise. BACKSTABBED (24) [verb] Past tense of backstab; to betray someone treacherously, especially by attacking them from behind or in a cowardly manner. | [verb] To criticize or attack someone secretly or when they are not present. BACKSTOPPED (24) [verb] To serve as backstop for. | [verb] To bolster, support. BACKTRACKED (26) [verb] To retrace one's steps. | [verb] To repeat or review work already done. | [verb] To taxi down an active runway in the opposite direction to that being used for takeoff. BALLYRAGGED (19) [verb] To harass, badger, taunt, or abuse verbally. BALUSTRADED (15) [adjective] Having a balustrade; furnished with or enclosed by a balustrade (a railing composed of small posts or balusters). BARNSTORMED (16) [verb] To travel around the countryside making political speeches etc. | [verb] To appear at fairs and carnivals in exhibitions of stunt flying, sporting events, or theater. | [verb] (of a sports team) To travel from town to town performing in front of small crowds. https//web.archive.org/web/20051201203635/http://www.sportingnews.com/archives/sports2000/numbers/173540.htmlhttps//web.archive.org/web/20070505133024/http://www.hoophall.com/halloffamers/bhof-original-celtics.htmlhttps//web.archive.org/web/20070929004147/http://www.jimthorpe.org/jim_thorpe_athlete.php http//www.nytimes.com/2013/06/17/sports/soccer/to-us-soccer-team-home-field-is-a-many-changing-thing.html?_r=2 BARRICADOED (17) BASTARDISED (15) [verb] To claim or demonstrate that someone is a bastard, or illegitimate. | [verb] To reduce from a higher to a lower state, such as by removing refined elements or introducing debased elements; to debase. | [verb] To beget out of wedlock. BASTARDIZED (24) [verb] To claim or demonstrate that someone is a bastard, or illegitimate. | [verb] To reduce from a higher to a lower state, such as by removing refined elements or introducing debased elements; to debase. | [verb] To beget out of wedlock. BASTINADOED (15) [verb] To punish a person by beating the bare soles of the feet, using a stick or truncheon. BATTLEFIELD (17) [noun] The area where a land battle is or was fought, which is not necessarily a field. BEACHCOMBED (25) [verb] Past tense of beachcomb; to search a beach for interesting items such as shells, sea glass, or other objects of value or interest. BEAVERBOARD (19) [noun] A form of fiberboard made of wood pulp compressed into sheets. BECUDGELLED (18) [verb] Past tense of cudgel; struck or beaten with a cudgel (a short thick stick used as a weapon). | [verb] Troubled or puzzled (as in "cudgeled one's brains"). BEDRIVELLED (18) BEGLAMOURED (17) BELEAGUERED (15) [verb] To besiege; to surround with troops. | [verb] To vex, harass, or beset. | [verb] To exhaust. BELOWGROUND (18) [adjective] Located, occurring, or existing beneath the surface of the ground. | [adverb] Beneath the surface of the ground. BESPATTERED (16) [verb] To spatter or cover with something; sprinkle with anything liquid, or with any wet or adhesive substance. | [verb] To soil by spattering. | [verb] To asperse with calumny or reproach; shend. BESPRINKLED (20) [adjective] Sprinkled. BESTIALIZED (23) [verb] To make like a beast | [verb] To bring or reduce to the state or condition of a beast BEWHISKERED (24) [adjective] Having whiskers BICHROMATED (21) [adjective] Treated with or containing potassium dichromate or a similar dichromate compound, particularly in photography or printing processes. BILLBOARDED (17) [verb] Past tense of billboard; to display prominently on a billboard or to advertise widely. | [adjective] Having the appearance or quality of being displayed on a billboard; flat and two-dimensional in appearance. BINUCLEATED (16) [adjective] Having two nuclei, as in a cell that contains two distinct nuclei. BIODEGRADED (17) [verb] To decompose as a result of biological action, especially by microorganisms | [adjective] Subject to biodegradation BIPOLARIZED (25) BIRDBRAINED (17) [adjective] Silly, stupid, or lacking in intelligence; scatterbrained. BITUMINIZED (25) [verb] To treat with bitumen BLACKBALLED (22) [verb] To vote against, especially in an exclusive organization. | [verb] To ostracize. BLACKBIRDED (23) [verb] Past tense of blackbird, meaning to recruit or kidnap people, especially in the 19th and early 20th centuries, to work as laborers, often under exploitative conditions. | [verb] To coerce or trick someone into forced labor or servitude. BLACKJACKED (33) [verb] Past tense of blackjack; to hit with a blackjack (a weapon) or to coerce someone into doing something. BLACKLISTED (20) [verb] To place on a blacklist; to mark a person or entity as one to be shunned or banned. | [adjective] Being on a blacklist, or having been shunned and rejected due to information (true or false) being spread about scandalous activities or ideas, especially controversial political opinions. BLACKMAILED (22) [verb] To extort money or favors from (a person) by exciting fears of injury other than bodily harm, such as injury to reputation, distress of mind, false accusation, etc. | [verb] (Kenya) To speak ill of someone; to defame someone. BLACKTOPPED (24) [verb] To pave with blacktop. BLINDFOLDED (19) [verb] To cover the eyes, in order to make someone unable to see. | [verb] To obscure understanding or comprehension. | [adjective] Wearing a blindfold BLUEPRINTED (16) [verb] To make a blueprint for. | [verb] To make a detailed operational plan for. BLUESHIFTED (20) [verb] Past tense of blueshift; shifted toward the blue end of the electromagnetic spectrum due to the Doppler effect, as when an object moves toward an observer. BODYCHECKED (29) [verb] To perform a body check on someone. BOLSHEVIZED (29) [verb] Past tense of bolshevize; to convert to Bolshevism or impose communist ideology and control. | [adjective] Having been subjected to Bolshevization; converted to or influenced by Bolshevik principles. BOOMERANGED (17) [verb] To return or rebound unexpectedly, especially when the result is undesired; to backfire. | [verb] To travel in a curved path. BOONDOGGLED (17) [verb] To waste time on a pointless activity. BOWDLERISED (18) [verb] To remove or alter those parts of a text considered offensive, vulgar, or otherwise unseemly. BOWDLERIZED (27) [verb] To remove or alter those parts of a text considered offensive, vulgar, or otherwise unseemly. BRAINWASHED (20) [verb] To affect one's mind by using extreme mental pressure or any other mind-affecting process. (e.g. hypnosis) | [verb] To take from an electronically controlled machine its stored-up information; to erase a computer's programming. (1960) BRANCHIOPOD (21) [noun] Any of the very many aquatic crustaceans of the class Branchiopoda, such as the fairy shrimps and water fleas BREAKFASTED (21) [verb] To eat the morning meal. | [verb] To serve breakfast to. BROADCASTED (17) [verb] To transmit a message or signal through radio waves or electronic means. | [verb] To transmit a message over a wide area; specifically, to send an email in a single transmission to a (typically large) number of people. | [verb] To appear as a performer, presenter, or speaker in a broadcast programme. BROTHERHOOD (20) [noun] The state of being brothers or a brother. | [noun] An association for any purpose, such as a society of monks; a fraternity. | [noun] The whole body of persons engaged in the same business, especially those of the same profession BUCCANEERED (18) [verb] Past tense of buccaneer; to engage in piracy or plundering, or to act as a buccaneer. BUCKSKINNED (24) BUCKTOOTHED (23) [adjective] Having prominent front teeth that stick out noticeably, resembling those of a buck or male deer. BULLSHITTED (17) [verb] To tell lies, exaggerate; to mislead; to deceive. | [verb] To have casual conversation with no real point; to shoot the breeze | [verb] To come up with on the spot, to improvise poorly. BULLWHIPPED (24) [verb] To beat with a bullwhip. BULLYRAGGED (19) [verb] To harass, badger, taunt, or abuse verbally. BURGLARIZED (24) [verb] To commit burglary. BUSHWHACKED (29) [verb] To travel through thick wooded country, cutting away scrub to make progress | [verb] To fight, as a guerilla, especially in wooded country | [verb] To ambush BUTTERFLIED (17) [verb] To cut (food) almost entirely in half and spread the halves apart, in a shape suggesting the wings of a butterfly. | [verb] To cut strips of surgical tape or plasters into thin strips, and place across (a gaping wound) to close it. BUTTONHOLED (17) [verb] To detain (a person) in conversation against their will. CACHINNATED (19) [verb] To laugh loudly, immoderately, or too often. CAFFEINATED (20) [verb] To add caffeine to. | [verb] To drink caffeinated beverages in order to increase one's energy or wakefulness or to enhance physical or mental performance. | [verb] To inject tension into (a situation, etc.) for one's own amusement; to stir things up. CALUMNIATED (16) [verb] To make hurtful untrue comments about. | [verb] To levy a false charge against, especially of a vague offense, with the intent to damage someone's reputation or standing. CAMOUFLAGED (20) [verb] To hide or disguise something by covering it up or changing the way it looks. | [adjective] Wearing, in, or treated with, camouflage; disguised CAMPHORATED (21) [adjective] Treated or impregnated with camphor. CANNABINOID (16) [noun] Substance that is structurally related to tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), a psychoactive compound present in cannabis, or that bind to cannabinoid receptors. | [adjective] Structurally related to tetrahydrocannabinol CANTILLATED (14) [verb] To chant, or to recite musically (especially in a synagogue). CAPACITATED (18) [verb] To make capable of functioning in a given capacity. | [verb] To alter sperm to allow it to fertilize eggs. | [verb] To reach maximum throughput on at least part of a constrained network. CAPARISONED (16) [verb] To dress up a horse or elephant with ornamental coverings. | [adjective] (of a horse or elephant) Having a richly ornamented harness. | [adjective] Dressed in richly ornamented finery. CAPITALISED (16) [verb] In writing or editing, to write (something: either an entire word or text, or just the initial letter(s) thereof) in capital letters, in upper case. | [verb] To contribute or acquire capital (money or other resources) for. | [verb] To convert into capital, i.e., to get cash or similar immediately fungible resources for some less fungible property or source of future income. CAPITALIZED (25) [verb] In writing or editing, to write (something: either an entire word or text, or just the initial letter(s) thereof) in capital letters, in upper case. | [verb] To contribute or acquire capital (money or other resources) for. | [verb] To convert into capital, i.e., to get cash or similar immediately fungible resources for some less fungible property or source of future income. CAPITULATED (16) [verb] To surrender; to end all resistance, to give up; to go along with or comply. | [verb] To draw up in chapters; to enumerate. | [verb] To draw up the articles of treaty with; to treat, bargain, parley. CARAMELISED (16) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARAMELIZED (25) [verb] To convert (sugar) into caramel. | [verb] To brown (sugar) by means of heat. | [verb] To undergo this kind of conversion or browning. CARBONADOED (17) [adjective] Studded or set with carbonado (black diamond); having a surface covered with small dark imperfections or flaws. CARBURETTED (16) [verb] To react with carbon. | [verb] To mix (air) with hydrocarbons, especially with petroleum, as in an internal combustion engine. CARICATURED (16) [verb] To represent someone in an exaggerated or distorted manner. CARILLONNED (14) [verb] Past tense of carillon; played on a carillon (a set of tuned bells). CARPENTERED (16) [verb] To work as a carpenter, cutting and joining timber. CARTWHEELED (20) [verb] To perform the gymnastics feat of a cartwheel. | [verb] To flip end over end: normally said of a crashing vehicle or aircraft. CASTELLATED (14) [adjective] Castle-like: built or shaped like a castle. | [adjective] Having grooves or recesses on an upper face. | [adjective] Castled: having or furnished with castles. | [adjective] Contained; held within a container. CATABOLIZED (25) [verb] To undergo catabolism. | [verb] To cause (a substance) to undergo catabolism. | [verb] To produce (a substance) by catabolism. CATEGORISED (15) [verb] To assign a category; to divide into classes. CATEGORIZED (24) [verb] To assign a category; to divide into classes. | [adjective] The characteristic of having been placed or sorted in a category or categories. CATERWAULED (17) [verb] To cry as cats in heat; to make a harsh, offensive noise. | [verb] To have a noisy argument, like cats. CENTERBOARD (16) [noun] The adjustable keel on a small yacht or dinghy that acts, among other things, as ballast and to counteract the sideways force of the wind. CENTRALISED (14) [verb] To move things physically towards the centre; to consolidate or concentrate | [verb] To move power to a single, central authority | [adjective] Having things physically towards the center; consolidated or concentrated CENTRALIZED (23) [verb] To move things physically towards the centre; to consolidate or concentrate | [verb] To move power to a single, central authority | [adjective] Having things physically towards the center; consolidated or concentrated CENTRIFUGED (18) [verb] To rotate something in a centrifuge in order to separate its constituents CHAIRMANNED (19) CHAMBERMAID (23) [noun] A maid who handles the chores in a bedroom. CHANNELIZED (26) [verb] To form a channel, especially by deepening or altering the course of a river. | [verb] To transmit through a channel. | [verb] To multiplex (messages) through a single line. CHARACTERED (19) [verb] To write (using characters); to describe. CHARBROILED (19) [verb] To cook on a flat, lined metal surface that is heated from below; to chargrill. CHAUFFEURED (23) [verb] To be, or act as, a chauffeur (driver of a motor car). | [verb] To transport (someone) in a motor vehicle. CHECKMARKED (29) CHEMISORBED (21) [verb] Past tense of chemisorb; to undergo or cause to undergo chemisorption, a process in which molecules bond to a surface through chemical forces. CHITCHATTED (22) [verb] To engage in small talk, to discuss unimportant matters. CHLORALOSED (17) [adjective] Treated with or containing chloralose, a sedative drug used to anesthetize animals. CHLORINATED (17) [verb] To add chlorine to (something, especially water, to purify it; or an auriferous substance, to extract gold from it). | [adjective] Of water, that has had chlorine added to it to purify it. CHOWDERHEAD (24) [noun] An idiot; a dummy. CHRYSOMELID (22) [noun] Any leaf beetle of the family Chrysomelidae CHUCKLEHEAD (26) [noun] A stupid or clumsy person. | [noun] A coastal rockfish of California, Sebastes chlorostictus. CHUGALUGGED (20) [verb] To swallow (a container of beer etc.) without pausing. CINEMATIZED (25) [verb] Adapted or presented in the style or form of a cinema film; converted into a movie format. CIRCUMCISED (20) [verb] To surgically remove the foreskin (prepuce) from a penis (male). | [verb] (sometimes proscribed) To surgically remove the clitoris (clitoridectomy), clitoral hood, or labia (female). | [noun] A circumcised person CIRCUMFUSED (21) [verb] To pour round; to spread round, as a fluid. | [verb] To spread round; to surround. CLAPBOARDED (19) [adjective] Covered or constructed with clapboards (wooden planks used as exterior siding on buildings). CLASSICIZED (25) [verb] To make classic. | [verb] To conform to the classic style. CLEANHANDED (18) [adjective] Innocent of wrongdoing; not guilty of dishonest or unethical behavior. CLEARHEADED (18) [adjective] Having the ability to think clearly and act appropriately CLOSEFISTED (17) [adjective] Unwilling to spend money; stingy or miserly. | [adjective] Having one's fist closed tightly. COCAPTAINED (18) [verb] Past tense of cocaptain; to serve jointly as a captain of a team or organization alongside another person. COCKNEYFIED (26) [verb] Made or altered to resemble Cockney speech, accent, or characteristics. COCOUNSELED (16) CODEVELOPED (20) [verb] Developed jointly or collaboratively with another person or entity. COHOSTESSED (17) COLDHEARTED (18) [adjective] Without sympathy, feeling or compassion; callous or heartless COMMENTATED (18) [verb] To provide a commentary; to act as a commentator; to maintain a stream of comments about some event. COMMODIFIED (22) [adjective] Subjected to commodification | [verb] To make something into a commodity, sometimes at the expense of its intrinsic value. COMPANIONED (18) [verb] To be a companion to; to attend on; to accompany. | [verb] To qualify as a companion; to make equal. COMPENSATED (18) [verb] To do (something good) after (something bad) happens | [verb] To pay or reward someone in exchange for work done or some other consideration. | [verb] To make up for; to do something in place of something else; to correct, satisfy; to reach an agreement such that the scales are literally or (metaphorically) balanced; to equalize or make even. COMPLICATED (20) [verb] To make complex; to modify so as to make something intricate or difficult. | [verb] To involve in a convoluted matter. | [adjective] Difficult or convoluted. COMPROMISED (20) [verb] To bind by mutual agreement. | [verb] To adjust and settle by mutual concessions; to compound. | [verb] To find a way between extremes. CONCENTERED (16) [verb] To come together at a common centre. | [verb] To coincide. | [verb] To bring together at a common centre. CONCERTIZED (25) [verb] To perform in concerts | [verb] To adapt to the concert form CONCILIATED (16) [verb] To make calm and content, or regain the goodwill of; to placate. | [verb] To mediate in a dispute. CONCRETIZED (25) [verb] To make concrete, substantial, real, or tangible; to represent or embody a concept through a particular instance or example. CONDITIONED (15) [verb] To subject to the process of acclimation. | [verb] To subject to different conditions, especially as an exercise. | [verb] To place conditions or limitations upon. CONFISCATED (19) [verb] To use one's authority to lay claim to and separate a possession from its holder. CONGLOBATED (17) [verb] Past tense of conglobate; to form into a ball or sphere. | [adjective] Formed into a rounded mass or ball-shaped structure. CONGREGATED (16) [verb] To collect into an assembly or assemblage; to bring into one place, or into a united body | [verb] To come together; to assemble; to meet. CONJECTURED (23) [verb] To guess; to venture an unproven idea. | [verb] To infer on slight evidence; to guess at. CONSCRIPTED (18) [verb] To enrol(l) compulsorily; to draft; to induct. CONSECRATED (16) [verb] To declare something holy, or make it holy by some procedure. | [verb] (specifically) To ordain as a bishop. CONSOCIATED (16) [verb] Associated or united together in a group or society; joined in close relationship or fellowship. CONSTIPATED (16) [verb] To cause constipation in. | [verb] To pack or crowd together. | [adjective] Unable to defecate; costive. CONSTITUTED (14) [verb] To set up; to establish; to enact. | [verb] To make up; to compose; to form. | [verb] To appoint, depute, or elect to an office; to make and empower. CONSTRAINED (14) [verb] To force physically, by strong persuasion or pressuring; to compel; to oblige. | [verb] To keep within close bounds; to confine. | [verb] To reduce a result in response to limited resources. CONSTRICTED (16) [verb] To narrow, especially by application of pressure. | [verb] To limit or restrict. CONSTRINGED (15) [verb] Past tense of constringe; to draw together or constrict. CONSTRUCTED (16) [verb] To build or form (something) by assembling parts. | [verb] To build (a sentence, an argument, etc.) by arranging words or ideas. | [verb] To draw (a geometric figure) by following precise specifications and using geometric tools and techniques. CONSUMMATED (18) [verb] To bring (a task, project, goal etc.) to completion; to accomplish. | [verb] To make perfect, achieve, give the finishing touch. | [verb] To make (a marriage) complete by engaging in first sexual intercourse. CONTRAVENED (17) [verb] To act contrary to an order; to fail to conform to a regulation or obligation. | [verb] To deny the truth of something. CONTRIBUTED (16) [verb] To give something that is or becomes part of a larger whole. CONVALESCED (19) [verb] To recover health and strength gradually after sickness or weakness. COORDINATED (15) [verb] To synchronize (activities). | [verb] To match (objects, especially clothes). | [adjective] Organized, working together, cooperating COPARTNERED (16) COPRESENTED (16) [verb] Past tense of copresent; presented jointly or together with another person or entity. COPUBLISHED (21) [verb] Published jointly by two or more publishers. COPYRIGHTED (23) [verb] To obtain or secure a copyright for some literary or other artistic work. | [adjective] Covered by a copyright, not public domain. CORKSCREWED (23) [verb] To wind or twist in the manner of a corkscrew; to move with much horizontal and vertical shifting. | [verb] To cause something to twist or move in a spiral path or shape. | [verb] To extract information or consent from someone. COSPONSORED (16) [verb] Past tense of cosponsor; to jointly sponsor or support something along with another person or organization. COUNTERMAND (16) [noun] An order to the contrary of a previous one. | [verb] To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given. | [verb] To recall a person or unit with such an order. COUNTERRAID (14) COUNTERSUED (14) [verb] Past tense of countersue; to sue someone who has sued you. COUNTRIFIED (17) [adjective] Rural, rustic; unsophisticated. | [verb] To make rural or rustic. COUNTRYFIED (20) [verb] To make rural or rustic. CRENELLATED (14) [verb] To furnish with crenelles. | [verb] To indent; to notch. | [adjective] Having crenellations or battlements CRESCENDOED (17) [verb] To increase in intensity; to reach or head for a crescendo. CROOKBACKED (26) [adjective] Having a bent or curved back; hunchbacked. CROSSBANDED (17) [adjective] Banded or arranged in a cross pattern, or having bands that cross each other. CROSSBARRED (16) [adjective] Having a crossbar or crossbars fitted across it. | [verb] Past tense of crossbar, meaning to fit with a crossbar or to block with a crossbar. CROSSRUFFED (20) [verb] To execute a play of this kind. CROWSTEPPED (21) [adjective] Having a crowstep. CRYPTORCHID (24) [noun] A male animal with one or two undescended testicles. CRYSTALIZED (26) [verb] Past tense of crystallize; converted into crystals or a crystalline form. | [adjective] Having been converted into crystals; solidified into a crystalline structure. CRYSTALLOID (17) [noun] Any substance that can be crystallized from solution | [noun] One of the microscopic particles resembling crystals, consisting of protein matter, which occur in certain plant cells. | [adjective] Crystal-like; transparent like crystal, or shaped like a crystal. CURRYCOMBED (23) CURVEBALLED (19) CYCLOSTYLED (22) [verb] To use such a wheel and puncture device to make copies. | [adjective] (of a document) copied using a cyclostyle | [adjective] Having a cyclostyle DEACIDIFIED (19) DEACTIVATED (18) [verb] To make something inactive or no longer effective | [verb] To prevent the action of a biochemical agent (such as an enzyme) | [verb] To remove a person or piece of hardware from active military service DEBILITATED (15) [verb] To make feeble; to weaken. | [adjective] Weakened. | [adjective] Run down, damaged, in disrepair. DECALCIFIED (20) [adjective] From which calcareous matter has been removed. | [verb] To deprive of calcareous matter. DECAPITATED (17) [verb] To remove the head of. | [verb] To oust or destroy the leadership or ruling body of (a government etc.). | [adjective] With the head removed. DECELERATED (15) [verb] To reduce the velocity of something | [verb] To reduce the rate of advancement of something, such as a disease | [verb] To go slower DECERTIFIED (18) [verb] To annul the certification of. | [verb] (industrial relations) To annul a labor union. DECIMALIZED (26) [verb] : To convert to the decimal system. DECOLONIZED (24) [verb] To release from the status of colony; to allow a colony to become independent. DECOLORIZED (24) [verb] To remove the color from. | [verb] To lose one’s color. DECONGESTED (16) [verb] To free from congestion DEFEMINIZED (27) [verb] To lose, or to remove feminine characteristics or qualities DEFINITIZED (25) DEFLAGRATED (17) [verb] To burn with intense light and heat. DEGENERATED (14) [verb] To lose good or desirable qualities. | [verb] To cause to lose good or desirable qualities. DEGLACIATED (16) DEHUMANIZED (27) [verb] To take away humanity; to remove or deny human qualities, characteristics, or attributes; to impersonalize. DELAMINATED (15) [verb] To cause (something assembled by lamination) to come apart into the layers that make it up. | [verb] To come apart into its component layers. | [adjective] Whose laminations have been removed. DELIBERATED (15) [verb] To consider carefully; to weigh well in the mind. | [verb] To consider the reasons for and against anything; to reflect. DELIQUESCED (24) [verb] To melt and disappear. | [verb] To become liquid by absorbing water from the atmosphere. DELOCALIZED (24) [verb] To broaden the scope of something (to make it more global). | [verb] To contain an electron in an orbital that extends over several adjacent atoms. | [verb] To remove from a locality. DEMOBILIZED (26) [verb] To release someone from military duty, especially after a war. | [verb] To disband troops, or remove them from a war footing. DEMODULATED (16) [verb] To reverse modulate, undo the effects of modulation. DEMONETIZED (24) [verb] To withdraw the status of legal tender from a coin (etc.) and remove it from circulation. | [verb] To declare ineligible or worthless as a medium of exchange or as legal tender. | [verb] To demote (published content, or its creator) so that it is no longer eligible to earn money for its publisher. DEMORALIZED (24) [verb] To destroy the morale of; to dishearten. DEMYSTIFIED (21) [verb] To remove the mystery from something; to explain or clarify. DENITRIFIED (16) [verb] To remove nitrogen, often through the breakdown of nitrogenous compounds and the release of nitrogen gas. DENOMINATED (15) [verb] To name; to designate. | [verb] To express in a monetary unit. DEPOLARIZED (24) [verb] To remove the polarization from something. | [verb] To demagnetize. DEPOPULATED (17) [verb] To reduce the population of a region by disease, war, forced relocation etc. | [verb] To remove the components from a circuit board. | [verb] To become depopulated, to lose its population. DEPRECIATED (17) [verb] To lessen in price or estimated value; to lower the worth of. | [verb] To decline in value over time. | [verb] To belittle or disparage. DEPROGRAMED (18) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. DERACINATED (15) [verb] To pull up by the roots; to uproot; to extirpate. | [verb] To force (people) from their homeland to a new or foreign location. | [verb] To liberate or be liberated from a culture or its norms. DEREGULATED (14) [verb] To remove the regulations, or legal restrictions, from. DEREPRESSED (15) [verb] To activate a gene by the removal of a repressor | [verb] To cease to repress (a belief, memory, etc.). | [adjective] (of a gene) activated by the removal of a repressor DERIVATIZED (25) DESALINATED (13) [verb] To remove the salt from something, especially from seawater for use in a domestic water supply DESALINIZED (22) [verb] To remove the salt from something, especially from seawater. DESIDERATED (14) [verb] To miss; to feel the absence of; to long for. DESQUAMATED (24) [verb] To shed or peel. DETASSELLED (13) DETOXICATED (22) [verb] (of a person) To remove poison (or its effects) from. | [verb] (of a poison) To counteract, or make less poisonous. DEVITALIZED (25) [verb] To deprive of vitality; to make lifeless; to weaken. DEVITRIFIED (19) [verb] (of a glassy material) To become crystalline and brittle DEVOCALIZED (27) DIFFERENCED (21) [verb] To distinguish or differentiate. DIGITALIZED (23) [verb] To digitize, to make digital. DILAPIDATED (16) [verb] To fall into ruin or disuse. | [verb] To cause to become ruined or put into disrepair. | [verb] To squander or waste. DIMENSIONED (15) [verb] To mark, cut or shape something to specified dimensions. | [adjective] Possessing dimension, non-dimensionless, dimensionful. DIPHTHEROID (21) [noun] Any bacterium that can cause diphtheria | [adjective] Of, pertaining to or resembling diphtheria. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to or resembling the diphtheria bacillus Corynebacterium diphtheriae. DISACCORDED (18) [verb] To fail to be in accord; to dissent. DISAFFECTED (21) [verb] To cause a loss of affection, sympathy or loyalty in; to alienate or estrange. | [adjective] Alienated or estranged, often with hostile effect; rebellious, resentful; disloyal. | [adjective] Affected with disease. DISAFFIRMED (21) [verb] To deny, contradict or repudiate DISANNULLED (13) [verb] To annul, do away with; to cancel. DISAPPEARED (17) [verb] To vanish. | [verb] To make vanish; especially, to abduct and murder surreptitiously for political reasons. | [verb] To go away; to become lost. DISAPPROVED (20) [verb] To condemn; to consider wrong or inappropriate; used with of. | [verb] To refuse to approve; reject. | [verb] To have or express an unfavorable opinion. DISARRANGED (14) [verb] To undo the arrangement of; to disorder; to derange. DISBELIEVED (18) [verb] To not believe; to exercise disbelief. | [verb] To actively deny (a statement, opinion or perception). | [verb] To cease to believe. DISBOWELLED (18) DISBURDENED (16) [verb] To rid of a burden; to free from a load carried; to unload. | [verb] To free from a source of mental trouble. DISCIPLINED (17) [verb] To train someone by instruction and practice. | [verb] To teach someone to obey authority. | [verb] To punish someone in order to (re)gain control. DISCOMFITED (20) [verb] To defeat completely; to rout. | [verb] To defeat the plans or hopes of; to frustrate; disconcert. | [verb] To embarrass greatly; to confuse; to perplex; to disconcert. DISCOMMODED (20) [verb] To cause inconvenience to (someone). DISCOMPOSED (19) [verb] To destroy the composure of; to disturb or agitate. | [verb] To disarrange, or throw into a state of disorder. | [adjective] Uneasy or disturbed. DISCOURAGED (16) [verb] To extinguish the courage of; to dishearten; to depress the spirits of; to deprive of confidence; to deject. | [verb] To persuade somebody not to do (something). | [adjective] Having lost confidence or hope; dejected; disheartened. DISCREDITED (16) [verb] To harm the good reputation of a person; to cause an idea or piece of evidence to seem false or unreliable. DISEMBARKED (21) [verb] To remove from on board a vessel; to put on shore | [verb] To go ashore out of a ship or boat; to leave a train or airplane DISEMBODIED (18) [adjective] Having no material body, immaterial; incorporeal or insubstantial. | [verb] To cause someone's soul, spirit, consciousness, voice, etc, to become separated from the physical body. | [verb] To separate (a part of the body) from the body. DISEMBOGUED (18) [verb] To come out into the open sea from a river etc. | [verb] (of a river or waters) To pour out, to debouch; to flow out through a narrow opening into a larger space. DISENTAILED (13) DISENTITLED (13) [verb] To deprive of title, right or claim. DISESTEEMED (15) [verb] To hold little or no esteem for; to consider worthless. DISGRUNTLED (14) [verb] To make discontent or cross; to put in a bad temper. | [adjective] Unhappy; dissatisfied | [adjective] Frustrated. DISHEVELLED (19) [verb] To throw into disorder; upheave. | [verb] To disarrange or loosen (hair, clothing, etc.). | [verb] To spread out in disorder. DISINCLINED (15) [verb] To make reluctant; to lessen the inclination of. | [adjective] Not inclined; having a disinclination; being unwilling. DISINFECTED (18) [verb] To sterilize by the use of cleaning agent. DISINFESTED (16) [verb] To eliminate insects, and vermin, and similar unwanted plagues of pests from. DISINTERRED (13) [verb] To take out of the grave or tomb. | [verb] To bring out, as from a grave or hiding place; to bring from obscurity into view. DISINVESTED (16) [verb] To reduce investment, or cease to invest. DISMEMBERED (19) [verb] To remove the limbs of. | [verb] To cut or otherwise divide something into pieces. | [adjective] From which the limbs have been removed DISORIENTED (13) [verb] To cause to lose orientation or direction. | [verb] To confuse or befuddle. | [adjective] Having lost one's direction; confused. DISREGARDED (15) [verb] To ignore; pay no attention to. | [adjective] Ignored | [adjective] Neglected DISRELISHED (16) [verb] To have no taste for; to reject as distasteful. | [verb] To deprive of relish; to make nauseous or disgusting in a slight degree. DISSERTATED (13) [verb] To make a dissertation; to discourse. | [verb] To write one's dissertation. DISSOCIATED (15) [verb] To make unrelated; to sever a connection; to separate. | [verb] To part; to stop associating. | [verb] To separate compounds into simpler component parts, usually by applying heat or through electrolysis. DISTEMPERED (17) [verb] To temper or mix unduly; to make disproportionate; to change the due proportions of. | [verb] To derange the functions of, whether bodily, mental, or spiritual; to disorder; to disease. | [verb] To deprive of temper or moderation; to disturb; to ruffle; to make disaffected, ill-humoured, or malignant. DISTRIBUTED (15) [verb] To divide into portions and dispense. | [verb] To supply to retail outlets. | [verb] To deliver or pass out. DIVARICATED (18) [verb] To spread apart; to (cause to) diverge or branch off. | [adjective] Spread-out, divergent, especially of a branch etc. which is at nearly ninety degrees to the main stem. DIVERSIFIED (19) [adjective] Modified by diversification | [verb] To make diverse or various in form or quality; to give variety to distinguish by numerous differences or aspects. DOLOMITIZED (24) DOWNHEARTED (19) [adjective] Sad, discouraged, in low spirits, unhappy, having no hope DOWNSHIFTED (22) [verb] To shift a transmission into a lower gear. | [verb] To function at a lower rate. | [verb] To make less controversial or risky. DUMBFOUNDED (21) [verb] To confuse and bewilder; to leave speechless. | [adjective] Shocked and speechless. EDULCORATED (15) [verb] To sweeten. | [verb] To make more acceptable or palatable. | [verb] To free from acidity. EFFECTUATED (20) [verb] To cause, bring about (an event); to accomplish, to carry out (a wish, plan etc.). EFFERVESCED (23) [verb] (of a liquid) to emit small bubbles of dissolved gas; to froth or fizz | [verb] (of a gas) to escape from solution in a liquid in the form of bubbles | [verb] (of a person) to show high spirits EFFLORESCED (20) [verb] (obsolete except figurative) To burst into bloom; to flower. | [verb] Of something hidden: to come forth, to emerge; also, to reach full glory or power. | [verb] Senses relating to chemistry. ELASTICIZED (23) [verb] To make (clothing, etc.) with elastic, by attaching elastic bands, so it can be adjusted while maintaining a snug fit. ELECTRIFIED (17) [adjective] Powered by electricity. | [verb] To supply electricity to; to charge with electricity. | [verb] To cause electricity to pass through; to affect by electricity; to give an electric shock to. ELUCUBRATED (16) EMANCIPATED (18) [verb] To set free from the power of another; to liberate; as: | [verb] To free from any controlling influence, especially from anything which exerts undue or evil influence | [adjective] Something which has been set free. EMASCULATED (16) [verb] To deprive of virile or procreative power; to castrate, to geld. | [verb] To deprive of masculine vigor or spirit; to weaken; to render effeminate; to vitiate by unmanly softness. | [verb] Of a flower: to deprive of the anthers. EMBARRASSED (16) [verb] To humiliate; to disrupt somebody's composure or comfort with acting publicly or freely; to disconcert; to abash | [verb] To hinder from liberty of movement; to impede; to obstruct. | [verb] To involve in difficulties concerning money matters; to encumber with debt; to beset with urgent claims or demands. EMBELLISHED (19) [verb] To make more beautiful and attractive; to decorate. | [verb] To make something sound or look better or more acceptable than it is in reality; to distort, to embroider. | [adjective] Having been made more attractive, compelling or interesting. EMBROIDERED (17) [verb] To stitch a decorative design on fabric with needle and thread of various colours. | [verb] To add imaginary detail to a narrative to make it more interesting or acceptable. EMBRYONATED (19) [adjective] Containing an embryo ENCOMPASSED (18) [verb] To form a circle around; to encircle. | [verb] To include within its scope; to circumscribe or go round so as to surround; to enclose; to contain. | [verb] To include completely; to describe fully or comprehensively. ENCOUNTERED (14) [verb] To meet (someone) or find (something), especially unexpectedly. | [verb] To confront (someone or something) face to face. | [verb] To engage in conflict, as with an enemy. ENCRIMSONED (16) ENDEAVOURED (16) ENGARLANDED (14) ENLIGHTENED (16) [verb] To supply with light. | [verb] To make something clear to (someone); to give knowledge or understanding to. | [noun] Someone who has been introduced to the mysteries of some activity, religion especially Buddhism ENSANGUINED (13) ENSORCELLED (14) [verb] To bewitch or enchant. | [verb] To captivate, entrance, fascinate. ENTERTAINED (12) [verb] To amuse (someone); to engage the attention of agreeably. | [verb] To have someone over at one's home for a party or visit. | [verb] To receive and take into consideration; to have a thought in mind. EPITHELIOID (17) EPITHELIZED (26) EQUATORWARD (24) EQUIVOCATED (26) [verb] To use words of equivocal or doubtful signification; to express one's opinions in terms which admit of different senses, with intent to deceive; to use ambiguous expressions with a view to mislead; as, to equivocate is the work of duplicity. | [verb] To render equivocal or ambiguous. ESTABLISHED (17) [verb] To make stable or firm; to confirm. | [verb] To form; to found; to institute; to set up in business. | [verb] To appoint or adopt, as officers, laws, regulations, guidelines, etc.; to enact; to ordain. ETERNALIZED (21) EVANGELIZED (25) [verb] To tell people about (a particular branch of) Christianity, especially in order to convert them; to preach the gospel to. | [verb] To preach any ideology to those who have not yet been converted to it. | [verb] To be enthusiastic about something, and to attempt to share that enthusiasm with others; to promote. EVISCERATED (17) [verb] To disembowel, to remove the viscera. | [verb] To destroy or make ineffectual or meaningless. | [verb] To elicit the essence of. EXACERBATED (23) [verb] To make worse (a problem, bad situation, negative feeling, etc.); aggravate; exasperate. EXAGGERATED (21) [verb] To overstate, to describe more than is fact. | [adjective] That has been described as greater than it actually is; abnormally increased or enlarged. EXASPERATED (21) [verb] To tax the patience of, irk, frustrate, vex, provoke, annoy; to make angry. | [adjective] Having one's patience greatly taxed; greatly annoyed; made furious. | [adjective] Made worse or more intense. EXCOGITATED (22) [verb] To think over something carefully; to consider fully; cogitate. | [verb] To reach as a conclusion through reason or careful thought. EXCRUCIATED (23) [verb] To inflict intense pain or mental distress on (someone); to torture. EXEMPLIFIED (26) [verb] To show or illustrate by example. | [verb] To be an instance of or serve as an example. | [verb] To make an attested copy or transcript of (a document) under seal. EXENTERATED (19) [verb] To disembowel; to eviscerate. EXHILARATED (22) [verb] To cheer, to cheer up, to gladden, to make happy. | [verb] To excite, to thrill. EXPATRIATED (21) [verb] To banish; to drive or force (a person) from his own country; to make an exile of. | [verb] To withdraw from one’s native country. | [verb] To renounce the rights and liabilities of citizenship where one is born and become a citizen of another country. EXPERIENCED (23) [verb] To observe certain events; undergo a certain feeling or process; or perform certain actions that may alter one or contribute to one's knowledge, opinions, or skills. | [adjective] Having experience and skill in a subject. | [adjective] Experient. EXTRAVERTED (22) [verb] Alternative spelling of extrovert, especially so as to be visible. | [adjective] Turned or thrust outwards, especially: EXTROVERTED (22) [adjective] Turned or thrust outwards, especially: FACILITATED (17) [verb] To make easy or easier. | [verb] To help bring about. | [verb] To preside over (a meeting, a seminar). FANATICIZED (26) [verb] To make into a fanatic. | [verb] To become fanatical. FANTASYLAND (18) [noun] An ideal place that does not exist in reality. FEATHERHEAD (21) [noun] A foolish person. FEDERALIZED (25) [verb] To unite into a federation. | [verb] To bring under federal control. | [verb] To change (a unitary state) into a federation. FELICITATED (17) [verb] To congratulate. FEMTOSECOND (19) [noun] A unit of time equal to 0.000 000 000 000 001 seconds (i.e. 1x10-15 seconds) and with symbol fs. FENESTRATED (15) [verb] To cut an opening into. | [adjective] Having windows | [adjective] Having evolved perforations through the leaves or fistulate/hollow/tubular stems/trunks FIBRILLATED (17) [verb] To make rapid irregular movements. | [adjective] Having fibrils FICTIONIZED (26) FINGERBOARD (18) [noun] A flat or roughly flat strip on the neck of a stringed instrument, against which the strings are pressed to shorten the vibrating length and produce notes of higher pitches. | [noun] A miniature skateboard that is driven with the fingers. FIREPROOFED (20) [verb] To make resistant to damage from fire. FLAGELLATED (16) [verb] To whip or scourge. FLIMFLAMMED (24) [verb] To swindle or cheat. FLOCCULATED (19) [adjective] Collected together in a loose aggregation like flocks (tufts) of wool, or coagulated in this way. FLUORIDATED (16) [verb] To add fluoride to something, especially to drinking water in order to reduce tooth decay. FLUORINATED (15) [verb] To introduce fluorine into a compound. | [adjective] Treated or reacted with fluorine or hydrofluoric acid. | [adjective] Formally derived from another compound by the replacement of one or more atoms of hydrogen with fluorine. FOOTFAULTED (18) FOOTSLOGGED (17) [verb] To walk heavily over a long distance or in a weary manner; to trudge FORECHECKED (26) [verb] To pressure the puck carrier for the opposing team FOREREACHED (20) FORESIGHTED (19) [adjective] Having foresight; foreseeing; provident. FORESTALLED (15) [verb] To prevent, delay or hinder something by taking precautionary or anticipatory measures; to avert. | [verb] To preclude or bar from happening, render impossible. | [verb] To purchase the complete supply of a good, particularly foodstuffs, in order to charge a monopoly price. FORETOKENED (19) [verb] To betoken beforehand; prognosticate; foreshadow; give warning of; presage. FORGATHERED (19) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FOULMOUTHED (20) [adjective] Tending to use obscene or offensive language FRATERNIZED (24) [verb] To associate with others in a brotherly or friendly manner. | [verb] To associate as friends with an enemy, in violation of duty. | [verb] To have an intimate or sexual relationship with a forbidden member of the opposite sex; as, in some cases, football players with cheerleaders. FREEHEARTED (18) FREEWHEELED (21) [verb] (of a gear) To continue spinning after disengagement. | [verb] (of a cyclist) To ride a bicycle without pedalling, e.g. downhill. | [verb] (of a motorist) To operate a motor vehicle which is coasting without power, e.g. downhill. FRENCHIFIED (23) [adjective] Made French or more French-like | [adjective] Having contracted a venereal disease. FULLMOUTHED (20) GALLIVANTED (16) [verb] To roam about for pleasure without any definite plan. | [verb] To flirt, to romance. GASTRULATED (13) GELATINIZED (22) [verb] To cause to become gelatinous. | [verb] To become gelatinous. | [verb] To coat or treat with gelatin. GENERALISED (13) [verb] To speak in generalities, or in vague terms. | [verb] To infer or induce from specific cases to more general cases or principles. | [verb] To derive or deduce (a general concept or principle) from particular facts. GENERALIZED (22) [verb] To speak in generalities, or in vague terms. | [verb] To infer or induce from specific cases to more general cases or principles. | [verb] To derive or deduce (a general concept or principle) from particular facts. GENICULATED (15) GENUFLECTED (18) [verb] To bend the knee, as in servitude. | [verb] To briefly touch one knee to the ground, typically associated with religious worship. | [verb] To behave in a servile manner; to grovel. GEOMETRISED (15) GEOMETRIZED (24) GINGERBREAD (16) [noun] A type of cake whose main flavoring is ginger. | [noun] Something ersatz; something showy but insubstantial. | [noun] A flamboyant Victorian-era architectural style. GLAMOURIZED (24) [verb] To make or give the appearance of being glamorous. | [verb] To glorify; to romanticize. GODFATHERED (20) GOLDBRICKED (22) [verb] (US slang) To shirk or malinger. | [verb] (US slang) To swindle. GOOSENECKED (19) GORMANDISED (16) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GORMANDIZED (25) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GRAPHITIZED (27) [verb] To convert to graphite. | [verb] To coat with graphite. | [adjective] (of carbon) Converted to graphite GRECIANIZED (24) GREENMAILED (15) GUILLOTINED (13) [verb] To execute, cut or cut short (a person, a stack of paper or a debate) by use of a guillotine. | [verb] To end discussion on a parliamentary bill by invoking cloture. HABILITATED (17) [verb] To enable one to function in a given manner; to make one capable of performing a given function or of conducting something; to make one fit to fulfill a given purpose or competent to act within a particular role. | [verb] To qualify oneself, through a demonstration of ability, to function in a certain capacity or to act within a certain role. | [verb] In European institutions of higher education, to qualify as an instructor or professor, usually by defending a dissertation or similar project. HALFHEARTED (21) [adjective] Lacking full energy, effort, commitment, or resolve. | [adjective] Lacking in heart or spirit; ungenerous; unkind. HALOGENATED (16) [verb] To treat with, or react with, a halogen or a hydrohalic acid | [adjective] Treated or reacted with a halogen. | [adjective] Formally derived from another compound by the replacement of one or more hydrogen atoms with a halogen. HANDCRAFTED (21) [adjective] Made by hand or using the hands, as opposed to by mass production or using machinery. HANDICAPPED (22) [verb] To encumber with a handicap in any contest. | [verb] (by extension) To place at disadvantage. | [verb] To estimate betting odds. HARBINGERED (18) HARDMOUTHED (21) HAREBRAINED (17) [adjective] (of an idea or plan etc) Absurd, foolish or stupid. | [adjective] (of a person) Frivolous and silly; featherbrained or scatterbrained. HARPSICHORD (22) [noun] A musical instrument with a keyboard that produces sound through a mechanical process. When the performer presses a key, a corresponding plectrum plucks a tuned string. Harpsichord originated in late medieval Europe and is one of the most important instruments used to perform Baroque music. HEATHENIZED (27) HEDGEHOPPED (24) [verb] Of an aircraft: to fly very close to the ground, such that evasive manoeuvres need to be taken to avoid obstacles HEMORRHAGED (21) [verb] To bleed copiously. | [verb] To lose (something) in copious quantities. HEMSTITCHED (22) [verb] To sew or embroider using this stitch HEPARINIZED (26) [verb] To treat with heparin, especially so as to prevent coagulation. | [adjective] Treated with heparin HETERODYNED (19) [verb] To produce heterodyne interference in a radio | [verb] To change the frequency of a signal by such a process HETEROPLOID (17) HIGHLIGHTED (23) [verb] To make prominent; emphasize. | [verb] To be a highlight of. | [verb] To mark (important passages of text), e.g. with a fluorescent marker pen or in a wordprocessor, as a means of memory retention or for later reference. HOLOGRAPHED (21) HOMESTEADED (18) HOMOGENISED (18) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. HOMOGENIZED (27) [verb] To make homogeneous, to blend or puree. | [verb] Specifically, to treat milk so that the cream no longer separates. | [adjective] Having been made homogenous, said especially of milk (which when homogenized no longer separates into cream and skim milk). HOMOLOGATED (18) [verb] To confirm, ratify or approve, especially officially or legally. HOMOLOGIZED (27) [verb] To make something homologous. | [verb] To become homologous. HONEYCOMBED (24) [verb] To riddle something with holes, especially in such a pattern. | [adjective] Having a perforated structure, resembling a honeycomb. HONEYMOONED (20) [verb] To have a honeymoon (a trip taken by a couple after wedding). HOPSCOTCHED (24) [verb] To move by hopping. | [verb] To move back and forth between adjacent patterns by hopping. HUMMINGBIRD (22) [noun] Any of various small American birds in the family Trochilidae that have the ability to hover. HUNCHBACKED (28) [adjective] Having an abnormally curved or hunched back HUNDREDFOLD (20) HYDROPLANED (21) [verb] To skim the surface of a body of water while moving at high speed. HYPERBOLOID (22) [noun] A particular surface in three-dimensional Euclidean space, the graph of a quadratic with all three variables squared and their coefficients not all of the same sign. HYPEREXTEND (27) [verb] To extend a joint beyond its normal position in a way that stresses the ligaments, often causing injury HYPOCYCLOID (27) [noun] The locus of a point on the circumference of a circle that rolls without slipping inside the circumference of another circle. HYPODIPLOID (23) HYPOTHYROID (26) [adjective] Of or pertaining to hypothyroidism | [adjective] Having hypothyroidism IDEOLOGIZED (23) ILLEGALIZED (22) ILLUMINATED (14) [verb] To shine light on something. | [verb] To decorate something with lights. | [verb] To clarify or make something understandable. ILLUSTRATED (12) [verb] To shed light upon. | [verb] To clarify something by giving, or serving as, an example or a comparison. | [verb] To provide a book or other publication with pictures, diagrams or other explanatory or decorative features. IMMOBILIZED (27) [verb] To render motionless; to stop moving or stop from moving. | [verb] To modify a surface such that things will not stick to it | [adjective] Subject to immobilization. IMPARADISED (17) IMPASSIONED (16) [adjective] Filled with intense emotion or passion; fervent. IMPLEMENTED (18) [verb] To bring about; to put into practice | [verb] To carry out; to do IMPREGNATED (17) [verb] To cause to become pregnant. | [verb] To fertilize. | [verb] To saturate, or infuse. INACTIVATED (17) [verb] To make inactive. INAUGURATED (13) [verb] To induct into office with a formal ceremony. | [verb] To dedicate ceremoniously; to initiate something in a formal manner. INCANDESCED (17) [verb] To make or become incandescent, especially by the application of heat. INCINERATED (14) [verb] To destroy by burning INCORRUPTED (16) INDEMNIFIED (18) [verb] To secure against loss or damage; to insure. | [verb] To compensate or reimburse someone for some expense or injury | [verb] To hurt, to harm INDIGENIZED (23) [verb] To bring something under the control of an indigenous people. INFILTRATED (15) [verb] To surreptitiously penetrate, enter or gain access to. | [verb] (of a liquid) To pass through something by filtration. | [verb] To cause (a liquid) to pass through something by filtration. INGRATIATED (13) [verb] To bring oneself into favour with someone by flattering or trying to please him or her. | [verb] (followed by to) To recommend; to render easy or agreeable. INITIALIZED (21) [verb] To assign initial values to something | [verb] To assign an initial value to a variable | [verb] To format a storage medium prior to use INOSCULATED (14) [verb] To homogenize; to make continuous. | [verb] To open into. | [verb] To unite. INSEMINATED (14) [verb] To sow (to disperse or plant seeds). | [verb] To impregnate (to cause to become pregnant). INSPISSATED (14) [verb] To thicken, especially by boiling, evaporation, or condensation; condense. | [verb] To become viscous. | [adjective] Thickened or dried by evaporation INSUFFLATED (18) [verb] To breathe or blow into or on. | [verb] To treat by blowing a gas, vapor, or powder into a body cavity. | [verb] To inhale (a powder etc.). INTENERATED (12) INTENSIFIED (15) [verb] To render more intense | [verb] To become intense, or more intense; to act with increasing power or energy. INTERALLIED (12) [adjective] Between allied states. INTERBEDDED (16) [adjective] Occurring between beds of rock. INTERCEPTED (16) [verb] To stop, deflect or divert (something in progress or motion). | [verb] To gain possession of (the ball) in a ball game | [verb] To take or comprehend between. INTERDEPEND (15) [verb] To depend mutually; to depend on each other. INTERDICTED (15) [verb] To exclude (someone or somewhere) from participation in church services; to place under a religious interdict. | [verb] To forbid (an action or thing) by formal or legal sanction. | [verb] To forbid (someone) from doing something. INTERGRADED (14) [verb] To pass or change from one state to another by steps or stages. INTERISLAND (12) INTERJECTED (21) [verb] To insert something between other things. | [verb] To say as an interruption or aside. | [verb] To interpose oneself; to intervene. INTERLAPPED (16) [verb] To overlap mutually, so that each partially covers the other. INTERLARDED (13) [verb] Bloat or embellish (something) by including (often minor and extraneous) details at regular intervals. INTERLEAVED (15) [verb] To insert (pages, which are normally blank) between the pages of a book. | [verb] To intersperse (something) at regular intervals between the parts of a thing or between items in a group. | [verb] To allocate (things such as successive segments of memory) to different tasks. INTERLINKED (16) [verb] To link together. | [verb] To link (two or more things) together. INTERLOCKED (18) [verb] To fit or clasp together securely. | [verb] To interlace. INTERMESHED (17) [verb] To mesh between one another. INTERMITTED (14) [verb] To interrupt, to stop or cease temporarily or periodically; to suspend. INTERPLAYED (17) INTERPRETED (14) [verb] To explain or tell the meaning of; to translate orally into intelligible or familiar language or terms. applied especially to language, but also to dreams, signs, conduct, mysteries, etc. | [verb] To apprehend and represent by means of art; to show by illustrative representation | [verb] To act as an interpreter. INTERRUPTED (14) [verb] To disturb or halt (an ongoing process or action, or the person performing it) by interfering suddenly. | [verb] To divide; to separate; to break the monotony of. | [verb] To assert to (a computer) that an exceptional condition must be handled. INTERSECTED (14) [verb] To cut into or between; to cut or cross mutually; to divide into parts. | [verb] Of two sets, to have at least one element in common. INTERSPACED (16) [verb] To place (things) spaced out between other things. | [verb] To sow or seed (an area) with things spaced out between other things. INTERSTRAND (12) INTERTILLED (12) INTERTWINED (15) [verb] To twine something together. | [verb] To become twined together. | [adjective] Twined or twisted together INTERVIEWED (18) [verb] To ask questions of (somebody); to have an interview. | [verb] To be interviewed; to attend an interview. INTERWEAVED (18) INTERWORKED (19) [verb] To work (two or more things) into and through each other. | [verb] To interact. INTIMIDATED (15) [verb] To make timid or afraid; to cause to feel fear or nervousness; to deter, especially by threats of violence | [adjective] Subjected to intimidation. INTOXICATED (21) [verb] To stupefy by doping with chemical substances such as alcohol. | [verb] To excite to enthusiasm or madness. | [adjective] Stupefied by alcohol, drunk. INTROJECTED (21) [verb] To unconsciously incorporate into one's psyche. INTROMITTED (14) INTROVERTED (15) [adjective] Turned or thrust inward, particularly: INVAGINATED (16) [verb] To fold up or enclose into a sheath-like or pouch-like structure, either naturally or as part of a surgical procedure. | [verb] To turn or fold inwardly. | [verb] To fold inward to create a hollow space where none had existed, as with a gastrula forming from a blastula. INVALIDATED (16) [verb] To make invalid. Especially applied to contract law. | [adjective] Made invalid. INVENTORIED (15) [verb] (operations) To take stock of the resources or items on hand; to produce an inventory. INVIGILATED (16) [verb] To oversee a test or exam. INVIGORATED (16) [verb] To impart vigor, strength, or vitality to. | [verb] To heighten or intensify. | [verb] To give life or energy to. IRONHEARTED (15) ITALIANATED (12) ITALIANISED (12) ITALIANIZED (21) JEOPARDISED (22) [verb] To put in jeopardy, to threaten. JEOPARDIZED (31) [verb] To put in jeopardy, to threaten. JOURNALIZED (28) [verb] To record in a journal. | [verb] To keep a journal. KERATINIZED (25) [verb] To convert into keratin. | [verb] To take on the appearance of keratin, or become impregnated with keratin. KETOSTEROID (16) KINDHEARTED (20) [adjective] Having an innately kind disposition or character. KNUCKLEHEAD (25) [noun] An idiot; a stupid or inept person | [noun] An endearing remark directed to siblings or one's own children; a child who is acting silly. LALLYGAGGED (18) [verb] (See lollygag.) To dawdle; to be lazy or idle; to avoid necessary work or effort. | [verb] To pet, kiss, or otherwise demonstrate overt affection, generally in public. LAMEBRAINED (16) LATERALIZED (21) [verb] To localize a function to either the left or right side of the brain LEADERBOARD (15) [noun] A board showing the ranking of leaders in a competition. | [noun] An advertisement on a web page spanning the width of the page and shallow in height. LEAPFROGGED (19) [verb] To jump over some obstacle, as in the game of leapfrog. | [verb] To overtake. | [verb] To progress. LEATHERWOOD (18) [noun] A deciduous shrub, of the genus Dirca, that has leathery bark | [noun] A subalpine shrub or small tree found only in New Zealand, Olearia colensoi LEGITIMATED (15) [verb] To make legitimate, lawful, or valid; especially, to put in the position or state of a legitimate person before the law, by legal means. LEGITIMISED (15) [verb] To make legitimate. LEGITIMIZED (24) [verb] To make legitimate. LETTERBOXED (21) [verb] To transfer a widescreen motion picture to home video formats while preserving the original aspect ratio, with the placing of black bars above and below the picture area. | [verb] To hunt for letterboxes (containers with logbook and rubber stamp) by following clues. LEVELHEADED (19) [adjective] Sensible; rational; possessing sound judgment. LEXICALIZED (30) [verb] To convert to a single lexical unit, as a group of words with meaning beyond their parts. LIBERALISED (14) [adjective] Alternative spelling of liberalized | [verb] To make liberal, free. | [verb] To become liberal, free. LIBERALIZED (23) [verb] To make liberal, free. | [verb] To become liberal, free. LIFEGUARDED (17) LIGHTNINGED (17) LIMELIGHTED (18) LIONHEARTED (15) [adjective] Brave, courageous. LITERALIZED (21) [verb] To make literal or prosaic LIVETRAPPED (19) LOBOTOMISED (16) [adjective] Alternative spelling of lobotomized LOBOTOMIZED (25) [verb] To perform a lobotomy upon. | [verb] To remove the vitality or intelligence from. LOLLYGAGGED (18) [verb] To dawdle; to be lazy or idle; to avoid necessary work or effort. | [verb] (19th-20th centuries) To fool around, especially sexually. LONGSIGHTED (17) [adjective] Hyperopic; farsighted LOUDMOUTHED (18) LYOPHILISED (20) [verb] To freeze-dry LYOPHILIZED (29) [verb] To freeze-dry | [adjective] Freeze-dried LYSOGENISED (16) LYSOGENIZED (25) MACADAMIZED (28) [verb] To cover, as a road, or street, with small, broken stones, so as to form a smooth, hard, convex surface. MALADJUSTED (22) [adjective] Badly adjusted to the demands and stresses of daily living; unable to cope. MAMMILLATED (18) [adjective] Having small nipples, or small protuberances like nipples or mammae. | [adjective] Bounded like a nipple; said of the apex of some shells. MANIFESTOED (17) MANIPULATED (16) [verb] To move, arrange or operate something using the hands | [verb] To influence, manage, direct, control or tamper with something | [verb] To handle and move a body part, either as an examination or for a therapeutic purpose MASQUERADED (24) [verb] To take part in a masquerade; to assemble in masks and costumes; to wear a disguise. | [verb] To pass off as a different person or a person with qualities that one does not possess; also, to make a pretentious show of being what one is not. | [verb] To conceal (someone) with, or as if with, a mask; to disguise. MASTURBATED (16) [verb] To stimulate oneself sexually, especially by use of one’s hand or a sex toy made for this purpose, often to the point of ejaculation. | [verb] To stimulate someone else sexually without penetration of the penis. | [verb] To stimulate or please oneself by means of anything, not necessarily sexual, that does not get them anywhere; something that wastes their time; something that does not help others or achieve any important goal. MENSTRUATED (14) [verb] To stain with or as if with menses. | [verb] To undergo menstruation, to have a period. MENTHOLATED (17) [adjective] Impregnated with menthol. METABOLIZED (25) [verb] To undergo metabolism. | [verb] To cause a substance to undergo metabolism. | [verb] To produce a substance using metabolism. MICROFILMED (21) [verb] To reproduce documents on such film MICROMETHOD (21) MICROSECOND (18) [noun] An SI unit of time equal to 10-6 seconds. Symbol: μs It is commonly represented with symbol µs. MILITARISED (14) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILITARIZED (23) [verb] To give a military character to something, such as government or organization. | [verb] To train or equip for war. | [verb] To adopt for use by the military. MILLIONFOLD (17) MILLISECOND (16) [noun] One one-thousandth of a second. Symbol: ms. MINERALISED (14) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINERALIZED (23) [verb] To convert to a mineral; to petrify. | [verb] To impregnate with minerals. | [verb] To mineralogize; to collect and study minerals. MINISKIRTED (18) MISADJUSTED (22) MISBALANCED (18) MISBELIEVED (19) MISBUTTONED (16) MISCOMPUTED (20) MISDIRECTED (17) [verb] To direct something wrongly | [verb] To direct attention away from covert actions or intended targets. | [verb] To put the incorrect address on a mail item MISEDUCATED (17) [verb] To educate wrongly. MISEMPLOYED (21) [verb] To employ incorrectly; to misuse. MISENROLLED (14) MISESTEEMED (16) MISFOCUSSED (19) MISGOVERNED (18) [verb] To govern badly or wrongly. MISINFERRED (17) MISINFORMED (19) [verb] To give or deliver false, fake, or misleading information. MISINTERRED (14) MISLABELLED (16) [verb] To label incorrectly. MISORIENTED (14) MISPACKAGED (23) MISRECKONED (20) MISRECORDED (17) MISREFERRED (17) MISRENDERED (15) [verb] To render incorrectly. MISREPORTED (16) [verb] To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of. MISSIONIZED (23) MOCKINGBIRD (23) [noun] A long-tailed American songbird of the Mimidae family, noted for its ability to mimic calls of other birds. MODULARIZED (24) MOISTURISED (14) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MOISTURIZED (23) [verb] To make more moist. | [verb] To make more humid. MONGRELIZED (24) [verb] To breed a mongrel | [verb] To cross-breed MONOGRAMMED (19) [verb] To mark something with a monogram. MONOGRAPHED (20) [verb] To write a monograph on (a subject). | [verb] Of the FDA: to publish a standard that authorizes the use of (a substance). MONOPOLISED (16) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MONOPOLIZED (25) [verb] To have a monopoly on something | [verb] To dominate or to get total control of something by excluding everyone else MOONLIGHTED (18) [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job), often in the evening or during the night. | [verb] (by extension) To engage in an activity other than what one is known for. | [verb] (by extension, of an inanimate object) To perform a secondary function substantially different from its supposed primary function, as in protein moonlighting. MORTARBOARD (16) [noun] A square board, with a handle, on which mortar or plaster is carried: a hawk. | [noun] An academic cap that has a flat square top with a tassel. MOTHERBOARD (19) [noun] The primary circuit board of a personal computer, containing the circuitry for the central processing unit, keyboard, mouse and monitor, together with slots for other devices. MOTHPROOFED (22) [verb] To apply odoriferous materials intended to repel moths from clothing. MOTORCYCLED (21) MULTIBLADED (17) MULTICELLED (16) MULTICOATED (16) MULTIHEADED (18) MULTIMANNED (16) MULTIPLEXED (23) [verb] To interleave several activities. | [verb] To combine several signals into one. | [verb] To convert (a cinema business) into a large complex, or multiplex. MULTITIERED (14) MUSICALISED (16) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work | [adjective] That has been set to music MUSICALIZED (25) [verb] To set (a text etc) to music | [verb] To compose music for a dramatic work MUSTACHIOED (19) [verb] To adorn with a mustachio, or something that resembles a mustachio. NATURALISED (12) [verb] To grant citizenship to someone not born a citizen | [verb] To acclimatize an animal or plant | [verb] To make natural NATURALIZED (21) [verb] To grant citizenship to someone not born a citizen | [verb] To acclimatize an animal or plant | [verb] To make natural NEARSIGHTED (16) [adjective] Myopic, suffering from myopia NEIGHBOURED (18) [noun] The state or condition of being a neighbour; neighbourhood; neighbourship. | [verb] To be adjacent to | [verb] (followed by "on"; figurative) To be similar to, to be almost the same as. NETHERWORLD (18) [pronoun] The place to which one's spirit descends upon death, conceived as below the surface of the earth. | [pronoun] The locale of the spirit world or afterlife, whether deemed to be situated below the world of the living or not. | [pronoun] Specifically, a location of punishment in the afterlife; a hell. NEUTRALISED (12) [verb] To make even, inactive or ineffective. | [verb] To make (a territory, etc.) politically neutral. | [verb] To make (an acidic or alkaline substance) chemically neutral. NEUTRALIZED (21) [verb] To make even, inactive or ineffective. | [verb] To make (a territory, etc.) politically neutral. | [verb] To make (an acidic or alkaline substance) chemically neutral. NEWSPAPERED (19) NONATTACHED (17) NONCOMPOUND (18) NONDIRECTED (15) NONDISABLED (15) NONINFECTED (17) NONINFESTED (15) NONINVOLVED (18) NONRAILROAD (12) NONSELECTED (14) NONSTANDARD (13) [noun] Something that is not standard. | [adjective] Not standard. | [adjective] Not conforming to the standard variety, or to the language as used by the majority of its speakers. OBJECTIFIED (26) [adjective] Treated as an object | [verb] To make something (such as an abstract idea) possible to be perceived by the senses. | [verb] To treat as something objectively real. OBLITERATED (14) [verb] To remove completely, leaving no trace; to wipe out; to destroy. | [adjective] Very drunk, intoxicated, wasted. OBNUBILATED (16) [adjective] Obscured; dimmed or hidden with or as if with a cloud. | [verb] To obscure, to shadow. | [verb] To make cloudy. OPENHEARTED (17) [adjective] Frank and candidly straightforward | [adjective] Generous and kind | [adjective] Emotionally receptive OPENMOUTHED (19) [adjective] Talkative, speaking freely. | [adjective] With the mouth open. | [adjective] Gaping in surprise, wonder or astonishment. OPERCULATED (16) OPINIONATED (14) [verb] To have or express as an opinion; to opine. | [verb] To have a given opinion. | [adjective] Having very strong opinions. OUTACHIEVED (20) OUTBALANCED (16) [verb] To have more influence or significance than another; to preponderate or outweigh. OUTCAVILLED (17) OUTCOMPETED (18) [verb] To be more successful than a competitor; especially to thrive in the presence of an organism that is competing for resources OUTDESIGNED (14) OUTNUMBERED (16) [verb] (stative) to be more in number than somebody or something. OUTPREACHED (19) OUTPRODUCED (17) OUTPROMISED (16) OUTRIVALLED (15) [verb] To outperform; to outdo. OUTSPARKLED (18) OUTSPRINTED (14) [verb] To sprint faster than someone else. OUTSTRIPPED (16) [verb] To outrun or leave behind. | [verb] To exceed, excel or surpass. OUTTHROBBED (19) OUTWRESTLED (15) OVERBROWSED (20) OVERCHARGED (21) [verb] To charge (somebody) more money than the correct amount or to surpass a certain limit while charging a bill. | [verb] To continue to charge (an electrical device) beyond its capacity. | [verb] To charge (someone) with an inflated number or degree of legal charges (for example, charging them with a more serious crime than was committed); to upcharge. OVERCHILLED (20) OVERCLAIMED (19) OVERCLEANED (17) OVERCLEARED (17) OVERCLOUDED (18) [verb] To cover, or become covered, with clouds. | [verb] To cast sorrow or gloom over. OVERCOACHED (22) OVERCOUNTED (17) OVERCRAMMED (21) OVERCROPPED (21) [verb] To cultivate land excessively and thus exhaust its fertility OVERCROWDED (21) [verb] To fill beyond reasonable limits, with people, animals, objects or information. | [adjective] Containing too many occupants for an area of its size. OVERDRESSED (16) [verb] To wear too many clothes for a particular occasion. | [verb] To wear clothing which is too elaborate or formal for a particular occasion. | [adjective] Wearing too many clothes for the weather or the occasion. OVEREXCITED (24) [verb] To excite to an excessive degree | [adjective] Excessively excited OVEREXERTED (22) [verb] To exert (oneself) to an excessive degree OVEREXPOSED (24) [verb] To expose excessively. | [verb] To provide excessive publicity or reporting regarding (a person, event, etc.). | [verb] To expose (film) to light during the development process for a longer time than is required to accurately produce the image. OVERFAVORED (21) OVERFOCUSED (20) OVERHANDLED (19) OVERLABORED (17) OVERLEARNED (15) OVERLIGHTED (19) OVERMANAGED (18) OVERMATCHED (22) [verb] To match more than intended. | [verb] To be more than equal to or a match for, to surpass; hence, to conquer, vanquish. | [verb] To marry to a superior. OVERMUSCLED (19) OVERNIGHTED (19) [verb] To stay overnight; to spend the night. | [verb] To send something for delivery the next day. OVERPEDALED (18) OVERPEOPLED (19) [verb] To people too densely; overpopulate. OVERPLAIDED (18) OVERPLANNED (17) OVERPLANTED (17) OVERPLOTTED (17) OVERPOWERED (20) [verb] To subdue someone by superior force. | [verb] To excel or exceed in power; to cause to yield; to subdue. | [verb] To render imperceptible by means of greater strength, intensity etc. OVERPRAISED (17) [verb] To praise to an excessive degree. OVERPRINTED (17) [verb] To print over what has already been printed. | [verb] To add an overprint to (a stamp). | [verb] To print too many copies of. OVERREACHED (20) [verb] To reach above or beyond, especially to an excessive degree. | [verb] To do something beyond an appropriate limit, or beyond one's ability. | [verb] Of a horse: to strike the heel of a forefoot with the toe of a hindfoot. OVERREACTED (17) [verb] To react too much or too intensely. OVERREFINED (18) [verb] To refine to an excessive degree. | [adjective] Refined to an excessive degree OVERRESPOND (17) OVERSLIPPED (19) OVERSTAFFED (21) [verb] To furnish with too many staff. OVERSTEPPED (19) [verb] To go too far beyond (a limit); especially, to cross boundaries or exceed norms or conventions. | [verb] To take a step in which the foot touches ground too far forward. | [verb] To move with a gait such that the hind foot touches the ground forward of the point where the front foot touches the ground. OVERSTIRRED (15) OVERSTOCKED (21) [verb] To stock to an excessive degree. OVERSTREWED (18) OVERSTUFFED (21) [verb] To stuff to excess. | [verb] To cover completely with soft upholstery. | [adjective] Filled beyond capacity. OVERTRAINED (15) [verb] To train too much or too long. OVERTREATED (15) OVERTRIMMED (19) OVERTRUMPED (19) [verb] To play a higher trump card than the previous one in a trick OVERWATERED (18) [adjective] Watered too much. OVERWEIGHED (22) OVERWHELMED (23) [verb] To engulf, surge over and submerge. | [verb] To overpower, crush. | [verb] To overpower emotionally. PADDLEBOARD (18) [noun] The board used in the sport of paddleboarding PALATALIZED (23) [adjective] Having undergone palatalisation. | [verb] To pronounce a sound with the tongue against the palate of the mouth when that sound normally would not be so pronounced. | [verb] (unaccusative, of a sound) To be pronounced with the tongue against the palate. PAPERBACKED (24) PARADROPPED (19) [verb] To deliver goods or equipment by dropping of a parachute PARAGRAPHED (20) [verb] To sort text into paragraphs. PARALLELLED (14) PARAPHRASED (19) [verb] To restate something as, or to compose a paraphrase. PARASITISED (14) [verb] To live on or in a host organism as a parasite. PARASITIZED (23) [verb] To live on or in a host organism as a parasite PARATHYROID (20) [noun] The parathyroid gland. | [noun] A parathyroid hormone. | [adjective] Situated near the thyroid gland. PARATYPHOID (22) [noun] Paratyphoid fever | [adjective] Resembling typhoid. PARTITIONED (14) [verb] To divide something into parts, sections or shares | [verb] To divide a region or country into two or more territories with separate political status | [verb] To separate or divide a room by a partition (ex. a wall), often use with off PASQUINADED (24) PASTEURISED (14) [verb] To heat food for the purpose of killing harmful organisms such as bacteria, viruses, protozoa, molds, and yeasts. PASTEURIZED (23) [verb] To heat food for the purpose of killing harmful organisms such as bacteria, viruses, protozoa, molds, and yeasts. PASTURELAND (14) [noun] Land used for grazing animals PEDESTALLED (15) PERPETRATED (16) [verb] To be guilty of, or responsible for a crime etc; to commit. PERPETUATED (16) [verb] To make perpetual; to preserve from extinction or oblivion. | [verb] To prolong the existence of. PERSONIFIED (17) [verb] To be an example of; to have all the attributes of. | [verb] To create a representation of (an abstract quality) in the form of a character. PETTICOATED (16) PETTIFOGGED (19) [verb] To quibble over trivial matters; nitpick. | [verb] To do a petty business as a lawyer, or carry out law business in a petty or tricky way. PHILANDERED (18) [verb] To woo women; to play the male flirt. PHOTOCOPIED (21) [verb] To make a copy using a photocopier. PHOTOMAPPED (23) PHOTOPERIOD (19) [noun] The normal duration of natural daylight experienced by an organism; daylength PHOTOSTATED (17) PICKABACKED (28) PIGEONHOLED (18) [verb] To categorize; especially to limit or be limited to a particular category, role, etc. | [verb] To put aside, to not act on (proposals, suggestions, advice). PIGGYBACKED (27) [verb] To attach or append something to another (usually larger) object or event. | [verb] To obtain a wireless internet connection by bringing one's own computer within the range of another's wireless connection without that subscriber's permission or knowledge. | [verb] To utilize "last-mile" wiring rented from a larger owner ISP by a smaller ISP. PILGRIMAGED (18) [verb] To go on a pilgrimage. PITCHFORKED (26) [verb] To toss or carry with a pitchfork. | [verb] To throw suddenly. PLACEKICKED (26) [verb] (in several forms of football) To kick the ball from a stationary position, especially as a means of scoring extra points. PLAGIARISED (15) [verb] To use, and pass off as one's own, someone else's writing, speech, ideas, or other intellectual or creative work, especially in an academic context; to commit plagiarism. PLAGIARIZED (24) [verb] To use, and pass off as one's own, someone else's writing, speech, ideas, or other intellectual or creative work, especially in an academic context; to commit plagiarism. | [adjective] Produced using plagiarism PLASMOLYZED (28) [verb] To cause, or to undergo plasmolysis | [adjective] Modified by plasmolysis PLASTICIZED (25) [verb] To make something more plastic, especially by adding a plasticizer | [verb] To become more plastic | [verb] To capitalize on something with ignorance to its significance or true value; to exploit something for monetary gain POLEMICIZED (27) [verb] To engage in argument. POLITICISED (16) [verb] To discuss politics | [verb] To give something political characteristics; to turn into a political issue | [verb] To make someone politically active or aware POLITICIZED (25) [verb] To discuss politics | [verb] To give something political characteristics; to turn into a political issue | [verb] To make someone politically active or aware POLYCHROMED (24) [adjective] Strikingly multicolored, as if by polychromy. POLYGAMIZED (29) POLYMERISED (19) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POLYMERIZED (28) [verb] To convert a monomer to a polymer by polymerization. | [verb] To undergo polymerization. POMPADOURED (19) [verb] To style hair into a pompadour | [adjective] (of a head of hair) Styled in a pompadour. POPULARISED (16) [verb] To make something popular. | [verb] To present something in a widely understandable or acceptable form, especially technical or scientific material for a general audience. POPULARIZED (25) [verb] To make popular. POTENTIATED (14) [verb] To endow with power. | [verb] To enhance. | [verb] To increase the potency (of a drug or biochemical agent). PREACHIFIED (22) [verb] To preach didactically; to sermonize PREADMITTED (17) PREALLOTTED (14) PREAPPROVED (21) PREARRANGED (15) [verb] To arrange in advance. PREASSIGNED (15) PRECANCELED (18) PRECENSORED (16) PRECOMPUTED (20) PREDECEASED (17) [verb] To die sooner than. PREDESTINED (15) [verb] To determine the future or the fate of something in advance; to preordain. | [verb] To foreordain by divine will. PREDIGESTED (16) [verb] To digest food in advance of eating it | [verb] (by extension) To preprocess in order to deliver the most important parts in a simplified form. PREDISPOSED (17) [verb] To make someone susceptible to something (such as a disease). | [verb] To make someone inclined to something in advance; to influence. | [adjective] Inclined. PREFINANCED (19) PREFOCUSSED (19) [verb] To focus in advance PREMEASURED (16) PREMODIFIED (20) [verb] To modify in advance PREMONISHED (19) [verb] To warn of something in advance PRENOTIFIED (17) PRENUMBERED (18) PREOCCUPIED (20) [adjective] Concerned with something else; distracted; giving one's attention elsewhere. | [adjective] Describing a scientific name that was previously used, a junior homonym. | [verb] To distract; to occupy or draw attention elsewhere. PREORDAINED (15) [verb] To determine the fate of something in advance. | [adjective] Determined in advance; predestined PREPACKAGED (23) [verb] To enclose in packaging prior to sale. | [adjective] That has been packaged prior to being sold PREPREPARED (18) [verb] To prepare in advance. | [adjective] Prepared in advance PRERECORDED (17) [verb] To record in advance. | [adjective] Recorded in advance, as opposed to live. PRERELEASED (14) PREREQUIRED (23) PRESCREENED (16) PRESELECTED (16) [verb] To select in advance. | [adjective] Selected in advance PRESSURISED (14) [verb] To put pressure on; to put under pressure. PRESSURIZED (23) [verb] To put pressure on; to put under pressure. | [adjective] Under pressure. PRESTRESSED (14) [adjective] Having been stressed before use PRESUPPOSED (18) [verb] To assume some truth without proof, usually for the purpose of reaching a conclusion based on that truth. PREVISIONED (17) PRIORITIZED (23) [verb] To arrange or list a group of things in order of priority or importance. | [verb] To rank something as having high priority. | [adjective] With priority, having priority PRIVATEERED (17) PROFITEERED (17) [verb] To make an unreasonable profit not justified by cost or risk. PROLOGUIZED (24) PROMULGATED (17) [verb] To make known or public. | [verb] To put into effect as a regulation. PROPHETHOOD (22) PROPITIATED (16) [verb] To conciliate, appease, or make peace with someone, particularly a god or spirit. | [verb] To make propitious or favourable. | [verb] To make propitiation. PROSAUROPOD (16) [noun] Any member of the Prosauropoda, a group of early herbivorous dinosaurs with a long neck and small head, forelimbs shorter than the hindlimbs, and a very large thumb claw for defense. PROSTITUTED (14) [verb] To offer (oneself or someone else) for sexual activity in exchange for money. | [verb] To sacrifice (oneself, one's talents etc.) in return for profit or other advantage; to exploit for base purposes. PROTOCOLLED (16) PROVISIONED (17) [verb] To supply with provisions. | [verb] To supply (a user) with an account, resources, etc. so that they can use a system. PSEUDOMONAD (17) PUMPKINSEED (22) [noun] The seed of a pumpkin. | [noun] A North American sunfish; Lepomis gibbosus. PUSSYFOOTED (20) [verb] To move silently, stealthily, or furtively. | [verb] To act timidly or cautiously. | [verb] To use euphemistic language or circumlocution. QUANTITATED (21) [verb] To measure the quantity of, especially with high accuracy and taking uncertainty into account, as in quantitative analysis. QUARANTINED (21) [verb] To retain in obligatory isolation or separation, as a sanitary measure to prevent the spread of contagious disease. | [verb] To put in isolation as if by quarantine | [adjective] In quarantine; isolated. QUITCLAIMED (25) RACKETEERED (18) RADICALISED (15) [verb] To make radical. | [verb] To become radical; to adopt a radical political stance. RADICALIZED (24) [verb] To make radical. | [verb] To become radical; to adopt a radical political stance. | [adjective] That has been through the process of radicalization. RATAPLANNED (14) REACTIVATED (17) [verb] To activate again. READDRESSED (14) [verb] To address or deal with again. | [verb] To change the address of. REALLOCATED (14) [verb] To allocate (a resource) to another person or purpose. | [verb] To allocate again. REAPPOINTED (16) [verb] Appoint again REAPPRAISED (16) [verb] To appraise again. REASSEMBLED (16) [verb] To assemble again | [verb] To put back together; to reverse the process of disassembly REATTEMPTED (16) [verb] To attempt again. RECANALIZED (23) RECERTIFIED (17) RECHANNELED (17) RECHARTERED (17) RECOLLECTED (16) [verb] To recall; to collect one's thoughts again, especially about past events. | [verb] To collect (things) together again. | [verb] To compose oneself. RECOLONIZED (23) [verb] To colonize again, especially after decolonization. RECOMMENCED (20) [verb] To begin again. RECOMMENDED (19) [verb] To bestow commendation on; to represent favourably; to suggest, endorse or encourage as an appropriate choice. | [verb] To make acceptable; to attract favor to. | [verb] To advise, propose, counsel favorably RECOMMITTED (18) [verb] Commit again RECOMPENSED (18) [verb] To reward or repay (someone) for something done, given etc. | [verb] To give compensation for an injury, or other type of harm or damage. | [verb] To give (something) in return; to pay back; to pay, as something earned or deserved. RECONCEIVED (19) RECONDENSED (15) RECONFIRMED (19) [verb] To confirm again; to establish more firmly | [verb] (travel) To advise an airline of your intention to use a reservation, or risk cancellation. RECONNECTED (16) [verb] To connect again or differently. RECONQUERED (23) [verb] To conquer again. RECONTACTED (16) RECONTOURED (14) RECONVERTED (17) [verb] To convert again, convert back. | [verb] To convert. RECONVICTED (19) [verb] To convict again | [adjective] Convicted again RECONVINCED (19) RECRUDESCED (17) [verb] To recur, or break out anew after a dormant period. RECUPERATED (16) [verb] To recover, especially from an illness; to get better from an illness. | [verb] To co-opt subversive ideas for mainstream use REDECORATED (15) [verb] To change the appearance of a place by altering the decor. | [verb] To refurbish. REDEDICATED (16) [verb] To dedicate again. REDELIVERED (16) REDEPOSITED (15) [verb] To deposit again. | [verb] To form into a new accumulation; used especially of sediments moved from an original position REDESCRIBED (17) REDEVELOPED (18) [verb] To develop again or differently. | [verb] To intensify by a second process. | [verb] To convert a neighbourhood by demolishing old buildings and building new ones, or by renovating existing ones. REDISCUSSED (15) REDISPLAYED (18) [verb] To display again. REDISSOLVED (16) [verb] To dissolve again REDISTILLED (13) REENERGIZED (22) [verb] To energize again or anew. REENTHRONED (15) REESCALATED (14) REESTIMATED (14) REEVALUATED (15) [verb] Evaluate again; reassess; revisit; reconsider. REEXPRESSED (21) REFASHIONED (18) [verb] To fashion again or anew. REFORMATTED (17) [verb] To format anew or again, generally erasing a previous format. | [adjective] Having been formatted again. REFORTIFIED (18) REFRESHENED (18) REFURBISHED (20) [verb] To rebuild or replenish with all new material; to restore to original (or better) working order and appearance. | [adjective] Rebuilt or replenished with all new material; or, restored to original (or better) working order and appearance. REFURNISHED (18) [verb] To furnish again; to get new furniture for. | [verb] To supply or provide anew. REGENERATED (13) [verb] To construct or create anew, especially in an improved manner. | [verb] To revitalize. | [verb] To replace lost or damaged tissue. REGULARIZED (22) [verb] To make regular. REHUMANIZED (26) REIMPLANTED (16) REINHABITED (17) [verb] To inhabit again (after living elsewhere) REINITIATED (12) REINSPECTED (16) REINSTALLED (12) [verb] To install again. REJUVENATED (22) [verb] To render young again. | [adjective] Made young again. | [adjective] (of a stream) Stimulated by uplift to renewed erosive activity. RELACQUERED (23) RELATIVIZED (24) [verb] To make one thing relative to another. | [verb] (grammar) To make relative. RELIQUEFIED (24) REMAINDERED (15) [verb] To mark or declare items left unsold as subject to reduction in price. REMOBILIZED (25) REMOISTENED (14) REMONETIZED (23) [verb] To monetize again. REMOTIVATED (17) REMUNERATED (14) [verb] To compensate; to pay. RENOMINATED (14) [verb] To nominate again. REORGANIZED (22) [verb] To organize something again, or in a different manner | [verb] To undergo a reorganization | [adjective] That has been subjected to reorganization REOUTFITTED (15) REPATRIATED (14) [verb] To restore (a person) to his or her own country. REPATTERNED (14) REPLASTERED (14) [verb] To plaster (a wall, ceiling, etc.) again. REPLENISHED (17) [verb] To refill; to renew; to supply again or to add a fresh quantity to. | [verb] To fill up; to complete; to supply fully. | [verb] To finish; to complete; to perfect. REPOLARIZED (23) REPOPULATED (16) [verb] To populate again; to breed among a group in order to keep the population up. | [verb] To reintroduce a species into (an area). | [verb] To fill with data again; to refresh. REPOSSESSED (14) [verb] To reclaim ownership of property for which payment remains due. | [verb] To gain back possession of. REPREHENDED (18) [verb] To criticize, to reprove REPRESENTED (14) [verb] To present again or anew; to present by means of something standing in the place of; to exhibit the counterpart or image of; to typify. | [verb] To portray visually; to delineate | [verb] To portray by mimicry or acting; to act the part or character of REPRIMANDED (17) [verb] To reprove in a formal or official way. REPROCESSED (16) [verb] To process again. REPROGRAMED (17) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REPUBLISHED (19) [verb] To publish once again; to print and distribute copies of a work that has previously been printed and distributed. REPURCHASED (19) [verb] To buy back or again; to regain by purchase. REREGULATED (13) RESCHEDULED (18) [verb] To schedule again or at a different time. | [verb] To reclassify; to change the schedule (division into which something is classified) of. RESENTENCED (14) RESUBMITTED (16) [verb] To submit again. RESURRECTED (14) [verb] To raise from the dead, to bring life back to. | [verb] To restore to a working state. | [verb] To bring back to view or attention; reinstate. RETICULATED (14) [adjective] Characterized by or having the form of a grid or network. | [adjective] Constructed with diamond-shaped stones. | [adjective] Having a reticle in the focus of an eyepiece. RETIGHTENED (16) [verb] To tighten again RETRODICTED (15) [verb] To attempt to estimate the previous state from the present. RETROFITTED (15) [verb] To add or substitute new parts or components to some device, structure etc., that were not previously available; to modernize | [verb] To fix an older version (or older versions) as part of the same process of fixing the newest version; to backport | [adjective] Fitted or installed at a later date RETROGRADED (14) [verb] To move backwards; to recede; to retire; to decline; to revert. | [verb] To show retrogradation. REVALIDATED (16) REVALORIZED (24) REVEGETATED (16) [verb] (of barren ground) To become recolonized by plants | [verb] To vegetate again (in all senses) REVICTUALED (17) REVITALISED (15) [verb] To give new life, energy, activity or success to something. | [verb] To rouse from a state of inactivity or quiescence. REVITALIZED (24) [verb] To give new life, energy, activity or success to something. | [verb] To rouse from a state of inactivity or quiescence. RHAPSODIZED (27) [verb] To speak with exaggerated or rapturous enthusiasm (about, (up)on or over something). | [verb] To say (something) with exaggerated or rapturous enthusiasm. | [verb] To recount or describe (something) as a rhapsody, or in the manner of a rhapsody. RHINESTONED (15) RICOCHETTED (19) [verb] To rebound off something wildly in a seemingly random direction. | [verb] To operate upon by ricochet firing. RINGSTRAKED (17) ROADBLOCKED (21) ROUGHHOUSED (19) [verb] To behave rowdily or violently. | [verb] To treat roughly or violently. ROUNDHEADED (17) SAFEGUARDED (17) [verb] To protect, to keep safe. | [verb] To escort safely. SANDBLASTED (15) [verb] To spray with fast-moving solid grains (such as sand propelled by compressed air, although softer material like sodium bicarbonate used for delicate materials may also be so referred to). The process is used for stripping dirt, rust, paint etc. from the surface of objects. SANDPAPERED (17) [verb] To polish or grind (a surface) with or as if with sandpaper. | [adjective] Treated with sandpaper. SCANDALISED (15) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. SCANDALIZED (24) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. SCAPEGOATED (17) [verb] To punish someone for the error or errors of someone else; to make a scapegoat of. | [verb] To blame something for the problems of a given society without evidence to back up the claim. SCATTERGOOD (15) SCHEMATIZED (28) [verb] To organize according to a scheme. | [verb] To distort and simplify for the purpose of highlighting certain characteristics. | [verb] To make a plan in outline. SCHNORKELED (21) SCHOOLCHILD (22) [noun] A young person attending school or of an age to attend school. SCLEROTIZED (23) [verb] To harden. SCRIMSHAWED (22) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRUTINISED (14) [verb] To examine something with great care. | [verb] To audit accounts etc in order to verify them. SCRUTINIZED (23) [verb] To examine something with great care or detail, as to look for hidden or obscure flaws. | [verb] To audit accounts etc in order to verify them. SCUTELLATED (14) SECULARISED (14) [verb] To make secular. SECULARIZED (23) [verb] To make secular. SECURITIZED (23) [verb] To convert assets (typically outstanding loans or other receivables) to securities, usually by selling them with a discount to a financial intermediary, which pools them with other similar assets and sells further as securities to third-party investors. | [adjective] Made into a security. SEMIDEIFIED (18) SEMIRETIRED (14) [adjective] Partially retired; working part time, and/or not yet receiving pension benefits nor drawing down retirement savings. SEMISKILLED (18) [adjective] Requiring only minimal levels of training. SENSUALIZED (21) [verb] To make sensual; to subject to the love of sensual pleasure; to debase by carnal gratifications. SENTINELLED (12) [verb] To watch over as a guard. | [verb] To post as guard. | [verb] To post a guard for. SEPULCHERED (19) [verb] To bury the dead. SEQUESTERED (21) [verb] To separate from all external influence; to seclude; to withdraw. | [verb] To separate in order to store. | [verb] To set apart; to put aside; to remove; to separate from other things. SERVANTHOOD (18) SEVERALFOLD (18) SHADOWBOXED (28) [verb] To practice moves without an actual opponent, often in front of a mirror. SHIPWRECKED (26) [verb] To wreck a boat through a collision or mishap. | [adjective] Stranded as a result of a shipwreck. SHITTIMWOOD (20) SHORTHAIRED (18) [adjective] Having short hair. SHORTHANDED (19) [verb] To render (spoken or written words) into shorthand. | [verb] (by extension) To use a brief or shortened way of saying or doing something. | [verb] To write in shorthand. SIDESLIPPED (17) [verb] To perform a flight manoeuvre that moves the aircraft sideways without turning it. SIDESTEPPED (17) [verb] To step to the side. | [verb] To avoid or dodge. SIDETRACKED (19) [verb] To divert (a locomotive or train) on to a lesser used track in order to allow other trains to pass. | [verb] To divert or distract (someone) from a main issue or course of action with an alternate or less relevant topic or activity; or, to use deliberate trickery or sly wordplay when talking to (a person) in order to avoid discussion of a subject. | [verb] To sideline; to push aside; to divert or distract from, reducing (something) to a secondary or subordinate position. SILHOUETTED (15) [verb] To represent by a silhouette; to project upon a background, so as to be like a silhouette. SILICONIZED (23) [adjective] Treated or coated with silicone. SIMULCASTED (16) [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SKYROCKETED (25) [verb] To increase suddenly and extremely; to shoot up; to surge or spike. | [adjective] Suddenly and rapidly increased SLAUGHTERED (16) [verb] To butcher animals, generally for food | [verb] To massacre people in large numbers | [verb] To kill in a particularly brutal manner SLEEPWALKED (21) [verb] To walk and/or perform other actions while sleeping; to somnambulate. SLENDERIZED (22) [verb] To make more slender. SLEUTHHOUND (18) SLOGANEERED (13) [verb] To make and disseminate slogans; often contrasted with substantive debate SMORGASBORD (17) [noun] A Swedish-style buffet comprising a variety of cold sandwiches and other dishes; (by extension) any buffet with a wide selection of dishes. | [noun] An abundant and diverse collection of things. SNAPSHOTTED (17) SOFTHEARTED (18) [adjective] Gentle; kind; sympathetic. | [adjective] Easily moved to sorrow or pity. | [adjective] Willing to accept criticism. SOLEMNIFIED (17) SOLUBILISED (14) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOLUBILIZED (23) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOMERSETTED (14) SPACEWALKED (23) [verb] To perform a spacewalk. SPEARFISHED (20) [verb] To try to catch a fish using a spear or spear gun. | [verb] To fish for spearfish by any method. SPEARHEADED (18) [verb] To drive or campaign ardently for, as an effort, project, etc. SPECIALISED (16) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: | [adjective] Highly skilled in a specific field. SPECIALIZED (25) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: | [adjective] Highly skilled in a specific field. SPEECHIFIED (22) [verb] To give a speech; to hold forth; to pronounce pompously or at length. | [verb] (possibly obsolete) To make speeches to (someone); to address in a speech. SPEEDBALLED (17) SPLASHBOARD (19) [noun] A guard towards the front of a vehicle, to prevent splashing by mud or water from the road. SPLAYFOOTED (20) SPOTLIGHTED (18) [verb] To illuminate with a spotlight. | [verb] To draw attention to. SPRINGBOARD (17) [noun] A diving board consisting of a flexible, springy, cantilevered platform, used for diving into water. | [noun] A small platform on springs and usually hinged at one end, used to launch or vault onto other equipment. | [noun] Anything that gives a person or thing energy or impulse, or that serves to launch or begin something. SPRINKLERED (18) SQUIRRELLED (21) [verb] To store in a secretive manner, to hide something for future use STANCHIONED (17) STAPHYLINID (20) [noun] Any of the beetle family Staphylinidae, the rove beetles. STARBOARDED (15) [verb] To put to the right, or starboard, side of a vessel. STEAMROLLED (14) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEREOTYPED (17) [verb] To make a stereotype of someone or something, or characterize someone by a stereotype. | [verb] To prepare for printing in stereotype; to produce stereotype plates of. | [verb] To print from a stereotype. STIGMATIZED (24) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. | [adjective] Subject to a stigma; marked as an outcast. STONEWALLED (15) [verb] To obstruct. | [verb] To refuse to answer or cooperate, especially in supplying information. | [adjective] Surrounded or defined in size and shape by a wall of stone. STONEWASHED (18) [adjective] Of cloth or clothing, having been tumbled with stones in order to soften the fabric. STRAITLACED (14) [adjective] Having narrow views on moral matters; prudish. STRATEGIZED (22) [verb] To formulate a strategy. STREAMLINED (14) [verb] To design and construct the contours of a vehicle etc. so as to offer the least resistance to its flow through a fluid. | [verb] (by extension) To simplify or organize a process in order to increase its efficiency. | [verb] To modernise. STRIDULATED (13) [verb] To make a high-pitched chirping, grating, hissing, or squeaking sound, as male crickets and grasshoppers do, by rubbing certain body parts together. STRIKEBOUND (18) SUBCULTURED (16) SUBEMPLOYED (21) SUBLICENSED (16) SUBSTANDARD (15) [adjective] Of inferior quality; not meeting the minimum quality requirements. | [adjective] Not conforming to the standard variety; nonstandard. SUBSTITUTED (14) [verb] To use in place of something else, with the same function. | [verb] (in the phrase "substitute X for Y") To use X in place of Y. | [verb] (in the phrase "substitute X with/by Y") To use Y in place of X; to replace X with Y. SUBTOTALLED (14) [verb] To calculate a subtotal. SUGARCOATED (15) [adjective] Coated with sugar. | [adjective] Made superficially more attractive, possibly to cover up faults. SULFURETTED (15) [adjective] Treated, impregnated or reacted with sulfur | [adjective] Reacted with sulfur in the absence of oxygen SULPHURISED (17) [verb] To treat or react with sulfur or sulfur dioxide. SUPERABOUND (16) [verb] To abound very much; to be superabundant. SUPERCOILED (16) [verb] To twist circular DNA into a supercoil SUPERCOOLED (16) [verb] To cool a material below its transition temperature without that transition occurring | [adjective] Cooled below the transition temperature without the transition occurring SUPERFATTED (17) [adjective] Having been subjected to a superfatting treatment. SUPERHEATED (17) [verb] To heat a liquid above its boiling point | [verb] To heat a vapour above its saturation point | [verb] To heat too much, to overheat. SUPERINTEND (14) [verb] To oversee the work of others; to supervise. | [verb] To administer the affairs of something or someone. SUPPLICATED (18) [verb] To humble oneself before (another) in making a request; to beg or beseech. | [verb] To entreat for; to ask for earnestly and humbly. | [verb] To address in prayer; to entreat as a supplicant. SURFBOARDED (18) SURRENDERED (13) [verb] To give up into the power, control, or possession of another. | [verb] (by extension) To yield (a town, a fortification, etc.) to an enemy. | [verb] To give oneself up into the power of another, especially as a prisoner; to submit or give in. SUSPENDERED (15) SUSPICIONED (16) SWELLHEADED (19) SWITCHBOARD (22) [noun] The electronic panel that is used to direct telephone calls to the desired recipient. | [noun] A device that directs electricity from one source to another. SYLLABIFIED (20) SYMMETRIZED (28) SYMPATHISED (22) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYMPATHIZED (31) [verb] To have, show or express sympathy; to be affected by feelings similar to those of another, in consequence of knowing the person to be thus affected. | [verb] To support, favour, have sympathy (with a political cause or movement, a side in a conflict / in an action). | [verb] To say in an expression of sympathy. SYNCRETISED (17) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNCRETIZED (26) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNONYMIZED (29) SYNTHESIZED (27) [verb] To combine two or more things to produce a new product. | [verb] (of two or more things) To be combined producing a new, more complex product. | [verb] To produce a substance by chemical synthesis. TABERNACLED (16) TEARSTAINED (12) [adjective] Stained with tears. TEETERBOARD (14) TEETOTALLED (12) TELEGRAMMED (17) TELEGRAPHED (18) [verb] To send a message by telegraph. | [verb] To give nonverbal signals to another, as with gestures or a change in attitude. | [verb] To show one's intended action unintentionally. TELEMETERED (14) [adjective] Measured by means of telemetry TENEBRIONID (14) [noun] Any member of family Tenebrionidae of darkling beetles. TESSELLATED (12) [verb] To cover with tiles or stones, as a mosaic; to tile. | [verb] Of a two-dimensional shape, such that multiple copies of itself placed edge to edge cover an area leaving no space between the shapes. | [verb] To completely fill (an area) when multiple copies of one or more two-dimensional shapes are placed edge to edge. TESTCROSSED (14) THEOLOGISED (16) [verb] To treat something from a theological viewpoint. | [verb] To discuss or speculate about theological subjects. THEOLOGIZED (25) [verb] To treat something from a theological viewpoint. | [verb] To discuss or speculate about theological subjects. THERMALIZED (26) [verb] To lower the velocity and kinetic energy of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor by use of a moderator, and thus increase the efficiency of fission | [adjective] (of fast neutrons in a nuclear reactor) Brought to a lower velocity and kinetic energy by use of a moderator. THICKHEADED (25) [adjective] Stupid, obtuse or dumb. THIMBLEWEED (22) THITHERWARD (21) THUMBTACKED (25) THUNDERBIRD (18) [noun] A mythological bird, often associated with stormy weather, especially in various indigenous North American mythologies. | [noun] An Australian insectivorous songbird (Pachycephala pectoralis, formerly Pachycephala gutturalis), whose male is conspicuously marked with black and yellow, and has a black crescent on the breast. THUNDERHEAD (19) [noun] The top portion of a cumulonimbus cloud, which tends to be flattened or fibery in appearance, and may be indicative of thunderstorm activity. TIGHTFISTED (19) [adjective] Reluctant to spend money; miserly or stingy TODDLERHOOD (17) TOPSTITCHED (19) [verb] To stitch in this fashion. TRADEMARKED (19) [verb] To register something as a trademark. | [verb] To so label a product. | [adjective] Registered as a trademark. TRANSCENDED (15) [verb] To pass beyond the limits of something. | [verb] To surpass, as in intensity or power; to excel. | [verb] To climb; to mount. TRANSCRIBED (16) [verb] To convert a representation of language, typically speech but also sign language, etc., to another representation. The term now usually implies the conversion of speech to text by a human transcriptionist with the assistance of a computer for word processing and sometimes also for speech recognition, the process of a computer interpreting speech and converting it to text. | [verb] (dictation) To make such a conversion from live or recorded speech to text. | [verb] To transfer data from one recording medium to another. TRANSFECTED (17) [verb] To introduce foreign material into eukaryotic cells. | [adjective] Infected with nucleic acid TRANSFERRED (15) [verb] To move or pass from one place, person or thing to another. | [verb] To convey the impression of (something) from one surface to another. | [verb] To be or become transferred. TRANSFORMED (17) [verb] To change greatly the appearance or form of. | [verb] To change the nature, condition or function of; to change in nature, disposition, heart, character, etc.; to convert. | [verb] To subject to a transformation; to change into another form without altering the value. TRANSHIPPED (19) [verb] To transfer goods from one ship or other conveyance to another. | [verb] (of goods) To be transferred from one ship or other conveyance to another. TRANSMITTED (14) [verb] To send or convey something from one person, place or thing to another. | [verb] To spread or pass on something such as a disease or a signal. | [verb] To impart, convey or hand down something by inheritance or heredity. TRANSPORTED (14) [verb] To carry or bear from one place to another; to remove; to convey. | [verb] To deport to a penal colony. | [verb] To move (someone) to strong emotion; to carry away. TRANSSHAPED (17) TRANSVALUED (15) [verb] To represent or evaluate something according to a new principle, causing it to be revalued. TRAUMATISED (14) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRAUMATIZED (23) [verb] To injure, e.g. tissues, by force or by thermal, chemical or other agents. | [verb] To cause a trauma in. TRICHINIZED (26) TRICHOMONAD (19) [noun] Any of many flagellate protozoans of the genus Trichomonas, most of which are parasitic TRICORNERED (14) TRIFURCATED (17) [verb] To divide or fork into three channels or branches. TRIPLICATED (16) [verb] To make three identical copies of something. | [verb] To triple. TRIVIALISED (15) [verb] To make something appear trivial TRIVIALIZED (24) [verb] To make something appear trivial TRUEHEARTED (15) [adjective] Having a faithful heart; honest; sincere; not faithless or deceitful. TRUNCHEONED (17) TUBERCULOID (16) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling a tubercule | [adjective] Of or pertaining to tuberculosis TURPENTINED (14) [verb] To drain resin from (a tree) for use in making turpentine. TYPOGRAPHED (23) ULTRAHEATED (15) UMBILICATED (18) UNACCOUNTED (16) [adjective] Not accounted UNADDRESSED (14) [verb] To delete or forget the address of some entity. | [adjective] Not bearing an address. | [adjective] Not discussed or considered. UNALIENATED (12) UNALLOCATED (14) [adjective] That has not yet been allocated. UNAMORTIZED (23) UNAMPLIFIED (19) [adjective] Not amplified UNANNOTATED (12) UNANNOUNCED (14) [adjective] Not announced beforehand. UNASPIRATED (14) [adjective] Not aspirated. UNASSEMBLED (16) UNAUTOMATED (14) UNBALLASTED (14) UNBLEMISHED (19) [adjective] Faultless or lacking blemishes. | [adjective] Free from evil or corruption. UNBRACKETED (20) UNCALCIFIED (19) UNCALLOUSED (14) UNCAPTIONED (16) UNCASTRATED (14) [adjective] (of a male person or animal) Not castrated; possessing testicles. | [adjective] Not weakened, censored, or the like. UNCATALOGED (15) [adjective] Not catalogued UNCERTIFIED (17) [adjective] Lacking certification or official documentation | [adjective] Not officially registered UNCHANNELED (17) UNCHARTERED (17) [adjective] Not chartered; not supplied with a charter. UNCIVILIZED (26) [adjective] Crude, barbarous, wild, uncultured. | [adjective] Used to describe people who display a marked lack of manners as defined by a given culture. | [adjective] Used to describe behaviours deemed savage or inappropriate. UNCLARIFIED (17) UNCLUTTERED (14) [verb] To eliminate clutter from. | [verb] To eliminate clutter. | [adjective] Not cluttered; without clutter UNCOALESCED (16) UNCOLLECTED (16) [adjective] Not collected or gathered. | [adjective] Absent in mind; not having one's thoughts collected. UNCOMMITTED (18) [adjective] Not inclined toward either side in a matter under dispute. | [adjective] Not bound or pledged to a cause, party etc. | [adjective] (of an update to a database etc.) Not yet written to disk and logged. UNCOMPLETED (18) [adjective] Not completed. UNCONCEALED (16) [adjective] Open to view; not hidden or concealed UNCONCERNED (16) [adjective] Indifferent and having no interest; aloof. | [adjective] Not worried, anxious or apprehensive. | [adjective] Having no involvement. UNCONFESSED (17) [adjective] Not acknowledged | [adjective] Not confessed (to a priest) UNCONFIRMED (19) [adjective] Not finally established, settled or confirmed. | [adjective] Not having undergone the ritual of confirmation. UNCONNECTED (16) [adjective] Not connected or joined. | [adjective] Confused or disconnected. | [adjective] Without connections of family, etc. UNCONQUERED (23) [adjective] Not conquered UNCONTESTED (14) [adjective] Not contested or disputed; not made the object of competition. UNCONTRIVED (17) [adjective] Not contrived. UNCONVERTED (17) [adjective] Not converted (especially in the religious sense). UNCONVINCED (19) [adjective] Not convinced or lacking conviction | [verb] To cause to abandon a conviction. UNCORRECTED (16) [adjective] Not corrected. UNCURTAINED (14) [adjective] Without curtains. UNDECORATED (15) [adjective] Not possessing decorations. UNDEDICATED (16) UNDELEGATED (14) UNDELIVERED (16) [adjective] Not delivered UNDERBUDDED (17) UNDERCOOLED (15) [verb] To cool insufficiently | [verb] To supercool | [adjective] Insufficiently cooled UNDERFUNDED (17) [adjective] Insufficiently funded. | [verb] To provide insufficient funds (for). UNDERGIRDED (15) [verb] To strengthen, secure, or reinforce by passing a rope, cable, or chain around the underside of an object. | [verb] To give fundamental support; provide with a sound or secure basis; provide supportive evidence for. | [verb] To lend moral support to. UNDERGROUND (14) [noun] An underground railway, especially for mass transit of people in urban areas. | [noun] A train that runs on such an underground railway. | [noun] A rapid transit system, regardless of the elevation of its right of way. UNDERHANDED (17) [verb] To toss or lob with an underhand movement. | [verb] To trick, deceive or gull. | [verb] To excavate downward in successive steps or horizontal slices while positioned above on unbroken ore. UNDERLAPPED (17) UNDERMANNED (15) [verb] To fail to provide with enough workers or crew. | [adjective] Insufficiently manned; understaffed UNDERPINNED (15) [verb] To support from below with props or masonry. | [verb] To give support to; to corroborate. UNDERPLAYED (18) [verb] To play in a subordinate, or in an inferior manner; to underact a part. | [verb] To make something seem less important than it really is. | [verb] To play a low card when holding a high one, in the hope of a future advantage. UNDERPRICED (17) [adjective] Having a relatively or abnormally low price UNDERSCORED (15) [verb] To underline; to mark a line beneath text. | [verb] To emphasize or draw attention to. UNDERSERVED (16) [verb] To supply something with insufficient services or resources. | [adjective] Underresourced; not having sufficient service. UNDERSIGNED (14) [noun] The person or those people, mentioned in a document, whose names and signatures appear at the end | [adjective] (of a document) having signatures at the end or bottom | [adjective] (of a person) having signed at the end of a document UNDERSTATED (13) [verb] To state (something) with less completeness than needed; to minimise or downplay. | [verb] To state (something) with a lack of emphasis, in order to express irony. | [verb] To state a quantity that is too low. UNDERVALUED (16) [verb] To underestimate, or assign too low a value to. | [verb] To have too little regard for. | [adjective] Assigned an in appropriately low value. UNDESCENDED (16) [adjective] Not descended. UNDEVELOPED (18) [adjective] Not developed or used | [adjective] Not built on, unbuilt; not ready for building on | [adjective] Lagging behind others, especially in economic or social matters UNDIAGNOSED (14) [adjective] (of a disease or condition) That had not been diagnosed UNDIGNIFIED (17) [adjective] Lacking in or damaging to dignity | [verb] To treat without dignity. | [verb] To demean. UNDISCLOSED (15) [adjective] Not disclosed; kept secret. UNDISCUSSED (15) [adjective] Not discussed, not having been put under discussion. UNDISGUISED (14) [adjective] Not disguised, plainly visible. UNDISSOLVED (16) [adjective] Not dissolved UNDISTORTED (13) [adjective] Free from distortion UNDISTURBED (15) [adjective] Not disturbed or agitated | [adjective] Calm UNEARMARKED (18) UNENCHANTED (17) UNEVALUATED (15) UNEXERCISED (21) [adjective] Not having been subjected to physical exercise. | [adjective] Not having been exercised UNEXPLAINED (21) [adjective] Not explained. Of unknown cause or origin. UNEXPLOITED (21) [adjective] Not exploited UNEXPRESSED (21) [adjective] Not expressed. UNFERMENTED (17) [adjective] That has not been fermented | [adjective] That has been produced without fermentation UNFORTIFIED (18) [adjective] Not fortified UNFULFILLED (18) [adjective] Lacking fulfillment; marked by a feeling of failure to achieve goals or desires. | [adjective] Not yet provided as promised, particularly with respect to a contract or an order for a supply of something. UNFURNISHED (18) [adjective] Not furnished; having no furnishings. UNGARNISHED (16) UNHACKNEYED (24) [adjective] Not hackneyed. UNHARNESSED (15) [verb] To remove the harness from a horse etc. | [verb] (by extension) to liberate UNHARVESTED (18) UNIMMUNIZED (25) UNIMPRESSED (16) [verb] Too fail to impress positively; to leave very little impression or a bad impression; | [adjective] Not impressed UNINFLECTED (17) [adjective] (of a language) That which does not use inflection. | [adjective] (of a word) That which has not been inflected. UNINHABITED (17) [adjective] Not inhabited; having no inhabitants UNINHIBITED (17) [adjective] Not inhibited; having no inhibitions. UNINITIATED (12) [adjective] Not having been initiated. | [adjective] Of a person, not having the special knowledge of a particular group. UNINSPECTED (16) UNINSULATED (12) [adjective] Lacking insulation; not insulated UNIRRIGATED (13) UNJUSTIFIED (22) [adjective] Not justified (in any sense) | [verb] To remove or negate the justification for. UNKENNELLED (16) UNLAUNDERED (13) UNLIBERATED (14) [adjective] Not liberated; unfreed. UNLOCALIZED (23) UNMAGNIFIED (18) UNMEDICATED (17) UNMITIGATED (15) [adjective] Not mitigated. | [adjective] (intensifier) Total, complete, utter. UNMONITORED (14) [adjective] Not monitored; unwatched UNMOTIVATED (17) [adjective] Lacking motivation, without impetus to strive or excel. | [adjective] For which there is no motive. UNORGANIZED (22) [adjective] Not having been organized. | [adjective] (of a territory) Lacking a normal system of government. UNPERCEIVED (19) [adjective] Not perceived UNPERFORMED (19) [adjective] Not performed UNPERSUADED (15) [adjective] Not persuaded UNPERTURBED (16) [adjective] Not perturbed UNPOLARIZED (23) UNPRESSURED (14) UNPROCESSED (16) [adjective] Not processed UNPROFESSED (17) UNPROTECTED (16) [adjective] Not protected; lacking defence or protection; exposed. UNPUBLISHED (19) [adjective] Not published. UNQUALIFIED (24) [adjective] Not qualified, ineligible, unfit for a position or task. | [adjective] Not elaborated upon, or not accompanied by restrictions or qualification; undescribed. | [adjective] Outright; thorough; utter. UNRECLAIMED (16) [adjective] Not reclaimed. UNRECOVERED (17) UNREDRESSED (13) [adjective] Not redressed. UNREGULATED (13) [adjective] Not regulated UNREHEARSED (15) [adjective] Not rehearsed UNREPRESSED (14) [adjective] Not repressed. UNRETOUCHED (17) UNSATISFIED (15) [adjective] Not satisfied, especially with the quantity of something UNSATURATED (12) [adjective] (of a solution) Not saturated; capable of dissolving more of a solute at the same temperature. | [adjective] Of a compound containing atoms sharing more than one valence bond, especially of an organic compound having one or more double bonds or triple bonds between carbon atoms. | [adjective] (of a colour) Not chromatically pure; diluted. UNSCHEDULED (18) [adjective] Not scheduled; impromptu UNSCRAMBLED (18) [verb] To reverse the process of scrambling, decrypt. | [verb] To put into order or restore to order. UNSEGMENTED (15) [adjective] Not segmented. UNSEPARATED (14) [adjective] Not separated. UNSOLICITED (14) [adjective] Not requested, welcome or invited. UNSPECIFIED (19) [adjective] Not specified; not thoroughly explained or detailed; not adequately commented. UNSTOPPERED (16) [verb] To remove the stopper from. UNSUPPORTED (16) [adjective] Without physical support. | [adjective] For which support or help is not available. | [adjective] Without confirmation from a credible source, without verifying support UNSURPASSED (14) [adjective] Surpassing all others in some way UNSURPRISED (14) [adjective] Not surprised UNSUSPECTED (16) [adjective] Not suspected; not having raised suspicion. UNSWEETENED (15) [verb] To remove or lower the sweetness of. | [adjective] Not sweetened UNTARNISHED (15) [adjective] Not tarnished UNTRAMMELED (16) [adjective] Not limited or restricted; unrestrained; limitless. UNTRAVERSED (15) UNVARNISHED (18) [adjective] Not having been coated with varnish (or a similar surface treatment). | [adjective] (by extension) Natural, unmodified, unembellished, not exaggerated, as in unvarnished truth. UNWARRANTED (15) [adjective] Not warranted; being without warrant, authority, or guaranty; unwarrantable. | [adjective] Unjustified, inappropriate or undeserved. UNWEATHERED (18) UPHOLSTERED (17) [verb] To fit padding, stuffing, springs, webbing and fabric covering to (furniture). | [adjective] Covered in or characterized by upholstery. VARICOLORED (17) [adjective] Having a variety of colors; variegated or motley. VATICINATED (17) [verb] To predict or foretell (future events). VESICULATED (17) VITUPERATED (17) [verb] To criticize in a harsh or abusive manner. | [verb] To revile, vilify, defame, go on about or mouth off about someone | [verb] To use harsh or abusive wording. VOCIFERATED (20) [verb] To cry out with vehemence | [verb] To utter with a loud voice; to shout out. VOLATILISED (15) [verb] To make volatile; to cause to evaporate. | [verb] To make insubstantial; to dissipate. | [verb] To become volatile; to evaporate. VOLATILIZED (24) [verb] To make volatile; to cause to evaporate. | [verb] To make insubstantial; to dissipate. | [verb] To become volatile; to evaporate. VOLUNTEERED (15) [verb] To enlist oneself as a volunteer. | [verb] To do or offer to do something voluntarily. | [verb] To offer, usually unprompted. WAINSCOTTED (17) [verb] To decorate a wall with a wainscot. | [adjective] Having a wainscot. WAISTCOATED (17) WALLPAPERED (19) [verb] To cover (a wall, a room, etc) with wallpaper. | [adjective] Having had wallpaper applied. WARMHEARTED (20) [adjective] Amicable and friendly | [adjective] Kind, sympathetic and generous WATCHDOGGED (23) [verb] To perform a function analogous to that of a watchdog; to guard and warn. | [verb] To be continuously reset by a watchdog timer. WATERLOGGED (17) [adjective] Soaked with water | [adjective] In danger of sinking because of excess water onboard WATERMARKED (21) [verb] To mark paper with a watermark. | [verb] To mark a datafile with a digital watermark. WEAKHEARTED (22) WEATHERIZED (27) [verb] To protect a structure against damage by the weather. WESTERNISED (15) [verb] To make something western in character. WESTERNIZED (24) [verb] To make something western in character. | [adjective] Having been made culturally Western. WHITEWASHED (24) [verb] To paint over with a lime and water mixture so as to brighten up a wall or fence. | [verb] To cover over errors or bad actions. | [verb] To repay the financial debts of (another person). WHITHERWARD (24) WIDEMOUTHED (21) WIDOWERHOOD (22) WISECRACKED (23) [verb] To make a sarcastic, flippant, or sardonic comment. WOODSHEDDED (21) [verb] To practice or rehearse using a musical instrument. WRONGHEADED (20) [adjective] Having an obstinately (persistently, stubbornly) perverse/erroneous opinion or judgement. YOCTOSECOND (19) ZEPTOSECOND (25)

12-Letter Words (769)

ABSENTMINDED (18) [adjective] Absent in mind; often preoccupied; forgetful or careless due to distraction; easily distracted. ACCESSORISED (17) [verb] To furnish with accessories. | [verb] To wear or to choose accessories. ACCESSORIZED (26) [verb] To furnish with accessories. | [verb] To wear or to choose accessories. | [adjective] Wearing accessories. ACCLIMATISED (19) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. ACCLIMATIZED (28) [verb] To get used to a new climate. | [verb] To make used to a new climate or one that is different from that which is natural; to inure or habituate to other circumstances; to adapt to the peculiarities of a foreign or strange climate. | [adjective] Subjected to acclimatization ACCOMMODATED (22) [verb] To render fit, suitable, or correspondent; to adapt. | [verb] To cause to come to agreement; to bring about harmony; to reconcile. | [verb] To provide housing for. ACCOMPLISHED (24) [verb] To finish successfully. | [verb] To complete, as time or distance. | [verb] To execute fully; to fulfill; to complete successfully. ACCULTURATED (17) [verb] To change the culture of (a person) by the influence of another culture, especially a more advanced culture. | [verb] To cause (a person) to acquire the culture of society, starting at birth. | [verb] To be changed by acculturation. ACHROMATIZED (29) [verb] Made achromatic; deprived of color or rendered colorless. ACKNOWLEDGED (24) [verb] To admit the knowledge of; to recognize as a fact or truth; to declare one's belief in | [verb] To own or recognize in a particular quality, character or relationship; to admit the claims or authority of; to give recognition to. | [verb] To be grateful of (e.g. a benefit or a favour) ADMINISTERED (16) [verb] To cause to ingest (a drug), either by openly offering or through deceit. | [verb] To apportion out, distribute. | [verb] To manage or supervise the conduct, performance or execution of; to govern or regulate the parameters for the conduct, performance or execution of; to work in an administrative capacity. AGGLOMERATED (17) [verb] To wind or collect into a ball; hence, to gather into a mass or anything like a mass. AGGLUTINATED (15) [verb] To unite, or cause to adhere, as with glue or other viscous substance; to unite by causing an adhesion of substances. | [verb] To form through agglutination. AIRFREIGHTED (20) [verb] To transport by air. ALPHABETIZED (29) [adjective] Arranged in alphabetical order. | [verb] To arrange words or items in order of the first (and then subsequent) letters as they occur in the alphabet. | [adjective] Arranged in alphabetical order. AMPHIDIPLOID (23) [noun] An organism, especially a plant, that contains two complete diploid sets of chromosomes from two different species. ANESTHETIZED (25) [verb] To administer anesthesia to: to render unfeeling or unconscious through the use of narcotic substances, usually either alcohol or pharmaceutical drugs. | [adjective] Subject to anesthesia | [adjective] Made to be unfeeling, alienated and emotionless. ANIMADVERTED (19) [verb] To criticise, to censure. | [verb] To consider. | [verb] To turn judicial attention (to); to criticise or punish. ANTHOLOGIZED (26) [verb] To compile, or include something in, an anthology. APOTHEOSIZED (27) [verb] To deify, to convert into a god. | [verb] To exalt, glorify. APPROPRIATED (19) [verb] To make suitable; to suit. | [verb] To take to oneself; to claim or use, especially as by an exclusive right. | [verb] To set apart for, or assign to, a particular person or use, especially in exclusion of all others; with to or for. APPROXIMATED (26) [verb] To estimate. | [verb] To come near to; to approach. | [verb] To carry or advance near; to cause to approach. ASSASSINATED (13) [verb] To murder someone, especially an important person, by a sudden or obscure attack, especially for ideological or political reasons. | [verb] To harm, ruin, or defame severely or destroy by treachery, slander, libel, or obscure attack. BACHELORHOOD (23) [noun] The state or condition of being a bachelor; the period of time during which a man remains unmarried. BACKGROUNDED (23) [verb] To put in a position that is not prominent. | [verb] To gather and provide background information (on). | [adjective] Moved to the background BACKPEDALLED (24) [verb] To pedal backwards on a bicycle. | [verb] To step backwards. | [verb] To distance oneself from an earlier claim or statement; back off from an idea. BACKSTITCHED (26) [verb] To sew with a backstitch. BATTLEGROUND (16) [noun] A location where a battle may be fought, or has been fought. | [noun] Any subject of dispute or contention. BATTLEMENTED (17) [adjective] Having battlements; furnished with or decorated by battlements (notched parapets on castle walls). BENEFICIATED (20) [verb] To reduce (ores). BESPECTACLED (21) [adjective] Wearing spectacles (glasses). BLACKGUARDED (23) [verb] To revile or abuse in scurrilous language. | [verb] To act like a blackguard; to be a scoundrel. BLOODSTAINED (16) [adjective] Stained, spotted or otherwise discolored with blood. | [adjective] Having the color of something which has been stained with blood. | [adjective] Responsible for the deaths of others; guilty of murder. BOOTSTRAPPED (19) [verb] To help (oneself) without the aid of others. | [verb] To load the operating system into the memory of a computer. Usually shortened to boot. | [verb] To compile the tools that will be used to compile the rest of the system or program. BOTTLENECKED (21) [verb] Past tense of bottleneck; to restrict or impede the flow or progress of something due to a limited capacity point. | [adjective] Restricted or impeded by a bottleneck; experiencing a constraint that limits throughput or progress. BRAINSTORMED (17) [verb] To investigate something, or solve a problem using brainstorming. | [verb] To participate in a brainstorming session. BREADBOARDED (19) [verb] To set up (an electronic device) on a breadboard. BUBBLEHEADED (23) [adjective] Silly, scatterbrained, or lacking intelligence; frivolous or empty-headed. BUTTONHOOKED (22) [verb] Past tense of buttonhole; to accost or detain someone in conversation. | [verb] In football, to execute a buttonhook maneuver, where a receiver runs downfield then cuts sharply back toward the quarterback. CANNIBALISED (17) [verb] To eat (parts of) another of one's own species. | [verb] To remove parts of (a machine, etc) for use in other similar machines. | [verb] To reduce sales or market share (for one of one's own products) by introducing another. CANNIBALIZED (26) [verb] To eat (parts of) another of one's own species. | [verb] To remove parts of (a machine, etc) for use in other similar machines. | [verb] To reduce sales or market share (for one of one's own products) by introducing another. CANNONBALLED (17) [verb] Past tense of cannonball; jumped or dived into water with legs and arms drawn up in a ball position. | [verb] Moved forward with great force or speed, like a cannonball. CANTILEVERED (18) [verb] To project (something) in the manner of or by means of a cantilever. | [adjective] Fitted with a cantilever. CARBOXYLATED (27) [verb] To form a carboxyl group by introduction of carbon dioxide | [verb] To react with a carboxylic acid | [adjective] Converted into a carboxylic acid, normally by the oxidation of an alcohol or aldehyde. CARROTTOPPED (19) CARRYFORWARD (24) [noun] An amount of money, credits, or other value that is transferred from one accounting period to the next. | [verb] To transfer an amount forward to a subsequent period or account. CATHETERIZED (27) [verb] To introduce a catheter into part of the body. CATHOLICIZED (29) [verb] To make Catholic; to convert to Catholicism. | [verb] To become Catholic; to convert to Catholicism. CERTIFICATED (20) [verb] To supply with a certificate, especially following certification | [adjective] That has been subject to certification CHANDELIERED (19) CHECKERBOARD (26) [noun] A pattern of squares of alternating colours. | [noun] A board, usually square, covered with such a pattern; especially such a board with 8×8 squares, used to play chess and draughts/checkers. | [verb] To checker; to mark with an alternating pattern of light and dark. CHESTERFIELD (21) [noun] A couch, sofa, or love seat with padded arms and back of the same height, often curved outward at the top. | [noun] Any couch or sofa. CHLOROFORMED (23) [verb] To treat with chloroform, or to render unconscious with chloroform. CIRCULARISED (17) [verb] To publicize something by publishing and distributing circulars. | [verb] To distribute a circular or circulars to. | [verb] To canvass opinion by using a questionnaire. CIRCULARIZED (26) [verb] To publicize something by publishing and distributing circulars. | [verb] To distribute a circular or circulars to. | [verb] To canvass opinion by using a questionnaire. CIRCUMVENTED (22) [verb] To avoid or get around something; to bypass | [verb] To surround or besiege | [verb] To outwit or outsmart CIVILIANIZED (27) [verb] To convert from military to civilian operation or control. | [verb] To change the status of (a member of the armed forces) to that of a civilian. CLOSEMOUTHED (20) [adjective] Reticent, secretive or uncommunicative CLOTHESLINED (18) [verb] To knock (a person) over by striking his or her upper body or neck with one's arm, as if he or she had run into a low clothesline. COBBLESTONED (19) [adjective] Paved or surfaced with cobblestones. COCOUNSELLED (17) [verb] Past tense of cocounsel; to serve jointly as a counselor or attorney with another person in providing legal advice or representation. COCULTIVATED (20) [verb] Past tense of cocultivate; to cultivate or grow two or more organisms or plants together in the same environment. CODISCOVERED (21) COLLABORATED (17) [verb] To work together with others to achieve a common goal. | [verb] To voluntarily cooperate treasonably, as with an enemy occupation force in one's country. COLONIALIZED (24) [verb] Past tense of colonialize; to subject (a territory or people) to colonial rule or control; to establish a colony in or establish colonies within. COMMANDEERED (20) [verb] To seize for military use. | [verb] To force into military service. | [verb] To take arbitrarily or by force. COMMEMORATED (21) [verb] To honour the memory of someone or something with a ceremony or object. | [verb] To serve as a memorial to someone or something. COMMISERATED (19) [verb] To feel or express compassion or sympathy for (someone or something). | [verb] (as the phrasal verb commiserate with) To sympathize; condole. | [verb] To offer condolences jointly with; express sympathy with. COMMISSIONED (19) [verb] To send or officially charge someone or some group to do something. | [verb] To place an order for (often piece of art) | [verb] To put into active service COMMUNALIZED (28) [verb] To take property into communal ownership COMMUNICATED (21) [verb] To impart | [verb] To share COMPLEMENTED (21) [verb] To complete, to bring to perfection, to make whole. | [verb] To provide what the partner lacks and lack what the partner provides, thus forming part of a whole. | [verb] To change a voltage, number, color, etc. to its complement. COMPLEXIFIED (29) [verb] Made complex or more complex; converted into a complex form or structure. COMPLEXIONED (26) [adjective] Having a particular complexion or skin color, often used in combination with descriptive terms (such as "dark-complexioned" or "light-complexioned"). COMPLIMENTED (21) [verb] To pay a compliment (to); to express a favorable opinion (of). COMPREHENDED (23) [verb] To include, comprise; to contain. | [verb] To understand or grasp fully and thoroughly. | [adjective] Understood. COMPUTERISED (19) [adjective] Having undergone computerisation. | [adjective] Functioning upon or through the medium of computers; digital. | [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. COMPUTERIZED (28) [adjective] Having undergone computerisation. | [adjective] Functioning upon or through the medium of computers; digital. | [verb] To convert a manual function or system into a computer system. CONCATENATED (17) [verb] To join or link together, as though in a chain. | [verb] To join (text strings) together. CONCENTRATED (17) [verb] To bring to, or direct toward, a common center; to unite more closely; to gather into one body, mass, or force. | [verb] To increase the strength and diminish the bulk of, as of a liquid or an ore; to intensify, by getting rid of useless material; to condense. | [verb] To approach or meet in a common center; to consolidate. CONDESCENDED (19) [verb] To come down from one's superior position; to deign (to do something). | [verb] To treat (someone) as though inferior; to be patronizing (toward someone); to talk down (to someone). | [verb] (possibly nonstandard) To treat (someone) as though inferior; to be patronizing toward (someone); to talk down to (someone). CONFABULATED (20) [verb] To speak casually with; to chat. | [verb] To confer. | [verb] To fabricate memories in order to fill gaps in one's memory. CONFEDERATED (19) [verb] To combine in a confederacy. CONSOLIDATED (16) [verb] To combine into a single unit; to group together or join. | [verb] To make stronger or more solid. | [verb] To pay off several debts with a single loan. CONSTELLATED (15) [verb] To combine as a cluster. | [verb] To fit, adorn (as if) with constellations. | [verb] To (form a) cluster. CONSTERNATED (15) [verb] To cause consternation in; to dismay. | [adjective] Dismayed. CONTAMINATED (17) [verb] To make something dangerous or toxic by introducing impurities or foreign matter. | [verb] To soil, stain, corrupt, or infect by contact or association. | [verb] To make unfit for use by the introduction of unwholesome or undesirable elements. CONTEMPLATED (19) [verb] To look at on all sides or in all its aspects; to view or consider with continued attention; to regard with deliberate care; to meditate on; to study, ponder, or consider. | [verb] To consider as a possibility. CONTRADICTED (18) [verb] To deny the truth of (a statement or statements). | [verb] To deny the truth of the statement(s) made by (a person). | [verb] To be contrary to (something). CONTROVERTED (18) [verb] To dispute, to argue about (something). | [verb] To argue against (something or someone); to contradict, to deny. | [verb] To be involved or engaged in controversy; to argue. CONVEYORISED (21) [adjective] Equipped with or converted to use a conveyor system or conveyor belt for automated movement or transportation of goods or materials. CONVEYORIZED (30) CORRESPONDED (18) [verb] (constructed with to) To be equivalent or similar in character, quantity, quality, origin, structure, function etc. | [verb] (constructed with with) to exchange messages, especially by postal letter, over a period of time. | [verb] To have sex with. CORROBORATED (17) [verb] To confirm or support something with additional evidence; to attest or vouch for. | [verb] To make strong; to strengthen. | [adjective] Strengthened; confirmed; rendered more certain. COSMETICIZED (28) [verb] Made to appear better or more attractive superficially without addressing underlying problems or defects. COTRANSDUCED (18) [verb] Past tense of cotransduce; to introduce genetic material into a bacterial cell along with other genetic material in a single transduction event. COUNTENANCED (17) [verb] To tolerate, support, sanction, patronise or approve of something. COUNTERACTED (17) [verb] To have a contrary or opposing effect or force on | [verb] To deliberately act in opposition to, to thwart or frustrate COUNTERMOVED (20) COUNTERPOSED (17) [verb] To act as a counterweight; to counterbalance. COUNTERTREND (15) COUNTERWORLD (18) CRACKBRAINED (23) [adjective] Idiotic. CREATUREHOOD (18) CREDENTIALED (16) [verb] To furnish with credentials CRIMINALIZED (26) [verb] To make (something) a crime; to make illegal under criminal law; to ban. | [verb] To treat as a criminal. CRISSCROSSED (17) [verb] To move back and forth over (something). | [verb] To mark (something) with crossed lines. | [adjective] Marked by lines crossing in two or more directions. CROSSHATCHED (23) [verb] To mark or fill with a crosshatch pattern. CRYSTALLISED (18) [verb] To make something form into crystals | [verb] To assume a crystalline form | [verb] To give something a definite or precise form CRYSTALLIZED (27) [verb] To make something form into crystals | [verb] To assume a crystalline form | [verb] To give something a definite or precise form CYSTICERCOID (22) DECARBONATED (18) DECARBONIZED (27) [verb] To remove carbon from something, especially from an engine. | [verb] To reduce or replace fossil fuels by renewable energy in energy production systems and processes. DECARBURIZED (27) [verb] To decarbonize. DECEREBRATED (18) [verb] To remove the cerebrum in order to eliminate brain function. DECLASSIFIED (19) [verb] To remove the classification from; to lift the restrictions on DECOMPRESSED (20) [verb] To relieve the pressure or compression on something. | [verb] To bring someone (such as a diver) back to normal atmospheric pressure after being exposed to high pressure. | [verb] To restore (compressed data) to its original form. DECONTROLLED (16) [verb] To remove controls. | [adjective] Released from a form of control. DECORTICATED (18) [adjective] Having had the outer covering removed DECREPITATED (18) [verb] To roast (a salt or mineral) until it stops crackling in the fire. | [verb] Of salts and minerals, to crackle when heated, indicating a sudden breakdown of their particles. DEFIBRINATED (19) DEFORMALIZED (28) DEGLAMORIZED (26) [verb] To make less glamorous DEHUMIDIFIED (23) [verb] To reduce the moisture in a body of air; to lower the humidity. DEMAGNETIZED (26) [verb] To make something nonmagnetic by removing its magnetic properties. | [verb] To erase the contents of a magnetic storage device. | [adjective] From which all magnetism has been removed. DEMOCRATIZED (27) [verb] To make democratic. DEMONSTRATED (16) [verb] To show how to use (something). | [verb] To show the steps taken to create a logical argument or equation. | [verb] To participate in or organize a demonstration. DENTICULATED (16) DEOXYGENATED (25) [verb] To remove dissolved oxygen from (something, such as water or blood). DEPROGRAMMED (21) [verb] To counteract the effects of previous programming or brainwashing, especially in an attempt to persuade (a person) to abandon allegiance to a cult. DESACRALIZED (25) [verb] To remove the sacredness of. DESEGREGATED (16) [verb] To the end segregation of (something). DESENSITIZED (23) [verb] To cause to become less sensitive or insensitive. DESEXUALIZED (30) [verb] To divest of sexual attributes; to make conceptually asexual. DESTABILIZED (25) [verb] To make something unstable. | [verb] To become unstable. DESULFURIZED (26) [verb] To remove the sulfur from something (such as petroleum or flue gases). DETERIORATED (14) [verb] To make worse; to make inferior in quality or value; to impair. | [verb] To grow worse; to be impaired in quality; to degenerate. DETRIBALIZED (25) [verb] To cause (the members of a tribe) to lose their tribal culture. | [adjective] Detached from one's tribe, or from tribal traditions. DIAGONALIZED (24) DICHOTOMIZED (30) [verb] To separate into two parts or classifications. | [verb] To be divided into two. | [verb] To exhibit as a half disk. DILLYDALLIED (18) DISAPPOINTED (18) [verb] To sadden or displease (someone) by underperforming, or by not delivering something promised or hoped for. | [verb] To deprive (someone of something expected or hoped for). | [verb] To fail to meet (an expectation); to fail to fulfil (a hope). DISASSEMBLED (18) [verb] To take to pieces; to reverse the process of assembly. | [verb] To convert machine code to a human-readable, mnemonic form. DISCOMFORTED (21) [verb] To cause annoyance or distress to. | [verb] To discourage; to deject. DISCOMMENDED (21) DISCONCERTED (18) [verb] To upset the composure of. | [verb] To bring into confusion. | [verb] To frustrate, discomfit. DISCONFIRMED (21) [verb] To establish the falsity of a claim or belief; to show or to tend to show that a theory or hypothesis is not valid. DISCONNECTED (18) [verb] To sever or interrupt a connection. | [verb] Of a person, to become detached or withdrawn. | [verb] To remove the connection between an appliance and an electrical power source. DISCONTENTED (16) [adjective] Experiencing discontent, dissatisfaction. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to discontent. DISCONTINUED (16) [verb] To interrupt the continuance of; to put an end to, especially as regards commercial productions; to stop producing, making, or supplying something. | [adjective] Permanently no longer available or in production. DISEMBOWELED (21) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. DISENCHANTED (19) [verb] (of a person) To free from illusion, false belief or enchantment; to undeceive or disillusion. | [verb] (of a person) To disappoint. | [verb] (of a thing) To remove a spell or magic enchantment from. DISENTANGLED (15) [verb] To free something from entanglement; to extricate or unknot. | [verb] To unravel; to separate into discrete components or units. | [verb] To become free or untangled. DISFURNISHED (20) DISHEARTENED (17) [verb] To discourage someone by removing their enthusiasm or courage. | [adjective] Discouraged, despairing. DISINHERITED (17) [verb] To exclude from inheritance; to disown. DISINHIBITED (19) [verb] To remove an inhibition. DISORGANIZED (24) [verb] To make less organized; to reduce to chaos. | [adjective] Lacking order or organization; confused; chaotic. DISPOSSESSED (16) [verb] To deprive someone of the possession of land, especially by evicting them. | [verb] To take possession of the ball/puck etc. (from someone). | [adjective] Homeless DISQUALIFIED (26) [verb] To make ineligible for something. | [verb] To exclude from consideration by the explicit revocation of a previous qualification. DISRESPECTED (18) [verb] To show a lack of respect to someone or something. DISSATISFIED (17) [adjective] Feeling or displaying disappointment or a lack of contentment. | [adjective] Not satisfied (e.g. with the quality of something). | [verb] To fail to satisfy; to displease. DISSEMINATED (16) [verb] To sow and scatter principles, ideas, opinions, etc, or concrete things, for growth and propagation, like seeds. | [verb] To become widespread. | [adjective] Spread around; widespread DISSIMILATED (16) [verb] To make dissimilar or unlike. | [verb] To become dissimilar or unlike. DISSIMULATED (16) [verb] To practise deception by concealment or omission, or by feigning a false appearance. | [verb] To disguise or hide by adopting a false appearance. | [verb] To connive at; to wink at; to pretend not to notice. DOMESTICATED (18) [verb] To make domestic. | [verb] To make fit for domestic life. | [verb] To adapt to live with humans. DOMICILIATED (18) DUNDERHEADED (19) EAVESDROPPED (21) [verb] To hear a conversation one is not intended to hear; to listen in. | [verb] To listen for another organism's calls, so as to exploit them. ELECTROCUTED (17) [verb] To kill by electric shock. | [verb] To execute by electric shock, often by means of an electric chair. | [verb] To inflict a severe electric shock (not necessarily fatal) upon. ELECTROLYZED (27) [verb] To decompose by means of, or as a result of electrolysis. | [adjective] Decomposed by electrolysis ELECTROTYPED (20) [verb] To make such a plate EMBLEMATIZED (28) [verb] To stand as an emblem for; to represent. ENCAPSULATED (17) [verb] To enclose something as if in a capsule. | [verb] To epitomize something by expressing it as a brief summary. | [verb] To enclose objects in a common interface in a way that makes them interchangeable, and guards their states from invalid changes. ENCULTURATED (15) ENFRANCHISED (21) [verb] To grant the franchise to an entity, specifically: | [adjective] Emancipated ENREGISTERED (14) EQUILIBRATED (24) [verb] To balance, or bring into equilibrium. | [verb] To balance, to be in a state of equilibrium. | [adjective] Subject to equilibration ETHEREALIZED (25) [verb] To make ethereal. ETYMOLOGISED (19) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. ETYMOLOGIZED (28) [verb] To find or provide the etymology for a word. EUTHANATIZED (25) EXPECTORATED (24) [verb] To cough up fluid from the lungs. | [verb] To spit. EXPERIMENTED (24) [verb] To conduct an experiment. | [verb] To experience; to feel; to perceive; to detect. | [verb] To test or ascertain by experiment; to try out; to make an experiment on. EXPOSTULATED (22) [verb] To protest or remonstrate; to reason earnestly with a person on some impropriety of conduct. EXPROPRIATED (24) [verb] To deprive a person of (their private property) for public use. EXTEMPORISED (24) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do something in a makeshift way. | [verb] To make or create extempore. EXTEMPORIZED (33) [verb] To do something, particularly to perform or speak, without prior planning or thought; to act in an impromptu manner; to improvise. | [verb] To do, create, improvise, adapt, or devise in an impromptu or spontaneous manner. EXTERIORISED (20) [verb] To externalize. | [verb] To expose (an internal organ) for observation or surgery. EXTERIORIZED (29) [verb] To externalize. | [verb] To expose (an internal organ) for observation or surgery. EXTERMINATED (22) [verb] To kill all of (a population of pests or undesirables), usually intentionally. | [verb] To bring a definite end to; finish completely. EXTERNALISED (20) [verb] To make something external or objective | [verb] To represent something abstract or intangible as material; to embody | [verb] To attribute emotions etc to external circumstances; to project EXTERNALIZED (29) [verb] To make something external or objective | [verb] To represent something abstract or intangible as material; to embody | [verb] To attribute emotions etc to external circumstances; to project EXTINGUISHED (24) [verb] To put out, as in fire; to end burning; to quench | [verb] To destroy or abolish something | [verb] To obscure or eclipse something EXTRAPOLATED (22) [verb] To infer by extending known information. | [verb] To estimate the value of a variable outside a known range from values within that range by assuming that the estimated value follows logically from the known ones EXTRAVAGATED (24) EXTRAVASATED (23) [verb] To flow (or be forced) from a vessel | [adjective] Produced by extravasation FAINTHEARTED (19) [adjective] Faint of heart; irresolute; fearful. FAMILIARISED (18) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARIZED (27) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FASCICULATED (20) FEATHEREDGED (21) FEEBLEMINDED (21) [adjective] Weak in intellectual power; lacking firmness or constancy; lacking intelligence FELLMONGERED (19) [verb] To prepare animal skin for tanning. FELLOWSHIPED (24) FIANCHETTOED (21) [verb] To play a fianchetto. FIBERGLASSED (19) FILIBUSTERED (18) [verb] To take part in a private military action in a foreign country. | [verb] To use obstructionist tactics in a legislative body. FINGERPICKED (25) [verb] To pluck of the individual strings of a stringed instrument with the fingers FLAMEPROOFED (23) [verb] To make flameproof. FLOODLIGHTED (21) FLUOROSCOPED (20) FLUTTERBOARD (18) FOREGATHERED (20) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FOREGROUNDED (18) [verb] To place in the foreground (physically or metaphorically). FOREORDAINED (17) [verb] To predestine or preordain. FORESHADOWED (23) [verb] To presage, or suggest something in advance. FORMULARIZED (27) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FOUNTAINHEAD (19) [noun] A spring that is the source of a river. | [noun] An abundant source of knowledge, etc. FRACTIONATED (18) [verb] To separate (a mixture) into its individual constituents by exploiting differences in some chemical or physical property, such as boiling point, particle size, solubility etc. | [verb] To divide each plaintext symbol into several ciphertext symbols as a preliminary stage of encryption. | [verb] To use the technique of fractionation in hypnosis. FRAGMENTATED (19) FRAGMENTIZED (28) GANGLIONATED (15) GEOPRESSURED (16) GESTICULATED (16) [verb] To make gestures or motions, as in speaking. | [verb] To say or express through gestures. GLASSPAPERED (18) GLYCERINATED (19) GLYCOSYLATED (22) [verb] To react with a sugar to form a glycoside (especially a glycoprotein) | [adjective] Describing a glycoside (but especially a glycoprotein) that has the sugar entity intact GOURMANDIZED (26) [verb] To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself. GRANDSTANDED (16) [verb] To behave dramatically or showily to impress an audience or observers; to pander to a crowd. GREATHEARTED (17) GUESSTIMATED (16) [verb] To make a guesstimate. | [verb] To make a guesstimate of a specific quantity. HALLUCINATED (18) [verb] To seem to perceive things (with one or more of one's senses) which are not really present; to have visions; to experience a hallucination. HEAVYHEARTED (25) HECTOGRAPHED (24) HELICOPTERED (20) [verb] To transport by helicopter. | [verb] To travel by helicopter. | [verb] To rotate like a helicopter blade. HELIOGRAPHED (22) [verb] To send a message by heliograph. | [verb] To send a heliograph. | [verb] To photograph by sunlight. HEMIHYDRATED (25) HENCEFORWARD (24) [adverb] From now on; from this time on HERRINGBONED (19) [verb] To stitch in a herringbone pattern. | [verb] To climb a hill by pointing the skis outward in a V-shape to keep from sliding backwards. HIERARCHIZED (30) [verb] To establish a hierarchy. | [verb] To arrange in a hierarchy. | [adjective] Arranged in a hierarchy HISTORICIZED (27) [verb] To treat from the perspective of history or historicism HOMESCHOOLED (23) [verb] To educate children at home, that is, at a private domestic place, in lieu of sending them to a public school or private educational institution. | [verb] To be educated at home. HORNSWOGGLED (21) [verb] To deceive or trick. HORSEWHIPPED (26) [verb] To flog or lash with a horsewhip. HOSPITALISED (18) [adjective] Being treated in a hospital | [verb] To send to hospital; to admit (a person) to hospital. | [verb] To render (a building) unfit for habitation, by long continued use as a hospital. HOSPITALIZED (27) [verb] To send to hospital; to admit (a person) to hospital. | [verb] To render (a building) unfit for habitation, by long continued use as a hospital. | [verb] (of an injury, illness, event, or person) To cause (a person) to require hospitalization. HOUSECLEANED (18) [verb] To clean the interior and furnishings of a residence. | [verb] To make major reforms; to clean house. | [verb] To clean the interior and residential furnishings of. HOUSEHUSBAND (21) [noun] A man who tends to his home as a housekeeper or homemaker; the male counterpart to a housewife. HYDROCOLLOID (22) [noun] Any material that forms a colloid (especially a gel) when mixed with water | [noun] Such a material, made from agar, used to make dental impressions HYDROCRACKED (28) HYDROGENATED (21) [verb] To treat something, or react something, with hydrogen; especially to react an unsaturated fat with hydrogen, in the presence of a nickel catalyst, to produce a harder saturated fat | [adjective] That has been treated, or reacted with hydrogen; especially describing a saturated fat so obtained from an unsaturated fat HYDROXYLATED (30) [verb] To introduce a hydroxyl group into a compound | [adjective] That has been modified by hydroxylation HYPERBOLIZED (32) [verb] To exaggerate, use hyperbole. | [verb] To represent or talk about with hyperbole. HYPERCHARGED (27) HYPEREXCITED (30) HYPERTHYROID (27) HYPOSTATIZED (30) [verb] To make into, or regard as, a separate and distinct substance; to construe a contextually-subjective and complex abstraction, idea, or concept as a universal object without regard to nuance or change in character. | [verb] To attribute actual or personal existence to. HYPOTHECATED (26) [verb] To pledge (something) as surety for a loan; to pawn, mortgage. | [verb] To designate a new tax or tax increase for a specific expenditure HYPOTHESIZED (33) [verb] To believe or assert on uncertain grounds. IMMORTALISED (17) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. IMMORTALIZED (26) [verb] To give unending life to, to make immortal. | [verb] To make eternally famous. | [verb] To remove the effects of normal apoptosis. IMPERSONATED (17) [verb] To pretend to be (a different person); to assume the identity of. | [verb] To operate with the permissions of a different user account. | [verb] To manifest in corporeal form; to personify. IMPOVERISHED (23) [verb] To make poor. | [verb] To weaken in quality; to deprive of some strength or richness. | [verb] To become poor. INCARCERATED (17) [verb] To lock away; to imprison, especially for breaking the law. | [verb] To confine; to shut up or enclose; to hem in. INCARNADINED (16) [verb] To make flesh-coloured. | [verb] To make red, especially blood-coloured or crimson; to redden. INCENTIVIZED (27) [verb] To provide incentives for; to encourage. | [verb] To provide incentives to. INCORPORATED (17) [verb] To include (something) as a part. | [verb] To mix (something in) as an ingredient; to blend | [verb] To admit as a member of a company INCRIMINATED (17) [verb] To accuse or bring criminal charges against. | [verb] To indicate the guilt of. INDIVIDUATED (18) [verb] To make, or cause to appear, individual. INEQUIVALVED (28) INFANTILIZED (25) [verb] To reduce (a person) to the state or status of an infant. | [verb] To treat (a person) like a child. INGURGITATED (15) [verb] To swallow greedily or in large amounts. | [verb] To swallow up, as in a gulf. INSTANTIATED (13) [verb] To represent (something) by a concrete instance. | [verb] To create an object (an instance) of a specific class. INSTRUMENTED (15) [verb] To apply measuring devices. | [verb] To devise, conceive, cook up, plan. | [verb] To perform upon an instrument; to prepare for an instrument. INTERCALATED (15) [verb] To insert an extra leap day into a calendar in order to maintain synchrony with natural phenomena. | [verb] To insert an extra month into a calendar for the same purpose. The Hebrew calendar has such a month. | [verb] To insert a substance between two or more molecules, bases, cells, or tissues. INTERCHANGED (19) [verb] To switch (each of two things) | [verb] To mutually give and receive (something); to exchange | [verb] To swap or change places INTERCROPPED (19) [verb] To grow more than one crop, in alternate rows, in the same field. INTERCROSSED (15) [verb] To cross back over one another | [verb] To breed two strains having a common ancestry with one another INTERGRAFTED (17) INTERIORISED (13) [verb] To internalize; to bring inside oneself. INTERIORIZED (22) [verb] To internalize; to bring inside oneself. INTERLAYERED (16) INTERMARRIED (15) [verb] To marry a member of another group, social stratum, or religion. | [verb] To marry within the same ethnic, social, or family group. INTERMEDDLED (17) [verb] To mix, mingle together. | [verb] To get mixed up (with). | [verb] To butt in, to interfere in or with. INTERMINGLED (16) [verb] To mix or become mixed together. INTERNALISED (13) [verb] To make something internal; to incorporate it in oneself. | [verb] To store (a string or other structure) in a shared pool, such that subsequent items with the same value can share the same instance. | [verb] To transfer stocks between brokers within an organization, rather than through the exchange. INTERNALIZED (22) [verb] To make something internal; to incorporate it in oneself. | [verb] To store (a string or other structure) in a shared pool, such that subsequent items with the same value can share the same instance. | [verb] To transfer stocks between brokers within an organization, rather than through the exchange. INTERPLANTED (15) [verb] To alternate plantings of two or more species. INTERPLEADED (16) INTERPOLATED (15) [verb] To introduce (something) between other things; especially to insert (possibly spurious) words into a text. | [verb] To estimate the value of a function between two points between which it is tabulated. | [verb] During the course of processing some data, and in response to a directive in that data, to fetch data from a different source and process it in-line along with the original data. INTERRELATED (13) [adjective] Having a mutual or reciprocal relation or parallelism; correlative. INTERROGATED (14) [verb] To question or quiz, especially in a thorough and/or aggressive manner | [verb] To query; to request information from. | [verb] To examine critically. INTERSPERSED (15) [verb] To mix two things irregularly, placing things of one kind among things of other: | [verb] To scatter or insert something into or among other things. | [verb] To diversify by placing or inserting other things among something. INTERTWISTED (16) [verb] To twist together; to intertwine INTROSPECTED (17) [verb] To engage in introspection. | [verb] To look into. INVESTIGATED (17) [verb] To inquire into or study in order to ascertain facts or information. | [verb] To examine, look into, or scrutinize in order to discover something hidden or secret. | [verb] To conduct an inquiry or examination. JACKHAMMERED (33) [verb] To use a jackhammer. | [verb] To break (something) using a jackhammer. | [verb] To form (something) using a jackhammer. JITTERBUGGED (24) [verb] To dance the jitterbug. LARGEHEARTED (17) [adjective] Possessing the properties associated with the heart as the seat of love; compassionate, generous, benevolent, forgiving, etc. LIGHTHEARTED (20) [adjective] Joyful, glad, taking pleasure in being alive; not depressed or sad. | [adjective] Enjoyably lacking of seriousness, not grave. LITHOGRAPHED (22) [verb] To create a copy of an image through lithography. | [adjective] Depicted in the form of a lithograph. LOCKSTITCHED (24) MACHICOLATED (22) [verb] To furnish with machicolations. | [adjective] Having machicolations. MAINSTREAMED (17) [verb] To popularize, to normalize, to render mainstream. | [verb] To become mainstream. | [verb] To educate (a disabled student) together with non-disabled students. MALCONTENTED (17) MALNOURISHED (18) [verb] To feed insufficiently, to cause malnutrition. | [adjective] Suffering from malnutrition MANUFACTURED (20) [verb] To make things, usually on a large scale, with tools and either physical labor or machinery. | [verb] To work (raw or partly wrought materials) into suitable forms for use. | [verb] To fabricate; to create false evidence to support a point. MARGINALIZED (25) [verb] To relegate (something, especially a topic or a group of people) to the margins or to a lower limit; to exclude socially or otherwise. | [adjective] Subject to marginalization. MASCULINISED (17) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASCULINIZED (26) [verb] To make masculine; to give typically male characteristics. MASTERMINDED (18) [verb] To act in the role of mastermind. MATERIALISED (15) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATERIALIZED (24) [verb] To cause to take physical form, or to cause an object to appear. | [verb] To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere. | [verb] To regard as matter; to consider or explain by the laws or principles which are appropriate to matter. MATHEMATIZED (29) [verb] To describe in terms of a mathematical equation. MATRICULATED (17) [verb] To enroll as a member of a body, especially of a college or university | [verb] To be enrolled as a member of a body, especially of a college or university. MEALYMOUTHED (23) [adjective] Prone to speaking evasively, indirectly, or duplicitously; not forthright MEMORIALISED (17) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MEMORIALIZED (26) [verb] To provide a memorial for someone; to commemorate | [verb] To create a written record of a meeting or conversation. | [verb] To petition with a memorial, or statement of facts. MERCHANDISED (21) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. MERCHANDIZED (30) [verb] To engage in trade; to carry on commerce. | [verb] To engage in in-store promotion of the sale of goods, as by display and arrangement of goods. | [verb] To engage in the trade of. METASTASIZED (24) [verb] (of a disease or tumour) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis. MICROGRAPHED (23) MICROMANAGED (20) [verb] To manage, direct, or control a person, group, or system to an unnecessary level of detail or precision. MIMEOGRAPHED (23) [verb] To make mimeograph copies. MINIATURIZED (24) [verb] To design or construct something on a miniature scale. | [adjective] That is a miniature version of something MISADDRESSED (17) [verb] To address (a letter, etc.) incorrectly. MISALLOCATED (17) [verb] To allocate incorrectly or inappropriately. MISAPPREHEND (22) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISASSEMBLED (19) MISCAPTIONED (19) MISCATALOGED (18) MISCHANNELED (20) MISCONCEIVED (22) [verb] To misunderstand MISCONDUCTED (20) [verb] To mismanage. | [verb] To behave inappropriately, to misbehave. | [verb] To act improperly. MISCONNECTED (19) MISCONSTRUED (17) [verb] To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand. MISDESCRIBED (20) [verb] To incorrectly explain or detail something or someone. MISDEVELOPED (21) MISDIAGNOSED (17) [verb] To incorrectly diagnose. MISESTIMATED (17) [verb] To estimate erroneously. MISEVALUATED (18) MISPERCEIVED (22) [verb] To perceive erroneously. MISPROGRAMED (20) MOLLYCODDLED (22) [verb] To be overprotective and indulgent toward; to pamper. MOUNTEBANKED (21) MOUSETRAPPED (19) [verb] To trap; to trick or fool (someone) into a bad situation. | [verb] To prevent (the user) from leaving a website by opening another copy when it is closed. MUDDLEHEADED (21) [adjective] Confused, groggy, semi-conscious. | [adjective] Foolish, stupid MULTICOLORED (17) [adjective] Having multiple colors. MULTIFACETED (20) [adjective] Having multiple facets. | [adjective] Having many aspects; nuanced or diverse. MULTILAYERED (18) [adjective] Having more than one layer. MULTILEVELED (18) MULTIPLICAND (19) [noun] A number that is to be multiplied by another (the multiplier). MULTIPRONGED (18) MULTISKILLED (19) [adjective] Having multiple skills MULTISTEMMED (19) MULTISTORIED (15) [adjective] Multi-storey. MULTITOWERED (18) MULTIWARHEAD (21) MYTHOLOGIZED (31) [verb] To interpret (a story etc.) as mythological; to explain the symbolic meaning of. | [verb] To construct a myth or mythology. | [verb] To make (something or someone) into a myth; to create a legend about. NATIONALISED (13) [verb] To make into, or to become, a nation. | [verb] To bring a private company under the control of a specific government. | [verb] To bring a concept such as a political issue or commercial campaign to the attention of the entire country. NATIONALIZED (22) [verb] To make into, or to become, a nation. | [verb] To bring a private company under the control of a specific government. | [verb] To bring a concept such as a political issue or commercial campaign to the attention of the entire country. NECESSITATED (15) [verb] To make necessary; to require (something) to be brought about. NEIGHBORHOOD (22) [noun] The quality of being a neighbor, of living nearby, next to each-other; proximity. | [noun] Close proximity, nearby area; particularly, close proximity to one's home. | [noun] The inhabitants of a residential area. NIGHTCLUBBED (23) NONACTIVATED (18) NONAUTOMATED (15) NONCERTIFIED (18) NONCOMMITTED (19) NONCONCURRED (17) NONCONFORMED (20) NONDEPRESSED (16) NONFEDERATED (17) NONIRRIGATED (14) NONMOTORIZED (24) NONNUCLEATED (15) NONREGULATED (14) NONSCHEDULED (19) [adjective] Not scheduled; not according to schedule. NONUNIONIZED (22) [adjective] Not unionized; lacking union representation NUCLEOCAPSID (19) [noun] The core structure of a virus, consisting of nucleic acid surrounded by a coat of protein ORCHESTRATED (18) [verb] To arrange or score music for performance by an orchestra. | [verb] To compose or arrange orchestral music for a dramatic performance. | [verb] To arrange or direct diverse elements to achieve a desired effect ORIENTALIZED (22) [verb] To make Oriental; to cause to conform to Oriental manners or conditions. ORTHOPTEROID (18) [noun] Any of the insects historically included in the order Orthoptera, including the cockroaches, earwigs, praying mantises, etc. OUTBARGAINED (16) OUTDELIVERED (17) OUTDISTANCED (16) [verb] To run further or faster than another, or to finish a race with a large margin. OUTGENERALED (14) [verb] To outdo or surpass (someone) in military skill or leadership. OUTGLITTERED (14) OUTINTRIGUED (14) OUTORGANIZED (23) OUTPERFORMED (20) [verb] To perform better than something or someone. OUTPOPULATED (17) OUTREBOUNDED (16) [verb] To get more rebounds than OUTSTRETCHED (18) [verb] To extend by stretching | [adjective] Extended or stretched out OVERACHIEVED (24) [verb] To achieve more or at a higher level of quality than was expected. OVERANALYZED (28) [verb] To analyze too much or in too much detail. OVERARRANGED (17) OVERASSERTED (16) OVERBALANCED (20) [verb] To throw (someone or something) off balance. | [verb] To lose one's balance. | [verb] To have an excess weight. OVERBLEACHED (23) OVERBORROWED (21) [verb] To borrow too much money. OVERBURDENED (19) [verb] To overload or overtax | [adjective] Excessively burdened OVERCONSUMED (20) OVERDESIGNED (18) OVERDIRECTED (19) OVEREDUCATED (19) [verb] To educate too much. | [adjective] Having received too much education OVERENAMORED (18) OVERENROLLED (16) OVEREQUIPPED (29) OVEREXPANDED (26) OVEREXTENDED (24) [verb] To expand or extend to an excessive degree, especially to do so beyond a safe limit. | [verb] To apply (a term) to too many referents, by overextension. | [verb] To push a pawn too far, so that it becomes vulnerable to the opponent's attacks. OVERFATIGUED (20) OVERFOCUSSED (21) OVERGOVERNED (20) OVERINDULGED (18) [verb] To indulge to excess. OVERINFLATED (19) [verb] To inflate excessively; to provide too much inflation | [adjective] Inflated; exaggerated OVERINFORMED (21) OVERMANNERED (18) OVERMASTERED (18) [verb] To overpower or overwhelm. OVEROPERATED (18) OVERPACKAGED (25) OVERPEDALLED (19) OVERPRODUCED (21) [verb] To produce more of something than one can use or sell. | [verb] To apply excess modifications to musical recordings, such as adding effects. OVERPROMISED (20) [verb] To promise more than is delivered OVERPROMOTED (20) OVERREPORTED (18) [verb] To report too much or too often. OVERSERVICED (21) OVERSHADOWED (23) [verb] To obscure something by casting a shadow. | [verb] To dominate something and make it seem insignificant. | [verb] To shelter or protect. OVERSLAUGHED (20) [verb] To hinder or stop, as by an overslaugh or impediment. OVERSTRAINED (16) [verb] To subject to an excessive demand on strength, resources, or abilities OVERSTRESSED (16) [verb] To place excessive emphasis on something | [verb] To place excessive physical stress on something, especially to such an extent that it deforms or breaks OVERSUPPLIED (20) [verb] To supply more than is needed. OVERUTILIZED (25) OVERWEIGHTED (23) [verb] To weigh down: to put too heavy a burden on. | [verb] To place excessive weight or emphasis on; to overestimate the importance of. OVERWINTERED (19) [verb] To keep or preserve for the winter. | [verb] To spend the winter (in a particular place). OVERWITHHELD (25) OVERWITHHOLD (25) PARAMETRIZED (26) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. | [adjective] Furnished with, or described in terms of parameters PARFOCALIZED (29) PARTICIPATED (19) [verb] To join in, to take part, to involve oneself (in something). | [verb] To share, share in (something). | [verb] To share (something) with others; to transfer (something) to or unto others. PEDUNCULATED (18) PERAMBULATED (19) [verb] To walk about, roam or stroll. | [verb] To inspect (an area) on foot. PEREGRINATED (16) [verb] To travel from place to place, or from one country to another, especially on foot; hence, to sojourn in foreign countries. | [verb] To travel through a specific place. PERSEVERATED (18) [verb] (instransitive) To persist in doing something; to continue to repeat an action after the original stimulus has ended. | [verb] To cause the perseveration of (a given reflex or response). PERSONALISED (15) [verb] To adapt something to the needs or tastes of an individual | [verb] To represent something abstract as a person; to embody | [adjective] Adapted to the needs of an individual PERSONALIZED (24) [verb] To adapt something to the needs or tastes of an individual | [verb] To represent something abstract as a person; to embody | [adjective] Adapted to the needs of an individual PHAGOCYTIZED (33) [verb] To ingest (something) by phagocytosis. PHAGOCYTOSED (24) [adjective] Engulfed and ingested as a result of phagocytosis PHOSPHATIZED (32) PHOSPHOLIPID (25) [noun] Any lipid, such as lecithin or cephalin, consisting of a diglyceride combined with a phosphate group and a simple organic molecule such as choline or ethanolamine; they are important constituents of biological membranes. PHOTOEXCITED (27) PHOTOGRAPHED (24) [verb] To take a photograph of. | [verb] To fix permanently in the memory etc. | [verb] To take photographs. PHOTOINDUCED (21) PHOTOIONIZED (27) PHOTOREDUCED (21) PHOTOSTATTED (18) [verb] To make such a photocopy of. PICKERELWEED (24) [noun] Any of several freshwater plants, of the genus Pontederia, that have heart-shaped leaves PLASTERBOARD (17) [noun] A construction material consisting of a rigid panel of several layers of fibreboard or paper bonded to a gypsum core. | [verb] To fit or reinforce with plasterboard. PLEROCERCOID (19) PONTIFICATED (20) [verb] To preside as a bishop, especially at mass. | [verb] To act like a pontiff; to express one's position or opinions dogmatically and pompously as if they were absolutely correct. | [verb] To speak in a patronizing, supercilious or pompous manner, especially at length. PREANNOUNCED (17) PREASSEMBLED (19) PRECANCELLED (19) PRECIPITATED (19) [verb] To make something happen suddenly and quickly. | [verb] To throw an object or person from a great height. | [verb] To send violently into a certain state or condition. PRECONCEIVED (22) [verb] To conceive, or form an opinion of, beforehand; to form a previous notion or idea of. | [adjective] (of an opinion or notion) Conceived beforehand: formed ahead of time. PRECONCERTED (19) [adjective] Agreed upon in advance. PREDOMINATED (18) [verb] To dominate, have control, or succeed by superior numbers or size. | [verb] To be prominent; to loom large; to be the chief component of a whole. | [verb] To dominate or hold power over, especially through numerical advantage; to outweigh. PREFORMATTED (20) PREMEDITATED (18) [verb] To meditate, consider, or plan beforehand; to think about and revolve in the mind beforehand. | [adjective] Planned, considered or estimated in advance; deliberate. PREMOISTENED (17) PRENOMINATED (17) PREPORTIONED (17) PREPOSSESSED (17) PREPROCESSED (19) [verb] To process in advance. PREPROGRAMED (20) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PREPURCHASED (22) PREQUALIFIED (27) [verb] To qualify or be qualified in advance. PREROGATIVED (19) PRESCHEDULED (21) PRESENTENCED (17) PRESIGNIFIED (19) PRESPECIFIED (22) PRESWEETENED (18) PRETENSIONED (15) [adjective] Tensioned prior to some other operation PRETERMITTED (17) [verb] To intentionally disregard something, allow it to go unnoticed, or change the subject in response to someone's comment; to omit or fail to carry out something; to prematurely terminate or interrupt something. PREVARICATED (20) [verb] To deviate, transgress; to go astray (from). | [verb] To shift or turn from direct speech or behaviour; to evade the truth; to waffle or be (intentionally) ambiguous. | [verb] To collude, as where an informer colludes with the defendant, and makes a sham prosecution. PROCESSIONED (17) PROLIFERATED (18) [verb] To increase in number or spread rapidly; to multiply. PROPORTIONED (17) [verb] To divide into proper shares; to apportion. | [verb] To form symmetrically. | [verb] To set or render in proportion. PROSELYTISED (18) [verb] To advertise one’s religious beliefs; to convert (someone) to one’s own faith or religious movement or encourage them to do so. | [verb] (by extension) To advertise a non-religious belief, way of living, cause, point of view, (scientific) hypothesis, social or other position, political party, or other organization; to convince someone to join such a cause or organization or support such a position; to recruit someone. PROSELYTIZED (27) [verb] To advertise one’s religious beliefs; to convert (someone) to one’s own faith or religious movement or encourage them to do so. | [verb] (by extension) To advertise a non-religious belief, way of living, cause, point of view, (scientific) hypothesis, social or other position, political party, or other organization; to convince someone to join such a cause or organization or support such a position; to recruit someone. PROUDHEARTED (19) PRUSSIANISED (15) PRUSSIANIZED (24) PUZZLEHEADED (37) QUARTERSAWED (25) RADIOGRAPHED (20) [verb] To produce a radiograph image. RADIOLABELED (16) RATIOCINATED (15) [verb] To use the powers of the mind logically and methodically; to reason. RATIONALISED (13) [adjective] Given a rational explanation | [verb] To make something rational or more rational. | [verb] To justify an immoral act, or illogical behaviour. “The process of thought by which one justifies a discreditable act, and by which one offers to oneself and the world a better motive for one's action than the true motive” RATIONALIZED (22) [verb] To make something rational or more rational. | [verb] To justify an immoral act, or illogical behaviour. “The process of thought by which one justifies a discreditable act, and by which one offers to oneself and the world a better motive for one's action than the true motive” | [verb] To remove radicals, without changing the value of an expression or the roots of an equation. REACCREDITED (18) REACQUAINTED (24) [verb] To acquaint again; to reintroduce or refamiliarise. REAFFORESTED (19) [verb] To reforest. REAGGREGATED (16) REATTRIBUTED (15) REAUTHORIZED (25) RECALCULATED (17) [verb] To calculate again. RECALIBRATED (17) [verb] To calibrate for a second or subsequent time RECHALLENGED (19) RECHANNELLED (18) RECHRISTENED (18) [verb] Christen again RECIPROCATED (19) [verb] To exchange two things, with both parties giving one thing and taking another thing. | [verb] To give something else in response (where the "thing" may also be abstract, a feeling or action) To make a reciprocal gift. | [verb] To move backwards and forwards, like a piston. RECIRCULATED (17) [verb] To circulate again. RECLASSIFIED (18) [verb] Classify again, give a new classification to RECONFIGURED (19) [verb] To arrange into a new configuration. RECONNOITRED (15) [verb] To perform a reconnaissance (of an area; an enemy position); to scout with the aim of gaining information. | [verb] To recognise. RECONSIDERED (16) [verb] To consider a matter again RECRIMINATED (17) [verb] To accuse in return, state an accusation in return. RECULTIVATED (18) REDETERMINED (16) [verb] To determine again REDISCOUNTED (16) [verb] To discount again. REDISCOVERED (19) [verb] To discover again; especially something previously lost or forgotten. REDISTRICTED (16) REDUPLICATED (18) [verb] To double again: to multiply: to repeat. | [verb] To repeat (a word or part of a word) in order to form a new word or phrase, possibly with modification of one of the repetitions. REEMPHASIZED (29) [verb] To emphasize again; to reiterate. REENGINEERED (14) [verb] To engineer again, to redesign or extensively modify in design. REFORMULATED (18) [verb] To formulate again or differently. REFRIGERATED (17) [verb] To cool down, make cool. | [verb] Now specifically, to keep cool by containing within a refrigerator. REGIONALIZED (23) [verb] To divide into or organize according to regions. | [verb] To administer on a regional basis. | [adjective] Divided into regions or considered on a regional basis REGURGITATED (15) [verb] To throw up or vomit; to eject what has previously been swallowed. | [verb] To cough up from the gut to feed its young, as an animal or bird does. | [verb] (by extension) To repeat verbatim. REHYPNOTIZED (30) REIDENTIFIED (17) REINCARNATED (15) [verb] To be, or cause to be, reborn, especially in a different body or as a different species. REINNERVATED (16) REINOCULATED (15) REINSTITUTED (13) [verb] To institute for a second or subsequent time REINTEGRATED (14) [verb] To integrate again or in a different manner | [verb] To restore something to a state of integration REINTRODUCED (16) [verb] To introduce again. | [adjective] (chiefly of a plant or animal) introduced again REKEYBOARDED (23) RELANDSCAPED (18) RELINQUISHED (25) [verb] To give up, abandon or retire from something. To trade away. | [verb] To let go (free, away), physically release. | [verb] To metaphorically surrender, yield control or possession. RELUBRICATED (17) REMONSTRATED (15) [verb] To object; to express disapproval (with, against). | [verb] Specifically, to lodge an official objection (especially by means of a remonstrance) with a monarch or other ruling body. | [verb] (often with an object consisting of direct speech or a clause beginning with that) To state or plead as an objection, formal protest, or expression of disapproval. RENCOUNTERED (15) [verb] To meet, encounter, come into contact with. | [verb] To attack hand to hand. RENDEZVOUSED (26) [verb] To meet at an agreed time and place. RENEGOTIATED (14) [verb] To negotiate new terms to replace old ones. REORIENTATED (13) [verb] To orientate anew; to cause to face a different direction. REPOSITIONED (15) [verb] To put into a new position REPRIVATIZED (27) REPROGRAMMED (20) [verb] To program anew or differently. | [verb] (by extension) To make a fundamental change to the behaviour or habits of. | [verb] To shift funds appropriated for one government program to a different government program. REREGISTERED (14) RESEGREGATED (15) RESENSITIZED (22) RESOCIALIZED (24) RESOLIDIFIED (17) RESTABILIZED (24) RESTIMULATED (15) RESTRUCTURED (15) [verb] To change the organization of. | [verb] To modify the terms of a loan, providing relief to a debtor who would otherwise be forced to default. RESUSCITATED (15) [verb] To restore consciousness, vigor, or life to. | [verb] To regain consciousness. RETRANSLATED (13) [verb] To translate again or anew. RETROGRESSED (14) [verb] To return to an earlier, simpler or worse condition; to regress. | [verb] To go backwards; to retreat. | [verb] To return to bad behaviour; to relapse. RETROSPECTED (17) REVACCINATED (20) [verb] To vaccinate again REVERBERATED (18) [verb] To ring or sound with many echos. | [verb] To have a lasting effect. | [verb] To repeatedly return. REVICTUALLED (18) ROMANTICISED (17) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. | [adjective] Interpreted in an unrealistic, idealized fashion. ROMANTICIZED (26) [verb] To interpret or view something in a romantic (unrealistic, idealized) manner. | [verb] To think or act in a romantic manner. | [adjective] Interpreted in an unrealistic, idealized fashion. RUBBERNECKED (23) [verb] To watch by craning the neck (as though it were made of rubber), especially if the observer and observed are in motion relative to each other. SACCHARIFIED (23) SCHISMATIZED (29) SCINTILLATED (15) [verb] To give off sparks; to shine as if emanating sparks; to twinkle or glow. | [verb] To throw off like sparks. SCRATCHBOARD (22) [noun] A technique in which drawings are created using sharp knives and tools for etching into a thin layer of white china clay that is coated with black India ink. SEMIDETACHED (21) [noun] Such a house. | [adjective] Of a house: joined to another one on one side, having one shared wall. SEMIFINISHED (21) [adjective] Partially finished SEMIPALMATED (19) [adjective] Having webs between some, but not all, of the toes SEQUESTRATED (22) [verb] To sequester. SHARECROPPED (22) [verb] To participate in a financial arrangement in which a tenant farmer pays for use of land with a share (part) of the crop raised on that land. SHIRTSLEEVED (19) SHORTCHANGED (22) [verb] To defraud someone by giving them less change than they should be given after a transaction. | [verb] (by extension) To deprive someone of something for which they paid. | [verb] To make disadvantaged by design. SHORTSIGHTED (20) [adjective] Near-sighted; myopic; unable to focus on distant objects. | [adjective] Unable to see long-term objectives; lacking foresight. SHUFFLEBOARD (24) [noun] A game that involves sliding a puck or coin towards a target. | [noun] The long, narrow board on which this game is played. SIMPLEMINDED (20) [adjective] Stupid. | [adjective] Unsophisticated; lacking subtlety. SINGULARIZED (23) [verb] To make singular. SKELETONISED (17) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKELETONIZED (26) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. | [adjective] Reduced to a skeleton. SLIPSTREAMED (17) [verb] To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator. | [verb] To incorporate additional software (such as patches) into an existing installer. SOLILOQUISED (22) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLILOQUIZED (31) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOMERSAULTED (15) [verb] To perform a somersault. SOUNDPROOFED (19) [verb] To make resistant to transmitting sound. SOUTHERNWOOD (19) [noun] An aromatic shrub, Artemisia abrotanum, related to wormwood. SPARKPLUGGED (23) SPERMATOZOID (26) [noun] A motile, ciliated male gamete produced in the antheridium of an alga, fern or gymnosperm. SPINSTERHOOD (18) STANDARDBRED (17) [noun] A breed of horse bred specifically for harness racing STANDARDISED (15) [verb] To establish a standard consisting of regulations for how something is to be done across an organization. | [verb] To make to conform to a standard. | [verb] To check for conformance with a standard. STANDARDIZED (24) [verb] To establish a standard consisting of regulations for how something is to be done across an organization. | [verb] To make to conform to a standard. | [verb] To check for conformance with a standard. STICKHANDLED (23) [verb] To maintain individual possession of the puck or ball by controlling it with movements of one's stick, especially to do so in a skillful manner. | [verb] (by extension) To deal capably and swiftly with a situation, especially in a manner which deflects potential problems. STONYHEARTED (19) STORYBOARDED (19) STOUTHEARTED (16) [adjective] Brave, courageous and plucky. | [adjective] Stubborn, resolute. STRAIGHTBRED (19) STRAIGHTENED (17) [verb] To cause to become straight. | [verb] To become straight. | [verb] To put in order; to sort; to tidy up. STRANGLEHOLD (17) [noun] A grip or control so strong as to stifle or cut off. | [verb] To hold a tight grip or control STRANGULATED (14) [verb] To stop flow through a vessel. | [verb] To strangle. | [adjective] Having the circulation stopped by compression; attended with arrest or obstruction of circulation, caused by constriction or compression. STRENGTHENED (17) [verb] To make strong or stronger; to add strength to; to increase the strength of; to fortify. | [verb] To empower; to give moral strength to; to encourage; to enhearten. | [verb] To augment; to improve; to intensify. STRINGHALTED (17) SUBARACHNOID (20) [adjective] Located or occurring below the arachnoid mater, often specifically between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater SUBCLUSTERED (17) SUBIRRIGATED (16) SUBNETWORKED (22) SUBOPTIMIZED (28) SUBORDINATED (16) [verb] To make subservient. | [verb] To treat as of less value or importance. | [verb] To make of lower priority in order of payment in bankruptcy. SUBSATURATED (15) SUBTHRESHOLD (21) SUBURBANISED (17) SUBURBANIZED (26) SUBVOCALIZED (29) [verb] To form (words or statements) in thought and express them inwardly without uttering them aloud. | [adjective] Expressed by speaking inwardly SUPERCHARGED (21) [verb] To increase the power of an internal combustion engine (either Otto or Diesel cycle) by compressing the inlet air with power extracted from the crankshaft. | [verb] To make faster or more powerful. | [verb] To overlay one charge upon another. SUPERIMPOSED (19) [verb] To place an object over another object, usually in such a way that both will be visible. | [verb] To establish a structural system over, independently of underlying structures. | [adjective] Positioned on or above something else, especially in layers SUPERINDUCED (18) [verb] To replace (someone) with someone else; to bring into another's position; especially, to take (a second wife) quickly after the death of a first, or while she is still alive. | [verb] To bring in or introduce as an addition; to produce, cause, bring on. | [verb] To cause (especially further disease) in addition (to an existing medical condition). SUPERPOWERED (20) SUPERSCRIBED (19) [verb] To write on the exterior of, the surface of, or above. | [verb] To write (something) on the exterior of an object, such as a document or an envelope. | [verb] To address (an envelope etc.). SUPPLEMENTED (19) [verb] To provide or make a supplement to something. SWASHBUCKLED (27) [verb] To take part in exciting romantic adventures. SWITCHBACKED (29) SYLLABICATED (20) SYNCHRONISED (21) [adjective] Operating in unison, in a state of synchronisation. | [verb] To cause two or more events or actions to happen at exactly the same time or same rate, or in a time-coordinated way. | [verb] To set (a clock or watch) to display the same time as another. SYNCHRONIZED (30) [verb] To cause two or more events or actions to happen at exactly the same time or same rate, or in a time-coordinated way. | [verb] To set (a clock or watch) to display the same time as another. | [verb] To cause (a set of files, data, or settings) on one computer or device to be (and try to remain) the same as on another. SYSTEMATISED (18) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATIZED (27) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. TELECOMMUTED (19) [verb] To work from home, sometimes for part of a working day or week, using a computer connected to one's employer's network or via the Internet. TEMPORALIZED (26) THERMOFORMED (23) THERMOSTATED (18) THOROUGHBRED (22) [noun] A horse of a breed derived from crosses between Arabian stallions and English mares, bred for racing. (usually capitalized: Thoroughbred.) | [noun] Any purebred horse. | [noun] A person of uncommon strength or endurance (like that of a thoroughbred horse). THOUSANDFOLD (20) THROTTLEHOLD (19) THUNDERCLOUD (19) [noun] A large, dark cloud, usually a cumulonimbus, charged with electricity and producing thunder and lightning; a stormcloud | [noun] (by extension) Something menacing and brooding. TRANQUILIZED (31) [verb] To calm (a person or animal) or put them to sleep using a drug. | [verb] To make (something or someone) tranquil. | [verb] To become tranquil. TRANSFIGURED (17) [verb] To transform the outward appearance of; to convert into a different form, state or substance. | [verb] To glorify or exalt. TRANSGRESSED (14) [verb] To exceed or overstep some limit or boundary. | [verb] To act in violation of some law. | [verb] (construed with against) To commit an offense; to sin. TRANSLOCATED (15) [verb] To displace, or move from one place to another. | [verb] (of a chromosomal segment) To cause to undergo translocation. | [verb] To cause to undergo translocation, usually a transition through a membrane. TRANSPIERCED (17) [verb] To pierce through; to pass through. TRANSPLANTED (15) [verb] To uproot (a growing plant), and plant it in another place. | [verb] To remove (something) and establish its residence in another place; to resettle or relocate. | [verb] To transfer (tissue or an organ) from one body to another, or from one part of a body to another. TRANSSHIPPED (20) [verb] To transfer something from one vessel or conveyance to another for onward shipment. | [verb] (of goods) To be transferred from one vessel or conveyance to another for onward shipment. TRIANGULATED (14) [verb] To locate by means of triangulation | [verb] To pit two others against each other in order to achieve a desired outcome or to gain an advantage; to "play both ends against the middle" TROPICALIZED (26) TUBERCULATED (17) TURBOCHARGED (21) [verb] To increase the power of (an internal combustion engine, either Otto or Diesel cycle) by compressing the inlet air with power extracted from the exhaust air. | [verb] To make faster or more powerful. | [adjective] Having a turbocharger TURTLENECKED (19) ULTRAREFINED (16) UNACCLIMATED (19) UNACCREDITED (18) [adjective] Not accredited; lacking accreditation. UNACCUSTOMED (19) [verb] To make or become used to a change from something one was accustomed to. | [adjective] Not used to an event or thing, not accustomed. UNACQUAINTED (24) [adjective] Not acquainted, unfamiliar (with someone or something). | [adjective] Not usual; unfamiliar; strange. UNADVERTISED (17) [adjective] Not advertised UNAFFILIATED (19) [verb] To discontinue one's affiliation with an organisation. | [noun] A person or organization having no affiliation. | [adjective] Not affiliated, not associated UNALLEVIATED (16) [adjective] Relentless UNASSOCIATED (15) [adjective] Not associated UNATTENUATED (13) UNATTRIBUTED (15) [adjective] Lacking attribution; of unknown authorship UNAUTHORIZED (25) [adjective] Not having any authority | [adjective] Without official authorization UNBARRICADED (18) UNCALCULATED (17) [adjective] Not calculated; lacking forethought. UNCALIBRATED (17) UNCELEBRATED (17) [adjective] Not celebrated; ignored UNCHALLENGED (19) [adjective] Not having any challengers. | [adjective] Lacking experience due to lack of challenges; untested. UNCHAPERONED (20) [adjective] Not chaperoned; not having a chaperone UNCHRISTENED (18) UNCHRONICLED (20) UNCIRCULATED (17) [adjective] Not circulated. UNCLASSIFIED (18) [adjective] Not classified | [verb] To declassify. UNCOMPOUNDED (20) [adjective] Not compounded. UNCONFOUNDED (19) UNCONJUGATED (23) UNCONSIDERED (16) [adjective] Not considered. UNCONTRACTED (17) UNCONTROLLED (15) [adjective] Not controlled; not under control. UNCORRELATED (15) [adjective] Not correlated | [adjective] Having a covariance of zero UNCOVENANTED (18) [adjective] Not bound by a covenant. | [adjective] Not promised by covenant. UNCULTIVATED (18) [adjective] Not cultivated by agricultural methods; not prepared for cultivation. | [adjective] Inadequately educated; lacking art or knowledge | [adjective] Not attended to or fostered. UNDECIPHERED (21) [adjective] Not deciphered. UNDECOMPOSED (20) UNDEFOLIATED (17) UNDERCHARGED (20) [verb] To charge less than the correct amount. | [verb] To put too small a charge into. UNDERCOUNTED (16) [verb] To count to an insufficient degree; to count one thing disproportionately less than another UNDEREXPOSED (23) [verb] To take a photograph using too small an exposure | [verb] To provide with insufficient publicity UNDERINSURED (14) [noun] One who has insufficient insurance. | [adjective] Not having sufficient insurance to cover loss or damage | [adjective] Not having proper health insurance UNDERPOWERED (19) [verb] To supply with insufficient power. | [adjective] Having insufficient power for its operation. UNDERREACTED (16) UNDERSHIRTED (17) UNDERSTAFFED (20) [adjective] Having an inadequate number of workers or assistants UNDERSTEERED (14) [verb] The action of a car when it does not follow the desired curve while cornering. Tyre slip of the front wheels. UNDERSTUDIED (15) [adjective] Insufficiently studied. | [verb] To study or know a role to such an extent as to be able to replace the normal performer when required. | [verb] To act as an understudy (to someone). UNDERWHELMED (22) [verb] To fail to impress; to perform disappointingly. UNDESIGNATED (15) [adjective] Not designated. UNDETERMINED (16) [adjective] Not determined; not settled; not decided. | [adjective] Not limited; not defined; indeterminate. UNDIMINISHED (19) [adjective] Not diminished. UNDISCHARGED (20) [adjective] Not discharged UNDISCOVERED (19) [adjective] That has not been discovered; unknown. | [adjective] That has not yet been discovered; unexplored. | [verb] To forget something discovered earlier. UNDISTRACTED (16) [adjective] Not distracted UNDOCUMENTED (18) [adjective] Lacking instructions or reference material. | [adjective] Not having official documents that provide identification, authorization, etc. | [noun] An immigrant who has entered a country (often as a migrant worker) and has no documentation authorizing them to (still) be present there. UNDRAMATIZED (25) UNDUPLICATED (18) UNEMBITTERED (17) UNENCUMBERED (19) [adjective] Not burdened with worries, cares or responsibilities. | [adjective] Free of encumbrance. | [adjective] (of property) Not subject to any claims. UNEXPURGATED (23) [adjective] Not expurgated, not having had anything objectionable removed UNFERTILIZED (25) [adjective] Not fertilized; uninseminated UNFORMULATED (18) [adjective] Not formulated. UNFREQUENTED (25) [adjective] Not frequented. UNGENTRIFIED (17) UNGERMINATED (16) UNGLAMORIZED (25) UNHYDROLYZED (32) UNHYPHENATED (24) [verb] To remove or displace a hyphen from. | [adjective] Lacking a hyphen. | [adjective] Of people, belonging to a single ethnicity or nationality: names for multi-ethnic/multi-nationality groups generally require a hyphen to connect the names being combined. UNIDENTIFIED (17) [adjective] Not identified; having an unknown or unnamed identity. UNILLUSIONED (13) UNINFLUENCED (18) [adjective] Not influenced UNINOCULATED (15) UNINSTRUCTED (15) [adjective] Not instructed | [adjective] Uneducated UNINTEGRATED (14) UNINTERESTED (13) [adjective] Unmotivated by personal interest; unbiased, disinterested. | [adjective] Not interested; indifferent, not concerned. UNIRRADIATED (14) UNLIKELIHOOD (20) [noun] Absence of likelihood; the state of being unlikely or improbable; improbability. UNMECHANIZED (29) UNMODERNIZED (25) [adjective] Not modernized. UNMYELINATED (18) UNOBSTRUCTED (17) [adjective] Not obstructed UNORNAMENTED (15) [adjective] Not ornamented; without ornament. UNOXYGENATED (24) UNPARALLELED (15) [adjective] Having no parallel; without equal; lacking anything similar or worthy of comparison. UNPREJUDICED (25) [adjective] Not prejudiced. UNPRINCIPLED (19) [adjective] Lacking moral values UNPRIVILEGED (19) [adjective] Not having special privileges, opposite of privileged. | [adjective] Not requiring special privileges UNPROGRAMMED (20) UNPRONOUNCED (17) UNPUBLICIZED (28) [adjective] Not publicized. UNPUNCTUATED (17) [verb] To remove punctuation from (a text). | [adjective] Not punctuated, lacking punctuation. UNQUESTIONED (22) [adjective] (of a person) Not subjected to an interrogation | [adjective] (of a fact) Accepted without question; indisputable UNRECOGNIZED (25) [adjective] Not recognized UNRECONCILED (17) [adjective] Not reconciled | [adjective] Inconsistent | [verb] To sever; to make no longer reconciled to each other. UNREGISTERED (14) [adjective] Not registered. | [verb] To undo the process of registration for. | [verb] To undo a registration process. UNREINFORCED (18) UNREMEMBERED (19) [adjective] Not remembered UNRESTRAINED (13) [verb] To free from restraints. | [adjective] Immoderate; not restrained or held in check | [adjective] Spontaneous, natural and informal; unconstrained UNRESTRICTED (15) [adjective] Not restricted or confined | [adjective] Having no security classification UNSANCTIONED (15) [adjective] Not sanctioned; not approved by a sanctioning body. UNSEGREGATED (15) [adjective] Not segregated UNSENSITIZED (22) UNSTERILIZED (22) [adjective] Not sterilized. UNSTRATIFIED (16) UNSTRUCTURED (15) [adjective] Lacking structure. UNSUBSIDIZED (25) UNSUPERVISED (18) [adjective] Not supervised; not being constantly observed. UNTRANSLATED (13) [adjective] Not translated; still in the original language. | [adjective] Not converted from a processed mRNA sequence into a protein. UNVACCINATED (20) [adjective] Not vaccinated UNVENTILATED (16) [adjective] Not ventilated, lacking ventilation. UNVERBALIZED (27) VACATIONLAND (18) [noun] An area that is often the site of vacations, or well suited for vacations. VASECTOMIZED (29) [verb] To perform a vasectomy | [adjective] That has been subjected to vasectomy VERMICULATED (20) [verb] To decorate with lines resembling the tracks of worms. | [adjective] Decorated with lines like worm tracks. WATERFLOODED (20) WATERPROOFED (21) [verb] To make waterproof or water-resistant. | [adjective] Having been made waterproof WEATHERBOARD (21) [noun] The windward side of a vessel. | [noun] A plank placed over an opening to keep out driven water. | [noun] Any of a series of horizontal boards used to cover the exterior of a timber-framed building; clapboard. WHIPSTITCHED (26) [verb] To sew using such a stitch. | [verb] To half-plough or rafter. WHOLEHEARTED (22) [adjective] Having no reservations; showing unconditional and enthusiastic support. WOODENHEADED (21)

13-Letter Words (361)

ADMINISTRATED (17) [verb] To administer | [verb] The act or function of providing maintenance and general housekeeping for computer systems, networks, peripheral equipment, etc. AESTHETICIZED (28) [verb] To make aesthetic; to show something at its best, most pleasing or most artistic. ALLOPOLYPLOID (21) ANAPHYLACTOID (24) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of anaphylaxis; relating to a severe allergic reaction that mimics anaphylaxis but does not involve an immunological mechanism. ANATHEMATIZED (28) [verb] To cause to be, or to declare as, an anathema or evil. ANTIAPARTHEID (19) [adjective] Acting against or opposing apartheid. ANTIBILLBOARD (18) APOSTROPHISED (21) [verb] To address using the form of rhetoric called the apostrophe. | [verb] To add one or more apostrophe characters to text to indicate missing letters. APOSTROPHIZED (30) [verb] To address using the form of rhetoric called the apostrophe. | [verb] To add one or more apostrophe characters to text to indicate missing letters. ATTITUDINISED (15) [verb] To assume an affected, unnatural exaggerated attitude or pose. | [verb] To cause to assume a pose. | [verb] To give the appearance of, make a show of by posing. ATTITUDINIZED (24) [verb] To assume an affected, unnatural exaggerated attitude or pose. | [verb] To cause to assume a pose. | [verb] To give the appearance of, make a show of by posing. AUTHENTICATED (19) [verb] To render authentic; to give authority to, by the proof, attestation, or formalities required by law, or sufficient to entitle to credit. | [verb] To prove authentic; to determine as real and true. AUTOPOLYPLOID (21) [noun] An organism that has multiple sets of chromosomes derived from the same species. AUTOSUGGESTED (16) BACKSCATTERED (24) [verb] To scatter particles and/or radiation back to the direction from which they come. BIOENGINEERED (17) [adjective] Produced, or modified, by bioengineering BROKENHEARTED (23) [adjective] Grieved and disappointed, especially with the loss of a beloved person or thing, such as the repudiation of a romantic relationship. CANDLELIGHTED (21) CATERCORNERED (18) [adjective] Situated or placed diagonally; at an angle across from something else, typically opposite corners. | [adverb] In a diagonal direction; diagonally across. CHARACTERIZED (30) [verb] To depict someone or something a particular way (often negative). | [verb] To be typical of. | [verb] To determine the characteristics of. CHATEAUBRIAND (21) [noun] A thick, juicy cut from the center of a beef tenderloin. CHOREOGRAPHED (25) [verb] To design and record the choreography for a dramatic work such as a ballet | [verb] To direct the development of a project; to orchestrate | [adjective] Made to work together; orchestrated CHOWDERHEADED (27) [adjective] Stupid or foolish; having a blockhead or dull mind. CHUCKLEHEADED (29) [adjective] Stupid or foolish; lacking intelligence or common sense. CIRCUMSCRIBED (24) [verb] To draw a line around; to encircle. | [verb] To limit narrowly; to restrict. | [verb] To draw the smallest circle or higher-dimensional sphere that has (a polyhedron, polygon, etc.) in its interior. CIRCUMSTANCED (22) [adjective] Placed in particular circumstances or conditions; situated. CLAPPERCLAWED (25) COLLECTIVISED (21) [verb] To organize a farm or industrial enterprise on the basis of collective control COLLECTIVIZED (30) [verb] To organize a farm or industrial enterprise on the basis of collective control COMPARTMENTED (22) [adjective] Divided into compartments. | [adjective] Having (a specified type of) compartments. CONCELEBRATED (20) [verb] To celebrate along with others | [verb] (of a newly ordained priest) To celebrate a mass along with the bishop who ordained him CONGLOMERATED (19) [verb] To combine together into a larger mass. | [verb] To combine together into a larger corporation. CONGLUTINATED (17) [verb] Glued or stuck together; united by means of a glutinous substance. | [adjective] United or joined together in a mass. CONGRATULATED (17) [verb] To express one’s sympathetic pleasure or joy to the person(s) it is felt for. | [verb] To consider oneself fortunate in some matter. CONSERVATIZED (28) CONTAINERISED (16) [adjective] Of freight, packed in a container for transport. | [verb] To transport (cargo) in large, standard containers. | [verb] To modify (a ship or industry) to use such containers. CONTAINERIZED (25) [adjective] Of freight, packed in a container for transport. | [verb] To transport (cargo) in large, standard containers. | [verb] To modify (a ship or industry) to use such containers. CONTEMPORIZED (29) [verb] Past tense of contemporize; to make contemporary or to adapt to present times. COPOLYMERIZED (32) [adjective] Polymerized, along with another compound, to form a copolymer COTRANSPORTED (18) [verb] Past tense of cotransport; transported together or simultaneously, especially referring to the movement of two or more substances across a cell membrane by a single carrier protein. COUNTERARGUED (17) [verb] Past tense of counterargue; to present an opposing argument in response to another argument. COUNTERDEMAND (19) COUNTERFEITED (19) [verb] To falsely produce what appears to be official or valid; to produce a forged copy of. | [verb] To produce a faithful copy of. | [verb] To feign; to mimic. COUNTERMANDED (19) [verb] To revoke (a former command); to cancel or rescind by giving an order contrary to one previously given. | [verb] To recall a person or unit with such an order. | [verb] To prohibit. COUNTERPOISED (18) [verb] To act against with equal weight; to equal in weight; to balance the weight of; to counterbalance. | [verb] To act against with equal power; to balance. COUNTERSIGNED (17) [verb] To sign on the opposite side of (a document). | [verb] (by extension) To add a second signature to a document, affirming the validity of the signature of another person. COUNTERSTATED (16) COUNTERVAILED (19) [verb] To have the same value as. | [verb] To counteract, counterbalance or neutralize. | [verb] To compensate for. CREDENTIALLED (17) [adjective] Having or possessing credentials; qualified or certified through documented evidence of achievement or authority. CRYOPRESERVED (24) [verb] To preserve something (especially biological tissue) by freezing it and holding it a very low temperature | [adjective] Preserved by the use of cryopreservation DECAFFEINATED (23) [adjective] From which caffeine has been removed (e.g. decaffeinated coffee). DECENTRALIZED (26) [verb] To cause something to change from being concentrated at one point to being distributed across a number of points. | [verb] To reduce the authority of a governing body by distributing that authority among several bodies. | [adjective] Not centralized; having no center or several centers DECHLORINATED (20) DECOMPENSATED (21) DECONDITIONED (18) [verb] To adapt to a less demanding environment than that to which one was previously conditioned. DECONSECRATED (19) [verb] To remove the consecration from a church or similar building DECONSTRUCTED (19) [verb] To break something down into its component parts. | [verb] To analyse in terms of deconstruction (a philosophical theory of textual criticism). | [verb] To analyse (generally). DEFENESTRATED (18) [verb] To eject or throw (someone or something) from a window; compare transfenestrate. | [verb] To throw out; to remove or dismiss (someone) from a position of power or authority. | [verb] To remove a Windows operating system from a computer. DEFIBRILLATED (20) [verb] To stop the fibrillation of the heart in order to restore normal contractions, especially by the use of an electric shock. DEMILITARIZED (26) [verb] To remove troops from an area. | [verb] To prevent troops from entering an area. | [verb] To return an area to civilian control. DEMINERALIZED (26) [adjective] From which all minerals have been removed. DENATURALIZED (24) [verb] To revoke or deny the citizenship of. | [verb] To make less natural; to cause to deviate from its nature. DENUCLEARIZED (26) [verb] To ban, remove or reduce the numbers of nuclear weapons in an area. DEPOLITICIZED (28) [verb] To remove something from political influence DEPOLYMERIZED (31) [verb] To decompose a polymer into smaller fragments. DEPRESSURIZED (26) [verb] To reduce the air pressure within a chamber. | [verb] To have the pressure of one's environmental atmosphere reduced. DIPHTHONGIZED (33) [verb] To change to a diphthong, as by inserting or removing a vowel. | [verb] To become a diphthong. DISACCUSTOMED (21) DISADVANTAGED (20) [verb] To place at a disadvantage. | [adjective] Lacking an advantage relative to another. | [adjective] Poor; in financial difficulties. DISAFFILIATED (21) [verb] To cease to have an affiliation (with); to take steps to break an affiliation or association. DISAGGREGATED (18) [verb] To separate or break down into components DISAMBIGUATED (20) [verb] To remove ambiguities from; to make less ambiguous; to clarify or specify which of multiple possibilities, e.g. possible meanings of an ambiguous statement, applies, or to invite or require this. | [verb] To distinguish one word or lexical unit (from a different one which has a similar form). DISASSOCIATED (17) [verb] To separate oneself from a person or situation. | [verb] To separate into smaller discrete units. | [verb] To separate from related items. DISCRIMINATED (19) [verb] To make distinctions. | [verb] (construed with against) To make decisions based on prejudice. | [verb] To set apart as being different; to mark as different; to separate from another by discerning differences; to distinguish. DISEMBOWELLED (22) [verb] To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate. | [verb] To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider. DISENCUMBERED (21) [verb] To remove an encumbrance or burden from (someone or something). DISENTHRALLED (18) [verb] To set free from thraldom or oppression. DISFRANCHISED (23) [verb] To deprive someone of some privilege, especially the right to vote; to disenfranchise. DISHARMONIZED (29) DISILLUSIONED (15) [verb] To free or deprive of illusion; to disenchant. | [adjective] Disappointed; experiencing disillusionment; having lost one's illusions. DISINTEGRATED (16) [verb] To undo the integrity of, break into parts. | [verb] To fall apart, break up into parts. | [adjective] That has undergone disintegration DISINTERESTED (15) [adjective] Having no stake or interest in the outcome; free of bias, impartial. | [adjective] Uninterested, lacking interest. DISORIENTATED (15) [verb] To cause to lose orientation or direction. | [verb] To confuse or befuddle. DISQUANTITIED (24) DISREMEMBERED (21) [verb] To fail to remember; to forget. DISTINGUISHED (19) [verb] To recognize someone or something as different from others based on its characteristics. | [verb] To see someone or something clearly or distinctly. | [verb] To make oneself noticeably different or better from others through accomplishments. DISUBSTITUTED (17) [adjective] Having two substituents DUMBFOUNDERED (23) EDITORIALIZED (24) [verb] To express one's opinion as if in an editorial, or as if it were an objective statement. ELECTIONEERED (16) [verb] To campaign for an elective office, on one's own behalf, or on behalf of another, particularly by direct contact. ELECTROFORMED (21) ELECTROPLATED (18) [verb] To coat (an object) with a thin layer of metal using electrolysis | [adjective] Having a thin electrochemical layer of metal deposited on its surface EMOTIONALIZED (25) [verb] To give something an emotional quality. | [verb] To make an emotional display. ENDOPOLYPLOID (22) ESSENTIALIZED (23) [verb] To reduce to its essence. EXSANGUINATED (22) [verb] To kill by means of blood loss. | [verb] To die by means of blood loss. | [verb] To drain a body (living or dead) of blood. FANTASTICATED (19) [verb] To make fantastical. | [verb] To behave fantastically. FEATHERBEDDED (24) [verb] To treat someone with excessive indulgence; to pamper, cosset or mollycoddle. FEATHERHEADED (24) [adjective] Giddy; frivolous; foolish FELLOWSHIPPED (27) FICTIONALISED (19) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONALIZED (28) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FIELDSTRIPPED (22) FINGERPRINTED (20) [verb] To take somebody's fingerprints. | [verb] To identify something uniquely by a combination of measurements. FLABBERGASTED (22) [verb] To overwhelm with bewilderment; to amaze, confound, or stun, especially in a ludicrous manner. | [adjective] Appalled, annoyed, exhausted or disgusted. | [adjective] Damned. FORESHORTENED (20) [verb] To render the image of an object such that it appears to be receding in space as it is perceived visually. | [verb] To abridge, reduce, contract. | [verb] To make shorter. GERRYMANDERED (21) [verb] To divide a geographic area into voting districts in such a way as to give an unfair advantage to one party in an election. | [verb] (by extension) To draw dividing lines for other types of districts in an unintuitive way to favor a particular group or for other perceived gain. GINGERBREADED (19) GRANDFATHERED (22) [verb] To be, or act as, a grandfather to. | [verb] To retain discontinued laws or rules for (a thing, person or organization previously affected by them). HEADQUARTERED (27) [verb] To provide (an organization) with headquarters. | [verb] To establish headquarters. HYPEREXTENDED (30) [verb] To extend a joint beyond its normal position in a way that stresses the ligaments, often causing injury | [adjective] Extremely long; extended greatly HYPERINFLATED (25) HYPERTROPHIED (27) HYPOEUTECTOID (24) INCAPACITATED (20) [verb] To make someone or something incapable of doing something; to disable. | [verb] To make someone ineligible; to disqualify. | [adjective] Rendered unable to act; restricted from taking action. INDISCIPLINED (19) INDOCTRINATED (17) [verb] To teach with a biased, one-sided or uncritical ideology; to brainwash. | [verb] To teach; to instruct. INEXPERIENCED (25) [adjective] Not experienced; lacking knowledge or experience; green. | [adjective] Virginal or lacking in personal knowledge and experiences of sex. INSOLUBILIZED (25) [verb] To make insoluble. | [adjective] Made insoluble. INTERCOMPARED (20) INTERDEPENDED (18) [verb] To depend mutually; to depend on each other. INTERDIFFUSED (21) INTERINVOLVED (20) INTERMEDIATED (17) [verb] To mediate, to be an intermediate. | [verb] To arrange, in the manner of a broker. INTERPELLATED (16) [verb] To interrupt (someone) so as to inform or question (that person about something). | [verb] To address (a person) in a way that presupposes a particular identification of them; to give (a person) an identity (which may or may not be accurate). | [verb] To question (someone) formally concerning official or governmental policy or business. ISOCARBOXAZID (34) KNUCKLEHEADED (28) LEGITIMATIZED (26) [verb] To make legitimate. | [verb] To legalize. MALFUNCTIONED (21) [verb] To function improperly | [verb] To fail to function METAMORPHOSED (23) [verb] (of a moth or insect) To undergo metamorphosis. | [verb] (by extension) To undergo some transformation. | [verb] To transform (something) so that it has a completely different appearance. MICROINJECTED (27) [verb] To inject with a micropipette. MISATTRIBUTED (18) [verb] To erroneously attribute; to falsely ascribe; used especially of authorship. MISCALCULATED (20) [verb] To calculate incorrectly. | [verb] To make a gross error in judgement. MISCHANNELLED (21) MISCLASSIFIED (21) [verb] To classify incorrectly. MISEMPHASIZED (32) MISFUNCTIONED (21) MISIDENTIFIED (20) [adjective] Identified incorrectly | [verb] To mistake the identity. MISPOSITIONED (18) MISPROGRAMMED (23) MISPRONOUNCED (20) [verb] To pronounce (a word, phrase, etc.) incorrectly. | [adjective] Pronounced incorrectly. MISREGISTERED (17) MISREMEMBERED (22) [verb] To remember incorrectly. MISTRANSLATED (16) [verb] To translate incorrectly. MISUNDERSTAND (17) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MISUNDERSTOOD (17) [verb] To understand incorrectly, while believing one has understood correctly. MONONUCLEATED (18) MULTIBARRELED (18) MULTIBRANCHED (23) MULTISTRANDED (17) MULTITALENTED (16) [adjective] Having skill or talent in more than one field. MUNICIPALIZED (29) [verb] To convert into a municipality NONACCREDITED (19) NONAFFILIATED (20) NONASSOCIATED (16) NONCLASSIFIED (19) [adjective] Not classified or not subject to classification. NONCONJUGATED (24) NONCONTROLLED (16) NONCULTIVATED (19) NONESTERIFIED (17) NONINTEGRATED (15) NONIRRADIATED (15) NONMYELINATED (19) NONRESTRICTED (16) NONSEGREGATED (16) [adjective] Not segregated. NONSTRUCTURED (16) NONSUBSIDIZED (26) NORTHEASTWARD (20) [adjective] In or toward the northeast | [adverb] Toward the northeast NORTHWESTWARD (23) [adjective] In or toward the northwest | [adverb] Toward the northwest OUTMANEUVERED (19) [verb] To perform movements more adroitly or successfully than. | [adjective] Overcome by the maneuvering of others. OUTPOLITICKED (22) OUTREPRODUCED (19) OVERAMPLIFIED (24) OVERBEJEWELED (29) OVERCIVILIZED (31) OVERCOMMITTED (23) [verb] To make excessive commitments, either beyond one's ability or beyond what is reasonable | [adjective] Having committed too much of one's time or resources. OVERCONCERNED (21) OVERCORRECTED (21) OVERDECORATED (20) [verb] To decorate or embellish to an excessive degree OVERDEVELOPED (23) [verb] To develop to an excessive degree | [verb] To develop a photographic film for too long | [adjective] Excessively developed OVERESTIMATED (19) [verb] To judge or calculate too highly. OVEREXERCISED (26) OVEREXPLAINED (26) OVEREXPLOITED (26) [verb] To exploit excessively OVERFULFILLED (23) [verb] To do more than is necessary to fulfil something OVERHARVESTED (23) OVERIDEALIZED (27) OVERIMPRESSED (21) OVERMEDICATED (22) OVERNOURISHED (20) OVERORGANIZED (27) OVERPERSUADED (20) OVERPOPULATED (21) [verb] To fill with too many individuals; to exceed the capacity of a region to contain the population. | [adjective] Having or consisting of a higher population than can be sustained. OVERPROCESSED (21) OVERPROGRAMED (22) OVERPROTECTED (21) [verb] To protect to an excessive degree; to coddle OVERQUALIFIED (29) [adjective] Having too many qualifications to be deemed appropriate for a (usually unskilled) job. OVERREGULATED (18) OVERRESPONDED (20) OVERSATURATED (17) OVERSTRETCHED (22) [verb] To stretch too far. | [verb] To stretch over something. | [adjective] Subject to demands that are more than can be reasonably handled. OVERSWEETENED (20) OVERTIGHTENED (21) PAMPHLETEERED (23) [verb] To publish and distribute pamphlets as a form of propaganda. PARAMETERIZED (27) [verb] To describe in terms of parameters. | [verb] To rewrite (a database query, etc.) as a template into which parameters can be inserted. PARENTHESIZED (28) [verb] To place text in parentheses. | [verb] To interject. | [adjective] Between parentheses. PARTICLEBOARD (20) [noun] A structural material manufactured from wood particles (such as chips and shavings) by pressing, and binding through resin PHILOSOPHISED (24) [verb] To ponder or reason out philosophically. PHILOSOPHIZED (33) [verb] To ponder or reason out philosophically. PHOSPHORESCED (26) [verb] To exhibit phosphorescence PHOTOCOMPOSED (25) PHOTOENGRAVED (23) PHOTOOXIDIZED (36) PICTORIALIZED (27) POLITICALIZED (27) PORCELAINIZED (27) POSTTENSIONED (16) PREDESIGNATED (18) PREDESTINATED (17) [verb] To predestine. PREDETERMINED (19) [verb] To determine or decide in advance. | [verb] To doom by previous decree; to foredoom. | [adjective] Determined in advance PREFABRICATED (23) [adjective] Manufactured in advance, usually to a standard format, and then assembled on site | [adjective] Invented in advance | [verb] To manufacture (a building, etc.) in standard components that can be fitted together on site. PREFORMULATED (21) PREPONDERATED (19) [verb] To outweigh; to be heavier than; to exceed in weight | [verb] To overpower by stronger or moral power. | [verb] To cause to prefer; to incline; to decide. PREPROGRAMMED (23) [verb] To program something in advance. | [verb] To predispose to certain thoughts or behaviours. PREREGISTERED (17) [verb] To register for something (especially for a course of education) prior to its start. | [verb] To register or enroll (a person, especially a student) prior to the start of something. PRESANCTIFIED (21) PRESTERILIZED (25) PRESTRUCTURED (18) PROPAGANDIZED (29) [verb] To use or spread propaganda. | [verb] To tell propaganda to someone in an attempt to influence one's views. | [verb] To use something or someone in propaganda purposes. PROPOSITIONED (18) [verb] To make a suggestion of sexual intercourse to (someone with whom one is not sexually involved). | [verb] To make an offer or suggestion to (someone). PSYCHOLOGISED (25) [verb] To interpret or analyze in psychological terms PSYCHOLOGIZED (34) [verb] To interpret or analyze in psychological terms QUARTERBACKED (31) [verb] To play the position of quarterback. | [verb] (by extension) To lead a team or group; to be primarily responsible for some group project or activity. RADIOLABELLED (17) RATTLEBRAINED (16) REACCELERATED (18) REAPPORTIONED (18) [verb] To apportion again; to redistribute or reallocate. REARTICULATED (16) RECAPITALIZED (27) [verb] To change how a corporation is structured. RECAPITULATED (18) [verb] To summarize or repeat in concise form. | [verb] (of an organism) During an individual's development, to pass through stages corresponding to the species' stages of evolutionary development. | [verb] To reproduce or closely resemble (as in structure or function). RECENTRIFUGED (20) RECONDITIONED (17) [verb] To restore to a functional state, or to a condition resembling the original. | [adjective] Which has been reconditioned RECONNOITERED (16) [verb] To perform a reconnaissance (of an area; an enemy position); to scout with the aim of acquiring information. | [adjective] Of a region or situation that has been surveyed (especially in a military situation). RECONSECRATED (18) [verb] To consecrate again. RECONSTITUTED (16) [verb] To construct something anew, or in a different manner | [verb] To add liquid to a concentrated or dehydrated food to return it to its original consistency | [adjective] Constructed anew RECONSTRUCTED (18) [verb] To construct again; to restore. | [verb] To attempt to understand an event by recreating or talking through the circumstances. | [adjective] Constructed or assembled again; rebuilt or renovated REDINTEGRATED (16) [verb] To renew, restore to wholeness. | [verb] (of a stimulus element) To reinstate a memory by redintegration. REDISTRIBUTED (17) [verb] To distribute again. REEMBROIDERED (19) REENCOUNTERED (16) REESTABLISHED (19) [verb] To establish again. | [verb] To restore to a previously operational state. REEXPERIENCED (25) REFLECTORIZED (28) REHABILITATED (19) [verb] To restore (someone) to their former state, reputation, possessions, status etc. | [verb] To vindicate; to restore the reputation or image of (a person, concept etc.). | [verb] To return (something) to its original condition. REINTERPRETED (16) [verb] To interpret again. | [adjective] Interpreted again REINTERVIEWED (20) REINVIGORATED (18) [verb] To give new life, energy or strength to someone or something; to revitalize | [adjective] Revitalized or rejuvenated REMILITARIZED (25) [verb] To militarize (a demilitarized area) again. REPOPULARIZED (27) REPRESSURIZED (25) REPRISTINATED (16) REPROVISIONED (19) REQUISITIONED (23) [verb] To demand something, especially for a military need of staff, supplies or transport. RESYNTHESIZED (29) RETRANSFERRED (17) RETRANSFORMED (19) RETRANSMITTED (16) [verb] To transmit again. REUPHOLSTERED (19) [verb] To upholster again; to replace the attached fabric covering on furniture. SECTARIANIZED (25) [verb] To imbue with sectarian feelings; to subject to the control of a sect. SEMICIVILIZED (30) [adjective] Somewhat or partially civilized. SEXTUPLICATED (25) SHUTTLECOCKED (25) SOMNAMBULATED (20) SOPHISTICATED (21) [verb] To make less natural or innocent. | [verb] To practice sophistry; change the meaning of, or be vague about in order to mislead or deceive. | [verb] To alter and make impure, as with the intention to deceive. SOUTHEASTWARD (20) [adjective] In or toward the southeast | [adverb] Toward the southeast SOUTHWESTWARD (23) [adjective] In or toward the southwest | [adverb] Toward the southwest SPIRITUALIZED (25) [verb] To make spiritual; to invoke spirituality. | [verb] To refine intellectually or morally; to purify from the corrupting influence of the world; to give a spiritual character or tendency to. | [verb] To give a spiritual meaning to; to take in a spiritual sense; opposed to literalize. STEAMROLLERED (16) [verb] To level a road using a steamroller | [verb] To proceed ruthlessly against all opposition as if with an overwhelming force; to overpower STEREOGRAPHED (20) STRAIGHTLACED (20) [adjective] Having narrow views on moral matters; prudish. SUBCLASSIFIED (21) SUBCONTRACTED (20) [verb] To contract out portions of a larger contracted project. SUBINFEUDATED (20) SUBJECTIVISED (28) SUBJECTIVIZED (37) SUBSTANTIATED (16) [verb] To verify something by supplying evidence; to authenticate or corroborate | [verb] To give material form or substance to something; to embody; to record in documents SUMMERSAULTED (18) [verb] To perform a somersault. SUPERABOUNDED (19) [verb] To abound very much; to be superabundant. SUPERANNUATED (16) [verb] To retire or put out of use due to age. | [verb] To show to be obsolete due to age. | [verb] To retire due to age. SUPERELEVATED (19) SUPERHARDENED (20) SUPERINFECTED (21) SUPERINTENDED (17) [verb] To oversee the work of others; to supervise. | [verb] To administer the affairs of something or someone. SUPEROVULATED (19) TECHNICALIZED (30) TECHNOLOGIZED (29) [verb] To make technological; to equip with technology. TENDERHEARTED (18) [adjective] Compassionate for another's distress | [adjective] Easily moved to love TERGIVERSATED (18) [verb] To evade, to equivocate using subterfuge; to obfuscate in a deliberate manner. | [verb] To change sides or affiliation; to apostatize. THENCEFORWARD (25) [adverb] From then on; from that time on THERMOSTATTED (19) THIMBLERIGGED (23) THYMECTOMIZED (35) TRANQUILLIZED (32) [verb] To calm (a person or animal) or put them to sleep using a drug. | [verb] To make (something or someone) tranquil. | [verb] To become tranquil. TRANSGENDERED (16) [verb] To change the gender of; (used loosely) to change the sex of. (Compare transsex.) | [noun] A transgender person. | [adjective] Transgender; denoting or relating to a person whose gender identity does not correspond with their sex assigned at birth. TRANSMIGRATED (17) [verb] To migrate to another country. | [verb] (of the soul) To pass into another body after death. TRANSVALUATED (17) TROTHPLIGHTED (23) ULTRARAREFIED (17) UNACCOMPANIED (22) [adjective] Travelling without companions | [adjective] Performed or scored without accompaniment; solo UNADJUDICATED (25) UNADULTERATED (15) [adjective] Pure; not mixed or adulterated with anything | [adjective] Utter or out-and-out, especially in the phrase unadulterated truth UNANTICIPATED (18) [adjective] Not anticipated. UNAPPRECIATED (20) [adjective] Not deemed to have any value, valueless, worthless | [adjective] (of an investment) Not having risen in value UNARTICULATED (16) [adjective] Not articulated UNASSIMILATED (16) [adjective] Not assimilated. UNBOWDLERIZED (29) UNCAPITALIZED (27) UNCHLORINATED (19) UNCIRCUMCISED (22) [adjective] Not circumcised, intact. | [adjective] (by extension) Not Jewish or Muslim; gentile | [adjective] Spiritually impure; irreligious. UNCOMPENSATED (20) [adjective] Not compensated; having no compensation. | [adjective] Not paid for one's work. UNCOMPLICATED (22) [verb] To remove complications from. | [adjective] Simple, not complicated, basic. UNCONDITIONED (17) [adjective] Without conditions; absolute. | [adjective] Not having been conditioned. | [adjective] Not treated with hair conditioner. | [verb] To free from prior conditioning. UNCONSECRATED (18) [adjective] Not consecrated UNCONSTRAINED (16) [adjective] Not constrained UNCONSTRICTED (18) [adjective] Not constricted UNCONSTRUCTED (18) [adjective] Not (yet) constructed UNCONSUMMATED (20) [adjective] Not consummated UNCOORDINATED (17) [adjective] (of a project etc) Not coordinated or properly planned | [adjective] (of body movement) Lacking coordination UNDERACHIEVED (23) [verb] To achieve less than expected; to fail to fulfil one's potential. UNDERBUDGETED (19) UNDEREDUCATED (18) [verb] To give an inadequate education. | [adjective] Insufficiently educated. UNDEREMPLOYED (22) [adjective] Employed in a job that offers fewer work hours than desired. UNDERFINANCED (20) [adjective] Lacking sufficient financing UNDERINFLATED (18) UNDERPREPARED (19) [adjective] Not adequately prepared. UNDERREPORTED (17) [verb] To report a number falsely, making it smaller than it ought to be, especially to do so intentionally | [verb] As a group, to report something less frequently than it actually occurs | [adjective] Reported as smaller or lesser than reality UNDERUTILIZED (24) [adjective] Insufficiently utilized | [verb] Underuse UNDISCIPLINED (19) [adjective] Not subjected to discipline, control or correction; uncorrected | [adjective] Lacking in self-control; ungovernable UNDISCOURAGED (18) UNDISSOCIATED (17) [adjective] Not dissociated UNDISTRIBUTED (17) [adjective] Not distributed UNELECTRIFIED (19) UNEMBARRASSED (18) [adjective] Not embarrassed UNEMBELLISHED (21) [adjective] Plain, unadorned, or simple. UNENLIGHTENED (18) [adjective] Not enlightened; ignorant in general or of some particular fact. UNESTABLISHED (19) [adjective] Not established. UNHOMOGENIZED (29) UNIMPASSIONED (18) [adjective] Not impassioned; lacking passion; without emotion. UNINTERRUPTED (16) [adjective] Continuing with no interruption UNINTIMIDATED (17) UNIVERSALIZED (26) [verb] To make universal, to make consistent or common across all cases. UNMANIPULATED (18) UNMETABOLIZED (27) UNPARASITIZED (25) UNPASTEURIZED (25) [adjective] Not pasteurized. UNPRECEDENTED (19) [adjective] Never before seen, done, or experienced; without precedent. UNPRESSURIZED (25) [adjective] Not pressurized. UNREPRESENTED (16) [adjective] Not represented UNSPECIALIZED (27) [adjective] Having no speciality, or particular purpose | [adjective] (of a cell or tissue) Having no special function UNTRANSFORMED (19) [adjective] Not transformed; free of any transformation WHEELBARROWED (25)

14-Letter Words (211)

AFOREMENTIONED (20) [noun] The one or ones mentioned previously. | [adjective] Previously mentioned. ALLOTETRAPLOID (17) ANAGRAMMATIZED (29) [verb] To produce an anagram of; to transpose the letters of. AUTOTETRAPLOID (17) [noun] An organism that has four sets of chromosomes derived from the same species, typically produced through chromosome doubling in a diploid organism. BOURGEOISIFIED (21) [verb] Past tense of bourgeoisify; to make bourgeois in character, attitudes, or behavior. | [adjective] Having been made bourgeois or given bourgeois characteristics. BUREAUCRATISED (19) [verb] To bring under the control of a bureaucracy; to make bureaucratic. BUREAUCRATIZED (28) [verb] To bring under the control of a bureaucracy; to make bureaucratic. BUTTERFINGERED (21) [adjective] Prone to dropping things; clumsy or lacking dexterity in handling objects. CHICKENHEARTED (29) [adjective] Lacking courage; cowardly or timid. CIRCUMVALLATED (24) [verb] To surround with, or as if with, a rampart. COLLATERALIZED (26) [verb] To secure a loan or other contract by using collateral. | [verb] To pledge assets as collateral. | [adjective] Secured by a pledge of collateral. COMMERCIALISED (23) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMMERCIALIZED (32) [verb] To apply business methodology to something in order to profit | [verb] To exploit something for maximum financial gain, sometimes by sacrificing quality COMPASSIONATED (21) CONCEPTUALISED (21) [verb] To interpret a phenomenon by forming a concept. | [verb] To conceive the idea for something. CONCEPTUALIZED (30) [verb] To interpret a phenomenon by forming a concept. | [verb] To conceive the idea for something. CONTAINERBOARD (19) [noun] A type of paperboard used for making corrugated boxes and shipping containers. CONTEXTUALIZED (33) [verb] To place something or someone in a particular context. CORTICOSTEROID (19) [noun] Any of a group of steroid hormones, secreted by the adrenal cortex, that are involved in a large range of physiological systems. | [noun] Any of several synthetic hormones of related structure. COUNTERCHANGED (23) [adjective] Exchanged | [adjective] Having the tinctures exchanged mutually. COUNTERCHARGED (23) [verb] Past tense of countercharge; to make an accusatory charge in response to another charge. | [verb] In military contexts, to charge in response to an enemy's charge. COUNTERCHECKED (28) [verb] To restrict or limit by counteracting. | [verb] To recheck. COUNTERCLAIMED (21) [verb] To file a counterclaim. COUNTERMARCHED (24) [verb] To march back along the same route COUNTERORDERED (18) COUNTERPLOTTED (19) [verb] To form a plot or plan in opposition to the actions of another. COUNTERPOINTED (19) [verb] To compose or arrange such music. | [verb] To serve as an opposing point against. COUNTERPUNCHED (24) [verb] To deliver a punch designed to exploit an opponent's momentary defensive weakness caused by a punch thrown by the opponent. | [verb] To deliver a competitive response to an opponent designed to exploit a weakness created by the opponent's offensive efforts. COUNTERRALLIED (17) COUNTERSTAINED (17) [verb] To stain with a counterstain CYANOETHYLATED (26) DAGUERREOTYPED (22) DECARBOXYLATED (30) [verb] To remove one or more carboxyl groups from a molecule | [adjective] Describing a product of decarboxylation DECOMMISSIONED (22) [verb] To take out of service or to render unusable. | [verb] To remove or revoke a commission. | [verb] To remove or revoke a formal designation. DECONCENTRATED (20) DECONTAMINATED (20) [verb] To remove contamination from (something), rendering it safe. DECRIMINALIZED (29) [verb] To change the laws so something is no longer a crime. DEHYDROGENATED (24) [verb] To remove hydrogen from (a substance). | [adjective] That has been treated by dehydrogenation DEMATERIALIZED (27) [verb] To disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To cause something to disappear by becoming immaterial. | [verb] To remove the physical materials from (a process, etc.) DEMYTHOLOGIZED (34) [verb] To remove the mythological elements of. DENATIONALIZED (25) [verb] To transfer the control and ownership of an industry from government to private hands; to privatize. | [verb] To strip of nationhood; to cease to recognise, or allow to exist, as a nation. DEPERSONALIZED (27) [verb] To remove a sense of personal identity or individual character from something. | [verb] To present (something) as an impersonal object. | [verb] To suffer an episode of depersonalization. DIFFERENTIATED (22) [verb] To show, or be the distinction between two things. | [verb] To perceive the difference between things; to discriminate. | [verb] To modify, or be modified. DISARTICULATED (18) [verb] To disjoint. | [verb] To amputate (a limb) at a joint without cutting the bone. | [adjective] Disjointed DISEMBARRASSED (20) [verb] To get (someone) out of a difficult or embarrassing situation; to free (someone) from the embarrassment (of a situation); to relieve (someone of a burden, item of clothing, etc.) (often used reflexively). | [verb] To free (something) from complication. | [verb] To disentangle (two things); to distinguish. DISESTABLISHED (21) [verb] To deprive (an established church, military squadron, operations base, etc.) of its official status. | [verb] To abolish (an existing position of employment). DISINTOXICATED (25) EPIGRAMMATIZED (31) EPITHELIALIZED (29) EXCOMMUNICATED (30) [verb] To officially exclude someone from membership of a church or religious community. | [verb] To exclude from any other group; to banish. FEATHERBRAINED (23) FLANNELMOUTHED (23) FRACTIONALIZED (29) [verb] To separate into parts or fractions; to fractionate GLUCOCORTICOID (22) [noun] Any of a group of steroid hormones, produced by the adrenal cortex, that are involved in metabolism and have anti-inflammatory properties. GONADECTOMIZED (30) HEPATECTOMIZED (33) HYPERCIVILIZED (37) HYPEREUTECTOID (25) HYPERIMMUNIZED (36) HYPERPIGMENTED (28) HYPERPOLARIZED (34) HYPOSENSITIZED (32) IMMATERIALIZED (28) IMPERSONALIZED (28) INCONVENIENCED (22) [verb] To bother; to discomfort INDIVIDUALISED (20) [verb] To give something its own individuality; to characterize or differentiate. | [verb] To modify something to suit an individual; to personalize. INDIVIDUALIZED (29) [verb] To give something its own individuality; to characterize or differentiate. | [verb] To modify something to suit an individual; to personalize. | [adjective] That has been tailored to an individual INDUSTRIALISED (16) [adjective] Having undergone industrialisation. | [verb] (of a country) To develop industry; to become industrial. | [verb] (of a process) To organize along industrial lines. INDUSTRIALIZED (25) [verb] (of a country) To develop industry; to become industrial. | [verb] (of a process) To organize along industrial lines. | [adjective] Having undergone industrialization INTERCONNECTED (19) [verb] To connect to one another. | [adjective] Intertwined; connected at multiple points or levels INTERCONVERTED (20) [verb] To convert mutually one into another INTERDIGITATED (17) [verb] To fold or lock together, as when the fingers of one hand are laced between those of the other. | [verb] To become folded or locked together, like the fingers of a folded hand. | [verb] To intermingle; to present alternately items from one group and then another. INTERPERMEATED (19) INTUSSUSCEPTED (19) MALAPPORTIONED (21) MELODRAMATISED (20) [verb] To make melodramatic. MELODRAMATIZED (29) [verb] To make melodramatic. MICROMETEOROID (21) [noun] An extraterrestrial particle less than a millimeter in size MISAPPREHENDED (25) [verb] To interpret incorrectly; to misunderstand. | [adjective] Misunderstood. MISARTICULATED (19) MISINTERPRETED (19) [verb] To make an incorrect interpretation; to misunderstand. MISREPRESENTED (19) [verb] To represent falsely; to inaccurately portray something. MISTRANSCRIBED (21) MONUMENTALIZED (28) [verb] To make something become or appear monumental MULTICHAMBERED (26) MULTINUCLEATED (19) NEPHRECTOMIZED (33) NONCOMPLICATED (23) NONCONDITIONED (18) NONDIVERSIFIED (22) NONESTABLISHED (20) NONHALOGENATED (19) NONHANDICAPPED (25) OCCIDENTALIZED (29) [verb] To convert or adapt to Western culture. ORTHOGONALIZED (28) OUTMANIPULATED (19) OVARIECTOMIZED (31) [verb] To remove the ovaries from. OVERADVERTISED (22) OVERCLASSIFIED (23) OVERCOMPRESSED (24) OVERCONTROLLED (20) OVERDETERMINED (21) [adjective] (of a problem or question) Having more constraints or causes than necessary to determine a solution or result. | [adjective] (of a system of linear equations) Having more equations than variables. | [adjective] (usually psychoanalysis) Determined by multiple causes in such a way that any of the causes on its own would be sufficient to account for the effect. OVERDISCOUNTED (21) OVERDOCUMENTED (23) OVERDRAMATIZED (30) [verb] To dramatize to excess; to make overdramatic. OVERELABORATED (20) [verb] To elaborate excessively; to go into too much detail. OVEREMPHASIZED (34) [verb] To place too much emphasis on; to overstate the importance of. OVERENCOURAGED (21) OVERENGINEERED (19) OVERFERTILIZED (30) OVERGLAMORIZED (30) OVERIDENTIFIED (22) OVERLENGTHENED (22) OVERORNAMENTED (20) OVERPRESCRIBED (24) [verb] To prescribe a drug more frequently than appropriate OVERPRIVILEGED (24) OVERPROGRAMMED (25) OVERSIMPLIFIED (25) [adjective] Having been simplified to the point where important information is not conveyed. | [verb] To explain or present something in a way that excludes important information for the sake of brevity, or of making the explanation or presentation easy to understand. OVERSPECULATED (22) OVERSTIMULATED (20) [verb] To stimulate to an excessive degree; to expose to excessive stimulation. | [adjective] Excessively stimulated OVERSTRUCTURED (20) OVERSUBSCRIBED (24) [verb] To subscribe to an extent that is greater than the availability | [verb] To use the oversubscription technique in multithreading. | [verb] To use the oversubscription technique in a computer network. PARALLELEPIPED (21) [noun] A solid figure, having six faces, all parallelograms; all opposite faces being similar and parallel. PARTICULARISED (19) [verb] To make particular, as opposed to general; to restrict to a specific or individual case, class etc.; to single out. | [verb] To be specific about (individual instances); to go into detail (about), to specify. | [verb] To differentiate, make distinct from others. PARTICULARIZED (28) [verb] To make particular, as opposed to general; to restrict to a specific or individual case, class etc.; to single out. | [verb] To be specific about (individual instances); to go into detail (about), to specify. | [verb] To differentiate, make distinct from others. PHILANTHROPOID (25) PHOSPHORYLATED (28) [verb] To cause phosphorylation | [verb] To undergo phosphorylation | [adjective] Reacted or combined with phosphoric acid PLATITUDINIZED (27) [verb] To utter one or more platitudes; to make obvious, trivial, or clichéd remarks concerning a topic. | [verb] To express as or reduce to one or more clichés or truisms. PRECONDITIONED (20) [verb] To condition in advance PRECONSTRUCTED (21) PREESTABLISHED (22) [verb] To establish beforehand. PREINTERVIEWED (23) PROCRASTINATED (19) [verb] To delay taking action; to wait until later. | [verb] To put off; to delay (something). PROGNOSTICATED (20) [verb] To predict or forecast, especially through the application of skill. | [verb] To presage, betoken. PROPORTIONATED (19) PROVINCIALIZED (31) PSYCHOANALYZED (37) [verb] To practice psychoanalysis (on). QUADRUPLICATED (29) [verb] To replicate four times; to make fourfold; to quadruple. | [adjective] Replicated four times QUINTUPLICATED (28) [verb] To multiply by five. | [verb] To make five copies of. REACCLIMATIZED (30) REAPPROPRIATED (21) [verb] To seize and reassign. | [verb] To appropriate again. | [verb] (of a group) To reclaim a term that was previously used to disparage that group. RECOMMISSIONED (21) [verb] To give a new commission or to validate an existing commission. | [verb] To put back in service (undoing decommissioning). | [adjective] Commissioned again RECONCENTRATED (19) RECONSOLIDATED (18) [verb] To consolidate again RECONTAMINATED (19) RECRYSTALLIZED (29) [verb] To crystallize again; especially as a means of purification. REHOSPITALIZED (29) REINCORPORATED (19) [verb] To incorporate again or in a different manner REINVESTIGATED (19) [verb] To investigate again REMANUFACTURED (22) REMATERIALIZED (26) REMYTHOLOGIZED (33) RENATIONALIZED (24) [verb] To nationalize again, after a previous privatization. | [adjective] Nationalized again, after a previous privatization. REORCHESTRATED (20) REPHOTOGRAPHED (26) REPUBLICANIZED (30) RESTRENGTHENED (19) RESYSTEMATIZED (29) REVOLUTIONISED (18) [verb] To change radically or significantly, as in a revolution. REVOLUTIONIZED (27) [verb] To radically or significantly change, as in a revolution SCATTERBRAINED (19) [adjective] Having the qualities of a scatterbrain: absent-minded, forgetful, easily distracted. SLEDGEHAMMERED (24) [verb] To strike with a sledgehammer. SNAGGLETOOTHED (20) SPLENECTOMIZED (30) STRAITJACKETED (28) [verb] To put someone into a straitjacket. | [verb] (by extension) To restrict the freedom of, either physically or psychologically. STRUCTURALIZED (26) SUBCATEGORIZED (29) [verb] To categorize more specifically by placing in a subcategory. | [verb] (grammar) To practice subcategorization. SUBSPECIALIZED (30) SUBSTANTIVIZED (29) SUPERCIVILIZED (31) SUPERCONDUCTED (22) SUPERINSULATED (17) SUPERSATURATED (17) [verb] To cause a solution to have more solute dissolved in it than it can stably contain at current conditions. | [adjective] (of a solution) More concentrated than is normally possible. | [adjective] (of a vapor) Having a vapor pressure higher than is normally possible. THEATRICALIZED (29) [verb] To render suitable for the theatre. TRANSISTORISED (15) [verb] To equip an electronic circuit or device with transistors, especially to convert a device using an older technology to the use of transistors, particularly to make it smaller or more portable. TRANSISTORIZED (24) [verb] To equip an electronic circuit or device with transistors, especially to convert a device using an older technology to the use of transistors, particularly to make it smaller or more portable. | [adjective] Built using solid state components such as transistors. TRANSLITERATED (15) [verb] To represent letters or words in the characters of another writing system. | [adjective] Represented in the characters of another alphabet TRANSMOGRIFIED (21) [adjective] Altered, transformed, or mutated into a form that is grotesque or amusing. | [verb] To completely alter the form of. | [verb] To completely alter one's form. TRISUBSTITUTED (17) ULTRACIVILIZED (29) UNACCLIMATIZED (30) UNACCOMMODATED (24) UNACCULTURATED (19) UNACKNOWLEDGED (26) [adjective] Not acknowledged UNANESTHETIZED (27) UNAPPROPRIATED (21) [adjective] That has not been appropriated for a specific use, or assigned to a specific person or organization. UNCOMPREHENDED (25) UNCOMPUTERIZED (30) UNCONSOLIDATED (18) [adjective] Not (yet) consolidated UNCONTAMINATED (19) [adjective] Not contaminated; unpolluted. UNCONTEMPLATED (21) UNCONTRADICTED (20) [adjective] Not contradicted; without contradiction; unquestioned. UNCORROBORATED (19) [adjective] Not corroborated UNCREDENTIALED (18) UNCRYSTALLIZED (29) UNDERDEVELOPED (22) [verb] To develop insufficiently. | [adjective] Immature and not fully developed | [adjective] Having a low level of economic productivity and technological sophistication UNDERESTIMATED (18) [verb] To perceive (someone or something) as having a lower value, quantity, worth, etc., than what he/she/it actually has. UNDERNOURISHED (19) [adjective] Provided with insufficient nourishment to sustain proper health and growth. UNDERPOPULATED (20) [adjective] Having an insufficient population for economic viability UNDERSATURATED (16) [adjective] Insufficiently saturated | [adjective] (of igneous rock) Having minerals without free silica UNDOMESTICATED (20) [adjective] Not domesticated UNINCORPORATED (19) [adjective] Not organized as a corporation. | [adjective] (of land or the like) Not contained in a municipality. | [verb] To undo or remove the incorporation of. UNPREMEDITATED (20) [adjective] Performed, but not planned or thought out in advance; extemporaneous, but not unintentional. UNREFRIGERATED (19) UNROMANTICIZED (28) UNSTANDARDIZED (26) UNSYNCHRONIZED (32) UNSYSTEMATIZED (29) VENTRILOQUIZED (36) [verb] To practice ventriloquism. | [verb] To speak the words of (another person), as though by ventriloquism. WEATHERBOARDED (24) [verb] To cover with a weatherboard. WEATHERPROOFED (26) [verb] To make something resistant to damage caused by the weather.

15-Letter Words (82)

CHROMATOGRAPHED (29) [verb] Past tense of chromatograph; to separate and analyze substances using chromatography. CIRCUMAMBULATED (26) [verb] To walk around something in a circle, especially for a ritual purpose. CIRCUMNAVIGATED (26) [verb] To travel completely around somewhere or something, especially by sail. | [verb] To circumvent or bypass. | [verb] To sail around the world. CONTRAINDICATED (21) [verb] To make inadvisable; to warn against a specific medicine or treatment. COUNTERATTACKED (24) [verb] To attack in response to an attack by opponents COUNTERBALANCED (22) [verb] To apply weight in order to balance an opposing weight. | [verb] To match or equal in effect when applying opposing force | [adjective] Having a counterbalance COUNTERPICKETED (26) COUNTERWEIGHTED (25) [verb] Past tense of counterweight; balanced or offset with an equal weight on the opposite side. | [adjective] Having a counterweight attached or applied for balance. DESPIRITUALIZED (28) DISCOMBOBULATED (25) [verb] To throw into a state of confusion; to befuddle or perplex. | [adjective] Confused, embarrassed, upset. | [adjective] Broken, mixed up. DISCOUNTENANCED (21) [verb] To have an unfavorable opinion of; to deprecate or disapprove of. | [verb] To abash, embarrass or disconcert. | [verb] To refuse countenance or support to; to discourage. DISENFRANCHISED (25) [verb] To deprive someone of a franchise, generally their right to vote | [adjective] Not represented; especially, not having the right to vote. DISEQUILIBRATED (28) DISPROPORTIONED (21) ELECTROPHORESED (23) [verb] To carry out electrophoresis on something. | [adjective] Produced by, or subjected to electrophoresis FEATHERSTITCHED (27) [verb] To make stitches of this kind. GRANDPARENTHOOD (23) HEMAGGLUTINATED (23) HYPERSENSITIZED (33) HYPERSTIMULATED (26) HYPERVENTILATED (27) [verb] To breathe quickly and deeply, especially at an abnormally rapid rate. HYSTERECTOMIZED (35) [verb] To perform a hysterectomy upon. INTERCORRELATED (18) [verb] (of multiple things) To correlate mutually. INTERPENETRATED (18) [verb] To penetrate mutually or reciprocally. | [verb] To permeate or pervade. INTERSTRATIFIED (19) LARYNGECTOMIZED (33) MACROAGGREGATED (23) MALADMINISTERED (21) [verb] To administer wrongly or badly. MISAPPROPRIATED (24) [verb] To take something for wrong or illegal purposes. | [verb] To embezzle. MONOUNSATURATED (18) [adjective] (of an organic compound) having a single double or triple bond NONCERTIFICATED (23) NONCOMPUTERIZED (31) NONCONSOLIDATED (19) NONCREDENTIALED (19) NONENCAPSULATED (20) NONHOSPITALIZED (30) NONMATRICULATED (20) OVERACCENTUATED (23) OVERARTICULATED (21) OVERCAPITALIZED (32) [verb] To estimate the value of a company, stock etc too highly | [verb] To capitalize a business beyond a sustainable level | [adjective] Having excess capital. OVERCENTRALIZED (30) OVERCOMPENSATED (25) [verb] To do an excessive amount in one area in an effort to overcome a perceived lack in another area. | [verb] To provide with excessive pay or reward for work performed. OVERCOMPLICATED (27) [adjective] Excessively complicated | [verb] To make something excessively complicated. OVERCONSTRUCTED (23) OVEREMBELLISHED (26) [verb] To embellish excessively. OVERENTERTAINED (19) OVEREXAGGERATED (28) OVERGENERALIZED (29) [verb] To discuss or regard something in terms that are too general, and thereby ignore significant details or differences. OVERHOMOGENIZED (34) OVEROPINIONATED (21) OVERREPRESENTED (21) [verb] To represent as being higher or greater than it is. | [adjective] Represented to an excessive degree, or in excessive numbers OVERSPECIALIZED (32) [verb] To specialize to an excessive degree. PHOTODUPLICATED (26) PHOTOSENSITIZED (30) PINEALECTOMIZED (31) POLYUNSATURATED (21) [adjective] Of or relating to long chain organic compounds that have multiple double bonds; polyunsaturated fatty acids are essential to human nutrition. | [adjective] (nutrition, of a fat or oil) Having a chemical structure that does not easily change into cholesterol (a substance containing a lot of fat though to be an important cause of heart disease). PREMANUFACTURED (25) PROLETARIANISED (18) [verb] To turn (a person or group) into proletariat. PROLETARIANIZED (27) [verb] To turn (a person or group) into proletariat. RECHOREOGRAPHED (27) RESPIRITUALIZED (27) SENSATIONALISED (16) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENSATIONALIZED (25) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENTIMENTALISED (18) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SENTIMENTALIZED (27) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. STRAIGHTFORWARD (26) [adjective] Proceeding in a straight course or manner; not deviating. | [adjective] Easy, simple, without difficulty | [adjective] Direct; honest; frank SUBCOMMISSIONED (24) SUPERCALENDERED (21) [verb] To pass (paper) through a supercalender. SUPERSTIMULATED (20) TERRITORIALIZED (25) TETRAMETHYLLEAD (24) THERMOREGULATED (22) [verb] To regulate the body temperature (by thermoregulation) TRADITIONALIZED (26) TRANSPARENTIZED (27) UNCHOREOGRAPHED (27) UNDEREMPHASIZED (33) [adjective] Insufficiently emphasized UNDERPRIVILEGED (23) [noun] A deprived person; deprived people (normally used as a plural). | [adjective] Deprived of the opportunities and advantages of others, usually through no fault of one's own. UNDERPUBLICIZED (32) UNDISTINGUISHED (21) [adjective] Not distinguished: not marked by conspicuous qualities. | [adjective] Not distinguished: not having an air of distinction. UNRECONSTRUCTED (20) [verb] To reverse or undo the effects of reconstruction. | [adjective] Not reconstructed. | [adjective] Unreconciled to social or cultural change; particularly with respect to the Reconstruction after the American Civil War. UNSOPHISTICATED (23) [adjective] Not sophisticated; lacking sophistication. UNSUBSTANTIATED (18) [verb] To prove false; to disprove or discredit. | [verb] (human services) To officially categorize (an allegation) as unsubstantiated. | [verb] To call into question; to create doubt about.

About This Word List

This page lists all 4 letter 9 letter 10 letter boggle words ending with the letter D. Whether you're playing 4 Letter 9 Letter 10 Letter Boggle, looking for crossword answers, or solving a word puzzle, this list gives you every valid word to choose from. Click any word to use our word unscrambler and see all possible words from those letters.

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