Wheel of Fortune Words Starting With S

18,631 words found — all lengths, starting with S

Use this list of Wheel of Fortune Words Starting With S to find your next winning play. Click any word to unscramble it and see all possible words from those letters.
Starting With S Ending With S Containing S
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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

3-Letter Words (62)

SAB (5) [noun] A saboteur, especially of fox hunts. | [verb] To sabotage, especially fox hunts in opposition to blood sports. SAC (5) [noun] A bag or pouch inside a plant or animal that typically contains a fluid. | [noun] (games) A sacrifice. | [verb] (games) To sacrifice. | [noun] The privilege, formerly enjoyed by the lord of a manor, of holding courts, trying causes, and imposing fines. 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. SAE (3) SAG (4) [noun] The state of sinking or bending; a droop. | [noun] The difference in elevation of a wire, cable, chain or rope suspended between two consecutive points. | [noun] The difference in height or depth between the vertex and the rim of a curved surface, specifically used for optical elements such as a mirror or lens. | [noun] An Indian dish made from greens (usually spinach) cooked down to a thick paste. SAL (3) [noun] Salt | [noun] Shorea robusta, a dipterocarpaceous tree. SAP (5) [noun] The juice of plants of any kind, especially the ascending and descending juices or circulating fluid essential to nutrition. | [noun] The sapwood, or alburnum, of a tree. | [noun] Any juice. | [noun] A short wooden club; a leather-covered hand weapon; a blackjack. | [noun] A narrow ditch or trench made from the foremost parallel toward the glacis or covert way of a besieged place by digging under cover of gabions, etc. SAT (3) [verb] (of a person) To be in a position in which the upper body is upright and supported by the buttocks. | [verb] (of a person) To move oneself into such a position. | [verb] (of an object) To occupy a given position permanently. | [noun] A moon or other smaller body orbiting a larger one. SAU (3) SAW (6) [noun] A tool with a toothed blade used for cutting hard substances, in particular wood or metal | [noun] A musical saw. | [noun] A sawtooth wave. | [noun] Something spoken; speech, discourse. | [interjection] What's up (either as a greeting or actual question). SAX (10) [noun] A slate-cutter's hammer; slate-ax. | [noun] A knife or sword; a dagger about 50 cm (20 inches) in length. | [verb] To cut or slash with a sharp instrument; incise; scarify. | [noun] A single-reed instrument musical instrument of the woodwind family, usually made of brass and with a distinctive loop bringing the bell upwards. SAY (6) [noun] A chance to speak; the right or power to influence or make a decision. | [verb] To pronounce. | [verb] To recite. | [noun] A type of fine cloth similar to serge. | [noun] Trial by sample; assay; specimen. | [noun] A strainer for milk. SEA (3) [noun] A large body of salt water. | [noun] A lake, especially if large or if salty or brackish. | [noun] The swell of the sea; a single wave; billow. SEC (5) [noun] Second, 1/60 of a minute. | [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] A unit of angle equal to one-sixtieth of a minute of arc or one part in 3600 of a degree. SEE (3) [verb] (stative) To perceive or detect with the eyes, or as if by sight. | [verb] To form a mental picture of. | [verb] (social) To meet, to visit. | [noun] A diocese, archdiocese; a region of a church, generally headed by a bishop, especially an archbishop. SEG (4) SEI (3) [noun] A sei whale. SEL (3) SEN (3) [noun] A unit of Japanese currency, worth one hundredth of a yen. | [noun] A coin of this value. | [noun] Self | [noun] A unit of length equal 20 wa, 40 meters SER (3) SET (3) [verb] To put (something) down, to rest. | [verb] To attach or affix (something) to something else, or in or upon a certain place. | [verb] To put in a specified condition or state; to cause to be. | [noun] A punch for setting nails in wood. | [adjective] Fixed in position. | [noun] A young plant fit for setting out; a slip; shoot. | [verb] To divide a class group in a subject according to ability SEW (6) [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. | [verb] To drain the water from. SEX (10) [noun] A category into which sexually-reproducing organisms are divided on the basis of their reproductive roles in their species. | [noun] Another category, especially of humans and especially based on sexuality or gender roles. | [noun] The members of such a category, taken collectively. | [noun] An offshoot of a larger religion; a group sharing particular (often unorthodox) political and/or religious beliefs. SHA (6) SHE (6) [noun] A female. | [pronoun] (personal) The female person or animal previously mentioned or implied. | [pronoun] (personal, sometimes affectionate) A ship or boat. SHH (9) [noun] An utterance of shh. | [verb] To utter shh. | [interjection] Requesting silence. SHY (9) [noun] An act of throwing. | [noun] A place for throwing. | [noun] A sudden start aside, as by a horse. SIB (5) [adjective] Having kinship or relationship; related by same-bloodedness; having affinity; being akin; kindred. | [noun] Kindred; kin; kinsmen; a body of persons related by blood in any degree. | [noun] A kinsman; a blood relation; a relative, near or remote; one closely allied to another; an intimate companion. | [verb] To bring into relation; establish a relationship between; make friendly; reconcile. | [verb] To engage in repetitive behaviors such as eye-poking, skin-picking, hand-biting, or head-banging. SIC (5) [verb] To mark with a bracketed sic. | [adverb] Thus; thus written; used to indicate, for example, that text is being quoted as it is from the source. | [verb] To incite an attack by, especially a dog or dogs. SIM (5) [noun] A simulation or simulator. SIN (3) [noun] A violation of God's will or religious law. | [noun] A misdeed. | [noun] A sin offering; a sacrifice for sin. | [noun] A letter of the Hebrew alphabet; שׂ | [noun] A traditional tube skirt worn by Lao and Thai women, particularly northern Thai and northeastern Thai women. SIP (5) [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. SIR (3) [noun] A man of a higher rank or position. | [noun] A respectful term of address to a man of higher rank or position, particularly: | [noun] A respectful term of address to an adult male (often older), especially if his name or proper title is unknown. SIS (3) [noun] A daughter of the same parents as another person; a female sibling. | [noun] A female member of a religious order; especially one devoted to more active service; (informally) a nun. | [noun] Any butterfly in the genus Adelpha, so named for the resemblance of the dark-colored wings to the black habit traditionally worn by nuns. SIT (3) [noun] Subsidence of the roof of a coal mine. | [noun] An event, usually lasting one full day or more, where the primary goal is to sit in meditation. | [verb] (of a person) To be in a position in which the upper body is upright and supported by the buttocks. | [noun] Short for situation. SIX (10) [noun] The digit or figure 6. | [noun] (by ellipsis of six o'clock) Rear, behind (rear side of something). | [noun] An event whereby a batsman hits a ball which does not bounce before passing over a boundary in the air, resulting in an award of 6 runs for the batting team. SKA (7) [noun] A style of Jamaican dance music combining elements of Caribbean calypso and mento with American jazz and rhythm and blues. SKI (7) [noun] One of a pair of long flat runners designed for gliding over snow or water | [noun] One of a pair of long flat runners under some flying machines, used for landing | [verb] To move on skis SKY (10) [noun] The atmosphere above a given point, especially as visible from the ground during the day. | [noun] The part of the sky which can be seen from a specific place or at a specific time; its condition, climate etc. | [noun] Heaven. SLY (6) [adjective] Artfully cunning; secretly mischievous; wily. | [adjective] (having a positive sense) Dexterous in performing an action, so as to escape notice | [adjective] Done with, and marked by, artful and dexterous secrecy; subtle SOB (5) [noun] A cry with a short, sudden expulsion of breath. | [noun] Sound of sob | [verb] To weep with convulsive gasps. | [verb] To soak. 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. SOL (3) [noun] The fifth step in the solfège scale of C (Ut), preceded by fa and followed by la. | [noun] A solar day on Mars (equivalent to 24 hours, 39 minutes, 35 seconds). | [noun] A Spanish-American gold or silver coin, now the main currency unit of Peru (also new sol), or a coin of this value. | [noun] A type of colloid in which a solid is dispersed in a liquid. | [noun] An old French coin worth 12 deniers. SON (3) [noun] One's male offspring. | [noun] A male adopted person in relation to his adoptive parents. | [noun] A male person who has such a close relationship with an older or otherwise more authoritative person that he can be regarded as a son of the other person. | [verb] To produce (i.e. bear, father, beget) a son. SOP (5) [noun] Something entirely soaked. | [noun] A piece of solid food to be soaked in liquid food. | [noun] Something given or done to pacify or bribe. SOS (3) [noun] A syllable used in solfège to represent the fifth note of a major scale. SOT (3) [noun] Stupid person; fool | [noun] Drunkard | [verb] To drink until one becomes drunk SOU (3) [noun] An old French copper coin equal to one twentieth of a livre or twelve deniers; one sou is to the livre as one shilling is to the pound. | [noun] Cent; pocket money. | [noun] A thing of the smallest value; a whit; a jot. SOW (6) [noun] A female pig. | [noun] A female bear, she-bear. | [noun] A female guinea pig. | [verb] To scatter, disperse, or plant (seeds). SOX (10) [noun] A knitted or woven covering for the foot. | [noun] A shoe worn by Greco-Roman comedy actors. | [noun] A color pattern (usually white) on a cat's or dog's lower leg that is different from the color pattern on the rest of the animal. SOY (6) [noun] A common East Asian liquid sauce, made by subjecting boiled beans to long fermentation and then long digestion in salt and water. | [noun] Soybeans, or the protein derived from them. SPA (5) [noun] A health resort near a mineral spring or hot spring. | [noun] A trendy or fashionable resort. | [noun] A health club. | [noun] A clumsy person (see spastic) SPY (8) [noun] A person who secretly watches and examines the actions of other individuals or organizations and gathers information on them (usually to gain an advantage). | [verb] To act as a spy. | [verb] To spot; to catch sight of. SRI (3) STY (6) [noun] A pen or enclosure for swine. | [noun] A messy, dirty or debauched place. | [verb] To place in, or as if in, a sty | [noun] A ladder. | [noun] An inflammation of the eyelid. SUB (5) [noun] A submarine. | [noun] A submarine sandwich: a sandwich made on a long bun. | [noun] A substitute, often in sports. | [verb] To coat with a layer of adhering material; to planarize by means of such a coating. SUE (3) [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.). SUM (5) [noun] A quantity obtained by addition or aggregation. | [noun] (often plural) An arithmetic computation, especially one posed to a student as an exercise (not necessarily limited to addition). | [noun] A quantity of money. | [noun] The basic unit of money in Kyrgyzstan. | [pronoun] A certain number, at least two. | [noun] A type of administrative district used in China, Mongolia, and Russia. In Mongolia, a somon is smaller than a province. In China, it is only used in Inner Mongolia where it is equivalent to a township. SUN (3) [noun] A star, especially when seen as the centre of any single solar system. | [noun] The light and warmth which is received from the sun. | [noun] Something like the sun in brightness or splendor. | [noun] A traditional Japanese unit of length, approximately 30.3 millimetres (1.193 inches). | [noun] Crotalaria juncea, an East Indian leguminous plant yielding a fiber. SUP (5) [noun] A sip; a small amount of food or drink. | [verb] To sip; to take a small amount of food or drink into the mouth, especially with a spoon. | [verb] To take supper. | [interjection] What's up (either as a greeting or actual question) | [adjective] Being or relating to the squark that is the superpartner of an up quark. | [noun] Superintendent. | [noun] Upper limit. | [noun] A stand-up paddleboard SUQ (12) [noun] A street market, particularly in Arabic- and Somali-speaking countries; a place where people buy and sell goods. SYN (6) [adjective] That has a torsion angle between 0° and 90°.

4-Letter Words (353)

SABE (6) SABS (6) [verb] To sabotage, especially fox hunts in opposition to blood sports. SACK (10) [noun] A bag; especially a large bag of strong, coarse material for storage and handling of various commodities, such as potatoes, coal, coffee; or, a bag with handles used at a supermarket, a grocery sack; or, a small bag for small items, a satchel. | [noun] The amount a sack holds; also, an archaic or historical measure of varying capacity, depending on commodity type and according to local usage; an old English measure of weight, usually of wool, equal to 13 stone (182 pounds), or in other sources, 26 stone (364 pounds). | [noun] The plunder and pillaging of a captured town or city. | [noun] A variety of light-colored dry wine from Spain or the Canary Islands; also, any strong white wine from southern Europe; sherry. | [noun] A bag or pouch inside a plant or animal that typically contains a fluid. | [noun] A bag or pouch inside a plant or animal that typically contains a fluid. SACS (6) [noun] A bag or pouch inside a plant or animal that typically contains a fluid. | [noun] (games) A sacrifice. SADE (5) SADI (5) SAFE (7) [noun] A box, usually made of metal, in which valuables can be locked for safekeeping. | [noun] A condom. | [noun] A ventilated or refrigerated chest or closet for securing provisions from noxious animals or insects. SAGA (5) [noun] An Old Norse (Icelandic) prose narrative, especially one dealing with family or social histories and legends. | [noun] Something with the qualities of such a saga; an epic, a long story. SAGE (5) [noun] A wise person or spiritual teacher; someone of gravity and wisdom, especially, a teacher venerable for years, and of sound judgment and prudence; a grave or stoic philosopher. | [adjective] Wise. | [adjective] Grave; serious; solemn | [noun] The plant Salvia officinalis and savory spice produced from it; also planted for ornamental purposes. | [verb] The act of using the word or option sage in the email field or a checkbox of an imageboard when posting a reply. SAGO (5) [noun] A powdered starch obtained from certain palms used as a food thickener. | [noun] A similar starch obtained from a palm-like cycad, Cycas revoluta | [noun] Any of the palms from which sago is extracted. SAGS (5) [noun] The state of sinking or bending; a droop. | [noun] The difference in elevation of a wire, cable, chain or rope suspended between two consecutive points. | [noun] The difference in height or depth between the vertex and the rim of a curved surface, specifically used for optical elements such as a mirror or lens. SAGY (8) SAID (5) [adjective] Mentioned earlier; aforesaid. | [verb] To pronounce. | [verb] To recite. SAIL (4) [noun] A piece of fabric attached to a boat and arranged such that it causes the wind to drive the boat along. The sail may be attached to the boat via a combination of mast, spars and ropes. | [noun] (nautical,uncountable) The concept of a sail or sails, as if a substance. | [noun] The power harnessed by a sail or sails, or the use of this power for travel or transport. | [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. SAIN (4) SAKE (8) [noun] Cause, interest or account | [noun] Purpose or end; reason | [noun] The benefit or regard of someone or something | [noun] An alcoholic beverage made from fermenting various forms of rice, usually with an ABV similar to wine. SAKI (8) [noun] An alcoholic beverage made from fermenting various forms of rice, usually with an ABV similar to wine. | [noun] A class of Japanese rice wines made from polished rice and typically about 20% alcohol by volume. | [noun] Any of several species of South American monkeys of the genus Pithecia. with large ears and a long hairy tail that is not prehensile. SALE (4) [noun] A hall. | [noun] An exchange of goods or services for currency or credit. | [noun] (Short for discount sale) The sale of goods at reduced prices. SALL (4) SALP (6) [noun] Any of the free-swimming tunicates of the order Salpida and its single family Salpidae. SALS (4) [noun] Shorea robusta, a dipterocarpaceous tree. SALT (4) [noun] A common substance, chemically consisting mainly of sodium chloride (NaCl), used extensively as a condiment and preservative. | [noun] One of the compounds formed from the reaction of an acid with a base, where a positive ion replaces a hydrogen of the acid. | [noun] A salt marsh, a saline marsh at the shore of a sea. SAME (6) [adjective] Not different or other; not another or others; not different as regards self; selfsame; identical. | [adjective] Lacking variety from; indistinguishable. | [adjective] Similar, alike. | [adverb] Together. SAMP (8) [noun] An article of food consisting of coarse ground maize, or a porridge made from it. 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. SANE (4) [adjective] Being in a healthy condition; not deranged; thinking rationally. | [adjective] Mentally sound; possessing a rational mind; having the mental faculties in such condition as to be able to anticipate and judge the effect of one's actions in an ordinary manner. | [adjective] Rational; reasonable; sensible. SANG (5) [verb] To produce musical or harmonious sounds with one’s voice. | [verb] To express audibly by means of a harmonious vocalization. | [verb] To soothe with singing. | [noun] A Chinese wind instrument, a free-reed mouth organ consisting of 13 or more bamboo pipes of various lengths, which are fixed at their bases in a wind chest made from a dried gourd (or, more recently, wood or chrome-plated brass). SANK (8) [verb] (heading, physical) To move or be moved into something. | [verb] (heading, social) To diminish or be diminished. | [verb] To conceal and appropriate. SANS (4) [adjective] Short for sans serif. | [preposition] Without; lacking | [noun] A letter of the Archaic Greek alphabet (uppercase Ϻ, lowercase ϻ) that came after pi and before qoppa. SAPS (6) [noun] The juice of plants of any kind, especially the ascending and descending juices or circulating fluid essential to nutrition. | [noun] The sapwood, or alburnum, of a tree. | [noun] Any juice. 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). SARI (4) [noun] The traditional dress of women in the Indian Subcontinent; an outer garment consisting of a single length of cotton or silk, most often with one end wrapped around the waist to form a skirt, the other draped over the shoulder or head. SARK (8) [noun] A shirt. | [verb] To cover with sarking, or thin boards. SASH (7) [noun] A piece of cloth designed to be worn around the waist. | [noun] A decorative length of cloth worn over the shoulder to the opposite hip, often for ceremonial or other formal occasions. | [verb] To adorn with a sash. | [noun] The opening part (casement) of a window usually containing the glass panes, hinged to the jamb, or sliding up and down as in a sash window. SASS (4) [noun] Backtalk, cheek, sarcasm. | [noun] Vegetables used in making sauces. | [verb] To talk, to talk back. SATE (4) [verb] To satisfy the appetite or desire of; to fill up. | [verb] (of a person) To be in a position in which the upper body is upright and supported by the buttocks. | [verb] (of a person) To move oneself into such a position. | [noun] Satay SATI (4) [noun] The traditional custom of a Hindu woman giving herself up to be cremated on her husband’s funeral pyre as a sign of her devotion. SAUL (4) SAVE (7) [noun] In various sports, a block that prevents an opponent from scoring. | [noun] When a relief pitcher comes into a game leading by 3 points (runs) or less, and his team wins while continually being ahead. | [noun] A point in a professional wrestling match when one or more wrestlers run to the ring to aid a fellow wrestler who is being beaten. SAWN (7) [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. SAWS (7) [noun] A tool with a toothed blade used for cutting hard substances, in particular wood or metal | [noun] A musical saw. | [noun] A sawtooth wave. SAYS (7) [noun] A chance to speak; the right or power to influence or make a decision. | [verb] To pronounce. | [verb] To recite. SCAB (8) [noun] An incrustation over a sore, wound, vesicle, or pustule, formed during healing. | [noun] The scabies. | [noun] The mange, especially when it appears on sheep. SCAD (7) [noun] Any of several fish, of the family Carangidae, from the western Atlantic. | [noun] (in the plural) A large number or quantity. SCAG (7) [noun] Heroin. | [noun] (originally African American Vernacular English) A woman of loose morals. | [noun] A cigarette. SCAM (8) [noun] A fraudulent deal. | [noun] Something that is promoted using scams. | [verb] To defraud or embezzle. SCAN (6) [noun] Close investigation. | [noun] An instance of scanning. | [noun] The result or output of a scanning process. SCAR (6) [noun] A permanent mark on the skin, sometimes caused by the healing of a wound. | [noun] (by extension) A permanent negative effect on someone's mind, caused by a traumatic experience. | [noun] Any permanent mark resulting from damage. | [noun] A cliff or rock outcrop. | [noun] A marine food fish, the scarus or parrotfish (family Scaridae). SCAT (6) [noun] A tax; tribute. | [noun] A land-tax paid in the Shetland Islands. | [noun] Animal excrement; droppings, dung. | [noun] Scat singing. | [verb] To leave quickly (often used in the imperative). | [noun] Any fish in the family Scatophagidae SCOP (8) SCOT (6) [noun] A local tax, paid originally to the lord or ruler and later to a sheriff. SCOW (9) [noun] A large flat-bottomed boat, having broad, square ends. | [verb] To transport in a scow. SCRY (9) [verb] To predict the future using crystal balls or other objects. | [verb] To descry; to see. | [noun] A cry or shout. 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. SCUM (8) [noun] A layer of impurities that accumulates at the surface of a liquid (especially molten metal or water). | [noun] A greenish water vegetation (such as algae), usually found floating on the surface of ponds | [noun] The topmost liquid layer of a cesspool or septic tank. SCUP (8) [noun] A common sparoid food fish, Stenotomus chrysops, of temperate regions of the Atlantic coast of North America; the porgy. | [noun] A swing. SCUT (6) [noun] A hare; a hare as the game in a hunt. | [noun] A short, erect tail, as of a hare, rabbit, or deer. | [noun] (by extension) The buttocks or rump; also, the female pudenda, the vulva. | [noun] A contemptible person. | [noun] Distasteful work; drudgery; specifically some menial procedure left for a doctor or medical student to complete, sometimes for training purposes. | [verb] (originally Cumbria) To scamper off. SEAL (4) [noun] A pinniped (Pinnipedia), particularly an earless seal (true seal) or eared seal. | [noun] A bearing representing a creature something like a walrus. | [verb] To hunt seals. | [noun] A stamp used to impress a design on a soft substance such as wax. | [verb] To tie up animals (especially cattle) in their stalls. SEAM (6) [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [noun] A suture. | [noun] A thin stratum, especially of an economically viable material such as coal or mineral. | [verb] To put together with a seam. | [noun] An old English measure of grain, containing eight bushels. | [noun] Grease; tallow; lard SEAR (4) [adjective] Dry; withered, especially of vegetation. | [noun] A scar produced by searing | [noun] Part of a gun that retards the hammer until the trigger is pulled. SEAS (4) [noun] A large body of salt water. | [noun] A lake, especially if large or if salty or brackish. | [noun] The swell of the sea; a single wave; billow. SEAT (4) [noun] Something to be sat upon. | [noun] A location or site. | [noun] The starting point of a fire. SECS (6) [noun] Second, 1/60 of a minute. | [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] A unit of angle equal to one-sixtieth of a minute of arc or one part in 3600 of a degree. SECT (6) [noun] An offshoot of a larger religion; a group sharing particular (often unorthodox) political and/or religious beliefs. | [noun] A group following a specific ideal or a leader. | [noun] A cutting; a scion. 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. SEEK (8) [noun] The operation of navigating through a stream. | [verb] To try to find; to look for; to search for. | [verb] To ask for; to solicit; to beseech. SEEL (4) [adjective] Good; fortunate; opportune; happy. | [noun] Good fortune; happiness; bliss. | [noun] Opportunity; time; season. | [verb] To sew together the eyes of a young hawk. | [noun] The rolling or agitation of a ship in a storm. SEEM (6) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. SEEN (4) [verb] (stative) To perceive or detect with the eyes, or as if by sight. | [verb] To form a mental picture of. | [verb] (social) To meet, to visit. | [noun] The letter س in the Arabic script. SEEP (6) [noun] A small spring, pool, or other spot where liquid from the ground (e.g. water, petroleum or tar) has oozed to the surface; a place of seeping. | [noun] Moisture, liquid, gas, etc. that seeps out; a seepage. | [noun] The seeping away of a liquid, etc. SEER (4) [noun] One who sees something; an eyewitness. | [noun] One who foretells the future; a clairvoyant, prophet, soothsayer or diviner. | [noun] Unit of mass or volume in the Middle East and Indian subcontinent. SEES (4) [verb] (stative) To perceive or detect with the eyes, or as if by sight. | [verb] To form a mental picture of. | [verb] (social) To meet, to visit. SEGO (5) [noun] A perennial bulb lily found in Western North America, the Calochortus nuttallii, which has trumpet-shaped flowers. SEGS (5) SEIF (7) [noun] A sand dune that elongates parallel to the prevailing wind. SEIS (4) [noun] A sei whale. SELF (7) [noun] One individual's personality, character, demeanor, or disposition. | [noun] The subject of one's own experience of phenomena: perception, emotions, thoughts. | [noun] An individual person as the object of his own reflective consciousness (plural selves). SELL (4) [noun] An act of selling. | [noun] An easy task. | [noun] An imposition, a cheat; a hoax; a disappointment; anything occasioning a loss of pride or dignity. | [noun] A seat or stool. | [noun] A rope (usually for tying up cattle, but can also mean any sort of rope). SELS (4) SEME (6) [noun] Anything which serves for any purpose as a substitute for an object of which it is, in some sense, a representation or sign. | [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. | [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [adjective] Sprinkled, sown, strewn: said of a field or charge when strewn with small (identical) charges. | [noun] (Japanese fiction) An active or dominant male character in a same-sex relationship; a top. SEMI (6) [noun] A semi-detached house. | [noun] A semitrailer; a tractor-trailer; an eighteen-wheeler; an artic. | [noun] A semifinal. 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. SENE (4) [noun] Senna. | [noun] A unit of currency equivalent to a hundredth of a Samoan tala. SENT (4) [noun] A subdivision of currency, equal to one hundredth of an Estonian kroon. | [noun] A distinctive odour or smell. | [noun] An odour left by an animal that may be used for tracing. SEPT (6) [noun] A clan, tribe, or family, proceeding from a common progenitor (used especially of the ancient clans in Ireland). | [noun] An enclosure; a railing. SERA (4) [noun] The clear yellowish liquid obtained upon separating whole blood into its solid and liquid components after it has been allowed to clot. | [noun] Blood serum from the tissues of immunized animals, containing antibodies and used to transfer immunity to another individual, called antiserum. | [noun] A watery liquid from animal tissue, especially one that moistens the surface of serous membranes or that is exuded by such membranes when they become inflamed, such as in edema or a blister. SERE (4) [adjective] Without moisture; dry. | [adjective] Of fabrics: threadbare, worn out. | [noun] A natural succession of animal or plant communities in an ecosystem, especially a series of communities succeeding one another from the time a habitat is unoccupied to the point when a climax community is achieved. | [noun] A claw, a talon. | [adjective] Individual, separate, set apart. SERF (7) [noun] A partially free peasant of a low hereditary class, attached like a slave to the land owned by a feudal lord and required to perform labour, enjoying minimal legal or customary rights | [noun] A similar agricultural labourer in 18th and 19th century Europe | [noun] (strategy games) a worker unit SERS (4) SETA (4) [noun] A bristle or hair | [noun] The stalk of a moss sporangium, or occasionally in a liverwort. SETS (4) [verb] To put (something) down, to rest. | [verb] To attach or affix (something) to something else, or in or upon a certain place. | [verb] To put in a specified condition or state; to cause to be. SETT (4) [verb] To put (something) down, to rest. | [verb] To attach or affix (something) to something else, or in or upon a certain place. | [verb] To put in a specified condition or state; to cause to be. SEWN (7) [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. SEWS (7) [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. SEXT (11) [noun] Noon, reckoned as the sixth hour of daylight. | [noun] The service appointed for this hour. | [noun] A sixth: an interval of six diatonic degrees. | [noun] An electronic message involving sexual language or images. SEXY (14) [adjective] (of a person) Having sex appeal; suggestive of sex. | [adjective] That can sexually attract or arouse. | [adjective] (of a thing or concept) interesting, attractive, intriguing, or appealing. | [adjective] Used to describe prime numbers that differ from each other by six. 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). SHAG (8) [noun] Matted material; rough massed hair, fibres etc. | [noun] Coarse shredded tobacco. | [noun] A type of rough carpet pile. | [noun] Several species of sea birds in the family Phalacrocoracidae (cormorant family), especially the common shag or European shag, Phalacrocorax aristotelis, found on European and African coasts. | [noun] A swing dance. | [noun] (Northwestern Ontario) A fundraising dance in honour of a couple engaged to be married. | [noun] Friend; mate; buddy. SHAH (10) [noun] A king of Persia or Iran. | [noun] A supreme ruler in some Middle Eastern or South Asian nations. | [noun] A Ukrainian monetary unit. SHAM (9) [noun] A fake; an imitation that purports to be genuine. | [noun] Trickery, hoaxing. | [noun] A false front, or removable ornamental covering. SHAT (7) [verb] To defecate. | [verb] To excrete (something) through the anus. | [verb] To fool or try to fool someone; to be deceitful. | [noun] A dry salt lake, in the Saharan area of Africa, that stays dry in the summer but receives some water in the winter. | [noun] A fragment of anything shattered. SHAW (10) [noun] A thicket; a small wood or grove. | [noun] The leaves and tops of vegetables, especially potatoes and turnips. SHAY (10) [noun] A chaise. SHEA (7) [noun] A tree (Vitellaria paradoxa) indigenous to Africa, occurring in Mali, Cameroon, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Togo, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan, Burkina Faso and Uganda. | [noun] The fruit of this tree, having a thin, tart, nutritious pulp that surrounds a relatively large, oil-rich seed. 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. SHES (7) [noun] A female. SHEW (10) [noun] A play, dance, or other entertainment. | [noun] An exhibition of items. | [noun] A broadcast program/programme. | [verb] To display, to have somebody see (something). SHIM (9) [noun] A wedge. | [noun] A thin piece of material, sometimes tapered, used for alignment or support. | [noun] A small library that transparently intercepts and modifies calls to an API, usually for compatibility purposes. | [noun] A person characterised by both male and female traits, or by ambiguous male-female traits, also called a he-she; transsexual. SHIN (7) [noun] The front part of the leg below the knee; the front edge of the shin bone: Shinbone | [noun] A fishplate for a railway. | [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. | [noun] The twenty-first letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others): Shin (letter) SHIP (9) [noun] A water-borne vessel generally larger than a boat. | [noun] (chiefly in combination) A vessel which travels through any medium other than across land, such as an airship or spaceship. | [noun] A sailing vessel with three or more square-rigged masts. | [verb] To send by water-borne transport. | [noun] A fictional romantic relationship between two characters, either real or themselves fictional. SHIT (7) [noun] Solid excretory product evacuated from the bowels; feces. | [noun] An instance of defecation. | [noun] Rubbish; worthless matter. | [verb] To defecate. SHIV (10) [noun] A knife, especially a makeshift one fashioned from something not normally used as a weapon (like a plastic spoon or a toothbrush). | [noun] A particular woody by-product of processing flax or hemp. | [verb] To stab someone with a shiv. SHMO (9) SHOD (8) [adjective] Wearing shoes. | [adjective] Having tires equipped. | [verb] To put shoes on one's feet. SHOE (7) [noun] A protective covering for the foot, with a bottom part composed of thick leather or plastic sole and often a thicker heel, and a softer upper part made of leather or synthetic material. Shoes generally do not extend above the ankle, as opposed to boots, which do. | [noun] A piece of metal designed to be attached to a horse's foot as a means of protection; a horseshoe. | [noun] A device for holding multiple decks of playing cards, allowing more games to be played by reducing the time between shuffles. SHOG (8) SHOO (7) [verb] To induce someone or something to leave. | [verb] To leave under inducement. | [verb] To usher someone. SHOP (9) [noun] An establishment that sells goods or services to the public; originally only a physical location, but now a virtual establishment as well. | [noun] A place where things are manufactured or crafted; a workshop. | [noun] A large garage where vehicle mechanics work. SHOT (7) [verb] To launch a projectile. | [verb] To move or act quickly or suddenly. | [verb] To act or achieve. | [noun] A charge to be paid, a scot or shout. | [interjection] Thank you. SHOW (10) [noun] A play, dance, or other entertainment. | [noun] An exhibition of items. | [noun] A broadcast program/programme. SHRI (7) SHUL (7) [noun] The synagogue. SHUN (7) [verb] To avoid, especially persistently. | [verb] To escape (a threatening evil, an unwelcome task etc). | [verb] To screen, hide. SHUT (7) [adjective] Closed, shut. | [adjective] Narrow; confined. | [adjective] At a little distance; near. | [noun] A narrow alley or passage acting as a short cut through the buildings between two streets. SIAL (4) [noun] The rocks rich in silicon and aluminum that form the upper layer of the earth's crust, which lies beneath all continental landmasses. SIBB (8) SIBS (6) [noun] Kindred; kin; kinsmen; a body of persons related by blood in any degree. | [noun] A kinsman; a blood relation; a relative, near or remote; one closely allied to another; an intimate companion. | [noun] A sibling, brother or sister (irrespective of gender) SICE (6) [noun] A groom, or servant with responsibility for the horses. | [noun] (Malaya) usually syce: chauffeur, driver. | [noun] The number six in a game of dice. SICK (10) [noun] Sick people in general as a group. | [noun] Vomit. | [verb] To vomit. | [verb] To incite an attack by, especially a dog or dogs. SICS (6) [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. SIDE (5) [noun] A bounding straight edge of a two-dimensional shape. | [noun] A flat surface of a three-dimensional object; a face. | [noun] One half (left or right, top or bottom, front or back, etc.) of something or someone. | [verb] To clear, tidy or sort. SIFT (7) SIGH (8) [noun] A deep, prolonged audible inhale and exhale of breath; as when fatigued, frustrated, grieved, or relieved; the act of sighing. | [noun] Figuratively, a manifestation of grief; a lament. | [noun] A person who is bored. SIGN (5) [noun] (sometimes also used uncountably) A visible indication. | [noun] Physical evidence left by an animal. | [noun] A clearly visible object, generally flat, bearing a short message in words or pictures. | [verb] To make a mark SIKE (8) [noun] A gutter or ditch; a small stream that frequently dries up in the summer. | [noun] A sigh. | [verb] To sigh or sob. | [interjection] Indicating that one's preceding statement was false and that one has successfully fooled one's interlocutor. Also sike. SILD (5) [noun] Any young herring (other than a sprat), especially if canned and processed in Scandinavia for sale as a sardine. SILK (8) [noun] A fine fiber excreted by the silkworm or other arthropod (such as a spider). | [noun] A fine, soft cloth woven from silk fibers. | [noun] Anything which resembles silk, such as the filiform styles of the female flower of maize, or the seed covering of bombaxes. SILL (4) [noun] (also window sill) A horizontal slat which forms the base of a window. | [noun] A horizontal, structural member of a building near ground level on a foundation or pilings or lying on the ground in earth-fast construction and bearing the upright portion of a frame. Also called a ground plate, groundsill, sole, sole-plate, mudsill. An interrupted sill fits between posts instead of being below and supporting the posts in timber framing. | [noun] A horizontal layer of igneous rock between older rock beds. | [noun] A young herring. | [noun] The shaft or thill of a carriage. SILO (4) [noun] A vertical building, usually cylindrical, used for the production of silage. | [noun] From the shape, a building used for the storage of grain. | [noun] An underground bunker used to hold missiles which may be launched. SILT (4) [noun] Mud or fine earth deposited from running or standing water. | [noun] (by extension) Material with similar physical characteristics, whatever its origins or transport. | [noun] A particle from 3.9 to 62.5 microns in diameter, following the Wentworth scale. SIMA (6) [noun] The upturned edge of a roof which acts as a gutter; a cyma. | [noun] The lower layer of the earth's outer crust that underlies the sial and is rich in silica, iron, and magnesium. SIMP (8) [noun] A simple person lacking common sense; a fool or simpleton. | [verb] To melancholically reminisce; to recall once fond memories now tinged with sadness, especially regarding a former lover. | [noun] A man who foolishly overvalues and defers to a woman, putting her on a pedestal. | [adjective] Made more simple; having its complexity reduced. SIMS (6) [noun] A simulation or simulator. SINE (4) [noun] In a right triangle, the ratio of the length of the side opposite an angle to the length of the hypotenuse. SING (5) [noun] A gathering at which people sing songs. | [verb] To produce musical or harmonious sounds with one’s voice. | [verb] To express audibly by means of a harmonious vocalization. SINH (7) [noun] A traditional tube skirt worn by Lao and Thai women, particularly northern Thai and northeastern Thai women. SINK (8) [noun] A basin used for holding water for washing. | [noun] A drain for carrying off wastewater. | [noun] A sinkhole. SINS (4) [noun] A violation of God's will or religious law. | [noun] A misdeed. | [noun] A sin offering; a sacrifice for sin. SIPE (6) [noun] Slit in a tire to drain away surface water and improve traction. | [noun] A drain. | [verb] To cut grooves in tires. SIPS (6) [noun] A small mouthful of drink SIRE (4) [noun] A lord, master, or other person in authority, most commonly used vocatively: formerly in speaking to elders and superiors, later only when addressing a sovereign. | [noun] A male animal; a stud, especially a horse or dog, that has fathered another. | [noun] A father; the head of a family; the husband. SIRS (4) [noun] A man of a higher rank or position. | [noun] A respectful term of address to a man of higher rank or position, particularly: | [noun] A respectful term of address to an adult male (often older), especially if his name or proper title is unknown. SITE (4) [noun] Sorrow, grief. | [noun] The place where anything is fixed; situation; local position | [noun] A place fitted or chosen for any certain permanent use or occupation SITH (7) SITS (4) [noun] Subsidence of the roof of a coal mine. | [noun] An event, usually lasting one full day or more, where the primary goal is to sit in meditation. | [verb] (of a person) To be in a position in which the upper body is upright and supported by the buttocks. SIZE (13) [noun] (obsolete outside dialectal) An assize. | [noun] A regulation determining the amount of money paid in fees, taxes etc. | [noun] A fixed standard for the magnitude, quality, quantity etc. of goods, especially food and drink. | [noun] A thin, weak glue used as primer for paper or canvas intended to be painted upon. SIZY (16) SKAG (9) [noun] Heroin. | [noun] (originally African American Vernacular English) A woman of loose morals. | [noun] A cigarette. SKAS (8) SKAT (8) [noun] A trick-taking card game for three players, popular in Germany. | [noun] A widow of two cards in the game of skat. SKEE (8) SKEG (9) [noun] A fin-like structure to the rear of the keel of a vessel that supports the rudder and protects a propeller. | [noun] A similar construction on a boat that acts as a keel. | [noun] A fin that serves to stabilize a surfboard. SKEP (10) [noun] A basket. | [noun] A beehive made of straw or wicker. SKEW (11) [noun] Something that has an oblique or slanted position. | [noun] An oblique or sideways movement. | [noun] A bias or distortion in a particular direction. | [noun] A stone at the foot of the slope of a gable, the offset of a buttress, etc., cut with a sloping surface and with a check to receive the coping stones and retain them in place; a skew-corbel. 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. SKIM (10) [noun] A cursory reading, skipping the details. | [noun] Skim milk. | [noun] The act of skimming. SKIN (8) [noun] The outer protective layer of the body of any animal, including of a human. | [noun] The outer protective layer of the fruit of a plant. | [noun] The skin and fur of an individual animal used by humans for clothing, upholstery, etc. SKIP (10) [noun] A leaping, jumping or skipping movement. | [noun] The act of passing over an interval from one thing to another; an omission of a part. | [noun] A passage from one sound to another by more than a degree at once. | [noun] A large open-topped container for waste, designed to be lifted onto the back of a truck to remove it along with its contents. (see also skep). | [noun] Short for skipper, the master or captain of a ship, or other person in authority. | [noun] An Australian of Anglo-Celtic descent. | [noun] (college slang) A college servant. SKIS (8) [noun] One of a pair of long flat runners designed for gliding over snow or water | [noun] One of a pair of long flat runners under some flying machines, used for landing | [verb] To move on skis SKIT (8) [noun] A short comic performance. | [noun] A jeer or sally; a brief satire. | [noun] A wanton girl; a wench. SKUA (8) [noun] Any of various predatory seabirds of the family Stercorariidae that often chase other seabirds to steal their catches. SLAB (6) [noun] A large, flat piece of solid material; a solid object that is large and flat. | [noun] A paving stone; a flagstone. | [noun] A carton containing 24 cans of beer. | [noun] Mud, sludge. | [noun] A car that has been modified with equipment such as loudspeakers, lights, special paint, hydraulics, and other accessories. SLAG (5) [noun] Waste material from a coal mine | [noun] Scum that forms on the surface of molten metal | [noun] Impurities formed and separated out when a metal is smelted from ore; vitrified cinders SLAM (6) [noun] A sudden impact or blow. | [noun] The shock and noise produced by violently closing a door or other object. | [noun] A slam dunk. | [noun] A type of card game, also called ruff and honours. | [noun] A shambling fellow. SLAP (6) [noun] A blow, especially one given with the open hand, or with something broad and flat. | [noun] The sound of such a blow. | [noun] Makeup; cosmetics. SLAT (4) [noun] A thin, narrow strip or bar of wood (lath) or metal. | [noun] (aeronautical) A movable control surface at the leading edge of a wing that when moved, changes the chord line of the airfoil, affecting the angle of attack. Employed in conjunction with flaps to allow for a lower stall speed in the landing attitude, facilitating slow flight. | [noun] A ski. SLAW (7) [noun] Coleslaw. SLAY (7) [verb] To kill, murder. | [verb] To eradicate or stamp out. | [verb] (by extension) To defeat, overcome (in a competition or contest). 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. SLEW (7) [noun] The act, or process of slewing. | [noun] A device used for slewing. | [noun] A change of position. | [noun] A wet place; a river inlet. | [verb] To kill, murder. | [noun] A large amount. 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. SLIM (6) [noun] A type of cigarette substantially longer and thinner than normal cigarettes. | [noun] A potato farl. | [noun] AIDS, or the chronic wasting associated with its later stages. SLIP (6) [noun] A thin, slippery mix of clay and water. | [noun] Mud, slime. | [noun] A twig or shoot; a cutting. | [noun] An act or instance of slipping. SLIT (4) [noun] A narrow cut or opening; a slot. | [noun] The opening of the vagina. | [noun] A woman, usually a sexually loose woman; a prostitute. SLOB (6) [noun] A lazy and slovenly person. | [noun] A lazy and obese person. SLOE (4) [noun] The small, bitter, wild fruit of the blackthorn (Prunus spinosa). | [noun] The tree Prunus spinosa. | [noun] Any of various other plants of the genus Prunus, as a shrub or small tree, Prunus alleghaniensis, bearing dark-purple fruit. SLOG (5) [noun] A long, tedious walk, or session of work. | [noun] An aggressive shot played with little skill. | [verb] To walk slowly, encountering resistance. SLOP (6) [noun] A loose outer garment; a jacket or overall. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A rubber thong sandal. | [noun] (in the plural) See slops. | [noun] Liquid or semi-solid; goo, paste, mud. | [noun] (costers) A policeman. SLOT (4) [noun] A broad, flat, wooden bar, a slat, especially as used to secure a door, window, etc. | [noun] A metal bolt or wooden bar, especially as a crosspiece. | [noun] An implement for baring, bolting, locking or securing a door, box, gate, lid, window or the like. | [noun] A narrow depression, perforation, or aperture; especially, one for the reception of a piece fitting or sliding in it. SLOW (7) [noun] Someone who is slow; a sluggard. | [noun] A slow song. | [verb] To make (something) run, move, etc. less quickly; to reduce the speed of. SLUB (6) [noun] A small thickened portion or knot found on linen yarn, caused by defects. | [noun] Fabric fiber produced by slubbing. | [verb] To draw and twist fibers in order to prepare them for spinning. SLUE (4) [noun] The act of sluing or the place to which something has slued. | [noun] A slough; a run or wet place. | [verb] To rotate something on an axis. SLUG (5) [noun] Any of many terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks, having no (or only a rudimentary) shell. | [noun] A slow, lazy person; a sluggard. | [noun] A bullet or other projectile fired from a firearm; in modern usage, generally refers to a shotgun slug. | [noun] A hard blow, usually with the fist. SLUM (6) [noun] A dilapidated neighborhood where many people live in a state of poverty. | [noun] Inexpensive trinkets awarded as prizes in a carnival game. | [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. | [noun] Slumgullion; a meat-based stew SLUR (4) [noun] An insult or slight. | [noun] A set of notes that are played legato, without separate articulation. | [noun] The symbol indicating a legato passage, written as an arc over the slurred notes (not to be confused with a tie). SLUT (4) [noun] A sexually promiscuous woman or girl. | [noun] Any sexually promiscuous person, often a gay man. | [noun] Someone who seeks attention through inappropriate means or to an excessive degree. SMEW (9) [noun] A small compact diving duck, Mergus albellus, that breeds in the northern taiga of Europe and Asia and winters on sheltered coasts or inland lakes. SMIT (6) [noun] Fine clay or ochre made up into balls, used for marking sheep. | [noun] An infection. | [noun] A stain. | [verb] To hit, to strike. SMOG (7) [noun] A noxious mixture of particulates and gases that is the result of urban air pollution. | [verb] To get a smog check; to check a vehicle or have it checked for emissions. SMUG (7) [verb] To make smug, or spruce. | [verb] To seize; to confiscate. | [verb] To hush up. SMUT (6) [noun] Soot. | [noun] A flake of ash or soot. | [noun] Sexually vulgar material; something that is sexual in a dirty way; pornographic material. SNAG (5) [noun] A stump or base of a branch that has been lopped off; a short branch, or a sharp or rough branch. | [noun] A dead tree that remains standing. | [noun] A tree, or a branch of a tree, fixed in the bottom of a river or other navigable water, and rising nearly or quite to the surface, by which boats are sometimes pierced and sunk. | [noun] A light meal. | [noun] A misnaged, an opponent to Chassidic Judaism (more likely modern, for cultural reasons). SNAP (6) [noun] A quick breaking or cracking sound or the action of producing such a sound. | [noun] A sudden break. | [noun] An attempt to seize, bite, attack, or grab. SNAW (7) SNED (5) [verb] To lop. SNIB (6) [noun] A latch or fastening for a door, window etc. | [noun] A reprimand; a snub. | [verb] To latch (a door, window etc.). SNIP (6) [noun] The act of snipping; cutting a small amount off of something. | [noun] A single cut with scissors, clippers, or similar tool. | [noun] Something acquired for a low price; a bargain. SNIT (4) [noun] A temper; a lack of patience; a bad mood. | [noun] A U.S. unit of volume for liquor equal to 2 jiggers, 3 U.S. fluid ounces, or 88.7 milliliters. | [noun] A beer chaser commonly served in three-ounce servings in highball or juice glasses with a Bloody Mary cocktail in the upper midwest states of United States including Minnesota, North Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, and Illinois. SNOB (6) [noun] A person who wishes to be seen as a member of the upper classes and who looks down on those perceived to have inferior or unrefined tastes. | [noun] A cobbler or shoemaker. | [noun] A member of the lower classes; a commoner. SNOG (5) [noun] A passionate kiss. | [verb] To kiss passionately. SNOT (4) [noun] Mucus, especially mucus from the nose. | [noun] A contemptible child. | [noun] A mean fellow. SNOW (7) [noun] The frozen, crystalline state of water that falls as precipitation. | [noun] Any similar frozen form of a gas or liquid. | [noun] A snowfall; a blanket of frozen, crystalline water. | [noun] A square-rigged vessel, differing from a brig only in that she has a trysail mast close abaft the mainmast, on which a large trysail is hoisted. SNUB (6) [noun] A deliberate affront or slight. | [noun] A sudden checking of a cable or rope. | [noun] A knot; a protuberance; a snag. | [verb] To sob with convulsions. SNUG (5) [noun] A small, comfortable back room in a pub. | [noun] A lug. | [verb] To make secure or snug. SNYE (7) SOAK (8) [noun] An immersion in water etc. | [noun] A drunkard. | [noun] A carouse; a drinking session. SOAP (6) [noun] A substance able to mix with both oil and water, used for cleaning, often in the form of a solid bar or in liquid form, derived from fats or made synthetically. | [noun] A metallic salt derived from a fatty acid | [noun] Flattery or excessively complacent conversation. SOAR (4) [noun] The act of soaring. | [noun] An upward flight. | [verb] To fly high with little effort, like a bird. SOBS (6) [noun] A cry with a short, sudden expulsion of breath. | [noun] Sound of sob | [verb] To weep with convulsive gasps. SOCK (10) [noun] A knitted or woven covering for the foot. | [noun] A shoe worn by Greco-Roman comedy actors. | [noun] A color pattern (usually white) on a cat's or dog's lower leg that is different from the color pattern on the rest of the animal. | [noun] A violent blow; a punch. | [noun] A ploughshare. | [noun] An opening into which a plug or other connecting part is designed to fit (e.g. a light bulb socket). SODA (5) [noun] Sodium bicarbonate (usually baking soda). | [noun] Sodium carbonate (usually washing soda). | [noun] Sodium in chemical combination. SODS (5) [verb] To cover with sod. | [noun] Sodomite; bugger. | [noun] (mildly pejorative, formerly considered vulgar) A person, usually male; often qualified with an adjective. SOFA (7) [noun] A raised area of a building's floor, usually covered with carpeting, used for sitting. | [noun] (furniture) An upholstered seat with a raised back and one or two raised ends, long enough to comfortably accommodate two or more people. | [verb] To furnish with one or more sofas. SOFT (7) [noun] A soft or foolish person; an idiot. | [noun] Ellipsis of soft tyre (A tyre whose compound is softer than mediums, and harder than supersofts.) | [noun] A soft sound or part of a sound. SOIL (4) [noun] A mixture of mineral particles and organic material, used to support plant growth. | [noun] The unconsolidated mineral or organic material on the immediate surface of the earth that serves as a natural medium for the growth of land plants. | [noun] The unconsolidated mineral or organic matter on the surface of the earth that has been subjected to and shows effects of genetic and environmental factors of: climate (including water and temperature effects), and macro- and microorganisms, conditioned by relief, acting on parent material over a period of time. A product-soil differs from the material from which it is derived in many physical, chemical, biological, and morphological properties and characteristics. | [noun] Faeces or urine etc. when found on clothes. | [noun] A wet or marshy place in which a boar or other such game seeks refuge when hunted. | [verb] To feed, as cattle or horses, in the barn or an enclosure, with fresh grass or green food cut for them, instead of sending them out to pasture; hence (such food having the effect of purging them), to purge by feeding on green food. SOJA (11) SOKE (8) [noun] Any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines. | [noun] A district under a particular jurisdiction. SOLA (4) [noun] A wild plant found in Bengal and Assam, Aeschynomene aspera, having a milky-white, spongy pith used for the manufacture of pith helmets and decorative artefacts. 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 SOLE (4) [noun] A wooden band or yoke put around the neck of an ox or cow in the stall. | [noun] A pond or pool; a dirty pond of standing water. | [verb] To pull by the ears; to pull about; haul; lug. | [adjective] Only | [noun] The bottom or plantar surface of the foot. SOLI (4) [noun] A piece of music for one performer. | [noun] A job or performance done by one person alone. | [noun] (games) A card game similar to whist in which each player plays against the others in turn without a partner SOLO (4) [noun] A piece of music for one performer. | [noun] A job or performance done by one person alone. | [noun] (games) A card game similar to whist in which each player plays against the others in turn without a partner SOLS (4) [noun] A solar day on Mars (equivalent to 24 hours, 39 minutes, 35 seconds). | [noun] A Spanish-American gold or silver coin, now the main currency unit of Peru (also new sol), or a coin of this value. | [noun] A type of colloid in which a solid is dispersed in a liquid. SOMA (6) [noun] The whole axial portion of an animal, including the head, neck, trunk, and tail. | [noun] The corporeal body, as distinguished from the psyche or soul and the pneuma or spirit. | [noun] The bulbous part of a neuron, containing the cell nucleus. | [noun] (hinduism) A ritual drink in ancient Vedic and continuing Hindu culture, obtained by pressing the Soma plant. SOME (6) [adverb] Of a measurement: approximately, roughly. | [pronoun] A certain number, at least two. | [pronoun] An indefinite quantity. SONE (4) [noun] (acoustics) a subjective unit of loudness for an average listener equal to the loudness of a 1000-hertz sound that has an intensity 40 decibels above the listener's own threshold of hearing SONG (5) [noun] A musical composition with lyrics for voice or voices, performed by singing. | [noun] (by extension) Any musical composition. | [noun] Poetical composition; poetry; verse. SONS (4) [noun] One's male offspring. | [noun] A male adopted person in relation to his adoptive parents. | [noun] A male person who has such a close relationship with an older or otherwise more authoritative person that he can be regarded as a son of the other person. SOOK (8) [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. | [noun] Familiar name for a calf. | [noun] A crybaby, a complainer, a whinger; a shy or timid person, a wimp; a coward. | [noun] A street market, particularly in Arabic- and Somali-speaking countries; a place where people buy and sell goods. | [noun] A mature female Chesapeake Bay blue crab, Callinectes sapidus. SOON (4) [adjective] Short in length of time from the present. | [adjective] Early | [adverb] Immediately, instantly. SOOT (4) [noun] Fine black or dull brown particles of amorphous carbon and tar, produced by the incomplete combustion of coal, oil etc. | [verb] To cover or dress with soot. SOPH (9) SOPS (6) [noun] Something entirely soaked. | [noun] A piece of solid food to be soaked in liquid food. | [noun] Something given or done to pacify or bribe. SORA (4) [noun] A rail (Porzana carolina) of North, Central, and northern South America. SORB (6) [noun] The service tree, Sorbus domestica. | [noun] Any of various related trees, including the wild service tree, S. torminalis, and the rowan, S. aucuparia. | [noun] The fruit of any of these trees, especially of the service tree. | [verb] To absorb or adsorb. 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. SORE (4) [noun] An injured, infected, inflamed or diseased patch of skin. | [noun] Grief; affliction; trouble; difficulty. | [verb] To mutilate the legs or feet of (a horse) in order to induce a particular gait. | [noun] A group of ducks on land. | [noun] A young hawk or falcon in its first year. SORI (4) [noun] Any reproductive structure, in some lichens and fungi, that produces spores. | [noun] A cluster of sporangia on the edge or underside of a fern frond. | [noun] Copper sulphate SORN (4) SORT (4) [noun] A general type. | [noun] Manner; form of being or acting. | [noun] Condition above the vulgar; rank. | [verb] To separate items into different categories according to certain criteria that determine their sorts. SOTH (7) SOTS (4) [noun] Stupid person; fool | [noun] Drunkard | [verb] To drink until one becomes drunk SOUK (8) [noun] A street market, particularly in Arabic- and Somali-speaking countries; a place where people buy and sell goods. SOUL (4) [noun] The spirit or essence of a person usually thought to consist of one's thoughts and personality. Often believed to live on after the person's death. | [noun] The spirit or essence of anything. | [noun] Life, energy, vigor. | [verb] To afford suitable sustenance. SOUP (6) [noun] Any of various dishes commonly made by combining liquids, such as water or stock with other ingredients, such as meat and vegetables, that contribute flavor and texture. | [noun] Any mixture or substance suggestive of soup consistency. | [verb] To feed: to provide with soup or a meal. | [verb] Alternative form of sup | [noun] Alternative form of sup | [verb] To sup or swallow. | [verb] To breathe out; to draw out. SOUR (4) [noun] The sensation of a sour taste. | [noun] A drink made with whiskey, lemon or lime juice and sugar. | [noun] (by extension) Any cocktail containing lemon or lime juice. SOUS (4) [noun] An old French copper coin equal to one twentieth of a livre or twelve deniers; one sou is to the livre as one shilling is to the pound. | [noun] Cent; pocket money. | [noun] A thing of the smallest value; a whit; a jot. | [noun] An old French copper coin equal to one twentieth of a livre or twelve deniers; one sou is to the livre as one shilling is to the pound. | [noun] An old French copper coin equal to one twentieth of a livre or twelve deniers; one sou is to the livre as one shilling is to the pound. SOWN (7) [verb] To scatter, disperse, or plant (seeds). | [verb] To spread abroad; to propagate. | [verb] To scatter over; to besprinkle. SOWS (7) [noun] A female pig. | [noun] A female bear, she-bear. | [noun] A female guinea pig. SOYA (7) [noun] A common East Asian liquid sauce, made by subjecting boiled beans to long fermentation and then long digestion in salt and water. | [noun] Soybeans, or the protein derived from them. SOYS (7) [noun] A common East Asian liquid sauce, made by subjecting boiled beans to long fermentation and then long digestion in salt and water. | [noun] Soybeans, or the protein derived from them. SPAE (6) [verb] To divine; foretell SPAN (6) [noun] The space from the thumb to the end of the little finger when extended; nine inches; an eighth of a fathom. | [noun] (by extension) A small space or a brief portion of time. | [noun] A portion of something by length; a subsequence. | [verb] To extend through the distance between or across. | [verb] To rotate, revolve, gyrate (usually quickly); to partially or completely rotate to face another direction. SPAR (6) [noun] A rafter of a roof. | [noun] A thick pole or piece of wood. | [noun] A bar of wood used to fasten a door. | [noun] A sparring session; a preliminary fight, as in boxing or cock-fighting. | [noun] Any of various microcrystalline minerals, of light, translucent, or transparent appearance, which are easily cleft. SPAS (6) [noun] A health resort near a mineral spring or hot spring. | [noun] A trendy or fashionable resort. | [noun] A health club. SPAT (6) [verb] To evacuate (saliva or another substance) from the mouth, etc. | [verb] To emit or expel in a manner similar to evacuating saliva from the mouth; specifically, to rain or snow slightly. | [verb] To utter (something) violently. | [noun] The spawn of shellfish, especially oysters and similar molluscs. | [noun] (often in the plural) A covering or decorative covering worn over a shoe. | [noun] A brief argument, falling out, quarrel. | [noun] A light blow with something flat. | [noun] An obsolete unit of distance in astronomy (symbol S), equal to one billion kilometres. SPAY (9) [verb] To remove or destroy the ovaries (of an animal) so that it cannot become pregnant. | [noun] The hart in its third year; a young deer | [verb] To divine; foretell SPAZ (15) [noun] A stupid or incompetent person. | [noun] A hyperactive person. | [noun] A tantrum, a fit. SPEC (8) [noun] A special place (for hiding or viewing) | [noun] A spectacular mark (catch) in Australian rules football. | [verb] To specify, especially in a formal specification document. 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. SPEW (9) [noun] Vomit | [noun] Ejaculate or ejaculation. | [noun] Nonsense or lies. SPIC (8) [noun] A Spanish-speaking person, someone with a Central American or Latino accent. SPIK (10) SPIN (6) [noun] Rapid circular motion. | [noun] A quantum angular momentum associated with subatomic particles, which also creates a magnetic moment. | [noun] A favourable comment or interpretation intended to bias opinion on an otherwise unpleasant situation. SPIT (6) [noun] A thin metal or wooden rod on which meat is skewered for cooking, often over a fire. | [noun] A generally low, narrow, pointed, usually sandy peninsula. | [verb] To impale on a spit; to pierce with a sharp object. | [noun] A sudden impact or blow. | [noun] The depth to which the blade of a spade goes into the soil when it is used for digging; a layer of soil of the depth of a spade's blade. SPIV (9) [noun] A smartly dressed person who trades in illicit, black-market or stolen goods. | [noun] A flashy con artist, often homeless, who lives by his wits. | [noun] In Scotland Yard usage, a low and common thief. SPOT (6) [noun] A round or irregular patch on the surface of a thing having a different color, texture etc. and generally round in shape. | [noun] A stain or disfiguring mark. | [noun] A pimple, papule or pustule. SPRY (9) [adjective] Having great power of leaping or running; nimble; active. | [adjective] Vigorous; lively; cheerful. SPUD (7) [noun] A potato. | [noun] A hole in a sock. | [noun] A type of short nut (fastener) threaded on both ends. SPUE (6) [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 SPUN (6) [verb] To rotate, revolve, gyrate (usually quickly); to partially or completely rotate to face another direction. | [verb] To make yarn by twisting and winding fibers together. | [verb] To present, describe, or interpret, or to introduce a bias or slant, so as to give something a favorable or advantageous appearance. SPUR (6) [noun] A rigid implement, often roughly y-shaped, that is fixed to one's heel for the purpose of prodding a horse. Often worn by, and emblematic of, the cowboy or the knight. | [noun] A jab given with the spurs. | [noun] Anything that inspires or motivates, as a spur does a horse. | [noun] A tern. | [noun] A spurious tone, one that interferes with a signal in a circuit and is often masked underneath that signal. | [noun] The track of an animal, such as an otter; a spoor. | [verb] To ask, to inquire SRIS (4) STAB (6) [noun] An act of stabbing or thrusting with an object. | [noun] A wound made by stabbing. | [noun] Pain inflicted on a person's feelings. STAG (5) [noun] An adult male deer. | [noun] A colt, or filly. | [noun] (by extension) A romping girl; a tomboy. STAR (4) [noun] Any small luminous dot appearing in the cloudless portion of the night sky, especially with a fixed location relative to other such dots. | [noun] A luminous celestial body, made up of plasma (particularly hydrogen and helium) and having a spherical shape. Depending on context the sun may or may not be included. | [noun] A concave polygon with regular, pointy protrusions and indentations, generally with five or six points. STAT (4) [adjective] With no delay; at once. | [adverb] Immediately; now. | [verb] To assign statistics to (a monster, etc. in a game). | [noun] A statutory public holiday (also as stat holiday) STAW (7) STAY (7) [noun] Continuance or a period of time spent in a place; abode for an indefinite time; sojourn. | [noun] A postponement, especially of an execution or other punishment. | [noun] A stop; a halt; a break or cessation of action, motion, or progress. | [noun] A prop; a support. | [noun] A strong rope or wire supporting a mast, and leading from one masthead down to some other, or other part of the vessel. | [adjective] Steep; ascending. STEM (6) [noun] The stock of a family; a race or generation of progenitors. | [noun] A branch of a family. | [noun] An advanced or leading position; the lookout. | [verb] To stop, hinder (for instance, a river or blood). | [noun] A gleam of light; a flame. | [noun] Acronym of science, technology, engineering, (and) mathematics. STEP (6) [noun] An advance or movement made from one foot to the other; a pace. | [noun] A rest, or one of a set of rests, for the foot in ascending or descending, as a stair, or a rung of a ladder. | [noun] A distinct part of a process; stage; phase. STET (4) [noun] A symbol used by proofreaders and typesetters to indicate that a word or phrase that was crossed out should still remain. | [verb] To let (edited material) stand, or remain as it was. STEW (7) [noun] A cooking-dish used for boiling; a cauldron. | [noun] A heated bath-room or steam-room; also, a hot bath. | [noun] A brothel. | [noun] A steward or stewardess on an airplane. STEY (7) STIR (4) [noun] The act or result of stirring (moving around the particles of a liquid etc.) | [noun] Agitation; tumult; bustle; noise or various movements. | [noun] Public disturbance or commotion; tumultuous disorder; seditious uproar. | [noun] Jail; prison. STOA (4) [noun] In Ancient Greece, a walkway with a roof supported by colonnades, often with a wall on one side; specifically, the Great Hall in Athens. STOB (6) [noun] A stick, twig or peg, especially in roofing or matting. | [noun] A small post for supporting paling. | [noun] A wedge in coal-mining. STOP (6) [noun] A (usually marked) place where buses, trams or trains halt to let passengers get on and off, usually smaller than a station. | [noun] An action of stopping; interruption of travel. | [noun] That which stops, impedes, or obstructs; an obstacle; an impediment. | [noun] A small well-bucket; a milk-pail. | [adjective] Being or relating to the squark that is the superpartner of a top quark. STOW (7) [noun] A place, stead. | [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. STUB (6) [noun] Something blunted, stunted, or cut short, such as stubble or a stump. | [noun] A piece of certain paper items, designed to be torn off and kept for record or identification purposes. | [noun] A placeholder procedure that has the signature of the planned procedure but does not yet implement the intended behavior. 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. STUM (6) [noun] Unfermented grape juice; must. | [noun] Wine revived by new fermentation, resulting from the admixture of must. | [verb] To ferment. STUN (4) [noun] The condition of being stunned. | [noun] That which stuns; a shock; a stupefying blow. | [noun] A person who lacks intelligence. STYE (7) [noun] A bacterial infection in the eyelash or eyelid. | [noun] A ladder. | [noun] An inflammation of the eyelid. SUBA (6) SUBS (6) [noun] A submarine. | [noun] A submarine sandwich: a sandwich made on a long bun. | [noun] A substitute, often in sports. SUCH (9) [noun] Something being indicated that is similar to something else. | [pronoun] A person, a thing, people or things like the one or ones already mentioned. SUCK (10) [noun] An instance of drawing something into one's mouth by inhaling. | [noun] Milk drawn from the breast. | [noun] A weak, self-pitying person; a person who refuses to go along with others, especially out of spite; a crybaby or sore loser. SUDD (6) [noun] (Central Africa) A floating mass of plant matter, such as reeds, which obstructs the passage of boats. SUDS (5) [noun] Lather; foam or froth formed by mixing soap and water. | [noun] Beer | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, soapsuds. 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.). SUER (4) SUES (4) [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.). SUET (4) [noun] The fatty tissue that surrounds and protects the kidneys; that of sheep and cattle is used in cooking and in making tallow. SUGH (8) SUIT (4) [noun] A set of clothes to be worn together, now especially a man's matching jacket and trousers (also business suit or lounge suit), or a similar outfit for a woman. | [noun] (by extension) A single garment that covers the whole body: space suit, boiler suit, protective suit. | [noun] (metonym) A person who wears matching jacket and trousers, especially a boss or a supervisor. SULK (8) [noun] A state of sulking. | [verb] To express ill humor or offence by remaining sullenly silent or withdrawn. | [noun] A furrow. SULU (4) [noun] An all-purpose skirt-like garment worn by men and women in Fiji. SUMO (6) [noun] A stylised Japanese form of wrestling in which a wrestler loses if he is forced from the ring, or if any part of his body except the soles of his feet touches the ground. | [noun] A rikishi (sumo wrestler) SUMP (8) [noun] A hollow or pit into which liquid drains, such as a cesspool, cesspit or sink. | [noun] The lowest part of a mineshaft into which water drains. | [noun] A completely flooded cave passage, sometimes passable by diving. SUMS (6) [noun] A type of administrative district used in China, Mongolia, and Russia. In Mongolia, a somon is smaller than a province. In China, it is only used in Inner Mongolia where it is equivalent to a township. | [noun] A quantity obtained by addition or aggregation. | [noun] (often plural) An arithmetic computation, especially one posed to a student as an exercise (not necessarily limited to addition). SUNG (5) [verb] To produce musical or harmonious sounds with one’s voice. | [verb] To express audibly by means of a harmonious vocalization. | [verb] To soothe with singing. SUNK (8) [verb] (heading, physical) To move or be moved into something. | [verb] (heading, social) To diminish or be diminished. | [verb] To conceal and appropriate. SUNN (4) [noun] Crotalaria juncea, an East Indian leguminous plant yielding a fiber. SUNS (4) [noun] A star, especially when seen as the centre of any single solar system. | [noun] The light and warmth which is received from the sun. | [noun] Something like the sun in brightness or splendor. SUPE (6) SUPS (6) [noun] A sip; a small amount of food or drink. | [noun] Superintendent. | [noun] Upper limit. SUQS (13) [noun] A street market, particularly in Arabic- and Somali-speaking countries; a place where people buy and sell goods. SURA (4) [noun] Any of the 114 chapters of the Qur'an. | [noun] The sap of the palmyra or of the coconut palm, palm wine. SURD (5) [noun] An irrational number, especially one expressed using the √ symbol. | [noun] A voiceless consonant. | [adjective] Lacking the sense of hearing; deaf. SURE (4) [adjective] Physically secure and certain, non-failing, reliable. | [adjective] Certain in one's knowledge or belief. | [adjective] Certain to act or be a specified way. SURF (7) [noun] Waves that break on an ocean shoreline. | [noun] An instance or session of riding a surfboard in the surf. | [noun] The bottom of a drain. SUSS (4) [noun] Anything dirty or muddy; a dirty puddle. | [noun] Suspicious behaviour; the act of loitering with intent. | [verb] To arrest for suspicious behaviour. | [noun] Social nous. SWAB (9) [noun] A small piece of soft, absorbent material, such as gauze, used to clean wounds, apply medicine, or take samples of body fluids. Often attached to a stick or wire to aid access. | [noun] A sample taken with a swab (piece of absorbent material). | [noun] A piece of material used for cleaning or sampling other items like musical instruments or guns. SWAG (8) [noun] (window coverings) A loop of draped fabric. | [noun] A low point or depression in land; especially, a place where water collects. | [verb] To (cause to) sway. | [noun] Style; fashionable appearance or manner. | [noun] (thieves' cant) A shop and its goods; any quantity of goods. | [noun] Initialism of scientific/speculative/sophisticated/stupid wild-ass guess. SWAM (9) [verb] To move through the water, without touching the bottom; to propel oneself in water by natural means. | [verb] To become immersed in, or as if in, or flooded with, or as if with, a liquid | [verb] To move around freely because of excess space. SWAN (7) [noun] Any of various species of large, long-necked waterfowl, of genus Cygnus (bird family: Anatidae), most of which have white plumage. | [noun] One whose grace etc. suggests a swan. | [noun] This bird used as a heraldic charge, sometimes with a crown around its neck (e. g. the arms of Buckinghamshire). | [verb] To declare (chiefly in first-person present constructions). SWAP (9) [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. | [noun] An exchange of two comparable things. | [noun] A blow; a stroke. SWAT (7) [noun] A hard stroke, hit or blow, e.g., as part of a spanking. | [noun] Alternate spelling of swot: vigorous study at an educational institution. | [verb] To beat off, as insects; to bat, strike, or hit. | [verb] To illegitimately provoke a SWAT assault upon (someone). SWAY (10) [noun] The act of swaying; a swaying motion; a swing or sweep of a weapon. | [noun] A rocking or swinging motion. | [noun] Influence, weight, or authority that inclines to one side SWIG (8) [noun] Drink, liquor. | [noun] (by extension) A long draught from a drink. | [noun] A person who drinks deeply. SWIM (9) [noun] An act or instance of swimming. | [noun] The sound, or air bladder, of a fish. | [noun] A part of a stream much frequented by fish. | [noun] A dizziness; swoon. | [noun] Abbreviation of someone who isn't me. used as a way to avoid self-designation or self-incrimination, especially in online drug forums SWOB (9) [noun] A small piece of soft, absorbent material, such as gauze, used to clean wounds, apply medicine, or take samples of body fluids. Often attached to a stick or wire to aid access. | [noun] A sample taken with a swab (piece of absorbent material). | [noun] A piece of material used for cleaning or sampling other items like musical instruments or guns. SWOP (9) [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. | [noun] A fusion of swing and hip-hop dance styles. SWOT (7) [noun] One who swots. | [noun] Work. | [noun] Vigorous study at an educational institution. SWUM (9) [verb] To move through the water, without touching the bottom; to propel oneself in water by natural means. | [verb] To become immersed in, or as if in, or flooded with, or as if with, a liquid | [verb] To move around freely because of excess space. SYBO (9) SYCE (9) [noun] A groom, or servant with responsibility for the horses. | [noun] (Malaya) usually syce: chauffeur, driver. SYKE (11) SYLI (7) SYNC (9) [noun] Harmony. | [noun] A music synchronization license, allowing the music to be synchronized with visual media such as films. | [verb] To synchronize, especially in the senses of data synchronization, time synchronization, or synchronizing music with video. SYNE (7) [adverb] Subsequently; then. | [adverb] Before now; ago. | [adverb] Late SYPH (12)

5-Letter Words (1056)

SABED (8) SABER (7) [noun] A light sword, sharp along the front edge, part of the back edge, and at the point. | [noun] A modern fencing sword modeled after the sabre. | [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. SABES (7) SABIN (7) SABIR (7) SABLE (7) [noun] A small carnivorous mammal of the Old World that resembles a weasel, Martes zibellina, from cold regions in Eurasia and the North Pacific islands, valued for its dark brown fur (Wikipedia). | [noun] The marten, especially Martes americana (syn. Mustela americana). | [noun] The fur or pelt of the sable or other species of martens; a coat made from this fur. SABOT (7) [noun] A wooden shoe. | [noun] A carrier around projectile(s) in firearms, cannons and artillery which holds the projectile in precision within the barrel SABRA (7) [noun] A native-born Israeli. SABRE (7) [noun] A light sword, sharp along the front edge, part of the back edge, and at the point. | [noun] A modern fencing sword modeled after the sabre. | [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. SACKS (11) [noun] A bag or pouch inside a plant or animal that typically contains a fluid. | [noun] (games) A sacrifice. | [verb] (games) To sacrifice. SACRA (7) [noun] Sacral artery | [noun] A large triangular bone at the base of the spine, located between the two ilia (wings of the pelvis) and formed from vertebrae that fuse in adulthood. SADES (6) SADHE (9) SADHU (9) [noun] An ascetic or practitioner of yoga (yogi) who has given up pursuit of the first three Hindu goals of life: kama (enjoyment), artha (practical objectives) and even dharma (duty). SADIS (6) SADLY (9) [adverb] In a sad manner; sorrowfully. | [adverb] Unfortunately, sad to say. | [adverb] Very much (of a desire etc.); dearly; urgently. SAFER (8) [adjective] Not in danger; out of harm's reach. | [adjective] Free from risk. | [adjective] Providing protection from danger; providing shelter. SAFES (8) [noun] A box, usually made of metal, in which valuables can be locked for safekeeping. | [noun] A condom. | [noun] A ventilated or refrigerated chest or closet for securing provisions from noxious animals or insects. SAGAS (6) [noun] An Old Norse (Icelandic) prose narrative, especially one dealing with family or social histories and legends. | [noun] Something with the qualities of such a saga; an epic, a long story. SAGER (6) SAGES (6) [noun] A wise person or spiritual teacher; someone of gravity and wisdom, especially, a teacher venerable for years, and of sound judgment and prudence; a grave or stoic philosopher. SAGGY (10) [adjective] Baggy or loose-fitting. | [adjective] That sinks or droops from wear or its own weight. SAGOS (6) [noun] A powdered starch obtained from certain palms used as a food thickener. | [noun] A similar starch obtained from a palm-like cycad, Cycas revoluta | [noun] Any of the palms from which sago is extracted. SAGUM (8) SAHIB (10) [noun] A term of respect for a white European or other person of rank in colonial India. SAICE (7) SAIDS (6) SAIGA (6) [noun] Saiga tatarica, an antelope which inhabits a vast area between Kalmykia, Kazakhstan, southern Siberia. SAILS (5) [noun] A piece of fabric attached to a boat and arranged such that it causes the wind to drive the boat along. The sail may be attached to the boat via a combination of mast, spars and ropes. | [noun] (nautical,uncountable) The concept of a sail or sails, as if a substance. | [noun] The power harnessed by a sail or sails, or the use of this power for travel or transport. SAINS (5) SAINT (5) [noun] A person whom a church or another religious group has officially recognised as especially holy or godly; one eminent for piety and virtue. | [noun] (by extension) A person with positive qualities; one who does good. | [noun] One of the blessed in heaven. | [verb] To canonize, to formally recognize someone as a saint. SAITH (8) [verb] To pronounce. | [verb] To recite. | [verb] To tell, either verbally or in writing. | [noun] The pollock or coalfish or coley (Pollachius virens). SAJOU (12) SAKER (9) [noun] A falcon (Falco cherrug) native of Southern Europe and Asia. | [noun] A medium cannon slightly smaller than a culverin developed during the early 17th century. SAKES (9) [noun] An alcoholic beverage made from fermenting various forms of rice, usually with an ABV similar to wine. | [noun] Cause, interest or account | [noun] Purpose or end; reason | [noun] An alcoholic beverage made from fermenting various forms of rice, usually with an ABV similar to wine. SAKIS (9) [noun] An alcoholic beverage made from fermenting various forms of rice, usually with an ABV similar to wine. | [noun] A class of Japanese rice wines made from polished rice and typically about 20% alcohol by volume. | [noun] Any of several species of South American monkeys of the genus Pithecia. with large ears and a long hairy tail that is not prehensile. 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. SALAL (5) [noun] A leathery-leaved North American shrub, Gaultheria shallon, with edible sepals and leaves. SALEP (7) [noun] A starch or jelly made out of plants in the Orchidaceae family, such as the early-purple orchid (Orchis mascula). SALES (5) [noun] A hall. | [noun] An exchange of goods or services for currency or credit. | [noun] (Short for discount sale) The sale of goods at reduced prices. SALIC (7) SALLY (8) [noun] A willow | [noun] Any tree that looks like a willow | [noun] An object made from the above trees' wood | [noun] A sortie of troops from a besieged place against an enemy. | [noun] A member of the Salvation Army. | [noun] A kind of stonefly. SALMI (7) [noun] A rich stew or ragout, especially of game. SALOL (5) SALON (5) [noun] A large room, especially one used to receive and entertain guests. | [noun] A gathering of people for a social or intellectual meeting. | [noun] An art gallery or exhibition; especially the Paris salon or autumn salon. SALPA (7) SALPS (7) [noun] Any of the free-swimming tunicates of the order Salpida and its single family Salpidae. SALSA (5) [noun] A spicy tomato sauce, often including onions and hot peppers. | [noun] A style of urban music originally from New York heavily influenced by Cuban dance music, jazz and rock. | [noun] Any of several dances performed to salsa music. SALTS (5) [noun] A common substance, chemically consisting mainly of sodium chloride (NaCl), used extensively as a condiment and preservative. | [noun] One of the compounds formed from the reaction of an acid with a base, where a positive ion replaces a hydrogen of the acid. | [noun] A salt marsh, a saline marsh at the shore of a sea. SALTY (8) [adjective] Tasting of salt. | [adjective] Containing salt. | [adjective] Coarse, provocative, earthy; said of language. SALVE (8) [noun] An ointment, cream, or balm with soothing, healing, or calming effects. | [noun] Any remedy or action that soothes or heals. | [verb] To calm or assuage. | [verb] To save (the appearances or the phenomena); to explain (a celestial phenomenon); to account for (the apparent motions of the celestial bodies). | [interjection] Hail; a greeting. | [verb] To say “salve” to; to greet; to salute. SALVO (8) [noun] An exception; a reservation; an excuse. | [noun] A concentrated fire from pieces of artillery, as in endeavoring to make a break in a fortification; a volley. | [noun] A salute paid by a simultaneous, or nearly simultaneous, firing of a number of cannon. SAMBA (9) [noun] A Brazilian ballroom dance or dance style. | [noun] A Brazilian musical genre, to which the aforementioned dance is danced, which has its roots in West Africa via the slave trade. | [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBO (9) [noun] A sandwich. SAMEK (11) SAMPS (9) SANDS (6) [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. SANDY (9) [adjective] Covered with sand. | [adjective] Sprinkled with sand. | [adjective] Containing sand. SANED (6) SANER (5) [adjective] Being in a healthy condition; not deranged; thinking rationally. | [adjective] Mentally sound; possessing a rational mind; having the mental faculties in such condition as to be able to anticipate and judge the effect of one's actions in an ordinary manner. | [adjective] Rational; reasonable; sensible. SANES (5) SANGA (6) [noun] Sandwich. SANGH (9) SANTO (5) SAPID (8) [adjective] Tasty, flavoursome or savoury SAPOR (7) SAPPY (12) [adjective] Excessively sweet, emotional, nostalgic; cheesy; mushy. (British equivalent: soppy) | [adjective] Having (a particularly large amount of) sap. | [adjective] Juicy. | [adjective] Musty; tainted; rancid. SARAN (5) [noun] A plastic resin used to make packaging films. SARDS (6) [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). SAREE (5) [noun] The traditional dress of women in the Indian Subcontinent; an outer garment consisting of a single length of cotton or silk, most often with one end wrapped around the waist to form a skirt, the other draped over the shoulder or head. SARGE (6) [noun] Sergeant | [verb] (pickup community) to go out and engage women in order to pick them up SARIN (5) [noun] The neurotoxin O-isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate, used as a chemical weapon. SARIS (5) [noun] The traditional dress of women in the Indian Subcontinent; an outer garment consisting of a single length of cotton or silk, most often with one end wrapped around the waist to form a skirt, the other draped over the shoulder or head. SARKS (9) [noun] A shirt. SARKY (12) [adjective] Sarcastic SAROD (6) [noun] A fretless string instrument used mainly in Indian classical music. SAROS (5) [noun] (history, Babylon) A quantity of 3600, such as a period of 3600 years. | [noun] A period of 223 synodic months (approximately 18 years 11 days 8 hours), after which the relative positions of the earth, sun and moon recur, used to predict eclipses. SASIN (5) [noun] Indian antelope; blackbuck SASSY (8) [adjective] Bold and spirited, cheeky, impudent, saucy. | [adjective] Somewhat sexy and provocative. | [adjective] Lively, vigorous. SATAY (8) [noun] A dish made from small pieces of meat or fish grilled on a skewer and served with a spicy peanut sauce, originating from Indonesia and Malaysia. 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. SATEM (7) SATES (5) SATIN (5) [noun] A cloth woven from silk, nylon or polyester with a glossy surface and a dull back. (The same weaving technique applied to cotton produces cloth termed sateen). | [verb] To make (paper, silver, etc.) smooth and glossy like satin. | [adjective] Semigloss. SATIS (5) [adjective] In a state of satisfaction. | [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. SATYR (8) [noun] A woodland creature with pointed ears, legs, and short horns of a goat and a fondness for unrestrained revelry. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus Faunis. | [noun] A sylvan deity or demigod, male companion of Pan or Dionysus, represented as part man and part goat, and characterized by riotous merriment and lasciviousness, sometimes pictured with a perpetual erection. SAUCE (7) [noun] A liquid (often thickened) condiment or accompaniment to food. | [noun] Tomato sauce (similar to US tomato ketchup), as in: | [noun] (usually “the”) Alcohol, booze. SAUCH (10) SAUCY (10) [adjective] Similar to sauce; having the consistency or texture of sauce. | [adjective] Impertinent or disrespectful, often in a manner that is regarded as entertaining or amusing; smart. | [adjective] Impudently bold; pert. SAUGH (9) SAULS (5) SAULT (5) SAUNA (5) [noun] A room or a house designed for heat sessions. | [noun] The act of using a sauna. | [noun] A public sauna; a front for a brothel in some countries. SAURY (8) [noun] A marine epipelagic fish of the family Scomberesocidae, with beaklike jaws and a row of small finlets behind the dorsal and anal fins. SAUTE (5) [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. SAVED (9) [verb] To prevent harm or difficulty. | [verb] To put aside, to avoid. | [adjective] Rescued from the consequences of sin. SAVER (8) [noun] One who saves. | [noun] One who keeps savings more than usual. SAVES (8) [noun] In various sports, a block that prevents an opponent from scoring. | [noun] When a relief pitcher comes into a game leading by 3 points (runs) or less, and his team wins while continually being ahead. | [noun] A point in a professional wrestling match when one or more wrestlers run to the ring to aid a fellow wrestler who is being beaten. SAVIN (8) [noun] The evergreen shrub Juniperus sabina, endemic to Europe, which yields a medicinal oil. | [noun] The poisonous dried tips of this plant, with anthelmintic properties, used as a drug. | [noun] The eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, of eastern North America. SAVOR (8) [noun] The specific taste or smell of something. | [noun] A distinctive sensation. | [noun] Sense of smell; power to scent, or trace by scent. | [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. SAVOY (11) [noun] Savoy cabbage | [noun] An Italian noble family, which became the ruling (hereditary) dynasty of Sardinia and later of Italy | [noun] A member of the Savoy noble family SAVVY (14) [noun] Shrewdness. | [verb] To understand. | [adjective] Shrewd, well-informed and perceptive. 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. SAWER (8) SAXES (12) [noun] A slate-cutter's hammer; slate-ax. | [noun] A knife or sword; a dagger about 50 cm (20 inches) in length. | [noun] A single-reed instrument musical instrument of the woodwind family, usually made of brass and with a distinctive loop bringing the bell upwards. SAYER (8) SAYID (9) SAYST (8) SCABS (9) [noun] An incrustation over a sore, wound, vesicle, or pustule, formed during healing. | [noun] The scabies. | [noun] The mange, especially when it appears on sheep. SCADS (8) [noun] Any of several fish, of the family Carangidae, from the western Atlantic. | [noun] (in the plural) A large number or quantity. SCAGS (8) [noun] Heroin. | [noun] (originally African American Vernacular English) A woman of loose morals. | [noun] A cigarette. 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 SCALE (7) [noun] A ladder; a series of steps; a means of ascending. | [noun] An ordered, usually numerical sequence used for measurement, means of assigning a magnitude. | [noun] Size; scope. | [noun] Part of an overlapping arrangement of many small, flat and hard pieces of keratin covering the skin of an animal, particularly a fish or reptile. | [noun] A device to measure mass or weight. SCALL (7) SCALP (9) [noun] The top of the head; the skull. | [noun] The part of the head where the hair grows from, or used to grow from. | [noun] A part of the skin of the head, with the hair attached, formerly cut or torn off from an enemy by warriors in some cultures as a token of victory. SCALY (10) [noun] The scaly yellowfish, Labeobarbus natalensis. | [adjective] Covered or abounding with scales. | [adjective] Composed of scales lying over each other. SCAMP (11) [noun] A rascal, swindler, or rogue; a ne'er-do-well. | [noun] A mischievous person, especially a playful, impish youngster. | [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. | [noun] A preliminary design sketch. SCAMS (9) [noun] A fraudulent deal. | [noun] Something that is promoted using scams. SCANS (7) [noun] Close investigation. | [noun] An instance of scanning. | [noun] The result or output of a scanning process. SCANT (7) [adjective] Very little, very few. | [adjective] Not full, large, or plentiful; scarcely sufficient; scanty; meager; not enough. | [adjective] Sparing; parsimonious; chary. | [verb] To limit in amount or share; to stint. | [noun] A block of stone sawn on two sides down to the bed level. | [noun] Scarcity; lack. SCAPE (9) [noun] A leafless stalk growing directly out of a root. | [noun] The basal segment of an insect's antenna (i.e. the part closest to the body). | [noun] The basal part of the ovipositor of an insect, more specifically known as the oviscape. | [noun] Escape | [noun] The cry of the snipe when flushed. SCARE (7) [noun] A minor fright. | [noun] A cause of slight terror; something that inspires fear or dread. | [noun] A device or object used to frighten. | [verb] To frighten, terrify, startle, especially in a minor way. | [adjective] Lean; scanty SCARF (10) [noun] A long, often knitted, garment worn around the neck. | [noun] A headscarf. | [noun] A neckcloth or cravat. | [noun] A type of joint in woodworking. | [verb] To eat very quickly. | [noun] A cormorant. SCARP (9) [noun] The steep artificial slope below a fort's parapet | [noun] A cliff at the edge of a plateau or ridge caused by erosion or faulting; the steeper side of an escarpment | [verb] (earth science) to cut, scrape, erode, or otherwise make into a scarp or escarpment SCARS (7) [noun] A permanent mark on the skin, sometimes caused by the healing of a wound. | [noun] (by extension) A permanent negative effect on someone's mind, caused by a traumatic experience. | [noun] Any permanent mark resulting from damage. SCART (7) [noun] A slight wound. | [noun] A dash or stroke. | [noun] A niggard. SCARY (10) [adjective] Causing or able to cause fright. | [adjective] Uncannily striking or surprising. | [adjective] Subject to sudden alarm; easily frightened. | [noun] Barren land having only a thin coat of grass. SCATS (7) [noun] A tax; tribute. | [noun] A land-tax paid in the Shetland Islands. | [noun] Scat singing. SCATT (7) SCAUP (9) [noun] The top of the head; the skull. | [noun] The part of the head where the hair grows from, or used to grow from. | [noun] A part of the skin of the head, with the hair attached, formerly cut or torn off from an enemy by warriors in some cultures as a token of victory. SCAUR (7) [noun] A steep cliff or bank. SCENA (7) [noun] A scene in an opera. | [noun] An accompanied dramatic recitative, interspersed with passages of melody, or followed by a full aria. | [noun] The stage of an ancient theatre. 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. SCENE (7) [noun] The location of an event that attracts attention. | [noun] The stage. | [noun] The decorations; furnishings and backgrounds of a stage, representing the place in which the action of a play is set SCENT (7) [noun] A distinctive odour or smell. | [noun] An odour left by an animal that may be used for tracing. | [noun] The sense of smell. SCHAV (13) SCHMO (12) [noun] A stupid or obnoxious person. SCHUL (10) SCHWA (13) [noun] An indeterminate central vowel sound as the "a" in "about", represented as /ə/ in IPA. | [noun] The character ə. SCION (7) [noun] A descendant, especially a first-generation descendant of a distinguished family. | [noun] The heir to a throne. | [noun] A guardian. SCOFF (13) [noun] Derision; ridicule; a derisive or mocking expression of scorn, contempt, or reproach. | [noun] An object of scorn, mockery, or derision. | [verb] To jeer; to laugh with contempt and derision. | [noun] Food. 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. SCONE (7) [noun] A small, rich, pastry or quick bread, sometimes baked on a griddle. | [noun] (Utah) Frybread served with honey butter spread on it. | [noun] The head. SCOOP (9) [noun] Any cup- or bowl-shaped tool, usually with a handle, used to lift and move loose or soft solid material. | [noun] The amount or volume of loose or solid material held by a particular scoop. | [noun] The act of scooping, or taking with a scoop or ladle; a motion with a scoop, as in dipping or shovelling. SCOOT (7) [noun] A dollar. | [noun] A scooter. | [noun] A sideways shuffling or sliding motion. | [noun] A sudden flow of water; a squirt. SCOPE (9) [noun] The breadth, depth or reach of a subject; a domain. | [noun] A device used in aiming a projectile, through which the person aiming looks at the intended target. | [noun] Opportunity; broad range; degree of freedom. | [noun] A bundle, as of twigs. SCOPS (9) SCORE (7) [noun] The total number of goals, points, runs, etc. earned by a participant in a game. | [noun] The number of points accrued by each of the participants in a game, expressed as a ratio or a series of numbers. | [noun] The performance of an individual or group on an examination or test, expressed by a number, letter, or other symbol; a grade. SCORN (7) [noun] Contempt or disdain. | [noun] A display of disdain; a slight. | [noun] An object of disdain, contempt, or derision. SCOTS (7) [noun] A local tax, paid originally to the lord or ruler and later to a sheriff. SCOUR (7) [noun] The removal of sediment caused by swiftly moving water. | [noun] A place scoured out by running water, as in the bed of a stream below a waterfall. | [noun] A place where wool is washed to remove grease and impurities prior to processing. | [verb] To search an area thoroughly. SCOUT (7) [noun] A person sent out to gain and bring in tidings; especially, one employed in war to gain information about the enemy and ground. | [noun] An act of scouting or reconnoitering. | [noun] A member of any number of youth organizations belonging to the international scout movement, such as the Boy Scouts of America or Girl Scouts of the United States. | [verb] To reject with contempt. | [noun] A swift sailing boat. | [noun] A projecting rock. | [noun] The guillemot. SCOWL (10) [noun] The wrinkling of the brows or face in frowning; the expression of displeasure, sullenness, or discontent in the countenance; an angry frown. | [noun] (by extension) Gloom; dark or threatening aspect. | [verb] To wrinkle the brows, as in frowning or displeasure; to put on a frowning look; to look sour, sullen, severe, or angry. | [noun] Old workings of iron ore. SCOWS (10) [noun] A large flat-bottomed boat, having broad, square ends. | [verb] To transport in a scow. SCRAG (8) [noun] A thin or scrawny person or animal. | [noun] The lean end of a neck of mutton; the scrag end. | [noun] The neck, especially of a sheep. SCRAM (9) [verb] Leave in a hurry, go away. | [noun] The emergency shutdown device of a nuclear reactor, originally specifically by insertion of one or more safety control rods. | [noun] An activation of the emergency shutdown of a nuclear reactor. | [noun] A scratch, especially caused by claws or fingernails. SCRAP (9) [noun] A (small) piece; a fragment; a detached, incomplete portion. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Leftover food. | [noun] The crisp substance that remains after drying out animal fat. | [noun] A fight, tussle, skirmish. SCREE (7) [noun] Loose stony debris on a slope. | [noun] (by extension) Similar debris made up of broken building material such as bricks, concrete, etc. | [noun] A slope made up of loose stony debris at the base of a cliff, mountain, etc. | [noun] A harsh, high-pitched sound or cry (as of a hawk). | [verb] To flatten or level concrete while still wet, and remove protruding gravel and stones from the surface. | [noun] A coarse sieve. SCREW (10) [noun] A device that has a helical function. | [noun] The motion of screwing something; a turn or twist to one side. | [noun] A prison guard. SCRIM (9) [noun] A kind of light cotton or linen fabric, often woven in openwork patterns, -- used for curtains, etc,. | [noun] A large military scarf, usually camouflage coloured and used for concealment when not used as a scarf. | [noun] A woven, nonwoven or knitted fabric composed of continuous strands of material used for reinforcing or strengthening membranes. | [noun] A practice match between one or more organized teams usually in preparation for a more competitive format, such as a tournament. SCRIP (9) [noun] A small medieval bag used to carry food, money, utensils etc. | [noun] Small change. | [noun] A scrap of paper. | [noun] A share certificate. | [noun] A medical prescription. SCROD (8) [noun] (sometimes New York) Any cod, pollock, haddock, or other whitefish. | [verb] To shred. SCRUB (9) [noun] One who labors hard and lives meanly; a mean fellow. | [noun] One who is incompetent or unable to complete easy tasks. | [noun] A thicket or jungle, often specified by the name of the prevailing plant | [noun] An instance of scrubbing. SCRUM (9) [noun] A tightly-packed and disorderly crowd of people. | [noun] Specifically used in the Canadian media to describe a tightly-packed group of reporters surrounding a member of the Canadian House of Commons while in the Parliament Buildings. | [noun] In rugby union or rugby league, all the forwards joined together in an organised way. Also known as a scrummage. SCUBA (9) [noun] (underwater diving) An apparatus carried by a diver, which includes a tank holding compressed, filtered air and a regulator which delivers the air to the diver at ambient pressure which can be used underwater. | [verb] To perform scuba diving. SCUDI (8) [noun] A silver coin and unit of currency of various Italian states from the 16th to the 19th centuries. | [noun] A former unit of currency in Malta, now the official currency of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. | [noun] A unit of currency in 19th-century Bolivia, equal to 16 soles. SCUDO (8) [noun] A silver coin and unit of currency of various Italian states from the 16th to the 19th centuries. | [noun] A former unit of currency in Malta, now the official currency of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. | [noun] A unit of currency in 19th-century Bolivia, equal to 16 soles. SCUDS (8) [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. SCUFF (13) [noun] (sometimes attributive) A mark left by scuffing or scraping. | [verb] To scrape the feet while walking. | [verb] To hit lightly, to brush against. | [noun] A scurf; a scale. SCULK (11) SCULL (7) [noun] A single oar mounted at the stern of a boat and moved from side to side to propel the boat forward. | [noun] One of a pair of oars handled by a single rower. | [noun] A small rowing boat, for one person. | [noun] A skull cap. A small bowl-shaped helmet, without visor or bever. | [noun] A shoal of fish. | [noun] The skua gull. SCULP (9) [verb] (sometimes humorous) To sculpture; to carve or engrave. | [verb] To flay. SCUMS (9) [noun] A layer of impurities that accumulates at the surface of a liquid (especially molten metal or water). | [noun] A greenish water vegetation (such as algae), usually found floating on the surface of ponds | [noun] The topmost liquid layer of a cesspool or septic tank. SCUPS (9) SCURF (10) [noun] A skin disease. | [noun] The flakes of skin that fall off as a result of a skin disease. | [noun] Any crust-like formations on the skin, or in general. | [noun] A grey bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus). SCUTA (7) [noun] A scutum. SCUTE (7) [noun] A horny, chitinous, or bony external plate or scale, as on the shell of a turtle or the skin of crocodiles. | [noun] A proneural gene, often associated with achaete, that is required for the formation of many larval and adult sense organs | [noun] A small shield. SCUTS (7) [noun] A hare; a hare as the game in a hunt. | [noun] A short, erect tail, as of a hare, rabbit, or deer. | [noun] (by extension) The buttocks or rump; also, the female pudenda, the vulva. SEALS (5) [noun] A pinniped (Pinnipedia), particularly an earless seal (true seal) or eared seal. | [noun] A bearing representing a creature something like a walrus. | [verb] To hunt seals. SEAMS (7) [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [noun] A suture. | [noun] A thin stratum, especially of an economically viable material such as coal or mineral. SEAMY (10) [adjective] Sordid, squalid or corrupt. | [adjective] Having or showing a seam. SEARS (5) [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. SEATS (5) [noun] Something to be sat upon. | [noun] A location or site. | [noun] The starting point of a fire. SEBUM (9) [noun] A thick oily substance, secreted by the sebaceous glands of the skin, that consists of fat, keratin and cellular debris. SECCO (9) [noun] A work painted on dry plaster, as distinguished from a fresco. | [adjective] Dry | [adjective] Dry – sparse accompaniment, staccato, without resonance SECTS (7) [noun] An offshoot of a larger religion; a group sharing particular (often unorthodox) political and/or religious beliefs. | [noun] A group following a specific ideal or a leader. | [noun] A cutting; a scion. SEDAN (6) [noun] An enclosed windowed chair suitable for a single occupant, carried by at least two porters, in equal numbers in front and behind, using wooden rails that passed through metal brackets on the sides of the chair. | [noun] An automobile designed in a configuration with separate compartments for engine space, driver/passenger space and luggage space. | [noun] A handbarrow for transporting fish. SEDER (6) [noun] The ceremonial meal held on the first night or two nights of Passover. | [noun] One of the 54 parts into which the Torah is divided. SEDGE (7) [noun] Any plant of the genus Carex, the true sedge, perennial, endogenous herbs, often growing in dense tufts in marshy places. They have triangular jointless stems, a spiked inflorescence, and long grasslike leaves which are usually rough on the margins and midrib. There are several hundred species. | [noun] Any plant of the family Cyperaceae. | [noun] Certain other plants resembling sedges, such as Gentiana rubricaulis and Andropogon virginicus. | [noun] A dry fly used in fly fishing, designed to resemble a sedge or caddis fly. | [noun] Alternative spelling of segge SEDGY (10) SEDUM (8) [noun] Any of various succulent plants, of the genus Sedum, native to temperate zones; the stonecrop SEEDS (6) [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. SEEDY (9) [adjective] Full of seeds. | [adjective] Disreputable, run-down. | [adjective] Untidy; unkempt. SEEKS (9) [verb] To try to find; to look for; to search for. | [verb] To ask for; to solicit; to beseech. | [verb] To try to acquire or gain; to strive after; to aim at. SEELS (5) [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. SEELY (8) SEEMS (7) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. SEEPS (7) [noun] A small spring, pool, or other spot where liquid from the ground (e.g. water, petroleum or tar) has oozed to the surface; a place of seeping. | [noun] Moisture, liquid, gas, etc. that seeps out; a seepage. | [noun] The seeping away of a liquid, etc. SEEPY (10) SEERS (5) [noun] One who sees something; an eyewitness. | [noun] One who foretells the future; a clairvoyant, prophet, soothsayer or diviner. | [noun] Unit of mass or volume in the Middle East and Indian subcontinent. SEGNI (6) SEGNO (6) SEGOS (6) [noun] A perennial bulb lily found in Western North America, the Calochortus nuttallii, which has trumpet-shaped flowers. SEGUE (6) [noun] An instance of segueing, a transition. | [verb] To move smoothly from one state or subject to another. | [verb] To make a smooth transition from one theme to another. SEIFS (8) [noun] A sand dune that elongates parallel to the prevailing wind. SEINE (5) [noun] A long net having floats attached at the top and sinkers (weights) at the bottom, used in shallow water for catching fish. | [verb] To use a seine, to fish with a seine. SEISE (5) [verb] To vest ownership of a freehold estate in (someone). | [verb] (with of) To put in possession. | [verb] To seize. SEISM (7) SEIZE (14) [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.). SELAH (8) [noun] A pause or rest of a contemplative nature. | [interjection] A word occurring between verses or paragraphs in parts of the Hebrew Bible, namely in Habakkuk and the Psalms; perhaps indicating a pause, either for contemplation or for the singer to clear his or her throat. SELFS (8) [noun] One individual's personality, character, demeanor, or disposition. | [noun] The subject of one's own experience of phenomena: perception, emotions, thoughts. | [noun] An individual person as the object of his own reflective consciousness (plural selves). SELLE (5) SELLS (5) [noun] An act of selling. | [noun] An easy task. | [noun] An imposition, a cheat; a hoax; a disappointment; anything occasioning a loss of pride or dignity. SELVA (8) [noun] Heavily forested ground in the Amazon basin. SEMEN (7) [noun] A sticky, milky fluid produced in male reproductive organs that contains the reproductive cells. SEMES (7) [noun] A folded-back and stitched piece of fabric; especially, the stitching that joins two or more pieces of fabric. | [noun] A suture. | [noun] A thin stratum, especially of an economically viable material such as coal or mineral. | [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. SEMIS (7) [noun] A semi-detached house. | [noun] A semitrailer; a tractor-trailer; an eighteen-wheeler; an artic. | [noun] A semifinal. | [noun] A small bronze coin minted during the Roman Republic, valued at half an as. SENDS (6) [verb] To make something (such as an object or message) go from one place to another. | [verb] To excite, delight, or thrill (someone). | [verb] To bring to a certain condition. SENGI (6) SENNA (5) [noun] Any of several plants of the tribe Cassieae, especially those of the genera Cassia and Senna, whose leaves and pods are used as a purgative and laxative. | [noun] The dried leaves or pods of these plants (especially of Senna alexandrina, syn. Cassia angustifolia or Cassia acutifolia), used medicinally. | [noun] Senna glycoside, a laxative. SENOR (5) [noun] A Spanish term of address equivalent to sir or Mr., used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a married or an older man. SENSA (5) SENSE (5) [noun] Any of the manners by which living beings perceive the physical world: for humans sight, smell, hearing, touch, taste. | [noun] Perception through the intellect; apprehension; awareness. | [noun] Sound practical or moral judgment. SENTE (5) [noun] A subdivision of currency, equal to one hundredth of a Lesotho loti. | [noun] (Go) first move, initiative SENTI (5) SEPAL (7) [noun] One of the component parts of the calyx, particularly when the sepals in a plant's calyx are not fused into a single structure. SEPIA (7) [noun] A dark brown pigment made from the secretions of the cuttlefish. | [noun] A dark, slightly reddish, brown colour. | [noun] (by extension) A sepia-coloured drawing or photograph. SEPIC (9) SEPOY (10) [noun] A native soldier of the East Indies, employed in the service of a European colonial power, notably the British India army (first under the British-chartered East India Company, later in the crown colony), but also France and Portugal. SEPTA (7) [noun] A wall separating two cavities; a partition | [noun] A partition that separates the cells of a fruit. | [noun] A partition that separates the cells of a (septated) fungus. SEPTS (7) [noun] A clan, tribe, or family, proceeding from a common progenitor (used especially of the ancient clans in Ireland). | [noun] An enclosure; a railing. SERAC (7) [noun] Often sérac: a hard, cone-shaped, pale green, strongly flavoured cheese from Switzerland made from skimmed cowmilk and blue fenugreek (Trigonella caerulea); Schabziger, Sapsago. It is usually eaten grated, mixed with butter, or in a fondue. | [noun] (glaciology) A sharp tower of ice formed by intersecting crevasses of a glacier. SERAI (5) [noun] (In Turkish or Muslim Asian contexts) A palace. | [noun] A seraglio. | [noun] A caravanserai; an inn. SERAL (5) SERED (6) SERER (5) SERES (5) [noun] A natural succession of animal or plant communities in an ecosystem, especially a series of communities succeeding one another from the time a habitat is unoccupied to the point when a climax community is achieved. | [noun] A claw, a talon. SERFS (8) [noun] A partially free peasant of a low hereditary class, attached like a slave to the land owned by a feudal lord and required to perform labour, enjoying minimal legal or customary rights | [noun] A similar agricultural labourer in 18th and 19th century Europe | [noun] (strategy games) a worker unit SERGE (6) [noun] A type of worsted cloth. | [noun] (by metonymy) A garment made of this fabric. | [verb] To overlock. | [noun] A large wax candle used in some church ceremonies. SERIF (8) [noun] A short line added to the end of a stroke in traditional typefaces, such as Times New Roman. | [adjective] Of a typeface, provided with serifs. SERIN (5) [noun] Any of various small finches in the genus Serinus, with largely yellow plumage. SEROW (8) [noun] Any of several species of Asian ungulates of the genus Capricornis. SERRY (8) SERUM (7) [noun] The clear yellowish liquid obtained upon separating whole blood into its solid and liquid components after it has been allowed to clot. | [noun] Blood serum from the tissues of immunized animals, containing antibodies and used to transfer immunity to another individual, called antiserum. | [noun] A watery liquid from animal tissue, especially one that moistens the surface of serous membranes or that is exuded by such membranes when they become inflamed, such as in edema or a blister. SERVE (8) [noun] An act of putting the ball or shuttlecock in play in various games. | [noun] A portion of food or drink, a serving. | [verb] (personal) To provide a service (or, by extension, a product, especially food or drink). SERVO (8) [noun] A servomechanism or servomotor. | [verb] To control by means of a servocontrol | [noun] A service station, being a place to buy petrol for cars etc., as well as various convenience items, with or without actual car service facilities. SETAE (5) [noun] A bristle or hair | [noun] The stalk of a moss sporangium, or occasionally in a liverwort. SETAL (5) SETON (5) [noun] A few silk threads or horsehairs, or a strip of linen etc., introduced beneath the skin by a knife or needle, so as to induce suppuration; also, the issue so formed. SETTS (5) [noun] The system of tunnels that is the home of a badger. | [noun] The pattern of distinctive threads and yarns that make up the plaid of a Scottish tartan. | [noun] A small, square-cut piece of quarried stone used for paving and edging. SETUP (7) [noun] Equipment designed for a particular purpose; an apparatus. | [noun] The fashion in which something is organized or arranged. | [noun] A situation orchestrated to frame someone; a covert effort to place the blame on somebody. SEVEN (8) [noun] The digit/figure 7 or an occurrence thereof. | [noun] A card bearing seven pips. | [numeral] A numerical value equal to 7; the number following six and preceding eight. This many dots: (•••••••). SEVER (8) [verb] To cut free. | [verb] To suffer disjunction; to be parted or separated. | [verb] To make a separation or distinction; to distinguish. SEWAN (8) SEWAR (8) 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. SEWER (8) [noun] A pipe or system of pipes used to remove human waste and to provide drainage. | [verb] To provide (a place) with a system of sewers. | [noun] A servant attending at a meal who is responsible for seating arrangements, serving dishes, etc. | [noun] One who sews. SEXED (13) [verb] To determine the sex of an animal. | [verb] To have sex with. | [adjective] Having a sex; being male or female. SEXES (12) [noun] An offshoot of a larger religion; a group sharing particular (often unorthodox) political and/or religious beliefs. | [noun] A group following a specific ideal or a leader. | [noun] A cutting; a scion. SEXTO (12) SEXTS (12) [noun] Noon, reckoned as the sixth hour of daylight. | [noun] The service appointed for this hour. | [noun] A sixth: an interval of six diatonic degrees. SHACK (14) [noun] A crude, roughly built hut or cabin. | [noun] Any poorly constructed or poorly furnished building. | [noun] The room from which a ham radio operator transmits. | [noun] Grain fallen to the ground and left after harvest. SHADE (9) [noun] Darkness where light, particularly sunlight, is blocked. | [noun] Something that blocks light, particularly in a window. | [noun] A variety of a colour/color, in particular one obtained by adding black (compare tint). | [verb] To shield from light. SHADS (9) [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). SHADY (12) [adjective] Abounding in shades. | [adjective] Causing shade. | [adjective] Overspread with shade; sheltered from the glare of light or sultry heat. SHAFT (11) [noun] The entire body of a long weapon, such as an arrow. | [noun] The long, narrow, central body of a spear, arrow, or javelin. | [noun] (by extension) Anything cast or thrown as a spear or javelin. SHAGS (9) [noun] Matted material; rough massed hair, fibres etc. | [noun] Coarse shredded tobacco. | [noun] A type of rough carpet pile. SHAHS (11) [noun] A king of Persia or Iran. | [noun] A supreme ruler in some Middle Eastern or South Asian nations. | [noun] A Ukrainian monetary unit. SHAKE (12) [noun] The act of shaking or being shaken; tremulous or back-and-forth motion. | [noun] A milkshake. | [noun] A beverage made by adding ice cream to a (usually carbonated) drink; a float. SHAKO (12) [noun] A stiff, cylindrical military dress hat with a metal plate in front, a short visor, and a plume. | [noun] A bearskin or busby. | [noun] The squilla or mantis shrimp. SHAKY (15) [adjective] Shaking or trembling. | [adjective] Nervous, anxious. | [adjective] (of wood) Full of shakes or cracks; cracked. SHALE (8) [noun] A shell or husk; a cod or pod. | [noun] A fine-grained sedimentary rock of a thin, laminated, and often friable, structure. | [verb] To take off the shell or coat of. SHALL (8) [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. SHALT (8) [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. SHALY (11) SHAME (10) [noun] Uncomfortable or painful feeling due to recognition or consciousness of one's own impropriety or dishonor or something being exposed that should have been kept private. | [noun] Something to regret. | [noun] Reproach incurred or suffered; dishonour; ignominy; derision. | [verb] To cause to feel shame. SHAMS (10) [noun] A fake; an imitation that purports to be genuine. | [noun] Trickery, hoaxing. | [noun] A false front, or removable ornamental covering. SHANK (12) [noun] The part of the leg between the knee and the ankle. | [noun] Meat from that part of an animal. | [noun] A redshank or greenshank, various species of Old World wading birds in the genus Tringa having distinctly colored legs. SHAPE (10) [noun] The status or condition of something | [noun] Condition of personal health, especially muscular health. | [noun] The appearance of something in terms of its arrangement in space, especially its outline; often a basic geometric two-dimensional figure. 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. SHARE (8) [noun] A portion of something, especially a portion given or allotted to someone. | [noun] A financial instrument that shows that one owns a part of a company that provides the benefit of limited liability. | [noun] A configuration enabling a resource to be shared over a network. | [noun] The cutting blade of an agricultural machine like a plough, a cultivator or a seeding-machine. SHARK (12) [noun] A scaleless, predatory fish of the superorder Selachimorpha, with a cartilaginous skeleton and 5 to 7 gill slits on each side of its head. | [verb] To fish for sharks. | [noun] Someone who exploits others, for example by trickery, lies, usury, extortion. | [verb] To pick or gather indiscriminately or covertly. SHARN (8) SHARP (10) [noun] The symbol ♯, placed after the name of a note in the key signature or before a note on the staff to indicate that the note is to be played a semitone higher. | [noun] A note that is played a semitone higher than usual; denoted by the name of the note that is followed by the symbol ♯. | [noun] A note that is sharp in a particular key. SHAUL (8) SHAVE (11) [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. | [noun] An instance of shaving. SHAWL (11) [noun] A square or rectangular piece of cloth worn as a covering for the head, neck, and shoulders, typically by women. | [noun] A fold of wrinkled flesh under the lips and neck of a bloodhound, used in scenting. | [verb] To wrap in a shawl. SHAWM (13) [noun] A mediaeval double-reed wind instrument with a conical wooden body. SHAWN (11) SHAWS (11) [noun] A thicket; a small wood or grove. | [noun] The leaves and tops of vegetables, especially potatoes and turnips. SHAYS (11) [noun] A chaise. SHEAF (11) [noun] A quantity of the stalks and ears of wheat, rye, or other grain, bound together; a bundle of grain or straw. | [noun] Any collection of things bound together; a bundle. | [noun] A bundle of arrows sufficient to fill a quiver, or the allowance of each archer. SHEAL (8) SHEAR (8) [noun] A cutting tool similar to scissors, but often larger. | [noun] The act of shearing, or something removed by shearing. | [noun] Forces that push in opposite directions. SHEAS (8) SHEDS (9) [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. SHEEN (8) [noun] Splendor; radiance; shininess. | [noun] A thin layer of a substance (such as oil) spread on a solid or liquid surface. | [verb] To shine; to glisten. | [noun] The letter ش in the Arabic script. SHEEP (10) [noun] A woolly ruminant of the genus Ovis. | [noun] A timid, shy person who is easily led by others. | [noun] (chiefly plural) A religious adherent, a member of a congregation or religious community (compare flock). | [noun] A sheep; specifically singular form of sheep. SHEER (8) [noun] A sheer curtain or fabric. | [adjective] Very thin or transparent. | [adjective] Pure in composition; unmixed; unadulterated. | [noun] The curve of the main deck or gunwale from bow to stern. SHEET (8) [noun] A thin bed cloth used as a covering for a mattress or as a layer over the sleeper. | [noun] A piece of paper, usually rectangular, that has been prepared for writing, artwork, drafting, wrapping, manufacture of packaging (boxes, envelopes, etc.), and for other uses. The word does not include scraps and irregular small pieces destined to be recycled, used for stuffing or cushioning or paper mache, etc. | [noun] A flat metal pan, often without raised edge, used for baking. SHEIK (12) [noun] The leader of an Arab village, family or small tribe. | [noun] An Islamic religious cleric; the leader of an Islamic religious order. | [noun] (some Arab Gulf countries) An official title for members of the royal family as well as some prominent families. SHELF (11) [noun] A flat, rigid structure, fixed at right angles to a wall or forming a part of a cabinet, desk etc., and used to support, store or display objects. | [noun] The capacity of such an object | [noun] A projecting ledge that resembles such an object. SHELL (8) [noun] A hard external covering of an animal. | [noun] The hard calcareous covering of a bird egg. | [noun] One of the outer layers of skin of an onion. SHEND (9) SHENT (8) SHEOL (8) 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. SHEWN (11) SHEWS (11) [noun] A play, dance, or other entertainment. | [noun] An exhibition of items. | [noun] A broadcast program/programme. 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 SHIEL (8) SHIER (8) SHIES (8) [noun] An act of throwing. | [noun] A place for throwing. | [noun] A sudden start aside, as by a horse. SHIFT (11) [noun] A modifier key whose main function is shifting between two or more functions of any of certain other keys (usually by pressing Shift and the other button simultaneously). | [noun] A type of women's undergarment, a slip. | [noun] A change of workers, now specifically a set group of workers or period of working time. SHILL (8) [noun] A person paid to endorse a product favourably, while pretending to be impartial. | [noun] An accomplice at a confidence trick during an auction or gambling game. | [noun] A house player in a casino. SHILY (11) SHIMS (10) [noun] A wedge. | [noun] A thin piece of material, sometimes tapered, used for alignment or support. | [noun] A small library that transparently intercepts and modifies calls to an API, usually for compatibility purposes. SHINE (8) [noun] Brightness from a source of light. | [noun] Brightness from reflected light. | [noun] Excellence in quality or appearance; splendour. | [verb] To cause (something) to shine; put a shine on (something); polish (something). SHINS (8) [noun] The front part of the leg below the knee; the front edge of the shin bone: Shinbone | [noun] A fishplate for a railway. | [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. SHINY (11) [noun] Anything shiny; a trinket. | [noun] Contraction of disparaging term "shiny arses", originating during World War Two, to describe a desk worker.https//books.google.co.uk/books?id=mAdUqLrKw4YC&pg=PA1717 | [adjective] Reflecting light. SHIPS (10) [noun] A water-borne vessel generally larger than a boat. | [noun] (chiefly in combination) A vessel which travels through any medium other than across land, such as an airship or spaceship. | [noun] A sailing vessel with three or more square-rigged masts. SHIRE (8) [noun] Physical area administered by a sheriff. | [noun] Former administrative area of Britain; a county. | [noun] The general area in which a person lives or comes from, used in the context of travel within the United Kingdom. SHIRK (12) [noun] One who shirks, who avoids a duty or responsibility. | [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. | [noun] The unforgivable sin of idolatry. SHIRR (8) [noun] A shirring. | [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. SHIRT (8) [noun] An article of clothing that is worn on the upper part of the body, and often has sleeves, either long or short, that cover the arms. | [noun] An interior lining in a blast furnace. | [noun] A member of the shirt-wearing team in a shirts and skins game. | [verb] To cover or clothe with a shirt, or as if with a shirt. SHIST (8) SHITS (8) [noun] A gastrointestinal disorder characterized by frequent and very fluid or watery bowel movements. | [noun] The watery or very soft excrement that comes from such bowel movements. | [noun] Solid excretory product evacuated from the bowels; feces. SHIVA (11) [noun] A weeklong period of formal mourning for a close relative. SHIVE (11) [noun] A slice, especially of bread. | [noun] A sheave. | [noun] A beam or plank of split wood. | [noun] A splinter or fragment of the woody core of flax or hemp broken off in braking or scutching | [noun] A knife, especially a makeshift one fashioned from something not normally used as a weapon (like a plastic spoon or a toothbrush). | [noun] A weeklong period of formal mourning for a close relative. SHIVS (11) [noun] A knife, especially a makeshift one fashioned from something not normally used as a weapon (like a plastic spoon or a toothbrush). | [noun] A particular woody by-product of processing flax or hemp. | [verb] To stab someone with a shiv. SHLEP (10) [noun] A long or burdensome journey. | [noun] A boring person, a drag; a good-for-nothing person. | [noun] A sloppy or slovenly person. SHOAL (8) [noun] A sandbank or sandbar creating a shallow. | [noun] A shallow in a body of water. | [verb] To arrive at a shallow (or less deep) area. | [noun] Any large number of persons or things. SHOAT (8) [noun] A young, newly-weaned pig. | [noun] A geep, a sheep-goat hybrid (whether artificially produced or the result of animals from these species naturally intermating). SHOCK (14) [noun] A sudden, heavy impact. | [noun] A discontinuity arising in the solution of a partial differential equation. | [verb] To cause to be emotionally shocked, to cause (someone) to feel surprised and upset. | [noun] An arrangement of sheaves for drying; a stook. SHOED (9) SHOER (8) SHOES (8) [noun] A protective covering for the foot, with a bottom part composed of thick leather or plastic sole and often a thicker heel, and a softer upper part made of leather or synthetic material. Shoes generally do not extend above the ankle, as opposed to boots, which do. | [noun] A piece of metal designed to be attached to a horse's foot as a means of protection; a horseshoe. | [noun] A device for holding multiple decks of playing cards, allowing more games to be played by reducing the time between shuffles. SHOGS (9) SHOJI (15) [noun] A door or partition consisting of a wooden frame covered in rice paper. SHONE (8) [verb] To emit light. | [verb] To reflect light. | [verb] To distinguish oneself; to excel. SHOOK (12) [noun] A set of pieces for making a cask or box, usually wood. | [noun] The parts of a piece of house furniture, as a bedstead, packed together. | [verb] To pack (staves, etc.) in a shook. | [verb] To cause (something) to move rapidly in opposite directions alternatingly. SHOOL (8) SHOON (8) SHOOS (8) [verb] To induce someone or something to leave. | [verb] To leave under inducement. | [verb] To usher someone. SHOOT (8) [noun] The emerging stem and embryonic leaves of a new plant. | [noun] A photography session. | [noun] A hunt or shooting competition. | [interjection] A mild expletive, expressing disbelief or disdain SHOPS (10) [noun] An establishment that sells goods or services to the public; originally only a physical location, but now a virtual establishment as well. | [noun] A place where things are manufactured or crafted; a workshop. | [noun] A large garage where vehicle mechanics work. SHORE (8) [noun] Land adjoining a non-flowing body of water, such as an ocean, lake or pond. | [noun] (from the perspective of one on a body of water) Land, usually near a port. | [verb] To set on shore. | [noun] A prop or strut supporting the weight or flooring above it. | [verb] To cut, originally with a sword or other bladed weapon, now usually with shears, or as if using shears. | [noun] (Obsolete except in Hiberno-English) A sewer. | [verb] To warn or threaten. SHORL (8) SHORN (8) [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. SHORT (8) [noun] A short circuit. | [noun] A short film. | [noun] A short version of a garment in a particular size. SHOTE (8) [noun] A young, newly-weaned pig. | [noun] A fish resembling the trout, the grayling (Thymallus thymallus). SHOTS (8) [noun] The result of launching a projectile or bullet. | [noun] The act of launching a ball or similar object toward a goal. | [noun] The heavy iron ball used for the shot put. SHOTT (8) SHOUT (8) [noun] A loud burst of voice or voices; a violent and sudden outcry, especially that of a multitude expressing joy, triumph, exultation, anger, or animated courage. | [noun] A round of drinks in a pub; the turn to pay the shot or scot; an act of paying for a round of drinks. | [noun] A call-out for an emergency services team. | [noun] A light flat-bottomed boat used in duck-shooting. SHOVE (11) [noun] A rough push. | [noun] An all-in bet. | [noun] A forward movement of packed river-ice. SHOWN (11) [verb] To display, to have somebody see (something). | [verb] To bestow; to confer. | [verb] To indicate (a fact) to be true; to demonstrate. SHOWS (11) [noun] A play, dance, or other entertainment. | [noun] An exhibition of items. | [noun] A broadcast program/programme. SHOWY (14) [adjective] (sometimes derogatory) calling attention; flashy; standing out to the eye SHOYU (11) [noun] A dark form of soy sauce 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. SHREW (11) [noun] Any of numerous small, mouselike, chiefly nocturnal, mammals of the family Soricidae (order Soricomorpha). | [noun] Certain other small mammals that resemble true shrews (order Soricomorpha). | [noun] An ill-tempered, nagging woman: a scold. | [verb] To beshrew; to curse. SHRIS (8) SHRUB (10) [noun] A woody plant smaller than a tree, and usually with several stems from the same base. | [verb] To lop; to prune. | [verb] (Kenyan English) To mispronounce a word by replacing its consonant sound(s) with another or others of a similar place of articulation. | [noun] A liquor composed of vegetable acid, fruit juice (especially lemon), sugar, sometimes vinegar, and a small amount of spirit as a preservative. Modern shrub is usually non-alcoholic, but in earlier times it was often mixed with a substantial amount of spirit such as brandy or rum, thus making it a liqueur. SHRUG (9) [noun] A lifting of the shoulders to signal indifference or a casual lack of knowledge. | [noun] A cropped, cardigan-like garment with short or long sleeves, typically knitted. | [verb] To raise (the shoulders) to express uncertainty, lack of concern, (formerly) dread, etc. SHTIK (12) SHUCK (14) [noun] The shell or husk, especially of grains (e.g. corn/maize) or nuts (e.g. walnuts). | [noun] A fraud; a scam. | [noun] A phony. SHULN (8) SHULS (8) [noun] The synagogue. SHUNS (8) [verb] To avoid, especially persistently. | [verb] To escape (a threatening evil, an unwelcome task etc). | [verb] To screen, hide. SHUNT (8) [noun] An act of moving (suddenly), as due to a push or shove. | [noun] A connection used as an alternative path between parts of an electrical circuit. | [noun] The shifting of the studs on a projectile from the deep to the shallow sides of the grooves in its discharge from a shunt gun. SHUSH (11) [verb] To be quiet; to keep quiet. | [verb] To ask someone to be quiet, especially by saying shh. SHUTE (8) SHUTS (8) [noun] The act or time of shutting; close. | [noun] A door or cover; a shutter. | [noun] The line or place where two pieces of metal are welded together. SHYER (11) [adjective] Easily frightened; timid. | [adjective] Reserved; disinclined to familiar approach. | [adjective] Cautious; wary; suspicious. SHYLY (14) [adverb] In a shy manner. SIALS (5) SIBBS (9) SIBYL (10) [noun] A pagan female oracle or prophetess, especially the Cumaean sibyl. SICES (7) [noun] A groom, or servant with responsibility for the horses. | [noun] (Malaya) usually syce: chauffeur, driver. | [noun] The number six in a game of dice. SICKO (11) [noun] A person with unpleasant tastes, views or habits. | [noun] A mentally ill person. | [noun] A physically ill person. SICKS (11) [verb] To incite an attack by, especially a dog or dogs. | [verb] To set upon; to chase; to attack. | [verb] To vomit. 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. SIDES (6) [noun] A bounding straight edge of a two-dimensional shape. | [noun] A flat surface of a three-dimensional object; a face. | [noun] One half (left or right, top or bottom, front or back, etc.) of something or someone. SIDLE (6) [noun] An act of sidling. | [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. SIEGE (6) [noun] (heading) Military action. | [noun] (heading) A seat. | [noun] A place with a toilet seat: an outhouse; a lavatory. SIEUR (5) SIEVE (8) [noun] A device with a mesh bottom to separate, in a granular material, larger particles from smaller ones, or to separate solid objects from a liquid. | [noun] A process, physical or abstract, that arrives at a final result by filtering out unwanted pieces of input from a larger starting set of input. | [noun] A kind of coarse basket. SIFTS (8) SIGHS (9) [noun] A deep, prolonged audible inhale and exhale of breath; as when fatigued, frustrated, grieved, or relieved; the act of sighing. | [noun] Figuratively, a manifestation of grief; a lament. | [noun] A person who is bored. SIGHT (9) [noun] (in the singular) The ability to see. | [noun] The act of seeing; perception of objects by the eye; view. | [noun] Something seen. SIGIL (6) [noun] A seal, signature or signet. | [noun] An occult or magical sign, image or symbol. | [noun] A nonalphanumeric character affixed to a symbol (e.g. variable) to indicate a property such as type or scope. SIGMA (8) [noun] The eighteenth letter of the Classical and Modern Greek alphabets, the twentieth letter of Old and Ancient. | [noun] The symbol Σ, used to indicate summation of a set or series. | [noun] The symbol σ, used to indicate one standard deviation from the mean, particularly in a normal distribution. SIGNS (6) [noun] (sometimes also used uncountably) A visible indication. | [noun] Physical evidence left by an animal. | [noun] A clearly visible object, generally flat, bearing a short message in words or pictures. SIKER (9) SIKES (9) [noun] A gutter or ditch; a small stream that frequently dries up in the summer. | [noun] A sigh. | [verb] To sigh or sob. SILDS (6) SILEX (12) [noun] Flint. | [noun] A finely ground relatively pure form of silicas used as a paint filler etc. SILKS (9) [noun] A fine fiber excreted by the silkworm or other arthropod (such as a spider). | [noun] A fine, soft cloth woven from silk fibers. | [noun] Anything which resembles silk, such as the filiform styles of the female flower of maize, or the seed covering of bombaxes. SILKY (12) [noun] A seal which can magically transform into a human by shedding its skin. | [noun] A chicken of a certain breed with very fine, silk-like feathers. | [adjective] Similar in appearance or texture (especially in softness and smoothness) to silk. SILLS (5) [noun] (also window sill) A horizontal slat which forms the base of a window. | [noun] A horizontal, structural member of a building near ground level on a foundation or pilings or lying on the ground in earth-fast construction and bearing the upright portion of a frame. Also called a ground plate, groundsill, sole, sole-plate, mudsill. An interrupted sill fits between posts instead of being below and supporting the posts in timber framing. | [noun] A horizontal layer of igneous rock between older rock beds. SILLY (8) [noun] A silly person. | [noun] A term of address. | [noun] A mistake. SILOS (5) [noun] A vertical building, usually cylindrical, used for the production of silage. | [noun] From the shape, a building used for the storage of grain. | [noun] An underground bunker used to hold missiles which may be launched. SILTS (5) [verb] To clog or fill with silt. | [verb] To become clogged with silt. | [verb] To flow through crevices; to percolate. SILTY (8) SILVA (8) SIMAR (7) SIMAS (7) SIMPS (9) [noun] A simple person lacking common sense; a fool or simpleton. | [noun] A man who foolishly overvalues and defers to a woman, putting her on a pedestal. | [noun] (by extension) Someone who foolishly overvalues someone else and defers to them, putting them on a pedestal. SINCE (7) [adverb] From a specified time in the past. | [preposition] From: referring to a period of time ending in the present and defining it by the point in time at which it started, or the period in which its starting point occurred. | [conjunction] From the time that. SINES (5) [noun] In a right triangle, the ratio of the length of the side opposite an angle to the length of the hypotenuse. SINEW (8) [noun] A cord or tendon of the body. | [noun] A cord or string, particularly as of a musical instrument. | [noun] Muscular power, muscle; nerve, nervous energy; vigor, vigorous strength. SINGE (6) [noun] A burning of the surface; a slight burn. | [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. SINGS (6) [noun] A gathering at which people sing songs. | [verb] To produce musical or harmonious sounds with one’s voice. | [verb] To express audibly by means of a harmonious vocalization. SINHS (8) SINKS (9) [noun] A basin used for holding water for washing. | [noun] A drain for carrying off wastewater. | [noun] A sinkhole. SINUS (5) [noun] A pouch or cavity in any organ or tissue, especially the paranasal sinus. | [noun] A channel for transmitting venous blood. | [noun] A notch or depression between two lobes or teeth in the margin of an organ. SIPED (8) SIPES (7) [noun] Slit in a tire to drain away surface water and improve traction. | [noun] A drain. SIRED (6) [verb] (of a male) to procreate; to father, beget, impregnate. SIREE (5) [noun] (used as an intensifier, emphatically, after yes or no) Sir. SIREN (5) [noun] One of a group of nymphs who lured mariners to their death on the rocks. | [noun] One who sings sweetly and charms. | [noun] A dangerously seductive woman. SIRES (5) [noun] A lord, master, or other person in authority, most commonly used vocatively: formerly in speaking to elders and superiors, later only when addressing a sovereign. | [noun] A male animal; a stud, especially a horse or dog, that has fathered another. | [noun] A father; the head of a family; the husband. SIRRA (5) SIRUP (7) [noun] Any thick liquid that has a high sugar content and which is added to or poured over food as a flavouring. | [noun] (by extension) Any viscous liquid. | [noun] (shortened from "syrup of figs") A wig. SISAL (5) [noun] A Central American plant, Agave sisalana, cultivated for its sword-shaped leaves that yield fibers used for rope. | [noun] The fibre of the plant. | [noun] A sisal mat. SISES (5) SISSY (8) [noun] An effeminate boy or man. | [noun] A timid, unassertive or cowardly person. | [noun] (BDSM) A male crossdresser who adopts feminine behaviours. | [noun] Urination; urine. SITAR (5) [noun] A Hindustani/Indian classical stringed instrument, typically having a gourd as its resonating chamber. SITED (6) [verb] To situate or place a building. SITES (5) [noun] Sorrow, grief. | [noun] The place where anything is fixed; situation; local position | [noun] A place fitted or chosen for any certain permanent use or occupation SITUP (7) SITUS (5) [noun] The position, especially the usual, normal position, of a body part or part of a plant. | [noun] The method in which the parts of a plant are arranged. | [noun] The location of a property as used for taxation or other legal purposes. SIVER (8) SIXES (12) [noun] The digit or figure 6. | [noun] (by ellipsis of six o'clock) Rear, behind (rear side of something). | [noun] An event whereby a batsman hits a ball which does not bounce before passing over a boundary in the air, resulting in an award of 6 runs for the batting team. SIXMO (14) SIXTE (12) [noun] The sixth defensive position, with the sword hand held at chest height, and the tip of the sword at eye level. SIXTH (15) [noun] (not used in the plural) The person or thing in the sixth position. | [noun] One of six equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The interval between one note and another, five notes higher in the scale, for example C to A, a major sixth, or C to A flat, a minor sixth. (Note that the interval covers six notes counting inclusively, for example C-D-E-F-G-A.) SIXTY (15) [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after fifty-nine and before sixty-one, represented in Roman numerals as LX and in Arabic numerals as 60. SIZAR (14) [noun] At certain universities, e.g. Cambridge and Dublin, a student who receives an allowance for his college expenses (a study grant), originally in return for serving other (paying) students. 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. SIZER (14) SIZES (14) [noun] (obsolete outside dialectal) An assize. | [noun] A regulation determining the amount of money paid in fees, taxes etc. | [noun] A fixed standard for the magnitude, quality, quantity etc. of goods, especially food and drink. SKAGS (10) [noun] Heroin. | [noun] (originally African American Vernacular English) A woman of loose morals. | [noun] A cigarette. SKALD (10) [noun] A Nordic poet of the Viking Age SKATE (9) [noun] A light boot, fitted with a blade, used for ice skating. | [noun] A boot having small wheels or casters attached to its sole; used for roller skating | [noun] A runner or blade, usually of steel, with a frame shaped to fit the sole of a shoe, made to be fastened under the foot, and used for gliding on ice. | [noun] A fish of the family Rajidae in the superorder Batoidea (rays) which inhabit most seas. Skates generally have small heads with protruding muzzles, and wide fins attached to a flat body. | [noun] A worn-out horse. SKATS (9) SKEAN (9) [noun] A quantity of yarn, thread, or the like, put up together, after it is taken from the reel. A skein of cotton yarn is formed by eighty turns of the thread around a fifty-four inch reel. | [noun] A web, a weave, a tangle. | [noun] The membrane of a fish ovary. | [noun] A double-edged, leaf-shaped, typically bronze dagger formerly used in Ireland and Scotland. SKEED (10) SKEEN (9) SKEES (9) SKEET (9) [noun] A form of trapshooting using clay targets to simulate birds in flight. | [noun] A hand consisting of a 9, a 5, a 2, and two other cards lower than 9. | [noun] The ejaculation of semen. | [noun] (Manx) news or gossip SKEGS (10) [noun] A fin-like structure to the rear of the keel of a vessel that supports the rudder and protects a propeller. | [noun] A similar construction on a boat that acts as a keel. | [noun] A fin that serves to stabilize a surfboard. SKEIN (9) [noun] A quantity of yarn, thread, or the like, put up together, after it is taken from the reel. A skein of cotton yarn is formed by eighty turns of the thread around a fifty-four inch reel. | [noun] A web, a weave, a tangle. | [noun] The membrane of a fish ovary. SKELM (11) SKELP (11) [noun] A blow; a smart stroke. | [noun] A squall; a heavy fall of rain. | [noun] A large portion. | [noun] A narrow strip of rolled or forged metal, ready to be bent and welded to form a pipe. SKENE (9) [noun] An element of ancient Greek theater: the structure at the back of the stage. | [noun] A double-edged, leaf-shaped, typically bronze dagger formerly used in Ireland and Scotland. | [noun] A quantity of yarn, thread, or the like, put up together, after it is taken from the reel. A skein of cotton yarn is formed by eighty turns of the thread around a fifty-four inch reel. SKEPS (11) [noun] A basket. | [noun] A beehive made of straw or wicker. SKEWS (12) [noun] Something that has an oblique or slanted position. | [noun] An oblique or sideways movement. | [noun] A bias or distortion in a particular direction. SKIDS (10) [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. 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. SKIER (9) [noun] One who skis. | [noun] A ball hit high in the air, often leading to a catch. SKIES (9) [noun] The atmosphere above a given point, especially as visible from the ground during the day. | [noun] The part of the sky which can be seen from a specific place or at a specific time; its condition, climate etc. | [noun] Heaven. | [verb] To move on skis SKIEY (12) SKIFF (15) [noun] Term used in tea gardens and denotes the act of cutting/pruning the bushes as per the specific norms. Various types of skiff are used viz Light Skiff (LS), Medium Skiff (MS), Deep Skiff (DS) and Level Of Skiff (LOS). | [noun] A small flat-bottomed open boat with a pointed bow and square stern. | [noun] Any of various types of boats small enough for sailing or rowing by one person. | [noun] (Nova Scotia) a deep blanket of snow covering the ground SKILL (9) [noun] Capacity to do something well; technique, ability. Skills are usually acquired or learned, as opposed to abilities, which are often thought of as innate. | [noun] Discrimination; judgment; propriety; reason; cause. | [noun] Knowledge; understanding. | [verb] To set apart; separate. SKIMO (11) SKIMP (13) [verb] To mock, deride, scorn, scold, make fun of. | [noun] A skimpy or insubstantial thing, especially a piece of clothing. | [noun] (in the plural) Underwear. SKIMS (11) [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. SKINK (13) [noun] A shin of beef. | [noun] A soup or pottage made from a boiled shin of beef. | [noun] (by extension) Usually preceded by a descriptive word: a soup or pottage made using other ingredients. | [noun] A lizard of the family Scincidae, having small or reduced limbs or none at all and long tails that are regenerated when shed. | [noun] A drink. SKINS (9) [noun] The outer protective layer of the body of any animal, including of a human. | [noun] The outer protective layer of the fruit of a plant. | [noun] The skin and fur of an individual animal used by humans for clothing, upholstery, etc. SKINT (9) [adjective] Penniless, poor, impecunious, broke. | [adjective] Skinned SKIPS (11) [noun] A leaping, jumping or skipping movement. | [noun] The act of passing over an interval from one thing to another; an omission of a part. | [noun] A passage from one sound to another by more than a degree at once. SKIRL (9) [noun] A shrill sound, as of bagpipes. | [verb] To make a shrill sound, as of bagpipes. SKIRR (9) [noun] A tern. | [verb] To leave hastily; to flee, especially with a whirring sound | [verb] To make a whirring sound. SKIRT (9) [noun] An article of clothing, usually worn by women and girls, that hangs from the waist and covers the lower part of the body. | [noun] The part of a dress or robe, etc., that hangs below the waist. | [noun] A loose edging to any part of a dress. SKITE (9) [noun] A sudden hit or blow; a glancing blow. | [noun] A trick. | [noun] A contemptible person. | [noun] A kind of hermitage SKITS (9) [noun] A short comic performance. | [noun] A jeer or sally; a brief satire. | [noun] A wanton girl; a wench. SKIVE (12) [noun] Something very easy, where one can slack off without penalty. | [noun] An act of avoiding lessons or work. | [verb] To avoid one's lessons or work (chiefly at school or university); shirk. | [noun] A rotating iron disk coated with oil and diamond dust used to polish the facets of a diamond. SKOAL (9) [verb] To make such a toast. | [interjection] A toast when drinking, roughly equivalent to cheers. SKOSH (12) [noun] A tiny amount; a little bit; tad; smidgen; jot. SKUAS (9) [noun] Any of various predatory seabirds of the family Stercorariidae that often chase other seabirds to steal their catches. SKULK (13) [noun] A group of foxes. | [noun] A group of people seen as being fox-like (e.g. cunning, dishonest, or having nefarious plans). | [noun] The act of skulking. SKULL (9) [noun] The main bones of the head considered as a unit; including the cranium, facial bones, and mandible. | [noun] A symbol for death; death's-head | [noun] The mind or brain. | [noun] (collective) A group of fish or a group of marine mammals such as porpoises, dolphins, or whales. SKUNK (13) [noun] Any of various small mammals, of the family Mephitidae, native to North and Central America, having a glossy black with a white coat and two musk glands at the base of the tail for emitting a noxious smell as a defensive measure. | [noun] A despicable person. | [noun] A walkover victory in sports or board games, as when the opposing side is unable to score. Compare shutout. | [noun] A member of a hybrid skinhead and punk subculture. | [noun] Any of the strains of hybrids of Cannabis sativa and Cannabis indica that may have THC levels exceeding those of typical hashish. SKYED (13) SKYEY (15) [adjective] Resembling the sky. | [adjective] Of or relating to the sky. | [adjective] In the sky. SLABS (7) [noun] A large, flat piece of solid material; a solid object that is large and flat. | [noun] A paving stone; a flagstone. | [noun] A carton containing 24 cans of beer. SLACK (11) [noun] The part of anything that hangs loose, having no strain upon it. | [noun] A tidal marsh or shallow that periodically fills and drains. | [adjective] (normally said of a rope) Lax; not tense; not firmly extended. | [verb] To slacken. | [noun] A temporary speed restriction where track maintenance or engineering work is being carried out at a particular place. | [noun] A valley, or small, shallow dell. | [noun] Small coal; coal dust. SLAGS (6) [noun] Waste material from a coal mine | [noun] Scum that forms on the surface of molten metal | [noun] Impurities formed and separated out when a metal is smelted from ore; vitrified cinders SLAIN (5) [noun] (with "the") Those who have been killed. | [verb] To kill, murder. | [verb] To eradicate or stamp out. SLAKE (9) [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. | [noun] A sloppy mess. SLAMS (7) [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. SLANG (6) [noun] Language outside of conventional usage and in the informal register. | [noun] Language that is unique to a particular profession or subject; jargon. | [noun] The specialized language of a social group, sometimes used to make what is said unintelligible to those not members of the group; cant. | [verb] To throw with a circular or arcing motion. | [noun] Any long, narrow piece of land; a promontory. | [noun] A fetter worn on the leg by a convict. | [verb] To sell (especially illegal drugs). SLANK (9) SLANT (5) [noun] A slope; an incline, inclination. | [noun] A sloped surface or line. | [noun] A run: a heading driven diagonally between the dip and strike of a coal seam. SLAPS (7) [noun] A blow, especially one given with the open hand, or with something broad and flat. | [noun] The sound of such a blow. | [noun] Makeup; cosmetics. SLASH (8) [noun] A slashing action or motion, particularly: | [noun] A mark made by a slashing motion, particularly: | [noun] Something resembling such a mark, particularly: | [noun] A drink of something; a draft. | [noun] A swampy area; a swamp. | [noun] The period of a transitory breeze. SLATE (5) [noun] A fine-grained homogeneous sedimentary rock composed of clay or volcanic ash which has been metamorphosed so that it cleaves easily into thin layers. | [noun] The bluish-grey colour of most slate. | [noun] A chalkboard, sheet of slate for writing on with chalk or with a thin rod of slate (a slate pencil) formerly commonly used by both students and teachers in schools | [verb] To cover with slate. SLATS (5) [noun] A thin, narrow strip or bar of wood (lath) or metal. | [noun] (aeronautical) A movable control surface at the leading edge of a wing that when moved, changes the chord line of the airfoil, affecting the angle of attack. Employed in conjunction with flaps to allow for a lower stall speed in the landing attitude, facilitating slow flight. | [noun] A ski. SLATY (8) SLAVE (8) [noun] A person who is held in servitude as the property of another person, and whose labor (and often also whose body and life) is subject to the owner's volition and control. | [noun] A drudge; one who labors or is obliged (e.g. by prior contract) to labor like a slave with limited rights, e.g. an indentured servant. | [noun] An abject person. SLAWS (8) SLAYS (8) [verb] To kill, murder. | [verb] To eradicate or stamp out. | [verb] (by extension) To defeat, overcome (in a competition or contest). SLEDS (6) [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. SLEEK (9) [noun] That which makes smooth; varnish. | [verb] To make smooth or glossy; to polish or cause to be attractive. | [adjective] Having an even, smooth surface; smooth SLEEP (7) [verb] To rest in a state of reduced consciousness. | [verb] (of a spinning top or yo-yo) To spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. | [verb] To cause (a spinning top or yo-yo) to spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. | [noun] The state of reduced consciousness during which a human or animal rests in a daily rhythm. SLEET (5) [noun] Pellets of ice made of mostly frozen raindrops or refrozen melted snowflakes. | [noun] A mixture of rain and snow. | [noun] A smooth coating of ice formed on ground or other objects by freezing rain. SLEPT (7) [verb] To rest in a state of reduced consciousness. | [verb] (of a spinning top or yo-yo) To spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. | [verb] To cause (a spinning top or yo-yo) to spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. SLEWS (8) [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. SLICE (7) [noun] That which is thin and broad. | [noun] A thin, broad piece cut off. | [noun] An amount of anything. SLICK (11) [noun] A covering of liquid, particularly oil. | [noun] Someone who is clever and untrustworthy. | [noun] A tool used to make something smooth or even. | [noun] The finer portion of crushed ore, as of gold, lead, or tin, separated by the water in certain wet processes. SLIDE (6) [noun] An item of play equipment that children can climb up and then slide down again. | [noun] A surface of ice, snow, butter, etc. on which someone can slide for amusement or as a practical joke. | [noun] The falling of large amounts of rubble, earth and stones down the slope of a hill or mountain; avalanche. SLIER (5) SLILY (8) [adverb] In a sly manner, cunningly. SLIME (7) [noun] Soft, moist earth or clay, having an adhesive quality; viscous mud; any substance of a dirty nature, that is moist, soft, and adhesive; bitumen; mud containing metallic ore, obtained in the preparatory dressing. | [noun] Any mucilaginous substance; or a mucus-like substance which exudes from the bodies of certain animals, such as snails or slugs. | [noun] A sneaky, unethical person; a slimeball. SLIMS (7) [noun] A type of cigarette substantially longer and thinner than normal cigarettes. | [noun] A potato farl. | [noun] AIDS, or the chronic wasting associated with its later stages. SLIMY (10) [noun] A ponyfish. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to slime | [adjective] Resembling, of the nature of, covered or daubed with, or abounding in slime SLING (6) [noun] An instrument for throwing stones or other missiles, consisting of a short strap with two strings fastened to its ends, or with a string fastened to one end and a light stick to the other. | [noun] A kind of hanging bandage put around the neck, in which a wounded arm or hand is supported. | [noun] A loop of cloth, worn around the neck, for supporting a baby or other such load. | [noun] A young or infant spider, such as one raised in captivity. SLINK (9) [noun] A furtive sneaking motion. | [noun] The young of an animal when born prematurely, especially a calf. | [noun] The meat of such a prematurely born animal. SLIPE (7) SLIPS (7) [noun] A thin, slippery mix of clay and water. | [noun] Mud, slime. | [noun] A twig or shoot; a cutting. SLIPT (7) SLITS (5) [noun] A narrow cut or opening; a slot. | [noun] The opening of the vagina. | [noun] A woman, usually a sexually loose woman; a prostitute. SLOBS (7) [noun] A lazy and slovenly person. | [noun] A lazy and obese person. SLOES (5) [noun] The small, bitter, wild fruit of the blackthorn (Prunus spinosa). | [noun] The tree Prunus spinosa. | [noun] Any of various other plants of the genus Prunus, as a shrub or small tree, Prunus alleghaniensis, bearing dark-purple fruit. SLOGS (6) [noun] A long, tedious walk, or session of work. | [noun] An aggressive shot played with little skill. SLOID (6) SLOJD (13) SLOOP (7) [noun] A single-masted sailboat with only one headsail. | [noun] A sailing warship, smaller than a frigate, with its guns all on one deck. | [noun] A sloop-of-war, smaller than a frigate, larger than a corvette. SLOPE (7) [noun] An area of ground that tends evenly upward or downward. | [noun] The degree to which a surface tends upward or downward. | [noun] The ratio of the vertical and horizontal distances between two points on a line; zero if the line is horizontal, undefined if it is vertical. SLOPS (7) [noun] A loose outer garment; a jacket or overall. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A rubber thong sandal. | [noun] (in the plural) See slops. | [noun] A loose outer garment; a jacket or overall. SLOSH (8) [noun] A quantity of a liquid; more than a splash. | [noun] A sloshing sound or motion. | [noun] Slush. | [noun] Backslash, the character \. SLOTH (8) [noun] Laziness; slowness in the mindset; disinclination to action or labour. | [noun] A herbivorous, arboreal South American mammal of the families Megalonychidae and Bradypodidae, noted for its slowness and inactivity. | [noun] A collective term for a group of bears. SLOTS (5) [noun] A broad, flat, wooden bar, a slat, especially as used to secure a door, window, etc. | [noun] A metal bolt or wooden bar, especially as a crosspiece. | [noun] An implement for baring, bolting, locking or securing a door, box, gate, lid, window or the like. SLOWS (8) [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. SLOYD (9) SLUBS (7) [noun] A small thickened portion or knot found on linen yarn, caused by defects. | [noun] Fabric fiber produced by slubbing. | [verb] To draw and twist fibers in order to prepare them for spinning. SLUED (6) [adjective] Somewhat drunk; tipsy. | [verb] To rotate something on an axis. | [verb] To turn something sharply. SLUES (5) [noun] The act of sluing or the place to which something has slued. | [noun] A slough; a run or wet place. SLUFF (11) SLUGS (6) [noun] Any of many terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks, having no (or only a rudimentary) shell. | [noun] A slow, lazy person; a sluggard. | [noun] A bullet or other projectile fired from a firearm; in modern usage, generally refers to a shotgun slug. SLUMP (9) [noun] A heavy or helpless collapse; a slouching or drooping posture; a period of poor activity or performance, especially an extended period. | [noun] A measure of the fluidity of freshly mixed concrete, based on how much the concrete formed in a standard slump cone sags when the cone is removed. | [noun] A boggy place. SLUMS (7) [noun] A dilapidated neighborhood where many people live in a state of poverty. | [noun] Inexpensive trinkets awarded as prizes in a carnival game. | [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. SLUNG (6) [verb] To throw with a circular or arcing motion. | [verb] To throw with a sling. | [verb] To pass a rope around (a cask, gun, etc.) preparatory to attaching a hoisting or lowering tackle. SLUNK (9) [verb] To sneak about furtively. | [verb] To give birth to an animal prematurely. | [noun] An animal, especially a calf, born prematurely or abortively. SLURB (7) SLURP (7) [noun] A loud sucking noise made in eating or drinking | [noun] A mouthful of liquid | [verb] To eat or drink noisily. SLURS (5) [noun] An insult or slight. | [noun] A set of notes that are played legato, without separate articulation. | [noun] The symbol indicating a legato passage, written as an arc over the slurred notes (not to be confused with a tie). SLUSH (8) [noun] Half-melted snow or ice. | [noun] Liquid mud or mire. | [noun] Flavored shaved ice served as a drink. SLUTS (5) [noun] A sexually promiscuous woman or girl. | [noun] Any sexually promiscuous person, often a gay man. | [noun] Someone who seeks attention through inappropriate means or to an excessive degree. SLYER (8) [adjective] Artfully cunning; secretly mischievous; wily. | [adjective] (having a positive sense) Dexterous in performing an action, so as to escape notice | [adjective] Done with, and marked by, artful and dexterous secrecy; subtle SLYLY (11) [adverb] In a sly manner, cunningly. SLYPE (10) [noun] A covered passageway, especially one connecting the transept of a cathedral or monastery to the chapter house. SMACK (13) [noun] A distinct flavor, especially if slight. | [noun] A slight trace of something; a smattering. | [noun] Heroin. | [noun] A small sailing vessel, commonly rigged as a sloop, used chiefly in the coasting and fishing trade and often called a fishing smack | [noun] A sharp blow; a slap. See also: spank. SMALL (7) [noun] Any part of something that is smaller or slimmer than the rest, now usually with anatomical reference to the back. | [verb] To make little or less. | [verb] To become small; to dwindle. SMALT (7) [noun] A deep blue pigment made from powdered glass mixed with cobalt oxide SMARM (9) [noun] Smarmy language or behavior. | [noun] A style of fan fiction in which characters are warm and caring toward each other but without sexual overtones. | [verb] To fawn, to be unctuous. SMART (7) [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. | [adjective] Exhibiting social ability or cleverness. | [noun] A sharp, quick, lively pain; a sting. SMASH (10) [noun] The sound of a violent impact; a violent striking together. | [noun] A traffic collision. | [noun] Something very successful or popular (as music, food, fashion, etc); a hit. SMAZE (16) [noun] Smoky haze in the air. SMEAR (7) [noun] A mark made by smearing. | [noun] Any of various forms of distortion that make a signal harder to see or hear. | [noun] A Pap smear. SMEEK (11) SMELL (7) [noun] A sensation, pleasant or unpleasant, detected by inhaling air (or, the case of water-breathing animals, water) carrying airborne molecules of a substance. | [noun] The sense that detects odours. | [noun] A conclusion or intuition that a situation is wrong, more complex than it seems, or otherwise inappropriate. SMELT (7) [noun] Any small anadromous fish of the family Osmeridae, found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and in lakes in North America and northern part of Europe. | [noun] A fool; a simpleton. | [verb] To sense a smell or smells. | [noun] Production of metal, especially iron, from ore in a process that involves melting and chemical reduction of metal compounds into purified metal. SMERK (11) SMEWS (10) [noun] A small compact diving duck, Mergus albellus, that breeds in the northern taiga of Europe and Asia and winters on sheltered coasts or inland lakes. SMILE (7) [noun] A facial expression comprised by flexing the muscles of both ends of one's mouth, often showing the front teeth, without vocalisation, and in humans is a common involuntary or voluntary expression of happiness, pleasure, amusement or anxiety. | [noun] Favour; propitious regard. | [noun] A drink bought by one person for another. SMIRK (11) [noun] An uneven, often crooked smile that is insolent, self-satisfied or scornful | [noun] A forced or affected smile; a simper | [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. SMITE (7) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMITH (10) [noun] A craftsperson who works metal into desired forms using a hammer and other tools, sometimes heating the metal to make it more workable, especially a blacksmith. | [noun] (by extension) One who makes anything; wright. | [noun] An artist. | [verb] To forge, to form, usually on an anvil; by heating and pounding. SMOCK (13) [noun] A type of undergarment worn by women; a shift or slip. | [noun] A blouse; a smock frock. | [noun] A loose garment worn as protection by a painter, etc. SMOGS (8) [noun] A noxious mixture of particulates and gases that is the result of urban air pollution. | [verb] To get a smog check; to check a vehicle or have it checked for emissions. SMOKE (11) [noun] The visible vapor/vapour, gases, and fine particles given off by burning or smoldering material. | [noun] A cigarette. | [noun] Anything to smoke (e.g. cigarettes, marijuana, etc.) | [verb] To inhale and exhale the smoke from a burning cigarette, cigar, pipe, etc. SMOKY (14) [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. | [adjective] Of a colour or colour pattern similar to that of smoke. SMOLT (7) [adjective] Bright; serene. | [adjective] (of weather) Calm; fine; fair. | [adjective] Smooth and shining. | [noun] A young salmon two or three years old, when it has acquired its silvery color. SMOTE (7) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMUTS (7) [noun] Soot. | [noun] A flake of ash or soot. | [noun] Sexually vulgar material; something that is sexual in a dirty way; pornographic material. SNACK (11) [noun] A light meal. | [noun] An item of food eaten between meals. | [noun] A very sexy and attractive person. | [noun] A share; a part or portion. SNAFU (8) [noun] A ridiculously chaotic situation. | [noun] A major glitch or breakdown. | [verb] To screw up or foul up. SNAGS (6) [noun] A stump or base of a branch that has been lopped off; a short branch, or a sharp or rough branch. | [noun] A dead tree that remains standing. | [noun] A tree, or a branch of a tree, fixed in the bottom of a river or other navigable water, and rising nearly or quite to the surface, by which boats are sometimes pierced and sunk. SNAIL (5) [noun] Any of very many animals (either hermaphroditic or nonhermaphroditic), of the class Gastropoda, having a coiled shell. | [noun] (by extension) A slow person; a sluggard. | [noun] A spiral cam, or a flat piece of metal of spirally curved outline, used for giving motion to, or changing the position of, another part, as the hammer tail of a striking clock. SNAKE (9) [noun] A legless reptile of the sub-order Serpentes with a long, thin body and a fork-shaped tongue. | [noun] A treacherous person. | [noun] Somebody who acts deceitfully for social gain. SNAKY (12) [adjective] Resembling or relating to snakes. | [adjective] Windy; winding; twisty; sinuous, wavy. | [adjective] Sly; cunning; deceitful. SNAPS (7) [noun] A quick breaking or cracking sound or the action of producing such a sound. | [noun] A sudden break. | [noun] An attempt to seize, bite, attack, or grab. SNARE (5) [noun] A trap (especially one made from a loop of wire, string, or leather). | [noun] A mental or psychological trap. | [noun] A loop of cord used in obstetric cases, to hold or to pull a fetus from the mother animal. SNARK (9) [noun] Snide remarks. | [verb] To express oneself in a snarky fashion. | [verb] To snort. | [noun] A graph in which every node has three branches, and the edges cannot be coloured in fewer than four colours without two edges of the same colour meeting at a point. SNARL (5) [noun] A knot or complication of hair, thread, or the like, difficult to disentangle. | [noun] An intricate complication; a problematic difficulty; a knotty or tangled situation. | [noun] A slow-moving traffic jam. | [noun] The act of snarling; a growl; a surly or peevish expression; an angry contention. SNASH (8) [noun] Verbal abuse; insolence; guff. | [verb] To talk impudently. SNATH (8) SNAWS (8) SNEAK (9) [noun] One who sneaks; one who moves stealthily to acquire an item or information. | [noun] A cheat; a con artist. | [noun] An informer; a tell-tale. SNEAP (7) SNECK (11) [noun] A latch or catch. | [noun] The nose. | [noun] A cut. SNEDS (6) [verb] To lop. SNEER (5) [noun] A facial expression where one slightly raises one corner of the upper lip, generally indicating scorn. | [noun] A display of contempt; scorn. | [verb] To raise a corner of the upper lip slightly, especially in scorn SNELL (5) [adjective] Quick, smart; sharp, active, brisk or nimble; lively. | [adjective] Quick-witted; witty. | [adjective] Harsh; severe. | [noun] A short line of horsehair, gut, monofilament, etc., by which a fishhook or lure is attached to a longer (and usually heavier) line. SNIBS (7) [noun] A latch or fastening for a door, window etc. | [noun] A reprimand; a snub. SNICK (11) [noun] A small deflection of the ball off the side of the bat; often carries to the wicketkeeper for a catch | [noun] A small cut or mark. | [noun] A knot or irregularity in yarn. | [noun] A sharp clicking sound. | [verb] To latch, to lock. SNIDE (6) [noun] An underhanded, tricky person given to sharp practise; a sharper; a cheat. | [noun] Counterfeit money | [adjective] Disparaging or derisive in an insinuative way. SNIFF (11) [noun] An instance of sniffing. | [noun] A quantity of something that is inhaled through the nose | [noun] A brief perception, or tiny amount. SNIPE (7) [noun] Any of various limicoline game birds of the genera Gallinago, Lymnocryptes and Coenocorypha in the family Scolopacidae, having a long, slender, nearly straight beak. | [noun] A fool; a blockhead. | [noun] A shot fired from a concealed place. | [noun] A cigarette butt. | [noun] A sharp, clever answer; sarcasm. SNIPS (7) [noun] The act of snipping; cutting a small amount off of something. | [noun] A single cut with scissors, clippers, or similar tool. | [noun] Something acquired for a low price; a bargain. SNITS (5) [noun] A temper; a lack of patience; a bad mood. | [noun] A U.S. unit of volume for liquor equal to 2 jiggers, 3 U.S. fluid ounces, or 88.7 milliliters. | [noun] A beer chaser commonly served in three-ounce servings in highball or juice glasses with a Bloody Mary cocktail in the upper midwest states of United States including Minnesota, North Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, and Illinois. SNOBS (7) [noun] A person who wishes to be seen as a member of the upper classes and who looks down on those perceived to have inferior or unrefined tastes. | [noun] A cobbler or shoemaker. | [noun] A member of the lower classes; a commoner. SNOGS (6) [noun] A passionate kiss. | [verb] To kiss passionately. 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. SNOOK (9) [noun] A freshwater and marine fish of the family Centropomidae in the order Perciformes. | [noun] Any of various other ray-finned fishes in several families. | [verb] To fish for snook. | [noun] (as a gesture) A disrespectful gesture, performed by placing the tip of a thumb on one's nose with the fingers spread, and typically while wiggling the fingers back and forth. SNOOL (5) [noun] An abject, cowardly person who submits tamely to others. | [verb] To submit tamely to others. SNOOP (7) [noun] The act of snooping | [noun] One who snoops | [noun] A private detective SNOOT (5) [noun] An elitist individual; one who looks down upon lower social classes. | [noun] A language pedant or snob; one who practices linguistic elitism. | [noun] A nose or snout, especially in derogatory use. SNORE (5) [noun] The act of snoring, and the noise produced. | [noun] An extremely boring person or event. | [verb] To breathe during sleep with harsh, snorting noises caused by vibration of the soft palate. SNORT (5) [noun] The sound made by exhaling or inhaling roughly through the nose. | [noun] A dose of a drug to be snorted. Here, "drug" includes snuff (i.e., pulverized tobacco). | [noun] A consumed portion of alcoholic drink. SNOTS (5) [noun] Mucus, especially mucus from the nose. | [noun] A contemptible child. | [noun] A mean fellow. SNOUT (5) [noun] The long, projecting nose, mouth, and jaw of a beast, as of pigs. | [noun] The front of the prow of a ship or boat. | [noun] A person's nose. SNOWS (8) [noun] The frozen, crystalline state of water that falls as precipitation. | [noun] Any similar frozen form of a gas or liquid. | [noun] A snowfall; a blanket of frozen, crystalline water. SNOWY (11) [adjective] Marked by snow, characterized by snow. | [adjective] Covered with snow, snow-covered, besnowed. | [adjective] Snow-white in color, white as snow. SNUBS (7) [noun] A deliberate affront or slight. | [noun] A sudden checking of a cable or rope. | [noun] A knot; a protuberance; a snag. SNUCK (11) [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. SNUFF (11) [noun] Finely ground or pulverized tobacco intended for use by being sniffed or snorted into the nose. | [noun] Fine-ground or minced tobacco, dry or moistened, intended for use by placing a pinch behind the lip or beneath the tongue; see also snus. | [noun] A snort or sniff of fine-ground, powdered, or pulverized tobacco. | [noun] The burning part of a candle wick, or the black, burnt remains of a wick (which must be periodically removed). | [verb] To extinguish a candle or oil-lamp flame by covering the burning end of the wick until the flame is suffocated. SNUGS (6) [noun] A small, comfortable back room in a pub. | [noun] A lug. | [verb] To make secure or snug. SNYES (8) SOAKS (9) [noun] An immersion in water etc. | [noun] A drunkard. | [noun] A carouse; a drinking session. SOAPS (7) [noun] A substance able to mix with both oil and water, used for cleaning, often in the form of a solid bar or in liquid form, derived from fats or made synthetically. | [noun] A metallic salt derived from a fatty acid | [noun] Flattery or excessively complacent conversation. SOAPY (10) [adjective] Resembling soap. | [adjective] Resembling a soap opera. | [adjective] Full of soap. SOARS (5) [noun] The act of soaring. | [noun] An upward flight. | [verb] To fly high with little effort, like a bird. SOAVE (8) SOBER (7) [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 SOCKO (11) [adjective] Superb, excellent, stunning. SOCKS (11) [noun] A knitted or woven covering for the foot. | [noun] A shoe worn by Greco-Roman comedy actors. | [noun] A color pattern (usually white) on a cat's or dog's lower leg that is different from the color pattern on the rest of the animal. SOCLE (7) [noun] A low plinth or pedestal used to display a statue or other artwork. | [noun] A plain face or plinth at the foot of a wall. | [noun] The sum of the minimal normal submodules of a given R-module of a given ring R. SODAS (6) [noun] Sodium bicarbonate (usually baking soda). | [noun] Sodium carbonate (usually washing soda). | [noun] Sodium in chemical combination. SODDY (10) SODIC (8) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing sodium. SODOM (8) SOFAR (8) [noun] A system for determining the position of vessels lost at sea by means of explosive sounds. SOFAS (8) [noun] A raised area of a building's floor, usually covered with carpeting, used for sitting. | [noun] (furniture) An upholstered seat with a raised back and one or two raised ends, long enough to comfortably accommodate two or more people. | [verb] To furnish with one or more sofas. SOFTA (8) [noun] A religious student, especially in Turkey | [noun] (by extension) A fanatic adherent, blind follower SOFTS (8) SOFTY (11) [noun] A weak or sentimental person. | [noun] Somebody who finds it difficult to scold or punish. | [noun] A software expert who is ignorant of the workings of hardware. SOGGY (10) [adjective] Soaked with moisture or other liquid. SOILS (5) [noun] A mixture of mineral particles and organic material, used to support plant growth. | [noun] The unconsolidated mineral or organic material on the immediate surface of the earth that serves as a natural medium for the growth of land plants. | [noun] The unconsolidated mineral or organic matter on the surface of the earth that has been subjected to and shows effects of genetic and environmental factors of: climate (including water and temperature effects), and macro- and microorganisms, conditioned by relief, acting on parent material over a period of time. A product-soil differs from the material from which it is derived in many physical, chemical, biological, and morphological properties and characteristics. SOJAS (12) SOKES (9) [noun] Any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines. | [noun] A district under a particular jurisdiction. SOKOL (9) SOLAN (5) [noun] Solan goose SOLAR (5) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the sun; proceeding from the sun | [adjective] Born under the predominant influence of the sun. | [adjective] Measured by the progress or revolution of the sun in the ecliptic; as, the solar year. | [noun] A loft or upper chamber forming the private accommodation of the head of the household in a medieval hall; a garret room. SOLDI (6) [noun] An Italian coin, formerly one-twentieth of a lira. SOLDO (6) [noun] An Italian coin, formerly one-twentieth of a lira. 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. SOLEI (5) [noun] A broad, flat muscle that extends behind the gastrocnemius along the back of the calf. SOLES (5) [noun] A wooden band or yoke put around the neck of an ox or cow in the stall. | [noun] A pond or pool; a dirty pond of standing water. | [noun] The bottom or plantar surface of the foot. 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. SOLON (5) SOLOS (5) [noun] A piece of music for one performer. | [noun] A job or performance done by one person alone. | [noun] (games) A card game similar to whist in which each player plays against the others in turn without a partner SOLUM (7) SOLUS (5) [adjective] Alone, unaccompanied (as a stage direction) SOLVE (8) [noun] (chiefly law enforcement) A solution; an explanation. | [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. SOMAS (7) [noun] The whole axial portion of an animal, including the head, neck, trunk, and tail. | [noun] The corporeal body, as distinguished from the psyche or soul and the pneuma or spirit. | [noun] The bulbous part of a neuron, containing the cell nucleus. SONAR (5) [noun] Echolocation | [noun] A device that uses hydrophones (in the same manner as radar) to locate objects underwater. SONDE (6) [noun] Probe; sound. | [noun] (physical sciences) Any of various devices for testing physical conditions, often for remote or underwater locations. SONES (5) [noun] (acoustics) a subjective unit of loudness for an average listener equal to the loudness of a 1000-hertz sound that has an intensity 40 decibels above the listener's own threshold of hearing SONGS (6) [noun] A musical composition with lyrics for voice or voices, performed by singing. | [noun] (by extension) Any musical composition. | [noun] Poetical composition; poetry; verse. SONIC (7) [adjective] Of or relating to sound. | [adjective] Having a speed approaching that of the speed of sound in air. SONLY (8) SONNY (8) [noun] A familiar form of address for a boy | [noun] Form of address to a boy or man, to express contempt, warning etc. SONSY (8) [adjective] Lucky; fortunate; thriving; plump SOOEY (8) SOOKS (9) [noun] Familiar name for a calf. | [noun] Familiar name for a cow. | [noun] A cow or sheep. SOOTH (8) [noun] Truth. | [noun] Augury; prognostication. | [noun] Blandishment; cajolery. SOOTS (5) [noun] Fine black or dull brown particles of amorphous carbon and tar, produced by the incomplete combustion of coal, oil etc. | [verb] To cover or dress with soot. SOOTY (8) [verb] To blacken or make dirty with soot. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or producing soot. | [adjective] Soiled with soot SOPHS (10) SOPHY (13) [noun] Wisdom, knowledge, learning | [noun] A title of a Safavid dynasty shah. | [noun] A wise man; a sage or wite. | [noun] A mystic Muslim; a Muslim ascetic | [noun] Any one of the various fields of study whose names end in -sophy. SOPOR (7) [noun] An unnaturally deep sleep. SOPPY (12) [adjective] Very wet; sodden, soaked. | [adjective] Sentimental, maudlin, schmaltzy. SORAS (5) [noun] A rail (Porzana carolina) of North, Central, and northern South America. SORBS (7) [noun] The service tree, Sorbus domestica. | [noun] Any of various related trees, including the wild service tree, S. torminalis, and the rowan, S. aucuparia. | [noun] The fruit of any of these trees, especially of the service tree. SORDS (6) [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. SOREL (5) [noun] A young buck (deer) in the third year. | [noun] A yellowish or reddish brown color; sorrel. | [noun] Any of various plants with acidic leaves, especially SORER (5) [adjective] Causing pain or discomfort; painfully sensitive. | [adjective] Sensitive; tender; easily pained, grieved, or vexed; very susceptible of irritation. | [adjective] Dire; distressing. SORES (5) [noun] An injured, infected, inflamed or diseased patch of skin. | [noun] Grief; affliction; trouble; difficulty. | [noun] A group of ducks on land. SORGO (6) SORNS (5) SORRY (8) [noun] The act of saying sorry; an apology. | [adjective] (of a person) Regretful for an action; grieved or saddened, especially by the loss of something or someone. | [adjective] Poor, pitifully sad or regrettable. SORTS (5) [noun] A general type. | [noun] Manner; form of being or acting. | [noun] Condition above the vulgar; rank. SORUS (5) [noun] Any reproductive structure, in some lichens and fungi, that produces spores. | [noun] A cluster of sporangia on the edge or underside of a fern frond. SOTHS (8) SOTOL (5) [noun] Any of several species of North American desert plants of the genus Dasylirion, of the asparagus family. | [noun] A distilled spirit made from the sap of some of these plants, especially Dasylirion wheeleri. SOUGH (9) [noun] A murmuring sound; rushing, rustling, or whistling sound. | [noun] A gentle breeze; a waft; a breath. | [noun] A (deep) sigh. | [noun] A small drain; an adit. SOUKS (9) [noun] A street market, particularly in Arabic- and Somali-speaking countries; a place where people buy and sell goods. SOULS (5) [noun] The spirit or essence of a person usually thought to consist of one's thoughts and personality. Often believed to live on after the person's death. | [noun] The spirit or essence of anything. | [noun] Life, energy, vigor. 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. SOUPS (7) [noun] Any of various dishes commonly made by combining liquids, such as water or stock with other ingredients, such as meat and vegetables, that contribute flavor and texture. | [noun] Any mixture or substance suggestive of soup consistency. | [verb] To feed: to provide with soup or a meal. SOUPY (10) [adjective] Resembling soup; creamy. | [adjective] Extravagant sentimental; slushy. SOURS (5) [noun] The sensation of a sour taste. | [noun] A drink made with whiskey, lemon or lime juice and sugar. | [noun] (by extension) Any cocktail containing lemon or lime juice. SOUSE (5) [noun] Something kept or steeped in brine | [noun] The act of sousing; a plunging into water. | [noun] A person suffering from alcoholism. | [noun] The act of sousing, or swooping. | [noun] A sou (the French coin). SOUTH (8) [noun] One of the four major compass points, specifically 180°, directed toward the South Pole, and conventionally downwards on a map, abbreviated as S. | [noun] The side of a church on the right hand of a person facing the altar. | [verb] To turn or move toward the south; to veer toward the south. SOWAR (8) SOWED (9) [verb] To scatter, disperse, or plant (seeds). | [verb] To spread abroad; to propagate. | [verb] To scatter over; to besprinkle. SOWER (8) SOYAS (8) SOYUZ (17) SOZIN (14) SPACE (9) [noun] (heading) Of time. | [noun] (heading) Unlimited or generalized extent, physical or otherwise. | [noun] (heading) A bounded or specific extent, physical or otherwise. SPACY (12) [adjective] Spaced-out | [adjective] Eccentric | [adjective] Having much space SPADE (8) [noun] A garden tool with a handle and a flat blade for digging. Not to be confused with a shovel which is used for moving earth or other materials. | [noun] A playing card marked with the symbol ♠. | [noun] A black person. | [noun] A hart or stag three years old. SPADO (8) SPAED (8) [verb] To divine; foretell SPAES (7) [verb] To divine; foretell SPAHI (10) [noun] (history) An Ottoman (Turkish empire) cavalryman, especially as recruited under a land-based system. | [noun] (history) A soldier in a mainly Arab-recruited cavalry (originally horse, later light armored) regiment in French colonial service in (former/ in name still) Ottoman North African provinces SPAIL (7) SPAIT (7) SPAKE (11) [adjective] Quiet; tame. | [adjective] Ready; prompt. | [verb] To communicate with one's voice, to say words out loud. SPALE (7) SPALL (7) [noun] A splinter, fragment or chip, especially of stone. | [verb] To break into fragments or small pieces. | [verb] To reduce, as irregular blocks of stone, to an approximately level surface by hammering. | [noun] The shoulder. SPANG (8) [noun] A shiny ornament or object; a spangle | [verb] To set with bright points: star or spangle. | [verb] To hitch; fasten. | [verb] (of a flying object such as a bullet) To strike or ricochet with a loud report | [noun] A bound or spring; a leap. | [noun] A span. SPANK (11) [noun] An instance of spanking, separately or part of a multiple blows-beating; a smack, swat, or slap. | [noun] A slapping sound, as produced by spanking. | [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. SPANS (7) [noun] The space from the thumb to the end of the little finger when extended; nine inches; an eighth of a fathom. | [noun] (by extension) A small space or a brief portion of time. | [noun] A portion of something by length; a subsequence. SPARE (7) [noun] The act of sparing; moderation; restraint. | [noun] Parsimony; frugal use. | [noun] An opening in a petticoat or gown; a placket. | [verb] To show mercy. SPARK (11) [noun] A small particle of glowing matter, either molten or on fire. | [noun] A short or small burst of electrical discharge. | [noun] A small, shining body, or transient light; a sparkle. | [noun] A gallant; a foppish young man. SPARS (7) [noun] A rafter of a roof. | [noun] A thick pole or piece of wood. | [noun] A bar of wood used to fasten a door. SPASM (9) [noun] A sudden, involuntary contraction of a muscle, a group of muscles, or a hollow organ. | [noun] A violent, excruciating seizure of pain. | [noun] A sudden and temporary burst of energy, activity, or emotion. SPATE (7) [noun] A river flood; an overflow or inundation. | [noun] (by extension) A sudden rush or increase. SPATS (7) [noun] (often in the plural) A covering or decorative covering worn over a shoe. | [noun] A piece of bodywork that covers the upper portions of the rear tyres of a car. | [noun] A brief argument, falling out, quarrel. SPAWN (10) [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. | [noun] The numerous eggs of an aquatic organism. SPAYS (10) [verb] To divine; foretell | [verb] To remove or destroy the ovaries (of an animal) so that it cannot become pregnant. SPEAK (11) [noun] A low class bar, a speakeasy. | [noun] Language, jargon, or terminology used uniquely in a particular environment or group. | [noun] Speech, conversation. SPEAN (7) SPEAR (7) [noun] A long stick with a sharp tip used as a weapon for throwing or thrusting, or anything used to make a thrusting motion. | [noun] A soldier armed with such a weapon; a spearman. | [noun] A lance with barbed prongs, used by fishermen to retrieve fish. SPECK (13) [noun] A tiny spot, especially of dirt etc. | [noun] A very small thing; a particle; a whit. | [noun] A small etheostomoid fish, Etheostoma stigmaeum, common in the eastern United States. | [noun] Fat; lard; fat meat. SPECS (9) [noun] Two similar or identical things taken together; often followed by of. | [noun] Two people in a relationship, partnership or friendship. | [noun] Used with binary nouns (often in the plural to indicate multiple instances, since such nouns are plural only, except in some technical contexts) 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. SPEEL (7) SPEER (7) SPEIL (7) SPEIR (7) SPELL (7) [noun] Words or a formula supposed to have magical powers. | [noun] A magical effect or influence induced by an incantation or formula. | [noun] Speech, discourse. | [verb] To read (something) as though letter by letter; to peruse slowly or with effort. | [noun] A shift (of work); a set of workers responsible for a specific turn of labour. | [noun] A splinter, usually of wood; a spelk. SPELT (7) [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. | [verb] To be able to write or say the letters that form words. | [noun] A grain, considered either a subspecies of wheat, Triticum aestivum subsp. spelta, or a separate species Triticum spelta or Triticum dicoccon. | [noun] A thin piece of wood or metal; a splinter. SPEND (8) [noun] Amount of money spent (during a period); expenditure. | [noun] (in the plural) Expenditures; money or pocket money. | [noun] Discharged semen. SPENT (7) [verb] To pay out (money). | [verb] To bestow; to employ; often with on or upon. | [verb] To squander. SPERM (9) [noun] The reproductive cell or gamete of the male; a spermatozoon. | [noun] Semen; the generative substance of male animals. | [noun] Sperm oil; whale oil from a sperm whale; spermaceti. SPEWS (10) [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 SPICA (9) [noun] A spike. | [noun] A spur. | [noun] A kind of bandage passing, by successive turns and crosses, from an extremity to the trunk; a spiral bandage with reversed turns. SPICE (9) [noun] Aromatic or pungent plant matter (usually dried) used to season or flavour food. | [noun] Appeal, interest; an attribute that makes something appealing, interesting, or engaging. | [noun] A synthetic cannabinoid drug. SPICK (13) SPICS (9) [noun] A Spanish-speaking person, someone with a Central American or Latino accent. SPICY (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or containing spice. | [adjective] (of flavors) Provoking a burning sensation due to the presence of chilis or similar hot spices | [adjective] (of flavors or odors) Tangy, zesty, or pungent. SPIED (8) [verb] To act as a spy. | [verb] To spot; to catch sight of. | [verb] To search narrowly; to scrutinize. SPIEL (7) [noun] A lengthy and extravagant speech or argument usually intended to persuade. | [noun] An early form of rap music. | [verb] To talk at length. | [noun] A game of curling. SPIER (7) SPIES (7) [noun] A person who secretly watches and examines the actions of other individuals or organizations and gathers information on them (usually to gain an advantage). | [verb] To act as a spy. | [verb] To spot; to catch sight of. SPIFF (13) [noun] Attractiveness or charm in dress, appearance, or manner. | [noun] A well-dressed man. | [noun] A bonus or other remuneration, given for reaching a sales goal or promoting the goods of a particular manufacturer. Originally from textile retailing, a percentage given for selling off surplus or out-of-fashion stock, of which the sales person could offer part as a discount to a customer. SPIKE (11) [noun] In a violin-family instrument, the carved wooden plug which sits in the bottom block of the instrument. | [noun] The spike of a cello or double bass that makes contact with the floor and supports the weight of the instrument. | [noun] A sort of very large nail. SPIKS (11) SPIKY (14) [adjective] Having spikes, spiny. | [adjective] Hostile; standoffish | [adjective] Of hair, erect, resembling spikes. SPILE (7) [noun] A splinter. | [noun] A spigot or plug used to stop the hole in a barrel or cask. | [noun] A spout inserted in a maple (or other tree) to draw off sap. | [noun] A pile; a post or girder. | [verb] Spoil. SPILL (7) [noun] A mess of something that has been dropped. | [noun] A fall or stumble. | [noun] A small stick or piece of paper used to light a candle, cigarette etc by the transfer of a flame from a fire. SPILT (7) [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. SPINE (7) [noun] The series of bones situated at the back from the head to the pelvis of a person, or from the head to the tail of an animal; backbone, vertebral column. | [noun] Something resembling a backbone, such as a ridge, or a long, central structure from which other structures radiate. | [noun] A pointed, fairly rigid protuberance or needle-like structure on an animal, shell, or plant. SPINS (7) [noun] Rapid circular motion. | [noun] A quantum angular momentum associated with subatomic particles, which also creates a magnetic moment. | [noun] A favourable comment or interpretation intended to bias opinion on an otherwise unpleasant situation. SPINY (10) SPIRE (7) [noun] The stalk or stem of a plant. | [noun] A young shoot of a plant; a spear. | [noun] Any of various tall grasses, rushes, or sedges, such as the marram, the reed canary-grass, etc. | [verb] To breathe. | [noun] One of the sinuous foldings of a serpent or other reptile; a coil. SPIRT (7) [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. SPIRY (10) SPITE (7) [noun] Ill will or hatred toward another, accompanied with the desire to irritate, annoy, or thwart; a want to disturb or put out another; mild malice | [noun] Vexation; chagrin; mortification. | [verb] To treat maliciously; to try to injure or thwart. | [preposition] Notwithstanding; despite. SPITS (7) [noun] A sudden impact or blow. | [noun] The shock and noise produced by violently closing a door or other object. | [noun] A slam dunk. SPITZ (16) [noun] Any of several Nordic breeds of dog such as the Pomeranian or Samoyed SPIVS (10) [noun] A smartly dressed person who trades in illicit, black-market or stolen goods. | [noun] A flashy con artist, often homeless, who lives by his wits. | [noun] In Scotland Yard usage, a low and common thief. SPLAT (7) [noun] The narrow wooden centre piece of a chair back. | [noun] The sharp, atonal sound of a liquid or soft solid hitting a solid surface. | [noun] The irregular shape of a viscous liquid or soft solid which has hit a solid surface. SPLAY (10) [noun] A slope or bevel, especially of the sides of a door or window, by which the opening is made larger at one face of the wall than at the other, or larger at each of the faces than it is between them. | [verb] To spread; spread out. | [verb] To dislocate, as a shoulder bone. SPLIT (7) [noun] A crack or longitudinal fissure. | [noun] A breach or separation, as in a political party; a division. | [noun] A piece that is split off, or made thin, by splitting; a splinter; a fragment. SPODE (8) SPOIL (7) [noun] (Also in plural: spoils) Plunder taken from an enemy or victim. | [noun] Material (such as rock or earth) removed in the course of an excavation, or in mining or dredging. Tailings. | [verb] To strip (someone who has been killed or defeated) of their arms or armour. SPOKE (11) [noun] A support structure that connects the axle or the hub of a wheel to the rim. | [noun] A projecting handle of a steering wheel. | [noun] A rung of a ladder. | [verb] To communicate with one's voice, to say words out loud. SPOOF (10) [noun] An act of deception; a hoax; a joking prank. | [noun] A light parody. | [noun] A drinking game in which players hold up to three (or another specified number of) coins hidden in a fist and attempt to guess the total number of coins held. | [noun] Semen. SPOOK (11) [noun] A ghost or phantom. | [noun] A hobgoblin. | [noun] A scare or fright. SPOOL (7) [noun] A reel; a device around which thread, wire or cable is wound, especially a cylinder or spindle. | [noun] A temporary storage area for electronic mail, etc. | [verb] To wind on a spool or spools. | [noun] A small swimming pool that can be used also as a spa. SPOON (7) [noun] An implement for eating or serving; a scooped utensil whose long handle is straight, in contrast to a ladle. | [noun] An implement for stirring food while being prepared; a wooden spoon. | [noun] A measure that will fit into a spoon; a spoonful. | [verb] To sail briskly with the wind astern, with or without sails hoisted. SPOOR (7) [noun] The track, trail, droppings or scent of an animal | [verb] To track an animal by following its spoor SPORE (7) [noun] A reproductive particle, usually a single cell, released by a fungus, alga, or plant that may germinate into another. | [noun] A thick resistant particle produced by a bacterium or protist to survive in harsh or unfavorable conditions. | [verb] To produce spores. SPORT (7) [noun] Any activity that uses physical exertion or skills competitively under a set of rules that is not based on aesthetics. | [noun] Something done for fun, regardless of its design or intended purpose. | [noun] A person who exhibits either good or bad sportsmanship. SPOTS (7) [noun] A round or irregular patch on the surface of a thing having a different color, texture etc. and generally round in shape. | [noun] A stain or disfiguring mark. | [noun] A pimple, papule or pustule. SPOUT (7) [noun] A tube or lip through which liquid or steam is poured or discharged. | [noun] A stream of liquid. | [noun] The mixture of air and water thrown up from the blowhole of a whale. SPRAG (8) [adjective] Lively, full of energy | [noun] A billet of wood; a piece of timber, a similar solid object or constructed unit used as a prop. | [verb] To check the motion of, as a carriage on a steep slope, by putting a sprag between the spokes of the wheel. | [noun] A young salmon. SPRAT (7) [noun] Any of various small, herring-like, marine fish in the genus Sprattus, in the family Clupeidae. SPRAY (10) [noun] A fine, gentle, dispersed mist of liquid. | [noun] A pressurized container; an atomizer. | [noun] Any of numerous commercial products, including paints, cosmetics, and insecticides, that are dispensed from containers in this manner. | [noun] A small branch of flowers or berries. SPREE (7) [noun] A merry frolic; especially, a drinking frolic. | [noun] Uninhibited activity. | [verb] To engage in a spree. SPRIG (8) [noun] A small shoot or twig of a tree or other plant; a spray. | [noun] An ornament resembling a small shoot or twig. | [noun] One of the separate pieces of lace fastened on a ground in applique lace. SPRIT (7) [noun] A spar between mast and upper outer corner of a spritsail on sailing boats. | [noun] A shoot; a sprout. | [verb] To sprout; to bud; to germinate, as barley steeped for malt. | [verb] To throw out with force from a narrow orifice; to eject; to spurt out. SPRUE (7) [noun] A tropical disease causing a sore throat and tongue, and disturbed digestion; psilosis. | [noun] (founding) The hole through which melted metal is poured into the gate, and thence into the mold. | [noun] (founding) Material that cools in the feed channels to a mold. SPRUG (8) SPUDS (8) [noun] A potato. | [noun] A hole in a sock. | [noun] A type of short nut (fastener) threaded on both ends. 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 SPUES (7) [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 SPUME (9) [noun] Foam or froth of liquid, particularly that of seawater. | [verb] To froth. SPUMY (12) SPUNK (11) [noun] A spark. | [noun] Touchwood; tinder. | [noun] A piece of tinder, sometimes impregnated with sulphur; a match. SPURN (7) [noun] An act of spurning; a scornful rejection. | [noun] A kick; a blow with the foot. | [noun] Disdainful rejection; contemptuous treatment. SPURS (7) [verb] To ask, to inquire | [noun] A rigid implement, often roughly y-shaped, that is fixed to one's heel for the purpose of prodding a horse. Often worn by, and emblematic of, the cowboy or the knight. | [noun] A jab given with the spurs. SPURT (7) [noun] A brief gush, as of liquid spurting from an orifice or a cut/wound. | [noun] Ejaculation of semen. | [noun] A shoot; a bud. | [noun] A moment, a short period of time. SPUTA (7) SQUAB (16) [noun] (sometimes attributive) A baby pigeon, dove, or chicken. | [noun] The meat of such a baby bird used as food. | [noun] A baby rook. 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. SQUAT (14) [noun] Nothing; nothing whatsoever. | [noun] A position assumed by bending deeply at the knees while resting on one's feet. | [noun] (exercise) Any of various modes of callisthenic exercises performed by moving the body and bending at least one knee. | [noun] The angel shark (genus Squatina). SQUAW (17) [noun] A woman, wife; especially a Native American woman. SQUEG (15) SQUIB (16) [noun] A small firework that is intended to spew sparks rather than explode. | [noun] A similar device used to ignite an explosive or launch a rocket, etc. | [noun] A kind of slow match or safety fuse. 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. STABS (7) [noun] An act of stabbing or thrusting with an object. | [noun] A wound made by stabbing. | [noun] Pain inflicted on a person's feelings. STACK (11) [noun] (heading) A pile. | [noun] A smokestack. | [noun] (heading) In computing. STADE (6) STAFF (11) [noun] (plural staffs or staves) A long, straight, thick wooden rod or stick, especially one used to assist in walking. | [noun] (plural staves) A series of horizontal lines on which musical notes are written; a stave. | [noun] (plural staff or staffs) The employees of a business. STAGE (6) [noun] A phase. | [noun] A platform; a surface, generally elevated, upon which show performances or other public events are given. | [noun] A floor or storey of a house. STAGS (6) [noun] An adult male deer. | [noun] A colt, or filly. | [noun] (by extension) A romping girl; a tomboy. STAGY (9) [adjective] Theatrical | [adjective] Unnaturally showy | [adjective] Melodramatic; sensationalized STAID (6) [adjective] Not capricious or impulsive; sedate, serious, sober. | [adjective] Always fixed in the same location; stationary. STAIG (6) STAIN (5) [noun] A discoloured spot or area. | [noun] A blemish on one's character or reputation. | [noun] A substance used to soak into a surface and colour it. STAIR (5) [noun] A single step in a staircase. | [noun] A series of steps; a staircase. STAKE (9) [noun] A piece of wood or other material, usually long and slender, pointed at one end so as to be easily driven into the ground as a marker or a support or stay. | [noun] A piece of wood driven in the ground, placed in the middle of the court, that is used as the finishing point after scoring 12 hoops in croquet. | [noun] A stick inserted upright in a lop, eye, or mortise, at the side or end of a cart, flat car, flatbed trailer, or the like, to prevent goods from falling off. STALE (5) [noun] Something stale; a loaf of bread or the like that is no longer fresh. | [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. | [noun] A long, thin handle (of rakes, axes, etc.) | [noun] A fixed position, particularly a soldier's in a battle-line. | [noun] (livestock) Urine, especially used of horses and cattle. | [noun] A live bird to lure birds of prey or others of its kind into a trap. STALK (9) [noun] The stem or main axis of a plant, which supports the seed-carrying parts. | [noun] The petiole, pedicel, or peduncle of a plant. | [noun] Something resembling the stalk of a plant, such as the stem of a quill. | [noun] A particular episode of trying to follow or contact someone. | [noun] A haughty style of walking. STALL (5) [noun] A compartment for a single animal in a stable or cattle shed. | [noun] A stable; a place for cattle. | [noun] A bench or table on which small articles of merchandise are exposed for sale. | [noun] An action that is intended to cause or actually causes delay. STAMP (9) [noun] An act of stamping the foot, paw or hoof. | [noun] An indentation, imprint, or mark made by stamping. | [noun] A device for stamping designs. 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. STANE (5) STANG (6) STANK (9) [verb] To have a strong bad smell. | [verb] To be greatly inferior; to perform badly. | [verb] To give an impression of dishonesty or untruth. | [adjective] Foul-smelling, stinking, unclean. | [noun] Water retained by an embankment; a pool of water. | [adjective] Weak; worn out | [verb] To sigh. STAPH (10) [noun] Staphylococcus bacteria and the infection it causes. STARE (5) [noun] A persistent gaze. | [verb] (construed with at) To look fixedly (at something). | [verb] To influence in some way by looking fixedly. | [noun] A starling. STARK (9) [adjective] Hard, firm; obdurate. | [adjective] Severe; violent; fierce (now usually in describing the weather). | [adjective] Strong; vigorous; powerful. | [verb] To stiffen. STARS (5) [noun] Any small luminous dot appearing in the cloudless portion of the night sky, especially with a fixed location relative to other such dots. | [noun] A luminous celestial body, made up of plasma (particularly hydrogen and helium) and having a spherical shape. Depending on context the sun may or may not be included. | [noun] A concave polygon with regular, pointy protrusions and indentations, generally with five or six points. START (5) [noun] The beginning of an activity. | [noun] A sudden involuntary movement. | [noun] The beginning point of a race, a board game, etc. | [verb] To begin, commence, initiate. | [noun] A tail, or anything projecting like a tail. STASH (8) [noun] A collection, sometimes hidden; a reserve. | [noun] A place where drugs are stored. | [verb] To hide or store away for later use. | [noun] Mustache STATE (5) [noun] A condition; a set of circumstances applying at any given time. | [noun] High social standing or circumstance. | [noun] A polity. STATS (5) [noun] A mathematical science concerned with data collection, presentation, analysis, and interpretation. | [noun] A systematic collection of data on measurements or observations, often related to demographic information such as population counts, incomes, population counts at different ages, etc. | [noun] Attributes of a unit in a game (e.g. health, damage output) STAVE (8) [noun] One of a number of narrow strips of wood, or narrow iron plates, placed edge to edge to form the sides, covering, or lining of a vessel or structure; especially, one of the strips which form the sides of a cask, a pail, etc. | [noun] One of the bars or rounds of a rack, rungs of a ladder, etc; one of the cylindrical bars of a lantern wheel | [noun] A metrical portion; a stanza; a staff. STAYS (8) [noun] Continuance or a period of time spent in a place; abode for an indefinite time; sojourn. | [noun] A postponement, especially of an execution or other punishment. | [noun] A stop; a halt; a break or cessation of action, motion, or progress. 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. STEAK (9) [noun] Beefsteak, a slice of beef, broiled or cut for broiling. | [noun] (by extension) A relatively large, thick slice or slab cut from another animal, a vegetable, etc. | [noun] (seafood) A slice of meat cut across the grain (perpendicular to the spine) from a fish. STEAL (5) [noun] The act of stealing. | [noun] A piece of merchandise available at a very attractive price. | [noun] A situation in which a defensive player actively takes possession of the ball or puck from the opponent's team. STEAM (7) [noun] The vapor formed when water changes from liquid phase to gas phase. | [noun] Pressurized water vapour used for heating, cooking, or to provide mechanical energy. | [noun] Internal energy for motive power. STEED (6) [noun] A stallion, especially in the sense of mount. | [noun] A bicycle. STEEK (9) STEEL (5) [noun] An artificial metal produced from iron, harder and more elastic than elemental iron; used figuratively as a symbol of hardness. | [noun] Any item made of this metal, particularly including: | [noun] Medicinal consumption of this metal; chalybeate medicine; (eventually) any iron or iron-treated water consumed as a medical treatment. | [proper noun] Coldbath Fields Prison in London, closed in 1877. STEEP (7) [noun] The steep side of a mountain etc.; a slope or acclivity. | [adjective] Of a near-vertical gradient; of a slope, surface, curve, etc. that proceeds upward at an angle near vertical. | [adjective] Expensive | [noun] A liquid used in a steeping process STEER (5) [noun] A suggestion about a course of action. | [noun] A helmsman; a pilot. | [verb] To guide the course of a vessel, vehicle, aircraft etc. (by means of a device such as a rudder, paddle, or steering wheel). | [noun] The castrated male of cattle, especially one raised for beef production. STEIN (5) [noun] A beer mug, usually made of ceramic or glass. STELA (5) [noun] An obelisk or upright stone pillar, usually as a primitive commemoration or gravestone STELE (5) [noun] Something stale; a loaf of bread or the like that is no longer fresh. | [noun] A long, thin handle (of rakes, axes, etc.) | [noun] The posts and rungs composing a ladder. | [noun] An upright (or formerly upright) slab containing engraved or painted decorations or inscriptions; a stela. | [noun] The central core of a plant's root and stem system, especially including the vascular tissue and developed from the plerome. STEMS (7) [noun] Acronym of science, technology, engineering, (and) mathematics. | [noun] An electron microscope that transmits a very narrow beam of electrons through a sample; it can detect individual large or heavy atoms. | [noun] A gleam of light; a flame. STENO (5) [noun] A stenographer, someone whose job is to take dictation in shorthand | [noun] Stenography STEPS (7) [noun] An advance or movement made from one foot to the other; a pace. | [noun] A rest, or one of a set of rests, for the foot in ascending or descending, as a stair, or a rung of a ladder. | [noun] A distinct part of a process; stage; phase. STERE (5) [noun] A measure of volume used e.g. for cut wood, equal to one cubic metre. STERN (5) [adjective] Having a hardness and severity of nature or manner. | [adjective] Grim and forbidding in appearance. | [noun] The rear part or after end of a ship or vessel. | [noun] A bird, the black tern. STETS (5) [verb] To let (edited material) stand, or remain as it was. STEWS (8) [noun] A cooking-dish used for boiling; a cauldron. | [noun] A heated bath-room or steam-room; also, a hot bath. | [noun] A brothel. STICH (10) STICK (11) [noun] An elongated piece of wood or similar material, typically put to some use, for example as a wand or baton. | [noun] Any roughly cylindrical (or rectangular) unit of a substance. | [noun] Material or objects attached to a stick or the like. | [noun] The traction of tires on the road surface. | [noun] Criticism or ridicule. 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. STIES (5) [noun] A pen or enclosure for swine. | [noun] A messy, dirty or debauched place. | [verb] To place in, or as if in, a sty STIFF (11) [noun] An average person, usually male, of no particular distinction, skill, or education, often a working stiff or lucky stiff. | [noun] A person who is deceived, as a mark or pigeon in a swindle. | [noun] A cadaver; a dead person. STILE (5) [noun] A set of one or more steps surmounting a fence or wall, or a narrow gate or contrived passage through a fence or wall, which in either case allows people but not livestock to pass. | [noun] A vertical component of a frame or panel, such as that of a door, window, or ladder. | [noun] Senses relating to a thin, pointed object. STILL (5) [noun] A period of calm or silence. | [noun] A photograph, as opposed to movie footage. | [noun] A resident of the Falkland Islands. | [noun] A device for distilling liquids. | [verb] To calm down, to quiet | [verb] To trickle, drip. STILT (5) [noun] Either of two poles with footrests that allow someone to stand or walk above the ground; used mostly by entertainers. | [noun] A tall pillar or post used to support some structure; often above water. | [noun] Any of various wading birds of the genera Himantopus and Cladorhynchus, related to the avocet, that have extremely long legs and long thin bills. STIME (7) STIMY (10) STING (6) [noun] A bump left on the skin after having been stung. | [noun] A bite by an insect. | [noun] A pointed portion of an insect or arachnid used for attack. | [verb] To hurt, usually by introducing poison or a sharp point, or both. STINK (9) [noun] A strong bad smell. | [noun] A complaint or objection. | [verb] To have a strong bad smell. STINT (5) [noun] A period of time spent doing or being something; a spell. | [noun] Limit; bound; restraint; extent. | [noun] Quantity or task assigned; proportion allotted. | [noun] Any of several very small wading birds in the genus Calidris. Types of sandpiper, such as the dunlin or the sanderling. STIPE (7) [noun] The stem of a mushroom, kelp, etc. | [noun] The trunk of a tree. | [noun] The caudicle within the pollinarium of an orchid flower STIRK (9) [noun] A yearling cow; a young bullock or heifer. STIRP (7) STIRS (5) [noun] The act or result of stirring (moving around the particles of a liquid etc.) | [noun] Agitation; tumult; bustle; noise or various movements. | [noun] Public disturbance or commotion; tumultuous disorder; seditious uproar. STOAE (5) STOAI (5) STOAS (5) [noun] In Ancient Greece, a walkway with a roof supported by colonnades, often with a wall on one side; specifically, the Great Hall in Athens. STOAT (5) [noun] Mustela erminea, the ermine or short-tailed weasel, a mustelid native to Eurasia and North America, distinguished from the least weasel by its larger size and longer tail with a prominent black tip. STOBS (7) [noun] A stick, twig or peg, especially in roofing or matting. | [noun] A small post for supporting paling. | [noun] A wedge in coal-mining. STOCK (11) [noun] A store or supply. | [noun] The capital raised by a company through the issue of shares. The total of shares held by an individual shareholder. | [noun] The raw material from which things are made; feedstock. | [noun] A thrust with a rapier; a stoccado. STOGY (9) [noun] A type of sturdy work boot; a brogan. STOIC (7) [noun] Proponent of stoicism, a school of thought, from in 300 B.C.E. up to about the time of Marcus Aurelius, who holds that by cultivating an understanding of the logos, or natural law, one can be free of suffering. | [noun] A person indifferent to pleasure or pain. | [adjective] Of or relating to the Stoics or their ideas. STOKE (9) [verb] To poke, pierce, thrust. | [verb] To feed, stir up, especially, a fire or furnace. | [verb] (by extension) To encourage a behavior or emotion. | [noun] A unit of kinematic viscosity in the CGS system of units. 1 stokes = 1 cm2/s STOLE (5) [verb] To take illegally, or without the owner's permission, something owned by someone else. | [verb] (of ideas, words, music, a look, credit, etc.) To appropriate without giving credit or acknowledgement. | [verb] To get or effect surreptitiously or artfully. | [noun] An ecclesiastical garment consisting of a decorated band worn on the back of the neck with each end hanging over the chest. | [noun] A stolon. STOMA (7) [noun] One of the tiny pores in the epidermis of a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor pass. | [noun] A small opening in a membrane; a surgically constructed opening, especially one in the abdominal wall that permits the passage of waste after a colostomy or ileostomy. | [noun] A mouthlike opening, such as the oral cavity of a nematode. STOMP (9) [noun] A deliberate heavy footfall; a stamp. | [noun] A dance having a heavy, rhythmic step. | [noun] The jazz music for this dance. STONE (5) [noun] A hard earthen substance that can form large rocks. | [noun] A small piece of stone, a pebble. | [noun] A gemstone, a jewel, especially a diamond. STONY (8) [adjective] As hard as stone. | [adjective] Containing or made up of stones. | [adjective] Of a person, lacking warmth and emotion. 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. STOOK (9) [noun] A pile or bundle, especially of straw. | [noun] (specifically) A group of 6 or 8 sheaves of grain stacked to dry vertically in a rectangular arrangement at harvest time, obsolete since the advent of the combine harvester (mid 20th century). | [verb] To make stooks. STOOL (5) [noun] A seat, especially for one person and without armrests. | [noun] A close-stool; a seat used for urination and defecation: a chamber pot, commode, outhouse seat, or toilet. | [noun] A plant that has been cut down until its main stem is close to the ground, resembling a stool, to promote new growth. | [noun] A plant from which layers are propagated by bending its branches into the soil. STOOP (7) [noun] The staircase and landing or porch leading to the entrance of a residence. | [noun] The threshold of a doorway, a doorstep. | [noun] A stooping, bent position of the body. | [noun] A post or pillar, especially a gatepost or a support in a mine. | [noun] A vessel for holding liquids; a flagon. STOPE (7) [noun] A mining excavation in the form of a terrace of steps. | [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. STOPS (7) [noun] A (usually marked) place where buses, trams or trains halt to let passengers get on and off, usually smaller than a station. | [noun] An action of stopping; interruption of travel. | [noun] That which stops, impedes, or obstructs; an obstacle; an impediment. STOPT (7) STORE (5) [noun] A place where items may be accumulated or routinely kept. | [noun] A supply held in storage. | [noun] (mainly North American) A place where items may be purchased; a shop. STORK (9) [noun] A large wading bird with long legs and a long beak of the family Ciconiidae. | [noun] (children's folklore) The mythical bringer of babies to families, or good news. | [noun] The seventeenth Lenormand card. STORM (7) [noun] Any disturbed state of the atmosphere, especially as affecting the earth's surface, and strongly implying destructive or unpleasant weather. | [noun] A violent agitation of human society; a civil, political, or domestic commotion; violent outbreak. | [noun] A wind scale for very strong wind, stronger than a gale, less than a hurricane (10 or higher on the Beaufort scale). | [verb] (with adverbial of direction) To move quickly and noisily like a storm, usually in a state of uproar or anger. STORY (8) [noun] A sequence of real or fictional events; or, an account of such a sequence. | [noun] A lie, fiction. | [noun] (usually pluralized) A soap opera. | [noun] A building; an edifice. STOSS (5) STOUP (7) [noun] A bucket. | [noun] A mug or drinking vessel. | [noun] A receptacle for holy water, especially a basin set at the entrance of a church. STOUR (5) [adjective] (now rare outside dialectal) Tall; large; stout. | [adjective] (now rare outside dialectal) Strong; powerful; hardy; robust; sturdy. | [adjective] (now rare outside dialectal) Bold; audacious. | [noun] A stake. | [verb] To move; stir. STOUT (5) [noun] A dark and strong malt brew made with toasted grain. | [noun] An obese person. | [noun] A large clothing size. | [noun] Gnat. STOVE (8) [noun] A heater, a closed apparatus to burn fuel for the warming of a room. | [noun] A device for heating food, (UK) a cooker. | [noun] A hothouse (heated greenhouse). | [verb] To fit or furnish with staves or rundles. STOWP (10) STOWS (8) [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. STRAP (7) [noun] A long, narrow, pliable strip of leather, cloth, or the like. | [noun] A strip of thick leather used in flogging. | [noun] Something made of such a strip, or of a part of one, or a combination of two or more for a particular use. STRAW (8) [noun] A dried stalk of a cereal plant. | [noun] Such dried stalks considered collectively. | [noun] A drinking straw. STRAY (8) [noun] Any domestic animal that has no enclosure, or its proper place and company, and wanders at large, or is lost; an estray. | [noun] One who is lost, either literally or metaphorically. | [noun] The act of wandering or going astray. | [verb] To wander, as from a direct course; to deviate, or go out of the way. | [adjective] Having gone astray; strayed; wandering STREP (7) [noun] A strep throat. | [noun] A streptococcus. | [noun] Any of several plants of the genus Streptocarpus. the Cape primroses. STREW (8) [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. STRIA (5) [noun] A stripe, usually one of a set of parallel stripes. | [noun] One of the fillets between the flutes of columns, etc. | [noun] A stretch mark. STRIP (7) [noun] A long, thin piece of land; any long, thin area. | [noun] (usually countable, sometimes uncountable) A long, thin piece of any material; any such material collectively. | [noun] A comic strip. | [noun] The act of removing one's clothes; a striptease. STROP (7) [noun] A strap; more specifically a piece of leather or a substitute (notably canvas), or strip of wood covered with a suitable material, for honing a razor, in this sense also called razor strop. | [noun] A bad mood or temper (see stroppy.) | [noun] A piece of rope spliced into a circular wreath, and put round a block for hanging it. | [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. | [noun] A poor-quality or unsaleable diamond. STROW (8) [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. STROY (8) STRUM (7) [noun] The sound made by playing various strings of a stringed instrument simultaneously. | [noun] The act of strumming. | [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. STRUT (5) [noun] Protuberance, air pressure | [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. | [noun] A proud step or walk, with the head erect; affected dignity in walking. | [adjective] Swelling out; protuberant; bulging. | [noun] A support rod. STUBS (7) [noun] Something blunted, stunted, or cut short, such as stubble or a stump. | [noun] A piece of certain paper items, designed to be torn off and kept for record or identification purposes. | [noun] A placeholder procedure that has the signature of the planned procedure but does not yet implement the intended behavior. STUCK (11) [verb] To become or remain attached; to adhere. | [verb] To jam; to stop moving. | [verb] To tolerate, to endure, to stick with. | [noun] A thrust. STUDS (6) [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. STUDY (9) [verb] (usually academic) To review materials already learned in order to make sure one does not forget them, usually in preparation for an examination. | [verb] (academic) To take a course or courses on a subject. | [verb] To acquire knowledge on a subject with the intention of applying it in practice. | [noun] Mental effort to acquire knowledge or learning. STUFF (11) [noun] Miscellaneous items or objects; (with possessive) personal effects. | [noun] Unspecified things or matters. | [noun] The tangible substance that goes into the makeup of a physical object. STULL (5) STUMP (9) [noun] The remains of something that has been cut off; especially the remains of a tree, the remains of a limb. | [noun] The place or occasion at which a campaign takes place; the husting. | [noun] A place or occasion at which a person harangues or otherwise addresses a group in a manner suggesting political oration. STUMS (7) [noun] Unfermented grape juice; must. | [noun] Wine revived by new fermentation, resulting from the admixture of must. | [verb] To ferment. STUNG (6) [verb] To hurt, usually by introducing poison or a sharp point, or both. | [verb] (of an insect) To bite. | [verb] (sometimes figurative) To hurt, to be in pain. STUNK (9) [verb] To have a strong bad smell. | [verb] To be greatly inferior; to perform badly. | [verb] To give an impression of dishonesty or untruth. STUNS (5) [noun] The condition of being stunned. | [noun] That which stuns; a shock; a stupefying blow. | [noun] A person who lacks intelligence. STUNT (5) [noun] A daring or dangerous feat, often involving the display of gymnastic skills. | [noun] Skill | [noun] A special means of rushing the quarterback done to confuse the opposing team's offensive line. | [noun] A check in growth. STUPA (7) [noun] A dome-shaped Buddhist monument, used to house relics of the Lord Buddha. | [noun] A stupe (medicated cloth or sponge). STUPE (7) [noun] A stupid person or (rarely) thing. | [noun] A hot, wet medicated cloth or sponge applied externally. | [verb] To foment with such a cloth or sponge. STURT (5) STYED (9) STYES (8) [noun] A ladder. | [noun] An inflammation of the eyelid. | [noun] A bacterial infection in the eyelash or eyelid. STYLE (8) [noun] Senses relating to a thin, pointed object. | [noun] (by extension from sense 1.1) A particular manner of expression in writing or speech, especially one regarded as good. | [noun] A particular manner of creating, doing, or presenting something, especially a work of architecture or art. STYLI (8) [noun] Senses relating to a thin, pointed object. | [noun] (by extension from sense 1.1) A particular manner of expression in writing or speech, especially one regarded as good. | [noun] A particular manner of creating, doing, or presenting something, especially a work of architecture or art. STYMY (13) SUAVE (8) [noun] Sweet talk. | [adjective] Charming, confident and elegant. SUBAH (10) SUBAS (7) SUBER (7) SUCKS (11) [noun] An instance of drawing something into one's mouth by inhaling. | [noun] Milk drawn from the breast. | [noun] A weak, self-pitying person; a person who refuses to go along with others, especially out of spite; a crybaby or sore loser. SUCRE (7) [noun] The former currency of Ecuador, divided into 100 centavos. SUDDS (7) SUDOR (6) SUDSY (9) SUEDE (6) [noun] A type of soft leather, made from calfskin, with a brushed texture to resemble fabric, often used to make boots, clothing and fashion accessories. | [verb] To make (leather) into suede. | [adjective] Made of suede SUERS (5) SUETS (5) SUETY (8) SUGAR (6) [noun] Sucrose in the form of small crystals, obtained from sugar cane or sugar beet and used to sweeten food and drink. | [noun] A specific variety of sugar. | [noun] Any of various small carbohydrates that are used by organisms to store energy. SUGHS (9) SUING (6) [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.). | [noun] The act of one who sues for something. SUINT (5) [noun] A substance obtained from the wool of sheep, consisting largely of potash mixed with fatty and earthy matters. SUITE (5) [noun] A retinue or company of attendants, as of a distinguished personage | [noun] A connected series or succession of objects; a number of things used or classed together | [noun] A group of connected rooms, usually separable from other rooms by means of access. SUITS (5) [noun] A set of clothes to be worn together, now especially a man's matching jacket and trousers (also business suit or lounge suit), or a similar outfit for a woman. | [noun] (by extension) A single garment that covers the whole body: space suit, boiler suit, protective suit. | [noun] (metonym) A person who wears matching jacket and trousers, especially a boss or a supervisor. SULCI (7) [noun] A furrow or groove in an organ or a tissue. | [noun] Any of the grooves that mark the convolutions of the surface of the brain. | [noun] A region of subparallel grooves or ditches formed by a geological process. SULFA (8) [noun] A sulfonamide or sulfanilamide. | [adjective] Of or containing sulfonamide or sulfanilamide. SULFO (8) SULKS (9) [noun] A state of sulking. | [verb] To express ill humor or offence by remaining sullenly silent or withdrawn. | [noun] A furrow. SULKY (12) [noun] A low two-wheeled cart, used in harness racing. | [noun] Any carriage seating only the driver. | [adjective] Silent and withdrawn after being upset SULLY (8) [noun] A blemish. | [verb] To soil or stain; to dirty. | [verb] To corrupt or damage. SULUS (5) [noun] An all-purpose skirt-like garment worn by men and women in Fiji. SUMAC (9) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMMA (9) [noun] A comprehensive summary of, or treatise on a subject, especially theology or philosophy. SUMOS (7) [noun] A stylised Japanese form of wrestling in which a wrestler loses if he is forced from the ring, or if any part of his body except the soles of his feet touches the ground. | [noun] A rikishi (sumo wrestler) SUMPS (9) [noun] A hollow or pit into which liquid drains, such as a cesspool, cesspit or sink. | [noun] The lowest part of a mineshaft into which water drains. | [noun] A completely flooded cave passage, sometimes passable by diving. SUNNA (5) SUNNS (5) SUNNY (8) [noun] A sunfish. | [adjective] (of weather or a day) Featuring a lot of sunshine. | [adjective] (of a place) Receiving a lot of sunshine. SUNUP (7) [noun] The time of day when the sun appears above the eastern horizon. | [noun] The change in color of the sky at sunup. SUPER (7) [adjective] Of excellent quality, superfine. | [adjective] Better than average, better than usual; wonderful. | [adverb] Very; extremely (used like the prefix super-). | [noun] Short for superannuation. SUPES (7) SUPRA (7) [adverb] Used to indicate that the current citation is from the same source as the previous one. | [noun] A traditional Georgian feast. SURAH (8) [noun] Any of the 114 chapters of the Qur'an. | [noun] Soft twilled silk SURAL (5) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the calf of the leg. SURAS (5) [noun] Any of the 114 chapters of the Qur'an. SURDS (6) [noun] An irrational number, especially one expressed using the √ symbol. | [noun] A voiceless consonant. SURER (5) [adjective] Physically secure and certain, non-failing, reliable. | [adjective] Certain in one's knowledge or belief. | [adjective] Certain to act or be a specified way. SURFS (8) [noun] Waves that break on an ocean shoreline. | [noun] An instance or session of riding a surfboard in the surf. | [noun] The bottom of a drain. SURFY (11) SURGE (6) [noun] A sudden transient rush, flood or increase. | [noun] The maximum amplitude of a vehicle's forward/backward oscillation | [noun] A sudden electrical spike or increase of voltage and current. SURGY (9) SURLY (8) [adjective] Irritated, bad-tempered, unfriendly. | [adjective] Threatening, menacing, gloomy. | [adjective] Lordly, arrogant, supercilious. SURRA (5) [noun] A disease of vertebrate animals caused by protozoan trypanosomes, involving fever, weakness, and lethargy. SUSHI (8) [noun] A Japanese dish made of small portions of sticky white rice flavored with vinegar, usually wrapped in seaweed and filled or topped with fish, vegetables or meat. | [noun] Raw fish, especially as a Japanese dish. SUTRA (5) [noun] A rule or thesis in Sanskrit grammar or Hindu law or philosophy. | [noun] A scriptural narrative, especially a discourse of the Buddha. SUTTA (5) [noun] A rule or thesis in Sanskrit grammar or Hindu law or philosophy. | [noun] A scriptural narrative, especially a discourse of the Buddha. SWABS (10) [noun] A small piece of soft, absorbent material, such as gauze, used to clean wounds, apply medicine, or take samples of body fluids. Often attached to a stick or wire to aid access. | [noun] A sample taken with a swab (piece of absorbent material). | [noun] A piece of material used for cleaning or sampling other items like musical instruments or guns. SWAGE (9) [noun] A tool, used by blacksmiths and other metalworkers, for cold shaping of a metal item. | [verb] To bend or shape through use of a swage. | [verb] To lessen the intensity of, to mitigate or relieve (hunger, emotion, pain etc.). SWAGS (9) [noun] Initialism of scientific/speculative/sophisticated/stupid wild-ass guess. | [noun] (window coverings) A loop of draped fabric. | [noun] A low point or depression in land; especially, a place where water collects. SWAIL (8) SWAIN (8) [noun] A young man or boy in service; a servant. | [noun] A knight's servant; an attendant. | [noun] A country labourer; a countryman, a rustic. SWALE (8) [noun] A low tract of moist or marshy land. | [noun] A long narrow and shallow trough between ridges on a beach, running parallel to the coastline. | [noun] A shallow troughlike depression that's created to carry water during rainstorms or snow melts; a drainage ditch. | [noun] A gutter in a candle. SWAMI (10) [noun] (used as a title) A Hindu ascetic or religious teacher. SWAMP (12) [noun] A piece of wet, spongy land; low ground saturated with water; soft, wet ground which may have a growth of certain kinds of trees, but is unfit for agricultural or pastoral purposes. | [noun] A type of wetland that stretches for vast distances, and is home to many creatures which have adapted specifically to that environment. | [noun] A place or situation that is foul or where progress is difficult. SWAMY (13) SWANG (9) SWANK (12) [noun] A fashionably elegant person. | [noun] Ostentation; bravado. | [verb] To swagger, to show off. SWANS (8) [noun] Any of various species of large, long-necked waterfowl, of genus Cygnus (bird family: Anatidae), most of which have white plumage. | [noun] One whose grace etc. suggests a swan. | [noun] This bird used as a heraldic charge, sometimes with a crown around its neck (e. g. the arms of Buckinghamshire). SWAPS (10) [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. 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. SWARE (8) [verb] To take an oath, to promise. | [verb] To use offensive, profane, or obscene language. | [noun] A swear word. SWARF (11) [noun] The waste chips or shavings from an abrasive activity, such as metalworking, a saw cutting wood, or the use of a grindstone or whetstone. | [noun] A particular waste chip or shaving. | [verb] To grind down. | [noun] A faint or swoon. SWARM (10) [noun] A large number of insects, especially when in motion or (for bees) migrating to a new colony. | [noun] A mass of people, animals or things in motion or turmoil. | [noun] A group of nodes sharing the same torrent in a BitTorrent network. SWART (8) [noun] Black or dark dyestuff; something of a certain swart; something of a certain ocker. | [adjective] Of a dark hue; moderately black; swarthy; tawny. | [adjective] Black. | [verb] To make swart or tawny; blacken; tan. | [noun] A layer of earth into which grass has grown; turf; sod. SWASH (11) [noun] The water that washes up on shore after an incoming wave has broken | [noun] A long, protruding ornamental line or pen stroke found in some typefaces and styles of calligraphy. | [noun] A narrow sound or channel of water lying within a sand bank, or between a sand bank and the shore, or a bar over which the sea washes. SWATH (11) [noun] The track cut out by a scythe in mowing. | [noun] A broad sweep or expanse, such as of land or of people. SWATS (8) [noun] A hard stroke, hit or blow, e.g., as part of a spanking. | [noun] Alternate spelling of swot: vigorous study at an educational institution. | [verb] To beat off, as insects; to bat, strike, or hit. SWAYS (11) [noun] The act of swaying; a swaying motion; a swing or sweep of a weapon. | [noun] A rocking or swinging motion. | [noun] Influence, weight, or authority that inclines to one side SWEAR (8) [verb] To take an oath, to promise. | [verb] To use offensive, profane, or obscene language. | [noun] A swear word. | [verb] To be lazy; rest for a short while during working hours. SWEAT (8) [noun] Fluid that exits the body through pores in the skin usually due to physical stress and/or high temperature for the purpose of regulating body temperature and removing certain compounds from the circulation. | [noun] The state of one who sweats; diaphoresis. | [noun] (especially WWI) A soldier (especially one who is old or experienced). | [verb] To emit sweat. SWEDE (9) [noun] The fleshy yellow root of a variety of rape, Brassica napus var. napobrassica, resembling a large turnip, grown as a vegetable. | [noun] The plant from which this is obtained. | [noun] The turnip. | [verb] To produce a low-budget remake of a film without the use of professional actors or filming techniques. SWEEP (10) [noun] A single action of sweeping. | [noun] The person who steers a dragon boat. | [noun] A person who stands at the stern of a surf boat, steering with a steering oar and commanding the crew. SWEER (8) SWEET (8) [noun] The basic taste sensation induced by sugar. | [noun] A confection made from sugar, or high in sugar content; a candy. | [noun] A food eaten for dessert. SWELL (8) [verb] To become bigger, especially due to being engorged. | [verb] To cause to become bigger. | [verb] To grow gradually in force or loudness. | [noun] The act of swelling; increase in size. | [adjective] Fashionable, like a swell or dandy. SWEPT (10) [verb] To clean (a surface) by means of a stroking motion of a broom or brush. | [verb] To move through a (horizontal) arc or similar long stroke. | [verb] To search (a place) methodically. SWIFT (11) [noun] A small plain-colored bird of the family Apodidae that resembles a swallow and is noted for its rapid flight. | [noun] Any of certain lizards of the genus Sceloporus. | [noun] A moth of the family Hepialidae, swift moth, ghost moth. SWIGS (9) [noun] Drink, liquor. | [noun] (by extension) A long draught from a drink. | [noun] A person who drinks deeply. SWILL (8) [noun] (collective) A mixture of solid and liquid food scraps fed to pigs etc; especially kitchen waste for this purpose. | [noun] (by extension) Any disgusting or distasteful liquid. | [noun] (by extension) Anything disgusting or worthless. SWIMS (10) [noun] An act or instance of swimming. | [noun] The sound, or air bladder, of a fish. | [noun] A part of a stream much frequented by fish. SWINE (8) [noun] (plural swine) A pig (the animal). | [noun] A contemptible person (plural swines). | [noun] A police officer; a "pig". | [noun] A female pig. SWING (9) [noun] The manner in which something is swung. | [noun] The sweep or compass of a swinging body. | [noun] A line, cord, or other thing suspended and hanging loose, upon which anything may swing. SWINK (12) SWIPE (10) [noun] A quick grab, bat, or other motion with the hand or paw; a sweep. | [noun] A strong blow given with a sweeping motion, as with a bat or club. | [noun] An act of interacting with a touch screen by drawing the finger rapidly across it. SWIRL (8) [noun] A whirling eddy. | [noun] A twist or coil of something. | [noun] The upward rushing of a fish through the water to take the bait. SWISH (11) [noun] A short rustling, hissing or whistling sound, often made by friction. | [noun] A hissing, sweeping movement through the air, as of an animal's tail. | [noun] A sound of liquid flowing inside a container. SWISS (8) [verb] To prepare (meat, fabric, etc.) by rolling or pounding in order to soften it. SWITH (11) SWIVE (11) [verb] To copulate with (a woman). | [verb] To cut a crop in a sweeping or rambling manner, hence to reap; cut for harvest. SWOBS (10) [noun] A small piece of soft, absorbent material, such as gauze, used to clean wounds, apply medicine, or take samples of body fluids. Often attached to a stick or wire to aid access. | [noun] A sample taken with a swab (piece of absorbent material). | [noun] A piece of material used for cleaning or sampling other items like musical instruments or guns. SWOON (8) [noun] A faint. | [noun] An infatuation. | [verb] To faint, to lose consciousness. SWOOP (10) [noun] An instance, or the act of suddenly plunging downward. | [noun] A sudden act of seizing. | [noun] A quick passage from one note to the next. SWOPS (10) [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. 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. SWORE (8) [verb] To take an oath, to promise. | [verb] To use offensive, profane, or obscene language. SWORN (8) [verb] To take an oath, to promise. | [verb] To use offensive, profane, or obscene language. | [adjective] Given or declared under oath. SWOTS (8) [noun] One who swots. | [noun] Work. | [noun] Vigorous study at an educational institution. SWOUN (8) SWUNG (9) [verb] To rotate about an off-centre fixed point. | [verb] To dance. | [verb] To ride on a swing. SYCEE (10) SYCES (10) [noun] A groom, or servant with responsibility for the horses. | [noun] (Malaya) usually syce: chauffeur, driver. SYKES (12) SYLIS (8) SYLPH (13) [noun] An invisible being of the air. | [noun] The elemental being of air, usually female. | [noun] (by extension) A slender woman or girl, usually graceful and sometimes with the implication of sublime station over everyday people. SYLVA (11) SYNCH (13) [noun] Harmony. | [noun] A music synchronization license, allowing the music to be synchronized with visual media such as films. | [verb] To synchronize, especially in the senses of data synchronization, time synchronization, or synchronizing music with video. SYNCS (10) [noun] Harmony. | [noun] A music synchronization license, allowing the music to be synchronized with visual media such as films. | [verb] To synchronize, especially in the senses of data synchronization, time synchronization, or synchronizing music with video. 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. SYNTH (11) [noun] A musical synthesizer. | [verb] To play on a musical synthesizer. SYPHS (13) SYREN (8) SYRUP (10) [noun] Any thick liquid that has a high sugar content and which is added to or poured over food as a flavouring. | [noun] (by extension) Any viscous liquid. | [noun] (shortened from "syrup of figs") A wig. SYSOP (10) [noun] A system operator, especially someone who administers an online communications system or bulletin board. | [noun] (WMF jargon) An administrator on a wiki. | [verb] To work as a sysop.

6-Letter Words (1801)

SABBAT (10) [noun] Witches' Sabbath SABBED (11) [verb] To sabotage, especially fox hunts in opposition to blood sports. SABERS (8) [noun] A light sword, sharp along the front edge, part of the back edge, and at the point. | [noun] A modern fencing sword modeled after the sabre. | [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. SABINE (8) [noun] The evergreen shrub Juniperus sabina, endemic to Europe, which yields a medicinal oil. | [noun] The poisonous dried tips of this plant, with anthelmintic properties, used as a drug. | [noun] The eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, of eastern North America. SABINS (8) SABIRS (8) SABLES (8) [noun] A small carnivorous mammal of the Old World that resembles a weasel, Martes zibellina, from cold regions in Eurasia and the North Pacific islands, valued for its dark brown fur (Wikipedia). | [noun] The marten, especially Martes americana (syn. Mustela americana). | [noun] The fur or pelt of the sable or other species of martens; a coat made from this fur. SABOTS (8) [noun] A wooden shoe. | [noun] A carrier around projectile(s) in firearms, cannons and artillery which holds the projectile in precision within the barrel SABRAS (8) [noun] A native-born Israeli. SABRED (9) [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. | [adjective] Equipped with a sabre or sabres. SABRES (8) [noun] A light sword, sharp along the front edge, part of the back edge, and at the point. | [noun] A modern fencing sword modeled after the sabre. SACBUT (10) SACHEM (13) [noun] The chief of a Native American tribe; a sagamore. | [noun] A leader in the Tammany Hall society. SACHET (11) [noun] A small scented cloth bag filled with fragrant material such as herbs or potpourri. | [noun] A cheesecloth bag of herbs and/or spices added during cooking and then removed before serving. | [noun] A small, sealed packet containing a single-use quantity of any material. 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. SACKER (12) SACQUE (17) SACRAL (8) [noun] Any of the sacral bones that make up the sacrum. | [adjective] Of the sacrum. | [adjective] Sacred. 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 SACRUM (10) [noun] A large triangular bone at the base of the spine, located between the two ilia (wings of the pelvis) and formed from vertebrae that fuse in adulthood. SADDEN (8) [verb] To make sad or unhappy. | [verb] To become sad or unhappy. | [verb] To darken a color during dyeing. SADDER (8) [adjective] (heading) Emotionally negative. | [adjective] Sated, having had one's fill; satisfied, weary. | [adjective] Steadfast, valiant. SADDHU (11) SADDLE (8) [noun] A seat (tack) for a rider placed on the back of a horse or other animal. | [noun] An item of harness (harness saddle) placed on the back of a horse or other animal. | [noun] A seat on a bicycle, motorcycle, etc. | [verb] To put a saddle on (an animal). SADHES (10) SADHUS (10) [noun] An ascetic or practitioner of yoga (yogi) who has given up pursuit of the first three Hindu goals of life: kama (enjoyment), artha (practical objectives) and even dharma (duty). SADISM (9) [noun] The enjoyment of inflicting pain or humiliation without pity. | [noun] Achievement of sexual gratification by inflicting pain or humiliation on others, or watching pain or humiliation inflicted on others. | [noun] (in general) Deliberate cruelty, either mental or physical, to other people, or to animals, regardless of whether for (sexual) gratification. SADIST (7) [noun] One who derives pleasure through cruelty or pain to others. SAFARI (9) [noun] A trip into any undeveloped area to see, photograph or hunt wild animals in their own environment. | [noun] A caravan going on a safari. | [verb] To take part in a safari. SAFELY (12) [adverb] In a safe manner; without risk; using caution above all else. | [adverb] In a secure manner; without the possibility of injury or harm resulting. SAFEST (9) [adjective] Not in danger; out of harm's reach. | [adjective] Free from risk. | [adjective] Providing protection from danger; providing shelter. SAFETY (12) [noun] The condition or feeling of being safe; security; certainty. | [noun] A mechanism on a weapon or dangerous equipment designed to prevent accidental firing. | [noun] An instance of a player being sacked or tackled in the end zone, or stepping out of the end zone and off the field, resulting in two points to the opposite team. SAFROL (9) SAGBUT (9) SAGELY (10) [adverb] In the manner of a sage, with wisdom, wisely. SAGEST (7) SAGGAR (8) [noun] A ceramic container used inside a fuel-fired kiln to protect pots from the flame. | [noun] Fireclay used to make ceramic casings. 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. SAGGER (8) [noun] A ceramic container used inside a fuel-fired kiln to protect pots from the flame. | [noun] Fireclay used to make ceramic casings. | [verb] Alternative form of saggar | [noun] A young male who wears trousers very low on his hips, exposing underwear and/or his buttocks or lower abdominals. SAGIER (7) SAHIBS (11) [noun] A term of respect for a white European or other person of rank in colonial India. SAICES (8) SAIGAS (7) [noun] Saiga tatarica, an antelope which inhabits a vast area between Kalmykia, Kazakhstan, southern Siberia. 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. SAILER (6) [noun] That which sails; a boat. | [noun] A fastball that skims through the air. | [noun] A person in the business of navigating ships or other vessels SAILOR (6) [noun] A person in the business of navigating ships or other vessels | [noun] Someone knowledgeable in the practical management of ships. | [noun] A member of the crew of a vessel; a mariner; a common seaman. SAIMIN (8) SAINED (7) SAINTS (6) [noun] A person whom a church or another religious group has officially recognised as especially holy or godly; one eminent for piety and virtue. | [noun] (by extension) A person with positive qualities; one who does good. | [noun] One of the blessed in heaven. SAITHE (9) [noun] The pollock or coalfish or coley (Pollachius virens). SAIYID (10) SAJOUS (13) SAKERS (10) [noun] A falcon (Falco cherrug) native of Southern Europe and Asia. | [noun] A medium cannon slightly smaller than a culverin developed during the early 17th century. SALAAM (8) [noun] A low bow as a ceremonial act of deference. | [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). | [interjection] A respectful ceremonial greeting performed mostly in Islamic countries. SALADS (7) [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. SALALS (6) [noun] A leathery-leaved North American shrub, Gaultheria shallon, with edible sepals and leaves. SALAMI (8) [noun] A large cured meat sausage of Italian origin, served in slices. | [noun] A grand slam. | [noun] A penis. SALARY (9) [noun] A fixed amount of money paid to a worker, usually calculated on a monthly or annual basis, not hourly, as wages. Implies a degree of professionalism and/or autonomy. | [verb] To pay on the basis of a period of a week or longer, especially to convert from another form of compensation. | [adjective] Saline. SALEPS (8) SALIFY (12) SALINA (6) [noun] A salt marsh, or salt pond, enclosed from the sea. SALINE (6) [noun] Water containing dissolved salt. | [noun] A salt spring; a place where salt water is collected in the earth. | [adjective] Containing salt; salty. SALIVA (9) [noun] A clear, slightly alkaline liquid secreted into the mouth by the salivary glands and mucous glands, consisting of water, mucin, protein, and enzymes. It moistens the mouth, lubricates ingested food, and begins the breakdown of starches. SALLET (6) [noun] A type of light spherical helmet | [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. SALLOW (9) [verb] To become sallow. | [verb] To cause (someone or something) to become sallow. | [adjective] (of skin) Yellowish. | [noun] A European willow, Salix caprea, that has broad leaves, large catkins and tough wood. SALMIS (8) [noun] A rich stew or ragout, especially of game. SALMON (8) [noun] One of several species of fish, typically of the Salmoninae subfamily, brownish above with silvery sides and delicate pinkish-orange flesh; they ascend rivers to spawn. | [noun] (plural salmons) A pale pinkish-orange colour, the colour of cooked salmon. | [noun] The upper bricks in a kiln which receive the least heat. SALOLS (6) SALONS (6) [noun] A large room, especially one used to receive and entertain guests. | [noun] A gathering of people for a social or intellectual meeting. | [noun] An art gallery or exhibition; especially the Paris salon or autumn salon. SALOON (6) [noun] A large room, especially one used to receive and entertain guests. | [noun] A gathering of people for a social or intellectual meeting. | [noun] An art gallery or exhibition; especially the Paris salon or autumn salon. SALOOP (8) SALPAE (8) SALPAS (8) SALPID (9) SALSAS (6) [noun] A spicy tomato sauce, often including onions and hot peppers. | [noun] A style of urban music originally from New York heavily influenced by Cuban dance music, jazz and rock. | [noun] Any of several dances performed to salsa music. 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. SALTER (6) [noun] One who makes, sells, or applies salt. | [noun] A trout leaving salt water to ascend a stream. SALTIE (6) [noun] A salt-water crocodile (or estuarine crocodile). | [noun] An ocean-going ship that enters the Great Lakes via the St. Lawrence Seaway. | [noun] The saltwater fluke or dab. SALUKI (10) SALUTE (6) [noun] An utterance or gesture expressing greeting or honor towards someone, now especially a formal, non-verbal gesture made with the arms or hands in any of various specific positions. | [noun] A kiss, offered in salutation. | [noun] A discharge of cannon or similar arms, as a mark of honour or respect. 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. SALVER (9) [noun] One who salves or cures. | [noun] One who pretends to cure; a quacksalver. | [noun] One who salves or saves goods, etc. from destruction or loss. | [noun] A tray used to display or serve food or other items (such as a visiting card). SALVES (9) [noun] An ointment, cream, or balm with soothing, healing, or calming effects. | [noun] Any remedy or action that soothes or heals. SALVIA (9) [noun] A plant in the genus Salvia, such as sage. SALVOR (9) [noun] One who salvages; especially, one who voluntarily assists in saving a distressed ship or its goods at sea. SALVOS (9) [noun] An exception; a reservation; an excuse. | [noun] A concentrated fire from pieces of artillery, as in endeavoring to make a break in a fortification; a volley. | [noun] A salute paid by a simultaneous, or nearly simultaneous, firing of a number of cannon. SAMARA (8) [noun] The winged indehiscent fruit of trees such as the ash, elm or maple SAMBAR (10) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. | [noun] A food preparation common in southern India and Sri Lanka, made of vegetables and lentils (usually pigeon peas, also called toor dal) in a spicy tamarind and lentil flour soup base. SAMBAS (10) [noun] A Brazilian ballroom dance or dance style. | [noun] A Brazilian musical genre, to which the aforementioned dance is danced, which has its roots in West Africa via the slave trade. | [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBOS (10) [noun] A sandwich. SAMBUR (10) SAMECH (13) SAMEKH (15) SAMEKS (12) SAMIEL (8) SAMITE (8) [noun] A material of rich silk, sometimes with gold threads, especially prized during the Middle Ages. SAMLET (8) SAMOSA (8) [noun] A snack, of Indian origin, consisting of a deep-fried triangular turnover filled with vegetables (especially potatoes) or meat. SAMPAN (10) [noun] A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars. SAMPLE (10) [noun] A part or snippet of something taken or presented for inspection, or shown as evidence of the quality of the whole; a specimen. | [noun] A subset of a population selected for measurement, observation or questioning, to provide statistical information about the population. | [noun] A small quantity of food for tasting, typically given away for free. SAMSHU (11) SANCTA (8) SANDAL (7) [noun] A type of open shoe made up of straps or bands holding a sole to the foot | [noun] Sandalwood | [noun] A long narrow boat used on the Barbary coast. 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. SANDER (7) [noun] A person employed to sand wood. | [noun] A machine to mechanize the process of sanding. | [noun] A device which spreads sand on the rails in wet, snowy or icy conditions to improve traction. SANDHI (10) [noun] Any of a wide variety of phonological processes that occur at morpheme or word boundaries, such as the fusion of sounds across word boundaries and the alteration of sounds due to neighboring sounds or due to the grammatical function of adjacent words. SANELY (9) SANEST (6) [adjective] Being in a healthy condition; not deranged; thinking rationally. | [adjective] Mentally sound; possessing a rational mind; having the mental faculties in such condition as to be able to anticipate and judge the effect of one's actions in an ordinary manner. | [adjective] Rational; reasonable; sensible. SANGAR (7) [noun] A stone breastwork; a fortified niche or look-out post. SANGAS (7) [noun] Sandwich. SANGER (7) [noun] A sandwich. | [noun] A stone breastwork; a fortified niche or look-out post. SANGHS (10) SANIES (6) [noun] A thin mixture of pus and blood serum discharged from a wound; ichor SANING (7) SANITY (9) [noun] The condition of being sane. | [noun] Reasonable and rational behaviour. SANJAK (17) [noun] An administrative region under the Ottoman Empire, a subdivision of a vilayet. | [noun] The governor of a sanjak; a sanjakbeg. SANNOP (8) SANNUP (8) SANSAR (6) SANSEI (6) [noun] A US- or Canadian-born grandchild of a Japanese immigrant to America. SANTIR (6) SANTOL (6) SANTOS (6) SANTUR (6) SAPORS (8) SAPOTA (8) SAPOTE (8) SAPOUR (8) 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). SAPPER (10) [noun] One who saps; specifically, one who is employed in working at saps, building and repairing fortifications, and the like. Often known as a combat engineer or military engineer. | [noun] An officer or private of the Royal Engineers. SARANS (6) SARAPE (8) [noun] A type of blanket worn as a cloak, especially by Spanish-Americans, or used as a saddle blanket. SARDAR (7) SAREES (6) [noun] The traditional dress of women in the Indian Subcontinent; an outer garment consisting of a single length of cotton or silk, most often with one end wrapped around the waist to form a skirt, the other draped over the shoulder or head. SARGES (7) SARINS (6) SARODE (7) SARODS (7) [noun] A fretless string instrument used mainly in Indian classical music. SARONG (7) [noun] A garment made of a length of printed cloth wrapped about the waist that is commonly worn by men and women in Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia, and the Pacific islands. SARSAR (6) SARSEN (6) [noun] Any of various blocks of sandstone found in various locations in southern England. SARTOR (6) SASHAY (12) [noun] A chassé. | [noun] A sequence of sideways steps in a circle in square dancing. | [verb] To walk casually, showily or in a flirty manner; to strut, swagger or flounce. SASHED (10) SASHES (9) [noun] A piece of cloth designed to be worn around the waist. | [noun] A decorative length of cloth worn over the shoulder to the opposite hip, often for ceremonial or other formal occasions. | [noun] The opening part (casement) of a window usually containing the glass panes, hinged to the jamb, or sliding up and down as in a sash window. SASINS (6) [noun] Indian antelope; blackbuck SASSED (7) [verb] To talk, to talk back. | [verb] To speak insolently to. SASSES (6) [verb] To talk, to talk back. | [verb] To speak insolently to. SATANG (7) [noun] A subdivision of currency, equal to one hundredth of a Thai baht. SATARA (6) SATAYS (9) [noun] A dish made from small pieces of meat or fish grilled on a skewer and served with a spicy peanut sauce, originating from Indonesia and Malaysia. SATEEN (6) [noun] A type of cotton cloth with a shiny surface and dull back, woven using the technique that, when applied to silk or nylon, results in cloth called satin. SATING (7) [verb] To satisfy the appetite or desire of; to fill up. SATINS (6) SATINY (9) [adjective] Like satin, smooth and shiny, glossy. SATIRE (6) [noun] A literary device of writing or art which principally ridicules its subject often as an intended means of provoking or preventing change. Humor, irony, and exaggeration are often used to aid this. | [noun] A satirical work. | [noun] Severity of remark. SATORI (6) [noun] A sudden inexpressible feeling of inner understanding or enlightenment. SATRAP (8) [noun] A governor of a Persian province. | [noun] A subordinate ruler. SATYRS (9) [noun] A woodland creature with pointed ears, legs, and short horns of a goat and a fondness for unrestrained revelry. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus Faunis. | [noun] A sylvan deity or demigod, male companion of Pan or Dionysus, represented as part man and part goat, and characterized by riotous merriment and lasciviousness, sometimes pictured with a perpetual erection. 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. SAUCER (8) [noun] A small shallow dish to hold a cup and catch drips. | [noun] An object round and gently curved (shaped like a saucer). | [noun] A small pan or vessel in which sauce was set on a table. SAUCES (8) [noun] A liquid (often thickened) condiment or accompaniment to food. | [noun] Tomato sauce (similar to US tomato ketchup), as in: | [noun] (usually “the”) Alcohol, booze. SAUCHS (11) SAUGER (7) [noun] A freshwater perciform fish, Sander canadensis SAUGHS (10) SAUGHY (13) SAULTS (6) SAUNAS (6) [noun] A room or a house designed for heat sessions. | [noun] The act of using a sauna. | [noun] A public sauna; a front for a brothel in some countries. SAUREL (6) SAUTED (7) SAUTES (6) SAVAGE (10) [noun] An uncivilized or feral human; a barbarian. | [noun] A defiant person. | [verb] To attack or assault someone or something ferociously or without restraint. SAVANT (9) [noun] A person of learning, especially one who is versed in literature or science. | [noun] A person who is considered eminent because of their achievements. | [noun] A person with significant mental disabilities who is very gifted in one area of activity, such as playing the piano or mental arithmetic. SAVATE (9) [noun] A form of French martial art that involves combinations of punching and kicking moves SAVERS (9) [noun] One who saves. | [noun] One who keeps savings more than usual. SAVINE (9) [noun] The evergreen shrub Juniperus sabina, endemic to Europe, which yields a medicinal oil. | [noun] The poisonous dried tips of this plant, with anthelmintic properties, used as a drug. | [noun] The eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, of eastern North America. SAVING (10) [verb] To prevent harm or difficulty. | [verb] To put aside, to avoid. | [noun] A reduction in cost or expenditure. SAVINS (9) [noun] The evergreen shrub Juniperus sabina, endemic to Europe, which yields a medicinal oil. | [noun] The poisonous dried tips of this plant, with anthelmintic properties, used as a drug. | [noun] The eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, of eastern North America. SAVIOR (9) [noun] A person who saves someone, rescues another from harm. | [noun] A child who is born to provide an organ or cell transplant to a sibling who has an otherwise fatal disease (used in combination, with "sibling", "baby", "child", "brother", "sister", etc.) SAVORS (9) [noun] The specific taste or smell of something. | [noun] A distinctive sensation. | [noun] Sense of smell; power to scent, or trace by scent. SAVORY (12) [noun] A savory snack. | [adjective] Tasty, attractive to the palate. | [adjective] Salty and/or spicy, but not sweet. | [noun] Any of several Mediterranean herbs, of the genus Satureja, grown as culinary flavourings. SAVOUR (9) [noun] The specific taste or smell of something. | [noun] A distinctive sensation. | [noun] Sense of smell; power to scent, or trace by scent. | [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. SAVOYS (12) [noun] Savoy cabbage | [noun] An Italian noble family, which became the ruling (hereditary) dynasty of Sardinia and later of Italy | [noun] A member of the Savoy noble family SAWERS (9) SAWFLY (15) [noun] Any of various flying insects of the suborder Symphyta whose ovipositor is long and often serrated and is used to cut into plants to lay eggs. SAWING (10) [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. SAWLOG (10) [noun] The part of a tree stem that will be processed at a sawmill, rather than becoming pulpwood. SAWNEY (12) SAWYER (12) [noun] One who saws timber, especially in a sawpit. | [noun] A large trunk of a tree brought down by the force of a river's current | [noun] A beetle, mostly in the genus Monochamus, that lives and feeds on trees, including timber. SAXONY (16) SAYERS (9) SAYEST (9) SAYIDS (10) SAYING (10) [verb] To pronounce. | [verb] To recite. | [verb] To tell, either verbally or in writing. SAYYID (13) SCABBY (15) [adjective] Affected with scabs; full of scabs. | [adjective] Diseased with the scab, or mange; mangy. | [adjective] Having a blotched, uneven appearance. SCALAR (8) [noun] A quantity that has magnitude but not direction; compare vector | [noun] An amplifier whose output is a constant multiple of its input | [adjective] Having magnitude but not direction SCALDS (9) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. 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. SCALER (8) SCALES (8) [noun] A ladder; a series of steps; a means of ascending. | [noun] An ordered, usually numerical sequence used for measurement, means of assigning a magnitude. | [noun] Size; scope. SCALLS (8) SCALPS (10) [noun] The top of the head; the skull. | [noun] The part of the head where the hair grows from, or used to grow from. | [noun] A part of the skin of the head, with the hair attached, formerly cut or torn off from an enemy by warriors in some cultures as a token of victory. SCAMPI (12) [noun] A Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus). | [noun] Any similar species of genus Nephrops or similar prawns. SCAMPS (12) [noun] A rascal, swindler, or rogue; a ne'er-do-well. | [noun] A mischievous person, especially a playful, impish youngster. | [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. SCANTS (8) [noun] A block of stone sawn on two sides down to the bed level. | [noun] A sheet of stone. | [noun] (wood) A slightly thinner measurement of a standard wood size. SCANTY (11) [adjective] Somewhat less than is needed in amplitude or extent. | [adjective] Sparing; niggardly; parsimonious; stingy. SCAPED (11) SCAPES (10) [noun] A leafless stalk growing directly out of a root. | [noun] The basal segment of an insect's antenna (i.e. the part closest to the body). | [noun] The basal part of the ovipositor of an insect, more specifically known as the oviscape. SCARAB (10) [noun] A beetle of the species Scarabaeus sacer, sacred to the ancient Egyptians. | [noun] Any species of beetle belonging to the family Scarabaeidae. | [noun] A symbol, seal, amulet, or gem fashioned to resemble the sacred beetle. SCARCE (10) [adjective] Uncommon, rare; difficult to find; insufficient to meet a demand. | [adjective] Scantily supplied (with); deficient (in); used with of. | [adverb] Scarcely, only just. SCARED (9) [verb] To frighten, terrify, startle, especially in a minor way. | [adjective] Feeling fear; afraid, frightened. SCARER (8) SCARES (8) [noun] A minor fright. | [noun] A cause of slight terror; something that inspires fear or dread. | [noun] A device or object used to frighten. SCAREY (11) SCARFS (11) [noun] A long, often knitted, garment worn around the neck. | [noun] A headscarf. | [noun] A neckcloth or cravat. SCARPH (13) SCARPS (10) [noun] The steep artificial slope below a fort's parapet | [noun] A cliff at the edge of a plateau or ridge caused by erosion or faulting; the steeper side of an escarpment | [verb] (earth science) to cut, scrape, erode, or otherwise make into a scarp or escarpment SCARRY (11) SCARTS (8) [noun] A slight wound. | [noun] A dash or stroke. | [noun] A niggard. SCATHE (11) [noun] Harm; damage; injury; hurt; misfortune; waste. | [verb] To injure or harm. | [verb] To blast; scorch; wither. SCATTS (8) SCATTY (11) [adjective] Scatterbrained; flighty. | [adjective] Showery; rainy SCAUPS (10) [noun] The top of the head; the skull. | [noun] The part of the head where the hair grows from, or used to grow from. | [noun] A part of the skin of the head, with the hair attached, formerly cut or torn off from an enemy by warriors in some cultures as a token of victory. SCAURS (8) [noun] A steep cliff or bank. SCENAS (8) [noun] A scene in an opera. | [noun] An accompanied dramatic recitative, interspersed with passages of melody, or followed by a full aria. | [noun] The stage of an ancient theatre. SCENDS (9) [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. SCENES (8) [noun] The location of an event that attracts attention. | [noun] The stage. | [noun] The decorations; furnishings and backgrounds of a stage, representing the place in which the action of a play is set SCENIC (10) [noun] A depiction of scenery | [noun] A scenic artist; a person employed to design backgrounds for theatre etc. | [adjective] Having beautiful scenery; picturesque SCENTS (8) [noun] A distinctive odour or smell. | [noun] An odour left by an animal that may be used for tracing. | [noun] The sense of smell. SCHAVS (14) SCHEMA (13) [noun] An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind (for example, a body schema). | [noun] A formal description of the structure of a database: the names of the tables, the names of the columns of each table, and the data type and other attributes of each column. | [noun] (markup languages) A formal description of data, data types, and data file structures, such as XML schemas for XML files. SCHEME (13) [noun] A systematic plan of future action. | [noun] A plot or secret, devious plan. | [noun] An orderly combination of related parts. SCHISM (13) [noun] A split or separation within a group or organization, typically caused by discord. | [noun] A formal division or split within a religious body. | [noun] A split within Christianity whereby a group no longer recognizes the Bishop of Rome as the head of the Church, but shares essentially the same beliefs with the Church of Rome. In other words, a political split without the introduction of heresy. SCHIST (11) [noun] Any of a variety of coarse-grained crystalline metamorphic rocks with a foliated structure that allows easy division into slabs or slates. SCHIZO (20) [noun] Schizophrenic. SCHIZY (23) SCHLEP (13) [noun] A long or burdensome journey. | [noun] A boring person, a drag; a good-for-nothing person. | [noun] A sloppy or slovenly person. SCHMOE (13) SCHMOS (13) SCHNOZ (20) [noun] Nose. SCHOOL (11) [noun] (collective) A group of fish or a group of marine mammals such as porpoises, dolphins, or whales. | [noun] A multitude. | [verb] (of fish) To form into, or travel in a school. | [noun] An institution dedicated to teaching and learning; an educational institution. SCHORL (11) [noun] The most common variety of tourmaline. SCHRIK (15) SCHROD (12) SCHTIK (15) SCHUIT (11) SCHULN (11) SCHUSS (11) [noun] A straight run downhill | [verb] To ski a schuss. SCHWAS (14) [noun] An indeterminate central vowel sound as the "a" in "about", represented as /ə/ in IPA. | [noun] The character ə. SCILLA (8) [noun] A plant of the genus Scilla; a squill. | [noun] A bulb of Urginea scilla. SCIONS (8) [noun] A descendant, especially a first-generation descendant of a distinguished family. | [noun] The heir to a throne. | [noun] A guardian. SCLAFF (14) SCLERA (8) [noun] The white of the eye. It is the tough outer coat of the eye that covers the eyeball except for the cornea. SCOFFS (14) [noun] Derision; ridicule; a derisive or mocking expression of scorn, contempt, or reproach. | [noun] An object of scorn, mockery, or derision. | [verb] To jeer; to laugh with contempt and derision. SCOLDS (9) [noun] A person who habitually scolds, in particular a troublesome and angry woman. SCOLEX (15) [noun] The structure at the front end of a tapeworm which, in the adult, has suckers and hooks by which it attaches itself to a host. SCONCE (10) [noun] A fixture for a light. | [noun] A head or a skull. | [noun] A poll tax; a mulct or fine. | [noun] A type of small fort or other fortification, especially as built to defend a pass or ford. SCONES (8) [noun] A small, rich, pastry or quick bread, sometimes baked on a griddle. | [noun] (Utah) Frybread served with honey butter spread on it. | [noun] The head. SCOOPS (10) [noun] Any cup- or bowl-shaped tool, usually with a handle, used to lift and move loose or soft solid material. | [noun] The amount or volume of loose or solid material held by a particular scoop. | [noun] The act of scooping, or taking with a scoop or ladle; a motion with a scoop, as in dipping or shovelling. SCOOTS (8) [noun] A dollar. | [noun] A scooter. | [noun] A sideways shuffling or sliding motion. 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. SCOPES (10) [noun] The breadth, depth or reach of a subject; a domain. | [noun] A device used in aiming a projectile, through which the person aiming looks at the intended target. | [noun] Opportunity; broad range; degree of freedom. SCORCH (13) [noun] A slight or surface burn. | [noun] A discolouration caused by heat. | [noun] Brown discoloration on the leaves of plants caused by heat, lack of water or by fungi. 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. SCORER (8) [noun] One who scores. | [noun] One who keeps track of scores in a game; a scorekeeper. | [noun] Either of a pair of people, one provided by each side, who record in a specially formatted book, every ball bowled, every run scored, and every wicket that falls SCORES (8) [noun] The total number of goals, points, runs, etc. earned by a participant in a game. | [noun] The number of points accrued by each of the participants in a game, expressed as a ratio or a series of numbers. | [noun] The performance of an individual or group on an examination or test, expressed by a number, letter, or other symbol; a grade. SCORIA (8) [noun] The slag or dross that remains after the smelting of metal from an ore. | [noun] Rough masses of rock formed by solidified lava, and which can be found around a volcano's crater. SCORNS (8) [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. SCOTCH (13) [noun] A surface cut or abrasion. | [noun] A line drawn on the ground, as one used in playing hopscotch. | [noun] A block for a wheel or other round object; a chock, wedge, prop, or other support, to prevent slipping. | [noun] (as a plural noun, the Scotch) The people of Scotland. | [noun] Scotch tape SCOTER (8) [noun] Any one of several species of northern sea ducks of the genus Melanitta. SCOTIA (8) [noun] A concave molding with a lower edge projecting beyond the top. SCOURS (8) [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. SCOUSE (8) [noun] A stew associated with the Liverpool area, usually containing (at least) meat, onions, carrots and potatoes. SCOUTH (11) SCOUTS (8) [noun] A person sent out to gain and bring in tidings; especially, one employed in war to gain information about the enemy and ground. | [noun] An act of scouting or reconnoitering. | [noun] A member of any number of youth organizations belonging to the international scout movement, such as the Boy Scouts of America or Girl Scouts of the United States. SCOWED (12) SCOWLS (11) [noun] The wrinkling of the brows or face in frowning; the expression of displeasure, sullenness, or discontent in the countenance; an angry frown. | [noun] (by extension) Gloom; dark or threatening aspect. | [verb] To wrinkle the brows, as in frowning or displeasure; to put on a frowning look; to look sour, sullen, severe, or angry. SCRAGS (9) [noun] A thin or scrawny person or animal. | [noun] The lean end of a neck of mutton; the scrag end. | [noun] The neck, especially of a sheep. SCRAMS (10) [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. SCRAPE (10) [noun] A broad, shallow injury left by scraping (rather than a cut or a scratch). | [noun] A fight, especially a fistfight without weapons. | [noun] An awkward set of circumstances. SCRAPS (10) [noun] A (small) piece; a fragment; a detached, incomplete portion. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Leftover food. | [noun] The crisp substance that remains after drying out animal fat. SCRAWL (11) [noun] Irregular, possibly illegible handwriting. | [noun] A hastily or carelessly written note etc. | [noun] Writing that lacks literary merit. | [verb] To creep; crawl; (by extension) to swarm with crawling things SCREAK (12) SCREAM (10) [noun] A loud, emphatic, exclamation of extreme emotion, especially horror, fear, excitement, or anger; it may comprise a word or a sustained, high-pitched vowel sound. | [noun] A form of singing associated with the metal and screamo styles of music. It is a loud, rough, distorted version of the voice; rather than the normal voice of the singer. | [noun] Used as an intensifier 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. SCREEN (8) [noun] A physical divider intended to block an area from view, or provide shelter from something dangerous. | [noun] A material woven from fine wires intended to block animals or large particles from passing while allowing gasses, liquids and finer particles to pass. | [noun] (by analogy) Searching through a sample for a target; an act of screening SCREES (8) [noun] Loose stony debris on a slope. | [noun] (by extension) Similar debris made up of broken building material such as bricks, concrete, etc. | [noun] A slope made up of loose stony debris at the base of a cliff, mountain, etc. SCREWS (11) [noun] A device that has a helical function. | [noun] The motion of screwing something; a turn or twist to one side. | [noun] A prison guard. SCREWY (14) [adjective] Crazy; silly; ridiculous | [adjective] Tipsy; slightly drunk. | [adjective] Exacting; extortionate; close. SCRIBE (10) [noun] Someone who writes; a draughtsperson; a writer for another; especially, an official or public writer; an amanuensis, secretary, notary or copyist. | [noun] A writer and doctor of the law; one skilled in the law and traditions; one who read and explained the law to the people. | [noun] A very sharp, steel drawing implement used in engraving and etching, a scriber. SCRIED (9) [verb] To predict the future using crystal balls or other objects. | [verb] To descry; to see. | [verb] To proclaim. SCRIES (8) [verb] To predict the future using crystal balls or other objects. | [verb] To descry; to see. | [verb] To proclaim. SCRIMP (12) [noun] A pinching miser; a niggard. | [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. SCRIMS (10) [noun] A kind of light cotton or linen fabric, often woven in openwork patterns, -- used for curtains, etc,. | [noun] A large military scarf, usually camouflage coloured and used for concealment when not used as a scarf. | [noun] A woven, nonwoven or knitted fabric composed of continuous strands of material used for reinforcing or strengthening membranes. SCRIPS (10) [noun] A small medieval bag used to carry food, money, utensils etc. | [noun] Small change. | [noun] A scrap of paper. SCRIPT (10) [noun] A writing; a written document. | [noun] Written characters; style of writing. | [noun] Type made in imitation of handwriting. SCRIVE (11) SCRODS (9) [noun] (sometimes New York) Any cod, pollock, haddock, or other whitefish. SCROLL (8) [noun] A roll of paper or parchment; a writing formed into a roll. | [noun] An ornament formed of undulations giving off spirals or sprays, usually suggestive of plant form. Roman architectural ornament is largely of some scroll pattern. | [noun] Spirals or sprays in the shape of an actual plant. SCROOP (10) SCROTA (8) [noun] The bag of skin and muscle that contains the testicles in mammals. SCRUBS (10) [noun] One who labors hard and lives meanly; a mean fellow. | [noun] One who is incompetent or unable to complete easy tasks. | [noun] A thicket or jungle, often specified by the name of the prevailing plant SCRUFF (14) [noun] Someone with an untidy appearance. | [noun] Stubble, facial hair (on males). | [noun] Crust. | [noun] The loose skin at the back of the neck of some animals. SCRUMS (10) [noun] A tightly-packed and disorderly crowd of people. | [noun] Specifically used in the Canadian media to describe a tightly-packed group of reporters surrounding a member of the Canadian House of Commons while in the Parliament Buildings. | [noun] In rugby union or rugby league, all the forwards joined together in an organised way. Also known as a scrummage. SCUBAS (10) [noun] (underwater diving) An apparatus carried by a diver, which includes a tank holding compressed, filtered air and a regulator which delivers the air to the diver at ambient pressure which can be used underwater. SCUFFS (14) [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. SCULKS (12) SCULLS (8) [noun] A single oar mounted at the stern of a boat and moved from side to side to propel the boat forward. | [noun] One of a pair of oars handled by a single rower. | [noun] A small rowing boat, for one person. SCULPS (10) [verb] (sometimes humorous) To sculpture; to carve or engrave. | [verb] To flay. SCULPT (10) [noun] A modification that can be applied to an object, like a texture, but changes the object's shape rather than its appearance. | [verb] To form by sculpture. | [verb] To work as a sculptor. SCUMMY (15) SCURFS (11) SCURFY (14) SCURRY (11) [noun] A dash. | [verb] To run with quick light steps, to scamper. SCURVY (14) [noun] A disease caused by insufficient intake of vitamin C leading to the formation of livid spots on the skin, spongy gums, loosening of the teeth and bleeding into the skin and from almost all mucous membranes. | [adjective] Covered or affected with scurf or scabs; scabby; scurfy; specifically, diseased with the scurvy. | [adjective] Contemptible, despicable, low, disgustingly mean. SCUTCH (13) [noun] An implement used to separate the fibres of flax by beating them. | [noun] The woody fibre of flax; the refuse of scutched flax. | [verb] To beat or whip; to drub. | [noun] A tuft or clump of grass. SCUTES (8) [noun] A horny, chitinous, or bony external plate or scale, as on the shell of a turtle or the skin of crocodiles. | [noun] A proneural gene, often associated with achaete, that is required for the formation of many larval and adult sense organs | [noun] A small shield. SCUTUM (10) [noun] An oblong shield made of boards or wickerwork covered with leather, with sometimes an iron rim; carried chiefly by the heavy-armed infantry of the Roman army. | [noun] A scute. | [noun] A shield-like protection, such as the scutum protecting the back of a hard tick (cf. alloscutum, conscutum) SCUZZY (29) [adjective] Dirty or grimy. | [adjective] Disreputable; sleazy. SCYPHI (16) SCYTHE (14) [noun] An instrument for mowing grass, grain, etc. by hand, composed of a long, curving blade with a sharp concave edge, fastened to a long handle called a snath. | [noun] A scythe-shaped blade attached to ancient war chariots. | [noun] The tenth Lenormand card. SEABAG (9) [noun] A duffel bag used by sailors or marines. SEABED (9) [noun] The floor or bottom of the sea or ocean. SEADOG (8) [noun] A sailor accustomed to the sea. | [noun] A pirate. | [noun] A seal. (marine mammal) 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. SEALER (6) [noun] A tool used to seal something. | [noun] A person who is employed to seal things. | [noun] A coating designed to prevent excessive absorption of finish coats into porous surfaces; a coating designed to prevent bleeding. | [noun] A person who hunts seals. SEAMAN (8) [noun] A mariner or sailor, one who mans a ship. Opposed to landman or landsman. | [noun] A person of the lowest rank in the Navy, below able seaman. | [noun] An enlisted rate in the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard, ranking below petty officer third class and above seaman apprentice. 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. SEAMEN (8) [noun] A mariner or sailor, one who mans a ship. Opposed to landman or landsman. | [noun] A person of the lowest rank in the Navy, below able seaman. | [noun] An enlisted rate in the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard, ranking below petty officer third class and above seaman apprentice. SEAMER (8) [noun] A person who sews seams. | [noun] Part of a sewing machine that creates seams. | [noun] A bowler skilled at making the ball seam. SEANCE (8) [noun] A ceremony where people try to communicate with the spirits of dead people, usually led by a medium. | [noun] The sitting of an assembly to discuss a matter. | [verb] To hold a séance (communication with spirits). SEARCH (11) [noun] An attempt to find something. | [noun] The act of searching in general. | [verb] To look in (a place) for something. 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. SEARER (6) SEASON (6) [noun] Each of the four divisions of a year: spring, summer, autumn (fall) and winter | [noun] A part of a year when something particular happens | [noun] That which gives relish; seasoning. | [verb] To flavour food with spices, herbs or salt. 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. SEATER (6) [noun] (in combination) A vehicle or item of furniture that has a specified seating capacity SEAWAN (9) SEAWAY (12) [noun] A lane or route at sea that is regularly used by ships; a sea lane or trade route | [noun] An inland waterway used by seagoing shipping | [noun] The headway of a vessel SEBUMS (10) SECANT (8) [noun] A straight line that intersects a curve at two or more points. | [noun] In a right triangle, the reciprocal of the cosine of an angle. Symbol: sec | [adjective] That cuts or divides. SECCOS (10) SECEDE (9) [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. SECERN (8) 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. SECPAR (10) SECRET (8) [noun] A piece of knowledge that is hidden and intended to be kept hidden. | [noun] The key or principle by which something is made clear; the knack. | [noun] Something not understood or known. SECTOR (8) [noun] Section | [noun] Zone (designated area). | [noun] Part of a circle, extending to the center SECUND (9) [adjective] Arranged on one side only, as flowers or leaves on a stalk; unilateral. SECURE (8) [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. SEDANS (7) [noun] An enclosed windowed chair suitable for a single occupant, carried by at least two porters, in equal numbers in front and behind, using wooden rails that passed through metal brackets on the sides of the chair. | [noun] An automobile designed in a configuration with separate compartments for engine space, driver/passenger space and luggage space. | [noun] A handbarrow for transporting fish. SEDATE (7) [verb] To calm or put (a person) to sleep using a sedative drug. | [verb] To make tranquil. | [adjective] (of a person or their behaviour) Remaining composed and dignified, and avoiding too much activity or excitement. SEDERS (7) [noun] The ceremonial meal held on the first night or two nights of Passover. | [noun] One of the 54 parts into which the Torah is divided. SEDGES (8) [noun] Any plant of the genus Carex, the true sedge, perennial, endogenous herbs, often growing in dense tufts in marshy places. They have triangular jointless stems, a spiked inflorescence, and long grasslike leaves which are usually rough on the margins and midrib. There are several hundred species. | [noun] Any plant of the family Cyperaceae. | [noun] Certain other plants resembling sedges, such as Gentiana rubricaulis and Andropogon virginicus. SEDILE (7) [noun] One of a row of seats in an Ancient Roman amphitheatre. | [noun] A seat in the chancel of a church near the altar, for the officiating clergyman. SEDUCE (9) [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. SEDUMS (9) [noun] Any of various succulent plants, of the genus Sedum, native to temperate zones; the stonecrop 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. SEEDER (7) [noun] A device used to plant seeds; a seed drill | [noun] An implement used to remove the seeds from fruit etc. | [noun] A person who seeds clouds in order to make it rain SEEING (7) [verb] (stative) To perceive or detect with the eyes, or as if by sight. | [verb] To form a mental picture of. | [verb] (social) To meet, to visit. | [conjunction] Inasmuch as; in view of the fact that. SEEKER (10) [noun] One who seeks. | [noun] Especially, a religious seeker: a pilgrim, or one who aspires to enlightenment or salvation. 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. SEEMER (8) SEEMLY (11) [adjective] (of behavior) Appropriate; suited to the occasion or purpose; becoming. | [adverb] Appropriately, fittingly. 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. SEESAW (9) [noun] A structure composed of a plank, balanced in the middle, used as a game in which one person goes up as the other goes down. | [noun] A series of up-and-down movements. | [noun] A series of alternating movements or feelings. SEETHE (9) [verb] To boil. | [verb] (of a liquid) To boil vigorously. | [verb] (of a liquid) To foam in an agitated manner, as if boiling. SEGGAR (8) SEGNOS (7) 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. SEGUES (7) [noun] An instance of segueing, a transition. | [verb] To move smoothly from one state or subject to another. | [verb] To make a smooth transition from one theme to another. SEICHE (11) [noun] A short-term standing wave oscillation of the water level in a lake, characteristic of its geometry SEIDEL (7) [noun] A large beer mug or tankard, especially one with a lid. SEINED (7) [verb] To use a seine, to fish with a seine. SEINER (6) SEINES (6) [noun] A long net having floats attached at the top and sinkers (weights) at the bottom, used in shallow water for catching fish. | [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. SEISER (6) SEISES (6) [verb] To vest ownership of a freehold estate in (someone). | [verb] (with of) To put in possession. | [verb] To seize. SEISIN (6) [noun] (common law) An entitlement to a freehold estate with a right to immediate possession; dates from feudal times but is still used in technical discussions of real property law today. | [noun] The act of taking possession. | [noun] The thing possessed; property. SEISMS (8) SEISOR (6) 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.). SEIZER (15) SEIZES (15) [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.). SEIZIN (15) [noun] (common law) An entitlement to a freehold estate with a right to immediate possession; dates from feudal times but is still used in technical discussions of real property law today. | [noun] The act of taking possession. | [noun] The thing possessed; property. SEIZOR (15) SEJANT (13) [adjective] Seated, sitting. SELAHS (9) SELDOM (9) [adjective] Rare; infrequent. | [adverb] Infrequently, rarely. SELECT (8) [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] Privileged, specially selected. SELFED (10) [adjective] Produced by vegetative propagation | [adjective] Produced by self-pollination SELLER (6) [noun] Someone who sells; a vendor; a clerk. | [noun] Something which sells. | [noun] An enclosed underground space, often under a building, used for storage or shelter. SELLES (6) SELSYN (9) SELVAS (9) [noun] Heavily forested ground in the Amazon basin. SELVES (9) [noun] One individual's personality, character, demeanor, or disposition. | [noun] The subject of one's own experience of phenomena: perception, emotions, thoughts. | [noun] An individual person as the object of his own reflective consciousness (plural selves). SEMEME (10) [noun] The smallest unit of meaning; especially the meaning expressed by a morpheme. SEMENS (8) SEMINA (8) SEMPLE (10) SEMPRE (10) [adverb] (as a qualifier) always, still; maintaining the same style SENARY (9) [noun] The numeral system which uses six as the base. | [adjective] Of sixth rank or order. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or based on six. SENATE (6) [noun] In some bicameral legislative systems, the upper house or chamber. | [noun] A group of experienced, respected, wise individuals serving as decision makers or advisors in a political system or in institutional governance, as in a university, and traditionally of advanced age and male. SENDAL (7) [noun] A light silk cloth. SENDED (8) SENDER (7) [noun] Someone who sends. | [noun] A device or component that transmits, as in telegraphy or computer networks. SENDUP (9) [noun] A satirical imitation of a work of art or a genre. SENECA (8) SENEGA (7) SENHOR (9) [noun] A Portuguese gentleman. | [noun] A Spanish term of address equivalent to sir or Mr., used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a married or an older man. SENILE (6) [noun] A person who is senile. | [adjective] Of, or relating to old age. | [adjective] Exhibiting the deterioration in mind and body often accompanying old age; doddering. SENIOR (6) [noun] An old person. | [noun] Someone older than someone else (with possessive). | [noun] Someone seen as deserving respect or reverence because of their age. SENITI (6) [noun] A Tongan unit of currency equivalent to a hundredth of a pa'anga. SENNAS (6) [noun] Any of several plants of the tribe Cassieae, especially those of the genera Cassia and Senna, whose leaves and pods are used as a purgative and laxative. | [noun] The dried leaves or pods of these plants (especially of Senna alexandrina, syn. Cassia angustifolia or Cassia acutifolia), used medicinally. | [noun] Senna glycoside, a laxative. SENNET (6) [noun] A signal call given on a cornet or trumpet for entrance or exit on a theatrical stage | [noun] The barracuda. | [noun] Braided cord or fabric of such small stuff as plaited rope yarns SENNIT (6) [noun] Braided cord or fabric of such small stuff as plaited rope yarns | [noun] Plaited or braided straw or grass which is used for making hats and for a variety of ornamental crafts SENORA (6) [noun] A Spanish term of address equivalent to Mrs., used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a married, divorced or widowed woman SENORS (6) SENRYU (9) SENSED (7) [verb] To use biological senses: to either see, hear, smell, taste, or feel. | [verb] To instinctively be aware. | [verb] To comprehend. SENSES (6) [noun] Any of the manners by which living beings perceive the physical world: for humans sight, smell, hearing, touch, taste. | [noun] Perception through the intellect; apprehension; awareness. | [noun] Sound practical or moral judgment. SENSOR (6) [noun] A device or organ that detects certain external stimuli and responds in a distinctive manner. SENSUM (8) SENTRY (9) [noun] A guard, particularly on duty at the entrance to a military base. | [noun] Sentry duty; time spent being a sentry. | [noun] A form of drag to be towed underwater, which on striking bottom is upset and rises to the surface. SEPALS (8) [noun] One of the component parts of the calyx, particularly when the sepals in a plant's calyx are not fused into a single structure. SEPIAS (8) [noun] A dark brown pigment made from the secretions of the cuttlefish. | [noun] A dark, slightly reddish, brown colour. | [noun] (by extension) A sepia-coloured drawing or photograph. SEPOYS (11) [noun] A native soldier of the East Indies, employed in the service of a European colonial power, notably the British India army (first under the British-chartered East India Company, later in the crown colony), but also France and Portugal. SEPSES (8) [noun] A serious medical condition in which the whole body is inflamed, causing injury to its own tissues and organs as a response to infection. SEPSIS (8) [noun] A serious medical condition in which the whole body is inflamed, causing injury to its own tissues and organs as a response to infection. SEPTAL (8) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the septum. | [adjective] Relating to an Irish clan or sept. SEPTET (8) [noun] A group of seven, often a musical group of seven performers. | [noun] A musical composition for seven instruments or seven voices. SEPTIC (10) [noun] A substance that causes sepsis or putrefaction. | [noun] A septic tank; a system for the disposal of sewage into a septic tank, a septic system. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to sepsis. | [noun] A mathematical object (function, curve, surface, etc.) of degree seven. | [noun] An American, a Yank. SEPTUM (10) [noun] A wall separating two cavities; a partition | [noun] A partition that separates the cells of a fruit. | [noun] A partition that separates the cells of a (septated) fungus. SEQUEL (15) [noun] The events, collectively, which follow a previously mentioned event; the aftermath. | [noun] A narrative that is written after another narrative set in the same universe, especially a narrative that is chronologically set after its predecessors, or (perhaps improper usage) any narrative that has a preceding narrative of its own. | [noun] Thirlage. SEQUIN (15) [noun] Any of various small gold coins minted in Italy and Turkey. | [noun] A sparkling spangle used for the decoration of ornate clothing. SERACS (8) [noun] Often sérac: a hard, cone-shaped, pale green, strongly flavoured cheese from Switzerland made from skimmed cowmilk and blue fenugreek (Trigonella caerulea); Schabziger, Sapsago. It is usually eaten grated, mixed with butter, or in a fondue. | [noun] (glaciology) A sharp tower of ice formed by intersecting crevasses of a glacier. SERAIL (6) SERAIS (6) [noun] (In Turkish or Muslim Asian contexts) A palace. | [noun] A seraglio. | [noun] A caravanserai; an inn. SERAPE (8) [noun] A type of blanket worn as a cloak, especially by Spanish-Americans, or used as a saddle blanket. SERAPH (11) [noun] A six-winged angel; the highest choir or order of angels in Christian angelology, ranked above cherubim, and below God. They are the 5th highest order of angels in Jewish angelology. A detailed description can be found at the beginning of Isaiah chapter 6 SERDAB (9) SEREIN (6) SERENE (6) [noun] Serenity; clearness; calmness. | [noun] Evening air; night chill. | [verb] To make serene. | [noun] A fine rain from a cloudless sky after sunset. SEREST (6) SERGES (7) SERIAL (6) [noun] A work, such as a work of fiction, published in installments, often numbered and without a specified end. | [noun] A publication issued in successive parts, often numbered and with no predetermined end. | [noun] A serial number, esp. one required to activate software. SERIES (6) [noun] A number of things that follow on one after the other or are connected one after the other. | [noun] A television or radio program which consists of several episodes that are broadcast in regular intervals | [noun] The sequence of partial sums \sum_{i=1}^n{a_i} of a given sequence ai. SERIFS (9) [noun] A short line added to the end of a stroke in traditional typefaces, such as Times New Roman. SERINE (6) [noun] A nonessential amino acid, CH2OH.CH(NH2)COOH, found in most animal proteins, especially silk. SERING (7) SERINS (6) [noun] Any of various small finches in the genus Serinus, with largely yellow plumage. SERMON (8) [noun] Religious discourse; a written or spoken address on a religious or moral matter. | [noun] A lengthy speech of reproval. | [verb] To discourse to or of, as in a sermon. SEROSA (6) [noun] A membrane which lines an internal cavity to protect the contents and which secretes serum. SEROUS (6) [adjective] Containing, secreting, or resembling serum; watery; a fluid or discharge that is pale yellow and transparent, usually representing something of a benign nature. (This contrasts with the term sanguine, which means blood-tinged and usually harmful.) SEROWS (9) [noun] Any of several species of Asian ungulates of the genus Capricornis. SERUMS (8) [noun] The clear yellowish liquid obtained upon separating whole blood into its solid and liquid components after it has been allowed to clot. | [noun] Blood serum from the tissues of immunized animals, containing antibodies and used to transfer immunity to another individual, called antiserum. | [noun] A watery liquid from animal tissue, especially one that moistens the surface of serous membranes or that is exuded by such membranes when they become inflamed, such as in edema or a blister. SERVAL (9) [noun] A medium-sized African wild cat, Leptailurus serval, formerly Felis serval. 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. SERVER (9) [noun] A program that provides services to other programs or devices, either in the same computer or over a computer network. | [noun] A computer dedicated to running such programs. | [noun] One who serves. SERVES (9) [noun] An act of putting the ball or shuttlecock in play in various games. | [noun] A portion of food or drink, a serving. | [verb] (personal) To provide a service (or, by extension, a product, especially food or drink). SERVOS (9) [noun] A servomechanism or servomotor. | [noun] A service station, being a place to buy petrol for cars etc., as well as various convenience items, with or without actual car service facilities. SESAME (8) [noun] A tropical Asian plant (Sesamum indicum) bearing small flat seeds used as food and as a source of oil. | [noun] The seed of this plant. SESTET (6) [noun] A piece of music composed for six voices or six instruments; a sextet or sestuor. | [noun] The last six lines of a sonnet, forming two stanzas of three lines each. SETOFF (12) [noun] The situation where a bank or similar organisation repays itself money owed by an accountholder out of his or her account. SETONS (6) [noun] A few silk threads or horsehairs, or a strip of linen etc., introduced beneath the skin by a knife or needle, so as to induce suppuration; also, the issue so formed. SETOSE (6) [adjective] Thickly set with bristles or bristly hairs. SETOUS (6) SETOUT (6) SETTEE (6) [noun] A long seat with a back, made to accommodate several persons at once; a sofa. | [noun] A vessel with a very long, sharp prow, carrying two or three masts with lateen sails, used in the Mediterranean. SETTER (6) [noun] One who sets something, especially a typesetter. | [noun] A long-haired breed of gundog (Wikipedia). | [noun] The player who is responsible for setting, or passing, the ball to teammates for an attack. | [verb] To cut the dewlap (of a cow or ox), and insert a seton, so as to cause an issue. SETTLE (6) [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. | [noun] A seat of any kind. SETUPS (8) [noun] Equipment designed for a particular purpose; an apparatus. | [noun] The fashion in which something is organized or arranged. | [noun] A situation orchestrated to frame someone; a covert effort to place the blame on somebody. SEVENS (9) [noun] The digit/figure 7 or an occurrence thereof. | [noun] A card bearing seven pips. | [noun] Rugby sevens. SEVERE (9) [adjective] Very bad or intense. | [adjective] Strict or harsh. | [adjective] Sober, plain in appearance, austere. SEVERS (9) [verb] To cut free. | [verb] To suffer disjunction; to be parted or separated. | [verb] To make a separation or distinction; to distinguish. SEWAGE (10) [noun] A suspension of water and solid waste, transported by sewers to be disposed of or processed. | [noun] Sewerage. SEWANS (9) SEWARS (9) SEWERS (9) [noun] A pipe or system of pipes used to remove human waste and to provide drainage. | [noun] A servant attending at a meal who is responsible for seating arrangements, serving dishes, etc. | [noun] One who sews. SEWING (10) [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. | [noun] The action of the verb to sew. SEXIER (13) [adjective] (of a person) Having sex appeal; suggestive of sex. | [adjective] That can sexually attract or arouse. | [adjective] (of a thing or concept) interesting, attractive, intriguing, or appealing. SEXILY (16) SEXING (14) [verb] To determine the sex of an animal. | [verb] To have sex with. | [noun] The determination of the sex of a young bird (typically poultry) SEXISM (15) [noun] The belief that people of one sex or gender are inherently superior to others. | [noun] Discrimination or different treatment (e.g. in job opportunities) based on sex or gender. | [noun] Attitudes or actions that are based on or promote the expectation that people adhere to stereotypical social roles (gender roles) based on sex. SEXIST (13) [noun] A person who discriminates on grounds of sex; someone who practises sexism. | [adjective] Unfairly discriminatory against one sex in favour of the other. SEXPOT (15) [noun] A sexy person. SEXTAN (13) SEXTET (13) [noun] Any group of six people or things. | [noun] A composition for six voices or instruments. | [noun] A group of six singers or instrumentalists. SEXTON (13) [noun] A church official who looks after a church building and its graveyard and may act as a gravedigger and bell-ringer. | [noun] A sexton beetle. SEXTOS (13) SEXUAL (13) [noun] A species which reproduces by sexual rather than asexual reproduction, or a member of such a species. | [noun] A person who experiences sexual attraction, a person who has interest in or desire for sex (especially as contrasted with an asexual). | [adjective] Arising from the fact of being male or female; pertaining to sex or gender, or to the social relations between the sexes. SHABBY (16) [adjective] Torn or worn; unkempt. | [adjective] Clothed with ragged, much worn, or soiled garments. | [adjective] Mean; paltry; despicable. SHACKO (15) SHACKS (15) [noun] A crude, roughly built hut or cabin. | [noun] Any poorly constructed or poorly furnished building. | [noun] The room from which a ham radio operator transmits. SHADED (11) [verb] To shield from light. | [verb] To alter slightly. | [verb] To vary or approach something slightly, particularly in color. SHADER (10) SHADES (10) [noun] Darkness where light, particularly sunlight, is blocked. | [noun] Something that blocks light, particularly in a window. | [noun] A variety of a colour/color, in particular one obtained by adding black (compare tint). SHADOW (13) [noun] A dark image projected onto a surface where light (or other radiation) is blocked by the shade of an object. | [noun] Relative darkness, especially as caused by the interruption of light; gloom, obscurity. | [noun] A area protected by an obstacle (likened to an object blocking out sunlight). SHADUF (13) SHAFTS (12) [noun] The entire body of a long weapon, such as an arrow. | [noun] The long, narrow, central body of a spear, arrow, or javelin. | [noun] (by extension) Anything cast or thrown as a spear or javelin. SHAGGY (14) [adjective] With long, thick, and uncombed hair, fur or wool. | [adjective] With a surface like shaggy hair; rough nap. SHAIRD (10) SHAIRN (9) SHAKEN (13) [verb] To cause (something) to move rapidly in opposite directions alternatingly. | [verb] To move (one's head) from side to side, especially to indicate refusal, reluctance or disapproval. | [verb] To move or remove by agitating; to throw off by a jolting or vibrating motion. SHAKER (13) [noun] A person or thing that shakes, or by means of which something is shaken. | [noun] A variety of pigeon. | [noun] One who holds railroad spikes while they are hammered. SHAKES (13) [noun] The act of shaking or being shaken; tremulous or back-and-forth motion. | [noun] A milkshake. | [noun] A beverage made by adding ice cream to a (usually carbonated) drink; a float. SHAKOS (13) [noun] A stiff, cylindrical military dress hat with a metal plate in front, a short visor, and a plume. | [noun] A bearskin or busby. | [noun] The squilla or mantis shrimp. SHALED (10) SHALES (9) [noun] A shell or husk; a cod or pod. | [noun] A fine-grained sedimentary rock of a thin, laminated, and often friable, structure. | [verb] To take off the shell or coat of. SHALEY (12) SHALOM (11) [noun] Peace | [interjection] A traditional Jewish greeting or farewell. SHAMAN (11) [noun] A traditional (prescientific) faith healer. | [noun] A member of certain tribal societies who acts as a religious medium between the concrete and spirit worlds. SHAMAS (11) [noun] Copsychus malabaricus (white-rumped shama), a saxicoline songbird of India, glossy black with a white rump and brown underparts, and six other species in genus Copsychus. 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. SHAMES (11) [noun] Uncomfortable or painful feeling due to recognition or consciousness of one's own impropriety or dishonor or something being exposed that should have been kept private. | [noun] Something to regret. | [noun] Reproach incurred or suffered; dishonour; ignominy; derision. | [noun] A sexton in a synagogue. SHAMMY (16) [noun] Chamois leather. | [noun] A cloth made of this leather. | [verb] To clean with a chamois leather cloth. SHAMOS (11) SHAMOY (14) SHAMUS (11) [noun] A private detective; originally, a policeman or police detective. SHANDY (13) [noun] A drink made by mixing beer and lemonade. | [noun] A glass of this drink. | [adjective] Wild, energetic, romping, boisterous, rambunctious SHANKS (13) [noun] The part of the leg between the knee and the ankle. | [noun] Meat from that part of an animal. | [noun] A redshank or greenshank, various species of Old World wading birds in the genus Tringa having distinctly colored legs. SHANNY (12) [noun] A fish, the prickleback. SHANTI (9) SHANTY (12) [noun] A roughly-built hut or cabin. | [noun] A rudimentary or improvised dwelling, especially one not legally owned. | [noun] An unlicensed pub. | [noun] A song a sailor sings, especially in rhythm to his work. | [adjective] Jaunty; showy. 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. SHAPEN (11) SHAPER (11) SHAPES (11) [noun] The status or condition of something | [noun] Condition of personal health, especially muscular health. | [noun] The appearance of something in terms of its arrangement in space, especially its outline; often a basic geometric two-dimensional figure. SHARDS (10) [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. 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. SHARER (9) SHARES (9) [noun] A portion of something, especially a portion given or allotted to someone. | [noun] A financial instrument that shows that one owns a part of a company that provides the benefit of limited liability. | [noun] A configuration enabling a resource to be shared over a network. SHARIF (12) [noun] A traditional Arab tribal title given to those who serve as the protector of the tribe and all tribal assets. SHARKS (13) [noun] A scaleless, predatory fish of the superorder Selachimorpha, with a cartilaginous skeleton and 5 to 7 gill slits on each side of its head. | [verb] To fish for sharks. | [noun] Someone who exploits others, for example by trickery, lies, usury, extortion. SHARNS (9) SHARNY (12) SHARPS (11) [noun] The symbol ♯, placed after the name of a note in the key signature or before a note on the staff to indicate that the note is to be played a semitone higher. | [noun] A note that is played a semitone higher than usual; denoted by the name of the note that is followed by the symbol ♯. | [noun] A note that is sharp in a particular key. SHARPY (14) SHAUGH (13) SHAULS (9) 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. SHAVEN (12) [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. SHAVER (12) [noun] One who shaves. | [noun] A barber, one whose occupation is to shave. | [noun] A tool or machine for shaving; an electric razor. SHAVES (12) [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. SHAVIE (12) SHAWED (13) SHAWLS (12) [noun] A square or rectangular piece of cloth worn as a covering for the head, neck, and shoulders, typically by women. | [noun] A fold of wrinkled flesh under the lips and neck of a bloodhound, used in scenting. SHAWMS (14) [noun] A mediaeval double-reed wind instrument with a conical wooden body. SHEAFS (12) [noun] A quantity of the stalks and ears of wheat, rye, or other grain, bound together; a bundle of grain or straw. | [noun] Any collection of things bound together; a bundle. | [noun] A bundle of arrows sufficient to fill a quiver, or the allowance of each archer. SHEALS (9) SHEARS (9) [noun] A cutting tool similar to scissors, but often larger. | [noun] The act of shearing, or something removed by shearing. | [noun] Forces that push in opposite directions. SHEATH (12) [noun] A holster for a sword; a scabbard. | [noun] (by extension) Anything that has a similar shape to a scabbard that is used to hold an object that is longer than it is wide. | [noun] The base of a leaf when sheathing or investing a branch or stem, as in grasses. | [verb] To put (something such as a knife or sword) into a sheath. SHEAVE (12) [noun] A wheel having a groove in the rim for a rope to work in, and set in a block, mast, or similar; the wheel of a pulley. | [noun] A sliding scutcheon for covering a keyhole. | [verb] To gather and bind into a sheaf. SHEENS (9) [verb] To shine; to glisten. SHEENY (12) [noun] A Jew. | [noun] A cheat or fraudster. | [adjective] Having a sheen; glossy SHEERS (9) [noun] A sheer curtain or fabric. | [noun] The curve of the main deck or gunwale from bow to stern. | [noun] An abrupt swerve from the course of a ship. SHEETS (9) [noun] A thin bed cloth used as a covering for a mattress or as a layer over the sleeper. | [noun] A piece of paper, usually rectangular, that has been prepared for writing, artwork, drafting, wrapping, manufacture of packaging (boxes, envelopes, etc.), and for other uses. The word does not include scraps and irregular small pieces destined to be recycled, used for stuffing or cushioning or paper mache, etc. | [noun] A flat metal pan, often without raised edge, used for baking. SHEEVE (12) SHEIKH (16) [noun] The leader of an Arab village, family or small tribe. | [noun] An Islamic religious cleric; the leader of an Islamic religious order. | [noun] (some Arab Gulf countries) An official title for members of the royal family as well as some prominent families. SHEIKS (13) [noun] The leader of an Arab village, family or small tribe. | [noun] An Islamic religious cleric; the leader of an Islamic religious order. | [noun] (some Arab Gulf countries) An official title for members of the royal family as well as some prominent families. SHEILA (9) [noun] A woman. | [noun] A shayla, a headscarf worn by Muslim women. SHEKEL (13) [noun] A currency unit of both ancient and modern Israel. | [noun] (often antisemitic) Money, especially that purportedly owned or distributed as bribes by Jewish elites. | [noun] An ancient unit of weight equivalent to one-fiftieth of a mina. SHELLS (9) [noun] A hard external covering of an animal. | [noun] The hard calcareous covering of a bird egg. | [noun] One of the outer layers of skin of an onion. SHELLY (12) SHELTA (9) SHELTY (12) [noun] A Shetland pony; any small pony. | [noun] Sheepdog. | [noun] A Shetlander. SHELVE (12) [noun] A rocky ledge or shelf. | [verb] To place on a shelf. | [verb] To set aside; to quit or postpone. SHELVY (15) SHENDS (10) SHEOLS (9) SHEQEL (18) SHERDS (10) [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. SHERIF (12) [noun] A member of an Arab princely family descended from Muhammad through his son-in-law Ali and daughter Fatima, the "Grand Shereef" being the governor of Mecca. SHERPA (11) [noun] A mountain guide or porter, particularly a male of the Sherpa people so employed. | [noun] An expert sent by a country’s leader to a summit meeting. | [noun] A synthetic fabric with a long, thick pile, similar to faux fur, imitation lamb wool or fleece. SHERRY (12) [noun] A fortified wine produced in Jerez de la Frontera in Spain, or a similar wine produced elsewhere. | [noun] A variety of sherry. | [noun] A glass of sherry. SHEUCH (14) SHEUGH (13) [noun] A ditch, especially a field boundary ditch usually used to drain fields and mark their boundaries. | [noun] The space between the buttocks. | [noun] The Atlantic ocean, the sea. 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. SHEWER (12) SHIBAH (14) 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. SHIELS (9) SHIERS (9) SHIEST (9) SHIFTS (12) [noun] A modifier key whose main function is shifting between two or more functions of any of certain other keys (usually by pressing Shift and the other button simultaneously). | [noun] A type of women's undergarment, a slip. | [noun] A change of workers, now specifically a set group of workers or period of working time. SHIFTY (15) [adjective] Subject to frequent changes in direction. | [adjective] (of a person's eyes) Moving from one object to another, not looking directly and steadily at the person with whom one is speaking. | [adjective] Having the appearance of being dishonest, criminal or unreliable. SHIKAR (13) [noun] Hunting, sport; a hunting expedition. | [noun] Hunting guide (elsewhere besides India, e.g. Australia) SHIKSA (13) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A non-Jewish girl, especially one who is attractive and young. SHIKSE (13) SHILLS (9) [noun] A person paid to endorse a product favourably, while pretending to be impartial. | [noun] An accomplice at a confidence trick during an auction or gambling game. | [noun] A house player in a casino. SHIMMY (16) [noun] A dance movement involving thrusting the shoulders back and forth alternately. | [noun] A dance that was popular in the 1920s. | [noun] An abnormal vibration, especially in the wheels of a vehicle. SHINDY (13) [noun] A shindig. | [noun] An uproar or disturbance; a spree; a row; a riot. | [noun] Hockey; shinney SHINED (10) [verb] To emit light. | [verb] To reflect light. | [verb] To distinguish oneself; to excel. SHINER (9) [noun] One who shines; a luminary. | [noun] One who causes things to shine; a polisher. | [noun] A black eye. SHINES (9) [noun] Brightness from a source of light. | [noun] Brightness from reflected light. | [noun] Excellence in quality or appearance; splendour. SHINNY (12) [verb] To climb in an awkward manner. | [noun] An informal game of pickup hockey played with minimal equipment: skates, sticks and a puck or ball. | [noun] Street hockey. | [noun] Moonshine (illegal alcohol) SHIRES (9) [noun] Physical area administered by a sheriff. | [noun] Former administrative area of Britain; a county. | [noun] The general area in which a person lives or comes from, used in the context of travel within the United Kingdom. SHIRKS (13) [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. SHIRRS (9) [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. SHIRTS (9) [noun] An article of clothing that is worn on the upper part of the body, and often has sleeves, either long or short, that cover the arms. | [noun] An interior lining in a blast furnace. | [noun] A member of the shirt-wearing team in a shirts and skins game. SHIRTY (12) [adjective] Ill-tempered or annoyed. SHISTS (9) SHITTY (12) [adjective] Very bad; unpleasant; miserable; insignificant. | [adjective] Under the influence of illicit drugs or alcohol; drunk; high. | [adjective] Annoyed. SHIVAH (15) [noun] A weeklong period of formal mourning for a close relative. SHIVAS (12) SHIVER (12) [noun] The act of shivering. | [noun] A bodily response to early hypothermia.Wp | [verb] To tremble or shake, especially when cold or frightened. | [noun] A fragment or splinter, especially of glass or stone. SHIVES (12) [noun] A knife, especially a makeshift one fashioned from something not normally used as a weapon (like a plastic spoon or a toothbrush). | [noun] A particular woody by-product of processing flax or hemp. | [noun] A slice, especially of bread. SHLEPP (13) SHLEPS (11) [noun] A long or burdensome journey. | [noun] A boring person, a drag; a good-for-nothing person. | [noun] A sloppy or slovenly person. SHLOCK (15) [noun] Commodity that is shoddy or inferior. SHLUMP (13) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. SHMEAR (11) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SHMOES (11) [noun] A stupid or obnoxious person. SHMUCK (17) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SHNAPS (11) SHNOOK (13) [noun] A person who is easily taken advantage of. SHOALS (9) [noun] A sandbank or sandbar creating a shallow. | [noun] A shallow in a body of water. | [verb] To arrive at a shallow (or less deep) area. SHOALY (12) SHOATS (9) [noun] A young, newly-weaned pig. | [noun] A geep, a sheep-goat hybrid (whether artificially produced or the result of animals from these species naturally intermating). SHOCKS (15) [noun] A sudden, heavy impact. | [noun] A discontinuity arising in the solution of a partial differential equation. | [verb] To cause to be emotionally shocked, to cause (someone) to feel surprised and upset. SHODDY (14) [noun] A low-grade cloth made from by-products of wool processing, or from recycled wool. | [noun] Worthless goods. | [noun] Vulgar pretence or sham. SHOERS (9) SHOFAR (12) [noun] A ram’s-horn trumpet SHOGUN (10) [noun] The supreme generalissimo of feudal Japan. SHOJIS (16) [noun] A door or partition consisting of a wooden frame covered in rice paper. SHOLOM (11) SHOOED (10) [verb] To induce someone or something to leave. | [verb] To leave under inducement. | [verb] To usher someone. SHOOKS (13) [noun] A set of pieces for making a cask or box, usually wood. | [noun] The parts of a piece of house furniture, as a bedstead, packed together. SHOOLS (9) SHOOTS (9) [noun] The emerging stem and embryonic leaves of a new plant. | [noun] A photography session. | [noun] A hunt or shooting competition. SHOPPE (13) [noun] (sometimes capitalized) A fanciful spelling of shop, chiefly used in the names of businesses to give an air of old-fashionedness. SHORAN (9) SHORED (10) [adjective] Having a shore, often one of a specified type. | [verb] To set on shore. | [verb] (without up) To provide with support. SHORES (9) [noun] Land adjoining a non-flowing body of water, such as an ocean, lake or pond. | [noun] (from the perspective of one on a body of water) Land, usually near a port. | [verb] To set on shore. SHORLS (9) SHORTS (9) [noun] A short circuit. | [noun] A short film. | [noun] A short version of a garment in a particular size. SHORTY (12) [noun] A short person. | [noun] A term of endearment for a child, younger sibling, shorter person, etc. | [noun] A child. SHOTES (9) [noun] A young, newly-weaned pig. | [noun] A fish resembling the trout, the grayling (Thymallus thymallus). SHOTTS (9) 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. SHOUTS (9) [noun] A loud burst of voice or voices; a violent and sudden outcry, especially that of a multitude expressing joy, triumph, exultation, anger, or animated courage. | [noun] A round of drinks in a pub; the turn to pay the shot or scot; an act of paying for a round of drinks. | [noun] A call-out for an emergency services team. 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. SHOVEL (12) [noun] A hand tool with a handle, used for moving portions of material such as earth, snow, and grain from one place to another, with some forms also used for digging. Not to be confused with a spade, which is designed solely for small-scale digging and incidental tasks such as chopping of small roots. | [noun] A spade. | [verb] To move materials with a shovel. SHOVER (12) SHOVES (12) [noun] A rough push. | [noun] An all-in bet. | [noun] A forward movement of packed river-ice. 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. SHOWER (12) [noun] A brief fall of precipitation (spell of rain, or a similar fall of snow, sleet, or cascade). | [noun] A device for bathing by which water is made to fall on the body from a height, either from a tank or by the action of a pump. | [noun] An instance of using of this device in order to bathe oneself. | [noun] One who shows. SHOYUS (12) SHRANK (13) [verb] To cause to become smaller. | [verb] To become smaller; to contract. | [verb] To cower or flinch. | [noun] (Pennsylvania Dutch English) A large highly decorative German/Dutch-style piece of furniture, which combines aspects of a clothing wardrobe, curio, and cabinet. SHREDS (10) [noun] A long, narrow piece cut or torn off; a strip. | [noun] In general, a fragment; a piece; a particle; a very small amount. SHREWD (13) [adjective] Showing clever resourcefulness in practical matters. | [adjective] Artful, tricky or cunning. | [adjective] Streetwise. SHREWS (12) [noun] Any of numerous small, mouselike, chiefly nocturnal, mammals of the family Soricidae (order Soricomorpha). | [noun] Certain other small mammals that resemble true shrews (order Soricomorpha). | [noun] An ill-tempered, nagging woman: a scold. SHRIEK (13) [noun] A sharp, shrill outcry or scream; a shrill wild cry such as is caused by sudden or extreme terror, pain, or the like. | [noun] An exclamation mark. | [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. SHRIFT (12) [noun] The act of going to or hearing a religious confession. | [noun] Confession to a priest. | [noun] Forgiveness given by a priest after confession; remission. SHRIKE (13) [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Laniidae which are known for their habit of catching other birds and small animals and impaling the uneaten portions of their bodies on thorns. SHRILL (9) [noun] A shrill sound. | [verb] To make a shrill noise. | [adjective] High-pitched and piercing. SHRIMP (13) [noun] Any of many swimming, often edible crustaceans, chiefly of the infraorder Caridea or the suborder Dendrobranchiata, with slender legs, long whiskers and a long abdomen. | [noun] The flesh of such crustaceans. | [noun] A small, puny or unimportant person. SHRINE (9) [noun] A holy or sacred place dedicated to a specific deity, ancestor, hero, martyr, saint, or similar figure of awe and respect, at which said figure is venerated or worshipped. | [noun] A case, box, or receptacle, especially one in which are deposited sacred relics, as the bones of a saint. | [noun] A place or object hallowed from its history or associations. SHRINK (13) [noun] Shrinkage; contraction; recoil. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A psychiatrist or psychotherapist. | [noun] Loss of inventory, for example due to shoplifting or not selling items before their expiration date. SHRIVE (12) [verb] To hear or receive a confession (of sins etc.) | [verb] To prescribe penance or absolution. | [verb] To confess, and receive absolution. SHROFF (15) [noun] A provider of financial services, especially a small-scale independent banker or money changer or a local expert at detecting bad coin. | [noun] A cashier, especially for a carpark. | [noun] Short for shroff office: the office of a shroff at a carpark, etc. 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. SHROVE (12) [verb] To hear or receive a confession (of sins etc.) | [verb] To prescribe penance or absolution. | [verb] To confess, and receive absolution. SHRUBS (11) [noun] A woody plant smaller than a tree, and usually with several stems from the same base. | [noun] A liquor composed of vegetable acid, fruit juice (especially lemon), sugar, sometimes vinegar, and a small amount of spirit as a preservative. Modern shrub is usually non-alcoholic, but in earlier times it was often mixed with a substantial amount of spirit such as brandy or rum, thus making it a liqueur. SHRUGS (10) [noun] A lifting of the shoulders to signal indifference or a casual lack of knowledge. | [noun] A cropped, cardigan-like garment with short or long sleeves, typically knitted. SHRUNK (13) [verb] To cause to become smaller. | [verb] To become smaller; to contract. | [verb] To cower or flinch. SHTETL (9) [noun] A Jewish village or small town, especially one in Eastern Europe. SHTICK (15) [noun] A generally humorous routine | [noun] A characteristic trait or theme, especially in the way people or media present themselves. | [noun] A gimmick. SHTIKS (13) SHUCKS (15) [noun] The shell or husk, especially of grains (e.g. corn/maize) or nuts (e.g. walnuts). | [noun] A fraud; a scam. | [noun] A phony. SHUNTS (9) [noun] An act of moving (suddenly), as due to a push or shove. | [noun] A connection used as an alternative path between parts of an electrical circuit. | [noun] The shifting of the studs on a projectile from the deep to the shallow sides of the grooves in its discharge from a shunt gun. SHUTED (10) SHUTES (9) SHYERS (12) SHYEST (12) [adjective] Easily frightened; timid. | [adjective] Reserved; disinclined to familiar approach. | [adjective] Cautious; wary; suspicious. SHYING (13) [verb] To avoid due to timidness or caution. | [verb] To jump back in fear. | [verb] To throw sideways with a jerk; to fling SIALIC (8) SIALID (7) SIBYLS (11) [noun] A pagan female oracle or prophetess, especially the Cumaean sibyl. SICCAN (10) 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. SICKEE (12) SICKEN (12) [verb] To make ill. | [verb] To become ill. | [verb] To fill with disgust or abhorrence. SICKER (12) [adjective] Having an urge to vomit. | [adjective] In poor health. | [adjective] Mentally unstable, disturbed. | [adjective] (obsolete outside dialectal) Certain. | [verb] To percolate, trickle, or ooze, as water through a crack. SICKIE (12) [noun] A day, or time, off work due to (supposed) illness. SICKLE (12) [noun] An implement having a semicircular blade and short handle, used for cutting long grass and cereal crops. | [noun] Any of the sickle-shaped middle feathers of the domestic cock. | [verb] To cut with a sickle. SICKLY (15) [verb] To make (something) sickly. | [verb] To become sickly. | [adjective] Frequently ill or in poor health. SICKOS (12) [noun] A person with unpleasant tastes, views or habits. | [noun] A mentally ill person. | [noun] A physically ill person. SIDDUR (8) [noun] A prayer book containing a set order of daily prayers. SIDING (8) [noun] A building material which covers and protects the sides of a house or other building. | [verb] To ally oneself, be in an alliance, usually with "with" or rarely "in with" | [verb] To lean on one side. | [noun] A second, relatively short length of track just to the side of a railroad track, joined to the main track by switches at one or both ends, used either for loading or unloading freight, storing trains or other rail vehicles; or to allow two trains on a same track to meet (opposite directions) or pass (same direction) (the latter sense is probably an American definition). 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. SIDLER (7) SIDLES (7) [noun] An act of sidling. | [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) SIEGES (7) [noun] (heading) Military action. | [noun] (heading) A seat. | [noun] A place with a toilet seat: an outhouse; a lavatory. SIENNA (6) [noun] A form of clay containing iron and manganese. | [noun] A pigment with a reddish-brown colour. | [noun] A light reddish-brown colour. SIERRA (6) [noun] A rugged range of mountains. | [noun] The letter S in the ICAO spelling alphabet. | [noun] A scombroid fish. SIESTA (6) [noun] A nap, especially an afternoon one taken after lunch in some cultures. | [verb] To take a siesta; to nap. SIEURS (6) SIEVED (10) [verb] To strain, sift or sort using a sieve. | [verb] To concede; let in | [adjective] Passed through a sieve. SIEVES (9) [noun] A device with a mesh bottom to separate, in a granular material, larger particles from smaller ones, or to separate solid objects from a liquid. | [noun] A process, physical or abstract, that arrives at a final result by filtering out unwanted pieces of input from a larger starting set of input. | [noun] A kind of coarse basket. SIFAKA (13) [noun] A medium-sized lemur of the genus Propithecus. SIFTED (10) [adjective] Having undergone sifting. SIFTER (9) 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. SIGHER (10) SIGHTS (10) [noun] (in the singular) The ability to see. | [noun] The act of seeing; perception of objects by the eye; view. | [noun] Something seen. SIGILS (7) [noun] A seal, signature or signet. | [noun] An occult or magical sign, image or symbol. | [noun] A nonalphanumeric character affixed to a symbol (e.g. variable) to indicate a property such as type or scope. SIGLOI (7) SIGLOS (7) SIGMAS (9) [noun] The eighteenth letter of the Classical and Modern Greek alphabets, the twentieth letter of Old and Ancient. | [noun] The symbol Σ, used to indicate summation of a set or series. | [noun] The symbol σ, used to indicate one standard deviation from the mean, particularly in a normal distribution. SIGNAL (7) [noun] A sequence of states representing an encoded message in a communication channel. | [noun] Any variation of a quantity or change in an entity over time that conveys information upon detection. | [noun] A sign made to give notice of some occurrence, command, or danger, or to indicate the start of a concerted action. SIGNED (8) [verb] To make a mark | [verb] To make the sign of the cross | [verb] To indicate SIGNEE (7) [noun] One who signs a contract, especially in athletic contexts SIGNER (7) SIGNET (7) [noun] An object (especially a ring) formerly used to impress a picture into the sealing wax of a document as a proof of its origin SIGNOR (7) [noun] A courtesy title for a man of Italian origin. SILAGE (7) [noun] Fermented green forage fodder stored in a silo. | [verb] To ensilage. SILANE (6) [noun] Any of a group of silicon hydrides that are analogous to alkanes (the paraffin hydrocarbons); especially the parent compound SiH4 | [noun] Monosilane (SiH₄) | [noun] Any organic derivative of monosilane SILENI (6) SILENT (6) [noun] That which is silent; a time of silence. | [noun] A silent movie | [adjective] Free from sound or noise; absolutely still; perfectly quiet. SILICA (8) [noun] Silicon dioxide. | [noun] Any of the silica group of the silicate minerals. SILKED (11) SILKEN (10) [verb] To render silken or silklike. | [adjective] Made of silk. | [adjective] Having a smooth, soft, or light texture, like that of silk; suggestive of silk. SILLER (6) 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. SILVAE (9) SILVAN (9) [adjective] Pertaining to the forest, or woodlands. | [adjective] Residing in a forest or wood. | [adjective] Wooded, or covered in forest. | [noun] Tellurium SILVAS (9) SILVER (9) [noun] A lustrous, white, metallic element, atomic number 47, atomic weight 107.87, symbol Ag. | [noun] (collectively) Coins made from silver or any similar white metal. | [noun] (collectively) Cutlery and other eating utensils, whether silver or made from some other white metal. SILVEX (16) SIMARS (8) SIMIAN (8) [noun] An ape or monkey, especially an anthropoid. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to apes; apelike. | [adjective] Bearing resemblance to an ape. SIMILE (8) [noun] A figure of speech in which one thing is compared to another, in the case of English generally using like or as. SIMLIN (8) SIMMER (10) [noun] The state or process of simmering. | [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. | [noun] Someone who plays a sim (a simulation game), particularly The Sims. SIMNEL (8) SIMONY (11) [noun] The buying or selling of spiritual or sacred things, such as ecclesiastical offices, pardons, or consecrated objects. SIMOOM (10) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMOON (8) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMPER (10) [noun] A foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, or affected smile; a smirk. | [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. SIMPLE (10) [noun] A herbal preparation made from one plant, as opposed to something made from more than one plant. | [noun] (by extension) A physician. | [noun] A simple or atomic proposition. SIMPLY (13) [adverb] (manner) In a simple way or state; considered in or by itself; without addition; alone. | [adverb] (manner) Plainly; without art or subtlety | [adverb] (manner) Weakly; foolishly; stupidly. SINEWS (9) [noun] A cord or tendon of the body. | [noun] A cord or string, particularly as of a musical instrument. | [noun] Muscular power, muscle; nerve, nervous energy; vigor, vigorous strength. SINEWY (12) [adjective] Tough; having strong sinews. | [adjective] Having or showing nervous strength. | [adjective] (of a person or animal) Possessing physical strength and weight; rugged and powerful. SINFUL (9) [adjective] Constituting a sin; being morally or religiously wrong; wicked; evil | [adjective] Decadent (luxuriously self-indulgent) 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. SINGER (7) [noun] A person who sings, often professionally. | [noun] (square dance) dance figure with a fixed structure, sung by a caller, or a piece of music with that structure. | [noun] A person who, or device which, singes. SINGES (7) [noun] A burning of the surface; a slight burn. | [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. SINGLE (7) [noun] A 45 RPM vinyl record with one song on side A and one on side B. | [noun] A popular song released and sold (on any format) nominally on its own though usually having at least one extra track. | [noun] One who is not married or does not have a romantic partner. SINGLY (10) [adverb] In a single or unaccompanied manner; without a companion. | [adverb] Individually; particularly; severally. | [adverb] Without partners, companions, or associates; single-handed. SINKER (10) [noun] One who sinks something. | [noun] A weight used in fishing to cause the line or net to sink. | [noun] Any of several high speed pitches that have a downward motion near the plate; a two-seam fastball, a split-finger fastball, or a forkball. SINNED (7) [verb] To commit a sin. SINNER (6) [noun] A person who sins or has sinned. | [noun] A person who sins or has sinned by the action or identity indicated or previously mentioned | [noun] An unregenerate person. SINTER (6) [noun] An alluvial sediment deposited by a mineral spring. | [noun] A mass formed by sintering. | [noun] A mixture of iron ore and fluxes added to a blast furnace. SIPHON (11) [noun] A bent pipe or tube with one end lower than the other, in which hydrostatic pressure exerted due to the force of gravity moves liquid from one reservoir to another. | [noun] A soda siphon. | [noun] A tubelike organ found in animals or elongated cell found in plants. SIPING (9) 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. SIPPER (10) SIPPET (10) [noun] A small piece of something, especially a piece of toast or fried bean eaten with soup or gravy. SIRDAR (7) [noun] A high-ranking person in India and other areas of west-central Asia; a chief, a headman. | [noun] The leader of a group of Sherpa mountain guides. SIREES (6) SIRENS (6) [noun] One of a group of nymphs who lured mariners to their death on the rocks. | [noun] One who sings sweetly and charms. | [noun] A dangerously seductive woman. SIRING (7) [verb] (of a male) to procreate; to father, beget, impregnate. | [noun] An act of procreation, especially between animals. SIRRAH (9) [noun] A term of address to an inferior male or more commonly a child. A modern day equivalent would be "little man". SIRRAS (6) SIRREE (6) [noun] (used as an intensifier, emphatically, after yes or no) Sir. SIRUPS (8) [noun] Any thick liquid that has a high sugar content and which is added to or poured over food as a flavouring. | [noun] (by extension) Any viscous liquid. | [noun] (shortened from "syrup of figs") A wig. SIRUPY (11) [adjective] Having the taste or consistency of syrup. | [adjective] Overly sweet. | [adjective] Overly sentimental. SISALS (6) SISKIN (10) [noun] A small green and yellow European finch, Carduelis spinus spinus or Carduelis spinus, now Spinus spinus. | [noun] Any of various similar birds in subfamily Carduelinae, principally in the genus Spinus. SISTER (6) [noun] A daughter of the same parents as another person; a female sibling. | [noun] A female member of a religious order; especially one devoted to more active service; (informally) a nun. | [noun] Any butterfly in the genus Adelpha, so named for the resemblance of the dark-colored wings to the black habit traditionally worn by nuns. SISTRA (6) [noun] An ancient Egyptian musical instrument, to be shaken, consisting of a metal frame holding percussive metal beads. SITARS (6) [noun] A Hindustani/Indian classical stringed instrument, typically having a gourd as its resonating chamber. SITCOM (10) [noun] An episodic comedy television program with a plot or storyline based around a particular humorous situation. | [noun] Acronym of single income, two children, oppressive/outrageous mortgage. SITING (7) [verb] To situate or place a building. | [noun] The act of finding a site for something. SITTEN (6) SITTER (6) [noun] Someone who sits, e.g. for a portrait. | [noun] One employed to watch or tend something; a babysitter, housesitter, petsitter, etc. | [noun] A participant in a séance. SITUPS (8) SIVERS (9) SIXMOS (15) SIXTES (13) SIXTHS (16) [noun] (not used in the plural) The person or thing in the sixth position. | [noun] One of six equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The interval between one note and another, five notes higher in the scale, for example C to A, a major sixth, or C to A flat, a minor sixth. (Note that the interval covers six notes counting inclusively, for example C-D-E-F-G-A.) SIZARS (15) [noun] At certain universities, e.g. Cambridge and Dublin, a student who receives an allowance for his college expenses (a study grant), originally in return for serving other (paying) students. SIZERS (15) SIZIER (15) SIZING (16) [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. SIZZLE (24) [noun] The sound of water hitting a hot surface | [noun] Zing, zip, or pizazz; excitement. | [verb] To make the sound of water hitting a hot surface. SKALDS (11) [noun] A Nordic poet of the Viking Age SKATED (11) [verb] To move along a surface (ice or ground) using skates. | [verb] To skateboard | [verb] To use the skating technique. SKATER (10) [noun] A person who skates. | [noun] A member of skateboarding subculture, characterized by dingy and baggy clothes, and often wallet chains. | [noun] A player who is not a goaltender. SKATES (10) [noun] A light boot, fitted with a blade, used for ice skating. | [noun] A boot having small wheels or casters attached to its sole; used for roller skating | [noun] A runner or blade, usually of steel, with a frame shaped to fit the sole of a shoe, made to be fastened under the foot, and used for gliding on ice. SKATOL (10) SKEANE (10) SKEANS (10) [noun] A double-edged, leaf-shaped, typically bronze dagger formerly used in Ireland and Scotland. | [noun] A quantity of yarn, thread, or the like, put up together, after it is taken from the reel. A skein of cotton yarn is formed by eighty turns of the thread around a fifty-four inch reel. | [noun] A web, a weave, a tangle. SKEENS (10) SKEETS (10) SKEIGH (14) SKEINS (10) [noun] A quantity of yarn, thread, or the like, put up together, after it is taken from the reel. A skein of cotton yarn is formed by eighty turns of the thread around a fifty-four inch reel. | [noun] A web, a weave, a tangle. | [noun] The membrane of a fish ovary. SKELMS (12) SKELPS (12) [verb] To beat or slap. | [verb] To move briskly along. | [verb] To form (a plate or bar of metal, etc.) into a skelp. SKENES (10) SKERRY (13) [noun] A small rocky island which may be covered by the sea at high tide or during storms. SKETCH (15) [noun] A rapidly executed freehand drawing that is not intended as a finished work, often consisting of a multitude of overlapping lines. | [noun] A rough design, plan, or draft, as a rough draft of a book. | [noun] A brief description of a person or account of an incident; a general presentation or outline. 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. SKEWER (13) [noun] A long pin, normally made of metal or wood, used to secure food during cooking. | [noun] Food served on a skewer | [noun] A scenario in which a piece attacks a more valuable piece which, if it moves aside, reveals a less valuable piece. Compare pin.W | [adjective] Neither parallel nor at right angles to a certain line; askew. SKIBOB (14) SKIDDY (15) SKIDOO (11) [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. | [noun] A snowmobile. SKIERS (10) [noun] One who skis. | [noun] A ball hit high in the air, often leading to a catch. SKIFFS (16) [noun] Term used in tea gardens and denotes the act of cutting/pruning the bushes as per the specific norms. Various types of skiff are used viz Light Skiff (LS), Medium Skiff (MS), Deep Skiff (DS) and Level Of Skiff (LOS). | [noun] A small flat-bottomed open boat with a pointed bow and square stern. | [noun] Any of various types of boats small enough for sailing or rowing by one person. SKIING (11) [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) | [noun] A group of sports utilizing skis as primary equipment. SKILLS (10) [verb] To set apart; separate. | [verb] To discern; have knowledge or understanding; to know how (to). | [verb] To know; to understand. | [noun] Capacity to do something well; technique, ability. Skills are usually acquired or learned, as opposed to abilities, which are often thought of as innate. SKIMOS (12) SKIMPS (14) [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. SKIMPY (17) [noun] (Western Australia) A barmaid who wears little clothing. | [adjective] Small or inadequate; not generous, or of a garment, very small, light, or revealing. SKINKS (14) [noun] A shin of beef. | [noun] A soup or pottage made from a boiled shin of beef. | [noun] (by extension) Usually preceded by a descriptive word: a soup or pottage made using other ingredients. SKINNY (13) [noun] The details or facts; especially, those obtained by gossip or rumor. | [noun] A state of nakedness; nudity. | [noun] A low-fat serving of coffee. SKIRLS (10) [noun] A shrill sound, as of bagpipes. | [verb] To make a shrill sound, as of bagpipes. SKIRRS (10) [verb] To leave hastily; to flee, especially with a whirring sound | [verb] To make a whirring sound. | [verb] To search about in, scour SKIRTS (10) [noun] An article of clothing, usually worn by women and girls, that hangs from the waist and covers the lower part of the body. | [noun] The part of a dress or robe, etc., that hangs below the waist. | [noun] A loose edging to any part of a dress. SKITED (11) [verb] To boast. | [verb] To skim or slide along a surface. | [verb] To slip, such as on ice. SKITES (10) [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. SKIVER (13) SKIVES (13) [noun] Something very easy, where one can slack off without penalty. | [noun] An act of avoiding lessons or work. | [verb] To avoid one's lessons or work (chiefly at school or university); shirk. SKIVVY (19) [noun] A female domestic servant, especially one employed for menial work. | [noun] (Vietnam War) A prostitute. | [noun] A close-fitting, long-sleeved T-shirt with a rolled collar. SKLENT (10) SKOALS (10) SKULKS (14) [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. SKULLS (10) [noun] (collective) A group of fish or a group of marine mammals such as porpoises, dolphins, or whales. | [noun] A multitude. | [noun] The main bones of the head considered as a unit; including the cranium, facial bones, and mandible. SKUNKS (14) [noun] Any of various small mammals, of the family Mephitidae, native to North and Central America, having a glossy black with a white coat and two musk glands at the base of the tail for emitting a noxious smell as a defensive measure. | [noun] A despicable person. | [noun] A walkover victory in sports or board games, as when the opposing side is unable to score. Compare shutout. SKYBOX (22) [noun] A seating area for VIPs in a stadium. | [noun] A cube with textures on its inner faces, used to simulate the sky or similar backdrop around a three-dimensional playfield. SKYCAP (17) [noun] A porter at an airport. SKYING (14) [verb] To hit, kick or throw (a ball) extremely high. | [verb] To clear (a hurdle, high jump bar, etc.) by a large margin. | [verb] To hang (a picture on exhibition) near the top of a wall, where it cannot be well seen. SKYLIT (13) [adjective] Receiving all or most light from the sky | [adjective] Furnished with one or more skylights. SKYMAN (15) SKYMEN (15) SKYWAY (19) [noun] A walkway connecting buildings at a significant height above ground level. | [noun] An airplane route. | [noun] An elevated road. SLACKS (12) [noun] The part of anything that hangs loose, having no strain upon it. | [noun] A tidal marsh or shallow that periodically fills and drains. | [verb] To slacken. SLAGGY (11) 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. SLAKER (10) SLAKES (10) [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. SLALOM (8) [noun] The sport of skiing in a zigzag course through gates. (Often used attributively) | [noun] Any similar activity on other vehicles, including canoes and water skis. | [noun] A course used for the sport of slalom. SLANGS (7) [noun] Language outside of conventional usage and in the informal register. | [noun] Language that is unique to a particular profession or subject; jargon. | [noun] The specialized language of a social group, sometimes used to make what is said unintelligible to those not members of the group; cant. SLANGY (10) [adjective] Including or given to slang. SLANTS (6) [noun] A slope; an incline, inclination. | [noun] A sloped surface or line. | [noun] A run: a heading driven diagonally between the dip and strike of a coal seam. SLANTY (9) SLATCH (11) SLATED (7) [verb] To cover with slate. | [verb] To criticise harshly. | [verb] To schedule. SLATER (6) [noun] One who lays slates, or whose occupation is to slate buildings. | [noun] Any terrestrial isopod crustacean of the genus Porcellio and allied genera; a woodlouse. | [noun] A harsh critic; one who slates or denigrates something. SLATES (6) [noun] A fine-grained homogeneous sedimentary rock composed of clay or volcanic ash which has been metamorphosed so that it cleaves easily into thin layers. | [noun] The bluish-grey colour of most slate. | [noun] A chalkboard, sheet of slate for writing on with chalk or with a thin rod of slate (a slate pencil) formerly commonly used by both students and teachers in schools SLATEY (9) 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. SLAVER (9) [noun] Saliva running from the mouth; drool. | [verb] To drool saliva from the mouth; to slobber. | [verb] To fawn. | [noun] A person engaged in the slave trade. SLAVES (9) [noun] A person who is held in servitude as the property of another person, and whose labor (and often also whose body and life) is subject to the owner's volition and control. | [noun] A drudge; one who labors or is obliged (e.g. by prior contract) to labor like a slave with limited rights, e.g. an indentured servant. | [noun] An abject person. SLAVEY (12) [noun] A male servant. | [noun] A maid, maidservant. SLAYED (10) [verb] To kill, murder. | [verb] To eradicate or stamp out. | [verb] (by extension) To defeat, overcome (in a competition or contest). SLAYER (9) [noun] A killer; a murderer; someone who slays SLEAVE (9) SLEAZE (15) [noun] Low moral standards. | [noun] A person of low moral standards. | [noun] A man who is sexually aggressive or forward with women to the point of causing disgust. SLEAZO (15) [noun] A sleazy person. SLEAZY (18) [adjective] Marked by low quality; inferior; inadequate. | [adjective] Raunchy or perverted in nature; tastelessly sexual | [adjective] Untrustworthy SLEDGE (8) [noun] A heavy, long handled maul or hammer used to drive stakes, wedges, etc. | [verb] To hit with a sledgehammer. | [noun] A low sled drawn by animals, typically on snow, ice or grass. | [verb] To verbally insult or abuse an opponent in order to distract them (considered unsportsmanlike). SLEEKS (10) [verb] To make smooth or glossy; to polish or cause to be attractive. SLEEKY (13) SLEEPS (8) [verb] To rest in a state of reduced consciousness. | [verb] (of a spinning top or yo-yo) To spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. | [verb] To cause (a spinning top or yo-yo) to spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. SLEEPY (11) [noun] The gum that builds up in the eye; sleep, gound. | [adjective] Tired; feeling the need for sleep. | [adjective] Suggesting tiredness. SLEETS (6) [verb] (of the weather) To be in a state in which sleet is falling. SLEETY (9) SLEEVE (9) [noun] The part of a garment that covers the arm. | [noun] A (usually tubular) covering or lining to protect a piece of machinery etc. | [noun] A protective jacket or case, especially for a record, containing art and information about the contents; also the analogous leaflet found in a packaged CD. SLEIGH (10) [noun] A vehicle, generally pulled by an animal, which moves over snow or ice on runners, used for transporting persons or goods. (contrast "sled", which is smaller) | [verb] To ride or drive a sleigh. | [adjective] Sly. SLEUTH (9) [noun] A detective. | [noun] A sleuth-hound; a bloodhound. | [noun] An animal’s trail or track. | [noun] Slowness; laziness, sloth. 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. SLICER (8) SLICES (8) [noun] That which is thin and broad. | [noun] A thin, broad piece cut off. | [noun] An amount of anything. SLICKS (12) [noun] A covering of liquid, particularly oil. | [noun] Someone who is clever and untrustworthy. | [noun] A tool used to make something smooth or even. SLIDER (7) [noun] An item of play equipment that children can climb up and then slide down again. | [noun] A surface of ice, snow, butter, etc. on which someone can slide for amusement or as a practical joke. | [noun] The falling of large amounts of rubble, earth and stones down the slope of a hill or mountain; avalanche. SLIDES (7) [noun] An item of play equipment that children can climb up and then slide down again. | [noun] A surface of ice, snow, butter, etc. on which someone can slide for amusement or as a practical joke. | [noun] The falling of large amounts of rubble, earth and stones down the slope of a hill or mountain; avalanche. SLIEST (6) SLIGHT (10) [noun] The act of slighting; a deliberate act of neglect or discourtesy. | [noun] Sleight. | [verb] To treat as unimportant or not worthy of attention; to make light of. SLIMED (9) [verb] To coat with slime. | [verb] To besmirch or disparage. | [verb] To carve (fish), removing the offal. SLIMES (8) [noun] Soft, moist earth or clay, having an adhesive quality; viscous mud; any substance of a dirty nature, that is moist, soft, and adhesive; bitumen; mud containing metallic ore, obtained in the preparatory dressing. | [noun] Any mucilaginous substance; or a mucus-like substance which exudes from the bodies of certain animals, such as snails or slugs. | [noun] A sneaky, unethical person; a slimeball. SLIMLY (11) SLIMSY (11) SLINGS (7) [noun] An instrument for throwing stones or other missiles, consisting of a short strap with two strings fastened to its ends, or with a string fastened to one end and a light stick to the other. | [noun] A kind of hanging bandage put around the neck, in which a wounded arm or hand is supported. | [noun] A loop of cloth, worn around the neck, for supporting a baby or other such load. SLINKS (10) [verb] To sneak about furtively. | [verb] To give birth to an animal prematurely. SLINKY (13) [noun] A three-dimensional curve — a spiral wound around a helix. | [adjective] Furtive, stealthy or catlike. | [adjective] Thin; lank; lean. SLIPED (9) SLIPES (8) SLIPPY (13) [adjective] (slightly informal) Slippery. | [adjective] Spry, nimble. SLIPUP (10) [noun] A (small) error or mistake; a (minor) misstep. SLIVER (9) [noun] A long piece cut or rent off; a sharp, slender fragment; a splinter. | [noun] A strand, or slender roll, of cotton or other fiber in a loose, untwisted state, produced by a carding machine and ready for the roving or slubbing which precedes spinning. | [noun] Bait made of pieces of small fish. Compare kibblings. SLOBBY (13) [adjective] Slobbish. | [adjective] Slobbery. | [adjective] Slushy, like slob ice. SLOGAN (7) [noun] A catch phrase associated with the product or service being advertised. | [noun] A distinctive phrase of a person or group of people. | [noun] A battle cry among the ancient highlanders of Scotland. SLOIDS (7) SLOJDS (14) SLOOPS (8) [noun] A single-masted sailboat with only one headsail. | [noun] A sailing warship, smaller than a frigate, with its guns all on one deck. | [noun] A sloop-of-war, smaller than a frigate, larger than a corvette. 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. SLOPER (8) SLOPES (8) [noun] An area of ground that tends evenly upward or downward. | [noun] The degree to which a surface tends upward or downward. | [noun] The ratio of the vertical and horizontal distances between two points on a line; zero if the line is horizontal, undefined if it is vertical. SLOPPY (13) [adjective] Very wet; covered in or composed of slop. | [adjective] Messy; not neat, elegant, or careful. | [adjective] Imprecise or loose. SLOSHY (12) [adjective] That sloshes or splashes SLOTHS (9) [noun] Laziness; slowness in the mindset; disinclination to action or labour. | [noun] A herbivorous, arboreal South American mammal of the families Megalonychidae and Bradypodidae, noted for its slowness and inactivity. | [noun] A collective term for a group of bears. SLOUCH (11) [noun] A hanging down of the head; a drooping posture; a limp appearance | [noun] Any depression or hanging down, as of a hat brim. | [noun] Someone who is slow to act. SLOUGH (10) [noun] The skin shed by a snake or other reptile. | [noun] Dead skin on a sore or ulcer. | [verb] To shed (skin). | [noun] A muddy or marshy area. SLOVEN (9) [noun] A habitually dirty or untidy man or boy; the male equivalent of slattern, or slut. | [noun] A low, base, lewd person. | [noun] An immoral woman. 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. SLOWER (9) [adjective] Taking a long time to move or go a short distance, or to perform an action; not quick in motion; proceeding at a low speed. | [adjective] Not happening in a short time; spread over a comparatively long time. | [adjective] Of reduced intellectual capacity; not quick to comprehend. | [noun] That which slows. SLOWLY (12) [adverb] (manner) At a slow pace. SLOYDS (10) SLUDGE (8) [noun] Solids separated from suspension in a liquid. | [noun] A residual semi-solid material left from industrial, water treatment, or wastewater treatment processes. | [noun] A sediment of accumulated minerals in a steam boiler. SLUDGY (11) SLUFFS (12) SLUICE (8) [noun] An artificial passage for water, fitted with a valve or gate, for example in a canal lock or a mill stream, for stopping or regulating the flow. | [noun] A water gate or floodgate. | [noun] Hence, an opening or channel through which anything flows; a source of supply. SLUICY (11) SLUING (7) [verb] To rotate something on an axis. | [verb] To turn something sharply. | [verb] To rotate on an axis; to pivot. SLUMMY (13) [adjective] Like a slum; run-down, dirty, decrepit. SLUMPS (10) [noun] A heavy or helpless collapse; a slouching or drooping posture; a period of poor activity or performance, especially an extended period. | [noun] A measure of the fluidity of freshly mixed concrete, based on how much the concrete formed in a standard slump cone sags when the cone is removed. | [noun] A boggy place. SLURBS (8) SLURPS (8) [noun] A loud sucking noise made in eating or drinking | [noun] A mouthful of liquid | [verb] To eat or drink noisily. SLURRY (9) [noun] Any flowable suspension of small particles in liquid. | [noun] Liquid waste from some types of mining, such as mountain top removal mining, usually very toxic and stored nearby in large dams. | [noun] A mixture of animal waste, other organic material and sometimes water, stored in a slurry pit and used as fertilizer; also used in combination, as pig slurry, etc. | [adjective] Slurred, tending to slur. SLUSHY (12) [noun] A flavoured frozen drink made with ice crystals. | [noun] A kitchen helper. | [adjective] Covered in slush. SLUTTY (9) [adjective] Of or resembling a slut. SLYEST (9) [adjective] Artfully cunning; secretly mischievous; wily. | [adjective] (having a positive sense) Dexterous in performing an action, so as to escape notice | [adjective] Done with, and marked by, artful and dexterous secrecy; subtle SLYPES (11) [noun] A covered passageway, especially one connecting the transept of a cathedral or monastery to the chapter house. SMACKS (14) [noun] A distinct flavor, especially if slight. | [noun] A slight trace of something; a smattering. | [noun] Heroin. SMALLS (8) [noun] Underwear. | [noun] Small goods. | [noun] (Oxford University slang) The preliminary examination for a degree. | [noun] Any part of something that is smaller or slimmer than the rest, now usually with anatomical reference to the back. SMALTI (8) SMALTO (8) SMALTS (8) SMARMS (10) [noun] Smarmy language or behavior. | [noun] A style of fan fiction in which characters are warm and caring toward each other but without sexual overtones. | [verb] To fawn, to be unctuous. SMARMY (13) [adjective] Falsely earnest, smug, or ingratiating. | [adjective] Unctuous, greasy, as hair from pomade SMARTS (8) [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. SMARTY (11) [noun] An obnoxiously clever or quick-witted person. SMAZES (17) SMEARS (8) [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. SMEARY (11) SMEEKS (12) SMEGMA (11) [noun] A whitish sebaceous secretion that collects between the glans penis and foreskin or in the vulva. SMELLS (8) [noun] A sensation, pleasant or unpleasant, detected by inhaling air (or, the case of water-breathing animals, water) carrying airborne molecules of a substance. | [noun] The sense that detects odours. | [noun] A conclusion or intuition that a situation is wrong, more complex than it seems, or otherwise inappropriate. SMELLY (11) [adjective] Having a bad smell. | [adjective] Having a quality that arouses suspicion. | [adjective] (in extreme programming) Having signs that suggest a design problem; having a code smell. | [noun] A Short Magazine Lee Enfield rifle or one of its derivatives. SMELTS (8) [noun] Any small anadromous fish of the family Osmeridae, found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and in lakes in North America and northern part of Europe. | [noun] A fool; a simpleton. | [noun] Production of metal, especially iron, from ore in a process that involves melting and chemical reduction of metal compounds into purified metal. SMERKS (12) SMIDGE (10) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMILAX (15) [noun] Any member of the Smilax genus of greenbriers. 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. SMILER (8) SMILES (8) [noun] A facial expression comprised by flexing the muscles of both ends of one's mouth, often showing the front teeth, without vocalisation, and in humans is a common involuntary or voluntary expression of happiness, pleasure, amusement or anxiety. | [noun] Favour; propitious regard. | [noun] A drink bought by one person for another. SMILEY (11) [noun] A simplified representation of a smiling face. | [noun] A sequence of keyboard characters used to represent a happy mood, especially :) or :-) or other depiction of smiling. | [noun] An improvised street weapon consisting of a length of chain with padlocks and other heavy objects affixed to one end. SMIRCH (13) [noun] Dirt, or a stain. | [noun] A stain on somebody's reputation. | [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [noun] A chirp of radiation power from an astronomical body that has a smeared appearance on its plot in the time-frequency plane (usually associated with massive bodies orbiting supermassive black holes) SMIRKS (12) [noun] An uneven, often crooked smile that is insolent, self-satisfied or scornful | [noun] A forced or affected smile; a simper | [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. SMIRKY (15) [adjective] Smirking, or as if smirking | [adjective] Smart; spruce. SMITER (8) SMITES (8) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMITHS (11) [noun] A craftsperson who works metal into desired forms using a hammer and other tools, sometimes heating the metal to make it more workable, especially a blacksmith. | [noun] (by extension) One who makes anything; wright. | [noun] An artist. SMITHY (14) [noun] The location where a smith (particularly a blacksmith) works, a forge. | [verb] To forge, especially by hand SMOCKS (14) [noun] A type of undergarment worn by women; a shift or slip. | [noun] A blouse; a smock frock. | [noun] A loose garment worn as protection by a painter, etc. SMOGGY (13) 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. SMOKER (12) [noun] A person who smokes tobacco habitually. | [noun] A smoking car on a train. | [noun] An informal social gathering for men only, at which smoking tobacco is allowed. SMOKES (12) [noun] The visible vapor/vapour, gases, and fine particles given off by burning or smoldering material. | [noun] A cigarette. | [noun] Anything to smoke (e.g. cigarettes, marijuana, etc.) SMOKEY (15) [noun] A state trooper. | [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. SMOLTS (8) [noun] A young salmon two or three years old, when it has acquired its silvery color. SMOOCH (13) [noun] A kiss. | [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOTH (11) [noun] Something that is smooth, or that goes smoothly and easily. | [noun] A smoothing action. | [noun] A domestic animal having a smooth coat. SMUDGE (10) [noun] A blemish or smear, especially a dark or sooty one. | [noun] Dense smoke, such as that used for fumigation. | [noun] A heap of damp combustibles partially ignited and burning slowly, placed on the windward side of a house, tent, etc. to keep off mosquitoes or other insects. | [verb] To obscure by blurring; to smear. SMUDGY (13) [adjective] Marked with smudges. | [adjective] Like a thick smoke (such as is emitted by a smudge pot). SMUGLY (12) [adverb] In a self-satisfied manner. SMUTCH (13) SMUTTY (11) [verb] To make dirty; to soil. | [adjective] Soiled with smut; blackened, dirty. | [adjective] Obscene, indecent. SNACKS (12) [noun] A light meal. | [noun] An item of food eaten between meals. | [noun] A very sexy and attractive person. SNAFUS (9) [noun] A ridiculously chaotic situation. | [noun] A major glitch or breakdown. SNAGGY (11) [adjective] Covered in snags, or similar sharp projections. SNAILS (6) [noun] Any of very many animals (either hermaphroditic or nonhermaphroditic), of the class Gastropoda, having a coiled shell. | [noun] (by extension) A slow person; a sluggard. | [noun] A spiral cam, or a flat piece of metal of spirally curved outline, used for giving motion to, or changing the position of, another part, as the hammer tail of a striking clock. SNAKED (11) [verb] To follow or move in a winding route. | [verb] To steal slyly. | [verb] To clean using a plumbing snake. SNAKES (10) [noun] A legless reptile of the sub-order Serpentes with a long, thin body and a fork-shaped tongue. | [noun] A treacherous person. | [noun] Somebody who acts deceitfully for social gain. SNAKEY (13) [adjective] Resembling or relating to snakes. | [adjective] Windy; winding; twisty; sinuous, wavy. | [adjective] Sly; cunning; deceitful. SNAPPY (13) [adjective] Rapid and without delay. | [adjective] Irritable. | [adjective] Tidy; well-dressed; sharp. SNARED (7) [verb] To catch or hold, especially with a loop. | [verb] To ensnare. SNARER (6) SNARES (6) [noun] A trap (especially one made from a loop of wire, string, or leather). | [noun] A mental or psychological trap. | [noun] A loop of cord used in obstetric cases, to hold or to pull a fetus from the mother animal. SNARKS (10) [noun] A graph in which every node has three branches, and the edges cannot be coloured in fewer than four colours without two edges of the same colour meeting at a point. | [noun] A fluke or unrepeatable result or detection in an experiment. SNARKY (13) [adjective] Snide and sarcastic; usually out of irritation, often humorously. | [adjective] Irritable, irritated. SNARLS (6) [noun] A knot or complication of hair, thread, or the like, difficult to disentangle. | [noun] An intricate complication; a problematic difficulty; a knotty or tangled situation. | [noun] A slow-moving traffic jam. SNARLY (9) [adjective] Given to snarling or growling. | [adjective] Full of snarls. SNATCH (11) [noun] A quick grab or catch. | [noun] A competitive weightlifting event in which a barbell is lifted from the platform to locked arms overhead in a smooth continuous movement. | [noun] A piece of some sound, usually music or conversation. SNATHE (9) SNATHS (9) SNAWED (10) SNAZZY (27) [adjective] Elegant in manner of dress; stylish, modern or appealing in appearance; flashy. | [adjective] Excellent; clever, ingenious, or adept in behavior, operation, or execution. SNEAKS (10) [noun] One who sneaks; one who moves stealthily to acquire an item or information. | [noun] A cheat; a con artist. | [noun] An informer; a tell-tale. SNEAKY (13) [noun] Any device used for covert surveillance. | [adjective] Difficult to catch due to constantly outwitting the adversaries | [adjective] Dishonest; deceitful. SNEAPS (8) SNECKS (12) [noun] A latch or catch. | [noun] The nose. | [noun] A cut. SNEERS (6) [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. SNEESH (9) SNEEZE (15) [noun] An act of sneezing. | [verb] To expel air as a reflex induced by an irritation in the nose. | [verb] To expel air as if the nose were irritated. SNEEZY (18) SNELLS (6) [noun] A short line of horsehair, gut, monofilament, etc., by which a fishhook or lure is attached to a longer (and usually heavier) line. SNICKS (12) [noun] A small deflection of the ball off the side of the bat; often carries to the wicketkeeper for a catch | [noun] A small cut or mark. | [noun] A knot or irregularity in yarn. SNIDER (7) SNIFFS (12) [noun] An instance of sniffing. | [noun] A quantity of something that is inhaled through the nose | [noun] A brief perception, or tiny amount. SNIFFY (15) [adjective] Disdainful; haughty. | [adjective] Characterised by sniffing. SNIPED (9) [verb] To hunt snipe. | [verb] To shoot at individuals from a concealed place. | [verb] (by extension) To shoot with a sniper rifle. SNIPER (8) [noun] A person using long-range small arms for precise attacks from a concealed position. | [noun] Any attacker using a non-contact weapon against a specific target from a concealed position. | [noun] One who shoots from a concealed position. SNIPES (8) [noun] Any of various limicoline game birds of the genera Gallinago, Lymnocryptes and Coenocorypha in the family Scolopacidae, having a long, slender, nearly straight beak. | [noun] A fool; a blockhead. | [noun] A shot fired from a concealed place. SNIPPY (13) [adjective] Fragmentary; snipped. | [adjective] Irritable; impatient; short-tempered. | [adjective] Stingy. SNITCH (11) [noun] A thief. | [noun] An informer, usually one who betrays his group. | [noun] A nose. SNIVEL (9) [noun] The act of snivelling. | [noun] Nasal mucus; snot. | [verb] To breathe heavily through the nose while it is congested with nasal mucus. SNOBBY (13) [adjective] Characteristic of a snob. SNOODS (7) [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. SNOOKS (10) [noun] A freshwater and marine fish of the family Centropomidae in the order Perciformes. | [noun] Any of various other ray-finned fishes in several families. | [noun] (as a gesture) A disrespectful gesture, performed by placing the tip of a thumb on one's nose with the fingers spread, and typically while wiggling the fingers back and forth. SNOOLS (6) [noun] An abject, cowardly person who submits tamely to others. SNOOPS (8) [noun] The act of snooping | [noun] One who snoops | [noun] A private detective SNOOPY (11) SNOOTS (6) [noun] An elitist individual; one who looks down upon lower social classes. | [noun] A language pedant or snob; one who practices linguistic elitism. | [noun] A nose or snout, especially in derogatory use. SNOOTY (9) [adjective] Pompous; snobbish; inclined to turn up one's nose | [adjective] Elite; exclusive SNOOZE (15) [noun] A brief period of sleep; a nap. | [noun] The snooze button on an alarm clock. | [noun] Something boring. SNOOZY (18) SNORED (7) [verb] To breathe during sleep with harsh, snorting noises caused by vibration of the soft palate. SNORER (6) SNORES (6) [noun] The act of snoring, and the noise produced. | [noun] An extremely boring person or event. | [verb] To breathe during sleep with harsh, snorting noises caused by vibration of the soft palate. SNORTS (6) [noun] The sound made by exhaling or inhaling roughly through the nose. | [noun] A dose of a drug to be snorted. Here, "drug" includes snuff (i.e., pulverized tobacco). | [noun] A consumed portion of alcoholic drink. SNOTTY (9) [noun] The lion's mane jellyfish, which secretes a mucus that can foul fishing nets. | [adjective] Running or dirtied with snot. | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of snot, especially in texture. SNOUTS (6) [noun] The long, projecting nose, mouth, and jaw of a beast, as of pigs. | [noun] The front of the prow of a ship or boat. | [noun] A person's nose. SNOUTY (9) 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. SNUBBY (13) SNUFFS (12) [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. SNUFFY (15) [adjective] Soiled with snuff. | [adjective] Sulky; angry; vexed. SNUGLY (10) [adverb] Tightly, with limited space to move, in a snug manner. 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. SOAKER (10) 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). SOAPER (8) 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. SOARER (6) SOAVES (9) SOBBED (11) [verb] To weep with convulsive gasps. | [verb] To say (something) while sobbing. | [verb] To soak. SOBBER (10) SOBEIT (8) SOBERS (8) [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 SOBFUL (11) SOCAGE (9) [noun] In the Middle Ages (and chiefly but not exclusively medieval England), a legal system whereby a tenant would pay a rent or do some agricultural work for the landlord. SOCCER (10) [noun] Association football | [verb] To kick the football directly off the ground, without using one's hands. SOCIAL (8) [noun] A festive gathering to foster introductions. | [noun] A dance held to raise money for a couple to be married. | [noun] A dinner dance event, usually held annually by a company or sporting club. SOCKED (13) [verb] To hit or strike violently; to deliver a blow to. | [verb] To throw. SOCKET (12) [noun] An opening into which a plug or other connecting part is designed to fit (e.g. a light bulb socket). | [noun] A hollow into a bone which a part fits, such as an eye, or another bone, in the case of a joint. | [noun] One endpoint of a two-way communication link, used for interprocess communication across a network. SOCLES (8) [noun] A low plinth or pedestal used to display a statue or other artwork. | [noun] A plain face or plinth at the foot of a wall. | [noun] The sum of the minimal normal submodules of a given R-module of a given ring R. SOCMAN (10) SOCMEN (10) SODDED (9) [verb] To cover with sod. | [verb] Bugger; sodomize. | [verb] Damn, curse, confound. SODDEN (8) [verb] To drench, soak or saturate. | [verb] To become soaked. | [adjective] Soaked or drenched with liquid; soggy, saturated. SODIUM (9) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Na) with an atomic number of 11 and atomic weight of 22.98977. It is a soft, waxy, silvery, reactive alkali metal that is never found unbound in nature. SODOMS (9) SODOMY (12) [noun] Any of several forms of sexual intercourse held to be unnatural, particularly bestiality or historically homosexuality, but also (sometimes) anal or oral sex. | [noun] (in particular) Anal sex. SOEVER (9) [adverb] In any fashion, of any kind; used for emphasis after words such as how, what, which etc. SOFARS (9) SOFFIT (12) [noun] The visible underside of an arch, balcony, beam, cornice, staircase, vault or any other architectural element. | [noun] (pipe technology) The top point of the inside open section of a pipe or box conduit. SOFTAS (9) [noun] A religious student, especially in Turkey | [noun] (by extension) A fanatic adherent, blind follower SOFTEN (9) [verb] To make something soft or softer. | [verb] To undermine the morale of someone (often soften up). | [verb] To make less harsh SOFTER (9) [adjective] Easily giving way under pressure. | [adjective] (of cloth or similar material) Smooth and flexible; not rough, rugged, or harsh. | [adjective] (of a sound) Quiet. SOFTIE (9) [noun] A weak or sentimental person. | [noun] Somebody who finds it difficult to scold or punish. | [noun] A software expert who is ignorant of the workings of hardware. SOFTLY (12) [adverb] In a soft manner; gently. | [adverb] Not loudly; nearly inaudible. SOGGED (9) SOIGNE (7) [adjective] Fashionable and elegant, well-groomed. 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. SOIREE (6) [noun] A formal evening party. SOKOLS (10) SOLACE (8) [noun] Comfort or consolation in a time of loneliness or distress. | [noun] A source of comfort or consolation. | [verb] To give solace to; comfort; cheer; console. SOLAND (7) SOLANO (6) SOLANS (6) [noun] Solan goose SOLATE (6) SOLDAN (7) SOLDER (7) [noun] Any of various easily-melted alloys, commonly of tin and lead, that are used to mend, coat, or join metal objects, usually small. | [noun] Figuratively, circumstances or emotions that strongly bond things or persons together in analogy to solder that joins metals. | [verb] To join items together, or to coat them with solder SOLELY (9) [adverb] Alone; exclusively. SOLEMN (8) [adjective] Deeply serious and somber. | [adjective] Somberly impressive. | [adjective] Performed with great ceremony. SOLEUS (6) [noun] A broad, flat muscle that extends behind the gastrocnemius along the back of the calf. SOLGEL (7) SOLIDI (7) [noun] A slashing action or motion, particularly: | [noun] A mark made by a slashing motion, particularly: | [noun] Something resembling such a mark, particularly: SOLIDS (7) [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. SOLING (7) [verb] To pull by the ears; to pull about; haul; lug. | [verb] To put a sole on (a shoe or boot) SOLION (6) 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. SOLONS (6) SOLUMS (8) SOLUTE (6) [noun] Any substance that is dissolved in a liquid solvent to create a solution | [verb] To dissolve. | [verb] To absolve. 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. SOLVER (9) SOLVES (9) [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. SOMATA (8) SOMBER (10) [verb] To make sombre or dark; to make shady. | [adjective] Dark; gloomy; shadowy, dimly lit. | [adjective] Dull or dark in colour or brightness. SOMBRE (10) [noun] Gloom; obscurity; duskiness. | [verb] To make sombre or dark; to make shady. | [adjective] Dark; gloomy; shadowy, dimly lit. SOMITE (8) [noun] One of the paired masses of mesoderm distributed along the sides of the neural tube that will eventually become dermis, skeletal muscle, or vertebrae. | [noun] A metamere, one of a series of segments, arranged longitudinally, of which some animals are composed. SONANT (6) SONARS (6) [noun] Echolocation | [noun] A device that uses hydrophones (in the same manner as radar) to locate objects underwater. SONATA (6) [noun] A musical composition for one or a few instruments, one of which is frequently a piano, in three or four movements that vary in key and tempo. SONDER (7) SONDES (7) [noun] Probe; sound. | [noun] (physical sciences) Any of various devices for testing physical conditions, often for remote or underwater locations. SONICS (8) [noun] The science and technology of sound. SONNET (6) [noun] A fixed verse form of Italian origin consisting of fourteen lines that are typically five-foot iambics and rhyme according to one of a few prescribed schemes. | [verb] To compose sonnets. | [verb] To celebrate in sonnets; to write a sonnet about. SONSIE (6) [adjective] Lucky; fortunate; thriving; plump SOONER (6) [adjective] Short in length of time from the present. | [adjective] Early | [adverb] Immediately, instantly. SOOTED (7) [adjective] Stained or marked with soot SOOTHE (9) [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. SOOTHS (9) SOPITE (8) SOPORS (8) SOPPED (11) [verb] To steep or dip in any liquid. | [verb] To soak in, or be soaked; to percolate. SORBED (9) SORBET (8) [noun] Frozen fruit juice, sometimes mixed with egg whites, used as dessert or between courses of a meal. SORBIC (10) SORDID (8) [adjective] Distasteful, ignoble, vile, or contemptible. | [adjective] Dirty or squalid. | [adjective] Morally degrading. SORDOR (7) [noun] Sordidness SORELS (6) [noun] A young buck (deer) in the third year. | [noun] A yellowish or reddish brown color; sorrel. | [noun] Any of various plants with acidic leaves, especially SORELY (9) [adverb] In a sore or desperate manner. SOREST (6) [adjective] Causing pain or discomfort; painfully sensitive. | [adjective] Sensitive; tender; easily pained, grieved, or vexed; very susceptible of irritation. | [adjective] Dire; distressing. SORGHO (10) SORGOS (7) SORING (7) SORNED (7) SORNER (6) SORREL (6) [noun] Any of various plants with acidic leaves, especially | [noun] A drink, consumed especially in the Caribbean around Christmas, made from the flowers of Hibiscus sabdariffa: hibiscus tea. | [noun] A brown colour, with a tint of red. SORROW (9) [noun] Unhappiness, woe | [noun] (usually in plural) An instance or cause of unhappiness. | [verb] To feel or express grief. 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. SORTER (6) SORTIE (6) [noun] An attack made by troops from a besieged position. | [noun] An operational flight carried out by a single military aircraft. | [noun] An attacking move SOTOLS (6) SOTTED (7) [adjective] Stupefied, especially with liquor. SOUARI (6) SOUCAR (8) SOUDAN (7) SOUGHS (10) [verb] To make a soft rustling or murmuring sound. | [verb] To drain. SOUGHT (10) [verb] To try to find; to look for; to search for. | [verb] To ask for; to solicit; to beseech. | [verb] To try to acquire or gain; to strive after; to aim at. SOULED (7) SOUNDS (7) [noun] A sensation perceived by the ear caused by the vibration of air or some other medium. | [noun] A vibration capable of causing such sensations. | [noun] A distinctive style and sonority of a particular musician, orchestra etc 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 SOURCE (8) [noun] The person, place or thing from which something (information, goods, etc.) comes or is acquired. | [noun] Spring; fountainhead; wellhead; any collection of water on or under the surface of the ground in which a stream originates. | [noun] A reporter's informant. SOURED (7) [verb] To make sour. | [verb] To become sour. | [verb] To spoil or mar; to make disenchanted. SOURER (6) [adjective] Having an acidic, sharp or tangy taste. | [adjective] Made rancid by fermentation, etc. | [adjective] Tasting or smelling rancid. SOURLY (9) SOUSED (7) [verb] To immerse in liquid; to steep or drench. | [verb] To steep in brine; to pickle. | [verb] To strike, beat. SOUSES (6) [verb] To immerse in liquid; to steep or drench. | [verb] To steep in brine; to pickle. | [verb] To strike, beat. SOUTER (6) [noun] A shoemaker or cobbler. SOUTHS (9) [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. SOVIET (9) [adjective] (history) Pertaining to the Soviet Union or its constituent republics. | [adjective] Supporting or representing the Soviet Union or Sovietism; Sovietist. | [noun] A workers' council, an institution first formed during the 1905 Russian Revolution and then instituted as the main form of communist government at all levels in the Soviet Union; by extension, a similar organization in early Chinese communism and elsewhere. SOVRAN (9) SOWANS (9) SOWARS (9) SOWCAR (11) SOWENS (9) SOWERS (9) SOWING (10) [verb] To scatter, disperse, or plant (seeds). | [verb] To spread abroad; to propagate. | [verb] To scatter over; to besprinkle. SOZINE (15) SOZINS (15) SPACED (11) [verb] To roam, walk, wander. | [verb] To set some distance apart. | [verb] To insert or utilise spaces in a written text. SPACER (10) SPACES (10) [noun] (heading) Of time. | [noun] (heading) Unlimited or generalized extent, physical or otherwise. | [noun] (heading) A bounded or specific extent, physical or otherwise. SPACEY (13) [adjective] Spaced-out | [adjective] Eccentric | [adjective] Having much space SPADED (10) [verb] To turn over soil with a spade to loosen the ground for planting. SPADER (9) SPADES (9) [noun] A garden tool with a handle and a flat blade for digging. Not to be confused with a shovel which is used for moving earth or other materials. | [noun] A playing card marked with the symbol ♠. | [noun] A black person. SPADIX (16) [noun] A fleshy spike (inflorescence) with reduced flowers, usually enclosed by a spathe, characteristic of aroids. | [noun] A male sexual organ of certain cephalopods and hydrozoans (especially the nautilus), used to transfer sperm. SPAHEE (11) SPAHIS (11) [noun] (history) An Ottoman (Turkish empire) cavalryman, especially as recruited under a land-based system. | [noun] (history) A soldier in a mainly Arab-recruited cavalry (originally horse, later light armored) regiment in French colonial service in (former/ in name still) Ottoman North African provinces SPAILS (8) SPAITS (8) SPALES (8) SPALLS (8) [noun] A splinter, fragment or chip, especially of stone. | [noun] The shoulder. SPANKS (12) [noun] An instance of spanking, separately or part of a multiple blows-beating; a smack, swat, or slap. | [noun] A slapping sound, as produced by spanking. | [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. 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. SPARER (8) [adjective] Scant; not abundant or plentiful. | [adjective] Sparing; frugal; parsimonious; not spending much money. | [adjective] Being more than what is necessary, or what must be used or reserved; not wanted, or not used; superfluous. SPARES (8) [noun] The act of sparing; moderation; restraint. | [noun] Parsimony; frugal use. | [noun] An opening in a petticoat or gown; a placket. SPARGE (9) [noun] The step or process in brewing beer which separates the mash into clear liquid wort and grain. | [verb] To sprinkle or spray. | [verb] To introduce bubbles into (a liquid). SPARID (9) [noun] Any of several perciform fishes of the family Sparidae SPARKS (12) [noun] A small particle of glowing matter, either molten or on fire. | [noun] A short or small burst of electrical discharge. | [noun] A small, shining body, or transient light; a sparkle. SPARKY (15) [noun] A radio operator. | [noun] An electrician. | [adjective] Lively and animated. SPARRY (11) [adjective] Abundant in spar (the mineral) | [adjective] Resembling spar (the mineral) SPARSE (8) [verb] To scatter; to disperse. | [adjective] Having widely spaced intervals. | [adjective] Not dense; meager; scanty SPASMS (10) [noun] A sudden, involuntary contraction of a muscle, a group of muscles, or a hollow organ. | [noun] A violent, excruciating seizure of pain. | [noun] A sudden and temporary burst of energy, activity, or emotion. SPATES (8) [noun] A river flood; an overflow or inundation. | [noun] (by extension) A sudden rush or increase. SPATHE (11) [noun] A large bract that envelops or subtends a whole inflorescence, typically a spadix. SPAVIE (11) SPAVIN (11) [noun] A disease of horses characterized by a bony swelling developed on the hock as the result of inflammation of the bones. SPAWNS (11) [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. SPAYED (12) [verb] To divine; foretell | [verb] To remove or destroy the ovaries (of an animal) so that it cannot become pregnant. SPEAKS (12) [noun] A low class bar, a speakeasy. | [noun] Language, jargon, or terminology used uniquely in a particular environment or group. | [noun] Speech, conversation. SPEANS (8) SPEARS (8) [noun] A long stick with a sharp tip used as a weapon for throwing or thrusting, or anything used to make a thrusting motion. | [noun] A soldier armed with such a weapon; a spearman. | [noun] A lance with barbed prongs, used by fishermen to retrieve fish. SPECIE (10) [noun] Type or kind, in various uses of the phrase in specie. | [noun] Money, especially in the form of coins made from precious metal, that has an intrinsic value; coinage. SPECKS (14) [noun] A tiny spot, especially of dirt etc. | [noun] A very small thing; a particle; a whit. | [noun] A small etheostomoid fish, Etheostoma stigmaeum, common in the eastern United States. SPEECH (13) [noun] The faculty of uttering articulate sounds or words; the ability to speak or to use vocalizations to communicate. | [noun] A session of speaking, especially a long oral message given publicly by one person. | [noun] A style of speaking. SPEEDO (9) [noun] A speedometer, particularly one in a race car or other automobile. | [noun] A tight-fitting swimsuit, especially commonly worn by competitive swimmers and divers. Usually implies a brief or bikini style swimsuit. SPEEDS (9) [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. SPEEDY (12) [verb] To process in a faster than normal, accelerated way | [verb] (Wiktionary and WMF jargon) to apply the speedy rule in an online community (often the deletion rule); speedy delete | [adjective] Rapid; swift SPEELS (8) SPEERS (8) SPEILS (8) SPEIRS (8) SPEISE (8) SPEISS (8) [noun] A mixed arsenide of iron (and cobalt, nickel, and copper) produced during the smelting of lead SPELLS (8) [noun] Words or a formula supposed to have magical powers. | [noun] A magical effect or influence induced by an incantation or formula. | [noun] Speech, discourse. SPELTS (8) SPELTZ (17) SPENCE (10) [noun] A buttery or pantry SPENDS (9) [noun] Amount of money spent (during a period); expenditure. | [noun] (in the plural) Expenditures; money or pocket money. | [noun] Discharged semen. SPENSE (8) SPERMS (10) [noun] The reproductive cell or gamete of the male; a spermatozoon. | [noun] Semen; the generative substance of male animals. | [noun] Sperm oil; whale oil from a sperm whale; spermaceti. 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 SPEWER (11) SPHENE (11) [noun] Titanite SPHERE (11) [noun] A regular three-dimensional object in which every cross-section is a circle; the figure described by the revolution of a circle about its diameter . | [noun] A spherical physical object; a globe or ball. | [noun] The apparent outer limit of space; the edge of the heavens, imagined as a hollow globe within which celestial bodies appear to be embedded. SPHERY (14) SPHINX (18) [noun] A creature with the head of a person and the body of an animal (commonly a lion). | [noun] A person who keeps his/her thoughts and intentions secret; an enigmatic person. | [noun] A mandrill, Mandrillus sphinx, formerly classified a baboon, and called sphinx baboon. SPICAE (10) SPICAS (10) [noun] A spike. | [noun] A spur. | [noun] A kind of bandage passing, by successive turns and crosses, from an extremity to the trunk; a spiral bandage with reversed turns. SPICED (11) [verb] To add spice or spices to; season. | [verb] To spice up. | [adjective] Having spice added, spicy. SPICER (10) SPICES (10) [noun] Aromatic or pungent plant matter (usually dried) used to season or flavour food. | [noun] Appeal, interest; an attribute that makes something appealing, interesting, or engaging. | [noun] A synthetic cannabinoid drug. SPICEY (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or containing spice. | [adjective] (of flavors) Provoking a burning sensation due to the presence of chilis or similar hot spices | [adjective] (of flavors or odors) Tangy, zesty, or pungent. SPICKS (14) SPIDER (9) [noun] Any of various eight-legged, predatory arthropods, of the order Araneae, most of which spin webs to catch prey. | [noun] A program which follows links on the World Wide Web in order to gather information. | [noun] A float (drink) made by mixing ice-cream and a soda or fizzy drink (such as lemonade). SPIELS (8) [noun] A lengthy and extravagant speech or argument usually intended to persuade. | [noun] An early form of rap music. | [verb] To talk at length. SPIERS (8) SPIFFS (14) [noun] Attractiveness or charm in dress, appearance, or manner. | [noun] A well-dressed man. | [noun] A bonus or other remuneration, given for reaching a sales goal or promoting the goods of a particular manufacturer. Originally from textile retailing, a percentage given for selling off surplus or out-of-fashion stock, of which the sales person could offer part as a discount to a customer. SPIFFY (17) [noun] A dapper person. | [adjective] Dapper; fine or neat, especially in style of clothing or other appearance. SPIGOT (9) [noun] A pin or peg used to stop the vent in a cask. | [noun] The plug of a faucet or cock. | [noun] A faucet. 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. SPIKER (12) SPIKES (12) [noun] In a violin-family instrument, the carved wooden plug which sits in the bottom block of the instrument. | [noun] The spike of a cello or double bass that makes contact with the floor and supports the weight of the instrument. | [noun] A sort of very large nail. SPIKEY (15) [adjective] Having spikes, spiny. | [adjective] Hostile; standoffish | [adjective] Of hair, erect, resembling spikes. 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. SPILES (8) [noun] A splinter. | [noun] A spigot or plug used to stop the hole in a barrel or cask. | [noun] A spout inserted in a maple (or other tree) to draw off sap. SPILLS (8) [noun] A mess of something that has been dropped. | [noun] A fall or stumble. | [noun] A small stick or piece of paper used to light a candle, cigarette etc by the transfer of a flame from a fire. SPILTH (11) [noun] A spillage; spilled material. SPINAL (8) [noun] A spinal anesthesia. | [adjective] Of or relating to the spine. | [adjective] (of a frog, or other experimental animal) Having a pithed brain, but an intact spinal cord. SPINED (9) SPINEL (8) [noun] Any of several hard minerals of cubic symmetry that are mixed oxides of magnesium and aluminium and are used as gemstones of various colours. | [noun] Any crystalline material, not necessarily an oxide, that possesses the same crystal structure as this mineral. | [noun] Bleached yarn in making the linen tape called inkle; unwrought inkle. SPINES (8) [noun] The series of bones situated at the back from the head to the pelvis of a person, or from the head to the tail of an animal; backbone, vertebral column. | [noun] Something resembling a backbone, such as a ridge, or a long, central structure from which other structures radiate. | [noun] A pointed, fairly rigid protuberance or needle-like structure on an animal, shell, or plant. SPINET (8) [noun] A short, compact harpsichord or piano. | [noun] A spinney. SPINNY (11) [noun] A small copse or wood, especially one planted as a shelter for game birds. | [adjective] Associated with spinning; moving with a spinning motion. | [adjective] Thin and long; slim; slender SPINOR (8) SPINTO (8) SPIRAL (8) [noun] A curve that is the locus of a point that rotates about a fixed point while continuously increasing its distance from that point. | [noun] A helix. | [noun] A self-sustaining process with a lot of momentum involved, so it is difficult to accelerate or stop it at once. SPIREA (8) [noun] Any of many flowering shrubs, of the genus Spiraea, that have clusters of white or pink flowers | [noun] The Astilbe. SPIRED (9) SPIREM (10) SPIRES (8) [noun] The stalk or stem of a plant. | [noun] A young shoot of a plant; a spear. | [noun] Any of various tall grasses, rushes, or sedges, such as the marram, the reed canary-grass, etc. SPIRIT (8) [noun] The soul of a person or other creature. What moves through experience into self-definition as souls purpose. | [noun] A supernatural being, often but not exclusively without physical form; ghost, fairy, angel. | [noun] Enthusiasm. SPIRTS (8) [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. SPITAL (8) 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. SPITES (8) [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. SPLAKE (12) [noun] A hybrid fish derived from a male brook trout and a female lake trout SPLASH (11) [noun] The sound made by an object hitting a liquid. | [noun] A small amount of liquid. | [noun] A small amount (of color). SPLATS (8) [noun] The narrow wooden centre piece of a chair back. | [noun] The sharp, atonal sound of a liquid or soft solid hitting a solid surface. | [noun] The irregular shape of a viscous liquid or soft solid which has hit a solid surface. SPLAYS (11) [noun] A slope or bevel, especially of the sides of a door or window, by which the opening is made larger at one face of the wall than at the other, or larger at each of the faces than it is between them. SPLEEN (8) [noun] In vertebrates, including humans, a ductless vascular gland, located in the left upper abdomen near the stomach, which destroys old red blood cells, removes debris from the bloodstream, acts as a reservoir of blood, and produces lymphocytes. | [noun] (except in the set phrase "to vent one's spleen") A bad mood; spitefulness. | [noun] A sudden motion or action; a fit; a freak; a whim. SPLENT (8) SPLICE (10) [noun] A junction or joining of ropes made by splicing them together. | [noun] The electrical and mechanical connection between two pieces of wire or cable. | [noun] That part of a bat where the handle joins the blade. SPLIFF (14) [noun] A cannabis cigarette. SPLINE (8) [noun] Long thin piece of metal or wood. | [noun] A rectangular piece that fits grooves like key seats in a hub and a shaft, so that while the one may slide endwise on the other, both must revolve together. | [noun] A flexible strip of metal or other material, that may be bent into a curve and used in a similar manner to a ruler to draw smooth curves between points. SPLINT (8) [noun] An inferior kind of cannel coal from Scottish collieries, having a slaty structure. | [noun] A narrow strip of wood split or peeled from a larger piece. | [noun] A dental device applied consequent to undergoing orthodontia. SPLITS (8) [noun] A crack or longitudinal fissure. | [noun] A breach or separation, as in a political party; a division. | [noun] A piece that is split off, or made thin, by splitting; a splinter; a fragment. SPLORE (8) SPLOSH (11) [noun] A heavy splashing sound. | [noun] Tea (the drink). | [verb] To make a heavy splashing sound. SPODES (9) SPOILS (8) [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.). SPOILT (8) [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.). SPOKED (13) SPOKEN (12) [verb] To communicate with one's voice, to say words out loud. | [verb] To have a conversation. | [verb] (by extension) To communicate or converse by some means other than orally, such as writing or facial expressions. SPOKES (12) [noun] A support structure that connects the axle or the hub of a wheel to the rim. | [noun] A projecting handle of a steering wheel. | [noun] A rung of a ladder. SPONGE (9) [noun] Any of various marine invertebrates, mostly of the phylum Porifera, that have a porous skeleton often of silica. | [noun] A piece of porous material used for washing (originally made from the invertebrates, now often made of plastic). | [noun] A porous material such as sponges consist of. SPONGY (12) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a sponge, namely being absorbent, squishy or porous. | [adjective] Wet; drenched; soaked and soft, like sponge; rainy. | [adjective] Drunk. SPOOFS (11) [noun] An act of deception; a hoax; a joking prank. | [noun] A light parody. | [noun] A drinking game in which players hold up to three (or another specified number of) coins hidden in a fist and attempt to guess the total number of coins held. SPOOFY (14) SPOOKS (12) [noun] A ghost or phantom. | [noun] A hobgoblin. | [noun] A scare or fright. SPOOKY (15) [adjective] Eerie, or suggestive of ghosts or the supernatural. | [adjective] Spooked; afraid; frightened. | [adjective] Unpredictably excitable; skittish (used especially of horses). SPOOLS (8) [noun] A reel; a device around which thread, wire or cable is wound, especially a cylinder or spindle. | [noun] A temporary storage area for electronic mail, etc. | [verb] To wind on a spool or spools. SPOONS (8) [verb] To sail briskly with the wind astern, with or without sails hoisted. | [noun] An implement for eating or serving; a scooped utensil whose long handle is straight, in contrast to a ladle. | [noun] An implement for stirring food while being prepared; a wooden spoon. SPOONY (11) [noun] A foolish, simple, or silly person. | [noun] A foolishly amorous person. | [adjective] Enamored in a silly or sentimental way. SPOORS (8) [verb] To track an animal by following its spoor SPORAL (8) SPORED (9) SPORES (8) [noun] A reproductive particle, usually a single cell, released by a fungus, alga, or plant that may germinate into another. | [noun] A thick resistant particle produced by a bacterium or protist to survive in harsh or unfavorable conditions. | [verb] To produce spores. SPORTS (8) [noun] Any activity that uses physical exertion or skills competitively under a set of rules that is not based on aesthetics. | [noun] Something done for fun, regardless of its design or intended purpose. | [noun] A person who exhibits either good or bad sportsmanship. SPORTY (11) [adjective] Favourable to sports | [adjective] Flashy in appearance. SPOTTY (11) [noun] A common New Zealand fish, Notolabrus celidotus | [adjective] Having spots; spotted. | [adjective] Of inconsistent quality SPOUSE (8) [noun] A person in a marriage or marital relationship. | [verb] To wed; to espouse. SPOUTS (8) [noun] A tube or lip through which liquid or steam is poured or discharged. | [noun] A stream of liquid. | [noun] The mixture of air and water thrown up from the blowhole of a whale. SPRAGS (9) [noun] A billet of wood; a piece of timber, a similar solid object or constructed unit used as a prop. | [noun] A young salmon. SPRAIN (8) [noun] The act or result of spraining; lameness caused by spraining | [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 SPRANG (9) [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 | [verb] To burst forth. | [verb] (of beards) To grow. SPRATS (8) [noun] Any of various small, herring-like, marine fish in the genus Sprattus, in the family Clupeidae. SPRAWL (11) [noun] An ungainly sprawling posture. | [noun] A straggling, haphazard growth, especially of housing on the edge of a city. | [verb] To sit with the limbs spread out. SPRAYS (11) [noun] A fine, gentle, dispersed mist of liquid. | [noun] A pressurized container; an atomizer. | [noun] Any of numerous commercial products, including paints, cosmetics, and insecticides, that are dispensed from containers in this manner. 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. SPREES (8) [noun] A merry frolic; especially, a drinking frolic. | [noun] Uninhibited activity. SPRENT (8) SPRIER (8) SPRIGS (9) [noun] A small shoot or twig of a tree or other plant; a spray. | [noun] An ornament resembling a small shoot or twig. | [noun] One of the separate pieces of lace fastened on a ground in applique lace. SPRING (9) [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 | [noun] An act of springing: a leap, a jump. | [noun] The season of the year in temperate regions in which plants spring from the ground and into bloom and dormant animals spring to life, variously reckoned as SPRINT (8) [noun] A short race at top speed. | [noun] A burst of speed or activity. | [noun] In Agile software development, a period of development of a fixed time that is preceded and followed by meetings. SPRITE (8) [noun] Spirit; mind; soul; state of mind; mood. | [noun] A supernatural being; a spirit; a shade; an apparition; a ghost. | [noun] A kind of short arrow. SPRITS (8) [noun] A spar between mast and upper outer corner of a spritsail on sailing boats. | [noun] A shoot; a sprout. SPRITZ (17) [noun] A sprinkling or spray of liquid; a small amount of liquid. | [verb] To spray, sprinkle, or squirt lightly. | [verb] To drizzle, to rain lightly. SPROUT (8) [noun] A new growth on a plant, whether from seed or other parts. | [noun] A child. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A Brussels sprout. SPRUCE (10) [noun] Any of various large coniferous evergreen trees or shrubs from the genus Picea, found in northern temperate and boreal regions; originally and more fully spruce fir. | [noun] The wood of a spruce. | [noun] (used attributively) Made of the wood of the spruce. SPRUCY (13) SPRUES (8) [noun] A tropical disease causing a sore throat and tongue, and disturbed digestion; psilosis. | [noun] (founding) The hole through which melted metal is poured into the gate, and thence into the mold. | [noun] (founding) Material that cools in the feed channels to a mold. SPRUGS (9) SPRUNG (9) [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 | [verb] To burst forth. | [verb] (of beards) To grow. SPRYER (11) SPRYLY (14) SPUING (9) SPUMED (11) [verb] To froth. SPUMES (10) [noun] Foam or froth of liquid, particularly that of seawater. | [verb] To froth. SPUNKS (12) [verb] To catch fire; flame up. | [verb] To ejaculate. SPUNKY (15) [adjective] Spirited or plucky. | [adjective] Pertaining to or like spunk (semen). | [adjective] Stained with semen. SPURGE (9) [noun] Any plant of the genus Euphorbia, a diverse genus of over 2,000 species. | [verb] To emit foam; to froth; said of the emission of yeast from beer during fermentation. SPURNS (8) [noun] An act of spurning; a scornful rejection. | [noun] A kick; a blow with the foot. | [noun] Disdainful rejection; contemptuous treatment. SPURRY (11) [noun] Any of several European annual herbs of the genus Spergula. SPURTS (8) [noun] A brief gush, as of liquid spurting from an orifice or a cut/wound. | [noun] Ejaculation of semen. | [noun] A shoot; a bud. SPUTUM (10) [noun] Matter coughed up and expectorated from the mouth, composed of saliva and discharges from the respiratory passages such as mucus, phlegm or pus. SPYING (12) [verb] To act as a spy. | [verb] To spot; to catch sight of. | [verb] To search narrowly; to scrutinize. SQUABS (17) [noun] (sometimes attributive) A baby pigeon, dove, or chicken. | [noun] The meat of such a baby bird used as food. | [noun] A baby rook. SQUADS (16) [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. SQUALL (15) [noun] A squall line, multicell line, or part of a squall line. | [noun] A sudden storm, as found in a squall line. | [noun] A loud cry or wail. SQUAMA (17) SQUARE (15) [noun] A polygon with four sides of equal length and four right angles; an equilateral rectangle; a regular quadrilateral. | [noun] Something characterized by a square, or nearly square, form. | [noun] An L- or T-shaped tool used to place objects or draw lines at right angles. SQUASH (18) [noun] A sport played in a walled court with a soft rubber ball and bats like tennis racquets. | [noun] A soft drink made from a fruit-based concentrate diluted with water. | [noun] A place or a situation where people have limited space to move. | [noun] A plant and its fruit of any of a few species of the genus Cucurbita, or gourd kind. | [noun] Muskrat. SQUATS (15) [noun] Nothing; nothing whatsoever. | [noun] A position assumed by bending deeply at the knees while resting on one's feet. | [noun] (exercise) Any of various modes of callisthenic exercises performed by moving the body and bending at least one knee. SQUAWK (22) [noun] A shrill noise, especially made by a voice or bird; a yell, scream, or call. | [noun] A four-digit transponder code used by aircraft for identification or transmission of emergency signals. | [noun] An issue or complaint related to aircraft maintenance. SQUAWS (18) [noun] A woman, wife; especially a Native American woman. SQUEAK (19) [noun] A short, high-pitched sound, as of two objects rubbing together, or the calls of small animals. | [noun] (games) A card game similar to group solitaire. | [noun] A narrow squeak. SQUEAL (15) [noun] A high-pitched sound, such as the scream of a child, or noisy worn-down brake pads. | [noun] The cry of a pig. | [verb] To scream with a shrill, prolonged sound. SQUEGS (16) SQUIBS (17) [noun] A small firework that is intended to spew sparks rather than explode. | [noun] A similar device used to ignite an explosive or launch a rocket, etc. | [noun] A kind of slow match or safety fuse. SQUIDS (16) [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. SQUILL (15) [noun] A European bulbous liliaceous plant, of the genus Scilla, used in medicine for its acrid, expectorant, diuretic, and emetic properties | [noun] A sea onion (Drimia maritima) | [noun] A mantis shrimp, Squilla mantis, from the Mediterranean SQUINT (15) [noun] An expression in which the eyes are partly closed. | [noun] The look of eyes which are turned in different directions, as in strabismus. | [noun] A quick or sideways glance. SQUIRE (15) [noun] A shield-bearer or armor-bearer who attended a knight. | [noun] A title of dignity next in degree below knight, and above gentleman. See esquire. | [noun] A male attendant on a great personage. | [noun] A ruler; a carpenter's square; a measure. SQUIRM (17) [noun] A twisting, snakelike movement of the body. | [verb] To twist one's body with snakelike motions. | [verb] To twist in discomfort, especially from shame or embarrassment. SQUIRT (15) [noun] An instrument from which a liquid is forcefully ejected in a small, quick stream. | [noun] A small, quick stream; a jet. | [noun] (hydrodynamics) The whole system of flow in the vicinity of a source. SQUISH (18) [noun] The sound or action of something, especially something moist, being squeezed or crushed. | [noun] A political moderate. | [noun] Marmalade. | [noun] A non-romantic and generally non-sexual infatuation with somebody one is not dating, or the object of that infatuation; a platonic crush. SQUUSH (18) SRADHA (10) STABLE (8) [noun] A building, wing or dependency set apart and adapted for lodging and feeding (and training) animals with hoofs, especially horses. | [noun] (metonymy) All the racehorses of a particular stable, i.e. belonging to a given owner. | [noun] A set of advocates; a barristers' chambers. | [adjective] Relatively unchanging, permanent; firmly fixed or established; consistent; not easily moved, altered, or destroyed. STABLY (11) [adverb] In a stable manner. | [noun] A medieval hunting practice in which a group of hunters and hounds stationed around the perimeter of a wood during a hunt to prevent the escape of the game. STACKS (12) [noun] (heading) A pile. | [noun] A smokestack. | [noun] (heading) In computing. STACTE (8) STADES (7) STADIA (7) [noun] A level staff or graduated rod used by surveyors to measure differences in level, or to measure horizontal distances by sighting the stadia hairs (graduations) through a telescope. | [noun] (historically) A graduated brass triangle used to measure the distance of a target by comparison of the graduations with the heights of soldiers or horses. | [noun] A Greek unit of measurement, equivalent to six plethra or six hundred podes, which, though varying in precise length, is generally accepted to be equivalent to approximately 185·4 metres. STAFFS (12) [noun] (plural staffs or staves) A long, straight, thick wooden rod or stick, especially one used to assist in walking. | [noun] (plural staves) A series of horizontal lines on which musical notes are written; a stave. | [noun] (plural staff or staffs) The employees of a business. 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. STAGER (7) [noun] An actor on the stage. | [noun] One who stages a theatrical performance. | [noun] One who has long acted on the stage of life; a practitioner; a person of experience, or of skill derived from long experience. STAGES (7) [noun] A phase. | [noun] A platform; a surface, generally elevated, upon which show performances or other public events are given. | [noun] A floor or storey of a house. STAGEY (10) [adjective] Theatrical | [adjective] Unnaturally showy | [adjective] Melodramatic; sensationalized STAGGY (11) STAIGS (7) STAINS (6) [noun] A discoloured spot or area. | [noun] A blemish on one's character or reputation. | [noun] A substance used to soak into a surface and colour it. STAIRS (6) [noun] A single step in a staircase. | [noun] A series of steps; a staircase. | [noun] A contiguous set of steps connecting two floors. 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. STAKES (10) [noun] A piece of wood or other material, usually long and slender, pointed at one end so as to be easily driven into the ground as a marker or a support or stay. | [noun] A piece of wood driven in the ground, placed in the middle of the court, that is used as the finishing point after scoring 12 hoops in croquet. | [noun] A stick inserted upright in a lop, eye, or mortise, at the side or end of a cart, flat car, flatbed trailer, or the like, to prevent goods from falling off. STALAG (7) [noun] A German prisoner-of-war camp, especially in World War II. | [noun] A genre of Nazi exploitation Holocaust pornography in Israel that flourished in the 1950s and early 1960s. 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. STALER (6) [adjective] (alcohol) Clear, free of dregs and lees; old and strong. | [adjective] No longer fresh, in reference to food, urine, straw, wounds, etc. | [adjective] No longer fresh, new, or interesting, in reference to ideas and immaterial things; cliche, hackneyed, dated. STALES (6) [noun] Something stale; a loaf of bread or the like that is no longer fresh. | [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. STALKS (10) [noun] The stem or main axis of a plant, which supports the seed-carrying parts. | [noun] The petiole, pedicel, or peduncle of a plant. | [noun] Something resembling the stalk of a plant, such as the stem of a quill. STALKY (13) STALLS (6) [noun] A compartment for a single animal in a stable or cattle shed. | [noun] A stable; a place for cattle. | [noun] A bench or table on which small articles of merchandise are exposed for sale. STAMEN (8) [noun] In flowering plants, the structure in a flower that produces pollen, typically consisting of an anther and a filament. STAMPS (10) [noun] An act of stamping the foot, paw or hoof. | [noun] An indentation, imprint, or mark made by stamping. | [noun] A device for stamping designs. STANCE (8) [noun] The manner, pose, or posture in which one stands. | [noun] One's opinion or point of view. | [noun] A place to stand; a position, a site, a station. STANCH (11) [noun] That which stanches or checks a flow. | [noun] A floodgate by which water is accumulated, for floating a boat over a shallow part of a stream by its release. | [verb] To stop the flow of. STANDS (7) [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. STANED (7) STANES (6) STANGS (7) STANKS (10) STANZA (15) [noun] A unit of a poem, written or printed as a paragraph; equivalent to a verse. | [noun] An apartment or division in a building. | [noun] An XML element which acts as basic unit of meaning in XMPP. STAPES (8) [noun] A small stirrup-shaped bone of the middle ear. STAPHS (11) [noun] Staphylococcus bacteria and the infection it causes. STAPLE (8) [noun] A town containing merchants who have exclusive right, under royal authority, to purchase or produce certain goods for export; also, the body of such merchants seen as a group. | [noun] (by extension) Place of supply; source. | [noun] The principal commodity produced in a town or region. | [noun] A wire fastener used to secure stacks of paper by penetrating all the sheets and curling around. STARCH (11) [noun] A widely diffused vegetable substance found especially in seeds, bulbs, and tubers, and extracted (as from potatoes, corn, rice, etc.) as a white, glistening, granular or powdery substance, without taste or smell, and giving a very peculiar creaking sound when rubbed between the fingers. It is used as a food, in the production of commercial grape sugar, for stiffening linen in laundries, in making paste, etc. | [noun] (nutrition) Carbohydrates, as with grain and potato based foods. | [noun] A stiff, formal manner; formality. 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. STARER (6) STARES (6) [noun] A persistent gaze. | [verb] (construed with at) To look fixedly (at something). | [verb] To influence in some way by looking fixedly. STARRY (9) [adjective] Having stars visible. | [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a star. | [adjective] Full of stars or celebrities; star-studded. STARTS (6) [noun] The beginning of an activity. | [noun] A sudden involuntary movement. | [noun] The beginning point of a race, a board game, etc. STARVE (9) [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. STASES (6) [noun] A slackening or arrest of the blood current, due not to a lessening of the heart’s beat, but to some abnormal resistance of the capillary walls. | [noun] Inactivity; a freezing, or state of motionlessness. | [noun] A technology allowing something to be artificially frozen in time, so that it does not age or change. STASIS (6) [noun] A slackening or arrest of the blood current, due not to a lessening of the heart’s beat, but to some abnormal resistance of the capillary walls. | [noun] Inactivity; a freezing, or state of motionlessness. | [noun] A technology allowing something to be artificially frozen in time, so that it does not age or change. STATAL (6) STATED (7) [verb] To declare to be a fact. | [verb] To make known. | [adjective] Expressed in a statement; uttered or written. STATER (6) [noun] A gold, silver or electrum coin of ancient Greece. | [noun] One who states. | [noun] A citizen of the United States of America who is a confirmed or lifelong resident of one single state. STATES (6) [noun] A condition; a set of circumstances applying at any given time. | [noun] High social standing or circumstance. | [noun] A polity. STATIC (8) [noun] Interference on a broadcast signal caused by atmospheric disturbances; heard as crackles on radio, or seen as random specks on television. | [noun] (by extension) Interference or obstruction from people. | [noun] Static electricity. STATOR (6) [noun] The stationary part of a motor or other machine. STATUE (6) [noun] A three-dimensional work of art, usually representing a person or animal, usually created by sculpting, carving, molding, or casting. | [noun] A portrait. | [verb] To form a statue of; to make into a statue. STATUS (6) [noun] A person’s condition, position or standing relative to that of others. | [noun] Prestige or high standing. | [noun] A situation or state of affairs. 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. STAVES (9) [noun] (plural staffs or staves) A long, straight, thick wooden rod or stick, especially one used to assist in walking. | [noun] (plural staves) A series of horizontal lines on which musical notes are written; a stave. | [noun] (plural staff or staffs) The employees of a business. | [noun] One of a number of narrow strips of wood, or narrow iron plates, placed edge to edge to form the sides, covering, or lining of a vessel or structure; especially, one of the strips which form the sides of a cask, a pail, etc. 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. STAYER (9) [noun] One who, or that which, upholds or supports; a prop. | [noun] One who, or that which, stays, stops, or restrains. | [noun] An athlete, horse, etc. with staying power. STEADS (7) [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. STEADY (10) [noun] A rest or support, as for the hand, a tool, or a piece of work. | [noun] A regular boyfriend or girlfriend. | [noun] A prostitute's regular customer. STEAKS (10) [noun] Beefsteak, a slice of beef, broiled or cut for broiling. | [noun] (by extension) A relatively large, thick slice or slab cut from another animal, a vegetable, etc. | [noun] (seafood) A slice of meat cut across the grain (perpendicular to the spine) from a fish. STEALS (6) [verb] To take illegally, or without the owner's permission, something owned by someone else. | [verb] (of ideas, words, music, a look, credit, etc.) To appropriate without giving credit or acknowledgement. | [verb] To get or effect surreptitiously or artfully. STEAMS (8) [noun] The vapor formed when water changes from liquid phase to gas phase. | [noun] Pressurized water vapour used for heating, cooking, or to provide mechanical energy. | [noun] Internal energy for motive power. STEAMY (11) [adjective] Warm and humid; full of steam | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of steam | [adjective] Erotic STEEDS (7) [noun] A stallion, especially in the sense of mount. | [noun] A bicycle. STEEKS (10) STEELS (6) [noun] An artificial metal produced from iron, harder and more elastic than elemental iron; used figuratively as a symbol of hardness. | [noun] Any item made of this metal, particularly including: | [noun] Medicinal consumption of this metal; chalybeate medicine; (eventually) any iron or iron-treated water consumed as a medical treatment. STEELY (9) [adjective] Having qualities resembling those of steel, especially hard and resolute. | [adjective] Made of steel. STEEPS (8) [verb] (middle voice) To soak or wet thoroughly. | [verb] To imbue with something; to be deeply immersed in. STEERS (6) [noun] A suggestion about a course of action. | [noun] A helmsman; a pilot. | [verb] To guide the course of a vessel, vehicle, aircraft etc. (by means of a device such as a rudder, paddle, or steering wheel). STEEVE (9) [noun] The angle which a bowsprit makes with the horizon, or with the line of the vessel's keel. | [noun] A spar, with a block at one end, used in stowing cotton bales and similar cargo needing to be packed tightly. | [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. STEINS (6) [noun] A beer mug, usually made of ceramic or glass. STELAE (6) [noun] An obelisk or upright stone pillar, usually as a primitive commemoration or gravestone STELAI (6) STELAR (6) [adjective] Of or relating to a stele. STELES (6) [noun] Something stale; a loaf of bread or the like that is no longer fresh. | [noun] A long, thin handle (of rakes, axes, etc.) | [noun] The posts and rungs composing a ladder. STELIC (8) STELLA (6) STEMMA (10) [noun] A family tree or recorded genealogy | [noun] In the study of stemmatics, a diagram showing the relationship of a text to its manuscripts | [noun] One of the types of simple eyes in arthropods STEMMY (13) STENCH (11) [noun] A strong foul smell; a stink. | [noun] A foul quality. | [noun] A smell or odour, not necessarily bad. STENOS (6) [noun] A stenographer, someone whose job is to take dictation in shorthand | [noun] Stenography STEPPE (10) [noun] The grasslands of Eastern Europe and Asia. Similar to (North American) prairie and (African) savanna. | [noun] A vast cold, dry grass-plain. STEREO (6) [noun] A system of recording or reproducing sound that uses two channels, each playing a portion of the original sound in such a way as to create the illusion of locating the sound at a particular position, each offset from the other, thereby more accurately imitating the location of the original sound when the recorded or reproduced sound is heard. | [noun] (by extension) Any object or device equipped with audio components that reproduces sound in stereo, such as a stereo console in the home. | [noun] A stereotype. STERES (6) [noun] A measure of volume used e.g. for cut wood, equal to one cubic metre. STERIC (8) [adjective] Relating to or involving the arrangement of atoms in space. | [adjective] Of the repulsion of atoms due to closeness or arrangement STERNA (6) [noun] The breastbone | [noun] The sclerotized plate of spiders, between the coxae, marking the floor of the cephalothorax STERNS (6) [noun] The rear part or after end of a ship or vessel. | [noun] The post of management or direction. | [noun] The hinder part of anything. STEROL (6) [noun] Any steroid that contains a hydroxyl group in the 3-position of the A-ring. 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. STICHS (11) STICKS (12) [noun] An elongated piece of wood or similar material, typically put to some use, for example as a wand or baton. | [noun] Any roughly cylindrical (or rectangular) unit of a substance. | [noun] Material or objects attached to a stick or the like. STICKY (15) [noun] A sticky note, such as a post-it note. | [noun] A discussion thread fixed at the top of the list of topics or threads so as to keep it in view. | [noun] A small adhesive particle found in wastepaper. STIFFS (12) [noun] An average person, usually male, of no particular distinction, skill, or education, often a working stiff or lucky stiff. | [noun] A person who is deceived, as a mark or pigeon in a swindle. | [noun] A cadaver; a dead person. STIFLE (9) [noun] A hind knee of various mammals, especially horses. | [noun] A bone disease of this region. | [verb] To interrupt or cut off. STIGMA (9) [noun] A mark of infamy or disgrace. | [noun] A scar or birthmark. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural stigmata) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion on Jesus' body, and sometimes reported to bleed periodically. | [noun] A ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau, (Ϛ/ϛ). STILES (6) [noun] A set of one or more steps surmounting a fence or wall, or a narrow gate or contrived passage through a fence or wall, which in either case allows people but not livestock to pass. | [noun] A vertical component of a frame or panel, such as that of a door, window, or ladder. | [noun] Senses relating to a thin, pointed object. STILLS (6) [noun] A period of calm or silence. | [noun] A photograph, as opposed to movie footage. | [noun] A resident of the Falkland Islands. STILLY (9) [adjective] Silent; calm | [adverb] While still and calm. STILTS (6) [noun] Either of two poles with footrests that allow someone to stand or walk above the ground; used mostly by entertainers. | [noun] A tall pillar or post used to support some structure; often above water. | [noun] Any of various wading birds of the genera Himantopus and Cladorhynchus, related to the avocet, that have extremely long legs and long thin bills. STIMES (8) STINGO (7) STINGS (7) [noun] A bump left on the skin after having been stung. | [noun] A bite by an insect. | [noun] A pointed portion of an insect or arachnid used for attack. STINGY (10) [adjective] Unwilling to spend, give, or share; ungenerous; mean | [adjective] Small, scant, meager, insufficient | [adjective] Stinging; able to sting. STINKO (10) [adjective] Drunk STINKS (10) [noun] A strong bad smell. | [noun] A complaint or objection. | [verb] To have a strong bad smell. STINKY (13) [adjective] Having a strong, unpleasant smell; stinking. | [adjective] Bad, undesirable. STINTS (6) [noun] A period of time spent doing or being something; a spell. | [noun] Limit; bound; restraint; extent. | [noun] Quantity or task assigned; proportion allotted. STIPED (9) STIPEL (8) STIPES (8) [noun] The vertical beam of a cross used for crucifixion. | [noun] The basal segment of the maxilla of an insect or a crustacean. | [noun] A stipe; a stalk or stem. STIRKS (10) [noun] A yearling cow; a young bullock or heifer. STIRPS (8) STITCH (11) [noun] A single pass of a needle in sewing; the loop or turn of the thread thus made. | [noun] An arrangement of stitches in sewing, or method of stitching in some particular way or style. | [noun] An intense stabbing pain under the lower edge of the ribcage, brought on by exercise. | [verb] To form stitches in; especially, to sew in such a manner as to show on the surface a continuous line of stitches. STITHY (12) STIVER (9) [noun] (money) A small Dutch coin worth one twentieth of a guilder. | [noun] Anything of small value. STOATS (6) [noun] Mustela erminea, the ermine or short-tailed weasel, a mustelid native to Eurasia and North America, distinguished from the least weasel by its larger size and longer tail with a prominent black tip. STOCKS (12) [noun] A store or supply. | [noun] The capital raised by a company through the issue of shares. The total of shares held by an individual shareholder. | [noun] The raw material from which things are made; feedstock. STOCKY (15) [adjective] (of a person or an animal) Sturdy; solidly built; heavy and compact. STODGE (8) [noun] Heavy, dull, often starchy food, such as a steamed pudding | [verb] To stuff; to cram. STODGY (11) [adjective] (of food) Having a thick, semi-solid consistency; glutinous; heavy on the stomach. | [adjective] Dull, old-fashioned. | [adjective] Badly put together. STOGEY (10) STOGIE (7) [noun] A cigar. | [noun] A type of sturdy work boot; a brogan. STOICS (8) [noun] Proponent of stoicism, a school of thought, from in 300 B.C.E. up to about the time of Marcus Aurelius, who holds that by cultivating an understanding of the logos, or natural law, one can be free of suffering. | [noun] A person indifferent to pleasure or pain. 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. STOKER (10) [noun] A person who stokes, especially one on a steamship who stokes coal in the boilers. | [noun] A device for stoking a fire; a poker. | [noun] A device that feeds coal into a furnace etc automatically. STOKES (10) [verb] To poke, pierce, thrust. | [verb] To feed, stir up, especially, a fire or furnace. | [verb] (by extension) To encourage a behavior or emotion. | [noun] A unit of kinematic viscosity in the CGS system of units. 1 stokes = 1 cm2/s STOLED (7) STOLEN (6) [verb] To take illegally, or without the owner's permission, something owned by someone else. | [verb] (of ideas, words, music, a look, credit, etc.) To appropriate without giving credit or acknowledgement. | [verb] To get or effect surreptitiously or artfully. STOLES (6) [noun] An ecclesiastical garment consisting of a decorated band worn on the back of the neck with each end hanging over the chest. | [noun] A scarf-like garment, often made of fur. | [noun] A stolon. STOLID (7) [adjective] Having or revealing little emotion or sensibility; dully or heavily stupid. STOLON (6) [noun] A shoot that grows along the ground and produces roots at its nodes; a runner. | [noun] A structure formed by some colonial organisms from which offspring are produced by budding, found in bryozoans, pterobranchs, some corals, and other invertebrates. | [noun] A hypha that acts as a runner, connecting sporangiophores. STOMAL (8) [adjective] Of, or relating to a stoma. STOMAS (8) [noun] One of the tiny pores in the epidermis of a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor pass. | [noun] A small opening in a membrane; a surgically constructed opening, especially one in the abdominal wall that permits the passage of waste after a colostomy or ileostomy. | [noun] A mouthlike opening, such as the oral cavity of a nematode. STOMPS (10) [noun] A deliberate heavy footfall; a stamp. | [noun] A dance having a heavy, rhythmic step. | [noun] The jazz music for this dance. 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.). STONER (6) [noun] One who stones. | [noun] A machine to remove the stones (pits) from fruit. | [noun] A habitual user of cannabis. STONES (6) [noun] A hard earthen substance that can form large rocks. | [noun] A small piece of stone, a pebble. | [noun] A gemstone, a jewel, especially a diamond. STONEY (9) STOOGE (7) [noun] One who knowingly allows himself or herself to be used for another's profit; a dupe. | [noun] A straight man. | [noun] A secret informant for police. STOOKS (10) [noun] A pile or bundle, especially of straw. | [noun] (specifically) A group of 6 or 8 sheaves of grain stacked to dry vertically in a rectangular arrangement at harvest time, obsolete since the advent of the combine harvester (mid 20th century). STOOLS (6) [noun] A seat, especially for one person and without armrests. | [noun] A close-stool; a seat used for urination and defecation: a chamber pot, commode, outhouse seat, or toilet. | [noun] A plant that has been cut down until its main stem is close to the ground, resembling a stool, to promote new growth. STOOPS (8) [verb] To suck one's teeth, indicating disappointment, derision or disgust. | [noun] The staircase and landing or porch leading to the entrance of a residence. | [noun] The threshold of a doorway, a doorstep. 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. STOPER (8) STOPES (8) [noun] A mining excavation in the form of a terrace of steps. STORAX (13) [noun] Any member of the genus Styrax of trees and shrubs. | [noun] The resin of the oriental sweetgum tree (Liquidambar orientalis), formerly used as a stimulating expectorant. 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. STORES (6) [noun] A place where items may be accumulated or routinely kept. | [noun] A supply held in storage. | [noun] (mainly North American) A place where items may be purchased; a shop. STOREY (9) [noun] A building; an edifice. | [noun] A floor or level of a building or ship. | [noun] A vertical level in certain letters, such as a and g. STORKS (10) [noun] A large wading bird with long legs and a long beak of the family Ciconiidae. | [noun] (children's folklore) The mythical bringer of babies to families, or good news. | [noun] The seventeenth Lenormand card. STORMS (8) [noun] Any disturbed state of the atmosphere, especially as affecting the earth's surface, and strongly implying destructive or unpleasant weather. | [noun] A violent agitation of human society; a civil, political, or domestic commotion; violent outbreak. | [noun] A wind scale for very strong wind, stronger than a gale, less than a hurricane (10 or higher on the Beaufort scale). STORMY (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to storms. | [adjective] Characterized by, or proceeding from, a storm; subject to storms; agitated with strong winds and heavy rain. | [adjective] Proceeding from violent agitation or fury. STOUND (7) STOUPS (8) [noun] A bucket. | [noun] A mug or drinking vessel. | [noun] A receptacle for holy water, especially a basin set at the entrance of a church. STOURE (6) STOURS (6) STOURY (9) STOUTS (6) [noun] A dark and strong malt brew made with toasted grain. | [noun] An obese person. | [noun] A large clothing size. STOVER (9) STOVES (9) [noun] A heater, a closed apparatus to burn fuel for the warming of a room. | [noun] A device for heating food, (UK) a cooker. | [noun] A hothouse (heated greenhouse). 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. STOWPS (11) STRAFE (9) [noun] An attack of machine-gun or cannon fire from a low-flying aircraft. | [noun] A sideways movement without turning. | [verb] To attack (ground targets) with automatic gunfire from a low-flying aircraft. STRAIN (6) [noun] Treasure. | [noun] The blood-vessel in the yolk of an egg. | [noun] Race; lineage, pedigree. | [noun] The act of straining, or the state of being strained. | [verb] To beget, generate (of light), engender, copulate (both of animals and humans), lie with, be born, come into the world. STRAIT (6) [noun] A narrow channel of water connecting two larger bodies of water. | [noun] A narrow pass, passage or street. | [noun] A neck of land; an isthmus. STRAKE (10) [noun] An iron fitting of a medieval cart wheel. | [noun] A type of aerodynamic surface mounted on an aircraft fuselage to fine-tune the airflow. | [noun] A continuous line of plates or planks running from bow to stern that contributes to a vessel's skin. (FM 55-501). | [verb] (sometimes with out or through) To delete or cross out; to scratch or eliminate. 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. STRANG (7) STRAPS (8) [noun] A long, narrow, pliable strip of leather, cloth, or the like. | [noun] A strip of thick leather used in flogging. | [noun] Something made of such a strip, or of a part of one, or a combination of two or more for a particular use. STRASS (6) STRATA (6) [noun] One of several parallel horizontal layers of material arranged one on top of another. | [noun] A layer of sedimentary rock having approximately the same composition throughout. | [noun] Any of the regions of the atmosphere, such as the stratosphere, that occur as layers. | [noun] Condominium unit, condominium building, condominium title STRATH (9) [noun] A wide, flat river valley. STRATI (6) STRAWS (9) [noun] A dried stalk of a cereal plant. | [noun] Such dried stalks considered collectively. | [noun] A drinking straw. STRAWY (12) STRAYS (9) [noun] Any domestic animal that has no enclosure, or its proper place and company, and wanders at large, or is lost; an estray. | [noun] One who is lost, either literally or metaphorically. | [noun] The act of wandering or going astray. STREAK (10) [noun] An irregular line left from smearing or motion. | [noun] A continuous series of like events. | [noun] The color of the powder of a mineral. So called, because a simple field test for a mineral is to streak it against unglazed white porcelain. STREAM (8) [noun] A small river; a large creek; a body of moving water confined by banks. | [noun] A thin connected passing of a liquid through a lighter gas (e.g. air). | [noun] Any steady flow or succession of material, such as water, air, radio signal or words. STREEK (10) STREEL (6) [noun] A disreputable woman, a slut. | [verb] To trail along; to saunter or be drawn along, carelessly, swaying in a kind of zigzag motion. STREET (6) [noun] A paved part of road, usually in a village or a town. | [noun] A road as above but including the sidewalks (pavements) and buildings. | [noun] The people who live in such a road, as a neighborhood. STREPS (8) [noun] A strep throat. | [noun] A streptococcus. | [noun] Any of several plants of the genus Streptocarpus. the Cape primroses. STRESS (6) [noun] (Cause of) discomfort. | [noun] Serious danger. | [noun] An aversive state of stress to which a person cannot fully adapt. STREWN (9) [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. STREWS (9) [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. STRIAE (6) [noun] A stripe, usually one of a set of parallel stripes. | [noun] One of the fillets between the flutes of columns, etc. | [noun] A stretch mark. STRICK (12) STRICT (8) [adjective] Strained; drawn close; tight. | [adjective] Tense; not relaxed. | [adjective] Exact; accurate; precise; rigorously particular. STRIDE (7) [verb] To walk with long steps. | [verb] To stand with the legs wide apart; to straddle. | [verb] To pass over at a step; to step over. | [noun] A long step in walking. STRIFE (9) [noun] Striving; earnest endeavor; hard work. | [noun] Exertion or contention for superiority, either by physical or intellectual means. | [noun] Bitter conflict, sometimes violent. STRIKE (10) [noun] A status resulting from a batter swinging and missing a pitch, or not swinging at a pitch when the ball goes in the strike zone, or hitting a foul ball that is not caught. | [noun] The act of knocking down all ten pins in on the first roll of a frame. | [noun] A work stoppage (or otherwise concerted stoppage of an activity) as a form of protest. STRING (7) [noun] A building, wing or dependency set apart and adapted for lodging and feeding (and training) animals with hoofs, especially horses. | [noun] (metonymy) All the racehorses of a particular stable, i.e. belonging to a given owner. | [noun] A set of advocates; a barristers' chambers. STRIPE (8) [noun] A long, relatively straight region of a single colour. | [noun] (in the plural) The badge worn by certain officers in the military or other forces. | [noun] Distinguishing characteristic; sign; likeness; sort. STRIPS (8) [noun] The act of removing one's clothes; a striptease. | [noun] (of games) Denotes a version of a game in which losing players must progressively remove their clothes. | [verb] To remove or take away, often in strips or stripes. STRIPT (8) STRIPY (11) [adjective] Having stripes; striped. STRIVE (9) [noun] Striving; earnest endeavor; hard work. | [noun] Exertion or contention for superiority, either by physical or intellectual means. | [noun] Bitter conflict, sometimes violent. STROBE (8) [noun] A stroboscopic lamp: a device used to produce regular flashes of light. | [noun] An electronic signal in hardware indicating that a value is ready to be read. | [verb] To flash like a stroboscopic lamp. STRODE (7) [verb] To walk with long steps. | [verb] To stand with the legs wide apart; to straddle. | [verb] To pass over at a step; to step over. STROKE (10) [noun] An act of stroking (moving one's hand over a surface). | [noun] A blow or hit. | [noun] A single movement with a tool. | [verb] To move one's hand or an object (such as a broom) along (a surface) in one direction. STROLL (6) [noun] A wandering on foot; an idle and leisurely walk; a ramble. | [verb] To wander on foot; to ramble idly or leisurely; to rove. | [verb] To go somewhere with ease. STROMA (8) [noun] The tissue structure of an organ, etc., that serves to support it. STRONG (7) [adjective] Capable of producing great physical force. | [adjective] Capable of withstanding great physical force. | [adjective] (of water, wind, etc.) Having a lot of power. STROOK (10) STROPS (8) [noun] A strap; more specifically a piece of leather or a substitute (notably canvas), or strip of wood covered with a suitable material, for honing a razor, in this sense also called razor strop. | [noun] A bad mood or temper (see stroppy.) | [noun] A piece of rope spliced into a circular wreath, and put round a block for hanging it. STROUD (7) [noun] A kind of coarse wool used in blankets or for garment by Native Americans. STROVE (9) STROWN (9) [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. STROWS (9) [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. STROYS (9) STRUCK (12) [verb] (sometimes with out or through) To delete or cross out; to scratch or eliminate. | [verb] (physical) To have a sharp or sudden effect. | [verb] To thrust in; to cause to enter or penetrate. STRUMA (8) [noun] Scrofula. | [noun] A scrofulous swelling; a tumour or goitre. STRUMS (8) [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. STRUNG (7) [verb] To put (items) on a string. | [verb] To put strings on (something). | [verb] To form into a string or strings, as a substance which is stretched, or people who are moving along, etc. STRUNT (6) STRUTS (6) [noun] Protuberance, air pressure | [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. STUBBY (13) [noun] A small, squat beer bottle. | [adjective] Abounding with stubs. | [adjective] Like a stub; short, especially cut short, thick and stiff; stunted; stubbed. STUCCO (10) [noun] A plaster that is used to coat (interior or) exterior walls, or used for mouldings. | [noun] Work made of stucco; stuccowork. | [verb] To coat or decorate with stucco. STUDIO (7) [noun] An artist’s or photographer’s workshop or the room in which an artist works. | [noun] An establishment where an art is taught. | [noun] A place where radio or television programs, records or films are made. STUDLY (10) [adjective] Like a stud; being or relating to a sexually attractive male. STUFFS (12) [noun] Miscellaneous items or objects; (with possessive) personal effects. | [noun] Unspecified things or matters. | [noun] The tangible substance that goes into the makeup of a physical object. STUFFY (15) [noun] A toy made of a soft material, usually stuffed with cotton, straw, beans, or other materials, and typically intended as a plaything for children. | [adjective] Poorly ventilated; partially plugged. | [adjective] Stout; mettlesome; resolute. STULLS (6) STUMPS (10) [noun] The remains of something that has been cut off; especially the remains of a tree, the remains of a limb. | [noun] The place or occasion at which a campaign takes place; the husting. | [noun] A place or occasion at which a person harangues or otherwise addresses a group in a manner suggesting political oration. STUMPY (13) [noun] An amputee who has lost a leg. | [adjective] Like or resembling a stump; short and cut off. | [adjective] Full of stumps. STUNTS (6) [noun] A daring or dangerous feat, often involving the display of gymnastic skills. | [noun] Skill | [noun] A special means of rushing the quarterback done to confuse the opposing team's offensive line. STUPAS (8) [noun] A dome-shaped Buddhist monument, used to house relics of the Lord Buddha. | [noun] A stupe (medicated cloth or sponge). STUPES (8) [noun] A stupid person or (rarely) thing. | [noun] A hot, wet medicated cloth or sponge applied externally. 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. STUPOR (8) [noun] A state of reduced consciousness or sensibility. | [noun] A state in which one has difficulty in thinking or using one’s senses. | [verb] To place into a stupor; to stupefy. STURDY (10) [noun] A disease in sheep and cattle, caused by a tapeworm and marked by great nervousness or by dullness and stupor. | [adjective] Of firm build; stiff; stout; strong. | [adjective] Solid in structure or person. STURTS (6) STYING (10) [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. STYLAR (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a stylus. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the style of a sundial. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a style. 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. STYLER (9) STYLES (9) [noun] Senses relating to a thin, pointed object. | [noun] (by extension from sense 1.1) A particular manner of expression in writing or speech, especially one regarded as good. | [noun] A particular manner of creating, doing, or presenting something, especially a work of architecture or art. STYLET (9) [noun] An engraving tool, a stylus. | [noun] A style of a plant's flower. | [noun] A slender medical probe or device. STYLUS (9) [noun] Senses relating to a thin, pointed object. | [noun] (by extension from sense 1.1) A particular manner of expression in writing or speech, especially one regarded as good. | [noun] A particular manner of creating, doing, or presenting something, especially a work of architecture or art. STYMIE (11) [noun] A situation where an opponent's ball is directly in the way of one's own ball and the hole, on the putting green (abolished 1952). | [noun] (by extension) An obstacle or obstruction. | [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. STYRAX (16) [noun] Any member of the genus Styrax of about 130 species of large shrubs or small trees, mostly native to temperate or tropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere. SUABLE (8) SUABLY (11) SUAVER (9) [adjective] Charming, confident and elegant. SUBAHS (11) 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. SUBDEB (11) SUBDUE (9) [verb] To overcome, quieten, or bring under control. | [verb] To bring (a country) under control by force. SUBERS (8) SUBFIX (18) SUBGUM (11) SUBITO (8) SUBLET (8) [noun] Property leased by one lessee to another. | [verb] To lease or rent all or part of (a property) (to another person). SUBLOT (8) SUBMIT (10) [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. SUBNET (8) [noun] The abstraction of a sequence. | [noun] A portion of a network that shares a network address in which each component is identified by a number. | [verb] To break (a network) into subnets. SUBORN (8) [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. SUBPAR (10) SUBSEA (8) [adjective] Beneath the sea; submarine. SUBSET (8) [noun] (of a set S) A set A such that every element of A is also an element of S. | [noun] A group of things or people, all of which are in a specified larger group. | [verb] To take a subset of. SUBTLE (8) [adjective] Hard to grasp; not obvious or easily understood; barely noticeable. | [adjective] (of a thing) Cleverly contrived. | [adjective] (of a person or animal) Cunning, skillful. SUBTLY (11) [adverb] With subtleness, in a subtle manner; with cleverness rather than brute force. SUBURB (10) [noun] A residential area located on the outskirts of a city or large town that usually includes businesses that cater to its residents; such as schools, grocery stores, shopping centers, restaurants, convenience stores, etc. | [noun] (by extension) The outer part; the environment. | [noun] Any subdivision of a conurbation, not necessarily on the periphery. SUBWAY (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. SUCCAH (13) [noun] A temporary dwelling or booth used by practising Jews during Tabernacles (Sukkot). SUCCOR (10) [noun] Aid, assistance, or relief given to one in distress; ministration. | [noun] Aid or assistance in the form of military equipment and soldiers, especially reinforcements sent to support military action. | [noun] (obsolete except dialectal) Protection, refuge, shelter; a place providing such protection, refuge or shelter. 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. SUCKER (12) [noun] A person or animal that sucks, especially a breast or udder; especially a suckling animal, young mammal before it is weaned. | [noun] An undesired stem growing out of the roots or lower trunk of a shrub or tree, especially from the rootstock of a grafted plant or tree. | [noun] (by extension) A parasite; a sponger. | [noun] Any thing or object. SUCKLE (12) [noun] A teat. | [verb] To give suck to; to nurse at the breast, udder, or dugs. | [verb] To nurse; to suck milk from a nursing mother. SUCRES (8) [noun] The former currency of Ecuador, divided into 100 centavos. SUDARY (10) SUDDEN (8) [noun] An unexpected occurrence; a surprise. | [adjective] Happening quickly and with little or no warning. | [adjective] Hastily prepared or employed; quick; rapid. SUDORS (7) SUDSED (8) [verb] To cover with, or as if with, soapsuds. SUDSER (7) [noun] A foaming agent used in detergents etc. | [noun] (entertainment industry) A soap opera. SUDSES (7) [verb] To cover with, or as if with, soapsuds. SUEDED (8) SUEDES (7) SUFFER (12) [verb] To undergo hardship. | [verb] To feel pain. | [verb] To become worse. SUFFIX (19) [noun] (grammar) A morpheme added at the end of a word to modify the word's meaning. | [noun] A subscript. | [noun] A final segment of a string of characters. SUGARS (7) [noun] Sucrose in the form of small crystals, obtained from sugar cane or sugar beet and used to sweeten food and drink. | [noun] A specific variety of sugar. | [noun] Any of various small carbohydrates that are used by organisms to store energy. SUGARY (10) [adjective] Of food, drink, etc, containing or covered with a large amount of sugar | [adjective] Of behavior, exaggeratedly sweet and pleasant, often to the point of aversion. | [adjective] Fond of sweets. SUGHED (11) SUINTS (6) 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. SUITER (6) SUITES (6) [noun] A retinue or company of attendants, as of a distinguished personage | [noun] A connected series or succession of objects; a number of things used or classed together | [noun] A group of connected rooms, usually separable from other rooms by means of access. SUITOR (6) [noun] One who pursues someone, especially a woman, for marriage; a wooer; one who courts someone. | [noun] A party to a suit or litigation. | [noun] One who sues, petitions, solicits, or entreats; a petitioner. SUKKAH (17) [noun] A temporary dwelling or booth used by practising Jews during Tabernacles (Sukkot). SUKKOT (14) [noun] A temporary dwelling or booth used by practising Jews during Tabernacles (Sukkot). SULCAL (8) SULCUS (8) [noun] A furrow or groove in an organ or a tissue. | [noun] Any of the grooves that mark the convolutions of the surface of the brain. | [noun] A region of subparallel grooves or ditches formed by a geological process. SULDAN (7) SULFAS (9) SULFID (10) SULFUR (9) [noun] A chemical element (symbol S) with an atomic number of 16. | [noun] A yellowish green colour, like that of sulfur. | [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. SULKED (11) [verb] To express ill humor or offence by remaining sullenly silent or withdrawn. SULKER (10) SULLEN (6) [noun] One who is solitary, or lives alone; a hermit. | [noun] (chiefly in plural) Sullen feelings or manners; sulks; moroseness. | [adjective] Having a brooding ill temper; sulky. SULPHA (11) [noun] A sulphanilamide. | [adjective] Of or containing sulphanilamide. SULTAN (6) [noun] The holder of a secular office, formally subordinate to, but de facto the power behind the throne of, the caliph. | [noun] A hereditary ruler in various Muslim states (sultanate), varying from petty principalities (as in Indonesia and in Yemen), often vassal of a greater ruler, to independent realms, such as Oman, Brunei, or an empire such as the Turkish Ottoman Empire. | [noun] A variant of solitaire, played with two decks of cards. SULTRY (9) [adjective] Hot and humid. | [adjective] Very hot and dry; torrid. | [adjective] Sexually enthralling. SUMACH (13) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMACS (10) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMMAE (10) [noun] A comprehensive summary of, or treatise on a subject, especially theology or philosophy. SUMMAS (10) SUMMED (11) [verb] To add together. | [verb] To give a summary of. SUMMER (10) [noun] One of four seasons, traditionally the second, marked by the longest and typically hottest days of the year due to the inclination of the Earth and thermal lag. Typically regarded as being from June 21 to September 22 or 23 in parts of the USA, the months of June, July and August in the United Kingdom and the months of December, January and February in the Southern Hemisphere. | [noun] Year; used to give the age of a person, usually a young one. | [noun] Someone with light, pinkish skin that has a blue undertone, light hair and eyes, seen as best suited to certain colors of clothing. | [noun] A pack-horse. | [noun] A person who sums. SUMMIT (10) [noun] A peak; the topmost point or surface, as of a mountain. | [noun] A gathering or assembly of leaders. | [verb] (hiking) To reach the summit of a mountain. | [pronoun] Something SUMMON (10) [noun] Call, command, order | [verb] To call people together; to convene. | [verb] To ask someone to come; to send for. SUNBOW (11) [noun] A bow or arc of prismatic colors like a rainbow, caused by refraction through a spray of water from a cataract, waterfall, fountain, etc., rather than through droplets of rain. SUNDAE (7) [noun] A dessert consisting of ice cream with various toppings. | [noun] A Korean dish made of the boiled or steamed intestines of a cow or pig, stuffed with various ingredients. SUNDER (7) [adjective] Sundry; separate; different. | [noun] A separation into parts; a division or severance | [verb] To break or separate or to break apart, especially with force. SUNDEW (10) [noun] Any of a group of insectivorous plants in the genus Drosera that catch insects by sticky droplets ("dew") at the end of hairs on the leafs and grow in boggy ground all over the world. SUNDOG (8) [noun] Either of two bright spots, caused by the refraction of sunlight through ice crystals, sometimes seen on the parhelic circle. SUNDRY (10) [noun] (usually in the plural) A minor miscellaneous item. | [noun] (in the plural) A category for irregular or miscellaneous items not otherwise classified. | [noun] (usually in the plural) An extra. SUNKEN (10) [verb] (heading, physical) To move or be moved into something. | [verb] (heading, social) To diminish or be diminished. | [verb] To conceal and appropriate. SUNKET (10) SUNLIT (6) [adjective] Illuminated by sunlight. SUNNAH (9) SUNNAS (6) 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. SUNSET (6) [noun] The time of day when the sun disappears below the western horizon. | [noun] The changes in color of the sky at sunset. | [noun] The final period of the life of a person or thing. SUNTAN (6) [noun] In humans a brown or darkened coloration of the skin caused by exposure to ultraviolet light. | [verb] To obtain a suntan by exposure to ultraviolet light. | [verb] To attempt to obtain a suntan. SUNUPS (8) [noun] The time of day when the sun appears above the eastern horizon. | [noun] The change in color of the sky at sunup. SUPERB (10) [adjective] First-rate; of the highest quality; exceptionally good. | [adjective] Grand; magnificent; august; stately. | [adjective] Haughty. SUPERS (8) [noun] Short for superannuation. | [noun] Short for supercomputer. | [noun] Short for superhero. SUPINE (8) [noun] (grammar) In Latin and other languages: a type of verbal noun used in the ablative and accusative cases, which shares the same stem as the passive participle. | [noun] (grammar) In Swedish: a verb form that combines with an inflection of ha to form the present perfect and pluperfect tenses. | [adjective] Lying on its back. 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. SUPPER (10) [noun] Food consumed before going to bed. | [noun] Any meal eaten in the evening; dinner eaten in the evening, rather than at noon. | [noun] A meal from a chip shop consisting of a deep-fried food with chips. | [noun] A drinker, especially one who drinks slowly (i.e., one who sups). SUPPLE (10) [verb] To make or become supple. | [verb] To make compliant, submissive, or obedient. | [adjective] Pliant, flexible, easy to bend SUPPLY (13) [noun] The act of supplying. | [noun] An amount of something supplied. | [noun] (in the plural) provisions. | [adverb] Supplely: in a supple manner, with suppleness. SURAHS (9) [noun] Any of the 114 chapters of the Qur'an. | [noun] Soft twilled silk SURELY (9) [adverb] Without fail. | [adverb] Certainly, undoubtedly. | [adverb] With confidence. SUREST (6) [adjective] Physically secure and certain, non-failing, reliable. | [adjective] Certain in one's knowledge or belief. | [adjective] Certain to act or be a specified way. SURETY (9) [noun] Certainty. | [noun] That which makes sure; that which confirms; ground of confidence or security. | [noun] A promise to pay a sum of money in the event that another person fails to fulfill an obligation. SURFED (10) [verb] To ride a wave, usually on a surfboard. | [verb] To browse the Internet, television, etc. SURFER (9) [noun] A person who rides a surfboard. | [noun] A person who surfs the Internet. | [noun] A duck, the surf scoter (Melanitta perspicillata). SURGED (8) [verb] To rush, flood, or increase suddenly. | [verb] To accelerate forwards, particularly suddenly. | [verb] To slack off a line. SURGER (7) SURGES (7) [noun] A sudden transient rush, flood or increase. | [noun] The maximum amplitude of a vehicle's forward/backward oscillation | [noun] A sudden electrical spike or increase of voltage and current. SURIMI (8) [noun] A white paste, made from ground fish, that is used to make formed and textured food products. SURRAS (6) SURREY (9) [noun] A light horse-drawn carriage with forward-facing seats accommodating two or four people, popular in the United States; a motorized carriage of similar design. SURTAX (13) [noun] An additional or extra tax. | [verb] To impose a surtax upon. SURVEY (12) [noun] The act of surveying; a general view. | [noun] A particular view; an examination, especially an official examination, of a particular group of items, in order to ascertain the condition, quantity, or quality. | [noun] The operation of finding the contour, dimensions, position, or other particulars of any part of the Earth's surface. SUSHIS (9) SUSLIK (10) [noun] Any of several large Eurasian squirrels, of the genera Citellus or Spermophilus | [noun] The fur of these animals 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). SUSSES (6) [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). SUTLER (6) [noun] A person who follows an army, selling provisions. SUTRAS (6) [noun] A rule or thesis in Sanskrit grammar or Hindu law or philosophy. | [noun] A scriptural narrative, especially a discourse of the Buddha. SUTTAS (6) [noun] A rule or thesis in Sanskrit grammar or Hindu law or philosophy. | [noun] A scriptural narrative, especially a discourse of the Buddha. SUTTEE (6) [noun] The traditional custom of a Hindu woman giving herself up to be cremated on her husband’s funeral pyre as a sign of her devotion. SUTURE (6) [noun] A seam formed by sewing two edges together, especially to join pieces of skin in surgically treating a wound. | [noun] Thread used to sew or stitch two edges (especially of skin) together. | [noun] An area where separate terrane join together along a major fault. SVARAJ (16) SVELTE (9) [adjective] Attractively thin; gracefully slender. | [adjective] Refined, delicate. SWABBY (16) [noun] A sailor. 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. SWAGER (10) SWAGES (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. SWAILS (9) SWAINS (9) [noun] A young man or boy in service; a servant. | [noun] A knight's servant; an attendant. | [noun] A country labourer; a countryman, a rustic. SWALES (9) [noun] A low tract of moist or marshy land. | [noun] A long narrow and shallow trough between ridges on a beach, running parallel to the coastline. | [noun] A shallow troughlike depression that's created to carry water during rainstorms or snow melts; a drainage ditch. SWAMIS (11) [noun] (used as a title) A Hindu ascetic or religious teacher. SWAMPS (13) [noun] A piece of wet, spongy land; low ground saturated with water; soft, wet ground which may have a growth of certain kinds of trees, but is unfit for agricultural or pastoral purposes. | [noun] A type of wetland that stretches for vast distances, and is home to many creatures which have adapted specifically to that environment. | [noun] A place or situation that is foul or where progress is difficult. SWAMPY (16) [adjective] Soggy and marshy; wet like a swamp. | [adjective] Flowing smoothly with no harsh tones but possibly including muddy tones. SWANKS (13) [verb] To swagger, to show off. SWANKY (16) [noun] An active and clever young fellow. | [noun] Poor thin beer or any sloppy drink, even sweetened water and vinegar. | [adjective] Rather posh, elegant, ritzy. SWARAJ (16) [noun] Self-rule SWARDS (10) [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. SWARFS (12) SWARMS (11) [noun] A large number of insects, especially when in motion or (for bees) migrating to a new colony. | [noun] A mass of people, animals or things in motion or turmoil. | [noun] A group of nodes sharing the same torrent in a BitTorrent network. SWARTH (12) SWARTY (12) SWATCH (14) [noun] A piece, pattern, or sample, generally of cloth or a similar material. | [noun] A selection of such samples bound together. | [noun] A clump or portion of something. | [noun] A channel or passage of water between sandbanks, or between a sandbank and a seashore. SWATHE (12) [noun] A bandage; a band | [verb] To bind with a swathe, band, bandage, or rollers | [noun] The track cut out by a scythe in mowing. SWATHS (12) [noun] The track cut out by a scythe in mowing. | [noun] A broad sweep or expanse, such as of land or of people. 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. SWAYER (12) SWEARS (9) [verb] To take an oath, to promise. | [verb] To use offensive, profane, or obscene language. | [noun] A swear word. SWEATS (9) [noun] Fluid that exits the body through pores in the skin usually due to physical stress and/or high temperature for the purpose of regulating body temperature and removing certain compounds from the circulation. | [noun] The state of one who sweats; diaphoresis. | [noun] (especially WWI) A soldier (especially one who is old or experienced). SWEATY (12) [noun] One who is sweaty. | [adjective] Covered in sweat. | [adjective] Having a tendency to sweat. | [noun] (sometimes humorous) A term of familiar address. SWEDES (10) [noun] The fleshy yellow root of a variety of rape, Brassica napus var. napobrassica, resembling a large turnip, grown as a vegetable. | [noun] The plant from which this is obtained. | [noun] The turnip. SWEENY (12) SWEEPS (11) [noun] A single action of sweeping. | [noun] The person who steers a dragon boat. | [noun] A person who stands at the stern of a surf boat, steering with a steering oar and commanding the crew. SWEEPY (14) SWEETS (9) [noun] The basic taste sensation induced by sugar. | [noun] A confection made from sugar, or high in sugar content; a candy. | [noun] A food eaten for dessert. SWELLS (9) [verb] To become bigger, especially due to being engorged. | [verb] To cause to become bigger. | [verb] To grow gradually in force or loudness. | [noun] The act of swelling; increase in size. SWERVE (12) [noun] A sudden movement out of a straight line, for example to avoid a collision. | [noun] A deviation from duty or custom. | [verb] To stray; to wander; to rove. SWEVEN (12) SWIFTS (12) [noun] A small plain-colored bird of the family Apodidae that resembles a swallow and is noted for its rapid flight. | [noun] Any of certain lizards of the genus Sceloporus. | [noun] A moth of the family Hepialidae, swift moth, ghost moth. SWILLS (9) [noun] (collective) A mixture of solid and liquid food scraps fed to pigs etc; especially kitchen waste for this purpose. | [noun] (by extension) Any disgusting or distasteful liquid. | [noun] (by extension) Anything disgusting or worthless. SWIMMY (16) SWINGE (10) [noun] A swinging blow. | [noun] Power; sway; influence. | [verb] To singe. SWINGS (10) [noun] The manner in which something is swung. | [noun] The sweep or compass of a swinging body. | [noun] A line, cord, or other thing suspended and hanging loose, upon which anything may swing. SWINGY (13) [adjective] Having a swinging motion. | [adjective] Characteristic of swing music. | [adjective] Having many swing voters. SWINKS (13) 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. SWIPES (11) [noun] A quick grab, bat, or other motion with the hand or paw; a sweep. | [noun] A strong blow given with a sweeping motion, as with a bat or club. | [noun] An act of interacting with a touch screen by drawing the finger rapidly across it. SWIPLE (11) SWIRLS (9) [noun] A whirling eddy. | [noun] A twist or coil of something. | [noun] The upward rushing of a fish through the water to take the bait. SWIRLY (12) [noun] A school prank involving holding a person upside down over a toilet bowl, submerging their head, then flushing water. | [adjective] Having swirls; swirling. SWISHY (15) [adjective] Producing a swishing sound. | [adjective] Swish; fancy, posh, impressive. | [adjective] (of a man) Effeminate; gay SWITCH (14) [noun] A bundle of thin sticks, typically made of wood, sometimes bond in such a way that binding can be moved so that it varies the tightness of the binding. | [noun] A device to turn electric current on and off or direct its flow. | [noun] A change or exchange. SWITHE (12) 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. SWIVEL (12) [noun] A piece, as a ring or hook, attached to another piece by a pin, in such a manner as to permit rotation about the pin as an axis. | [noun] A small piece of ordnance, turning on a point or swivel; called also swivel gun. | [noun] Strength of mind or character that enables one to overcome adversity; confidence; force of will. SWIVES (12) SWIVET (12) [noun] A state or condition of haste, flutter; extreme discomposure or distress; irritation, exasperation, annoyance. SWOONS (9) [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. SWOOPS (11) [noun] An instance, or the act of suddenly plunging downward. | [noun] A sudden act of seizing. | [noun] A quick passage from one note to the next. SWOOSH (12) [noun] A swooshing movement or sound | [noun] A pattern or logo suggesting a swooshing movement. | [verb] To move with a rushing or swirling sound SWORDS (10) [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. SWOUND (10) SWOUNS (9) SYBOES (11) SYCEES (11) SYLPHS (14) [noun] An invisible being of the air. | [noun] The elemental being of air, usually female. | [noun] (by extension) A slender woman or girl, usually graceful and sometimes with the implication of sublime station over everyday people. SYLPHY (17) SYLVAE (12) SYLVAN (12) [noun] One who resides in the woods. | [noun] A fabled deity of the wood; a faun, a satyr. | [adjective] Pertaining to the forest, or woodlands. SYLVAS (12) SYLVIN (12) SYMBOL (13) [noun] A character or glyph representing an idea, concept or object. | [noun] A thing considered the embodiment of a concept or object. | [noun] A type of noun whereby the form refers to the same entity independently of the context; a symbol arbitrarily denotes a referent. See also icon and index. 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. SYNCHS (14) [noun] Harmony. | [noun] A music synchronization license, allowing the music to be synchronized with visual media such as films. | [noun] The state or property of being synchronized. SYNCOM (13) SYNDET (10) SYNDIC (12) [noun] A government official, a magistrate, especially one of the Chief Magistrates of Geneva. | [noun] An agent of a corporation, or of any body of people engaged in a business enterprise; an advocate or patron; an assignee. SYNGAS (10) [noun] Synthesis gas or coal gas SYNODS (10) [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. SYNTAX (16) [noun] A set of rules that govern how words are combined to form phrases and sentences. | [noun] The formal rules of formulating the statements of a computer language. | [noun] The study of the structure of phrases, sentences and language. SYNTHS (12) [noun] A musical synthesizer. | [verb] To play on a musical synthesizer. SYNURA (9) SYPHER (14) SYPHON (14) [noun] A bent pipe or tube with one end lower than the other, in which hydrostatic pressure exerted due to the force of gravity moves liquid from one reservoir to another. | [noun] A soda siphon. | [noun] A tubelike organ found in animals or elongated cell found in plants. SYRENS (9) SYRINX (16) [noun] A set of panpipes. | [noun] A narrow channel cut in rock, especially in ancient Egyptian tombs. | [noun] The voice organ in birds. SYRUPS (11) [noun] Any thick liquid that has a high sugar content and which is added to or poured over food as a flavouring. | [noun] (by extension) Any viscous liquid. | [noun] (shortened from "syrup of figs") A wig. SYRUPY (14) [adjective] Having the taste or consistency of syrup. | [adjective] Overly sweet. | [adjective] Overly sentimental. SYSOPS (11) [noun] A system operator, especially someone who administers an online communications system or bulletin board. | [noun] (WMF jargon) An administrator on a wiki. SYSTEM (11) [noun] A collection of organized things; a whole composed of relationships among its members. | [noun] A method or way of organizing or planning. SYZYGY (25) [noun] An alignment of three celestial bodies (for example, the Sun, Earth, and Moon) such that one body is directly between the other two, such as occurs at an eclipse. | [noun] An archetypal pairing of contrasexual opposites, symbolizing the communication of the conscious and unconscious minds. | [noun] A relation between generators of a module.

7-Letter Words (2651)

SABATON (9) SABAYON (12) [noun] A custard-like dessert made with egg yolks, sugar and Marsala wine. SABBATH (14) [noun] Saturday, observed in Judaism and some Christian denominations as a day of rest and worship. | [noun] Sunday, observed in most of Christianity as a day of rest and worship. | [noun] Friday, observed in Islam as a day of rest and worship. SABBATS (11) [noun] Witches' Sabbath SABBING (12) [verb] To sabotage, especially fox hunts in opposition to blood sports. SABEING (10) SABERED (10) [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. SABINES (9) SABRING (10) [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. SACATON (9) SACBUTS (11) SACCADE (12) [noun] A sudden jerking movement. | [noun] A rapid jerky movement of the eye (voluntary or involuntary) from one focus to another. | [noun] The act of checking a horse quickly with a single strong pull of the reins. SACCATE (11) [adjective] Shaped like a pouch or sac. | [adjective] Having a pouch or sac. | [adjective] Enclosed in a sac. SACCULE (11) [noun] The smallest chamber of the membranous labyrinth of the ear. SACCULI (11) [noun] A small bag of herbs or medicinal substances, applied to the body. | [noun] A small sac. SACHEMS (14) [noun] The chief of a Native American tribe; a sagamore. | [noun] A leader in the Tammany Hall society. SACHETS (12) [noun] A small scented cloth bag filled with fragrant material such as herbs or potpourri. | [noun] A cheesecloth bag of herbs and/or spices added during cooking and then removed before serving. | [noun] A small, sealed packet containing a single-use quantity of any material. SACKBUT (15) [noun] A brass instrument from the Renaissance and Baroque Eras, and an ancestor of the modern trombone. It was derived from the medieval slide trumpet. SACKERS (13) SACKFUL (16) [noun] The amount a sack will contain. | [noun] A large number or amount (of something). | [adjective] Intent on plunder. SACKING (14) [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. SACLIKE (13) SACQUES (18) SACRALS (9) SACRING (10) [verb] To consecrate | [noun] Consecration of the Eucharist. | [noun] Consecration of a person for holy office, usually a bishop or sovereign. SACRIST (9) [noun] A sacristan. | [noun] A person retained in a cathedral to copy out music for the choir and take care of the books. SACRUMS (11) [noun] A large triangular bone at the base of the spine, located between the two ilia (wings of the pelvis) and formed from vertebrae that fuse in adulthood. SADDENS (9) [verb] To make sad or unhappy. | [verb] To become sad or unhappy. | [verb] To darken a color during dyeing. SADDEST (9) [adjective] (heading) Emotionally negative. | [adjective] Sated, having had one's fill; satisfied, weary. | [adjective] Steadfast, valiant. SADDHUS (12) SADDLED (10) [verb] To put a saddle on (an animal). | [verb] To get into a saddle. | [verb] To burden or encumber. SADDLER (9) [noun] Someone who makes, repairs and sells saddles, harnesses etc. | [noun] The harp seal. SADDLES (9) [noun] A seat (tack) for a rider placed on the back of a horse or other animal. | [noun] An item of harness (harness saddle) placed on the back of a horse or other animal. | [noun] A seat on a bicycle, motorcycle, etc. SADIRON (8) SADISMS (10) SADISTS (8) [noun] One who derives pleasure through cruelty or pain to others. SADNESS (8) [noun] The state or emotion of being sad. | [noun] An event in one's life that causes sadness. SAFARIS (10) [noun] A trip into any undeveloped area to see, photograph or hunt wild animals in their own environment. | [noun] A caravan going on a safari. | [verb] To take part in a safari. SAFFRON (13) [noun] The plant Crocus sativus, a crocus. | [noun] A spice (seasoning) and colouring agent made from the stigma and part of the style of the plant, sometimes or formerly also used as a dye and insect repellent. | [noun] An orange-yellow colour, the colour of a lion's pelt. SAFROLE (10) SAFROLS (10) SAGAMAN (10) SAGAMEN (10) SAGBUTS (10) SAGGARD (10) SAGGARS (9) [noun] A ceramic container used inside a fuel-fired kiln to protect pots from the flame. | [noun] Fireclay used to make ceramic casings. SAGGERS (9) [noun] A ceramic container used inside a fuel-fired kiln to protect pots from the flame. | [noun] Fireclay used to make ceramic casings. | [verb] Alternative form of saggar SAGGIER (9) [adjective] Baggy or loose-fitting. | [adjective] That sinks or droops from wear or its own weight. SAGGING (10) [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. SAGIEST (8) SAGUARO (8) [noun] Carnegiea gigantea, a large cactus native to the Sonoran Desert and characterized by its "arms". SAHIWAL (13) SAHUARO (10) [noun] Carnegiea gigantea, a large cactus native to the Sonoran Desert and characterized by its "arms". SAILERS (7) [noun] That which sails; a boat. | [noun] A fastball that skims through the air. | [noun] A person in the business of navigating ships or other vessels SAILING (8) [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. | [adjective] Travelling by ship. | [noun] Motion across a body of water in a craft powered by the wind, as a sport or otherwise SAILORS (7) [noun] A person in the business of navigating ships or other vessels | [noun] Someone knowledgeable in the practical management of ships. | [noun] A member of the crew of a vessel; a mariner; a common seaman. SAIMINS (9) SAINING (8) 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. SAINTLY (10) [adjective] Like or characteristic of a saint; befitting a holy person; saintlike. SAIYIDS (11) SALAAMS (9) [noun] A low bow as a ceremonial act of deference. | [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). SALABLE (9) [noun] Something that can be sold. | [adjective] Suitable for sale; marketable; worth enough to try to sell. SALABLY (12) SALAMIS (9) [noun] A large cured meat sausage of Italian origin, served in slices. | [noun] A grand slam. | [noun] A penis. SALCHOW (15) [noun] A figure skating jump with a takeoff from a back inside edge and landing on the back outside edge of the opposite foot after one or more rotations in the air. SALICIN (9) [noun] A glucoside derivative of salicylic acid; the active principle of willow bark, once used medicinally. SALIENT (7) [noun] An outwardly projecting part of a fortification, trench system, or line of defense. | [adjective] Worthy of note; pertinent or relevant. | [adjective] Prominent; conspicuous. SALINAS (7) [noun] A salt marsh, or salt pond, enclosed from the sea. SALINES (7) SALIVAS (10) SALLETS (7) [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. | [noun] A type of light spherical helmet 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. SALLIER (7) SALLIES (7) [noun] A willow | [noun] Any tree that looks like a willow | [noun] An object made from the above trees' wood SALLOWS (10) [verb] To become sallow. | [verb] To cause (someone or something) to become sallow. | [noun] A European willow, Salix caprea, that has broad leaves, large catkins and tough wood. SALLOWY (13) SALMONS (9) SALOONS (7) [noun] A large room, especially one used to receive and entertain guests. | [noun] A gathering of people for a social or intellectual meeting. | [noun] An art gallery or exhibition; especially the Paris salon or autumn salon. SALOOPS (9) SALPIAN (9) SALPIDS (10) SALPINX (16) SALSIFY (13) [noun] Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Tragopogon, most of which have purple flowers. | [noun] Scorzonera hispanica, a plant similar in flavor to T. porrifolius, with lanceolate leaves; cultivated for its dark-skinned edible root. Known in particular as "black salsify" among other common names | [noun] The edible root of these plants. SALTANT (7) SALTBOX (16) [noun] A box for keeping salt in. | [noun] A similar box formerly used as a percussion instrument in burlesque music. | [noun] A distinctively shaped wooden frame house with two storeys at the front and one behind, characteristic of New England SALTERN (7) [noun] An area used for saltmaking, especially in the East Anglian fenlands. | [noun] A modern saltworks. SALTERS (7) [noun] One who makes, sells, or applies salt. | [noun] A trout leaving salt water to ascend a stream. SALTEST (7) SALTIER (7) [adjective] Tasting of salt. | [adjective] Containing salt. | [adjective] Coarse, provocative, earthy; said of language. | [noun] An ordinary (geometric design) in the shape of an X. It usually occupies the entire field in which it is placed. SALTIES (7) [noun] A salt-water crocodile (or estuarine crocodile). | [noun] An ocean-going ship that enters the Great Lakes via the St. Lawrence Seaway. | [noun] The saltwater fluke or dab. SALTILY (10) SALTINE (7) [noun] A thin, crisp, salted, customarily white-colored cracker, a soda cracker. | [noun] A soda biscuit. SALTING (8) [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. SALTIRE (7) [noun] An ordinary (geometric design) in the shape of an X. It usually occupies the entire field in which it is placed. | [noun] The Saint Andrew's cross, the flag of Scotland. SALTISH (10) SALTPAN (9) [noun] A dry lake or playa whose level bed contains abundant salt. | [noun] A man-made pond where salty water is evaporated to recover salt and/or other minerals. SALUKIS (11) 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. SALUTER (7) SALUTES (7) [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. SALVAGE (11) [noun] The rescue of a ship, its crew or its cargo from a hazardous situation. | [noun] The ship, crew or cargo so rescued. | [noun] The compensation paid to the rescuers. | [noun] An uncivilized or feral human; a barbarian. | [noun] (Philippine English) summary execution, extrajudicial killing SALVERS (10) [noun] One who salves or cures. | [noun] One who pretends to cure; a quacksalver. | [noun] One who salves or saves goods, etc. from destruction or loss. SALVIAS (10) [noun] A plant in the genus Salvia, such as sage. SALVING (11) [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. SALVOED (11) SALVOES (10) [noun] An exception; a reservation; an excuse. | [noun] A concentrated fire from pieces of artillery, as in endeavoring to make a break in a fortification; a volley. | [noun] A salute paid by a simultaneous, or nearly simultaneous, firing of a number of cannon. SALVORS (10) [noun] One who salvages; especially, one who voluntarily assists in saving a distressed ship or its goods at sea. SAMARAS (9) [noun] The winged indehiscent fruit of trees such as the ash, elm or maple SAMBAED (12) [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBARS (11) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. SAMBHAR (14) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. SAMBHUR (14) SAMBUCA (13) [noun] An Italian liqueur made from elderberries and flavoured with licorice, traditionally served with 3 coffee beans that represent health, wealth and fortune (or past, present and future). | [noun] An ancient form of triangular harp having a very sharp, shrill tone. SAMBUKE (15) SAMBURS (11) SAMECHS (14) SAMEKHS (16) SAMIELS (9) SAMISEN (9) [noun] A kind of three-stringed Japanese fretless lute. SAMITES (9) [noun] A material of rich silk, sometimes with gold threads, especially prized during the Middle Ages. SAMLETS (9) SAMOSAS (9) [noun] A snack, of Indian origin, consisting of a deep-fried triangular turnover filled with vegetables (especially potatoes) or meat. SAMOVAR (12) [noun] A metal urn with a spigot, for boiling water for making tea. Traditionally, the water is heated by hot coals or charcoal in a chimney-like tube which runs through the center of the urn. Today, it is more likely that the water is heated by an electric coil. SAMPANS (11) [noun] A flat-bottomed Chinese wooden boat propelled by two oars. 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. SAMPLER (11) [noun] A piece of needlework embroidered with a variety of designs. | [noun] Someone whose job is to take samples. | [noun] A device that takes samples. SAMPLES (11) [noun] A part or snippet of something taken or presented for inspection, or shown as evidence of the quality of the whole; a specimen. | [noun] A subset of a population selected for measurement, observation or questioning, to provide statistical information about the population. | [noun] A small quantity of food for tasting, typically given away for free. SAMSARA (9) [noun] In Jainism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and some other eastern religions, the ongoing cycle of birth, death, and rebirth endured by human beings and all other mortal beings, and from which release is obtained by achieving the highest enlightenment. SAMSHUS (12) SAMURAI (9) [noun] In feudal Japan, a soldier who served a daimyo. SANCTUM (11) [noun] A place set apart, as with a sanctum sanctorum; a sacred or private place; a private retreat or workroom. SANDALS (8) [noun] A type of open shoe made up of straps or bands holding a sole to the foot | [noun] A long narrow boat used on the Barbary coast. SANDBAG (11) [noun] A sturdy sack filled with sand, generally used in large numbers to make defensive walls against flooding, bullets, or shrapnel. | [noun] A small bag filled with sand and used as a cudgel. | [noun] An engraver's leather cushion, etc. SANDBAR (10) [noun] A ridge of sand caused by the action of waves along a shore. SANDBOX (17) [noun] A children's play area consisting of a box filled with sand. | [noun] A box filled with sand that is shaped to form a mould for metal casting. | [noun] A container for sand or pounce, used historically before blotting paper. SANDBUR (10) SANDDAB (11) SANDERS (8) [noun] A person employed to sand wood. | [noun] A machine to mechanize the process of sanding. | [noun] A device which spreads sand on the rails in wet, snowy or icy conditions to improve traction. | [noun] Sandalwood, especially the red sandalwood SANDFLY (14) [noun] Any of various small flies of the genera Lutzomyia and Phlebotomus whose females suck the blood of vertebrates and thus spread leishmaniasis. | [noun] A small fly of the genus Austrosimulium. | [noun] A biting midge (family Ceratopogonidae). SANDHIS (11) SANDHOG (12) [noun] A person employed to dig tunnels. | [verb] To work digging tunnels. SANDIER (8) [adjective] Covered with sand. | [adjective] Sprinkled with sand. | [adjective] Containing sand. SANDING (9) [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. | [noun] The act or process by which something is sanded; the application of sandpaper, etc. SANDLOT (8) [noun] A vacant lot where children play. SANDMAN (10) [noun] A legendary figure who is said to bring good sleep and dreams by sprinkling magical sand into people's eyes. | [noun] Used as a symbol of the passage of time toward death. SANDMEN (10) SANDPIT (10) [noun] A place or pit from which sand is excavated. | [noun] A children’s play area consisting of a large container filled with sand. | [noun] A small-scale illustrative model of the theater of war in the Middle East. SANGARS (8) [noun] A stone breastwork; a fortified niche or look-out post. SANGERS (8) [noun] A stone breastwork; a fortified niche or look-out post. | [noun] A sandwich. SANGRIA (8) [noun] A cold drink, originating in Spain, consisting of red or white wine, brandy or sherry, fruit juice, sugar and soda water and garnished with orange and other fruit. | [noun] A deep red color. SANICLE (9) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Sanicula, having palmate compound leaves and small flowers arranged in umbels; the snakeroot. SANIOUS (7) SANJAKS (18) [noun] An administrative region under the Ottoman Empire, a subdivision of a vilayet. | [noun] The governor of a sanjak; a sanjakbeg. SANNOPS (9) SANNUPS (9) SANSARS (7) SANSEIS (7) SANTIMI (9) SANTIMS (9) [noun] A subunit of Latvian currency. 100 santims equal a lat. | [noun] A subunit of Ethiopian currency. 100 santims equal a birr. SANTIRS (7) SANTOLS (7) SANTOUR (7) SANTURS (7) SAPAJOU (16) SAPHEAD (13) SAPHENA (12) SAPIENS (9) SAPIENT (9) [noun] An intelligent, self-aware being. | [adjective] Attempting to appear wise or discerning. | [adjective] Possessing wisdom and discernment; wise, learned. SAPLESS (9) SAPLING (10) [noun] A young tree, but bigger than a seedling. | [noun] A youngster, especially a male nearing maturity. SAPONIN (9) [noun] Any of various steroid glycosides found in plant tissues that dissolve in water to give a soapy froth. SAPOTAS (9) SAPOTES (9) SAPOURS (9) SAPPERS (11) [noun] One who saps; specifically, one who is employed in working at saps, building and repairing fortifications, and the like. Often known as a combat engineer or military engineer. | [noun] An officer or private of the Royal Engineers. SAPPHIC (16) [noun] A Sapphic verse. | [noun] A person who is sapphic. | [adjective] Lesbian, relating to lesbianism, or (broadly) to women who are attracted (not necessarily exclusively) to women. SAPPIER (11) [adjective] Excessively sweet, emotional, nostalgic; cheesy; mushy. (British equivalent: soppy) | [adjective] Having (a particularly large amount of) sap. | [adjective] Juicy. SAPPILY (14) SAPPING (12) [verb] To drain, suck or absorb from (tree, etc.). | [verb] To exhaust the vitality of. | [verb] To strike with a sap (with a blackjack). SAPROBE (11) SAPSAGO (10) SAPWOOD (13) [noun] The wood just under the bark of a stem or branch, different in color from the heartwood. SARAPES (9) [noun] A type of blanket worn as a cloak, especially by Spanish-Americans, or used as a saddle blanket. SARCASM (11) [noun] Use of acerbic language to mock or convey contempt, often using irony and (in speech) often marked by overemphasis and a sneering tone of voice. | [noun] An act of sarcasm. SARCOID (10) [noun] Sarcoidosis. | [adjective] Relating to sarcoid (sarcoidosis). | [adjective] Resembling sarcoma. SARCOMA (11) [noun] A type of malignant tumor of the bone, cartilage, fat, muscle, blood vessels, or other connective or supportive tissue. SARCOUS (9) SARDANA (8) SARDARS (8) SARDINE (8) [noun] Any one of several species of small herring which are commonly preserved in olive oil or in tins for food, especially the pilchard, or European sardine Sardina pilchardus (syn. Clupea pilchardus). The California sardine Sardinops sagax (syn. Clupea sagax) is similar. The American sardines of the Atlantic coast are mostly the young of the Atlantic herring and of the menhaden. | [noun] Carnelian | [noun] Someone packed or crammed into a small space. SARDIUS (8) [noun] Sard SARKIER (11) [adjective] Sarcastic SARMENT (9) SARODES (8) SARONGS (8) [noun] A garment made of a length of printed cloth wrapped about the waist that is commonly worn by men and women in Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Indonesia, and the Pacific islands. SAROSES (7) [noun] (history, Babylon) A quantity of 3600, such as a period of 3600 years. | [noun] A period of 223 synodic months (approximately 18 years 11 days 8 hours), after which the relative positions of the earth, sun and moon recur, used to predict eclipses. SARSARS (7) SARSENS (7) [noun] Any of various blocks of sandstone found in various locations in southern England. SARTORS (7) SASHAYS (13) [noun] A chassé. | [noun] A sequence of sideways steps in a circle in square dancing. SASHIMI (12) [noun] A dish consisting of thin slices or pieces of raw fish or meat. SASHING (11) SASSABY (12) [noun] A large African antelope (Alcelaphus lunata, now Damaliscus lunatus), similar to the hartebeest, but having its horns regularly curved. SASSIER (7) [adjective] Bold and spirited, cheeky, impudent, saucy. | [adjective] Somewhat sexy and provocative. | [adjective] Lively, vigorous. SASSIES (7) SASSILY (10) SASSING (8) [verb] To talk, to talk back. | [verb] To speak insolently to. SATANGS (8) [noun] A subdivision of currency, equal to one hundredth of a Thai baht. SATANIC (9) [adjective] Of, pertaining to or resembling Satan (the Devil). | [adjective] Evil, fiendish, devilish or diabolical. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to any form of Satanism. SATARAS (7) SATCHEL (12) [noun] A bag or case with one or two shoulder straps, especially used to carry books etc. SATEENS (7) [noun] A type of cotton cloth with a shiny surface and dull back, woven using the technique that, when applied to silk or nylon, results in cloth called satin. SATIATE (7) [verb] To fill to satisfaction; to satisfy. | [verb] To satisfy to excess. To fill to satiety. | [adjective] Filled to satisfaction or to excess. SATIETY (10) [noun] The state of being satiated. SATINET (7) [noun] A faux satin usually made of synthetic fiber or cotton. SATIRES (7) [noun] A literary device of writing or art which principally ridicules its subject often as an intended means of provoking or preventing change. Humor, irony, and exaggeration are often used to aid this. | [noun] A satirical work. | [noun] Severity of remark. SATIRIC (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to satire SATISFY (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. SATORIS (7) SATRAPS (9) [noun] A governor of a Persian province. | [noun] A subordinate ruler. SATRAPY (12) [noun] The territory governed by a satrap; a province of any of several ancient empires of Western Asia (specifically, of the Median or Achaemenid empires or certain of their successors, including the Sassanian Empire and Hellenistic empires). SATSUMA (9) [noun] A seedless and easy-peeling cultivar of mandarin orange of Japanese origin; Citrus unshiu. SATYRIC (12) SATYRID (11) [noun] Any butterfly of the nymphalid subfamily Satyrinae, formerly the family Satyridae. SAUCERS (9) [noun] A small shallow dish to hold a cup and catch drips. | [noun] An object round and gently curved (shaped like a saucer). | [noun] A small pan or vessel in which sauce was set on a table. SAUCIER (9) [adjective] Similar to sauce; having the consistency or texture of sauce. | [adjective] Impertinent or disrespectful, often in a manner that is regarded as entertaining or amusing; smart. | [adjective] Impudently bold; pert. | [noun] In a large professional kitchen, a cook responsible for preparing sauces and for sauteing foods on demand. | [noun] Sauce pan (a pan used to cook up a sauce) SAUCILY (12) SAUCING (10) [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. SAUGERS (8) [noun] A freshwater perciform fish, Sander canadensis SAUNTER (7) [noun] A leisurely walk or stroll. | [noun] A leisurely pace. | [noun] A place for sauntering or strolling. SAURELS (7) SAURIAN (7) [adjective] Like or resembling a lizard. | [noun] (properly) A reptile of the suborder Sauria. | [noun] (popularly) Any large reptilian animal, including crocodiles and reptilian aliens. SAURIES (7) [noun] A marine epipelagic fish of the family Scomberesocidae, with beaklike jaws and a row of small finlets behind the dorsal and anal fins. SAUSAGE (8) [noun] A food made of ground meat (or meat substitute) and seasoning, packed in a section of the animal's intestine, or in a similarly cylindrical shaped synthetic casing; a length of this food. | [noun] A sausage-shaped thing. | [noun] Penis. 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. SAUTOIR (7) [noun] A ribbon, chain, scarf, or the like, tied around the neck in such a manner that the ends cross over each other. | [noun] A chain to which a pendant is attached, worn around the neck. SAVABLE (12) 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. SAVAGER (11) SAVAGES (11) [noun] An uncivilized or feral human; a barbarian. | [noun] A defiant person. | [verb] To attack or assault someone or something ferociously or without restraint. SAVANNA (10) [noun] A tropical grassland with scattered trees SAVANTS (10) [noun] A person of learning, especially one who is versed in literature or science. | [noun] A person who is considered eminent because of their achievements. | [noun] A person with significant mental disabilities who is very gifted in one area of activity, such as playing the piano or mental arithmetic. SAVARIN (10) [noun] A type of leavened cake often drizzled with liquor SAVATES (10) SAVELOY (13) [noun] A seasoned and smoked pork sausage, normally purchased ready-cooked. SAVINES (10) [noun] The evergreen shrub Juniperus sabina, endemic to Europe, which yields a medicinal oil. | [noun] The poisonous dried tips of this plant, with anthelmintic properties, used as a drug. | [noun] The eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, of eastern North America. SAVINGS (11) [noun] A reduction in cost or expenditure. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Something (usually money) that is saved, particularly money that has been set aside for the future. | [noun] The action of the verb to save. SAVIORS (10) [noun] A person who saves someone, rescues another from harm. | [noun] A child who is born to provide an organ or cell transplant to a sibling who has an otherwise fatal disease (used in combination, with "sibling", "baby", "child", "brother", "sister", etc.) SAVIOUR (10) [noun] A person who saves someone, rescues another from harm. | [noun] A child who is born to provide an organ or cell transplant to a sibling who has an otherwise fatal disease (used in combination, with "sibling", "baby", "child", "brother", "sister", etc.) SAVORED (11) [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. | [verb] To appreciate, enjoy or relish something. | [verb] To season. SAVORER (10) SAVOURS (10) [noun] The specific taste or smell of something. | [noun] A distinctive sensation. | [noun] Sense of smell; power to scent, or trace by scent. SAVOURY (13) [noun] A savory snack. | [adjective] Tasty, attractive to the palate. | [adjective] Salty and/or spicy, but not sweet. SAVVIED (14) [verb] To understand. SAVVIER (13) [adjective] Shrewd, well-informed and perceptive. SAVVIES (13) [verb] To understand. SAWBILL (12) [noun] The red-breasted merganser. SAWBUCK (18) [noun] A framework for holding wood so that it can be sawed; a sawhorse | [noun] A ten-dollar bill SAWDUST (11) [noun] The fine particles (dust) of wood created by sawing. | [verb] To sprinkle with sawdust. SAWFISH (16) [noun] Any ray (marine fish with a flat body and wing-like fins) of the family Pristidae, having a snout that resembles a saw. SAWLIKE (14) SAWLOGS (11) [noun] The part of a tree stem that will be processed at a sawmill, rather than becoming pulpwood. SAWMILL (12) [noun] A machine, building or company used for cutting (milling) lumber. | [verb] To process (lumber) in a sawmill. SAWNEYS (13) SAWYERS (13) [noun] One who saws timber, especially in a sawpit. | [noun] A large trunk of a tree brought down by the force of a river's current | [noun] A beetle, mostly in the genus Monochamus, that lives and feeds on trees, including timber. SAXHORN (17) [noun] Any of a group of similar brass instruments, resembling a bugle in shape, but with valves SAXTUBA (16) SAYABLE (12) SAYINGS (11) [noun] A proverb or maxim. | [noun] That which is said; a statement. SAYYIDS (14) 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). SCABBLE (13) SCABIES (11) [noun] An infestation of parasitic mites, Sarcoptes scabiei, causing intense itching caused by the mites burrowing into the skin of humans and other animals. It is easily transmissible from human to human; secondary skin infection may occur. SCALADE (10) SCALADO (10) SCALAGE (10) SCALARE (9) SCALARS (9) [noun] A quantity that has magnitude but not direction; compare vector | [noun] An amplifier whose output is a constant multiple of its input SCALDED (11) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. SCALDIC (12) SCALENE (9) [noun] Any of several muscles extending from the neck to the first and second ribs. | [noun] A scalene triangle. | [adjective] (of a triangle) Having sides unequal in length. SCALENI (9) [noun] Any of several muscles extending from the neck to the first and second ribs. | [noun] A scalene triangle. SCALERS (9) SCALEUP (11) [noun] The act or result of scaling up. SCALIER (9) [adjective] Covered or abounding with scales. | [adjective] Composed of scales lying over each other. | [adjective] Resembling scales, laminae, or layers. SCALING (10) [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. SCALLOP (11) [noun] Any of various marine bivalve molluscs of the family Pectinidae which are free-swimming. | [noun] One of a series of curves, forming an edge similar to a scallop shell. | [noun] A fillet of meat, escalope. 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). SCALPEL (11) [noun] A small straight knife with a very sharp blade used for surgery, dissection and craftwork. SCALPER (11) [noun] One who scalps, or removes the scalp of another. | [noun] One who scalps tickets to popular entertainment events: buying them in advance and then selling them (e.g. online or just outside the venue of the event), often at inflated prices. | [noun] A person on an open outcry exchange trading floor who buys and sells rapidly for his or her 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. SCAMPER (13) [noun] A quick, light run. | [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. | [noun] One who skimps or does slipshod work. SCANDAL (10) [noun] An incident or event that disgraces or damages the reputation of the persons or organization involved. | [noun] Damage to one's reputation. | [noun] Widespread moral outrage, indignation, as over an offence to decency. SCANDIA (10) SCANDIC (12) 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. SCANNER (9) [noun] A device which scans documents in order to convert them to a digital medium. | [noun] A radio receiver which iterates through a sequence of frequencies to detect signal. | [noun] A device which uses radiation (ultrasound, X-ray, etc.) to generate images of tissue or surfaces for diagnostic purposes. SCANTED (10) [verb] To limit in amount or share; to stint. | [verb] To fail, or become less; to scantle. | [adjective] Diminished; restricted. SCANTER (9) SCANTLY (12) SCAPING (12) SCAPOSE (11) SCAPULA (11) [noun] Either of the two large, flat, bones forming the back of the shoulder. SCARABS (11) [noun] A beetle of the species Scarabaeus sacer, sacred to the ancient Egyptians. | [noun] Any species of beetle belonging to the family Scarabaeidae. | [noun] A symbol, seal, amulet, or gem fashioned to resemble the sacred beetle. SCARCER (11) [adjective] Uncommon, rare; difficult to find; insufficient to meet a demand. | [adjective] Scantily supplied (with); deficient (in); used with of. SCARERS (9) 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. SCARIER (9) [adjective] Causing or able to cause fright. | [adjective] Uncannily striking or surprising. | [adjective] Subject to sudden alarm; easily frightened. SCARIFY (15) [verb] To remove thatch (build-up of organic matter on the soil) from a lawn, to dethatch. | [verb] To make scratches or cuts on. | [verb] To harrow the feelings. SCARILY (12) [adverb] In a scary manner. SCARING (10) [verb] To frighten, terrify, startle, especially in a minor way. SCARLET (9) [noun] A brilliant red colour tinged with orange. | [noun] Cloth of a scarlet color. | [verb] To dye or tinge with scarlet. SCARPED (12) [verb] (earth science) to cut, scrape, erode, or otherwise make into a scarp or escarpment SCARPER (11) [verb] To run away; to flee; to escape. SCARPHS (14) SCARRED (10) [verb] To mark the skin permanently. | [verb] To form a scar. | [verb] To affect deeply in a traumatic manner. SCARTED (10) SCARVES (12) [noun] A long, often knitted, garment worn around the neck. | [noun] A headscarf. | [noun] A neckcloth or cravat. SCATHED (13) [verb] To injure or harm. | [verb] To blast; scorch; wither. SCATHES (12) [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. SCATTER (9) [noun] The act of scattering or dispersing. | [noun] A collection of dispersed objects. | [verb] To (cause to) separate and go in different directions; to disperse. SCAUPER (11) [noun] A tool with a semicircular edge, used by engravers to clear away the spaces between the lines of an engraving. SCENDED (11) [verb] To heave upward. SCENERY (12) [noun] View, natural features, landscape. | [noun] Stage backdrops, property and other items on a stage that give the impression of the location of the scene. 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. SCEPTER (11) [noun] An ornamental staff held by a ruling monarch as a symbol of power. | [verb] To give a sceptre to. | [verb] To invest with royal power. SCEPTIC (13) [noun] Someone who habitually doubts beliefs and claims presented as accepted by others, requiring strong evidence before accepting any belief or claim. | [noun] Someone undecided as to what is true. | [noun] A type of agnostic; someone skeptical towards religion. SCEPTRE (11) [noun] An ornamental staff held by a ruling monarch as a symbol of power. | [verb] To give a sceptre to. | [verb] To invest with royal power. SCHAPPE (16) [noun] A silk yarn or fabric made out of carded spun silk. | [verb] To use a process of fermentation to remove sericin from silk. SCHEMAS (14) [noun] An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind (for example, a body schema). | [noun] A formal description of the structure of a database: the names of the tables, the names of the columns of each table, and the data type and other attributes of each column. | [noun] (markup languages) A formal description of data, data types, and data file structures, such as XML schemas for XML files. SCHEMED (15) [verb] To plot, or contrive a plan. | [verb] To plan; to contrive. SCHEMER (14) [noun] One who plots or schemes, who formulates plans. | [noun] One who is given to scheming. SCHEMES (14) [noun] A systematic plan of future action. | [noun] A plot or secret, devious plan. | [noun] An orderly combination of related parts. SCHERZI (21) [noun] A piece of music or a movement from a larger piece such as a symphony; especially, a piece of music played in a playful manner. SCHERZO (21) [noun] A piece of music or a movement from a larger piece such as a symphony; especially, a piece of music played in a playful manner. SCHISMS (14) [noun] A split or separation within a group or organization, typically caused by discord. | [noun] A formal division or split within a religious body. | [noun] A split within Christianity whereby a group no longer recognizes the Bishop of Rome as the head of the Church, but shares essentially the same beliefs with the Church of Rome. In other words, a political split without the introduction of heresy. SCHISTS (12) [noun] Any of a variety of coarse-grained crystalline metamorphic rocks with a foliated structure that allows easy division into slabs or slates. SCHIZOS (21) [noun] Schizophrenic. SCHIZZY (33) SCHLEPP (16) [noun] A long or burdensome journey. | [noun] A boring person, a drag; a good-for-nothing person. | [noun] A sloppy or slovenly person. SCHLEPS (14) [noun] A long or burdensome journey. | [noun] A boring person, a drag; a good-for-nothing person. | [noun] A sloppy or slovenly person. SCHLOCK (18) [noun] Commodity that is shoddy or inferior. SCHLUMP (16) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. | [verb] To move in a heavy, lazy or slovenly way. SCHMALZ (23) [noun] Liquid chicken fat. | [noun] Excessively sentimental art or music. SCHMEAR (14) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMEER (14) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMOES (14) [noun] A stupid or obnoxious person SCHMOOS (14) SCHMUCK (20) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SCHNAPS (14) SCHNOOK (16) [noun] A person who is easily taken advantage of. SCHNOZZ (30) [noun] Nose. SCHOLAR (12) [noun] A student; one who studies at school or college, typically having a scholarship. | [noun] A specialist in a particular branch of knowledge. | [noun] A learned person; a bookman. SCHOLIA (12) [noun] A scholium. | [noun] A note added to a text as an explanation, criticism or commentary | [noun] A note added to a proof as amplification SCHOOLS (12) [noun] (collective) A group of fish or a group of marine mammals such as porpoises, dolphins, or whales. | [noun] A multitude. | [verb] (of fish) To form into, or travel in a school. SCHORLS (12) SCHRIKS (16) SCHRODS (13) SCHTICK (18) [noun] A generally humorous routine | [noun] A characteristic trait or theme, especially in the way people or media present themselves. | [noun] A gimmick. SCHTIKS (16) SCHUITS (12) SCIATIC (11) [noun] A person with sciatica. | [adjective] Of, or relating to the ischium. | [adjective] Of, or relating to sciatica. SCIENCE (11) [noun] A particular discipline or branch of learning, especially one dealing with measurable or systematic principles rather than intuition or natural ability. | [noun] Specifically the natural sciences. | [noun] Knowledge gained through study or practice; mastery of a particular discipline or area. | [noun] A descendant, especially a first-generation descendant of a distinguished family. SCILLAS (9) [noun] A plant of the genus Scilla; a squill. | [noun] A bulb of Urginea scilla. SCIRRHI (12) [noun] An indurated organ or part, especially a gland. | [noun] A cancerous tumour which is hard, translucent, of a gray or bluish color, and emits a creaking sound when incised. SCISSOR (9) [noun] One blade on a pair of scissors. | [noun] Scissors. | [noun] (noun adjunct) Used in certain noun phrases to denote a thing resembling the action of scissors, as scissor kick, scissor hold (wrestling), scissor jack. SCIURID (10) SCLAFFS (15) SCLERAE (9) [noun] The white of the eye. It is the tough outer coat of the eye that covers the eyeball except for the cornea. SCLERAL (9) SCLERAS (9) [noun] The white of the eye. It is the tough outer coat of the eye that covers the eyeball except for the cornea. SCOFFED (16) [verb] To jeer; to laugh with contempt and derision. | [verb] To mock; to treat with scorn. | [verb] To eat food quickly. SCOFFER (15) SCOLDED (11) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. | [verb] To rebuke angrily. SCOLDER (10) SCOLLOP (11) [noun] Any of various marine bivalve molluscs of the family Pectinidae which are free-swimming. | [noun] One of a series of curves, forming an edge similar to a scallop shell. | [noun] A fillet of meat, escalope. SCONCED (12) SCONCES (11) [noun] A fixture for a light. | [noun] A head or a skull. | [noun] A poll tax; a mulct or fine. 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). SCOOPER (11) 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. SCOOTER (9) [noun] A kick scooter or push scooter; a human-powered land vehicle with a handlebar, deck and wheels that is propelled by a rider pushing off the ground. | [noun] A electric version of the kick scooter. | [noun] A motorscooter; a small motorcycle or moped with a step-through frame. SCOPING (12) [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. SCOPULA (11) [noun] A dense tuft of hair, as on the legs of certain insects. SCORERS (9) [noun] One who scores. | [noun] One who keeps track of scores in a game; a scorekeeper. | [noun] Either of a pair of people, one provided by each side, who record in a specially formatted book, every ball bowled, every run scored, and every wicket that falls SCORIAE (9) [noun] The slag or dross that remains after the smelting of metal from an ore. | [noun] Rough masses of rock formed by solidified lava, and which can be found around a volcano's crater. SCORIFY (15) SCORING (10) [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. 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. SCORNER (9) [noun] One who scorns. SCOTERS (9) [noun] Any one of several species of northern sea ducks of the genus Melanitta. SCOTIAS (9) [noun] A concave molding with a lower edge projecting beyond the top. SCOTOMA (11) [noun] An area of impaired or lost vision within a field of vision otherwise in a good (or at least healthy) state. SCOTTIE (9) 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. SCOURER (9) SCOURGE (10) [noun] A source of persistent trouble such as pestilence that causes pain and suffering or widespread destruction. | [noun] A means to inflict such pain or destruction. | [noun] A whip, often of leather. SCOUSES (9) [noun] A stew associated with the Liverpool area, usually containing (at least) meat, onions, carrots and potatoes. 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. SCOUTER (9) [noun] A stoneworker who removes large projections by boring slanting or transverse holes and using wedges etc. to split the stone. SCOUTHS (12) SCOWDER (13) SCOWING (13) 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. SCOWLER (12) SCRAGGY (14) [adjective] Rough and irregular; jagged. | [adjective] Lean or thin, scrawny. SCRAICH (14) SCRAIGH (13) 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. SCRAPER (11) [noun] An instrument with which anything is scraped. | [noun] One who scrapes horns. | [noun] One who plays a violin incompetently, producing cacophonous sounds. SCRAPES (11) [noun] A broad, shallow injury left by scraping (rather than a cut or a scratch). | [noun] A fight, especially a fistfight without weapons. | [noun] An awkward set of circumstances. SCRAPIE (11) [noun] A degenerative prion disease of sheep and goats that attacks the central nervous system. SCRAPPY (16) [adjective] Consisting of scraps; fragmentary; lacking unity or consistency. | [adjective] Having an aggressive spirit; inclined to fight or strive. | [adjective] (Of a fight) characterised by lots of ungainly or wild punches, grabs, wrestling, etc. SCRATCH (14) [noun] A disruption, mark or shallow cut on a surface made by scratching. | [noun] An act of scratching the skin to alleviate an itch or irritation. | [noun] A starting line (originally and simply, a line scratched in the ground), as in boxing. SCRAWLS (12) [noun] Irregular, possibly illegible handwriting. | [noun] A hastily or carelessly written note etc. | [noun] Writing that lacks literary merit. SCRAWLY (15) SCRAWNY (15) [adjective] Thin, malnourished and weak. SCREAKS (13) SCREAKY (16) SCREAMS (11) [noun] A loud, emphatic, exclamation of extreme emotion, especially horror, fear, excitement, or anger; it may comprise a word or a sustained, high-pitched vowel sound. | [noun] A form of singing associated with the metal and screamo styles of music. It is a loud, rough, distorted version of the voice; rather than the normal voice of the singer. | [noun] Used as an intensifier SCREECH (14) [noun] A high-pitched strident or piercing sound, such as that between a moving object and any surface. | [noun] A harsh, shrill cry, as of one in acute pain or in fright; a shriek; a scream. | [noun] (Newfoundlander) Newfoundland rum. SCREEDS (10) [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. SCREENS (9) [noun] A physical divider intended to block an area from view, or provide shelter from something dangerous. | [noun] A material woven from fine wires intended to block animals or large particles from passing while allowing gasses, liquids and finer particles to pass. | [noun] (by analogy) Searching through a sample for a target; an act of screening 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. SCREWER (12) SCREWUP (14) [noun] A substantial mistake, usually causing problems for more people than just the person or group who made it. | [noun] A person who often makes substantial mistakes; a bungler. | [noun] A person who is mentally or emotionally damaged. SCRIBAL (11) SCRIBED (12) [verb] To write. | [verb] To write, engrave, or mark upon; to inscribe. | [verb] To record. SCRIBER (11) [noun] A sharp-pointed tool, used by joiners for drawing lines; a marking awl. SCRIBES (11) [noun] Someone who writes; a draughtsperson; a writer for another; especially, an official or public writer; an amanuensis, secretary, notary or copyist. | [noun] A writer and doctor of the law; one skilled in the law and traditions; one who read and explained the law to the people. | [noun] A very sharp, steel drawing implement used in engraving and etching, a scriber. SCRIEVE (12) SCRIMPS (13) [noun] A pinching miser; a niggard. | [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. SCRIMPY (16) SCRIPTS (11) [noun] A writing; a written document. | [noun] Written characters; style of writing. | [noun] Type made in imitation of handwriting. SCRIVED (13) SCRIVES (12) SCROGGY (14) SCROLLS (9) [noun] A roll of paper or parchment; a writing formed into a roll. | [noun] An ornament formed of undulations giving off spirals or sprays, usually suggestive of plant form. Roman architectural ornament is largely of some scroll pattern. | [noun] Spirals or sprays in the shape of an actual plant. SCROOCH (14) [verb] To crouch, or hunker down. SCROOGE (10) SCROOPS (11) SCROTAL (9) SCROTUM (11) [noun] The bag of skin and muscle that contains the testicles in mammals. SCROUGE (10) SCRUBBY (16) SCRUFFS (15) [noun] Someone with an untidy appearance. | [noun] Stubble, facial hair (on males). | [noun] Crust. SCRUFFY (18) [noun] An artificial intelligence researcher who believes that intelligence is too complicated (or computationally intractable) to be solved with the sorts of homogeneous system favoured by the "neats". | [adjective] Untidy in appearance. | [adjective] Scurfy. SCRUNCH (14) [verb] To grind with the teeth, and with a crackling sound; to craunch. | [noun] A crunching noise. | [verb] To crumple and squeeze to make more compact. SCRUPLE (11) [noun] A weight of 1/288 of a pound, that is, twenty grains or one third of a dram, about 1.3 grams (symbol: ℈). | [noun] (by extension) A very small quantity; a particle. | [noun] A doubt or uncertainty concerning a matter of fact; intellectual perplexity. SCRYING (13) [verb] To predict the future using crystal balls or other objects. | [verb] To descry; to see. | [verb] To proclaim. 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. SCUFFLE (15) [noun] A rough, disorderly fight or struggle at close quarters. | [noun] A child's pinafore or bib. | [verb] To fight or struggle confusedly at close quarters. | [noun] A Dutch hoe, manipulated by both pushing and pulling. SCULKED (14) SCULKER (13) 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. SCULLER (9) [noun] One who sculls; an athlete who participates in sculling races. | [noun] A boat rowed by one person with two sculls, or short oars. SCULPED (12) [verb] (sometimes humorous) To sculpture; to carve or engrave. | [verb] To flay. SCULPIN (11) [noun] A small fish of the family Cottidae, usually lacking scales. Often found on river bottoms and in tidal pools. | [noun] A person who makes mischief. SCULPTS (11) [noun] A modification that can be applied to an object, like a texture, but changes the object's shape rather than its appearance. | [verb] To form by sculpture. | [verb] To work as a sculptor. SCUMBAG (14) [noun] Condom | [noun] (mildly) sleazy, disreputable or despicable person; lowlife SCUMBLE (13) [noun] An opaque kind of glaze (layer of paint). | [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. 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. SCUMMER (13) [noun] An instrument for taking off scum | [noun] A supporter of Southampton F.C.. | [noun] One who engages in scumming. | [noun] Excrement, scumber SCUNNER (9) [noun] Dislike or aversion. | [noun] (North Yorkshire) An urban youth usually associated with trouble or petty crime; a young chav. | [verb] To be sick of. SCUPPER (13) [noun] A drainage hole on the deck of a ship. | [noun] A similar opening in a wall or parapet that allows water to drain from a roof. | [verb] Thwart or destroy, especially something belonging or pertaining to another; compare scuttle. SCURRIL (9) SCUTAGE (10) [noun] A tax, paid in lieu of military service, that was a significant source of revenue in England in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. SCUTATE (9) SCUTTER (9) [noun] Thin excrement. | [noun] A hasty run. | [verb] To void thin excrement. SCUTTLE (9) [noun] A container like an open bucket (usually to hold and carry coal). | [noun] A broad, shallow basket. | [noun] A dish, platter or a trencher. | [noun] A small hatch or opening in a boat. Also, small opening in a boat or ship for draining water from open deck. | [noun] A quick pace; a short run. SCYPHUS (17) SCYTHED (16) [verb] To use a scythe. | [verb] To cut with a scythe. | [verb] To cut off as with a scythe; to mow. SCYTHES (15) [noun] An instrument for mowing grass, grain, etc. by hand, composed of a long, curving blade with a sharp concave edge, fastened to a long handle called a snath. | [noun] A scythe-shaped blade attached to ancient war chariots. | [noun] The tenth Lenormand card. SEABAGS (10) [noun] A duffel bag used by sailors or marines. SEABEDS (10) SEABIRD (10) [noun] Any bird that spends most of its time in coastal waters or over the oceans. SEABOOT (9) SEACOCK (15) [noun] A valve in the hull of a vessel used to let in water, either to clean the bilges, flood a ballast tank, or scuttle the vessel SEADOGS (9) [noun] A sailor accustomed to the sea. | [noun] A pirate. | [noun] A seal. (marine mammal) SEAFOOD (11) [noun] Fish, shellfish, seaweed, and other edible aquatic life. SEAFOWL (13) SEAGIRT (8) SEAGULL (8) [noun] Any of several white, often dark backed birds of the family Laridae having long pointed wings and short legs. | [noun] The symbol ̼ , which combines under a letter as a sort of accent. | [noun] A fan or member of Brighton and Hove Albion Football Club. SEALANT (7) [noun] Any material used to seal a surface so as to prevent passage of a fluid. | [noun] A mixture of polymers, fillers, and pigments used to fill and seal joints where moderate movement is expected. SEALERS (7) [noun] A tool used to seal something. | [noun] A person who is employed to seal things. | [noun] A coating designed to prevent excessive absorption of finish coats into porous surfaces; a coating designed to prevent bleeding. SEALERY (10) SEALING (8) [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. | [verb] To hunt seals. SEAMARK (13) [noun] Any elevated object on land which serves as a guide to mariners, such as a hill or steeple. | [noun] A beacon, buoy, etc. placed in the sea to aid navigation. SEAMERS (9) [noun] A person who sews seams. | [noun] Part of a sewing machine that creates seams. | [noun] A bowler skilled at making the ball seam. SEAMIER (9) [adjective] Sordid, squalid or corrupt. | [adjective] Having or showing a seam. SEAMING (10) [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. | [verb] To mark with a seam or line; to scar. SEANCES (9) [noun] A ceremony where people try to communicate with the spirits of dead people, usually led by a medium. | [noun] The sitting of an assembly to discuss a matter. SEAPORT (9) [noun] A town or harbour with facilities for seagoing ships to dock and take on or discharge cargo. SEAREST (7) SEARING (8) [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. SEASICK (13) [adjective] Suffering from sickness, nausea or dizziness due to the motion of a ship at sea. SEASIDE (8) [noun] The area by and around the sea; including the beach, promenade or cliffs | [adjective] Related to a seaside. SEASONS (7) [noun] Each of the four divisions of a year: spring, summer, autumn (fall) and winter | [noun] A part of a year when something particular happens | [noun] That which gives relish; seasoning. SEATERS (7) SEATING (8) [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. SEAWALL (10) [noun] A coastal defence in the form of a wall or an embankment. SEAWANS (10) SEAWANT (10) 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. SEAWARE (10) SEAWAYS (13) [noun] A lane or route at sea that is regularly used by ships; a sea lane or trade route | [noun] An inland waterway used by seagoing shipping | [noun] The headway of a vessel SEAWEED (11) [noun] Any of numerous marine plants and algae, such as a kelp. SEBACIC (13) SEBASIC (11) SECANTS (9) [noun] A straight line that intersects a curve at two or more points. | [noun] In a right triangle, the reciprocal of the cosine of an angle. Symbol: sec 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. SECEDER (10) SECEDES (10) [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. SECERNS (9) SECLUDE (10) [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. SECONDE (10) [noun] The second defensive position, with the sword hand held at waist height, with the hand held in a prone position and the tip of the sword below the level of the guard. SECONDI (10) SECONDO (10) [noun] The second part in a concerted piece. SECONDS (10) [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. SECPARS (11) SECRECY (14) [noun] Concealment; the condition of being secret or hidden. | [noun] The habit of keeping secrets. SECRETE (9) [adjective] Separated | [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. | [verb] To exude or yield. | [verb] To conceal. SECRETS (9) [noun] A piece of knowledge that is hidden and intended to be kept hidden. | [noun] The key or principle by which something is made clear; the knack. | [noun] Something not understood or known. SECTARY (12) [noun] A member of a particular sect, school of thought or practice, party, or profession; a sectarian. | [noun] A Protestant dissenter or nonconformist. SECTILE (9) SECTION (9) [noun] A cutting; a part cut out from the rest of something. | [noun] A part, piece, subdivision of anything. | [noun] A part of a document. SECTORS (9) [noun] Section | [noun] Zone (designated area). | [noun] Part of a circle, extending to the center SECULAR (9) [noun] A secular ecclesiastic, or one not bound by monastic rules. | [noun] A church official whose functions are confined to the vocal department of the choir. | [noun] A layman, as distinguished from a clergyman. 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. SECURER (9) SECURES (9) [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. SEDARIM (10) SEDATED (9) [verb] To calm or put (a person) to sleep using a sedative drug. | [verb] To make tranquil. SEDATER (8) SEDATES (8) [verb] To calm or put (a person) to sleep using a sedative drug. | [verb] To make tranquil. SEDGIER (9) SEDILIA (8) [noun] A series of seats, often recessed into the wall, on the south side of the chancel or choir for the use of officiating clergy. | [noun] One of a row of seats in an Ancient Roman amphitheatre. | [noun] A seat in the chancel of a church near the altar, for the officiating clergyman. 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. SEDUCER (10) [noun] Someone who seduces, especially a man who seduces a woman SEDUCES (10) [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. SEEABLE (9) SEEDBED (11) [noun] Ground prepared for the planting of seeds. | [noun] A place conducive to development and attainment. SEEDERS (8) [noun] A device used to plant seeds; a seed drill | [noun] An implement used to remove the seeds from fruit etc. | [noun] A person who seeds clouds in order to make it rain SEEDIER (8) [adjective] Full of seeds. | [adjective] Disreputable, run-down. | [adjective] Untidy; unkempt. SEEDILY (11) SEEDING (9) [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. SEEDMAN (10) SEEDMEN (10) SEEDPOD (11) SEEINGS (8) SEEKERS (11) [noun] One who seeks. | [noun] Especially, a religious seeker: a pilgrim, or one who aspires to enlightenment or salvation. SEEKING (12) [verb] To try to find; to look for; to search for. | [verb] To ask for; to solicit; to beseech. | [verb] To try to acquire or gain; to strive after; to aim at. SEELING (8) [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. SEEMERS (9) SEEMING (10) [verb] To appear; to look outwardly; to be perceived as. | [verb] To befit; to beseem. | [noun] Outward appearance. SEEPAGE (10) [noun] The process by which a liquid leaks through a porous substance; the process of seeping. | [noun] Water that has seeped or oozed through a porous soil. SEEPIER (9) SEEPING (10) [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. SEERESS (7) SEESAWS (10) [verb] To use a seesaw. | [verb] (by extension) To fluctuate. | [verb] To cause to move backward and forward in seesaw fashion. 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. SEETHES (10) [verb] To boil. | [verb] (of a liquid) To boil vigorously. | [verb] (of a liquid) To foam in an agitated manner, as if boiling. SEGETAL (8) SEGGARS (9) SEGMENT (10) [noun] A length of some object. | [noun] One of the parts into which any body naturally separates or is divided; a part divided or cut off; a section; a portion. | [noun] A portion. SEICHES (12) [noun] A short-term standing wave oscillation of the water level in a lake, characteristic of its geometry SEIDELS (8) [noun] A large beer mug or tankard, especially one with a lid. SEINERS (7) SEINING (8) [verb] To use a seine, to fish with a seine. | [noun] Fishing with a seine SEISERS (7) SEISING (8) [verb] To vest ownership of a freehold estate in (someone). | [verb] (with of) To put in possession. | [verb] To seize. SEISINS (7) [noun] (common law) An entitlement to a freehold estate with a right to immediate possession; dates from feudal times but is still used in technical discussions of real property law today. | [noun] The act of taking possession. | [noun] The thing possessed; property. SEISMAL (9) SEISMIC (11) [adjective] Related to, or caused by an earthquake or other vibration of the Earth. | [adjective] Of very large or widespread effect. SEISORS (7) SEISURE (7) SEIZERS (16) SEIZING (17) [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.). SEIZINS (16) [noun] (common law) An entitlement to a freehold estate with a right to immediate possession; dates from feudal times but is still used in technical discussions of real property law today. | [noun] The act of taking possession. | [noun] The thing possessed; property. SEIZORS (16) SEIZURE (16) [noun] The act of taking possession, as by force or right of law. | [noun] A sudden attack or convulsion, (e.g. an epileptic seizure). | [noun] A sudden onset of pain or emotion. SEJEANT (14) SELECTS (9) [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. SELENIC (9) SELFDOM (13) SELFING (11) [noun] A plant produced by vegetative propagation. SELFISH (13) [adjective] Holding one's own self-interest as the standard for decision making. | [adjective] Having regard for oneself above others’ well-being. SELLERS (7) [noun] An enclosed underground space, often under a building, used for storage or shelter. | [noun] A wine collection, especially when stored in a cellar. | [noun] Last place in a league or competition. SELLING (8) [verb] (ditransitive) To transfer goods or provide services in exchange for money. | [verb] To be sold. | [verb] To promote a product or service. SELLOUT (7) [noun] An action in which principles are compromised for financial gain. | [noun] A person who compromises his or her principles for financial gain. | [noun] The selling of an entire stock of something, especially tickets for an entertainment or sports event. SELSYNS (10) SELTZER (16) [noun] Carbonated water SELVAGE (11) [noun] The edge of a woven fabric, where the weft (side-to-side) threads run around the warp (top to bottom) threads, creating a finished edge. | [noun] Any edge of fabric finished so as to prevent raveling. | [noun] The excess area of any printed or perforated sheet, such as the border on a sheet of postage stamps or the wide margins of an engraving. SEMATIC (11) SEMEMES (11) [noun] The smallest unit of meaning; especially the meaning expressed by a morpheme. SEMEMIC (13) SEMIDRY (13) SEMIFIT (12) SEMILOG (10) SEMIMAT (11) SEMINAL (9) [noun] A seed. | [adjective] Of or relating to seed or semen. | [adjective] Creative or having the power to originate. SEMINAR (9) [noun] A class held for advanced studies in which students meet regularly to discuss original research, under the guidance of a professor. | [noun] A meeting held for the exchange of useful information by members of a common business community. SEMIPRO (11) [noun] Semiprofessional. | [adjective] Semiprofessional. SEMIRAW (12) SEMISES (9) SENARII (7) [noun] A verse having six metric feet. SENATES (7) [noun] In some bicameral legislative systems, the upper house or chamber. | [noun] A group of experienced, respected, wise individuals serving as decision makers or advisors in a political system or in institutional governance, as in a university, and traditionally of advanced age and male. SENATOR (7) [noun] A member, normally elected, in the house or chamber of a legislature called a senate. The legislatures of the United States and Canada have senators. | [noun] A position in government held in ancient Rome by experienced, elder officials as advisors or consultants for younger, less experienced functionaries. | [noun] A member of the king's council. SENDALS (8) [noun] A light silk cloth. SENDERS (8) [noun] Someone who sends. | [noun] A device or component that transmits, as in telegraphy or computer networks. SENDING (9) [verb] To make something (such as an object or message) go from one place to another. | [verb] To excite, delight, or thrill (someone). | [verb] To bring to a certain condition. SENDOFF (14) [noun] A party for a person (i.e. a fellow employee) who is leaving; a farewell party. | [noun] A party to recognize the passing (death) of a friend and allow survivors to reminisce about the person's life. SENDUPS (10) [noun] A satirical imitation of a work of art or a genre. SENECAS (9) SENECIO (9) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Senecio. SENEGAS (8) SENHORA (10) SENHORS (10) [noun] A Portuguese gentleman. | [noun] A Spanish term of address equivalent to sir or Mr., used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a married or an older man. SENILES (7) SENIORS (7) [noun] An old person. | [noun] Someone older than someone else (with possessive). | [noun] Someone seen as deserving respect or reverence because of their age. SENNETS (7) [noun] A signal call given on a cornet or trumpet for entrance or exit on a theatrical stage | [noun] The barracuda. | [noun] Braided cord or fabric of such small stuff as plaited rope yarns SENNITS (7) SENOPIA (9) SENORAS (7) [noun] A Spanish term of address equivalent to Mrs., used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a married, divorced or widowed woman SENORES (7) [noun] A Spanish term of address equivalent to sir or Mr., used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a married or an older man. SENSATE (7) [verb] To feel or apprehend by means of the senses; to perceive. | [adjective] Perceived by one or more of the senses. | [adjective] Having the ability to sense things physically. SENSING (8) [verb] To use biological senses: to either see, hear, smell, taste, or feel. | [verb] To instinctively be aware. | [verb] To comprehend. SENSORS (7) [noun] A device or organ that detects certain external stimuli and responds in a distinctive manner. SENSORY (10) [noun] Sensorium | [noun] An organ or faculty of sense. | [adjective] Of the senses or sensation. SENSUAL (7) [adjective] Inducing pleasurable or erotic sensations. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the physical senses; sensory. | [adjective] Provoking or exciting a strong response in the senses. SENTIMO (9) SEPALED (10) SEPPUKU (15) [noun] A form of ritual suicide by disembowelment using a blade, practiced by Japanese samurai, especially to rid oneself of shame, as a means of protest or, formerly, as a method of capital punishment. SEPTATE (9) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or divided by a septum. SEPTETS (9) [noun] A group of seven, often a musical group of seven performers. | [noun] A musical composition for seven instruments or seven voices. SEPTICS (11) [noun] A substance that causes sepsis or putrefaction. | [noun] A septic tank; a system for the disposal of sewage into a septic tank, a septic system. | [noun] A mathematical object (function, curve, surface, etc.) of degree seven. SEPTIME (11) [noun] The seventh defensive position, with the sword hand held at waist height, and the tip of the sword at knee level. SEPTUMS (11) SEQUELA (16) [noun] A disease or condition which is caused by an earlier disease or problem. | [noun] That which follows; an inference or corollary. SEQUELS (16) [noun] The events, collectively, which follow a previously mentioned event; the aftermath. | [noun] A narrative that is written after another narrative set in the same universe, especially a narrative that is chronologically set after its predecessors, or (perhaps improper usage) any narrative that has a preceding narrative of its own. | [noun] Thirlage. SEQUENT (16) [noun] Something that follows in a given sequence. | [noun] A disjunctive set of logical formulae which is partitioned into two subsets; the first subset, called the antecedent, consists of formulae which are valuated as false, and the second subset, called the succedent, consists of formulae which are valuated as true. (The set is written without set brackets and the separation between the two subsets is denoted by a turnstile symbol, which may be read "give(s)".) | [noun] A follower. SEQUINS (16) [noun] Any of various small gold coins minted in Italy and Turkey. | [noun] A sparkling spangle used for the decoration of ornate clothing. SEQUOIA (16) [noun] Sequoiadendron giganteum, a coniferous evergreen tree formerly in the genus Sequoia, now placed in Sequoiadendron. | [noun] Sequoia sempervirens, a coniferous evergreen tree, the only living species of the genus Sequoia. SERAILS (7) SERAPES (9) [noun] A type of blanket worn as a cloak, especially by Spanish-Americans, or used as a saddle blanket. SERAPHS (12) [noun] A six-winged angel; the highest choir or order of angels in Christian angelology, ranked above cherubim, and below God. They are the 5th highest order of angels in Jewish angelology. A detailed description can be found at the beginning of Isaiah chapter 6 SERDABS (10) SEREINS (7) SERENER (7) [adjective] Peaceful, calm, unruffled. | [adjective] Without worry or anxiety; unaffected by disturbance. | [adjective] Fair and unclouded (as of the sky); clear; unobscured. SERENES (7) SERFAGE (11) SERFDOM (13) [noun] The state of being a serf. | [noun] The feudal system that includes serfs. SERFISH (13) SERGING (9) SERIALS (7) [noun] A work, such as a work of fiction, published in installments, often numbered and without a specified end. | [noun] A publication issued in successive parts, often numbered and with no predetermined end. | [noun] A serial number, esp. one required to activate software. SERIATE (7) [verb] To arrange in serial order. | [adjective] Arranged in serial order. SERICIN (9) SERIEMA (9) [noun] Either of two species of bird in the family Cariamidae, endemic to South America. SERIFED (11) SERINES (7) SERINGA (8) SERIOUS (7) [adjective] Without humor or expression of happiness; grave in manner or disposition | [adjective] Important; weighty; not insignificant | [adjective] Really intending what is said (or planned, etc); in earnest; not jocular or deceiving SERMONS (9) [noun] Religious discourse; a written or spoken address on a religious or moral matter. | [noun] A lengthy speech of reproval. SEROSAE (7) SEROSAL (7) SEROSAS (7) SERPENT (9) [noun] A snake. | [noun] An obsolete wind instrument in the brass family, whose shape is suggestive of a snake (Wikipedia article). | [noun] A subtle, treacherous, malicious person. SERPIGO (10) SERRANO (7) [noun] A chili pepper, a cultivar of Capsicum annuum which originated in the mountainous regions of the Mexican states of Puebla and Hidalgo and is used in cooking. SERRATE (7) [verb] To make serrate. | [verb] To cut or divide in a jagged way. | [adjective] Having tooth-like projections on one side, as in a saw. SERRIED (8) [adjective] Crowded together in rows. | [verb] To crowd; to press together. SERRIES (7) SERUMAL (9) SERVALS (10) [noun] A medium-sized African wild cat, Leptailurus serval, formerly Felis serval. SERVANT (10) [noun] One who is hired to perform regular household or other duties, and receives compensation. As opposed to a slave. | [noun] One who serves another, providing help in some manner. | [noun] A person who dedicates themselves to God. SERVERS (10) [noun] A program that provides services to other programs or devices, either in the same computer or over a computer network. | [noun] A computer dedicated to running such programs. | [noun] One who serves. SERVICE (12) [noun] An act of being of assistance to someone. | [noun] The practice of providing such a service as economic activity. | [noun] A department in a company, an organization, a government department, etc. | [noun] Service tree SERVILE (10) [noun] (grammar) An element which forms no part of the original root. | [noun] A slave; a menial. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a slave. SERVING (11) [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. SESAMES (9) SESSILE (7) [adjective] Permanently attached to a substrate; not free to move about. | [adjective] Attached directly by the base; not having an intervening stalk; stalkless. SESSION (7) [noun] An informal gathering of musicians to play music, especially improvised jazz or a similar genre. | [noun] A period devoted to a particular activity, e.g. the annual or semiannual periods of a legislative body (that together comprise the legislative term) whose individual meetings are also called sessions. | [noun] A meeting of a council, court, school, or legislative body to conduct its business. SESTETS (7) [noun] A piece of music composed for six voices or six instruments; a sextet or sestuor. | [noun] The last six lines of a sonnet, forming two stanzas of three lines each. SESTINA (7) [noun] A highly structured poem consisting of six six-line stanzas followed by a tercet or envoy, for a total of thirty-nine lines. | [noun] A chord comprising the first six members of the harmonic series. SESTINE (7) SETBACK (15) [noun] An obstacle, delay, disadvantage, blow (an adverse event which retards or prevents progress towards a desired outcome) | [noun] The required distance between a structure and a road. | [noun] A step-like recession in a wall. SETLINE (7) SETOFFS (13) [noun] The situation where a bank or similar organisation repays itself money owed by an accountholder out of his or her account. SETOUTS (7) SETTEES (7) [noun] A long seat with a back, made to accommodate several persons at once; a sofa. | [noun] A vessel with a very long, sharp prow, carrying two or three masts with lateen sails, used in the Mediterranean. SETTERS (7) [noun] One who sets something, especially a typesetter. | [noun] A long-haired breed of gundog (Wikipedia). | [noun] The player who is responsible for setting, or passing, the ball to teammates for an attack. SETTING (8) [verb] To put (something) down, to rest. | [verb] To attach or affix (something) to something else, or in or upon a certain place. | [verb] To put in a specified condition or state; to cause to be. 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. SETTLER (7) [noun] Someone who settles in a new location, especially one who takes up residence in a previously uninhabited place; a colonist. | [noun] Someone who decides or settles something, such as a dispute. | [noun] That which settles or finishes, such as a blow that decides a contest. SETTLES (7) [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. | [noun] A seat of any kind. SETTLOR (7) [noun] A person who settles property on express trust for the benefit of beneficiaries. SEVENTH (13) [noun] The person or thing in the seventh position. | [noun] One of seven equal parts of a whole. | [noun] A tone of the seventh degree from a given tone, the interval between two such tones, or the two tones sounding in unison. SEVENTY (13) [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after sixty-nine and before seventy-one, represented in Roman numerals as LXX and in Arabic numerals as 70. SEVERAL (10) [noun] An area of land in private ownership (as opposed to common land). | [noun] Each particular taken singly; an item; a detail; an individual. | [noun] An enclosed or separate place; enclosure. SEVERED (11) [verb] To cut free. | [verb] To suffer disjunction; to be parted or separated. | [verb] To make a separation or distinction; to distinguish. SEVERER (10) [adjective] Very bad or intense. | [adjective] Strict or harsh. | [adjective] Sober, plain in appearance, austere. SEVICHE (15) [noun] Raw seafood cured by marination in an acidic medium such as citrus, vinegar, or other souring agent, found primarily in Latin America. SEVRUGA (11) [noun] A type of sturgeon, Acipenser stellatus. | [noun] An expensive caviar made from its eggs. SEWABLE (12) SEWAGES (11) SEWERED (11) SEWINGS (11) SEXIEST (14) [adjective] (of a person) Having sex appeal; suggestive of sex. | [adjective] That can sexually attract or arouse. | [adjective] (of a thing or concept) interesting, attractive, intriguing, or appealing. SEXISMS (16) SEXISTS (14) [noun] A person who discriminates on grounds of sex; someone who practises sexism. SEXLESS (14) [adjective] Without sexual activity. | [adjective] Without physical or behavioral sexual distinction. | [adjective] Provoking or showing no sexual desire SEXPOTS (16) [noun] A sexy person. SEXTAIN (14) SEXTANS (14) SEXTANT (14) [noun] A navigational device for deriving angular distances between objects so as to determine latitude and longitude. | [noun] One sixth of a circle or disc; a sector with an angle of 60°. | [noun] One of six groups of adjacent teeth, excluding the wisdom teeth. The front sextants go from canine to canine, and there are sextants on the right and left of these. See w:Periodontal examination. SEXTETS (14) [noun] Any group of six people or things. | [noun] A composition for six voices or instruments. | [noun] A group of six singers or instrumentalists. SEXTILE (14) [noun] A quantile of six equal proportions; any of the subsets thus obtained. | [noun] A segment that is a sixth of the whole. | [noun] A sextile aspect or position. SEXTONS (14) [noun] A church official who looks after a church building and its graveyard and may act as a gravedigger and bell-ringer. | [noun] A sexton beetle. SFERICS (12) SFUMATO (12) [noun] In painting, the application of subtle layers of translucent paint so that there is no visible transition between colors, tones and often objects. SHACKLE (16) [noun] (usually in the plural) A restraint fit over a human or animal appendage, such as a wrist, ankle or finger; normally used in pairs joined by a chain. | [noun] A U-shaped piece of metal secured with a pin or bolt across the opening, or a hinged metal loop secured with a quick-release locking pin mechanism. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A restraint on one's action, activity, or progress. | [verb] To restrain using shackles; to place in shackles. | [verb] To shake, rattle. SHACKOS (16) SHADERS (11) SHADFLY (17) SHADIER (11) [adjective] Abounding in shades. | [adjective] Causing shade. | [adjective] Overspread with shade; sheltered from the glare of light or sultry heat. SHADILY (14) SHADING (12) [verb] To shield from light. | [verb] To alter slightly. | [verb] To vary or approach something slightly, particularly in color. SHADOOF (14) [noun] A device used to gather water, consisting of a pivoted stick with a bucket on the end of it. SHADOWS (14) [noun] A dark image projected onto a surface where light (or other radiation) is blocked by the shade of an object. | [noun] Relative darkness, especially as caused by the interruption of light; gloom, obscurity. | [noun] A area protected by an obstacle (likened to an object blocking out sunlight). SHADOWY (17) [adjective] In shadow; darkened by shadows. | [adjective] (of character) Dark, obscure. | [adjective] Indulging in fancies; daydreaming. SHADUFS (14) 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. SHAHDOM (16) SHAIRDS (11) SHAIRNS (10) SHAITAN (10) [noun] A demon, a devil an enemy of divine | [noun] Iblis, Satan. | [noun] A dust storm. SHAKERS (14) [noun] A person or thing that shakes, or by means of which something is shaken. | [noun] A variety of pigeon. | [noun] One who holds railroad spikes while they are hammered. SHAKEUP (16) [noun] A vigorous reorganization, especially of the personnel or procedures of an organization. SHAKIER (14) [adjective] Shaking or trembling. | [adjective] Nervous, anxious. | [adjective] (of wood) Full of shakes or cracks; cracked. SHAKILY (17) SHAKING (15) [verb] To cause (something) to move rapidly in opposite directions alternatingly. | [verb] To move (one's head) from side to side, especially to indicate refusal, reluctance or disapproval. | [verb] To move or remove by agitating; to throw off by a jolting or vibrating motion. SHAKOES (14) SHALIER (10) SHALLOP (12) [noun] A kind of light boat; a dinghy. | [noun] A kind of large boat; a sloop. SHALLOT (10) [noun] A vegetable in the onion family. SHALLOW (13) [noun] A shallow portion of an otherwise deep body of water. | [noun] A fish, the rudd. | [noun] A costermonger's barrow. SHALOMS (12) SHAMANS (12) [noun] A traditional (prescientific) faith healer. | [noun] A member of certain tribal societies who acts as a religious medium between the concrete and spirit worlds. SHAMBLE (14) [noun] One of a succession of niches or platforms, one above another, to hold ore which is thrown successively from platform to platform, and thus raised to a higher level. | [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. SHAMING (13) [verb] To cause to feel shame. | [verb] To cover with reproach or ignominy; to dishonor; to disgrace. | [verb] To drive or compel by shame. SHAMMAS (14) 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. SHAMMER (14) SHAMMES (14) SHAMMOS (14) SHAMOIS (12) SHAMOYS (15) SHAMPOO (14) [noun] A traditional Indian and Persian body massage given after pouring warm water over the body and rubbing it with extracts from herbs. | [noun] A commercial liquid soap product for washing hair or other fibres/fibers, such as carpets. | [noun] An instance of washing the hair or other fibres with shampoo. 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. SHANTEY (13) SHANTIH (13) SHANTIS (10) SHAPELY (15) [adjective] Having a pleasing shape, pleasant to look at. SHAPERS (12) SHAPEUP (14) SHAPING (13) [verb] To create or make. | [verb] To give something a shape and definition. | [verb] To form or manipulate something into a certain shape. SHARERS (10) SHARIFS (13) [noun] A traditional Arab tribal title given to those who serve as the protector of the tribe and all tribal assets. SHARING (11) [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. 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. SHARKER (14) 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. SHARPEN (12) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To make sharp. | [verb] To become sharp. SHARPER (12) [adjective] Terminating in a point or edge, especially one that can cut easily; not obtuse or rounded. | [adjective] Intelligent. | [adjective] Higher than usual by one semitone (denoted by the symbol ♯ after the name of the note). SHARPIE (12) [noun] Accipiter striatus, the smallest hawk to reside in USA and Canada, which preys on songbirds. | [noun] An alert person. | [noun] A knowledgeable fisherman. SHARPLY (15) [adverb] In a sharp manner. | [adverb] (to describe breathing) Suddenly and intensely like a gasp, but typically as the result of an emotional reaction. | [adverb] In an intellectually alert and penetrating manner. SHASLIK (14) SHATTER (10) [noun] A fragment of anything shattered. | [noun] A (pine) needle. | [noun] A form of concentrated cannabis. SHAUGHS (14) SHAULED (11) SHAVERS (13) [noun] One who shaves. | [noun] A barber, one whose occupation is to shave. | [noun] A tool or machine for shaving; an electric razor. SHAVIES (13) SHAVING (14) [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. SHAWING (14) 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. SHEARER (10) SHEATHE (13) [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. SHEATHS (13) [noun] A holster for a sword; a scabbard. | [noun] (by extension) Anything that has a similar shape to a scabbard that is used to hold an object that is longer than it is wide. | [noun] The base of a leaf when sheathing or investing a branch or stem, as in grasses. SHEAVED (14) [verb] To gather and bind into a sheaf. | [adjective] (of straw) Made into a sheaf SHEAVES (13) [noun] A quantity of the stalks and ears of wheat, rye, or other grain, bound together; a bundle of grain or straw. | [noun] Any collection of things bound together; a bundle. | [noun] A bundle of arrows sufficient to fill a quiver, or the allowance of each archer. SHEBANG (13) [noun] A lean-to or temporary shelter. | [noun] A place or building; a store, saloon, or brothel. | [noun] Any matter of present concern; thing; or business; most commonly in the phrase "the whole shebang". | [noun] The character string "#!" used at the beginning of a computer file to indicate which interpreter can process the commands in the file, chiefly used in Unix and related operating systems. SHEBEAN (12) SHEBEEN (12) [noun] An unlicensed drinking establishment, especially in Ireland, Scotland, and South Africa. 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. SHEDDER (12) [noun] Agent noun of shed; one who sheds. | [noun] A crab in the act of casting its shell, or immediately afterwards while still soft. SHEENED (11) [verb] To shine; to glisten. SHEENEY (13) SHEENIE (10) SHEERED (11) [verb] To swerve from a course. | [verb] To shear. SHEERER (10) [adjective] Very thin or transparent. | [adjective] Pure in composition; unmixed; unadulterated. | [adjective] (by extension) Downright; complete; pure. SHEERLY (13) 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. SHEETER (10) SHEEVES (13) SHEGETZ (20) SHEIKHS (17) [noun] The leader of an Arab village, family or small tribe. | [noun] An Islamic religious cleric; the leader of an Islamic religious order. | [noun] (some Arab Gulf countries) An official title for members of the royal family as well as some prominent families. SHEILAS (10) [noun] A woman. | [noun] A shayla, a headscarf worn by Muslim women. SHEITAN (10) SHEKELS (14) [noun] A currency unit of both ancient and modern Israel. | [noun] (often antisemitic) Money, especially that purportedly owned or distributed as bribes by Jewish elites. | [noun] An ancient unit of weight equivalent to one-fiftieth of a mina. SHELLAC (12) [noun] A processed secretion of the lac insect, Coccus lacca; used in polishes, varnishes etc. | [noun] A beating; a thrashing. | [verb] To coat with shellac. 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). SHELLER (10) SHELTAS (10) SHELTER (10) [noun] A refuge, haven or other cover or protection from something. | [noun] An institution that provides temporary housing for homeless people, battered women etc. | [verb] To provide cover from damage or harassment; to shield; to protect. SHELTIE (10) [noun] A Shetland pony; any small pony. | [noun] Sheepdog. | [noun] A Shetlander. SHELVED (14) [verb] To place on a shelf. | [verb] To set aside; to quit or postpone. | [verb] To furnish with shelves. SHELVER (13) SHELVES (13) [noun] A flat, rigid structure, fixed at right angles to a wall or forming a part of a cabinet, desk etc., and used to support, store or display objects. | [noun] The capacity of such an object | [noun] A projecting ledge that resembles such an object. SHERBET (12) [noun] A food of frozen fruit juice with a dairy product such as milk added; a sorbet with dairy ingredients. | [noun] An effervescent powder made of bicarbonate of soda, sugar and flavourings, intended to be eaten alone or mixed with water to make a drink. | [noun] A traditional West and South Asian sweet drink prepared from fruits or flower petals. SHEREEF (13) [noun] A member of an Arab princely family descended from Muhammad through his son-in-law Ali and daughter Fatima, the "Grand Shereef" being the governor of Mecca. SHERIFF (16) [noun] (except Scotland) (High Sheriff) An official of a shire or county office, responsible for carrying out court orders, law enforcement and other duties. | [noun] A judge in the sheriff court, the court of a county or sheriffdom. | [noun] A government official, usually responsible for law enforcement in his county and for administration of the county jail, sometimes an officer of the court, usually elected. SHERIFS (13) [noun] A member of an Arab princely family descended from Muhammad through his son-in-law Ali and daughter Fatima, the "Grand Shereef" being the governor of Mecca. SHEROOT (10) SHERPAS (12) [noun] A mountain guide or porter, particularly a male of the Sherpa people so employed. | [noun] An expert sent by a country’s leader to a summit meeting. | [noun] A synthetic fabric with a long, thick pile, similar to faux fur, imitation lamb wool or fleece. SHERRIS (10) SHEUCHS (15) SHEUGHS (14) [noun] A ditch, especially a field boundary ditch usually used to drain fields and mark their boundaries. | [noun] The space between the buttocks. | [noun] The Atlantic ocean, the sea. SHEWERS (13) SHEWING (14) [verb] To display, to have somebody see (something). | [verb] To bestow; to confer. | [verb] To indicate (a fact) to be true; to demonstrate. SHIATSU (10) [noun] A form of massage, using the thumbs and palms, employed as therapy. SHIATZU (19) SHIBAHS (15) SHICKER (16) [noun] Drunk, drunkard | [adjective] Drunk SHICKSA (16) SHIELDS (11) [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. 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. SHIFTER (13) [noun] One who, or that which, shifts or changes. | [noun] A word whose meaning changes depending on the situation, as by deixis. | [noun] One who plays tricks or practices artifice; a cozener. SHIKARI (14) [noun] A hunter or tracker, especially in the Indian subcontinent. SHIKARS (14) [noun] Hunting, sport; a hunting expedition. | [noun] Hunting guide (elsewhere besides India, e.g. Australia) SHIKKER (18) [noun] Drunk, drunkard SHIKSAS (14) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A non-Jewish girl, especially one who is attractive and young. SHIKSES (14) SHILLED (11) [verb] To promote or endorse in return for payment, especially dishonestly. | [verb] To put under cover; to sheal. | [verb] To shell. SHILPIT (12) 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. SHIMMER (14) [noun] A faint or veiled and tremulous gleam or shining. | [noun] A measure of the irregularities in the loudness of a particular pitch over time. | [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. SHINDIG (12) [noun] A noisy party or festivities. SHINDYS (14) SHINERS (10) [noun] One who shines; a luminary. | [noun] One who causes things to shine; a polisher. | [noun] A black eye. SHINGLE (11) [noun] A small, thin piece of building material, often with one end thicker than the other, for laying in overlapping rows as a covering for the roof or sides of a building. | [noun] A rectangular piece of steel obtained by means of a shingling process involving hammering of puddled steel. | [noun] A small signboard designating a professional office; this may be both a physical signboard or a metaphoric term for a small production company (a production shingle). | [noun] A punitive strap such as a belt. | [noun] Small, smooth pebbles, as found on a beach. SHINGLY (14) SHINIER (10) [adjective] Reflecting light. | [adjective] Emitting light. | [adjective] Excellent; remarkable. SHINILY (13) SHINING (11) [verb] To emit light. | [verb] To reflect light. | [verb] To distinguish oneself; to excel. 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. SHINNEY (13) SHIPLAP (14) [noun] A type of wooden board that has rabbets to allow them to be overlapped. SHIPMAN (14) SHIPMEN (14) 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. SHIPPEN (14) [noun] A stable; a cowhouse. SHIPPER (14) [noun] A seaman; mariner; skipper. | [noun] The person or organization that ships (sends) something. | [noun] A box for shipping something fragile, such as bottled beer or wine. | [noun] A person who supports a romantic or sexual relationship between fictional characters or real people. SHIPPON (14) [noun] A cattle-shed. SHIPWAY (18) [noun] The sloping dry dock in which a ship is built and from where it is launched. | [noun] A navigable canal. 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. SHIRKER (14) 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. SHITAKE (14) [noun] A wide, brown variety of edible mushroom, Lentinula edodes. SHITTAH (13) SHITTED (11) [verb] To defecate. | [verb] To excrete (something) through the anus. | [verb] To fool or try to fool someone; to be deceitful. SHITTIM (12) SHIVAHS (16) SHIVERS (13) [noun] The act of shivering. | [noun] A bodily response to early hypothermia.Wp | [verb] To tremble or shake, especially when cold or frightened. SHIVERY (16) [adjective] Given to shivering; tending to shiver. | [adjective] Easily broken; brittle. SHLEPPS (14) SHLOCKS (16) SHLUMPS (14) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. SHLUMPY (17) SHMALTZ (21) SHMEARS (12) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SHMOOZE (21) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHMUCKS (18) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SHNOOKS (14) [noun] A person who is easily taken advantage of. 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. SHOALER (10) [noun] A coasting vessel. 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. SHOCKER (16) [noun] One who or that which shocks or startles. | [noun] A device for giving electric shocks. | [noun] A particular hand gesture with a sexual connotation. SHODDEN (12) SHOEING (11) [verb] To put shoes on one's feet. | [verb] To put horseshoes on a horse. | [verb] To equip an object with a protection against wear. SHOEPAC (14) [noun] A shoe, especially a warm, waterproofed boot. SHOFARS (13) [noun] A ram’s-horn trumpet SHOGGED (13) SHOGUNS (11) [noun] The supreme generalissimo of feudal Japan. SHOLOMS (12) SHOOFLY (16) SHOOING (11) [verb] To induce someone or something to leave. | [verb] To leave under inducement. | [verb] To usher someone. SHOOLED (11) SHOOTER (10) [noun] Someone who shoots something; a gunner, archer etc. | [noun] A firearm. | [noun] A video game in which shooting enemies (or targets) is the main objective. SHOPBOY (17) [noun] A boy employed in a shop. SHOPHAR (15) SHOPMAN (14) [noun] The proprietor, manager or operator of a small store. SHOPMEN (14) [noun] The proprietor, manager or operator of a small store. 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. SHOPPER (14) [noun] A person who shops. | [noun] A free local newspaper containing advertisements for local shops etc; sometimes includes discount coupons. | [noun] A kind of bicycle suited to riding short distances. SHOPPES (14) [noun] (sometimes capitalized) A fanciful spelling of shop, chiefly used in the names of businesses to give an air of old-fashionedness. SHORANS (10) SHORING (11) [verb] To set on shore. | [verb] (without up) To provide with support. | [verb] (usually with up) To reinforce (something at risk of failure). SHORTED (11) [verb] To cause a short circuit in (something). | [verb] Of an electrical circuit, to short circuit. | [verb] To shortchange. SHORTEN (10) [verb] To make shorter; to abbreviate. | [verb] To become shorter. | [verb] To make deficient (as to); to deprive (of). SHORTER (10) [adjective] Having a small distance from one end or edge to another, either horizontally or vertically. | [adjective] (of a person) Of comparatively small height. | [adjective] Having little duration. SHORTIA (10) SHORTIE (10) [noun] Something or someone that is shorter than normal. | [noun] A short-handed goal. | [adjective] Shorter than normal, especially of clothing. SHORTLY (13) [adverb] In a short or brief time or manner; quickly. | [adverb] In or after a short time; soon. | [adverb] In few words SHOTGUN (11) [noun] A gun which fires loads typically consisting of small metal balls, called shot, from a cartridge. | [noun] The front passenger seat in a vehicle, next to the driver; so called because the position of the shotgun-armed guard on a horse-drawn stage-coach, wagon train, or gold transport was next to the driver on a forward-mounted bench seat. | [noun] A one-story dwelling with no hallways or corridors, with the rooms arranged in a straight line. SHOTTED (11) [adjective] Loaded with shot | [adjective] Having a shot attached. SHOTTEN (10) 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. SHOUTER (10) SHOVELS (13) [noun] A hand tool with a handle, used for moving portions of material such as earth, snow, and grain from one place to another, with some forms also used for digging. Not to be confused with a spade, which is designed solely for small-scale digging and incidental tasks such as chopping of small roots. | [noun] A spade. SHOVERS (13) SHOVING (14) [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. SHOWBIZ (24) [noun] Showbusiness SHOWERS (13) [noun] A brief fall of precipitation (spell of rain, or a similar fall of snow, sleet, or cascade). | [noun] A device for bathing by which water is made to fall on the body from a height, either from a tank or by the action of a pump. | [noun] An instance of using of this device in order to bathe oneself. SHOWERY (16) [adjective] Given to showers; having frequent rainfall. | [adjective] Of or relating to a shower or showers. SHOWIER (13) [adjective] (sometimes derogatory) calling attention; flashy; standing out to the eye SHOWILY (16) SHOWING (14) [verb] To display, to have somebody see (something). | [verb] To bestow; to confer. | [verb] To indicate (a fact) to be true; to demonstrate. SHOWMAN (15) [noun] A person who produces or presents shows as a profession, especially the proprietor, manager, or MC of a circus or variety show. | [noun] A person skilled in dramatic or entertaining presentation, performance, or publicity. SHOWMEN (15) [noun] A person who produces or presents shows as a profession, especially the proprietor, manager, or MC of a circus or variety show. | [noun] A person skilled in dramatic or entertaining presentation, performance, or publicity. SHOWOFF (19) [noun] A person given to egotistically attempting to demonstrate prowess or ability. SHREWED (14) SHRIEKS (14) [noun] A sharp, shrill outcry or scream; a shrill wild cry such as is caused by sudden or extreme terror, pain, or the like. | [noun] An exclamation mark. | [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. SHRIEKY (17) SHRIEVE (13) SHRIFTS (13) [noun] The act of going to or hearing a religious confession. | [noun] Confession to a priest. | [noun] Forgiveness given by a priest after confession; remission. SHRIKES (14) [noun] Any of various passerine birds of the family Laniidae which are known for their habit of catching other birds and small animals and impaling the uneaten portions of their bodies on thorns. SHRILLS (10) [verb] To make a shrill noise. SHRILLY (13) [adverb] In a shrill manner. | [adjective] Somewhat shrill. SHRIMPS (14) [noun] Any of many swimming, often edible crustaceans, chiefly of the infraorder Caridea or the suborder Dendrobranchiata, with slender legs, long whiskers and a long abdomen. | [noun] The flesh of such crustaceans. | [noun] A small, puny or unimportant person. SHRIMPY (17) SHRINED (11) [verb] To enshrine; to place reverently, as if in a shrine. | [adjective] Enshrined SHRINES (10) [noun] A holy or sacred place dedicated to a specific deity, ancestor, hero, martyr, saint, or similar figure of awe and respect, at which said figure is venerated or worshipped. | [noun] A case, box, or receptacle, especially one in which are deposited sacred relics, as the bones of a saint. | [noun] A place or object hallowed from its history or associations. SHRINKS (14) [noun] Shrinkage; contraction; recoil. | [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A psychiatrist or psychotherapist. | [noun] Loss of inventory, for example due to shoplifting or not selling items before their expiration date. SHRIVED (14) SHRIVEL (13) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SHRIVEN (13) [verb] To question. | [verb] To hear or receive a confession (of sins etc.) | [verb] To prescribe penance or absolution. SHRIVER (13) SHRIVES (13) [verb] To hear or receive a confession (of sins etc.) | [verb] To prescribe penance or absolution. | [verb] To confess, and receive absolution. SHROFFS (16) [noun] A provider of financial services, especially a small-scale independent banker or money changer or a local expert at detecting bad coin. | [noun] A cashier, especially for a carpark. | [noun] Short for shroff office: the office of a shroff at a carpark, etc. SHROUDS (11) [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. SHRUBBY (17) SHTETEL (10) SHTETLS (10) [noun] A Jewish village or small town, especially one in Eastern Europe. SHTICKS (16) [noun] A generally humorous routine | [noun] A characteristic trait or theme, especially in the way people or media present themselves. | [noun] A gimmick. SHUCKED (17) [verb] To remove the shuck from (walnuts, oysters, etc.). | [verb] To remove (any outer covering). | [verb] To fool; to hoax. SHUCKER (16) SHUDDER (12) [noun] A shivering tremor, often from fear or horror. | [noun] A moment of almost pleasurable fear; a frisson. | [verb] To shake nervously, often from fear or horror. SHUFFLE (16) [noun] The act of shuffling cards. | [noun] The act of reordering anything, such as music tracks in a media player. | [noun] An instance of walking without lifting one's feet. SHUNNED (11) [verb] To avoid, especially persistently. | [verb] To escape (a threatening evil, an unwelcome task etc). | [verb] To screen, hide. SHUNNER (10) 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. SHUNTER (10) [noun] A railway locomotive used for shunting; a switcher. | [noun] A person who carries out shunting operations. SHUSHED (14) [verb] To be quiet; to keep quiet. | [verb] To ask someone to be quiet, especially by saying shh. SHUSHES (13) [verb] To be quiet; to keep quiet. | [verb] To ask someone to be quiet, especially by saying shh. SHUTEYE (13) [noun] Sleep. SHUTING (11) SHUTOFF (16) [noun] A valve used to turn off something. | [noun] The act of turning off something. SHUTOUT (10) [noun] Closing and forbidding entry, as a lockout in which management prevents works from working. | [noun] A game that ends with one side not having scored. SHUTTER (10) [noun] One who shuts or closes something. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Protective panels, usually wooden, placed over windows to block out the light. | [noun] The part of a camera, normally closed, that opens for a controlled period of time to let light in when taking a picture. SHUTTLE (10) [noun] The part of a loom that carries the woof back and forth between the warp threads. | [noun] The sliding thread holder in a sewing machine, which carries the lower thread through a loop of the upper thread, to make a lock stitch. | [noun] A transport service (such as a bus or train) that goes back and forth between two places, sometimes more. SHYLOCK (19) SHYNESS (13) [noun] The quality of being shy; a fear of social interactions. SHYSTER (13) [noun] Someone who acts in a disreputable, unethical, or unscrupulous way, especially in the practice of law and politics. | [verb] To act in a disreputable, unethical, or unscrupulous way, especially in the practice of law and politics. | [verb] To exploit (someone or something) in this way. SIALIDS (8) SIALOID (8) SIAMANG (10) [noun] A large black gibbon, Symphalangus syndactylus, from Sumatra SIAMESE (9) SIBLING (10) [noun] A person who shares a parent; one's brother or sister who one shares a parent with. | [noun] A node in a data structure that shares its parent with another node. | [noun] The most closely related species, or one of several most closely species when none can be determined to be more closely related. SIBYLIC (14) SICCING (12) [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. SICKBAY (18) [noun] A place used as a hospital on board a ship, on a spaceship (in science fiction). | [noun] A room or area for the treatment of the sick or injured in a school. SICKBED (16) [noun] A bed used by a person who is sick. | [noun] A place for convalescence. SICKEES (13) SICKENS (13) [verb] To make ill. | [verb] To become ill. | [verb] To fill with disgust or abhorrence. SICKEST (13) [adjective] Having an urge to vomit. | [adjective] In poor health. | [adjective] Mentally unstable, disturbed. SICKIES (13) [noun] A day, or time, off work due to (supposed) illness. SICKING (14) [verb] To incite an attack by, especially a dog or dogs. | [verb] To set upon; to chase; to attack. | [verb] To vomit. SICKISH (16) SICKLED (14) SICKLES (13) [noun] An implement having a semicircular blade and short handle, used for cutting long grass and cereal crops. | [noun] Any of the sickle-shaped middle feathers of the domestic cock. | [verb] To cut with a sickle. SICKOUT (13) [noun] A labor action where employees refuse to work claiming they are sick. SIDDURS (9) SIDEARM (10) [noun] A personal weapon, such as a handgun or sword, carried on the hip in a belt, sheath, holster, etc for rapid access. | [verb] To throw a ball with one's arm roughly parallel to the ground. | [adverb] With one's arm roughly parallel to the ground. SIDEBAR (10) [noun] A short news story printed alongside a larger one. | [noun] A block of information placed at the side of a printed page. | [noun] A block of information placed at the side of a webpage. SIDECAR (10) [noun] A one-wheeled attachment to a motorcycle to allow for a separate seat for a passenger or cargo space. | [noun] A cocktail made with cognac (or brandy), triple sec liqueur, and lemon juice. SIDEMAN (10) [noun] A soloist playing with a band or group of which he is not a regular member. | [noun] Somebody who is unimportant or irrelevant. SIDEMEN (10) [noun] A soloist playing with a band or group of which he is not a regular member. | [noun] Somebody who is unimportant or irrelevant. SIDEWAY (14) SIDINGS (9) [noun] A building material which covers and protects the sides of a house or other building. | [noun] A second, relatively short length of track just to the side of a railroad track, joined to the main track by switches at one or both ends, used either for loading or unloading freight, storing trains or other rail vehicles; or to allow two trains on a same track to meet (opposite directions) or pass (same direction) (the latter sense is probably an American definition). SIDLERS (8) SIDLING (9) [adjective] Directed toward one side | [adjective] Inclined; having an inclination | [adverb] In a sidelong direction | [verb] To (cause something to) move sideways. SIEGING (9) SIEMENS (9) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical conductance; the electric conductance in a body that has a resistance of one ohm. Symbol: S SIENITE (7) SIENNAS (7) [noun] A form of clay containing iron and manganese. | [noun] A pigment with a reddish-brown colour. | [noun] A light reddish-brown colour. SIERRAN (7) SIERRAS (7) [noun] A rugged range of mountains. | [noun] The letter S in the ICAO spelling alphabet. | [noun] A scombroid fish. SIESTAS (7) [noun] A nap, especially an afternoon one taken after lunch in some cultures. SIEVING (11) [verb] To strain, sift or sort using a sieve. | [verb] To concede; let in | [noun] The act of passing something through a sieve. SIFAKAS (14) [noun] A medium-sized lemur of the genus Propithecus. SIFTERS (10) SIFTING (11) [noun] The act by which something is sifted. SIGANID (9) SIGHERS (11) SIGHING (12) [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. 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. SIGHTER (11) SIGHTLY (14) [adjective] Attractive, pleasing to the eye; affording gratification to the sense of sight; aesthetically pleasing. | [adjective] Open to sight; conspicuous. SIGMATE (10) [adjective] Shaped like the Greek letter sigma 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). SIGNAGE (9) [noun] Signs, particularly those imparting commercial, directional, or road traffic information, taken collectively. | [noun] A sign, a signboard. SIGNALS (8) [noun] A sequence of states representing an encoded message in a communication channel. | [noun] Any variation of a quantity or change in an entity over time that conveys information upon detection. | [noun] A sign made to give notice of some occurrence, command, or danger, or to indicate the start of a concerted action. SIGNEES (8) [noun] One who signs a contract, especially in athletic contexts SIGNERS (8) SIGNETS (8) [noun] An object (especially a ring) formerly used to impress a picture into the sealing wax of a document as a proof of its origin SIGNIFY (14) [verb] To create a sign out of something. | [verb] To give (something) a meaning or an importance. | [verb] To show one’s intentions with a sign etc.; to indicate, announce. SIGNING (9) [verb] To make a mark | [verb] To make the sign of the cross | [verb] To indicate SIGNIOR (8) SIGNORA (8) [noun] Mrs; madam; title of address or respect for women in Italy. SIGNORE (8) [noun] A courtesy title for a man of Italian origin. SIGNORI (8) [noun] A courtesy title for a man of Italian origin. SIGNORS (8) [noun] A courtesy title for a man of Italian origin. SIGNORY (11) [noun] A territory or domain, especially under a feudal lordship. | [noun] Overlordship, dominion. | [noun] A ruling assembly, specifically of various Italian republics; a signoria. SILAGES (8) [noun] Fermented green forage fodder stored in a silo. SILANES (7) [noun] Any of a group of silicon hydrides that are analogous to alkanes (the paraffin hydrocarbons); especially the parent compound SiH4 | [noun] Monosilane (SiH₄) | [noun] Any organic derivative of monosilane SILENCE (9) [noun] The absence of any sound. | [noun] The act of refraining from speaking. | [noun] Form of meditative worship practiced by the Society of Friends (Quakers); meeting for worship. SILENTS (7) SILENUS (7) SILESIA (7) SILEXES (14) SILICAS (9) [noun] Silicon dioxide. | [noun] Any of the silica group of the silicate minerals. SILICIC (11) [adjective] Of, related to, or derived from silica SILICLE (9) SILICON (9) [noun] A nonmetallic element (symbol Si) with an atomic number of 14 and atomic weight of 28.0855. | [noun] A single atom of this element. | [noun] Computing SILIQUA (16) [noun] A weight of four grains; a carat. | [noun] A long dry fruit (seed capsule), length more than twice the width, typical to cruciferous plants and consisting of two fused carpels that separate when ripe. SILIQUE (16) [noun] A long dry fruit (seed capsule), length more than twice the width, typical to cruciferous plants and consisting of two fused carpels that separate when ripe. SILKIER (11) [adjective] Similar in appearance or texture (especially in softness and smoothness) to silk. | [adjective] Smooth and pleasant; seductive. | [adjective] Covered in long, slender, glistening hairs pressed close to the surface; sericeous. SILKIES (11) [noun] A seal which can magically transform into a human by shedding its skin. | [noun] A chicken of a certain breed with very fine, silk-like feathers. SILKILY (14) SILKING (12) SILLERS (7) SILLIER (7) [adjective] Laughable or amusing through foolishness or a foolish appearance. | [adjective] Blessed, particularly: | [adjective] Pitiful, inspiring compassion, particularly: SILLIES (7) [noun] A silly person. | [noun] A term of address. | [noun] A mistake. SILLILY (10) SILOING (8) [verb] To store in a silo. | [noun] The practice of using silos | [noun] The action of the verb to silo SILTIER (7) SILTING (8) [verb] To clog or fill with silt. | [verb] To become clogged with silt. | [verb] To flow through crevices; to percolate. SILURID (8) SILVANS (10) SILVERN (10) [adjective] Made of silver; or resembling or characteristic of silver; silvery. SILVERS (10) [noun] A lustrous, white, metallic element, atomic number 47, atomic weight 107.87, symbol Ag. | [noun] (collectively) Coins made from silver or any similar white metal. | [noun] (collectively) Cutlery and other eating utensils, whether silver or made from some other white metal. SILVERY (13) [adjective] Resembling silver in color, shiny white. | [adjective] Sprinkled or covered with silver. | [adjective] Having the clear, musical tone of silver; soft and clear in sound. SILVICS (12) SIMIANS (9) [noun] An ape or monkey, especially an anthropoid. SIMILAR (9) [noun] That which is similar to, or resembles, something else, as in quality, form, etc. | [noun] A material that produces an effect that resembles the symptoms of a particular disease. | [adjective] Having traits or characteristics in common; alike, comparable. SIMILES (9) [noun] A figure of speech in which one thing is compared to another, in the case of English generally using like or as. SIMIOID (10) SIMIOUS (9) SIMITAR (9) SIMLINS (9) SIMMERS (11) [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. SIMNELS (9) SIMOOMS (11) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMOONS (9) [noun] A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind of the desert, particularly of Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. SIMPERS (11) [noun] A foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, or affected smile; a smirk. | [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. SIMPLER (11) [adjective] Uncomplicated; taken by itself, with nothing added. | [adjective] Without ornamentation; plain. | [adjective] Free from duplicity; guileless, innocent, straightforward. SIMPLES (11) [noun] A herbal preparation made from one plant, as opposed to something made from more than one plant. | [noun] (by extension) A physician. | [noun] A simple or atomic proposition. SIMPLEX (18) [noun] An analogue in any dimension of the triangle or tetrahedron: the convex hull of n+1 points in n-dimensional space. | [noun] A simple word, one without affixes. | [adjective] Single, simple; not complex. SIMULAR (9) SINCERE (9) [adjective] Genuine; meaning what one says or does; heartfelt. | [adjective] Meant truly or earnestly. | [adjective] Clean; pure SINEWED (11) [adjective] Furnished with sinews. | [adjective] Equipped; strengthened. SINGERS (8) [noun] A person who sings, often professionally. | [noun] (square dance) dance figure with a fixed structure, sung by a caller, or a piece of music with that structure. | [noun] A person who, or device which, singes. | [noun] A person who sings, often professionally. SINGING (9) [verb] To produce musical or harmonious sounds with one’s voice. | [verb] To express audibly by means of a harmonious vocalization. | [verb] To soothe with singing. 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. SINGLES (8) [noun] A 45 RPM vinyl record with one song on side A and one on side B. | [noun] A popular song released and sold (on any format) nominally on its own though usually having at least one extra track. | [noun] One who is not married or does not have a romantic partner. SINGLET (8) [noun] A vest; a sleeveless garment with a low-cut neck, often worn underneath a shirt. | [noun] A multiplet having a single member, especially a single spectroscopic peak. | [noun] A quantum state having zero spin. SINKAGE (12) [noun] An amount of material involved in a sinking. | [noun] An area of sunken ground; a depression. | [noun] The change in draft that a vessel obtains when moving through the water. SINKERS (11) [noun] One who sinks something. | [noun] A weight used in fishing to cause the line or net to sink. | [noun] Any of several high speed pitches that have a downward motion near the plate; a two-seam fastball, a split-finger fastball, or a forkball. SINKING (12) [verb] (heading, physical) To move or be moved into something. | [verb] (heading, social) To diminish or be diminished. | [verb] To conceal and appropriate. SINLESS (7) [adjective] Without sin; never having sinned. SINNERS (7) [noun] A person who sins or has sinned. | [noun] A person who sins or has sinned by the action or identity indicated or previously mentioned | [noun] An unregenerate person. SINNING (8) [verb] To commit a sin. | [noun] The act of committing a sin. SINOPIA (9) SINOPIE (9) SINSYNE (10) SINTERS (7) [noun] An alluvial sediment deposited by a mineral spring. | [noun] A mass formed by sintering. | [noun] A mixture of iron ore and fluxes added to a blast furnace. SINUATE (7) [verb] To advance in wavy or curvy manner, to bend, to curve, to wind in and out | [adjective] Sinuous | [adjective] Having wavy indentation on its border or edge. SINUOUS (7) [adjective] Having curves in alternate directions; meandering. | [adjective] Moving gracefully and in a supple manner. | [adjective] Morally crooked; shifty. SINUSES (7) [noun] A pouch or cavity in any organ or tissue, especially the paranasal sinus. | [noun] A channel for transmitting venous blood. | [noun] A notch or depression between two lobes or teeth in the margin of an organ. SIPHONS (12) [noun] A bent pipe or tube with one end lower than the other, in which hydrostatic pressure exerted due to the force of gravity moves liquid from one reservoir to another. | [noun] A soda siphon. | [noun] A tubelike organ found in animals or elongated cell found in plants. SIPPERS (11) SIPPETS (11) [noun] A small piece of something, especially a piece of toast or fried bean eaten with soup or gravy. SIPPING (12) [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. SIRDARS (8) [noun] A high-ranking person in India and other areas of west-central Asia; a chief, a headman. | [noun] The leader of a group of Sherpa mountain guides. SIRLOIN (7) [noun] A cut of beef from the lower part of the back, where the last ribs are (called rump in UK English). | [noun] A cut of beef from the middle of the back (corresponding to short loin and partly rib in US English). SIROCCO (11) [noun] A hot and often strong southerly to southeasterly wind on the Mediterranean that originates in the Sahara and adjacent North African regions. | [noun] A draft of hot air from an artificial source of heat. SIRRAHS (10) [noun] A term of address to an inferior male or more commonly a child. A modern day equivalent would be "little man". SIRREES (7) SISKINS (11) [noun] A small green and yellow European finch, Carduelis spinus spinus or Carduelis spinus, now Spinus spinus. | [noun] Any of various similar birds in subfamily Carduelinae, principally in the genus Spinus. SISSIER (7) [adjective] Effeminate. | [adjective] Cowardly. SISSIES (7) [noun] An effeminate boy or man. | [noun] A timid, unassertive or cowardly person. | [noun] (BDSM) A male crossdresser who adopts feminine behaviours. SISTERS (7) [noun] A daughter of the same parents as another person; a female sibling. | [noun] A female member of a religious order; especially one devoted to more active service; (informally) a nun. | [noun] Any butterfly in the genus Adelpha, so named for the resemblance of the dark-colored wings to the black habit traditionally worn by nuns. SISTRUM (9) [noun] An ancient Egyptian musical instrument, to be shaken, consisting of a metal frame holding percussive metal beads. SITCOMS (11) [noun] Acronym of single income, two children, oppressive/outrageous mortgage. | [noun] An episodic comedy television program with a plot or storyline based around a particular humorous situation. SITHENS (10) SITTERS (7) [noun] Someone who sits, e.g. for a portrait. | [noun] One employed to watch or tend something; a babysitter, housesitter, petsitter, etc. | [noun] A participant in a séance. SITTING (8) [noun] A period during which one is seated for a specific purpose. | [noun] A special seat allotted to a seat-holder, at church, etc. | [noun] The part of the year in which judicial business is transacted. | [verb] (of a person) To be in a position in which the upper body is upright and supported by the buttocks. SITUATE (7) [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] Situated. SITUSES (7) [noun] The position, especially the usual, normal position, of a body part or part of a plant. | [noun] The method in which the parts of a plant are arranged. | [noun] The location of a property as used for taxation or other legal purposes. SIXFOLD (18) [adjective] Having six component parts. | [adverb] Times six, multiplied by six. SIXTEEN (14) [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after fifteen and before seventeen, represented in Arabic numerals as 16 and in Roman numerals as XVI. SIXTHLY (20) SIXTIES (14) [noun] The decade of the 1860s, 1960s, etc. (but especially the 1960s) | [noun] A period in American history centered around the counterculture movement of the late 1960s. | [noun] The decade of one's life from age 60 through age 69. SIZABLE (18) [adjective] Fairly large. SIZABLY (21) SIZIEST (16) SIZINGS (17) SIZZLED (26) [verb] To make the sound of water hitting a hot surface. | [verb] To be exciting or dazzling. SIZZLER (25) SIZZLES (25) [noun] The sound of water hitting a hot surface | [noun] Zing, zip, or pizazz; excitement. | [verb] To make the sound of water hitting a hot surface. SJAMBOK (22) [noun] A stout whip, especially made of rhinoceros or hippopotamus hide. | [verb] To whip with a sjambok; to horsewhip. SKALDIC (14) SKATERS (11) [noun] A person who skates. | [noun] A member of skateboarding subculture, characterized by dingy and baggy clothes, and often wallet chains. | [noun] A player who is not a goaltender. SKATING (12) [verb] To move along a surface (ice or ground) using skates. | [verb] To skateboard | [verb] To use the skating technique. SKATOLE (11) SKATOLS (11) SKEANES (11) SKEEING (12) SKEETER (11) [noun] Mosquito | [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. SKEINED (12) SKELLUM (13) 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. SKELPIT (13) SKELTER (11) SKEPSIS (13) SKEPTIC (15) [noun] Someone who habitually doubts beliefs and claims presented as accepted by others, requiring strong evidence before accepting any belief or claim. | [noun] Someone undecided as to what is true. | [noun] A type of agnostic; someone skeptical towards religion. SKETCHY (19) [adjective] Roughly or hastily laid out; intended for later refinement. | [adjective] Resembling a comedy sketch, of sketch quality. | [adjective] Of questionable or doubtful quality. SKEWERS (14) [noun] A long pin, normally made of metal or wood, used to secure food during cooking. | [noun] Food served on a skewer | [noun] A scenario in which a piece attacks a more valuable piece which, if it moves aside, reveals a less valuable piece. Compare pin.W SKEWING (15) [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. SKIABLE (13) SKIBOBS (15) 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. SKIDDER (13) SKIDDOO (13) [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. SKIDOOS (12) [noun] A snowmobile. | [verb] To depart, especially to depart quickly | [verb] A nonsense word, often an expression of disrespect SKIDWAY (18) SKIFFLE (17) [noun] A type of folk music, with jazz and blues influences, using homemade or improvised instruments. SKIINGS (12) SKILFUL (14) [adjective] Possessing skill, skilled. SKILLED (12) [adjective] Having or showing skill; skillful. | [adjective] Requiring special abilities or training. | [verb] To set apart; separate. SKILLET (11) [noun] A pan for frying, generally large and heavy. | [noun] (sometimes attributive) A dish or meal cooked in such a pan. | [verb] To cook in a skillet. 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. SKIMMER (15) [noun] A device that skims. | [noun] A person who skims. | [noun] Any of three species of bird in the genus Rynchops of the family Laridae, that feed by skimming the surface of water bodies with their bills in flight. | [verb] To shimmer. 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. SKINFUL (14) [noun] Enough to fill a skin. | [noun] Enough alcoholic drink to cause inebriation. SKINKED (16) SKINKER (15) 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. SKINNER (11) [noun] Someone who skins animals. | [noun] A hunting knife used for skinning animals. | [noun] One who deals in skins, pelts, or hides. SKIPPED (16) [verb] To move by hopping on alternate feet. | [verb] To leap about lightly. | [verb] To skim, ricochet or bounce over a surface. SKIPPER (15) [noun] The master of a ship. | [noun] A coach, director, or other leader. | [noun] The captain of a sports team such as football, cricket, rugby or curling. | [noun] Agent noun of skip: one who skips. | [noun] A barn or shed in which to shelter for the night. SKIPPET (15) [noun] A small boat; a skiff. | [noun] A small, round box used for keeping documents and seals or for covering seals attached to documents 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 SKIRRET (11) [noun] An umbelliferous plant (Sium sisarum), cultivated for its sweet edible tuberous roots. 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. SKIRTER (11) SKITING (12) [verb] To boast. | [verb] To skim or slide along a surface. | [verb] To slip, such as on ice. SKITTER (11) [noun] A skittering movement. | [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. | [noun] Often skitters: the condition of suffering from diarrhea; thin excrement. SKITTLE (11) [noun] One of the wooden targets used in skittles. | [verb] To play skittles. | [verb] To beat comprehensively. SKIVERS (14) SKIVING (15) [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. | [noun] A piece made in skiving (the paring or splitting of leather), especially the part from the inner, or flesh, side. SKIWEAR (14) [noun] Clothing to be worn while skiing. SKLENTS (11) SKOALED (12) SKOOKUM (17) [noun] (chiefly among Northwest Coast Aboriginal people) An evil spirit or woodland monster or giant. | [noun] A type of doll based on the mythical woodland monster. | [adjective] (Northwest US) Excellent, impressive. SKOSHES (14) [noun] A tiny amount; a little bit; tad; smidgen; jot. SKREEGH (15) SKREIGH (15) 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. SKULKER (15) 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. SKYCAPS (18) [noun] A porter at an airport. SKYDIVE (18) [noun] An instance of skydiving. | [verb] To be in freefall after jumping from an aircraft and landing safely by deploying a parachute. SKYDOVE (18) SKYHOOK (21) [noun] An hook imagined to be suspended in midair. | [noun] An overhead winch. | [noun] A helicopter that lifts and transports heavy objects suspended by a heavy cable. SKYJACK (27) [verb] To steal or commandeer (hijack) an airplane, usually by threat of violence to the passengers. | [noun] A platform that can be raised using a hydraulic scissor lift. SKYLARK (18) [noun] A small brown passerine bird, Alauda arvensis, that sings as it flies high into the air. | [verb] (originally nautical) To jump about joyfully, frolic; to play around, play tricks. SKYLINE (14) [noun] (earth sciences) The line at which the earth and sky meet. | [noun] The horizontal silhouette of a city or building against the sky. | [noun] A path of movement, especially military movement, producing a silhouette above terrain features visible from the location of likely observers. SKYPHOI (19) SKYPHOS (19) SKYSAIL (14) [noun] The sail set next above the royal. SKYWALK (21) [noun] Skyway SKYWARD (18) [adjective] Pointing or facing at or moving toward the sky. | [adverb] At or toward the sky. SKYWAYS (20) [noun] A walkway connecting buildings at a significant height above ground level. | [noun] An airplane route. | [noun] An elevated road. SLABBED (12) [verb] To make something into a slab. SLABBER (11) [noun] Moisture falling from the mouth; slaver. | [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. | [noun] A saw for cutting slabs from logs. 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. SLACKEN (13) [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. SLACKER (13) [noun] One who procrastinates or is lazy. | [noun] A person lacking a sense of direction in life; an underachiever. | [noun] A person who seeks to avoid military service. SLACKLY (16) SLAGGED (10) [verb] To produce slag | [verb] To become slag; to agglomerate when heated below the fusion point | [verb] To reduce to slag SLAINTE (7) SLAKERS (11) SLAKING (12) [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. SLALOMS (9) [verb] To race in a slalom. | [verb] To move in a slalom-like manner. 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. SLAMMER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, slams. | [noun] (usually "the slammer") Jail, prison. | [noun] A tequila cocktail. SLANDER (8) [noun] A false or unsupported, malicious statement (spoken, not written), especially one which is injurious to a person's reputation; the making of such a statement. | [verb] To utter a slanderous statement about; baselessly speak ill of. 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. SLAPPER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, slaps. | [noun] A prostitute. | [noun] A woman of loose morals. SLASHED (11) [verb] To cut or attempt to cut, particularly: | [verb] To strike violently and randomly, particularly: | [verb] To move quickly and violently. SLASHER (10) [noun] One who slashes. | [noun] A machine for applying size to warp yarns. | [noun] A horror movie with graphic blood and violence. A slasher movie SLASHES (10) [noun] A slashing action or motion, particularly: | [noun] A mark made by a slashing motion, particularly: | [noun] Something resembling such a mark, particularly: SLATERS (7) [noun] One who lays slates, or whose occupation is to slate buildings. | [noun] Any terrestrial isopod crustacean of the genus Porcellio and allied genera; a woodlouse. | [noun] A harsh critic; one who slates or denigrates something. SLATHER (10) [noun] A thick sauce or spread that is to be slathered (spread thickly) onto food. | [noun] Drool (especially if abundant). | [noun] (usually in the plural) A generous or abundant quantity. SLATIER (7) SLATING (8) [verb] To cover with slate. | [verb] To criticise harshly. | [verb] To schedule. 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. SLAVERS (10) [verb] To drool saliva from the mouth; to slobber. | [verb] To fawn. | [verb] To smear with saliva issuing from the mouth. SLAVERY (13) [noun] An institution or social practice of owning human beings as property, especially for use as forced laborers. | [noun] A condition of servitude endured by a slave. | [noun] A condition in which one is captivated or subjugated, as by greed or drugs. | [adjective] Covered in slaver; slobbery. SLAVEYS (13) [noun] A male servant. | [noun] A maid, maidservant. SLAVING (11) [verb] To work as a slaver, to enslave people. | [verb] To work hard. | [verb] To place a device under the control of another. SLAVISH (13) [adjective] In the manner of a slave; abject. | [adjective] (Of a copy) utterly faithful; totally lacking originality or creativity. SLAYERS (10) [noun] A killer; a murderer; someone who slays SLAYING (11) [verb] To kill, murder. | [verb] To eradicate or stamp out. | [verb] (by extension) To defeat, overcome (in a competition or contest). SLEAVED (11) SLEAVES (10) SLEAZES (16) [noun] Low moral standards. | [noun] A person of low moral standards. | [noun] A man who is sexually aggressive or forward with women to the point of causing disgust. SLEDDED (10) [verb] To ride a sled. | [verb] To convey on a sled. SLEDDER (9) 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. SLEDGES (9) [noun] A heavy, long handled maul or hammer used to drive stakes, wedges, etc. | [noun] A low sled drawn by animals, typically on snow, ice or grass. | [noun] Any type of sled or sleigh. SLEEKED (12) [verb] To make smooth or glossy; to polish or cause to be attractive. SLEEKEN (11) SLEEKER (11) [adjective] Having an even, smooth surface; smooth | [adjective] Glossy | [adjective] Not rough or harsh. SLEEKIT (11) [adjective] Specious, flattering; cunning. SLEEKLY (14) SLEEPER (9) [noun] Someone who sleeps. | [noun] That which lies dormant, as a law. | [noun] A spy, saboteur, or terrorist who lives unobtrusively in a community until activated by a prearranged signal; may be part of a sleeper cell. | [noun] A railroad tie. SLEETED (8) [verb] (of the weather) To be in a state in which sleet is falling. SLEEVED (11) SLEEVES (10) [noun] The part of a garment that covers the arm. | [noun] A (usually tubular) covering or lining to protect a piece of machinery etc. | [noun] A protective jacket or case, especially for a record, containing art and information about the contents; also the analogous leaflet found in a packaged CD. SLEIGHS (11) [noun] A vehicle, generally pulled by an animal, which moves over snow or ice on runners, used for transporting persons or goods. (contrast "sled", which is smaller) | [verb] To ride or drive a sleigh. SLEIGHT (11) [noun] Cunning; craft; artful practice. | [noun] An artful trick; sly artifice; a feat so dexterous that the manner of performance escapes observation. | [noun] Dexterous practice; dexterity; skill. SLENDER (8) [adjective] Thin; slim. | [adjective] Meagre; deficient | [adjective] (Gaelic languages) Palatalized. SLEUTHS (10) [noun] A detective. | [noun] A sleuth-hound; a bloodhound. | [noun] An animal’s trail or track. SLEWING (11) [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. SLICERS (9) SLICING (10) [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. SLICKED (14) [verb] To make slick. SLICKER (13) [adjective] Slippery or smooth due to a covering of liquid; often used to describe appearances. | [adjective] Appearing expensive or sophisticated. | [adjective] Superficially convincing but actually untrustworthy. | [noun] One who or that which slicks. SLICKLY (16) SLIDDEN (9) SLIDERS (8) [noun] An item of play equipment that children can climb up and then slide down again. | [noun] A surface of ice, snow, butter, etc. on which someone can slide for amusement or as a practical joke. | [noun] The falling of large amounts of rubble, earth and stones down the slope of a hill or mountain; avalanche. SLIDING (9) [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. SLIGHTS (11) [noun] The act of slighting; a deliberate act of neglect or discourtesy. | [noun] Sleight. | [verb] To treat as unimportant or not worthy of attention; to make light of. SLIMIER (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to slime | [adjective] Resembling, of the nature of, covered or daubed with, or abounding in slime | [adjective] Friendly in a false, calculating way; underhanded; sneaky; slick; smarmy. SLIMILY (12) SLIMING (10) [verb] To coat with slime. | [verb] To besmirch or disparage. | [verb] To carve (fish), removing the offal. SLIMMED (12) [verb] To lose weight in order to achieve slimness. | [verb] To make slimmer; to reduce in size. SLIMMER (11) [adjective] Slender, thin. | [adjective] (of something abstract like a chance or margin) Very small, tiny. | [adjective] (rural) Bad, of questionable quality; not strongly built, flimsy. SLIMPSY (14) SLINGER (8) SLINKED (12) SLIPING (10) SLIPOUT (9) 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. SLIPPER (11) [noun] A low soft shoe that can be slipped on and off easily. | [noun] Such a shoe intended for indoor use; a bedroom or house slipper. | [noun] A flip-flop (type of rubber sandal). SLIPUPS (11) [noun] A (small) error or mistake; a (minor) misstep. SLIPWAY (15) [noun] A sloping surface, leading down to the shore or to a river, on which ships are built, repaired or stored and from which they are launched. SLITHER (10) [noun] A limestone rubble. | [noun] (see usage notes) A sliver. | [verb] To move about smoothly and from side to side. SLITTED (8) [adjective] Having a slit or slits. SLITTER (7) SLIVERS (10) [noun] A long piece cut or rent off; a sharp, slender fragment; a splinter. | [noun] A strand, or slender roll, of cotton or other fiber in a loose, untwisted state, produced by a carding machine and ready for the roving or slubbing which precedes spinning. | [noun] Bait made of pieces of small fish. Compare kibblings. SLOBBER (11) [noun] Liquid material, generally saliva, that dribbles or drools outward and downward from the mouth. | [noun] Muddy or marshy land; mire. | [noun] A jellyfish. SLOGANS (8) [noun] A catch phrase associated with the product or service being advertised. | [noun] A distinctive phrase of a person or group of people. | [noun] A battle cry among the ancient highlanders of Scotland. 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. SLOGGER (9) SLOPERS (9) SLOPING (10) [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. 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. SLOSHES (10) [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) SLOUCHY (15) [adjective] Given to slouching. SLOUGHS (11) [noun] The skin shed by a snake or other reptile. | [noun] Dead skin on a sore or ulcer. | [verb] To shed (skin). SLOUGHY (14) SLOVENS (10) [noun] A habitually dirty or untidy man or boy; the male equivalent of slattern, or slut. | [noun] A low, base, lewd person. | [noun] An immoral woman. SLOWEST (10) [adjective] Taking a long time to move or go a short distance, or to perform an action; not quick in motion; proceeding at a low speed. | [adjective] Not happening in a short time; spread over a comparatively long time. | [adjective] Of reduced intellectual capacity; not quick to comprehend. SLOWING (11) [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. SLOWISH (13) SLUBBED (12) [verb] To draw and twist fibers in order to prepare them for spinning. SLUBBER (11) SLUDGES (9) [noun] Solids separated from suspension in a liquid. | [noun] A residual semi-solid material left from industrial, water treatment, or wastewater treatment processes. | [noun] A sediment of accumulated minerals in a steam boiler. 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. SLUGGER (9) [noun] A boxer who tends to deliver hard punches | [noun] A batter who has a high percentage of extra base hits 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. SLUICES (9) [noun] An artificial passage for water, fitted with a valve or gate, for example in a canal lock or a mill stream, for stopping or regulating the flow. | [noun] A water gate or floodgate. | [noun] Hence, an opening or channel through which anything flows; a source of supply. SLUMBER (11) [noun] A very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [noun] A state of ignorance or inaction. | [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. SLUMGUM (12) SLUMISM (11) SLUMMED (12) [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. SLUMMER (11) SLUMPED (12) [verb] To collapse heavily or helplessly. | [verb] To decline or fall off in activity or performance. | [verb] To slouch or droop. SLURBAN (9) 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. SLUSHES (10) [noun] Half-melted snow or ice. | [noun] Liquid mud or mire. | [noun] Flavored shaved ice served as a drink. SLYNESS (10) 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. SMACKER (15) [noun] One who smacks or spanks. | [noun] One who makes a smacking noise, especially while eating. | [noun] A kiss. SMALLER (9) [adjective] Not large or big; insignificant; few in number. | [adjective] Young, as a child. | [adjective] (writing, incomparable) Minuscule or lowercase, referring to written or printed letters. SMALTOS (9) 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. SMARTEN (9) [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. SMARTER (9) [adjective] Exhibiting social ability or cleverness. | [adjective] Exhibiting intellectual knowledge, such as that found in books. | [adjective] (often in combination) Equipped with intelligent behaviour (digital/computer technology). SMARTIE (9) SMARTLY (12) [adverb] In a smart manner. | [adverb] Quickly. | [adverb] Intelligently. SMASHED (13) [verb] To break (something brittle) violently. | [verb] To be destroyed by being smashed. | [verb] To hit extremely hard. SMASHER (12) [noun] Something that, or someone who, smashes. | [noun] An attractive person (see also smashing). | [noun] Anything very large or extraordinary; a whopper. SMASHES (12) [noun] The sound of a violent impact; a violent striking together. | [noun] A traffic collision. | [noun] Something very successful or popular (as music, food, fashion, etc); a hit. SMASHUP (14) [noun] An abrupt, damaging breakdown or failure. | [noun] A violent collision involving one or more vehicles. SMATTER (9) [noun] A smattering (small number or amount). | [noun] A smattering (superficial knowledge). | [verb] To talk superficially; to babble, chatter. 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. SMEARER (9) SMECTIC (13) [noun] A liquid crystal having the molecules aligned in this way. | [adjective] Cleansing. | [adjective] Astringent; detergent. SMEDDUM (13) SMEEKED (14) SMEGMAS (12) 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. SMELLER (9) SMELTED (10) [verb] To fuse or melt two things into one, especially in order to extract metal from ore; to meld SMELTER (9) [noun] A person employed to do smelting. | [noun] A machine used to smelt metal. | [noun] A place where smelting is done. SMERKED (14) SMIDGEN (11) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGES (11) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGIN (11) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMILERS (9) SMILING (10) [verb] To have (a smile) on one's face. | [verb] To express by smiling. | [verb] To express amusement, pleasure, or love and kindness. SMIRKED (14) [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. SMIRKER (13) SMITERS (9) SMITING (10) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. | [noun] The act of one who smites. SMITTEN (9) [verb] To hit, to strike. | [verb] To strike down or kill with godly force. | [verb] To injure with divine power. SMOCKED (16) [verb] To provide with, or clothe in, a smock or a smock frock. | [verb] To apply smocking. SMOKERS (13) [noun] A person who smokes tobacco habitually. | [noun] A smoking car on a train. | [noun] An informal social gathering for men only, at which smoking tobacco is allowed. SMOKIER (13) [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. | [adjective] Of a colour or colour pattern similar to that of smoke. SMOKILY (16) SMOKING (14) [verb] To inhale and exhale the smoke from a burning cigarette, cigar, pipe, etc. | [verb] To inhale and exhale tobacco smoke. | [verb] To give off smoke. | [noun] The act or process of emitting smoke. SMOLDER (10) [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. SMOOCHY (17) SMOOTHS (12) [noun] Something that is smooth, or that goes smoothly and easily. | [noun] A smoothing action. | [noun] A domestic animal having a smooth coat. SMOOTHY (15) SMOTHER (12) [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 | [noun] That which smothers or appears to smother, particularly 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. SMUDGES (11) [noun] A blemish or smear, especially a dark or sooty one. | [noun] Dense smoke, such as that used for fumigation. | [noun] A heap of damp combustibles partially ignited and burning slowly, placed on the windward side of a house, tent, etc. to keep off mosquitoes or other insects. SMUGGER (11) [adjective] Irritatingly pleased with oneself, offensively self-complacent, self-satisfied. | [adjective] Studiously neat or nice, especially in dress; spruce; affectedly precise; smooth and prim. SMUGGLE (11) [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. SMUTCHY (17) 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. SNAFFLE (13) [noun] A broad-mouthed, loose-ringed bit (metal in a horse's mouth). It brings pressure to bear on the tongue and bars and corners of the mouth. Often used as a training bit. | [noun] Decorative wear that looks like a snaffle. | [verb] To put a snaffle on, or control with a snaffle. 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) SNAKIER (11) [adjective] Resembling or relating to snakes. | [adjective] Windy; winding; twisty; sinuous, wavy. | [adjective] Sly; cunning; deceitful. SNAKILY (14) SNAKING (12) [verb] To follow or move in a winding route. | [verb] To steal slyly. | [verb] To clean using a plumbing snake. 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. SNAPPER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, snaps. | [noun] Any of approximately 100 different species of fish. | [noun] A (human) baby. SNARERS (7) SNARING (8) [verb] To catch or hold, especially with a loop. | [verb] To ensnare. | [noun] The capture of a person or animal by means of a snare. 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. SNARLER (7) SNASHES (10) SNATCHY (15) SNATHES (10) SNAWING (11) 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. SNEAKER (11) [noun] One who sneaks. | [noun] An athletic shoe with a soft, rubber sole. | [noun] A vessel of drink. 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. SNEERER (7) 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. SNEEZER (16) SNEEZES (16) [noun] An act of sneezing. | [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. SNELLER (7) SNIBBED (12) [verb] To latch (a door, window etc.). SNICKED (14) [verb] To latch, to lock. | [verb] To cut. | [verb] To cut or snip. SNICKER (13) [noun] A stifled or broken laugh. | [verb] To emit a snicker, a stifled or broken laugh. | [verb] To utter through a laugh of this kind. | [noun] A player who snicks the ball. SNIDELY (11) SNIDEST (8) 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 SNIFFER (13) [noun] One who sniffs. | [noun] The nose. | [noun] A software or hardware tool for intercepting and logging network traffic. SNIFFLE (13) [noun] The act, or the sound of sniffling; the condition of having a runny or wet nose, as from a cold or allergies. | [verb] To make a whimpering or sniffing sound when breathing, because of a runny nose. | [verb] To utter with a whimpering or sniffing sound. SNIFTER (10) [noun] A small alcoholic drink. | [noun] A pear-shaped glass for drinking brandy or other alcoholic beverages. | [noun] A severe storm. SNIGGER (9) [noun] A partly suppressed or broken laugh. | [noun] A sly or snide laugh. | [verb] To emit a snigger. SNIGGLE (9) [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. | [verb] To steal something of little value SNIPERS (9) [noun] A person using long-range small arms for precise attacks from a concealed position. | [noun] Any attacker using a non-contact weapon against a specific target from a concealed position. | [noun] One who shoots from a concealed position. SNIPING (10) [verb] To hunt snipe. | [verb] To shoot at individuals from a concealed place. | [verb] (by extension) To shoot with a sniper rifle. 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. SNIPPER (11) SNIPPET (11) [noun] A small part of something, such as a song or fabric; sample. | [noun] A text file containing a relatively small amount of code, useless by itself, along with instructions for inserting that code into a larger codebase. | [verb] To produce a snippet (small part) of; to excerpt. SNIVELS (10) [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. SNOGGED (10) [verb] To kiss passionately. SNOODED (9) SNOOKED (12) SNOOKER (11) [noun] A cue sport, popular in the UK and other Commonwealth of Nations countries. | [noun] The situation where the cue ball is in such a position that the opponent cannot directly hit the required ball with it. | [verb] To play the game of snooker. 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. SNOOPER (9) SNOOTED (8) SNOOZED (17) [verb] To sleep, especially briefly; to nap, doze. | [verb] To pause; to postpone for a short while. SNOOZER (16) SNOOZES (16) [noun] A brief period of sleep; a nap. | [noun] The snooze button on an alarm clock. | [noun] Something boring. SNOOZLE (16) SNORERS (7) SNORING (8) [verb] To breathe during sleep with harsh, snorting noises caused by vibration of the soft palate. | [noun] The action or sound of breathing during sleep with harsh, snorting noises caused by vibration of the soft palate. SNORKEL (11) [noun] A hollow tube, held in the mouth, or mounted on and opening into a diving mask, used by swimmers for breathing underwater. | [noun] A retractable tube fitted in diesel-engine submarines to allow sufficient ventilation that the engines may be used at periscope depth. | [verb] To use a snorkel. 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. SNORTER (7) [noun] One who snorts. | [noun] Something that is extraordinary or remarkable | [noun] Something that is extremely difficult SNOUTED (8) SNOWCAP (14) [noun] A layer of snow covering a mountain top. | [noun] A small hummingbird, Microchera albocoronata, which is a resident breeder in Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and western Panama. SNOWIER (10) [adjective] Marked by snow, characterized by snow. | [adjective] Covered with snow, snow-covered, besnowed. | [adjective] Snow-white in color, white as snow. SNOWILY (13) SNOWING (11) [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. SNOWMAN (12) [noun] A humanoid figure made with large snowballs stacked on each other. Human traits like a face and arms may be fashioned with sticks (arms), a carrot (nose), and stones or coal (eyes, mouth). | [noun] A score of eight, especially within one inning (in baseball) or on one hole (in golf, where it is also known as dogballs). | [noun] A playing card with the rank of eight. SNOWMEN (12) [noun] A humanoid figure made with large snowballs stacked on each other. Human traits like a face and arms may be fashioned with sticks (arms), a carrot (nose), and stones or coal (eyes, mouth). | [noun] A score of eight, especially within one inning (in baseball) or on one hole (in golf, where it is also known as dogballs). | [noun] A playing card with the rank of eight. SNUBBED (12) [verb] To slight, ignore or behave coldly toward someone. | [verb] To turn down; to dismiss. | [verb] To check; to reprimand. SNUBBER (11) [noun] A device used to suppress ("snub") voltage transients in electrical systems, pressure transients in fluid systems, or excess force or rapid movement in mechanical systems. | [noun] One who snubs. 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. SNUFFER (13) [noun] A device made to extinguish (snuff out) a candle. | [noun] A person who uses snuff (the tobacco product). | [noun] The common porpoise. SNUFFLE (13) [noun] An act of snuffling; sniffing loudly | [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. SNUFFLY (16) SNUGGED (10) [verb] To make secure or snug. | [verb] To snuggle or nestle. | [verb] To make smooth. SNUGGER (9) [noun] A threaded plastic tube used to clamp blood vessels during surgery. | [noun] A ring that fits tightly around a cable, rope or wire, holding it in place or preventing leakage around any hole through which it passes. | [noun] Moveable brackets for keeping small items secure on a shelf. | [adjective] Warm and comfortable; cosy. SNUGGLE (9) [noun] An affectionate hug. | [noun] The final remnant left in a liquor bottle. | [verb] To lie close to another person or thing, hugging or being cosy. SOAKAGE (12) SOAKERS (11) SOAKING (12) [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. SOAPBOX (18) [noun] A crate for packing soap. | [noun] Any physical or media platform which gives prominence to the person on it and the views they espouse. | [noun] A talk about one's pet topic (or the topic itself), especially when only tangentially relevant to an ongoing discussion. SOAPERS (9) SOAPIER (9) [adjective] Resembling soap. | [adjective] Resembling a soap opera. | [adjective] Full of soap. SOAPILY (12) SOAPING (10) [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). SOARERS (7) SOARING (8) [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. SOBBERS (11) SOBBING (12) [verb] To weep with convulsive gasps. | [verb] To say (something) while sobbing. | [verb] To soak. 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 SOBERER (9) [adjective] Not drunk; not intoxicated | [adjective] Not given to excessive drinking of alcohol | [adjective] Moderate; realistic; serious; not playful; not passionate; cool; self-controlled SOBERLY (12) [adverb] In a sober manner; temperately; coolly; calmly; gravely; seriously. SOCAGER (10) SOCAGES (10) SOCCAGE (12) [noun] In the Middle Ages (and chiefly but not exclusively medieval England), a legal system whereby a tenant would pay a rent or do some agricultural work for the landlord. SOCCERS (11) SOCIALS (9) [noun] A festive gathering to foster introductions. | [noun] A dance held to raise money for a couple to be married. | [noun] A dinner dance event, usually held annually by a company or sporting club. SOCIETY (12) [noun] A long-standing group of people sharing cultural aspects such as language, dress, norms of behavior and artistic forms. | [noun] A group of people who meet from time to time to engage in a common interest; an association or organization. | [noun] The sum total of all voluntary interrelations between individuals. SOCKETS (13) [noun] An opening into which a plug or other connecting part is designed to fit (e.g. a light bulb socket). | [noun] A hollow into a bone which a part fits, such as an eye, or another bone, in the case of a joint. | [noun] One endpoint of a two-way communication link, used for interprocess communication across a network. SOCKEYE (16) [noun] A small salmon with red flesh, Oncorhynchus nerka, found in the coastal waters of the northern Pacific. | [noun] The edible flesh of this fish. SOCKING (14) [verb] To hit or strike violently; to deliver a blow to. | [verb] To throw. | [adverb] Very, extremely SOCKMAN (15) SOCKMEN (15) SODDENS (9) [verb] To drench, soak or saturate. | [verb] To become soaked. SODDIES (9) SODDING (10) [verb] To cover with sod. | [verb] Bugger; sodomize. | [verb] Damn, curse, confound. SODIUMS (10) SOFFITS (13) [noun] The visible underside of an arch, balcony, beam, cornice, staircase, vault or any other architectural element. | [noun] (pipe technology) The top point of the inside open section of a pipe or box conduit. SOFTENS (10) [verb] To make something soft or softer. | [verb] To undermine the morale of someone (often soften up). | [verb] To make less harsh SOFTEST (10) [adjective] Easily giving way under pressure. | [adjective] (of cloth or similar material) Smooth and flexible; not rough, rugged, or harsh. | [adjective] (of a sound) Quiet. SOFTIES (10) [noun] A weak or sentimental person. | [noun] Somebody who finds it difficult to scold or punish. | [noun] A software expert who is ignorant of the workings of hardware. SOFTISH (13) SOGGIER (9) [adjective] Soaked with moisture or other liquid. SOGGILY (12) SOIGNEE (8) [adjective] Showing elegance and sophistication. SOILAGE (8) SOILING (8) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To become dirty or soiled. | [verb] To stain or mar, as with infamy or disgrace; to tarnish; to sully. SOILURE (7) SOIREES (7) [noun] A formal evening party. SOJOURN (14) [noun] A short stay somewhere. | [noun] A temporary residence. | [verb] To reside somewhere temporarily, especially as a guest or lodger. SOKEMAN (13) SOKEMEN (13) SOLACED (10) [verb] To give solace to; comfort; cheer; console. | [verb] To allay or assuage. | [verb] To take comfort; to be cheered. SOLACER (9) SOLACES (9) [noun] Comfort or consolation in a time of loneliness or distress. | [noun] A source of comfort or consolation. | [verb] To give solace to; comfort; cheer; console. SOLANDS (8) SOLANIN (7) SOLANOS (7) SOLANUM (9) [noun] Any plant in the genus Solanum. | [noun] A traditional green vegetable in the genus Solanum, specifically Solanum nigrum, and sometimes Solanum macrocarpon, Solanum scabrun, and Solanum villosum. SOLARIA (7) [noun] An establishment with sunbeds in it or where one can rent sunbeds. | [noun] A room, with many windows, exposed to the sun. | [noun] A sundial. SOLATED (8) SOLATES (7) SOLATIA (7) [noun] A form of compensation for emotional rather than physical or financial harm. | [noun] Intangible or emotional compensation. SOLDANS (8) SOLDERS (8) [noun] Any of various easily-melted alloys, commonly of tin and lead, that are used to mend, coat, or join metal objects, usually small. | [noun] Figuratively, circumstances or emotions that strongly bond things or persons together in analogy to solder that joins metals. | [verb] To join items together, or to coat them with solder SOLDIER (8) [noun] A member of an army, of any rank. | [noun] A private in military service, as distinguished from an officer. | [noun] A guardsman. SOLERET (7) SOLFEGE (11) [noun] A method of sight singing that uses the syllables do (originally ut), re, mi, fa, sol (or so), la, and si (or ti) to represent the seven principal pitches of the scale, most commonly the major scale. The fixed-do system uses do for C, and the moveable-do system uses do for whatever key the melody uses (thus B is do if the piece is in the key of B). The relative natural minor of a scale may be represented by beginning at la. SOLICIT (9) [noun] Solicitation | [verb] To persistently endeavor to obtain an object, or bring about an event. | [verb] To woo; to court. SOLIDER (8) SOLIDLY (11) [adverb] In a solid or firm manner. SOLIDUS (8) [noun] A slashing action or motion, particularly: | [noun] A mark made by a slashing motion, particularly: | [noun] Something resembling such a mark, particularly: SOLIONS (7) SOLITON (7) [noun] A self-reinforcing pulse or travelling wave caused by any non-linear effect (found in many physical systems). SOLOING (8) [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. SOLOIST (7) [noun] A person who performs a solo. SOLUBLE (9) [adjective] Able to be dissolved. | [adjective] Able to be solved or explained. SOLUBLY (12) SOLUTES (7) [noun] Any substance that is dissolved in a liquid solvent to create a solution SOLVATE (10) [noun] A complex formed by the attachment of solvent molecules to that of a solute | [verb] To form such a complex upon solution SOLVENT (10) [noun] A liquid that dissolves a solid, liquid, or gaseous solute, resulting in a solution. | [noun] That which resolves. | [adjective] Able to pay all debts as they become due, and having no more liabilities than assets. SOLVERS (10) SOLVING (11) [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. SOMATIC (11) [adjective] Part of, or relating to the body of an organism. | [adjective] Pertaining, and restricted, to an individual; not inheritable. | [adjective] Of or relating to the wall of the body; somatopleuric; parietal. SOMEDAY (13) [adverb] Sometime; at some unspecified time in the future. SOMEHOW (15) [adverb] In one way or another; in a way not yet known or explained; by some means SOMEONE (9) [noun] A partially specified but unnamed person. | [noun] An important person | [pronoun] Some person. SOMEWAY (15) [adverb] Somehow. SOMITAL (9) SOMITES (9) [noun] One of the paired masses of mesoderm distributed along the sides of the neural tube that will eventually become dermis, skeletal muscle, or vertebrae. | [noun] A metamere, one of a series of segments, arranged longitudinally, of which some animals are composed. SOMITIC (11) SONANCE (9) SONANTS (7) SONATAS (7) [noun] A musical composition for one or a few instruments, one of which is frequently a piano, in three or four movements that vary in key and tempo. SONDERS (8) SONGFUL (11) SONHOOD (11) SONLESS (7) SONLIKE (11) SONNETS (7) [noun] A fixed verse form of Italian origin consisting of fourteen lines that are typically five-foot iambics and rhyme according to one of a few prescribed schemes. SONNIES (7) SONOVOX (17) SONSHIP (12) SONSIER (7) SOONERS (7) SOONEST (7) [adjective] Short in length of time from the present. | [adjective] Early | [adverb] Immediately, instantly. 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. SOOTHER (10) [adjective] True. | [adjective] Pleasing; delightful; sweet. | [noun] One who, or that which, soothes. SOOTHES (10) [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. SOOTHLY (13) SOOTIER (7) [adjective] Of, relating to, or producing soot. | [adjective] Soiled with soot | [adjective] Of the color of soot. SOOTILY (10) SOOTING (8) [verb] To cover or dress with soot. SOPHIES (12) [noun] A title of a Safavid dynasty shah. | [noun] A wise man; a sage or wite. | [noun] Any one of the various fields of study whose names end in -sophy. SOPHISM (14) [noun] A method of teaching using the techniques of philosophy and rhetoric. | [noun] A flawed argument, superficially correct in its reasoning, usually designed to deceive. | [noun] An intentional fallacy. | [noun] A denomination in Islam emphasizing mysticism, asceticism and music. SOPHIST (12) [noun] One of a class of teachers of rhetoric, philosophy, and politics in ancient Greece. | [noun] A teacher who used plausible but fallacious reasoning. | [noun] (by extension) One who is captious, fallacious, or deceptive in argument. SOPITED (10) SOPITES (9) SOPPIER (11) [adjective] Very wet; sodden, soaked. | [adjective] Sentimental, maudlin, schmaltzy. SOPPING (12) [verb] To steep or dip in any liquid. | [verb] To soak in, or be soaked; to percolate. | [adjective] Soaked, drenched, completely wet to the point of dripping. SOPRANI (9) SOPRANO (9) [noun] Musical part or section higher in pitch than alto and other sections. | [noun] Person or instrument that performs the soprano part. | [verb] To sing or utter with high pitch, like a soprano singer SORBATE (9) SORBENT (9) [noun] A substance that can enable sorption. SORBETS (9) [noun] Frozen fruit juice, sometimes mixed with egg whites, used as dessert or between courses of a meal. SORBING (10) SORBOSE (9) SORCERY (12) [noun] Magical power; the use of witchcraft or magic arts. SORDINE (8) SORDINI (8) SORDINO (8) SORDORS (8) SORGHOS (11) SORGHUM (13) [noun] A cereal, Sorghum bicolor (syn. Sorghum vulgare) the grains of which are used to make flour and as cattle feed. | [noun] Sorghum syrup. SORINGS (8) SORITES (7) SORITIC (9) SORNERS (7) SORNING (8) SOROCHE (12) SORORAL (7) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a sister. | [adjective] Related through someone's sister. SOROSES (7) [noun] Any multiple fruit, usually fleshy, that is derived from the multiple ovaries in an infructescence. Such a structure typically includes remnants of floral tissues such as the perianth. Examples include the mulberry and pineapple. | [noun] (US historical) A women's club; a society to further the educational and social activities of women. SOROSIS (7) [noun] Any multiple fruit, usually fleshy, that is derived from the multiple ovaries in an infructescence. Such a structure typically includes remnants of floral tissues such as the perianth. Examples include the mulberry and pineapple. | [noun] (US historical) A women's club; a society to further the educational and social activities of women. SORRELS (7) [noun] Any of various plants with acidic leaves, especially | [noun] A drink, consumed especially in the Caribbean around Christmas, made from the flowers of Hibiscus sabdariffa: hibiscus tea. | [noun] A brown colour, with a tint of red. SORRIER (7) [adjective] (of a person) Regretful for an action; grieved or saddened, especially by the loss of something or someone. | [adjective] Poor, pitifully sad or regrettable. | [adjective] Pathetic and inferior to the point of causing others disgust. SORRILY (10) SORROWS (10) [noun] Unhappiness, woe | [noun] (usually in plural) An instance or cause of unhappiness. | [verb] To feel or express grief. SORTERS (7) SORTIED (8) [verb] To sally. SORTIES (7) [noun] An attack made by troops from a besieged position. | [noun] An operational flight carried out by a single military aircraft. | [noun] An attacking move SORTING (8) [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. SOTTISH (10) SOUARIS (7) SOUBISE (9) [noun] A béchamel-based sauce containing strained or puréed onions. | [noun] A kind of cravat worn by men in the late 18th century. SOUCARS (9) SOUDANS (8) SOUFFLE (13) [noun] A murmuring or blowing sound. | [noun] A baked dish made from beaten egg whites and various other ingredients. SOUGHED (12) [verb] To make a soft rustling or murmuring sound. | [verb] To drain. SOULFUL (10) [adjective] Full of emotion and vigor. | [adjective] Full of soul. | [noun] Enough to fill one's soul. 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. SOUNDER (8) [adjective] Healthy. | [adjective] Complete, solid, or secure. | [adjective] Having the property of soundness. | [noun] Something, or someone who makes a sound. | [noun] A device for making soundings at sea. | [noun] A group of wild boar. SOUNDLY (11) [adverb] In a thorough manner; in manner free of defect or deficiency. SOUPCON (11) [noun] A very small amount; a hint; a trace, slight idea; an inkling. | [noun] A suspicion; a suggestion. SOUPIER (9) [adjective] Resembling soup; creamy. | [adjective] Extravagant sentimental; slushy. SOUPING (10) [verb] To feed: to provide with soup or a meal. | [verb] To develop (film) in a (chemical) developing solution. | [verb] Alternative form of sup 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. SOURCES (9) [noun] The person, place or thing from which something (information, goods, etc.) comes or is acquired. | [noun] Spring; fountainhead; wellhead; any collection of water on or under the surface of the ground in which a stream originates. | [noun] A reporter's informant. SOUREST (7) [adjective] Having an acidic, sharp or tangy taste. | [adjective] Made rancid by fermentation, etc. | [adjective] Tasting or smelling rancid. SOURING (8) [verb] To make sour. | [verb] To become sour. | [verb] To spoil or mar; to make disenchanted. SOURISH (10) SOURSOP (9) [noun] A small tropical evergreen tree, Annona muricata. | [noun] The tart, spiny, yellow-green fruit of this tree. SOUSING (8) [verb] To immerse in liquid; to steep or drench. | [verb] To steep in brine; to pickle. | [verb] To strike, beat. SOUTANE (7) [noun] (Christian clerical dress) A long gown with sleeves and buttons at the front SOUTERS (7) [noun] A shoemaker or cobbler. 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. SOUTHER (10) SOVIETS (10) [noun] A workers' council, an institution first formed during the 1905 Russian Revolution and then instituted as the main form of communist government at all levels in the Soviet Union; by extension, a similar organization in early Chinese communism and elsewhere. SOVKHOZ (26) [noun] A large, state-owned farm in the Soviet Union. SOVRANS (10) SOWABLE (12) SOWCARS (12) SOYBEAN (12) [noun] A legume plant (Glycine max), commonly cultivated for human and animal consumption and as a nitrogen-fixing ground cover. | [noun] The edible seed of this plant. SOYMILK (16) [noun] A milky liquid made from soy beans and used as a beverage, cooking ingredient or substitute for dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of such a beverage. SOYUZES (19) SOZINES (16) SOZZLED (26) [adjective] Very drunk. SPACERS (11) SPACIAL (11) [adjective] Pertaining to (the dimension of) space. | [adjective] Pertaining to (outer) space. SPACIER (11) [adjective] Spaced-out | [adjective] Eccentric | [adjective] Having much space SPACING (12) [verb] To roam, walk, wander. | [verb] To set some distance apart. | [verb] To insert or utilise spaces in a written text. SPACKLE (15) [noun] Any powder (originally containing gypsum plaster and glue) that when mixed with water forms a plastic paste, which is used to fill cracks and holes in plaster. | [noun] A plastic paste meant for filling cracks and holes in plaster. | [noun] A paste-like substance that fills a gap. SPADERS (10) SPADING (11) [verb] To turn over soil with a spade to loosen the ground for planting. | [noun] The act by which soil is spaded, or turned over by digging. SPAEING (10) [verb] To divine; foretell SPAHEES (12) 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. SPALLER (9) SPANCEL (11) SPANDEX (17) [noun] A synthetic fibre known for its exceptional elasticity. | [noun] Clothing made from such material. SPANGLE (10) [noun] A small piece of sparkling metallic material sewn on to a garment as decoration; a sequin. | [noun] Any small sparkling object. | [noun] The butterfly, Papilio demoleus, family Papilionidae, of Asia. SPANGLY (13) SPANIEL (9) [noun] Any of various small to medium-sized breeds of gun dog having a broad muzzle, long, wavy fur and long ears that hang at the side of the head, bred for flushing and retrieving game. | [noun] A cringing, fawning person. | [verb] To follow loyally or obsequiously, like a spaniel. 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 SPANKER (13) [noun] Someone who spanks. | [noun] An instrument used to give someone a spanking or spank, such as a paddle. | [noun] A fore-and-aft gaff-rigged sail on the aft-most mast of a square-rigged vessel. 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. SPANNER (9) [noun] A hand tool for adjusting nuts and bolts; a wrench. | [noun] One who, or that which, spans. | [noun] A hand tool shaped like a small crank handle, for winding the spring of a wheel lock on a musket. SPARELY (12) SPARERS (9) [noun] One who or that which spares. SPAREST (9) [adjective] Scant; not abundant or plentiful. | [adjective] Sparing; frugal; parsimonious; not spending much money. | [adjective] Being more than what is necessary, or what must be used or reserved; not wanted, or not used; superfluous. SPARGED (11) [verb] To sprinkle or spray. | [verb] To introduce bubbles into (a liquid). SPARGER (10) SPARGES (10) [verb] To sprinkle or spray. | [verb] To introduce bubbles into (a liquid). SPARIDS (10) [noun] Any of several perciform fishes of the family Sparidae SPARING (10) [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. SPARKED (14) [verb] To trigger, kindle into activity (an argument, etc). | [verb] To light; to kindle. | [verb] To give off a spark or sparks. SPARKER (13) SPARKLE (13) [noun] A little spark; a scintillation. | [noun] Brilliance; luster. | [noun] Liveliness; vivacity. | [verb] To emit sparks; to throw off ignited or incandescent particles SPARKLY (16) [adjective] Giving off sparks, or small flashes of light; glittery | [adjective] Lively and high-spirited | [adjective] Bubbly or effervescent 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. SPARROW (12) [noun] The house sparrow, Passer domesticus; a small bird with a short bill, and brown, white and gray feathers. | [noun] A member of the family Passeridae, comprising small Old World songbirds. | [noun] A member of the family Emberizidae, comprising small New World songbirds. SPARSER (9) [adjective] Having widely spaced intervals. | [adjective] Not dense; meager; scanty | [adjective] Having few nonzero elements SPARTAN (9) [adjective] Austere, frugal, characterized by self-denial. | [adjective] Resolute in the face of danger or adversity. | [adjective] Lacking in decoration and luxury. SPASTIC (11) [noun] A person affected by spastic paralysis or spastic cerebral palsy. | [noun] A stupid, clumsy person. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or affected by spasm. SPATHAL (12) SPATHED (13) SPATHES (12) [noun] A large bract that envelops or subtends a whole inflorescence, typically a spadix. SPATHIC (14) SPATIAL (9) [adjective] Pertaining to (the dimension of) space. | [adjective] Pertaining to (outer) space. SPATTED (10) [verb] To spawn. Used of shellfish as above. | [verb] To quarrel or argue briefly. | [verb] To strike with a spattering sound. SPATTER (9) [noun] A spray or shower of droplets hitting a surface. | [noun] A spot or spots of a substance spattered on a surface. | [noun] The sound of droplets hitting a surface. SPATULA (9) [noun] A kitchen utensil consisting of a flat surface attached to a long handle, used for turning, lifting or stirring food. | [noun] A kitchen utensil consisting of a flexible surface attached to a long handle, used for scraping the sides of bowls. | [noun] A palette knife. SPATZLE (18) SPAVIES (12) SPAVIET (12) SPAVINS (12) [noun] A disease of horses characterized by a bony swelling developed on the hock as the result of inflammation of the bones. 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. SPAWNER (12) SPAYING (13) [verb] To divine; foretell | [verb] To remove or destroy the ovaries (of an animal) so that it cannot become pregnant. | [noun] The act or operation of neutering an animal; normally used in reference to performing the operation on a female. SPAZZES (27) [noun] A stupid or incompetent person. | [noun] A hyperactive person. | [noun] A tantrum, a fit. SPEAKER (13) [noun] One who speaks. | [noun] Loudspeaker. | [noun] Speakerphone. 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. SPEARER (9) SPECCED (14) [verb] To specify, especially in a formal specification document. SPECIAL (11) [noun] A reduction in consumer cost (usually for a limited time) for items or services rendered. | [noun] One of a rotation of meals systematically offered for a lower price at a restaurant. | [noun] Unusual or exceptional episode of a series. SPECIES (11) [noun] Type or kind. (Compare race.) | [noun] An image, an appearance, a spectacle. | [noun] Either of the two elements of the Eucharist after they have been consecrated. SPECIFY (17) [verb] To state explicitly, or in detail, or as a condition. | [verb] To include in a specification. | [verb] To bring about a specific result. SPECKED (16) [adjective] Having specks or spots, speckled. SPECKLE (15) [noun] A small spot or speck on the skin, plumage or foliage. | [noun] The random distribution of light when it is scattered by a rough surface. | [noun] Kind; sort. SPECTER (11) [noun] A ghostly apparition, a phantom. | [noun] A threatening mental image. SPECTRA (11) [noun] A range; a continuous, infinite, one-dimensional set, possibly bounded by extremes. | [noun] Specifically, a range of colours representing light (electromagnetic radiation) of contiguous frequencies; hence electromagnetic spectrum, visible spectrum, ultraviolet spectrum, etc. | [noun] The autism spectrum. SPECTRE (11) [noun] A ghostly apparition, a phantom. | [noun] A threatening mental image. SPECULA (11) [noun] A medical instrument used during an examination to dilate an orifice. | [noun] A mirror, especially one used in a telescope. | [noun] A bright, lustrous patch of colour found on the wings of ducks and some other birds, usually situated on the distal portions of the secondary quills, and much more brilliant in the adult male than in the female. 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. SPEEDER (10) SPEEDOS (10) [noun] A tight-fitting swimsuit, especially commonly worn by competitive swimmers and divers. Usually implies a brief or bikini style swimsuit. | [noun] A speedometer, particularly one in a race car or other automobile. SPEEDUP (12) [noun] An amount or rate of decrease in time taken to do a certain amount of work. | [noun] The relationship between time taken and number of processors used. | [noun] (labor) An employer's demand for more output without more pay. SPEELED (10) SPEERED (10) SPEILED (10) SPEIRED (10) SPEISES (9) SPELEAN (9) 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. SPELLER (9) [noun] A person who spells. | [noun] A participant in a spelling bee. | [noun] A book used to learn how to spell properly. SPELTER (9) [noun] Zinc, often in blocks or ingot form. | [noun] Zinc alloyed with another metal (especially copper), used as a solder. | [noun] An objet d'art made from zinc. SPELUNK (13) SPENCER (11) [noun] A short double-breasted men's overcoat worn in the 18th and 19th centuries. | [noun] A short, close-fitting jacket primarily worn by women and children in the early 19th century. | [noun] A (usually woollen) vest worn by women and girls for extra warmth. | [noun] One who works in a spence or buttery. SPENCES (11) [noun] A buttery or pantry SPENDER (10) SPENSES (9) SPERMIC (13) SPEWERS (12) SPEWING (13) [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 SPHENES (12) SPHENIC (14) SPHERAL (12) [adjective] Spherical | [adjective] Spherically symmetric SPHERED (13) [verb] To place in a sphere, or among the spheres; to ensphere. | [verb] To make round or spherical; to perfect. SPHERES (12) [noun] A regular three-dimensional object in which every cross-section is a circle; the figure described by the revolution of a circle about its diameter . | [noun] A spherical physical object; a globe or ball. | [noun] The apparent outer limit of space; the edge of the heavens, imagined as a hollow globe within which celestial bodies appear to be embedded. SPHERIC (14) [noun] A short pulse of electromagnetic radiation produced by lightning | [adjective] Spherical. | [adjective] Of or relating to the heavenly orbs, or to the sphere or spheres in which, according to ancient astronomy and astrology, they were set. SPICATE (11) SPICERS (11) SPICERY (14) SPICIER (11) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or containing spice. | [adjective] (of flavors) Provoking a burning sensation due to the presence of chilis or similar hot spices | [adjective] (of flavors or odors) Tangy, zesty, or pungent. SPICILY (14) SPICING (12) [verb] To add spice or spices to; season. | [verb] To spice up. SPICULA (11) [noun] A little spike; a spikelet. | [noun] A pointed fleshy appendage. | [noun] A thrusting javelin used by Romans that replaced the pilum in the late 3rd century. SPICULE (11) [noun] A sharp, needle-like piece. | [noun] A tiny glass flake formed during the manufacture of glass vials | [noun] Any of many needle-like crystalline structures that provide skeletal support in marine invertebrates like sponges. SPIDERS (10) [noun] Any of various eight-legged, predatory arthropods, of the order Araneae, most of which spin webs to catch prey. | [noun] A program which follows links on the World Wide Web in order to gather information. | [noun] A float (drink) made by mixing ice-cream and a soda or fizzy drink (such as lemonade). SPIDERY (13) [adjective] Like a spider. | [adjective] Characterized by many spindly extensions. SPIEGEL (10) SPIELED (10) [verb] To talk at length. | [verb] To give a sales pitch; to promote by speaking. SPIELER (9) [noun] A swindler, a gambler. | [noun] A gambling club. | [noun] A person who speaks fluently and glibly; a barker. 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) SPIGOTS (10) [noun] A pin or peg used to stop the vent in a cask. | [noun] The plug of a faucet or cock. | [noun] A faucet. SPIKERS (13) SPIKIER (13) [adjective] Having spikes, spiny. | [adjective] Hostile; standoffish | [adjective] Of hair, erect, resembling spikes. SPIKILY (16) SPIKING (14) [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. SPILING (10) [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. 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. SPILLER (9) SPILTHS (12) SPINACH (14) [noun] A particular edible plant, Spinacia oleracea, or its leaves. | [noun] Any of numerous plants, or their leaves, which are used for greens in the same way Spinacia oleraceae is. | [noun] Plants with spinach-like leaves that are noxious in some way SPINAGE (10) SPINALS (9) SPINATE (9) SPINDLE (10) [noun] (spinning) A rod used for spinning and then winding natural fibres (especially wool), usually consisting of a shaft and a circular whorl positioned at either the upper or lower end of the shaft when suspended vertically from the forming thread. | [noun] A rod which turns, or on which something turns. | [noun] A rotary axis of a machine tool or power tool. SPINDLY (13) [adjective] Characteristic of a spindle; slender and of weak appearance. SPINELS (9) [noun] Any of several hard minerals of cubic symmetry that are mixed oxides of magnesium and aluminium and are used as gemstones of various colours. | [noun] Any crystalline material, not necessarily an oxide, that possesses the same crystal structure as this mineral. | [noun] Bleached yarn in making the linen tape called inkle; unwrought inkle. SPINETS (9) [noun] A short, compact harpsichord or piano. | [noun] A spinney. SPINIER (9) SPINNER (9) [noun] Agent noun of spin; someone or something who spins. | [noun] A conical cover at the center of some aircraft propellers. | [noun] A device that is spun in games to choose a number or symbol. SPINNEY (12) [noun] A small copse or wood, especially one planted as a shelter for game birds. SPINOFF (15) [noun] An offshoot. | [noun] An incidental benefit or unexpected pay-off. | [noun] By-product. SPINORS (9) SPINOSE (9) [adjective] Having spines SPINOUS (9) [adjective] Having many spines. | [adjective] Spine-like; spiny. | [adjective] Of a person: difficult to deal with, prickly. SPINOUT (9) [noun] A skid that results in a car rotating so as not to be oriented in the direction of linear motion. | [noun] The formation of a subsidiary company that continues the operations of part of the parent company; the company so formed. SPINTOS (9) SPINULA (9) SPINULE (9) SPIRAEA (9) [noun] Any of many flowering shrubs, of the genus Spiraea, that have clusters of white or pink flowers | [noun] The Astilbe. SPIRALS (9) [noun] A curve that is the locus of a point that rotates about a fixed point while continuously increasing its distance from that point. | [noun] A helix. | [noun] A self-sustaining process with a lot of momentum involved, so it is difficult to accelerate or stop it at once. SPIRANT (9) [noun] A fricative. SPIREAS (9) [noun] Any of many flowering shrubs, of the genus Spiraea, that have clusters of white or pink flowers | [noun] The Astilbe. SPIREME (11) SPIREMS (11) SPIRIER (9) SPIRING (10) SPIRITS (9) [noun] The soul of a person or other creature. What moves through experience into self-definition as souls purpose. | [noun] A supernatural being, often but not exclusively without physical form; ghost, fairy, angel. | [noun] Enthusiasm. 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. SPIRULA (9) SPITALS (9) SPITING (10) [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. 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. SPITTER (9) [noun] One who puts meat on a spit. | [noun] A young deer whose antlers are beginning to shoot or become sharp; a brocket, or pricket. | [noun] One who spits. SPITTLE (9) [noun] Spit, usually frothy and of a milky coloration. | [noun] Something frothy and white that resembles spit. | [noun] Spit-up or drool of an infant. | [noun] A charitable house to receive and care for sick people, later distinguished from a hospital as being especially for those of a low class or meagre financial means. | [noun] A small sort of spade. SPITZES (18) [noun] Any of several Nordic breeds of dog such as the Pomeranian or Samoyed SPLAKES (13) [noun] A hybrid fish derived from a male brook trout and a female lake trout SPLASHY (15) [adjective] Relating to making splashes or the sound of splashing. | [adjective] Showy, ostentatious. | [adjective] Splashed with color. 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. SPLEENS (9) [noun] In vertebrates, including humans, a ductless vascular gland, located in the left upper abdomen near the stomach, which destroys old red blood cells, removes debris from the bloodstream, acts as a reservoir of blood, and produces lymphocytes. | [noun] (except in the set phrase "to vent one's spleen") A bad mood; spitefulness. | [noun] A sudden motion or action; a fit; a freak; a whim. SPLEENY (12) SPLENIA (9) [noun] The thick posterior part of the corpus callosum of the brain. SPLENIC (11) [adjective] Of, related to, or located near the spleen. SPLENII (9) [noun] A broad muscle running up the top part of the back of the neck. SPLENTS (9) 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. SPLICER (11) SPLICES (11) [noun] A junction or joining of ropes made by splicing them together. | [noun] The electrical and mechanical connection between two pieces of wire or cable. | [noun] That part of a bat where the handle joins the blade. SPLIFFS (15) [noun] A cannabis cigarette. SPLINED (10) [adjective] Having a spline or splines. SPLINES (9) [noun] Long thin piece of metal or wood. | [noun] A rectangular piece that fits grooves like key seats in a hub and a shaft, so that while the one may slide endwise on the other, both must revolve together. | [noun] A flexible strip of metal or other material, that may be bent into a curve and used in a similar manner to a ruler to draw smooth curves between points. SPLINTS (9) [noun] An inferior kind of cannel coal from Scottish collieries, having a slaty structure. | [noun] A narrow strip of wood split or peeled from a larger piece. | [noun] A dental device applied consequent to undergoing orthodontia. SPLODGE (11) [noun] An irregular-shaped splash, smear, or patch. | [verb] To make a splodge; to render as a splodge. SPLORES (9) SPLOTCH (14) [noun] An irregular-shaped spot or stain. | [verb] To mark with splotches. SPLURGE (10) [noun] An extravagant or ostentatious display. | [noun] An extravagant indulgence; a spending spree. | [verb] To (cause to) gush; to flow or move in a rush. SPLURGY (13) 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.). SPOILER (9) [noun] One who spoils; a plunderer; a pillager; a robber; a despoiler. | [noun] One who corrupts, mars, or renders useless. | [noun] A document, review or comment that discloses the ending or some key surprise or twist in a story, or the internal rules controlling the behaviour of a video game, etc. SPOKING (14) SPONDEE (10) [noun] A word or metrical foot of two syllables, either both long or both stressed. 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. SPONGER (10) [noun] One who uses a sponge. | [noun] A parasitic hanger-on. | [noun] A person or vessel employed in gathering sponges from the sea. SPONGES (10) [noun] Any of various marine invertebrates, mostly of the phylum Porifera, that have a porous skeleton often of silica. | [noun] A piece of porous material used for washing (originally made from the invertebrates, now often made of plastic). | [noun] A porous material such as sponges consist of. SPONGIN (10) [noun] A horny, sulfur-containing protein, related to keratin, that forms the skeletal structure of certain classes of sponges. A proteinaceous compound of which the spicules in Demospongiae are composed. SPONSAL (9) SPONSON (9) [noun] A projection from the side of an aircraft, watercraft, or land vehicle. | [verb] (often with the particle "out") To mount on a projection on the side of a vessel. SPONSOR (9) [noun] A person or organisation with some sort of responsibility for another person or organisation, especially where the responsibility has a religious, legal, or financial aspect. | [noun] One that pays all or part of the cost of an event, a publication, or a media program, usually in exchange for advertising time. | [verb] To be a sponsor for. SPOOFED (13) [verb] To gently satirize. | [verb] To deceive. | [verb] To falsify. SPOOFER (12) 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. SPOONEY (12) SPOORED (10) [verb] To track an animal by following its spoor SPORING (10) SPOROID (10) SPORRAN (9) [noun] A small pouch, usually made of either fur or plain or fur-trimmed leather, which is worn, suspended from a belt or chain, on the front of a kilt and used to hold various items normally carried in trouser pockets. 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. SPORTER (9) SPORTIF (12) SPORULE (9) SPOTLIT (9) [verb] To illuminate with a spotlight. | [verb] To draw attention to. 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). SPOTTER (9) [noun] A person who observes something. | [noun] A member of a sniper team who in addition to this function is responsible for providing additional information about targets from a different point of view. | [noun] One who supervises a person performing an activity, in order to help them should they be unable to complete it. SPOUSAL (9) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) marriage; nuptials; espousal | [adjective] Of or relating to marriage | [adjective] Of or relating to a spouse, spouses; to the relationship between spouses SPOUSED (10) SPOUSES (9) [noun] A person in a marriage or marital relationship. | [verb] To wed; to espouse. 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. SPOUTER (9) SPRAINS (9) [noun] The act or result of spraining; lameness caused by spraining | [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 SPRANGS (10) SPRAWLS (12) [noun] An ungainly sprawling posture. | [noun] A straggling, haphazard growth, especially of housing on the edge of a city. | [verb] To sit with the limbs spread out. SPRAWLY (15) 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 SPRAYER (12) SPREADS (10) [noun] The act of spreading. | [noun] Something that has been spread. | [noun] A layout, pattern or design of cards arranged for a reading. SPRIEST (9) SPRIGGY (14) SPRIGHT (13) SPRINGE (10) [noun] A snare. | [verb] To sprinkle; to scatter. | [verb] To catch in a springe; to ensnare. SPRINGS (10) [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 | [noun] An act of springing: a leap, a jump. | [noun] The season of the year in temperate regions in which plants spring from the ground and into bloom and dormant animals spring to life, variously reckoned as SPRINGY (13) [adjective] That returns rapidly to its original form (as a spring does) after being bent, compressed, stretched, etc. | [adjective] Lively; bouncy. | [adjective] Characteristic of the spring season. SPRINTS (9) [noun] A short race at top speed. | [noun] A burst of speed or activity. | [noun] In Agile software development, a period of development of a fixed time that is preceded and followed by meetings. SPRITES (9) [noun] Spirit; mind; soul; state of mind; mood. | [noun] A supernatural being; a spirit; a shade; an apparition; a ghost. | [noun] A kind of short arrow. SPROUTS (9) [noun] A new growth on a plant, whether from seed or other parts. | [noun] A child. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A Brussels sprout. 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. SPRUCER (11) [adjective] Smart, trim, and elegant in appearance; fastidious (said of a person). SPRUCES (11) [noun] Any of various large coniferous evergreen trees or shrubs from the genus Picea, found in northern temperate and boreal regions; originally and more fully spruce fir. | [noun] The wood of a spruce. | [noun] (used attributively) Made of the wood of the spruce. SPRYEST (12) 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. SPUDDER (11) SPUMIER (11) SPUMING (12) [verb] To froth. SPUMONE (11) SPUMONI (11) [noun] An Italian style of ice cream dessert made with layers of different colors and flavors (typically cherry, pistachio, and vanilla or chocolate) and usually containing candied fruits and nuts. SPUMOUS (11) SPUNKED (14) SPUNKIE (13) SPURGES (10) [noun] Any plant of the genus Euphorbia, a diverse genus of over 2,000 species. 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) SPURNER (9) 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 SPURRER (9) SPURREY (12) [noun] Any of several European annual herbs of the genus Spergula. 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. SPURTLE (9) SPUTNIK (13) [noun] Any of a series of Soviet robotic space satellites, especially the first one in 1957. | [noun] Any artificial satellite. SPUTTER (9) [noun] Moist matter thrown out in small detached particles. | [noun] Confused and hasty speech. | [verb] To emit saliva or spit from the mouth in small, scattered portions, as in rapid speaking. SQUABBY (23) 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. SQUALLS (16) [noun] A squall line, multicell line, or part of a squall line. | [noun] A sudden storm, as found in a squall line. | [noun] A loud cry or wail. SQUALLY (19) [adjective] Characterized by squalls, or sudden violent bursts of wind; gusty. | [adjective] Producing or characteristic of loud wails. | [adjective] Interrupted by unproductive spots, as a field of turnips or grain. SQUALOR (16) [noun] Filthiness and degradation, as from neglect or poverty SQUAMAE (18) 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. SQUARER (16) [adjective] Shaped like a square (the polygon). | [adjective] Forming a right angle, especially at right angles with the mast or the keel, and parallel to the horizon; said of the yards of a square-rigged vessel when they are so braced. | [adjective] Of numbers formed by multiplying two equal numbers. SQUARES (16) [noun] A polygon with four sides of equal length and four right angles; an equilateral rectangle; a regular quadrilateral. | [noun] Something characterized by a square, or nearly square, form. | [noun] An L- or T-shaped tool used to place objects or draw lines at right angles. SQUASHY (22) [adjective] Easily squashed when pressed. | [adjective] Resembling a bog or marsh underfoot. SQUATLY (19) SQUATTY (19) SQUAWKS (23) [noun] A shrill noise, especially made by a voice or bird; a yell, scream, or call. | [noun] A four-digit transponder code used by aircraft for identification or transmission of emergency signals. | [noun] An issue or complaint related to aircraft maintenance. SQUEAKS (20) [noun] A short, high-pitched sound, as of two objects rubbing together, or the calls of small animals. | [noun] (games) A card game similar to group solitaire. | [noun] A narrow squeak. SQUEAKY (23) [adjective] Tending to produce a high-pitched sound or squeak. SQUEALS (16) [noun] A high-pitched sound, such as the scream of a child, or noisy worn-down brake pads. | [noun] The cry of a pig. | [verb] To scream with a shrill, prolonged sound. SQUEEZE (25) [noun] A close or tight fit. | [noun] A difficult position. | [noun] A hug or other affectionate grasp. SQUELCH (21) [noun] A squelching sound. | [noun] (radio technology) The suppression of the unwanted hiss or static between received transmissions by adjusting the gain of the receiver. | [noun] A heavy blow or fall. SQUIFFY (25) [adjective] Slightly drunk or intoxicated; tipsy | [adjective] Crooked, askew; awry SQUILLA (16) SQUILLS (16) [noun] A European bulbous liliaceous plant, of the genus Scilla, used in medicine for its acrid, expectorant, diuretic, and emetic properties | [noun] A sea onion (Drimia maritima) | [noun] A mantis shrimp, Squilla mantis, from the Mediterranean SQUINCH (21) [noun] A structure constructed between two adjacent walls to aid in the transition from a polygonal to a circular structure, as when a dome is constructed on top of a square room. | [verb] To scrunch up (one's face, etc.). SQUINNY (19) [verb] To squint. SQUINTS (16) [noun] An expression in which the eyes are partly closed. | [noun] The look of eyes which are turned in different directions, as in strabismus. | [noun] A quick or sideways glance. SQUINTY (19) SQUIRED (17) [verb] To attend as a squire. | [verb] To attend as a beau, or gallant, for aid and protection. SQUIRES (16) [noun] A shield-bearer or armor-bearer who attended a knight. | [noun] A title of dignity next in degree below knight, and above gentleman. See esquire. | [noun] A male attendant on a great personage. SQUIRMS (18) [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. SQUIRMY (21) SQUIRTS (16) [noun] An instrument from which a liquid is forcefully ejected in a small, quick stream. | [noun] A small, quick stream; a jet. | [noun] (hydrodynamics) The whole system of flow in the vicinity of a source. SQUISHY (22) [noun] A squeezable foam toy. | [adjective] (of an object or substance) Yielding easily to pressure; very soft; especially, soft and wet, as mud. | [adjective] (of a person) Used as a term of endearment. SQUOOSH (19) SRADDHA (12) SRADHAS (11) 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). STABBER (11) STABILE (9) [noun] Abstract sculpture or structure of wire, sheet metal, etc. STABLED (10) [verb] To put or keep (an animal) in a stable. | [verb] To dwell in a stable. | [verb] To park (a rail vehicle). STABLER (9) [noun] A stablekeeper. STABLES (9) [noun] A building, wing or dependency set apart and adapted for lodging and feeding (and training) animals with hoofs, especially horses. | [noun] (metonymy) All the racehorses of a particular stable, i.e. belonging to a given owner. | [noun] A set of advocates; a barristers' chambers. 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. STACKER (13) STACKUP (15) STACTES (9) STADDLE (9) [noun] A prop or support; a staff, crutch. | [noun] The lower part or supporting frame of a stack, a stack-stand. | [noun] Any supporting framework or base. STADIAS (8) STADIUM (10) [noun] A venue where sporting events are held. | [noun] An Ancient Greek racecourse, especially, the Olympic course for foot races. | [noun] A Greek measure of length, being the chief one used for itinerary distances, also adopted by the Romans for nautical and astronomical measurements, equal to 600 Greek or 625 Roman feet, or 125 Roman paces, or to 606 feet, 9 inches. STAFFED (14) [verb] To supply (a business, volunteer organization, etc.) with employees or staff members. | [adjective] Occupied by staff, having members of staff. STAFFER (13) [noun] A member of a staff. STAGERS (8) [noun] An actor on the stage. | [noun] One who stages a theatrical performance. | [noun] One who has long acted on the stage of life; a practitioner; a person of experience, or of skill derived from long experience. STAGGED (10) [verb] To act as a "stag", an irregular dealer in stocks. | [verb] To watch; to dog, or keep track of. STAGGER (9) [noun] An unsteady movement of the body in walking or standing as if one were about to fall; a reeling motion | [noun] A disease of horses and other animals, attended by reeling, unsteady gait or sudden falling | [noun] Bewilderment; perplexity. STAGGIE (9) STAGIER (8) [adjective] Theatrical | [adjective] Unnaturally showy | [adjective] Melodramatic; sensationalized STAGILY (11) STAGING (9) [verb] To produce on a stage, to perform a play. | [verb] To demonstrate in a deceptive manner. | [verb] To orchestrate; to carry out. STAIDER (8) STAIDLY (11) STAINED (8) [verb] To discolour. | [verb] To taint or tarnish someone's character or reputation | [verb] To coat a surface with a stain STAINER (7) STAITHE (10) [noun] A riverbank | [noun] A fixed structure where ships land, especially to load and unload; wharf; landing stage. | [noun] An installation built at the railside or nearby for the storage of coal unloaded from wagons. STAKING (12) [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. | [noun] An act of stabbing with a stake. STALAGS (8) [noun] A German prisoner-of-war camp, especially in World War II. | [noun] A genre of Nazi exploitation Holocaust pornography in Israel that flourished in the 1950s and early 1960s. STALELY (10) STALEST (7) [adjective] (alcohol) Clear, free of dregs and lees; old and strong. | [adjective] No longer fresh, in reference to food, urine, straw, wounds, etc. | [adjective] No longer fresh, new, or interesting, in reference to ideas and immaterial things; cliche, hackneyed, dated. STALING (8) [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. 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. STALKER (11) [noun] A person who engages in stalking, i.e. quietly approaching animals to be hunted; a tracker or guide in hunting game. | [noun] A person who secretly follows someone, sometimes with unlawful intentions. | [noun] Any of various devices for removing the stalk from plants during harvesting. STALLED (8) [verb] To put (an animal, etc.) in a stall. | [verb] To fatten. | [verb] To come to a standstill. STAMENS (9) [noun] In flowering plants, the structure in a flower that produces pollen, typically consisting of an anther and a filament. STAMINA (9) [noun] The energy and strength for continuing to do something over a long period of time; power of sustained exertion, or resistance to hardship, illness etc. | [noun] The basic elements of a thing; rudimentary structures or qualities. | [noun] In flowering plants, the structure in a flower that produces pollen, typically consisting of an anther and a filament. STAMMEL (11) STAMMER (11) [noun] The involuntary repetition of a sound in speech. | [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. 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. STAMPER (11) STANCES (9) [noun] The manner, pose, or posture in which one stands. | [noun] One's opinion or point of view. | [noun] A place to stand; a position, a site, a station. STANDBY (13) [verb] To wait in expectation of some event; to make ready. | [verb] To remain loyal or faithful to. | [verb] To support; to continue to support despite things being bad. STANDEE (8) [noun] Somebody who is forced to stand up, for example, on a crowded bus. | [noun] A free-standing, rigid print (usually life-sized), for instance of a celebrity, often displayed for advertising and promotional purposes; a cut-out. STANDER (8) STANDUP (10) [noun] A performance of stand-up comedy; jokes delivered standing on a stage | [noun] A comedian who performs on stage. | [noun] A short meeting performed while standing up. STANGED (9) STANINE (7) STANING (8) STANNIC (9) [adjective] Containing tetravalent tin. STANNUM (9) STANZAS (16) [noun] A unit of a poem, written or printed as a paragraph; equivalent to a verse. | [noun] An apartment or division in a building. | [noun] An XML element which acts as basic unit of meaning in XMPP. STAPLED (10) [verb] To sort according to its staple. | [verb] To secure with a staple. | [adjective] Fastened with staples. STAPLER (9) [noun] A device which binds together sheets of paper by driving a thin metal staple through the sheets and simultaneously folding over the ends of the staple against the back surface of the paper. | [noun] A dealer in staple goods. | [noun] One employed to sort wool according to its staple. STAPLES (9) [noun] A town containing merchants who have exclusive right, under royal authority, to purchase or produce certain goods for export; also, the body of such merchants seen as a group. | [noun] (by extension) Place of supply; source. | [noun] The principal commodity produced in a town or region. STARCHY (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to starch. | [adjective] Containing starch. | [adjective] Having the quality of fabric starch as applied to fabric; stiff, hard; starched. STARDOM (10) [noun] The status or position of a performer acknowledged to be a star; fame; celebrity. STARERS (7) STARETS (7) STARING (8) [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. STARKER (11) [adjective] Hard, firm; obdurate. | [adjective] Severe; violent; fierce (now usually in describing the weather). | [adjective] Strong; vigorous; powerful. STARKLY (14) [adverb] In a stark manner; with great contrast. STARLET (7) [noun] A young actress with a promising career ahead of her. | [noun] An accomplished and important supporting player in a sports team. | [noun] A small star. STARLIT (7) [adjective] Illuminated by starlight. 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. STARTER (7) [noun] Someone who starts something. | [noun] Something that starts something. | [noun] The first course of a meal, consisting of a small, usually savoury, dish. STARTLE (7) [noun] A sudden motion or shock caused by an unexpected alarm, surprise, or apprehension of danger. | [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. STARTSY (10) STARTUP (9) [noun] The act or process of starting a process or machine. | [noun] A new company or organization or business venture designed for rapid growth. | [noun] (chiefly in plural) A kind of high-low or thigh-high boot worn by rustic people. 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. STARVER (10) STARVES (10) [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. STASHES (10) [noun] A collection, sometimes hidden; a reserve. | [noun] A place where drugs are stored. | [verb] To hide or store away for later use. STASIMA (9) STATANT (7) [adjective] (of an animal) standing on all four feet or paws STATELY (10) [adjective] Of people: worthy of respect; dignified, regal. | [adjective] Of movement: deliberate, unhurried; dignified. | [adjective] Grand, impressive, imposing. STATERS (7) [noun] A gold, silver or electrum coin of ancient Greece. | [noun] One who states. | [noun] A citizen of the United States of America who is a confirmed or lifelong resident of one single state. STATICE (9) [noun] Plants of the genus Limonium having spikes of white or mauve flowers. STATICS (9) [noun] The branch of mechanics concerned with forces in static equilibrium STATING (8) [verb] To declare to be a fact. | [verb] To make known. | [noun] Statement STATION (7) [noun] A stopping place. | [noun] A place where workers are stationed. | [noun] Any of the Stations of the Cross. STATISM (9) [noun] The belief that the centralization of power in a state (sovereign polity) is the ideal or best way to organize humanity. STATIST (7) [noun] A skilled politician or one with political power, knowledge or influence. | [noun] A statistician. | [noun] A supporter of statism. STATIVE (10) [noun] (grammar) A construct asserting that a subject has a particular property. | [adjective] (grammar) Asserting that a subject has a particular property. | [adjective] Of or relating to a fixed camp, or military posts or quarters. STATORS (7) [noun] The stationary part of a motor or other machine. STATUED (8) STATUES (7) [noun] A three-dimensional work of art, usually representing a person or animal, usually created by sculpting, carving, molding, or casting. | [noun] A portrait. | [noun] A children's game in which the players have to stand still without moving. STATURE (7) [noun] A person or animal's natural height when standing upright. | [noun] Respect coming from achievement or development. STATUSY (10) STATUTE (7) [noun] Written law, as laid down by the legislature. | [noun] (common law) Legislated rule of society which has been given the force of law by those it governs. STAUNCH (12) [verb] To stop the flow of (blood). | [verb] To stop, check, or deter an action. | [adjective] Loyal, trustworthy, reliable. STAVING (11) [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. STAYERS (10) [noun] One who, or that which, upholds or supports; a prop. | [noun] One who, or that which, stays, stops, or restrains. | [noun] An athlete, horse, etc. with staying power. STAYING (11) [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. STEADED (9) STEALER (7) [noun] (chiefly in combination) One who steals; a thief. | [noun] The endmost plank of a strake which stops short of the stem or stern. STEALTH (10) [noun] The attribute or characteristic of acting in secrecy, or in such a way that the actions are unnoticed or difficult to detect by others. | [noun] An act of secrecy, especially one involving thievery. | [verb] To conceal or infiltrate through the use of stealth. 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. STEAMER (9) [noun] A device or object that works by the operation of steam. | [noun] A mode of transportation propelled by steam. | [noun] A babycino (frothy milk drink). | [noun] A mug. STEARIC (9) STEARIN (7) [noun] Solid fat. | [noun] The triglyceride of stearic acid. 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. STEELIE (7) STEEPED (10) [verb] (middle voice) To soak or wet thoroughly. | [verb] To imbue with something; to be deeply immersed in. STEEPEN (9) [verb] To make steeper. | [verb] To become steeper. STEEPER (9) [adjective] Of a near-vertical gradient; of a slope, surface, curve, etc. that proceeds upward at an angle near vertical. | [adjective] Expensive | [adjective] Difficult to access; not easy reached; lofty; elevated; high. STEEPLE (9) [noun] A tall tower, often on a church, normally topped with a spire. | [noun] A spire. | [noun] A high headdress of the 14th century. STEEPLY (12) [adverb] In a steep manner. 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. STEERER (7) [noun] Someone or something that steers. | [noun] A person hired by a gambling establishment to locate potential customers and bring them in. 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. STEEVES (10) [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. STELENE (7) STELLAR (7) [adjective] (notcomp) Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of stars. | [adjective] Heavenly. | [adjective] (by extension) Exceptional. STELLAS (7) STEMMAS (11) STEMMED (12) [verb] To remove the stem from. | [verb] To be caused or derived; to originate. | [verb] To descend in a family line. STEMMER (11) STEMSON (9) STENCHY (15) STENCIL (9) [noun] A thin sheet, either perforated or using some other technique, with which a pattern may be produced upon a surface. | [noun] A utensil that contains a perforated sheet through which ink can be forced to create a printed pattern on a surface. | [noun] A two-ply master sheet for use with a mimeograph. STENGAH (11) STENOKY (14) STENTOR (7) [noun] A person with a powerful or stentorian voice. | [noun] Any protozoan of the genus Stentor. | [noun] A part of the amplification system of a carillon. 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. STEPPER (11) [noun] A person or animal that steps, especially energetically or high. | [noun] A dancer. | [noun] A kind of electric motor (a stepper motor) that advances in steps rather than smoothly. STEPPES (11) [noun] The grasslands of Eastern Europe and Asia. Similar to (North American) prairie and (African) savanna. | [noun] A vast cold, dry grass-plain. STEPSON (9) [noun] The son of one's spouse, but not one's own child. STEREOS (7) [noun] A system of recording or reproducing sound that uses two channels, each playing a portion of the original sound in such a way as to create the illusion of locating the sound at a particular position, each offset from the other, thereby more accurately imitating the location of the original sound when the recorded or reproduced sound is heard. | [noun] (by extension) Any object or device equipped with audio components that reproduces sound in stereo, such as a stereo console in the home. | [noun] A stereotype. STERILE (7) [adjective] Unable to reproduce (or procreate). | [adjective] Terse; lacking sentiment or emotional stimulation, as in a manner of speaking. | [adjective] Fruitless, uninspiring, or unproductive. STERLET (7) [noun] A smaller, common Eurasian sturgeon, of the species Acipenser ruthenus. STERNAL (7) [adjective] Of, relating to, or near the sternum. STERNER (7) [adjective] Having a hardness and severity of nature or manner. | [adjective] Grim and forbidding in appearance. | [noun] A director. STERNLY (10) [adverb] In a stern manner. STERNUM (9) [noun] The breastbone | [noun] The sclerotized plate of spiders, between the coxae, marking the floor of the cephalothorax 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. STEROLS (7) [noun] Any steroid that contains a hydroxyl group in the 3-position of the A-ring. STERTOR (7) 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. STEWBUM (14) [noun] A homeless alcoholic. STEWING (11) [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. STEWPAN (12) STHENIA (10) STHENIC (12) [adjective] Characterised by nervous energy; strong; robust. STIBIAL (9) STIBINE (9) STIBIUM (11) STICHIC (14) STICKED (14) STICKER (13) [noun] Something or someone that sticks. | [noun] One who sticks to something, or does not give up; a stayer. | [noun] An adhesive label or decal. | [adjective] Likely to stick; sticking, sticky. STICKIT (13) STICKLE (13) STICKUM (15) [noun] Any adhesive, adhesive residue; any sticky or gummy substance. STICKUP (15) [noun] A robbery at gunpoint | [noun] A small diameter tree branch or limb that extends out of the water in flooded or submerged timber, as in a lake or river. 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 STIFFEN (13) [verb] To make stiff. | [verb] To become stiff. STIFFER (13) [adjective] (of an object) Rigid; hard to bend; inflexible. | [adjective] (of policies and rules and their application and enforcement) Inflexible; rigid. | [adjective] (of a person) Formal in behavior; unrelaxed. STIFFLY (16) [adverb] In a stiff manner. STIFLED (11) [verb] To interrupt or cut off. | [verb] To repress, keep in or hold back. | [verb] To smother or suffocate. STIFLER (10) STIFLES (10) [noun] A hind knee of various mammals, especially horses. | [noun] A bone disease of this region. | [verb] To interrupt or cut off. STIGMAL (10) STIGMAS (10) [noun] A mark of infamy or disgrace. | [noun] A scar or birthmark. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural stigmata) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion on Jesus' body, and sometimes reported to bleed periodically. STILLED (8) [verb] To calm down, to quiet | [verb] To trickle, drip. | [verb] To cause to fall by drops. STILLER (7) [adjective] Not moving; calm. | [adjective] Not effervescing; not sparkling. | [adjective] Uttering no sound; silent. 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. STIMIES (9) [noun] A situation where an opponent's ball is directly in the way of one's own ball and the hole, on the putting green (abolished 1952). | [noun] (by extension) An obstacle or obstruction. | [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. STIMULI (9) [noun] Any external phenomenon that has an influence on a system, by triggering or modifying an internal phenomenon. | [noun] Something external that elicits or influences a physiological or psychological activity or response. | [noun] Anything effectively impinging upon any of the sensory apparatuses of a living organism, including physical phenomena both internal and external to the body. STINGER (8) [noun] A pointed portion of an insect or arachnid used for attack. | [noun] Anything that is used to sting, as a means of attack. | [noun] Anything, such as an insult, that stings mentally or psychologically. STINGOS (8) STINKER (11) [noun] A person who stinks. | [noun] A contemptible person. | [noun] Something difficult (e.g. a given puzzle) or unpleasant (e.g. negative review, nasty letter). STINTED (8) [verb] To stop (an action); cease, desist. | [verb] To stop speaking or talking (of a subject). | [verb] To be sparing or mean. STINTER (7) STIPELS (9) 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. STIPPLE (11) [noun] The use of small dots that give the appearance of shading; the dots thus used. | [verb] To use small dots to give the appearance of shading to. STIPULE (9) [noun] Basal appendage of a typical leaf of a flowering plant, usually appearing paired beside the petiole although sometimes absent or highly modified. STIRPES (9) 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. STIRRER (7) [noun] A device used to stir. | [noun] A person who stirs something. | [noun] A person who spreads rumours or causes agitation. STIRRUP (9) [noun] A ring or hoop suspended by a rope or strap from the saddle, for a horseman's foot while mounting or riding. | [noun] (by extension) Any piece shaped like the stirrup of a saddle, used as a support, clamp, etc. | [noun] A stapes. STIVERS (10) [noun] (money) A small Dutch coin worth one twentieth of a guilder. | [noun] Anything of small value. 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. STOCKER (13) [noun] Livestock that is wintered and then sold in the spring; often contrasted with a feeder when the focus is on intended disposition. | [noun] A racecar in certain classes of auto racing whose origins are nominally or notionally related to factory-stock autos, such as stock car racing or super-stock drag racing. | [noun] One who crafts gun stocks STODGED (10) STODGES (9) STOGEYS (11) STOGIES (8) [noun] A cigar. | [noun] A type of sturdy work boot; a brogan. STOICAL (9) [adjective] Enduring pain and hardship without showing feeling or complaint. STOKERS (11) [noun] A person who stokes, especially one on a steamship who stokes coal in the boilers. | [noun] A device for stoking a fire; a poker. | [noun] A device that feeds coal into a furnace etc automatically. STOKING (12) [verb] To poke, pierce, thrust. | [verb] To feed, stir up, especially, a fire or furnace. | [verb] (by extension) To encourage a behavior or emotion. STOLLEN (7) [noun] A traditional German cake eaten at Christmas time, made with nuts, raisins and other dried fruits. STOLONS (7) [noun] A shoot that grows along the ground and produces roots at its nodes; a runner. | [noun] A structure formed by some colonial organisms from which offspring are produced by budding, found in bryozoans, pterobranchs, some corals, and other invertebrates. | [noun] A hypha that acts as a runner, connecting sporangiophores. STOMACH (14) [noun] An organ in animals that stores food in the process of digestion. | [noun] The belly. | [noun] Pride, haughtiness. STOMATA (9) [noun] One of the tiny pores in the epidermis of a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor pass. | [noun] A small opening in a membrane; a surgically constructed opening, especially one in the abdominal wall that permits the passage of waste after a colostomy or ileostomy. | [noun] A mouthlike opening, such as the oral cavity of a nematode. STOMATE (9) [noun] Stoma STOMPED (12) [verb] To trample heavily. | [verb] To severely beat someone physically or figuratively. STOMPER (11) STONERS (7) [noun] One who stones. | [noun] A machine to remove the stones (pits) from fruit. | [noun] A habitual user of cannabis. STONIER (7) [adjective] As hard as stone. | [adjective] Containing or made up of stones. | [adjective] Of a person, lacking warmth and emotion. STONILY (10) STONING (8) [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.). STONISH (10) STOOGED (9) [verb] To act as a straight man. STOOGES (8) [noun] One who knowingly allows himself or herself to be used for another's profit; a dupe. | [noun] A straight man. | [noun] A secret informant for police. STOOKED (12) [verb] To make stooks. STOOKER (11) 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. STOOLIE (7) [noun] A stool pigeon. 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. STOOPER (9) STOPERS (9) STOPGAP (12) [noun] That which fills a gap or hiatus. | [noun] A temporary measure or short-term fix used until something better can be obtained; that which serves as an expedient in an emergency; a band-aid solution. | [adjective] Filling a gap or pause. STOPING (10) [noun] In mining, the removal of the desired ore from an underground mine, leaving behind an open space known as a stope. STOPPED (12) [verb] To cease moving. | [verb] To not continue. | [verb] To cause (something) to cease moving or progressing. STOPPER (11) [noun] Agent noun of stop, someone or something that stops something. | [noun] A type of knot at the end of a rope, to prevent it from unravelling. | [noun] A bung or cork. STOPPLE (11) [noun] A plug; a stopper. | [verb] To plug; to stop up. STORAGE (8) [noun] The act of storing goods; the state of being stored. | [noun] (usually countable) An object or place in which something is stored. | [noun] (usually uncountable) Any computer device, including such as a disk, on which data is stored for a longer term than memory. STOREYS (10) [noun] A building; an edifice. | [noun] A floor or level of a building or ship. | [noun] A vertical level in certain letters, such as a and g. STORIED (8) [adjective] Much talked or written about | [adjective] Historical | [adjective] Having multiple storeys; multistoried STORIES (7) [noun] A building; an edifice. | [noun] A floor or level of a building or ship. | [noun] A vertical level in certain letters, such as a and g. STORING (8) [verb] To keep (something) while not in use, generally in a place meant for that purpose. | [verb] To write (something) into memory or registers. | [noun] An amount stored. 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. STOUNDS (8) STOURES (7) STOURIE (7) STOUTEN (7) STOUTER (7) [adjective] Large; bulky. | [adjective] Bold, strong-minded. | [adjective] Proud; haughty. STOUTLY (10) [adverb] In a stout manner; lustily; boldly; obstinately. | [adverb] Of stout build. STOVERS (10) STOWAGE (11) [noun] The act or practice of stowing. | [noun] A place where things are stowed. | [noun] Things that are stowed. STOWING (11) [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. 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). STRAFER (10) STRAFES (10) [noun] An attack of machine-gun or cannon fire from a low-flying aircraft. | [noun] A sideways movement without turning. STRAINS (7) [noun] Treasure. | [noun] The blood-vessel in the yolk of an egg. | [noun] Race; lineage, pedigree. STRAITS (7) [noun] A narrow channel of water connecting two larger bodies of water. | [noun] A narrow pass, passage or street. | [noun] A neck of land; an isthmus. STRAKED (12) STRAKES (11) [noun] An iron fitting of a medieval cart wheel. | [noun] A type of aerodynamic surface mounted on an aircraft fuselage to fine-tune the airflow. | [noun] A continuous line of plates or planks running from bow to stern that contributes to a vessel's skin. (FM 55-501). STRANDS (8) [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. STRANGE (8) [noun] Vagina | [verb] To alienate; to estrange. | [verb] To be estranged or alienated. STRATAL (7) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a stratum STRATAS (7) STRATHS (10) [noun] A wide, flat river valley. STRATUM (9) [noun] One of several parallel horizontal layers of material arranged one on top of another. | [noun] A layer of sedimentary rock having approximately the same composition throughout. | [noun] Any of the regions of the atmosphere, such as the stratosphere, that occur as layers. STRATUS (7) [noun] A principal, low-level cloud type in the form of a gray layer with a rather uniform base, usually not associated with precipitation, and capable of producing corona phenomena and a weak, uniform luminance; abbreviated St. 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. STRAYER (10) STREAKS (11) [noun] An irregular line left from smearing or motion. | [noun] A continuous series of like events. | [noun] The color of the powder of a mineral. So called, because a simple field test for a mineral is to streak it against unglazed white porcelain. STREAKY (14) [adjective] Having streaks. | [adjective] Used to describe a shot where the ball deflects off the edge of the bat, but is not caught by the slips or wicket-keeper and instead results in runs for the batsman. | [adjective] (chiefly of a person, usually North America) Having alternating periods of good and bad performances; inconsistent. STREAMS (9) [noun] A small river; a large creek; a body of moving water confined by banks. | [noun] A thin connected passing of a liquid through a lighter gas (e.g. air). | [noun] Any steady flow or succession of material, such as water, air, radio signal or words. STREAMY (12) STREEKS (11) STREELS (7) [noun] A disreputable woman, a slut. STREETS (7) [noun] A paved part of road, usually in a village or a town. | [noun] A road as above but including the sidewalks (pavements) and buildings. | [noun] The people who live in such a road, as a neighborhood. STRETCH (12) [noun] An act of stretching. | [noun] The ability to lengthen when pulled. | [noun] A course of thought which diverts from straightforward logic, or requires extraordinary belief or exaggeration. STRETTA (7) STRETTE (7) STRETTI (7) [noun] The presence of two close or overlapping statements of the subject of a fugue, especially towards the end. | [noun] An acceleration in the tempo of an opera that produces an ending climax. STRETTO (7) [noun] The presence of two close or overlapping statements of the subject of a fugue, especially towards the end. | [noun] An acceleration in the tempo of an opera that produces an ending climax. | [adjective] Having gradually increasing speed. 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. STREWER (10) STRIATE (7) [verb] To mark something with striations. | [adjective] Striated | [adjective] Relating to the striate cortex of the brain STRICKS (13) STRIDER (8) STRIDES (8) [verb] To walk with long steps. | [verb] To stand with the legs wide apart; to straddle. | [verb] To pass over at a step; to step over. STRIDOR (8) [noun] A harsh, shrill, unpleasant noise. | [noun] A high-pitched sound heard on inspiration resulting from turbulent air flow in the upper airway usually indicative of serious airway obstruction. STRIFES (10) STRIGIL (8) [noun] A grooming tool used to scrape away dead skin, oil, dirt, etc. STRIKER (11) [noun] An individual who is on strike. | [noun] Someone or something that hits someone or something else. | [noun] One of the players on a team in football (soccer) in the row nearest to the opposing team's goal, who are therefore principally responsible for scoring goals. STRIKES (11) [noun] A status resulting from a batter swinging and missing a pitch, or not swinging at a pitch when the ball goes in the strike zone, or hitting a foul ball that is not caught. | [noun] The act of knocking down all ten pins in on the first roll of a frame. | [noun] A work stoppage (or otherwise concerted stoppage of an activity) as a form of protest. STRINGS (8) [noun] A building, wing or dependency set apart and adapted for lodging and feeding (and training) animals with hoofs, especially horses. | [noun] (metonymy) All the racehorses of a particular stable, i.e. belonging to a given owner. | [noun] A set of advocates; a barristers' chambers. STRINGY (11) [adjective] Composed of, or resembling, string or strings. | [adjective] (of food) Tough to the bite, as containing too much sinew or string tissue. | [adjective] (of a person) Wiry, lean, scrawny. 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. STRIPER (9) [noun] A device that applies stripes | [noun] The striped bass, Morone saxatilis, a popular sport fish native to North America | [noun] A person who is authorized to wear a certain number of stripes on his or her uniform STRIPES (9) [noun] A long, relatively straight region of a single colour. | [noun] (in the plural) The badge worn by certain officers in the military or other forces. | [noun] Distinguishing characteristic; sign; likeness; sort. STRIVED (11) STRIVEN (10) STRIVER (10) STRIVES (10) [noun] Striving; earnest endeavor; hard work. | [noun] Exertion or contention for superiority, either by physical or intellectual means. | [noun] Bitter conflict, sometimes violent. STROBES (9) [noun] A stroboscopic lamp: a device used to produce regular flashes of light. | [noun] An electronic signal in hardware indicating that a value is ready to be read. | [verb] To flash like a stroboscopic lamp. STROBIC (11) STROBIL (9) 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. STROKER (11) STROKES (11) [noun] An act of stroking (moving one's hand over a surface). | [noun] A blow or hit. | [noun] A single movement with a tool. STROLLS (7) [noun] A wandering on foot; an idle and leisurely walk; a ramble. | [verb] To wander on foot; to ramble idly or leisurely; to rove. | [verb] To go somewhere with ease. STROMAL (9) [adjective] Relating to a stroma | [adjective] Relating to sister chromatid cohesion STROPHE (12) [noun] A turn in verse, as from one metrical foot to another, or from one side of a chorus to the other. | [noun] The section of an ode that the chorus chants as it moves from right to left across the stage. | [noun] A pair of stanzas of alternating form on which the structure of a given poem is based. STROPPY (14) [adjective] Ornery, fractious, belligerent, or obstreperous, and hence difficult to deal with. STROUDS (8) 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) STROYER (10) STRUDEL (8) [noun] The symbol @, most commonly used in e-mail addresses. | [noun] A pastry made from multiple thin layers of dough rolled up and filled with fruit, etc. | [noun] A vertical hole in sea ice through which downward jet-like, buoyancy-driven drainage of flood water is thought to occur. STRUMAE (9) [noun] Scrofula. | [noun] A scrofulous swelling; a tumour or goitre. STRUMAS (9) STRUNTS (7) 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. STUBBLE (11) [noun] Short, coarse hair, especially on a man’s face. | [noun] The short stalks left in a field after crops have been harvested. STUBBLY (14) [adjective] Having stubble. STUCCOS (11) STUDDED (10) [adjective] Having studs. | [adjective] (in combination) Having many of some specified thing. STUDDIE (9) STUDENT (8) [noun] A person who studies or learns about a particular subject. | [noun] A person who is formally enrolled at a school, a college or university, or another educational institution. 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. STUDIER (8) STUDIES (8) [noun] An academic field of study concerning the given subject. | [verb] (usually academic) To review materials already learned in order to make sure one does not forget them, usually in preparation for an examination. | [verb] (academic) To take a course or courses on a subject. STUDIOS (8) [noun] An artist’s or photographer’s workshop or the room in which an artist works. | [noun] An establishment where an art is taught. | [noun] A place where radio or television programs, records or films are made. 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. STUFFER (13) STUIVER (10) STUMBLE (11) [noun] A fall, trip or substantial misstep. | [noun] An error or blunder. | [noun] A clumsy walk. 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. STUMPER (11) [noun] One who stumps, or speaks, or orates, as a politician. | [noun] A difficult puzzle or problem. | [noun] A boastful person. 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 STUNNER (7) [noun] Anything that is stunning. | [noun] A professional wrestling maneuver in which an attacking wrestler applies a facelock to an opponent and falls to a seated position, forcing the opponent's jaw or neck to drop on the attacker's shoulder. | [noun] A pistol firing a beam capable of stunning an enemy. STUNTED (8) [verb] (cheerleading) To perform a stunt. | [verb] To show off; to posture. | [verb] To check or hinder the growth or development of. STUPEFY (15) [verb] To dull the senses or capacity to think thereby reducing responsiveness; to dazzle or stun. STUPIDS (10) [noun] A stupid person; a fool. | [noun] The state or condition of being stupid. STUPORS (9) [noun] A state of reduced consciousness or sensibility. | [noun] A state in which one has difficulty in thinking or using one’s senses. | [verb] To place into a stupor; to stupefy. STUTTER (7) [noun] A speech disorder characterised by stuttering. | [noun] One who stutters. | [verb] To speak with a spasmodic repetition of vocal sounds. STYGIAN (11) [adjective] Dark and gloomy. | [adjective] Infernal or hellish. STYLATE (10) STYLERS (10) STYLETS (10) [noun] An engraving tool, a stylus. | [noun] A style of a plant's flower. | [noun] A slender medical probe or device. STYLING (11) [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. STYLISE (10) [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. STYLISH (13) [adjective] Having elegance or taste or refinement in manners or dress. | [adjective] Having a particular directing style or cinematography. STYLIST (10) [noun] Designer. | [noun] Hairdresser. | [noun] A writer or speaker distinguished for excellence or individuality of style; one who cultivates, or is a master or critic of, literary style. STYLITE (10) [noun] A Christian ascetic in ancient times who lived alone on top of a tall pillar. STYLIZE (19) [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. 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. STYMIES (12) [noun] A situation where an opponent's ball is directly in the way of one's own ball and the hole, on the putting green (abolished 1952). | [noun] (by extension) An obstacle or obstruction. | [verb] To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck. STYPSIS (12) STYPTIC (14) [noun] A substance used for styptic results. | [adjective] Bringing about contraction of tissues; harsh, raw, austere. | [adjective] (by extension) That stops bleeding. STYRENE (10) [noun] An aromatic hydrocarbon; a colourless, oily liquid, used in the manufacture of polymers such as polystyrene. SUASION (7) [noun] The act of urging or influencing; persuasion. SUASIVE (10) [adjective] Having power to persuade; persuasive. SUASORY (10) [adjective] Tending to persuade; persuasive SUAVELY (13) SUAVEST (10) [adjective] Charming, confident and elegant. SUAVITY (13) [noun] The quality of being sweet or pleasing to the mind; agreeableness; pleasantness | [noun] Sweetness to the taste. SUBACID (12) [noun] Any substance that is moderately acid. | [adjective] Somewhat acidic. SUBADAR (10) SUBALAR (9) SUBAREA (9) SUBARID (10) SUBATOM (11) SUBBASE (11) SUBBASS (11) SUBBING (12) [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. SUBCELL (11) SUBCLAN (11) SUBCODE (12) SUBCOOL (11) SUBCULT (11) SUBDEAN (10) SUBDEBS (12) SUBDUAL (10) SUBDUCE (12) SUBDUCT (12) SUBDUED (11) [verb] To overcome, quieten, or bring under control. | [verb] To bring (a country) under control by force. | [adjective] Conquered; overpowered; crushed; submissive. SUBDUER (10) SUBDUES (10) [verb] To overcome, quieten, or bring under control. | [verb] To bring (a country) under control by force. SUBECHO (14) SUBEDIT (10) [verb] To perform the work of a subeditor or copy editor. SUBERIC (11) SUBERIN (9) [noun] A waxy material found in the cell walls of cork and similar plants SUBFILE (12) SUBFUSC (14) [noun] Dark clothing. | [noun] Clothing acceptable, by regulation at certain universities, for an examination or official event. | [adjective] Having subdued colors. SUBGOAL (10) SUBGUMS (12) SUBHEAD (13) [noun] A subheading or subtitle SUBIDEA (10) SUBITEM (11) SUBJECT (18) [adjective] Likely to be affected by or to experience something. | [adjective] Conditional upon. | [adjective] Placed or situated under; lying below, or in a lower situation. | [noun] (grammar) In a clause: the word or word group (usually a noun phrase) that is dealt with. In active clauses with verbs denoting an action, the subject and the actor are usually the same. | [verb] (construed with to) To cause (someone or something) to undergo a particular experience, especially one that is unpleasant or unwanted. SUBJOIN (16) [noun] A subordinate or secondary join. | [verb] To add something to the end; to append or annex SUBLATE (9) [verb] To negate, deny or contradict. | [verb] To take or carry away; to remove. SUBLETS (9) [noun] Property leased by one lessee to another. | [verb] To lease or rent all or part of (a property) (to another person). SUBLIME (11) [verb] To sublimate. | [verb] To raise on high. | [verb] To exalt; to heighten; to improve; to purify. | [noun] Something sublime. SUBLINE (9) SUBLOTS (9) SUBMENU (11) [noun] A secondary menu available through another menu, especially one that branches off the first. SUBMISS (11) SUBMITS (11) [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. SUBNETS (9) [noun] The abstraction of a sequence. | [noun] A portion of a network that shares a network address in which each component is identified by a number. SUBORAL (9) SUBORNS (9) [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. SUBOVAL (12) SUBPART (11) SUBPENA (11) SUBPLOT (11) [noun] A plot within a story, subsidiary to the main plot. | [noun] A subdivision of a plot of land, especially one used for an agricultural experiment. | [verb] To provide (a story) with a subplot. SUBRACE (11) SUBRENT (9) SUBRING (10) SUBRULE (9) SUBSALE (9) SUBSECT (11) SUBSERE (9) SUBSETS (9) [noun] (of a set S) A set A such that every element of A is also an element of S. | [noun] A group of things or people, all of which are in a specified larger group. | [verb] To take a subset of. SUBSIDE (10) [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. SUBSIDY (13) [noun] Financial support or assistance, such as a grant. | [noun] Money granted by parliament to the British Crown. SUBSIST (9) [verb] To survive on a minimum of resources. | [verb] To have ontological reality; to exist. | [verb] To retain a certain state; to continue. SUBSITE (9) SUBSOIL (9) [noun] The layer of earth that is below the topsoil. | [verb] To turn up the subsoil of. SUBSUME (11) [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 SUBTASK (13) SUBTAXA (16) SUBTEEN (9) 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 SUBTEST (9) SUBTEXT (16) [noun] (authorship) The implicit meaning of a text, often a literary one, or a speech or dialogue. SUBTILE (9) SUBTLER (9) [adjective] Hard to grasp; not obvious or easily understood; barely noticeable. | [adjective] (of a thing) Cleverly contrived. | [adjective] (of a person or animal) Cunning, skillful. SUBTONE (9) SUBTYPE (14) [noun] A group of specific things within a larger, more general group. | [noun] The data type represented by a subclass. | [verb] To categorise as a subtype. SUBUNIT (9) [noun] Any subdivision of a larger unit. | [noun] A protein subunit. SUBURBS (11) [noun] A residential area located on the outskirts of a city or large town that usually includes businesses that cater to its residents; such as schools, grocery stores, shopping centers, restaurants, convenience stores, etc. | [noun] (by extension) The outer part; the environment. | [noun] Any subdivision of a conurbation, not necessarily on the periphery. SUBVENE (12) SUBVERT (12) [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). | [noun] An advertisement created by subvertising. SUBWAYS (15) [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. SUBZERO (18) [adjective] Less than zero, most commonly used to refer to temperature. SUBZONE (18) SUCCAHS (14) [noun] A temporary dwelling or booth used by practising Jews during Tabernacles (Sukkot). 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. SUCCESS (11) [noun] The achievement of one's aim or goal. | [noun] Financial profitability. | [noun] One who, or that which, achieves assumed goals. SUCCORS (11) [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. SUCCORY (14) [noun] Chicory (Cichorium intybus) SUCCOTH (14) [noun] A temporary dwelling or booth used by practising Jews during Tabernacles (Sukkot). SUCCOUR (11) [noun] Aid, assistance, or relief given to one in distress; ministration. | [noun] Aid or assistance in the form of military equipment and soldiers, especially reinforcements sent to support military action. | [noun] (obsolete except dialectal) Protection, refuge, shelter; a place providing such protection, refuge or shelter. SUCCUBA (13) SUCCUBI (13) [noun] A female demon which comes to men, especially monks, in their dreams to seduce them and have sexual intercourse, drawing energy from the men to sustain themselves, often until the point of exhaustion or death. | [noun] A strumpet, whore or prostitute. SUCCUMB (15) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUCCUSS (11) [verb] To shake with vigor. SUCKERS (13) [noun] A person or animal that sucks, especially a breast or udder; especially a suckling animal, young mammal before it is weaned. | [noun] An undesired stem growing out of the roots or lower trunk of a shrub or tree, especially from the rootstock of a grafted plant or tree. | [noun] (by extension) A parasite; a sponger. SUCKING (14) [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. 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.). SUCKLER (13) [noun] An animal that has not yet been weaned. | [noun] Any animal that suckles its young; a mammal. SUCKLES (13) [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.). SUCRASE (9) [noun] Any of a number of enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of sucrose to fructose and glucose or to their respective homopolysaccharides SUCROSE (9) [noun] A disaccharide with formula C12H22O11, consisting of two simple sugars, glucose and fructose; normal culinary sugar. SUCTION (9) [noun] A force which pushes matter from one space into another because the pressure inside the second space is lower than the pressure in the first. | [noun] A force holding two objects together because the pressure in the space between the items is lower than the pressure outside that space. | [noun] The process of creating an imbalance in pressure to draw matter from one place to another. SUDARIA (8) [noun] A napkin or handkerchief. SUDDENS (9) SUDORAL (8) SUDSERS (8) [noun] A foaming agent used in detergents etc. | [noun] (entertainment industry) A soap opera. SUDSIER (8) SUDSING (9) [verb] To cover with, or as if with, soapsuds. SUEDING (9) SUFFARI (13) SUFFERS (13) [verb] To undergo hardship. | [verb] To feel pain. | [verb] To become worse. SUFFICE (15) [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. SUFFUSE (13) [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. 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. SUGGEST (9) [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 SUGHING (12) SUICIDE (10) SUITERS (7) SUITING (8) [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. SUITORS (7) [noun] One who pursues someone, especially a woman, for marriage; a wooer; one who courts someone. | [noun] A party to a suit or litigation. | [noun] One who sues, petitions, solicits, or entreats; a petitioner. SUKKAHS (18) [noun] A temporary dwelling or booth used by practising Jews during Tabernacles (Sukkot). SUKKOTH (18) [noun] A temporary dwelling or booth used by practising Jews during Tabernacles (Sukkot). SULCATE (9) [adjective] Having deep, narrow sulci, grooves or furrows. SULDANS (8) SULFATE (10) [noun] Any ester of sulfuric acid. | [noun] Any salt of sulfuric acid. | [verb] To treat something with sulfuric acid, a sulfate, or with sulfur dioxide. SULFIDE (11) [noun] Any compound of sulfur and a metal or other electropositive element or group. SULFIDS (11) SULFITE (10) [noun] Any salt of sulfurous acid. SULFONE (10) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds that have a sulfonyl functional group attached to two carbon atoms; drugs of this structure have been used to treat leprosy. SULFURS (10) [noun] A chemical element (symbol S) with an atomic number of 16. | [noun] A yellowish green colour, like that of sulfur. | [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. SULFURY (13) SULKERS (11) SULKIER (11) [adjective] Silent and withdrawn after being upset SULKIES (11) [noun] A low two-wheeled cart, used in harness racing. | [noun] Any carriage seating only the driver. SULKILY (14) SULKING (12) [verb] To express ill humor or offence by remaining sullenly silent or withdrawn. | [noun] The act of one who sulks. SULLAGE (8) [noun] The liquid discharges from kitchens, washbasins, toilets etc; sewage. | [noun] Silt or sediment deposited from flowing water. | [noun] That which sullies or defiles. SULLIED (8) [adjective] Defiled or tainted, soiled or stained. | [verb] To soil or stain; to dirty. | [verb] To corrupt or damage. SULLIES (7) [noun] A blemish. | [verb] To soil or stain; to dirty. | [verb] To corrupt or damage. SULPHAS (12) SULPHID (13) SULPHUR (12) [noun] A chemical element (symbol S) with an atomic number of 16. | [noun] A yellowish green colour, like that of sulfur. | [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. SULTANA (7) [noun] A pale yellow raisin made from a seedless grape. | [noun] A female sultan or wife or mistress of a sultan. | [noun] A female ruler of a sultanate. SULTANS (7) [noun] The holder of a secular office, formally subordinate to, but de facto the power behind the throne of, the caliph. | [noun] A hereditary ruler in various Muslim states (sultanate), varying from petty principalities (as in Indonesia and in Yemen), often vassal of a greater ruler, to independent realms, such as Oman, Brunei, or an empire such as the Turkish Ottoman Empire. | [noun] A variant of solitaire, played with two decks of cards. SUMACHS (14) [noun] Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus and other genera in Anacardiaceae, particularly the elm-leaved sumac, Sicilian sumac, or tanner's sumac (Rhus coriaria). | [noun] Dried and chopped-up leaves and stems of a plant of the genus Rhus, particularly the tanner's sumac (see sense 1), used for dyeing and tanning leather or for medicinal purposes. | [noun] A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean, made from the berries of tanner's sumac. SUMLESS (9) SUMMAND (12) [noun] Something which is added or summed. SUMMARY (14) [noun] An abstract or a condensed presentation of the substance of a body of material. | [adjective] Concise, brief or presented in a condensed form | [adjective] Performed speedily and without formal ceremony. SUMMATE (11) SUMMERS (11) [noun] One of four seasons, traditionally the second, marked by the longest and typically hottest days of the year due to the inclination of the Earth and thermal lag. Typically regarded as being from June 21 to September 22 or 23 in parts of the USA, the months of June, July and August in the United Kingdom and the months of December, January and February in the Southern Hemisphere. | [noun] Year; used to give the age of a person, usually a young one. | [noun] Someone with light, pinkish skin that has a blue undertone, light hair and eyes, seen as best suited to certain colors of clothing. SUMMERY (14) [adjective] Relating to the summer. | [adjective] Of weather, typical of summer. SUMMING (12) [verb] To add together. | [verb] To give a summary of. | [noun] The act or result of addition; a sum. SUMMITS (11) [noun] A peak; the topmost point or surface, as of a mountain. | [noun] A gathering or assembly of leaders. SUMMONS (11) [noun] A call to do something, especially to come. | [noun] A notice summoning someone to appear in court, as a defendant, juror or witness. | [noun] A demand for surrender. | [verb] To call people together; to convene. SUMPTER (11) [noun] The driver of a packhorse. | [noun] A packhorse; a beast of burden. | [noun] A pack; a burden. SUNBACK (15) SUNBATH (12) [noun] A period spent tanning (sunbathing) in the sun. SUNBEAM (11) [noun] A visible, narrow, and intense (relative to ambient light) ray of sunlight. | [noun] An item of cutlery or crockery laid out on a table, but not used, and which can be returned to the drawer without being washed. | [noun] Any of various lycaenid butterflies of the genus Curetis. SUNBELT (9) [noun] A geographical region loosely described as the southern and western states of the USA where the weather is typically sunny. | [noun] A political geographical region approximately the same as above, where the voting tendency of the population is right wing. 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. SUNBOWS (12) [noun] A bow or arc of prismatic colors like a rainbow, caused by refraction through a spray of water from a cataract, waterfall, fountain, etc., rather than through droplets of rain. SUNBURN (9) [noun] A burn on the skin caused by excess exposure to the sun's rays. | [noun] A burn on the tissue of crop plants or their fruits (especially if they are rich in water like tomatoes, grapes, apples, gooseberries) caused by excess exposure to the sun's rays. | [verb] To receive a sunburn. SUNDAES (8) [noun] A dessert consisting of ice cream with various toppings. SUNDECK (14) [noun] An area on a ship's deck or on the roof of a house used for sunbathing. SUNDERS (8) [verb] To break or separate or to break apart, especially with force. | [verb] To part, separate. | [verb] To expose to the sun and wind. SUNDEWS (11) [noun] Any of a group of insectivorous plants in the genus Drosera that catch insects by sticky droplets ("dew") at the end of hairs on the leafs and grow in boggy ground all over the world. SUNDIAL (8) [noun] A device measuring the time of day by the position of a shadow cast by a pole or plate (gnomon) upon an engraved series of marks. SUNDOGS (9) [noun] Either of two bright spots, caused by the refraction of sunlight through ice crystals, sometimes seen on the parhelic circle. SUNDOWN (11) [noun] Sunset. | [noun] A hat with a wide brim to shade the eyes from sunlight. | [verb] To experience an episode or an onset of some detrimental mental condition like agitation, anxiety, hallucination or dementia, daily at nightfall. SUNFAST (10) [adjective] Colorfast in a way that will not fade in sunlight. SUNFISH (13) [noun] Any of various small freshwater fishes of the family Centrarchidae, often with iridescent colours and having a laterally compressed body. | [noun] Any of various large marine fishes of the family Molidae that have an oval compressed body. SUNGLOW (11) SUNKETS (11) SUNLAMP (11) [noun] A lamp that produces ultraviolet radiation; used for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. | [noun] A high-intensity lamp, used to produce an illusion of daylight. SUNLAND (8) SUNLESS (7) [adjective] Without the sun or sunshine; shaded; shadowed. | [adjective] Dreary, cheerless. SUNLIKE (11) SUNNAHS (10) SUNNIER (7) [adjective] (of weather or a day) Featuring a lot of sunshine. | [adjective] (of a place) Receiving a lot of sunshine. | [adjective] (of a person or a person's mood) cheerful SUNNILY (10) SUNNING (8) [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. SUNRISE (7) [noun] The time of day when the sun appears above the eastern horizon. | [noun] The change in color of the sky at dawn. | [noun] Any great awakening. SUNROOF (10) [noun] A fixed or operable opening in a vehicle roof (car or truck) which allows fresh air and/or light to enter the passenger compartment. A sunroof may include a transparent or opaque panel and may be manually operated or power driven. SUNROOM (9) [noun] A room in a residence with numerous large windows admitting sunlight. | [noun] Solarium SUNSETS (7) [noun] The time of day when the sun disappears below the western horizon. | [noun] The changes in color of the sky at sunset. | [noun] The final period of the life of a person or thing. SUNSPOT (9) [noun] A region on the sun's surface with a lower temperature than its surroundings and intense magnetic activity. SUNSUIT (7) [noun] A costume designed to protect a child from the sun. SUNTANS (7) [noun] In humans a brown or darkened coloration of the skin caused by exposure to ultraviolet light. | [verb] To obtain a suntan by exposure to ultraviolet light. | [verb] To attempt to obtain a suntan. SUNWARD (11) [adjective] Directed or turned toward the sun. | [adverb] In the direction of the sun. SUNWISE (10) SUPERED (10) SUPINES (9) [noun] (grammar) In Latin and other languages: a type of verbal noun used in the ablative and accusative cases, which shares the same stem as the passive participle. | [noun] (grammar) In Swedish: a verb form that combines with an inflection of ha to form the present perfect and pluperfect tenses. SUPPERS (11) [noun] Food consumed before going to bed. | [noun] Any meal eaten in the evening; dinner eaten in the evening, rather than at noon. | [noun] A meal from a chip shop consisting of a deep-fried food with chips. SUPPING (12) [verb] To sip; to take a small amount of food or drink into the mouth, especially with a spoon. | [verb] To take supper. | [noun] The act of one who sups; the act of taking supper. SUPPLED (12) [verb] To make or become supple. | [verb] To make compliant, submissive, or obedient. SUPPLER (11) [adjective] Pliant, flexible, easy to bend | [adjective] Lithe and agile when moving and bending | [adjective] Compliant; yielding to the will of others SUPPLES (11) [verb] To make or become supple. | [verb] To make compliant, submissive, or obedient. SUPPORT (11) [noun] (sometimes attributive) Something which supports. | [noun] Financial or other help. | [noun] Answers to questions and resolution of problems regarding something sold. SUPPOSE (11) [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. SUPREME (11) [noun] The highest point. | [noun] A pizza having a large number of the most common toppings, such as pepperoni, bell peppers, onions, mushrooms, olives, etc. | [noun] A breast of chicken or duck with the wing bone attached. SUPREMO (11) [noun] The most important person in an organization. SURBASE (9) SURCOAT (9) [noun] A loose garment without sleeves worn over a suit of armor, sometimes colored or embroidered with the wearer's coat of arms. | [noun] An overgarment worn over a woman's gown; a kind of short robe worn over the tunic at the close of the 11th century. SURFACE (12) [noun] The overside or up-side of a flat object such as a table, or of a liquid. | [noun] The outside hull of a tangible object. | [noun] Outward or external appearance. SURFEIT (10) [noun] An excessive amount of something. | [noun] Overindulgence in either food or drink; overeating. | [noun] A sickness or condition caused by overindulgence. SURFERS (10) [noun] A person who rides a surfboard. | [noun] A person who surfs the Internet. | [noun] A duck, the surf scoter (Melanitta perspicillata). SURFIER (10) SURFING (11) [verb] To ride a wave, usually on a surfboard. | [verb] To browse the Internet, television, etc. | [noun] The pastime or sport of riding surf on a surfboard. SURGEON (8) [noun] One who performs surgery; a doctor who performs operations on people or animals. | [noun] A surgeonfish. SURGERS (8) SURGERY (11) [noun] A procedure involving major incisions to remove, repair, or replace a part of a body. | [noun] The medical specialty related to the performance of surgical procedures. | [noun] A room or department where surgery is performed. SURGING (9) [verb] To rush, flood, or increase suddenly. | [verb] To accelerate forwards, particularly suddenly. | [verb] To slack off a line. SURLIER (7) [adjective] Irritated, bad-tempered, unfriendly. | [adjective] Threatening, menacing, gloomy. | [adjective] Lordly, arrogant, supercilious. SURLILY (10) SURMISE (9) [noun] Thought, imagination, or conjecture, which may be based upon feeble or scanty evidence; suspicion; guess. | [noun] Reflection; thought; posit. | [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. SURNAME (9) [noun] An additional name, particularly those derived from a birthplace, quality, or achievement; an epithet. | [noun] An additional name given to a person, place, or thing; a byname or nickname. | [noun] The name a person shares with other members of that person's family, distinguished from that person's given name or names; a family name. SURPASS (9) [verb] To go beyond, especially in a metaphoric or technical manner; to exceed. SURPLUS (9) [noun] That which remains when use or need is satisfied, or when a limit is reached; excess; overplus. | [noun] Specifically, an amount in the public treasury at any time greater than is required for the ordinary purposes of the government. | [noun] The remainder of a fund appropriated for a particular purpose. SURREAL (7) [noun] Surreal number | [adjective] Resembling a dream: fantastic and incongruous SURREYS (10) [noun] A light horse-drawn carriage with forward-facing seats accommodating two or four people, popular in the United States; a motorized carriage of similar design. SURTOUT (7) [noun] A man's overcoat; a close-bodied frock coat. | [noun] (fortifications) A raised portion of the parapet of a work at the angles, to protect from enfilade fire. SURVEIL (10) [verb] To keep someone or something under surveillance. SURVEYS (13) [noun] The act of surveying; a general view. | [noun] A particular view; an examination, especially an official examination, of a particular group of items, in order to ascertain the condition, quantity, or quality. | [noun] The operation of finding the contour, dimensions, position, or other particulars of any part of the Earth's surface. SURVIVE (13) [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. SUSLIKS (11) [noun] Any of several large Eurasian squirrels, of the genera Citellus or Spermophilus | [noun] The fur of these animals SUSPECT (11) [noun] A person who is suspected of something, in particular of committing a crime. | [verb] To imagine or suppose (something) to be true, or to exist, without proof. | [verb] To distrust or have doubts about (something or someone). 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. SUSPIRE (9) [noun] A long, deep breath; a sigh. | [verb] To breathe. | [verb] To exhale. SUSSING (8) [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). SUSTAIN (7) [noun] A mechanism which can be used to hold a note, as the right pedal on a piano. | [verb] To maintain, or keep in existence. | [verb] To provide for or nourish. SUTLERS (7) [noun] A person who follows an army, selling provisions. SUTTEES (7) [noun] The traditional custom of a Hindu woman giving herself up to be cremated on her husband’s funeral pyre as a sign of her devotion. SUTURAL (7) SUTURED (8) [verb] To sew up or join by means of a suture. SUTURES (7) [noun] A seam formed by sewing two edges together, especially to join pieces of skin in surgically treating a wound. | [noun] Thread used to sew or stitch two edges (especially of skin) together. | [noun] An area where separate terrane join together along a major fault. SVELTER (10) [adjective] Attractively thin; gracefully slender. | [adjective] Refined, delicate. SWABBED (15) [verb] To use a swab on something, or clean something with a swab. SWABBER (14) SWABBIE (14) [noun] A sailor. SWACKED (17) [adjective] Drunk. SWADDLE (12) [noun] Anything used to swaddle with, such as a cloth or band. | [verb] To bind (a baby) with long narrow strips of cloth. | [verb] To beat; cudgel. SWAGERS (11) SWAGGED (13) [verb] To (cause to) sway. | [verb] To droop; to sag. | [verb] To decorate (something) with loops of draped fabric. SWAGGER (12) [noun] Confidence, pride. | [noun] A bold or arrogant strut. | [noun] A prideful boasting or bragging. | [noun] An itinerant person who walks from farm to farm carrying a swag and seeking work, often in exchange for food and lodging. SWAGGIE (12) [noun] A swagman. SWAGING (12) [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. SWAGMAN (13) [noun] An itinerant person who walks from farm to farm carrying a swag and seeking work, often in exchange for food and lodging. | [noun] A fence, a middleman for transactions of stolen goods. SWAGMEN (13) [noun] An itinerant person who walks from farm to farm carrying a swag and seeking work, often in exchange for food and lodging. | [noun] A fence, a middleman for transactions of stolen goods. SWALLOW (13) [noun] A deep chasm or abyss in the earth. | [noun] The amount swallowed in one gulp; the act of swallowing. | [noun] Any of various carbohydrate-based dishes that are swallowed without much chewing. | [noun] A small, migratory bird of the Hirundinidae family with long, pointed, moon-shaped wings and a forked tail which feeds on the wing by catching insects. SWAMIES (12) 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. SWAMPER (14) [noun] A person who lives in a swampy area. | [noun] A person who clears a road for lumberers in a forest or swamp. | [noun] Someone or something that swamps or overwhelms. SWANKED (15) [verb] To swagger, to show off. SWANKER (14) 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). SWANPAN (12) 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. SWAPPER (14) 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. SWARMER (12) [noun] Something that swarms. SWARTHS (13) SWARTHY (16) [noun] A swarthy person. | [adjective] Tawny, dusky, dark. | [adjective] Dark-skinned. SWASHED (14) [verb] To swagger; to bluster and brag. | [verb] To dash or flow noisily; to splash. | [verb] To fall violently or noisily. SWASHER (13) SWASHES (13) [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 SWATHER (13) [noun] A device on a mowing machine or combine harvester that raises uncut grain and marks the edge of the swath SWATHES (13) [noun] The track cut out by a scythe in mowing. | [noun] A broad sweep or expanse, such as of land or of people. | [noun] A bandage; a band SWATTED (11) [verb] To beat off, as insects; to bat, strike, or hit. | [verb] To illegitimately provoke a SWAT assault upon (someone). SWATTER (10) SWAYERS (13) SWAYFUL (16) SWAYING (14) [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. SWEARER (10) SWEATED (11) [verb] To emit sweat. | [verb] To cause to excrete moisture through skin. | [verb] To work hard. SWEATER (10) [noun] A knitted jacket or jersey, usually of thick wool, worn by athletes before or after exercise. | [noun] A similar garment worn for warmth. | [noun] One who sweats (produces sweat). SWEEPER (12) [noun] One who sweeps floors or chimneys. | [noun] A detector (for mines). | [noun] Any of the small, tropical marine perciform fishes of the family Pempheridae, typically with deeply keeled, compressed bodies and large eyes. SWEETEN (10) [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. SWEETER (10) [adjective] Having a pleasant taste, especially one relating to the basic taste sensation induced by sugar. | [adjective] Having a taste of sugar. | [adjective] Retaining a portion of sugar. SWEETIE (10) [noun] (often as a term of address) A person who is much loved. | [noun] A sweetheart. | [noun] A fruit that is a crossbreed between a grapefruit and a pomelo, originating in Israel. SWEETLY (13) [adverb] In a sweet or pleasant manner. 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. SWELLER (10) SWELTER (10) [noun] Intense heat. | [verb] To suffer terribly from intense heat. | [verb] To perspire greatly from heat. SWELTRY (13) 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. SWERVER (13) SWERVES (13) [noun] A sudden movement out of a straight line, for example to avoid a collision. | [noun] A deviation from duty or custom. | [verb] To stray; to wander; to rove. SWEVENS (13) SWIDDEN (12) [noun] An area of land that has been cleared by cutting the vegetation and burning it; slash and burn. | [verb] To clear an area of land by cutting and burning. SWIFTER (13) [adjective] Fast; quick; rapid. | [adjective] Capable of moving at high speeds. | [noun] A rope used to retain the bars of the capstan in their sockets while it is being turned. SWIFTLY (16) [adverb] In a swift manner; quickly; with quick motion or velocity; fleetly. 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. SWIGGER (12) 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. SWILLER (10) SWIMMER (14) [noun] One who swims. | [noun] A protuberance on the leg of a horse. | [noun] A webfooted aquatic bird. SWINDLE (11) [noun] An instance of swindling. | [noun] Anything that is deceptively not what it appears to be. | [verb] To defraud. SWINGBY (16) [noun] An interplanetary flight in which the gravitational attraction of a planet is used to provide acceleration and a change in course. SWINGED (12) [verb] To singe. | [verb] To move like a lash; to lash. | [verb] To strike hard. SWINGER (11) [noun] One who swings. | [noun] A person who practices swinging (sex with different partners). | [noun] A bet in which the bettor must correctly pick two runners to finish in any of the places in any order. | [noun] One who swinges. SWINGES (11) [noun] A swinging blow. | [noun] Power; sway; influence. SWINGLE (11) [noun] An implement used to separate the fibres of flax by beating them; a scutch. | [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. SWINISH (13) SWINKED (15) SWINNEY (13) SWIPING (13) [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. SWIPLES (12) SWIPPLE (14) [noun] The part of a flail that is free to swing, and which strikes the grain in threshing. 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. SWISHER (13) [adjective] Sophisticated; fashionable; smooth. | [adjective] Attractive, stylish | [adjective] Effeminate. | [noun] The wrapping paper of a cigar for use in making a blunt to smoke marijuana SWISHES (13) [noun] A short rustling, hissing or whistling sound, often made by friction. | [noun] A hissing, sweeping movement through the air, as of an animal's tail. | [noun] A sound of liquid flowing inside a container. SWISSES (10) SWITHER (13) [noun] A state of indecision or confusion. | [verb] To be indecisive or in a state of confusion; to dither. SWITHLY (16) SWIVELS (13) [noun] A piece, as a ring or hook, attached to another piece by a pin, in such a manner as to permit rotation about the pin as an axis. | [noun] A small piece of ordnance, turning on a point or swivel; called also swivel gun. | [noun] Strength of mind or character that enables one to overcome adversity; confidence; force of will. SWIVETS (13) [noun] A state or condition of haste, flutter; extreme discomposure or distress; irritation, exasperation, annoyance. SWIVING (14) [verb] To copulate with (a woman). | [verb] To cut a crop in a sweeping or rambling manner, hence to reap; cut for harvest. | [noun] The act or process of copulating; copulation. SWIZZLE (28) [noun] A beverage of water and vinegar, often seasoned with ginger and sweetened with molasses, honey, or similar. | [noun] Any of various kinds of alcoholic drink. | [verb] To stir or mix. SWOBBED (15) [verb] To use a swab on something, or clean something with a swab. SWOBBER (14) SWOLLEN (10) [verb] To become bigger, especially due to being engorged. | [verb] To cause to become bigger. | [verb] To grow gradually in force or loudness. 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. SWOONER (10) 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. SWOOPER (12) 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"). SWOTTER (10) SWOUNDS (11) SWOUNED (11) SYCONIA (12) [noun] A collective fleshy fruit, in which the ovaries are hidden within a hollow receptacle, as in the fig; a hollow ball with a stalk at one end and an opening (ostiole) at the other, with flowers or fruits on the inside SYCOSES (12) SYCOSIS (12) [noun] A pustular eruption that affects the scalp or the bearded part of the face SYENITE (10) [noun] Granite. | [noun] An igneous rock composed of feldspar and hornblende. SYLLABI (12) [noun] A summary of topics which will be covered during an academic course, or a text or lecture. | [noun] The headnote of a reported case; the brief statement of the points of law determined prefixed to a reported case. SYLPHIC (17) SYLPHID (16) SYLVANS (13) SYLVINE (13) [noun] A saline evaporite, consisting of potassium chloride KCl, also found in fumaroles. SYLVINS (13) SYLVITE (13) [noun] A saline evaporite, consisting of potassium chloride KCl, also found in fumaroles. SYMBION (14) SYMBIOT (14) SYMBOLS (14) [noun] A character or glyph representing an idea, concept or object. | [noun] A thing considered the embodiment of a concept or object. | [noun] A type of noun whereby the form refers to the same entity independently of the context; a symbol arbitrarily denotes a referent. See also icon and index. SYMPTOM (16) [noun] A perceived change in some function, sensation or appearance of a person that indicates a disease or disorder, such as fever, headache or rash. | [noun] A signal; anything that indicates, or is characteristic of, the presence of something else, especially of something undesirable. SYNAGOG (12) SYNANON (10) SYNAPSE (12) [noun] The junction between the terminal of a neuron and either another neuron or a muscle or gland cell, over which nerve impulses pass. | [verb] To form a synapse. | [verb] To undergo synapsis. SYNCARP (14) 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. SYNCHRO (15) [noun] Any synchronized event, such as synchronized swimming | [noun] A type of rotary electrical transformer that is used for measuring the angle of a rotating machine such as an antenna platform. In its general physical construction, it is much like an electric motor SYNCING (13) [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. SYNCOMS (14) SYNCOPE (14) [noun] The loss or elision of a sound from the interior of a word, for example by changing cannot to can't, never to ne'er, or the pronunciation of the -cester ending in placenames as -ster (for example, Leicester pronounced Leister or Lester, and Worcester pronounced Wooster). | [noun] A loss of consciousness when someone faints, a swoon. | [noun] A missed beat or off-beat stress in music resulting in syncopation. SYNDETS (11) SYNDICS (13) [noun] A government official, a magistrate, especially one of the Chief Magistrates of Geneva. | [noun] An agent of a corporation, or of any body of people engaged in a business enterprise; an advocate or patron; an assignee. SYNERGY (14) [noun] (systems theory) A synonym of binding energy. | [noun] The cooperation of two or more nerves, muscles, organs, etc. | [noun] The combined action of two or more drugs where the effects are stronger than their mere sum. SYNESIS (10) SYNFUEL (13) [noun] Any of several fuels synthesized from coal or shale etc, or fermented from grain etc SYNGAMY (16) [noun] The fusion of two gametes to form a zygote. SYNODAL (11) [noun] A tribute in money formerly paid to the bishop or archdeacon, at the time of his Easter visitation, by every parish priest, now made to the ecclesiastical commissioners; a procuration. | [noun] A constitution made in a provincial or diocesan synod. | [adjective] Synodic; relating to a synod SYNODIC (13) [adjective] Of, related to or produced by a synod; synodal | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the conjunction of two or more heavenly bodies SYNONYM (15) [noun] (strictly) A word whose meaning is the same as that of another word. | [noun] A word or phrase with a meaning that is the same as, or very similar to, another word or phrase. | [noun] Any of the formal names for a taxon, including the valid name (i.e. the senior synonym). SYNOVIA (13) SYNTONY (13) SYNURAE (10) SYPHERS (15) SYPHONS (15) [noun] A bent pipe or tube with one end lower than the other, in which hydrostatic pressure exerted due to the force of gravity moves liquid from one reservoir to another. | [noun] A soda siphon. | [noun] A tubelike organ found in animals or elongated cell found in plants. SYRINGA (11) [noun] Sweet mock orange, Philadelphus coronarius. | [noun] Hence any of several flowering plants of the genus Philadelphus, such as now in the Western United States Philadelphus lewisii. | [noun] Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Syringa, such as the lilacs. SYRINGE (11) [noun] A device used for injecting or drawing fluids through a membrane. | [noun] A device consisting of a hypodermic needle, a chamber for containing liquids, and a piston for applying pressure (to inject) or reducing pressure (to draw); a hypodermic syringe. | [verb] To clean, or inject fluid, by means of a syringe. SYRPHID (16) [noun] Any species of the hoverfly family Syrphidae. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to flies of the family Syrphidae. SYSTEMS (12) [noun] A collection of organized things; a whole composed of relationships among its members. | [noun] A method or way of organizing or planning. SYSTOLE (10) [noun] The rhythmic contraction of the heart, by which blood is driven through the arteries. | [noun] A shortening of a naturally long vowel. SYZYGAL (23)

8-Letter Words (3466)

SABATONS (10) SABAYONS (13) [noun] A custard-like dessert made with egg yolks, sugar and Marsala wine. SABBATHS (15) [noun] Saturday, observed in Judaism and some Christian denominations as a day of rest and worship. | [noun] Sunday, observed in most of Christianity as a day of rest and worship. | [noun] Friday, observed in Islam as a day of rest and worship. SABBATIC (14) SABERING (11) [verb] To strike or kill with a sabre. SABOTAGE (11) [noun] A deliberate action aimed at weakening an enemy through subversion, obstruction, disruption, and/or destruction. | [noun] An act or acts with intent to injure, interfere with, or obstruct the national defense of a country by willfully injuring or destroying, or attempting to injure or destroy, any national defense or war materiel, premises, or utilities, to include human and natural resources. | [verb] To deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful. SABOTEUR (10) [noun] A person who intentionally causes the destruction of property in order to hinder the efforts of his/her enemy. SABULOSE (10) SABULOUS (10) SACATONS (10) SACCADES (13) [noun] A sudden jerking movement. | [noun] A rapid jerky movement of the eye (voluntary or involuntary) from one focus to another. | [noun] The act of checking a horse quickly with a single strong pull of the reins. SACCADIC (15) SACCULAR (12) SACCULES (12) [noun] The smallest chamber of the membranous labyrinth of the ear. SACCULUS (12) [noun] A small bag of herbs or medicinal substances, applied to the body. | [noun] A small sac. SACHEMIC (17) SACHETED (14) SACKBUTS (16) [noun] A brass instrument from the Renaissance and Baroque Eras, and an ancestor of the modern trombone. It was derived from the medieval slide trumpet. SACKFULS (17) [noun] The amount a sack will contain. | [noun] A large number or amount (of something). SACKINGS (15) [noun] Cheap rough cloth such as would be used to make bags (sacks). | [noun] Firing or termination of an employee. SACKLIKE (18) SACKSFUL (17) SACRARIA (10) [noun] In Ancient Rome, a place where sacred objects were kept, either in a temple (the adytum) or in a house (holding the penates) | [noun] The area surrounding the altar of a Christian church; the sanctuary or piscina. Sometimes specifically a drain directly to the earth, perhaps including reference to a basin, for washing vessels from consecration. | [noun] The complex sacrum of any bird. SACREDLY (14) SACRINGS (11) [noun] Consecration of the Eucharist. | [noun] Consecration of a person for holy office, usually a bishop or sovereign. SACRISTS (10) [noun] A sacristan. | [noun] A person retained in a cathedral to copy out music for the choir and take care of the books. SACRISTY (13) [noun] A room in a church where sacred vessels, books, vestments, etc. are kept. Sometimes also used by clergy to prepare for worship or for meetings. SADDENED (11) [verb] To make sad or unhappy. | [verb] To become sad or unhappy. | [verb] To darken a color during dyeing. SADDLERS (10) [noun] Someone who makes, repairs and sells saddles, harnesses etc. | [noun] The harp seal. SADDLERY (13) [noun] The trade or craft of a saddler. | [noun] A place of business of a saddler. | [noun] The inventory and equipment of a saddler; saddles and other horse-riding equipment, or the materials for making them. SADDLING (11) [verb] To put a saddle on (an animal). | [verb] To get into a saddle. | [verb] To burden or encumber. SADIRONS (9) SADISTIC (11) [adjective] Delighting in or feeling pleasure from the pain or humiliation of others. | [adjective] Of behaviour which gives pleasure in the pain or humiliation of others. | [adjective] Causing a high degree of pain or humiliation. SAFARIED (12) SAFENESS (11) SAFETIED (12) SAFETIES (11) [noun] The condition or feeling of being safe; security; certainty. | [noun] A mechanism on a weapon or dangerous equipment designed to prevent accidental firing. | [noun] An instance of a player being sacked or tackled in the end zone, or stepping out of the end zone and off the field, resulting in two points to the opposite team. SAFFRONS (14) [noun] The plant Crocus sativus, a crocus. | [noun] A spice (seasoning) and colouring agent made from the stigma and part of the style of the plant, sometimes or formerly also used as a dye and insect repellent. | [noun] An orange-yellow colour, the colour of a lion's pelt. SAFRANIN (11) [noun] A biological stain used in histology and cytology. SAFROLES (11) SAGACITY (14) [noun] Keen sense of smell. | [noun] The quality of being sage, wise, or able to make good decisions; the quality of being perceptive, astute or insightful. SAGAMORE (11) [noun] A chief of one or several Native American tribe(s), especially of the Algonquians. | [noun] A juice used in medicine. SAGANASH (12) SAGENESS (9) SAGGARDS (11) SAGGARED (11) SAGGERED (11) SAGGIEST (10) [adjective] Baggy or loose-fitting. | [adjective] That sinks or droops from wear or its own weight. SAGITTAL (9) [adjective] In the direction from dorsal to ventral. | [adjective] Of or relating to an arrow; resembling an arrow; furnished with an arrow-like appendage. SAGUAROS (9) [noun] Carnegiea gigantea, a large cactus native to the Sonoran Desert and characterized by its "arms". SAHIWALS (14) SAHUAROS (11) [noun] Carnegiea gigantea, a large cactus native to the Sonoran Desert and characterized by its "arms". SAILABLE (10) SAILBOAT (10) [noun] A boat propelled by a sail. | [noun] A playing card with the rank of four. SAILFISH (14) [noun] A fish of the genus Istiophorus, having a characteristic sail-like fin on its back. | [noun] The basking shark. | [noun] The quillback. SAILINGS (9) [noun] Motion across a body of water in a craft powered by the wind, as a sport or otherwise | [noun] Navigation; the skill needed to operate and navigate a vessel | [noun] The time of departure from a port SAILORLY (11) SAINFOIN (11) [noun] A perennial herb of the genus Onobrychis with pale pink flowers, especially Onobrychis viciifolia (syn. Onobrychis sativa). SAINTDOM (11) SAINTING (9) [verb] To canonize, to formally recognize someone as a saint. SALAAMED (11) [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). SALACITY (13) [noun] The state or quality of being salacious; lewdness, obscenity, bawdiness. | [noun] An act that is salacious, (lewd, obscene or bawdy); a salacious image or piece of writing. SALADANG (10) SALARIAT (8) [noun] Salary earners as a class or group - often as opposed to wage earners. 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. SALARIES (8) [noun] A fixed amount of money paid to a worker, usually calculated on a monthly or annual basis, not hourly, as wages. Implies a degree of professionalism and/or autonomy. | [verb] To pay on the basis of a period of a week or longer, especially to convert from another form of compensation. SALCHOWS (16) [noun] A figure skating jump with a takeoff from a back inside edge and landing on the back outside edge of the opposite foot after one or more rotations in the air. SALEABLE (10) [noun] Something that can be sold. | [adjective] Suitable for sale; marketable; worth enough to try to sell. SALEABLY (13) SALEROOM (10) [noun] A room in which items for sale are displayed; a showroom | [noun] A room in which items are auctioned SALESMAN (10) [noun] A man whose job it is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere. SALESMEN (10) [noun] A man whose job it is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere. SALICINE (10) [noun] A glucoside derivative of salicylic acid; the active principle of willow bark, once used medicinally. SALICINS (10) SALIENCE (10) [noun] The condition of being salient. | [noun] A highlight; perceptual prominence, or likelihood of being noticed. | [noun] Relative importance based on context. SALIENCY (13) [noun] The quality of being salient; salience SALIENTS (8) [noun] An outwardly projecting part of a fortification, trench system, or line of defense. SALIFIED (12) SALIFIES (11) SALINITY (11) [noun] The quality of being saline. | [noun] The concentration of salt in a solution. SALINIZE (17) SALIVARY (14) [noun] A salivary gland. | [adjective] Relating to saliva. SALIVATE (11) [verb] To produce saliva. | [verb] To show eager anticipation at the expectation of something. SALLIERS (8) SALLOWED (12) SALLOWER (11) [adjective] (of skin) Yellowish. | [adjective] (of a person) Having skin (especially on the face) of a sickly pale colour. | [adjective] (of objects or dim light) Having a similar pale, yellowish colour. SALLOWLY (14) SALLYING (12) [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. 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. SALPIANS (10) SALSILLA (8) SALTBUSH (13) [noun] Any of the genus Atriplex of plants, especially Atriplex hortensis or Atriplex patula, found in dry habitats, that have edible leaves resembling spinach, including many desert and seashore plants and halophytes. SALTERNS (8) [noun] An area used for saltmaking, especially in the East Anglian fenlands. | [noun] A modern saltworks. SALTIERS (8) SALTIEST (8) [adjective] Tasting of salt. | [adjective] Containing salt. | [adjective] Coarse, provocative, earthy; said of language. SALTINES (8) [noun] A thin, crisp, salted, customarily white-colored cracker, a soda cracker. | [noun] A soda biscuit. SALTINGS (9) [noun] The act of sprinkling salt, either on food, or on an icy road | [noun] A salt marsh | [noun] The act of tampering with an investigation site by adding bogus evidence. SALTIRES (8) [noun] An ordinary (geometric design) in the shape of an X. It usually occupies the entire field in which it is placed. | [noun] The Saint Andrew's cross, the flag of Scotland. SALTLESS (8) SALTLIKE (12) SALTNESS (8) SALTPANS (10) [noun] A dry lake or playa whose level bed contains abundant salt. | [noun] A man-made pond where salty water is evaporated to recover salt and/or other minerals. SALTWORK (15) SALTWORT (11) [noun] Batis maritima, a plant distributed in the southwestern United States, Caribbean, and South America in coastal saltmarshes. | [noun] Glaux maritima, a plant in the primrose family (Primulaceae) and which grows along coasts throughout the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. SALUTARY (11) [adjective] Effecting or designed to effect an improvement; remedial: salutary advice. | [adjective] Promoting good health and physical well-being; wholesome; curative. SALUTERS (8) SALUTING (9) [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. SALVABLE (13) SALVABLY (16) 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. SALVAGEE (12) SALVAGER (12) SALVAGES (12) [noun] The rescue of a ship, its crew or its cargo from a hazardous situation. | [noun] The ship, crew or cargo so rescued. | [noun] The compensation paid to the rescuers. SALVIFIC (16) [adjective] Able or intending to provide salvation or redemption. SALVOING (12) SAMARIUM (12) [noun] A chemical element (symbol Sm) with an atomic number of 62, a moderately hard silvery metal that slowly oxidizes in air. SAMBAING (13) [verb] To dance the samba. SAMBHARS (15) [noun] A Southeast Asian deer, Cervus unicolor. SAMBHURS (15) SAMBUCAS (14) [noun] An Italian liqueur made from elderberries and flavoured with licorice, traditionally served with 3 coffee beans that represent health, wealth and fortune (or past, present and future). | [noun] An ancient form of triangular harp having a very sharp, shrill tone. SAMBUKES (16) SAMENESS (10) [noun] The quality of being the same; identity. | [noun] The state of being equivalent; equality. | [noun] A tiring lack of variety; monotony. SAMISENS (10) [noun] A kind of three-stringed Japanese fretless lute. SAMIZDAT (20) [noun] The secret copying and sharing of illegal publications, chiefly in the Soviet Union; underground publishing and its publications. | [noun] A samizdat publication. SAMOVARS (13) [noun] A metal urn with a spigot, for boiling water for making tea. Traditionally, the water is heated by hot coals or charcoal in a chimney-like tube which runs through the center of the urn. Today, it is more likely that the water is heated by an electric coil. SAMPHIRE (15) [noun] One of several salt-tolerant plants, some edible SAMPLERS (12) [noun] A piece of needlework embroidered with a variety of designs. | [noun] Someone whose job is to take samples. | [noun] A device that takes samples. SAMPLING (13) [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. SAMSARAS (10) SAMURAIS (10) [noun] In feudal Japan, a soldier who served a daimyo. SANATIVE (11) [noun] A curative or restorative remedy. | [adjective] That cures or restores; curative or restorative SANCTIFY (16) [verb] To make holy; to consecrate; to set aside for sacred or ceremonial use. | [verb] To free from sin; to purify. | [verb] To make acceptable or useful under religious law or practice. SANCTION (10) [noun] An approval, by an authority, generally one that makes something valid. | [noun] A penalty, punishment, or some coercive measure, intended to ensure compliance; especially one adopted by several nations, or by an international body. | [noun] A law, treaty, or contract, or a clause within a law, treaty, or contract, specifying any of the above. SANCTITY (13) [noun] Holiness of life or disposition; saintliness | [noun] The condition of being considered sacred; inviolability | [noun] Something considered sacred. SANCTUMS (12) [noun] A place set apart, as with a sanctum sanctorum; a sacred or private place; a private retreat or workroom. SANDALED (10) [adjective] Wearing a sandal or sandals. SANDARAC (11) [noun] Realgar; red sulphide of arsenic. | [noun] A white or yellow resin obtained from a north African tree (Tetraclinis articulata), and pulverized for pounce; probably so called from a resemblance to the mineral. | [noun] Any tree from the genus Tetraclinis. SANDBAGS (12) [noun] A sturdy sack filled with sand, generally used in large numbers to make defensive walls against flooding, bullets, or shrapnel. | [noun] A small bag filled with sand and used as a cudgel. | [noun] An engraver's leather cushion, etc. SANDBANK (15) [noun] A ridge of sand along a shore that is partially or totally submerged and thus a hazard to shipping. SANDBARS (11) [noun] A ridge of sand caused by the action of waves along a shore. SANDBURR (11) SANDBURS (11) SANDDABS (12) SANDFISH (15) [noun] Genus Gonorynchus spp. (also called beaked sandfish), long, thin ray-finned fishes (family Gonorychidae) | [noun] Any of several marine fishes that burrow into sandy seabeds | [noun] Other animals that notably burrow in sand: SANDHOGS (13) [noun] A person employed to dig tunnels. SANDIEST (9) [adjective] Covered with sand. | [adjective] Sprinkled with sand. | [adjective] Containing sand. SANDLIKE (13) SANDLING (10) SANDLOTS (9) [noun] A vacant lot where children play. SANDPEEP (13) SANDPILE (11) SANDPITS (11) [noun] A place or pit from which sand is excavated. | [noun] A children’s play area consisting of a large container filled with sand. | [noun] A small-scale illustrative model of the theater of war in the Middle East. SANDSHOE (12) [noun] A sports or walking shoe with canvas upper and rubber sole; a sneaker. SANDSOAP (11) SANDSPUR (11) SANDWICH (17) [noun] A dish or foodstuff where two or more slices of bread serve as the wrapper or container of some other food. | [noun] (by extension) Any combination formed by layering one type of material between two layers of some other material. | [noun] A layer cake or sandwich cake. SANDWORM (14) SANDWORT (12) [noun] Any of several plants in the genera Arenaria, Minuartia, and Moehringia. SANENESS (8) SANGAREE (9) [noun] A mixed drink common in the West Indies, similar to sangria and usually featuring wine or fortified wine and spices. | [verb] To drink sangaree. | [verb] To prepare sangaree. SANGRIAS (9) [noun] A cold drink, originating in Spain, consisting of red or white wine, brandy or sherry, fruit juice, sugar and soda water and garnished with orange and other fruit. | [noun] A deep red color. SANGUINE (9) [noun] Blood colour; red. | [noun] Anything of a blood-red colour, as cloth. | [noun] A tincture, seldom used, of a blood-red colour (not to be confused with murrey). SANICLES (10) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Sanicula, having palmate compound leaves and small flowers arranged in umbels; the snakeroot. SANITARY (11) [noun] Sanitary towel. | [adjective] Of, or relating to health. | [adjective] Clean and free from pathogens; hygienic. SANITATE (8) SANITIES (8) SANITISE (8) [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. SANITIZE (17) [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. SANNYASI (11) [noun] A man in the stage of sannyasa; a wandering ascetic, a religious mendicant. SANSERIF (11) [noun] A typeface in which the characters do not have serifs. | [adjective] Of a typeface, without serifs. SANTALIC (10) SANTALOL (8) SANTONIN (8) [noun] An anthelmintic found in santonica and related plants. SANTOURS (8) SAPAJOUS (17) SAPHEADS (14) SAPHENAE (13) SAPIDITY (14) SAPIENCE (12) SAPIENCY (15) SAPLINGS (11) [noun] A young tree, but bigger than a seedling. | [noun] A youngster, especially a male nearing maturity. SAPONIFY (16) [verb] To convert (a fat or oil) into soap. | [verb] To be converted into soap. | [verb] To hydrolyze (an ester) using an alkali. SAPONINE (10) SAPONINS (10) [noun] Any of various steroid glycosides found in plant tissues that dissolve in water to give a soapy froth. SAPONITE (10) SAPOROUS (10) SAPPHICS (17) [noun] A Sapphic verse. | [noun] A person who is sapphic. SAPPHIRE (15) [noun] A clear deep blue variety of corundum, valued as a precious stone. | [noun] A white, yellow, or purple variety of corundum, either clear or translucent. | [noun] A deep blue colour. SAPPHISM (17) [noun] Lesbianism; female homosexuality SAPPHIST (15) SAPPIEST (12) [adjective] Excessively sweet, emotional, nostalgic; cheesy; mushy. (British equivalent: soppy) | [adjective] Having (a particularly large amount of) sap. | [adjective] Juicy. SAPREMIA (12) SAPREMIC (14) SAPROBES (12) SAPROBIC (14) SAPROPEL (12) SAPSAGOS (11) SAPWOODS (14) 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. SARCASMS (12) [noun] Use of acerbic language to mock or convey contempt, often using irony and (in speech) often marked by overemphasis and a sneering tone of voice. | [noun] An act of sarcasm. SARCENET (10) [noun] A very fine and soft silk ribbon woven in a plain weave with a fine warp and higher density weft. Now chiefly used for linings. SARCOIDS (11) [noun] Sarcoidosis. SARCOMAS (12) [noun] A type of malignant tumor of the bone, cartilage, fat, muscle, blood vessels, or other connective or supportive tissue. SARDANAS (9) SARDINES (9) [noun] Any one of several species of small herring which are commonly preserved in olive oil or in tins for food, especially the pilchard, or European sardine Sardina pilchardus (syn. Clupea pilchardus). The California sardine Sardinops sagax (syn. Clupea sagax) is similar. The American sardines of the Atlantic coast are mostly the young of the Atlantic herring and of the menhaden. | [noun] Carnelian | [noun] Someone packed or crammed into a small space. SARDONIC (11) [adjective] Scornfully mocking or cynical. | [adjective] Disdainfully or ironically humorous. SARDONYX (19) [noun] A gemstone having bands of red sard; a variety of onyx or chalcedony. | [noun] A tincture of sanguine colour when the blazoning is done by precious stones. SARGASSO (9) [noun] A brown alga, of the genus Sargassum, that forms large, floating masses. | [noun] Also Sargasso: a confused, tangled mass or situation. | [noun] A part of an ocean or sea characterized by floating masses of sargassos, like the Sargasso Sea. SARKIEST (12) [adjective] Sarcastic SARMENTA (10) SARMENTS (10) SARODIST (9) SARSENET (8) [noun] A very fine and soft silk ribbon woven in a plain weave with a fine warp and higher density weft. Now chiefly used for linings. SARTORII (8) [noun] A long, thin muscle that runs down the length of the thigh; the longest muscle in the human body. 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. SASHIMIS (13) SASSIEST (8) [adjective] Bold and spirited, cheeky, impudent, saucy. | [adjective] Somewhat sexy and provocative. | [adjective] Lively, vigorous. SASSWOOD (12) SASTRUGA (9) SASTRUGI (9) [noun] Any of a series of long, wavelike ridges or grooves formed on a snow surface by the wind, especially in polar plains, and surfaces of ice covered lakes/seas. These dunes of snow may be blown across the plains like wind-driven waves. SATANISM (10) [noun] Worship of Satan (usually synonymous with "the Devil"). | [noun] A profession, philosophy, or ideological construct featuring a positive, admirable, or useful association to the figure, character or entity known as 'Satan'; or, featuring opposition to all morality and the procurement of what is wanted regardless of the consequences concerning others. | [noun] LaVeyan Satanism. SATANIST (8) SATCHELS (13) [noun] A bag or case with one or two shoulder straps, especially used to carry books etc. SATIABLE (10) [adjective] Capable of being sated, satisfiable. SATIABLY (13) 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 SATIATES (8) [verb] To fill to satisfaction; to satisfy. | [verb] To satisfy to excess. To fill to satiety. SATINETS (8) [noun] A faux satin usually made of synthetic fiber or cotton. SATINPOD (11) SATIRISE (8) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATIRIST (8) [noun] A person who writes satire. SATIRIZE (17) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATSUMAS (10) [noun] A seedless and easy-peeling cultivar of mandarin orange of Japanese origin; Citrus unshiu. SATURANT (8) SATURATE (8) [noun] Something saturated, especially a saturated fat. | [verb] To cause to become completely impregnated, or soaked (especially with a liquid). | [verb] To fill to excess. SATYRIDS (12) [noun] Any butterfly of the nymphalid subfamily Satyrinae, formerly the family Satyridae. SAUCEBOX (19) SAUCEPAN (12) [noun] A deep cooking vessel with a handle and sometimes a lid; used for boiling, stewing and making sauces. SAUCIEST (10) [adjective] Similar to sauce; having the consistency or texture of sauce. | [adjective] Impertinent or disrespectful, often in a manner that is regarded as entertaining or amusing; smart. | [adjective] Impudently bold; pert. SAUNTERS (8) [noun] A leisurely walk or stroll. | [noun] A leisurely pace. | [noun] A place for sauntering or strolling. SAURIANS (8) [noun] (properly) A reptile of the suborder Sauria. | [noun] (popularly) Any large reptilian animal, including crocodiles and reptilian aliens. | [noun] A lizardlike person. SAUROPOD (11) [noun] A member of the Sauropoda suborder of dinosaurs SAUSAGES (9) [noun] A food made of ground meat (or meat substitute) and seasoning, packed in a section of the animal's intestine, or in a similarly cylindrical shaped synthetic casing; a length of this food. | [noun] A sausage-shaped thing. | [noun] Penis. SAUTEING (9) [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. SAUTERNE (8) SAUTOIRE (8) SAUTOIRS (8) [noun] A ribbon, chain, scarf, or the like, tied around the neck in such a manner that the ends cross over each other. | [noun] A chain to which a pendant is attached, worn around the neck. SAVAGELY (15) [adverb] In a wild, uncontrolled, or savage manner. SAVAGERY (15) [noun] Savage or brutal behaviour; barbarity. | [noun] A violent act of cruelty. | [noun] Savages collectively; the world of savages. SAVAGEST (12) SAVAGING (13) [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. SAVAGISM (14) SAVANNAH (14) [noun] A tropical grassland with scattered trees SAVANNAS (11) [noun] A tropical grassland with scattered trees SAVARINS (11) [noun] A type of leavened cake often drizzled with liquor SAVEABLE (13) SAVELOYS (14) [noun] A seasoned and smoked pork sausage, normally purchased ready-cooked. SAVINGLY (15) SAVIOURS (11) [noun] A person who saves someone, rescues another from harm. | [noun] A child who is born to provide an organ or cell transplant to a sibling who has an otherwise fatal disease (used in combination, with "sibling", "baby", "child", "brother", "sister", etc.) SAVORERS (11) SAVORIER (11) SAVORIES (11) [noun] A savory snack. | [noun] Any of several Mediterranean herbs, of the genus Satureja, grown as culinary flavourings. | [noun] The leaves of these plants used as a flavouring. SAVORILY (14) SAVORING (12) [noun] The act by which something is savored. | [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. | [verb] To appreciate, enjoy or relish something. SAVOROUS (11) SAVOURED (12) [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. | [verb] To appreciate, enjoy or relish something. | [verb] To season. SAVOURER (11) SAVVIEST (14) [adjective] Shrewd, well-informed and perceptive. SAVVYING (18) [verb] To understand. SAWBILLS (13) [noun] The red-breasted merganser. SAWBONES (13) [noun] A surgeon. SAWBUCKS (19) [noun] A framework for holding wood so that it can be sawed; a sawhorse | [noun] A ten-dollar bill SAWDUSTS (12) SAWFLIES (14) [noun] Any of various flying insects of the suborder Symphyta whose ovipositor is long and often serrated and is used to cut into plants to lay eggs. SAWHORSE (14) [noun] A structure with a crosspiece used to support timber or other material for working. SAWMILLS (13) [noun] A machine, building or company used for cutting (milling) lumber. SAWTEETH (14) SAWTOOTH (14) [noun] (plural "sawteeth") A cutting bit of a saw. | [noun] (plural "sawtooths") A sawtooth wave. | [noun] (plural "sawtooths") Any of various pierid butterflies of the genus Prioneris. SAXATILE (15) [adjective] Of or relating to rocks; living among rocks. SAXHORNS (18) [noun] Any of a group of similar brass instruments, resembling a bugle in shape, but with valves SAXONIES (15) SAXTUBAS (17) SAYONARA (11) [noun] An utterance of sayonara, the wishing of farewell to someone. | [interjection] (especially used when referring to Japan) Goodbye, adieu. SCABBARD (15) [noun] The sheath of a sword. | [verb] To put an object (especially a sword) into its scabbard. SCABBIER (14) [adjective] Affected with scabs; full of scabs. | [adjective] Diseased with the scab, or mange; mangy. | [adjective] Having a blotched, uneven appearance. SCABBILY (17) SCABBING (15) [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). SCABBLED (15) SCABBLES (14) SCABIOSA (12) SCABIOUS (12) [adjective] Having scabs | [adjective] Of or pertaining to scabies | [noun] Any of various herbaceous plants of the genus Scabiosa. SCABLAND (13) SCABLIKE (16) SCABROUS (12) [adjective] Covered with scales or scabs; hence, very coarse or rough. | [adjective] Disgusting, repellent. | [adjective] Of music, writing, etc.: lacking refinement; unmelodious, unmusical. 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. SCALABLE (12) [adjective] Capable of being climbed. | [adjective] Able to be changed in scale; resizeable. | [adjective] , (logistics), Able to greatly increase in capacity, with relative ease. SCALABLY (15) SCALADES (11) SCALADOS (11) SCALAGES (11) SCALARES (10) SCALAWAG (14) [noun] A scrawny cow. | [noun] A rascal. | [noun] Any white Southerner who supported the federal plan of Reconstruction after the American Civil War or who joined with the black freedmen and the carpetbaggers in support of Republican Party policies. SCALDING (12) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. | [noun] An instance of scalding: a burn. | [noun] 3,5-methoxy-4-ethoxyphenethylamine, a psychedelic drug and entheogen of the phenethylamine class. SCALENUS (10) [noun] Any of several muscles extending from the neck to the first and second ribs. | [noun] A scalene triangle. SCALEPAN (12) SCALEUPS (12) [noun] The act or result of scaling up. SCALIEST (10) [adjective] Covered or abounding with scales. | [adjective] Composed of scales lying over each other. | [adjective] Resembling scales, laminae, or layers. SCALLION (10) [noun] A spring onion, Allium fistulosum. | [noun] Any of various similar members of the genus Allium. | [noun] Any onion that lacks a fully developed bulb. SCALLOPS (12) [noun] Any of various marine bivalve molluscs of the family Pectinidae which are free-swimming. | [noun] One of a series of curves, forming an edge similar to a scallop shell. | [noun] A fillet of meat, escalope. SCALPELS (12) [noun] A small straight knife with a very sharp blade used for surgery, dissection and craftwork. SCALPERS (12) [noun] One who scalps, or removes the scalp of another. | [noun] One who scalps tickets to popular entertainment events: buying them in advance and then selling them (e.g. online or just outside the venue of the event), often at inflated prices. | [noun] A person on an open outcry exchange trading floor who buys and sells rapidly for his or her 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). SCALPING (13) [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). | [noun] The action by which someone is scalped. SCAMMING (15) [verb] To defraud or embezzle. SCAMMONY (17) [noun] Convolvulus scammonia, a twining perennial bindweed native to the eastern part of the Mediterranean basin, whose juice has been used in medicine as scammonium. | [noun] The cathartic gum resin obtained from this plant. SCAMPERS (14) [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. SCAMPIES (14) SCAMPING (15) [verb] To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion. SCAMPISH (17) SCANDALS (11) [noun] An incident or event that disgraces or damages the reputation of the persons or organization involved. | [noun] Damage to one's reputation. | [noun] Widespread moral outrage, indignation, as over an offence to decency. SCANDENT (11) [adjective] Climbing, without obvious morphological adaptations. SCANDIAS (11) SCANDIUM (13) [noun] A metallic chemical element, atomic number 21, obtained from some uranium ores; it is a transition element. SCANNERS (10) [noun] A device which scans documents in order to convert them to a digital medium. | [noun] A radio receiver which iterates through a sequence of frequencies to detect signal. | [noun] A device which uses radiation (ultrasound, X-ray, etc.) to generate images of tissue or surfaces for diagnostic purposes. SCANNING (11) [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. SCANSION (10) [noun] The rhythm or meter of a line or verse. | [noun] The act of analysing the meter of poetry. | [verb] (of text) Put into a rhythmic form or meter. SCANTEST (10) SCANTIER (10) [adjective] Somewhat less than is needed in amplitude or extent. | [adjective] Sparing; niggardly; parsimonious; stingy. SCANTIES (10) [noun] Small panties; skimpy underwear for a woman or girl. SCANTILY (13) [adverb] In a scanty manner; not fully; not plentifully; sparingly SCANTING (11) [verb] To limit in amount or share; to stint. | [verb] To fail, or become less; to scantle. SCAPHOID (16) [noun] Carpal navicular bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a boat, navicular. SCAPULAE (12) [noun] Either of the two large, flat, bones forming the back of the shoulder. SCAPULAR (12) [noun] A short cloak worn around the shoulders, adopted as part of the uniform of various religious orders, later often with an embroidered image of a saint. | [noun] One of a special group of feathers which arise from each of the scapular regions and lie along the sides of the back. | [noun] A bandage passing over the shoulder to support it, or to retain another bandage in place. SCAPULAS (12) [noun] Either of the two large, flat, bones forming the back of the shoulder. SCARCELY (15) [adverb] (modal) Probably not. | [adverb] (modal) Certainly not. | [adverb] (degree) Almost not at all; by a small margin. SCARCEST (12) [adjective] Uncommon, rare; difficult to find; insufficient to meet a demand. | [adjective] Scantily supplied (with); deficient (in); used with of. SCARCITY (15) [noun] The condition of something being scarce or deficient | [noun] An inadequate amount of something; a shortage SCARFING (14) [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. SCARFPIN (15) SCARIEST (10) [adjective] Causing or able to cause fright. | [adjective] Uncannily striking or surprising. | [adjective] Subject to sudden alarm; easily frightened. SCARIOSE (10) SCARIOUS (10) SCARLESS (10) SCARLETS (10) SCARPERS (12) [verb] To run away; to flee; to escape. SCARPHED (16) SCARPING (13) [verb] (earth science) to cut, scrape, erode, or otherwise make into a scarp or escarpment | [noun] A scarp (cliff caused by erosion). SCARRIER (10) SCARRING (11) [verb] To mark the skin permanently. | [verb] To form a scar. | [verb] To affect deeply in a traumatic manner. SCARTING (11) SCATBACK (18) SCATHING (14) [verb] To injure or harm. | [verb] To blast; scorch; wither. | [adjective] Harshly or bitterly critical; vitriolic SCATTERS (10) [noun] The act of scattering or dispersing. | [noun] A collection of dispersed objects. | [verb] To (cause to) separate and go in different directions; to disperse. SCATTIER (10) [adjective] Scatterbrained; flighty. SCATTING (11) [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. SCAUPERS (12) [noun] A tool with a semicircular edge, used by engravers to clear away the spaces between the lines of an engraving. SCAVENGE (14) [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 SCENARIO (10) [noun] An outline of the plot of a dramatic or literary work. | [noun] A screenplay itself, or an outline or a treatment of it. | [noun] An outline or model of an expected or supposed sequence of events. SCENDING (12) [verb] To heave upward. SCENICAL (12) SCENTING (11) [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. SCEPTERS (12) [noun] An ornamental staff held by a ruling monarch as a symbol of power. SCEPTICS (14) [noun] Someone who habitually doubts beliefs and claims presented as accepted by others, requiring strong evidence before accepting any belief or claim. | [noun] Someone undecided as to what is true. | [noun] A type of agnostic; someone skeptical towards religion. SCEPTRAL (12) SCEPTRED (13) SCEPTRES (12) [noun] An ornamental staff held by a ruling monarch as a symbol of power. SCHAPPES (17) SCHEDULE (14) [noun] A slip of paper; a short note. | [noun] A written or printed table of information, often forming an annex or appendix to a statute or other regulatory instrument, or to a legal contract. | [noun] A serial record of items, systematically arranged. SCHEMATA (15) [noun] An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind (for example, a body schema). | [noun] A formal description of the structure of a database: the names of the tables, the names of the columns of each table, and the data type and other attributes of each column. | [noun] (markup languages) A formal description of data, data types, and data file structures, such as XML schemas for XML files. SCHEMERS (15) [noun] One who plots or schemes, who formulates plans. | [noun] One who is given to scheming. SCHEMING (16) [verb] To plot, or contrive a plan. | [verb] To plan; to contrive. | [adjective] Tending to scheme; forming underhand plots. | [noun] The activity or practice of making secret or underhanded plans. SCHERZOS (22) [noun] A piece of music or a movement from a larger piece such as a symphony; especially, a piece of music played in a playful manner. SCHILLER (13) SCHIZIER (22) SCHIZOID (23) [noun] Someone with schizoid personality disorder | [noun] Someone with schizophrenia | [adjective] Characterized by social withdrawal and emotional coldness or flattened affectivity. SCHIZONT (22) [noun] A cell that divides by schizogony. SCHLEPPS (17) [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. SCHLIERE (13) SCHLOCKS (19) SCHLOCKY (22) SCHLUMPS (17) [noun] Someone who is lazy, slovenly or dull-looking. | [verb] To move in a heavy, lazy or slovenly way. SCHMALTZ (24) [noun] Liquid chicken fat. | [noun] Excessively sentimental art or music. SCHMALZY (27) SCHMEARS (15) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMEERS (15) [noun] A spread that goes on a bagel. | [noun] A batch of things that go together. | [noun] An aggregate. SCHMELZE (24) SCHMOOSE (15) SCHMOOZE (24) [noun] A casual conversation, especially one held in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. | [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHMUCKS (21) [noun] A jerk; a person who is unlikable, detestable, or contemptible because he or she is stupid, foolish, clumsy, oafish, inept, malicious, or unpleasant. | [noun] A deplorable, pitiful person; often in the form poor schmuck. SCHNAPPS (17) [noun] A type of distilled alcoholic beverage, often with a herbal or fruit flavoring, typically drunk neat as apéritif or digestif. | [noun] A serving of this beverage. SCHNECKE (19) SCHNOOKS (17) [noun] A person who is easily taken advantage of. SCHOLARS (13) [noun] A student; one who studies at school or college, typically having a scholarship. | [noun] A specialist in a particular branch of knowledge. | [noun] A learned person; a bookman. SCHOLIUM (15) [noun] A note added to a text as an explanation, criticism or commentary | [noun] A note added to a proof as amplification 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. SCHOONER (13) [noun] A sailing ship with two or more masts, all with fore-and-aft sails; if two masted, having a foremast and a mainmast. | [noun] A glass of beer, of a size which varies between states (Wikipedia). | [noun] A large goblet or drinking glass, used for lager or ale (Wikipedia). SCHTICKS (19) [noun] A generally humorous routine | [noun] A characteristic trait or theme, especially in the way people or media present themselves. | [noun] A gimmick. SCHUSSED (14) [verb] To ski a schuss. SCHUSSER (13) SCHUSSES (13) [noun] A straight run downhill | [verb] To ski a schuss. SCIAENID (11) [noun] Any fish belonging to the family Sciaenidae. SCIATICA (12) [noun] Neuralgia of the sciatic nerve, characterised by pain radiating down through the buttocks and the back of the thigh. SCIATICS (12) SCIENCES (12) [noun] A particular discipline or branch of learning, especially one dealing with measurable or systematic principles rather than intuition or natural ability. | [noun] Specifically the natural sciences. | [noun] Knowledge gained through study or practice; mastery of a particular discipline or area. SCILICET (12) [adverb] Namely, to wit, as follows SCIMETAR (12) SCIMITAR (12) [noun] A sword of Persian origin that features a curved blade. | [noun] A long-handled billhook. | [verb] To strike or slice with, or as if with, a scimitar. SCIMITER (12) SCINCOID (13) SCIOLISM (12) SCIOLIST (10) [noun] One who exhibits only superficial knowledge; a self-proclaimed expert with little real understanding. SCIROCCO (14) [noun] A hot and often strong southerly to southeasterly wind on the Mediterranean that originates in the Sahara and adjacent North African regions. | [noun] A draft of hot air from an artificial source of heat. SCIRRHUS (13) [noun] An indurated organ or part, especially a gland. | [noun] A cancerous tumour which is hard, translucent, of a gray or bluish color, and emits a creaking sound when incised. SCISSILE (10) [adjective] Readily cut or split | [adjective] (of a bond) easily broken SCISSION (10) [noun] The act of division, separation, cutting or severing | [noun] Cleavage SCISSORS (10) [noun] One blade on a pair of scissors. | [noun] Scissors. | [noun] (noun adjunct) Used in certain noun phrases to denote a thing resembling the action of scissors, as scissor kick, scissor hold (wrestling), scissor jack. SCISSURE (10) SCIURIDS (11) SCIURINE (10) SCIUROID (11) SCLAFFED (17) SCLAFFER (16) SCLEREID (11) SCLERITE (10) [noun] A hardened body part, especially in arthropod exoskeletons. SCLEROID (11) [adjective] Having a hard texture. SCLEROMA (12) [noun] Induration of the tissues | [noun] Rhinoscleroma SCLEROSE (10) SCLEROUS (10) [adjective] Hard; indurated; sclerotic SCOFFERS (16) SCOFFING (17) [verb] To jeer; to laugh with contempt and derision. | [verb] To mock; to treat with scorn. | [verb] To eat food quickly. SCOFFLAW (19) [noun] One who habitually violates minor laws or fails to answer trivial court summonses (such as parking tickets). SCOLDERS (11) SCOLDING (12) [verb] To burn with hot liquid. | [verb] To heat almost to boiling. | [verb] To rebuke angrily. SCOLECES (12) SCOLICES (12) [noun] The structure at the front end of a tapeworm which, in the adult, has suckers and hooks by which it attaches itself to a host. SCOLIOMA (12) SCOLLOPS (12) [noun] Any of various marine bivalve molluscs of the family Pectinidae which are free-swimming. | [noun] One of a series of curves, forming an edge similar to a scallop shell. | [noun] A fillet of meat, escalope. SCONCING (13) SCOOPERS (12) SCOOPFUL (15) SCOOPING (13) [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). SCOOTERS (10) [noun] A kick scooter or push scooter; a human-powered land vehicle with a handlebar, deck and wheels that is propelled by a rider pushing off the ground. | [noun] A electric version of the kick scooter. | [noun] A motorscooter; a small motorcycle or moped with a step-through frame. SCOOTING (11) [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. SCOPULAE (12) [noun] A dense tuft of hair, as on the legs of certain insects. SCOPULAS (12) 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 SCORCHER (15) [noun] One who, or that which, scorches. | [noun] A very hot day. | [noun] A very good goal, notably made with a very hard shot. SCORCHES (15) [noun] A slight or surface burn. | [noun] A discolouration caused by heat. | [noun] Brown discoloration on the leaves of plants caused by heat, lack of water or by fungi. SCOREPAD (13) SCORNERS (10) [noun] One who scorns. SCORNFUL (13) [adjective] Showing scorn or disrespect; contemptuous. SCORNING (11) [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. SCORPION (12) [noun] Any of various arachnids of the order Scorpiones, related to the spiders, characterised by two large front pincers and a curved tail with a venomous sting in the end. | [noun] An ancient military engine for hurling stones and other missiles. | [noun] A very spiteful or vindictive person. 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. SCOTCHES (15) [noun] (as a plural noun, the Scotch) The people of Scotland. | [noun] Whisky distilled in Scotland, especially from malted barley. | [noun] Any variety of Scotch. SCOTOMAS (12) [noun] An area of impaired or lost vision within a field of vision otherwise in a good (or at least healthy) state. SCOTOPIA (12) SCOTOPIC (14) [adjective] Relating to or denoting vision in dim light, believed to involve chiefly the rods of the retina. SCOTTIES (10) SCOURERS (10) SCOURGED (12) [verb] To strike with a scourge; to flog. SCOURGER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, scourges. SCOURGES (11) [noun] A source of persistent trouble such as pestilence that causes pain and suffering or widespread destruction. | [noun] A means to inflict such pain or destruction. | [noun] A whip, often of leather. SCOURING (11) [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. SCOUTERS (10) [noun] A stoneworker who removes large projections by boring slanting or transverse holes and using wedges etc. to split the stone. SCOUTHER (13) SCOUTING (11) [noun] The act of one who scouts. | [noun] The Scout Movement. | [noun] The activities of boy scouts and girl scouts. SCOWDERS (14) SCOWLERS (13) SCOWLING (14) [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. SCRABBLE (14) [noun] A scramble. | [verb] To scrape or scratch powerfully with hands or claws. | [verb] To gather hastily. SCRABBLY (17) SCRAGGED (13) [adjective] Rough with irregular points or a broken surface; scraggy. | [adjective] Lean and rough; scraggy. SCRAGGLY (15) [adjective] Rough, scruffy, or unkempt. | [adjective] Jagged or uneven; scraggy. SCRAICHS (15) SCRAIGHS (14) SCRAMBLE (14) [noun] A rush or hurry, especially making use of the limbs against a surface. | [noun] An emergency defensive air force mission to intercept attacking enemy aircraft. | [noun] A motocross race. SCRAMJET (19) [noun] A jet engine capable of propelling an aircraft at hypersonic speeds; combustion of the fuel/air mixture occurs at supersonic speeds. 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. SCRANNEL (10) SCRAPERS (12) [noun] An instrument with which anything is scraped. | [noun] One who scrapes horns. | [noun] One who plays a violin incompetently, producing cacophonous sounds. SCRAPIES (12) SCRAPING (13) [noun] The sound or action of something being scraped. | [noun] What has been removed when something has been scraped. | [verb] To draw (an object, especially a sharp or angular one), along (something) while exerting pressure. SCRAPPED (15) [verb] To discard. | [verb] (of a project or plan) To stop working on indefinitely. | [verb] To scrapbook; to create scrapbooks. SCRAPPER (14) SCRAPPLE (14) [noun] A tool for scraping. | [verb] To scrape or grub around. | [noun] (Blue Ridge) A mush of pork scraps, particularly head parts, and cornmeal or flour, which is boiled and poured into a mold, where the rendered gelatinous broth from cooking jells the mixture into a loaf. SCRATCHY (18) [adjective] Characterized by scratches. | [adjective] (chiefly of a sore throat) Annoying, irritating, itchy. | [adjective] (of an analogue radio transmission) Noisy, lossy; marred by white noise or static as a result of poor or low signal, interference or unfavourable atmospheric conditions. SCRAWLED (14) [verb] To write something hastily or illegibly. | [verb] To write in an irregular or illegible manner. | [verb] To write unskilfully and inelegantly. SCRAWLER (13) 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. SCREAMER (12) [noun] One who screams; one who shouts; one who sings harshly. | [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Anhimidae, endemic to South America, being large, bulky birds with a small downy head, long legs and large feet. | [noun] A healthy, vigorous animal. SCREECHY (18) 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. SCREENER (10) SCREWERS (13) SCREWIER (13) [adjective] Crazy; silly; ridiculous | [adjective] Tipsy; slightly drunk. | [adjective] Exacting; extortionate; close. SCREWING (14) [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. SCREWUPS (15) [noun] A substantial mistake, usually causing problems for more people than just the person or group who made it. | [noun] A person who often makes substantial mistakes; a bungler. | [noun] A person who is mentally or emotionally damaged. SCRIBBLE (14) [noun] Careless, hasty writing, doodle or drawing | [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. SCRIBERS (12) [noun] A sharp-pointed tool, used by joiners for drawing lines; a marking awl. SCRIBING (13) [verb] To write. | [verb] To write, engrave, or mark upon; to inscribe. | [verb] To record. SCRIEVED (14) SCRIEVES (13) SCRIMPED (15) [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. | [verb] To be frugal. SCRIMPER (14) SCRIMPIT (14) SCRIPTED (13) [verb] To make or write a script. | [adjective] Planned. SCRIPTER (12) SCRIVING (14) SCROFULA (13) [noun] A form of tuberculosis, most common in children, tending to cause enlarged and degenerated lymph nodes, especially in the neck, and often chronic, intractable skin inflammation as well. 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. SCROOGES (11) SCROOPED (13) SCROOTCH (15) SCROTUMS (12) [noun] The bag of skin and muscle that contains the testicles in mammals. SCROUGED (12) SCROUGES (11) SCROUNGE (11) [noun] Someone who scrounges; a scrounger. | [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. SCROUNGY (14) 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 SCRUBBER (14) [noun] A person or appliance that cleans floors or similar by scrubbing. | [noun] A device that removes impurities from gases. | [noun] A machine for washing leather after the tanpit. 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. SCRUPLES (12) [noun] A weight of 1/288 of a pound, that is, twenty grains or one third of a dram, about 1.3 grams (symbol: ℈). | [noun] (by extension) A very small quantity; a particle. | [noun] A doubt or uncertainty concerning a matter of fact; intellectual perplexity. SCRUTINY (13) [noun] Intense study of someone or something. | [noun] Thorough inspection of a situation or a case. | [noun] An examination of catechumens, in the last week of Lent, who were to receive baptism on Easter Day. SCUDDING (13) [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. SCUFFING (17) [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. 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. SCUFFLER (16) SCUFFLES (16) [noun] A rough, disorderly fight or struggle at close quarters. | [noun] A child's pinafore or bib. | [verb] To fight or struggle confusedly at close quarters. SCULKERS (14) SCULKING (15) SCULLERS (10) [noun] One who sculls; an athlete who participates in sculling races. | [noun] A boat rowed by one person with two sculls, or short oars. SCULLERY (13) [noun] A small room, next to a kitchen, where washing up and other domestic chores are done. SCULLING (11) [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. SCULLION (10) [noun] A servant of the lower classes. | [noun] A low, base person. | [noun] A spring onion, Allium fistulosum. SCULPING (13) [verb] (sometimes humorous) To sculpture; to carve or engrave. | [verb] To flay. SCULPINS (12) [noun] A small fish of the family Cottidae, usually lacking scales. Often found on river bottoms and in tidal pools. | [noun] A person who makes mischief. SCULPTED (13) [verb] To form by sculpture. | [verb] To work as a sculptor. | [adjective] Well shaped, as a good sculpture is. SCULPTOR (12) [noun] A person who sculpts; an artist who produces sculpture. SCUMBAGS (15) [noun] Condom | [noun] (mildly) sleazy, disreputable or despicable person; lowlife SCUMBLED (15) [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. SCUMBLES (14) [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. SCUMLIKE (16) SCUMMERS (14) [noun] An instrument for taking off scum | [noun] A supporter of Southampton F.C.. | [noun] One who engages in scumming. SCUMMIER (14) SCUMMING (15) [noun] The accumulation of sticky ink on a plate. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) That which is scummed off; skimmings; scum. | [noun] The strategy of collecting easy rewards in unchallenging areas, e.g. when a high-level character visits levels suitable for low-level characters in roguelike games. SCUNNERS (10) [noun] Dislike or aversion. | [noun] (North Yorkshire) An urban youth usually associated with trouble or petty crime; a young chav. | [verb] To be sick of. SCUPPAUG (15) SCUPPERS (14) [noun] A drainage hole on the deck of a ship. | [noun] A similar opening in a wall or parapet that allows water to drain from a roof. | [verb] Thwart or destroy, especially something belonging or pertaining to another; compare scuttle. SCURFIER (13) SCURRIED (11) [verb] To run with quick light steps, to scamper. SCURRIES (10) [verb] To run with quick light steps, to scamper. SCURRILE (10) SCURVIER (13) [adjective] Covered or affected with scurf or scabs; scabby; scurfy; specifically, diseased with the scurvy. | [adjective] Contemptible, despicable, low, disgustingly mean. SCURVIES (13) SCURVILY (16) SCUTAGES (11) SCUTCHED (16) [verb] To beat or whip; to drub. | [verb] To separate the woody fibre from (flax, hemp, etc.) by beating; to swingle. SCUTCHER (15) SCUTCHES (15) [noun] An implement used to separate the fibres of flax by beating them. | [noun] The woody fibre of flax; the refuse of scutched flax. | [verb] To beat or whip; to drub. SCUTELLA (10) [noun] A scutellum. | [noun] Any of several shield-shaped structures in insects, grasses etc SCUTTERS (10) [noun] Thin excrement. | [noun] A hasty run. | [verb] To void thin excrement. 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. SCUTTLES (10) [noun] A container like an open bucket (usually to hold and carry coal). | [noun] A broad, shallow basket. | [noun] A dish, platter or a trencher. SCUZZIER (28) [adjective] Dirty or grimy. | [adjective] Disreputable; sleazy. SCYPHATE (18) SCYTHING (17) [verb] To use a scythe. | [verb] To cut with a scythe. | [verb] To cut off as with a scythe; to mow. SEABEACH (15) SEABIRDS (11) [noun] Any bird that spends most of its time in coastal waters or over the oceans. SEABOARD (11) [noun] The area bordering the sea; a coastline; a sealine. SEABOOTS (10) SEABORNE (10) [adjective] Transported on the sea or ocean, especially by floating on the sea. SEACOAST (10) [noun] The coastal land bordering a sea or ocean SEACOCKS (16) [noun] A valve in the hull of a vessel used to let in water, either to clean the bilges, flood a ballast tank, or scuttle the vessel SEACRAFT (13) SEADROME (11) SEAFARER (11) [noun] A sailor or mariner. | [noun] One who travels by sea. SEAFLOOR (11) SEAFOODS (12) [noun] Fish, shellfish, seaweed, and other edible aquatic life. SEAFOWLS (14) SEAFRONT (11) [noun] The seashore, the coast. | [noun] The waterfront of a seaside town. SEAGOING (10) [adjective] Travelling out to sea. | [adjective] Made for, or used on the high seas. | [adjective] Fit for sailing on the high seas. SEAGULLS (9) [noun] Any of several white, often dark backed birds of the family Laridae having long pointed wings and short legs. | [noun] The symbol ̼ , which combines under a letter as a sort of accent. | [noun] A fan or member of Brighton and Hove Albion Football Club. SEALABLE (10) SEALANTS (8) [noun] Any material used to seal a surface so as to prevent passage of a fluid. | [noun] A mixture of polymers, fillers, and pigments used to fill and seal joints where moderate movement is expected. SEALLIKE (12) SEALSKIN (12) [noun] A type of fabric made from the skin of seals. | [noun] Any fabric manufactured to resemble sealskin. | [noun] An item of clothing made from sealskin (whether real or imitation). SEAMANLY (13) SEAMARKS (14) [noun] Any elevated object on land which serves as a guide to mariners, such as a hill or steeple. | [noun] A beacon, buoy, etc. placed in the sea to aid navigation. SEAMIEST (10) [adjective] Sordid, squalid or corrupt. | [adjective] Having or showing a seam. SEAMLESS (10) [adjective] Having no seams. | [adjective] Without interruption; coherent SEAMLIKE (14) SEAMOUNT (10) [noun] A mountain that rises from the floor of the ocean and does not breach the water's surface. SEAMSTER (10) SEAPIECE (12) SEAPLANE (10) [noun] Any aircraft capable of taking off from, and alighting on the surface of water. SEAPORTS (10) [noun] A town or harbour with facilities for seagoing ships to dock and take on or discharge cargo. SEAQUAKE (21) [noun] A hydrostatic pressure disturbance caused by an earthquake or volcano in the seabed. SEARCHED (14) [verb] To look in (a place) for something. | [verb] (followed by "for") To look thoroughly. | [verb] To look for, seek. SEARCHER (13) SEARCHES (13) [noun] An attempt to find something. | [noun] The act of searching in general. | [verb] To look in (a place) for something. SEAROBIN (10) SEASCAPE (12) [noun] A piece of art that depicts the sea or shoreline. SEASCOUT (10) SEASHELL (11) [noun] The empty shell of a marine mollusk | [noun] A very light pink colour, like that of some seashells. | [adjective] Of a very light pink colour, like that of some seashell. SEASHORE (11) [noun] The coastal land bordering a sea or an ocean. | [noun] The foreshore, the strip of land between low water and high water. SEASIDES (9) [noun] The area by and around the sea; including the beach, promenade or cliffs SEASONAL (8) [noun] Anything that is seasonal, such as a financial trend, a product for sale, or an employee. | [adjective] Of, related to or reliant on a season or period of the year, especially with regard to weather characteristics. 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. SEASONER (8) SEATINGS (9) SEATLESS (8) SEATMATE (10) SEATRAIN (8) SEATWORK (15) SEAWALLS (11) [noun] A coastal defence in the form of a wall or an embankment. SEAWANTS (11) SEAWARDS (12) [adverb] Towards the sea. SEAWARES (11) SEAWATER (11) [noun] The saltwater of a sea or ocean. | [adjective] Consisting of seawater. | [adjective] Associated in some way with seawater, or intended for dealing with seawater. SEAWEEDS (12) [noun] Any of numerous marine plants and algae, such as a kelp. SECALOSE (10) SECANTLY (13) SECATEUR (10) SECEDERS (11) SECEDING (12) [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. 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. SECLUDES (11) [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. 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. SECONDER (11) SECONDES (11) [noun] The second defensive position, with the sword hand held at waist height, with the hand held in a prone position and the tip of the sword below the level of the guard. SECONDLY (14) [adverb] In the second place. 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. SECRETER (10) SECRETES (10) [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. | [verb] To exude or yield. | [verb] To conceal. SECRETIN (10) [noun] A peptide hormone, secreted by the duodenum, that serves to regulate its acidity SECRETLY (13) [adverb] In secret, covertly. SECRETOR (10) [noun] A person who or animal that secretes (emits a bodily fluid). | [noun] A person who secretes comparatively large quantities of blood-group antigens in their bodily fluids. | [noun] A cell, tissue or organ (such as a gland) that produces a bodily secretion. SECTIONS (10) [noun] A cutting; a part cut out from the rest of something. | [noun] A part, piece, subdivision of anything. | [noun] A part of a document. SECTORAL (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a sector (all senses). SECTORED (11) SECULARS (10) [noun] A secular ecclesiastic, or one not bound by monastic rules. | [noun] A church official whose functions are confined to the vocal department of the choir. | [noun] A layman, as distinguished from a clergyman. SECUNDLY (14) SECUNDUM (13) SECURELY (13) [adverb] (manner) In a secure manner; without fear or apprehension; without danger SECURERS (10) SECUREST (10) SECURING (11) [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. SECURITY (13) [noun] The condition of not being threatened, especially physically, psychologically, emotionally, or financially. | [noun] Something that secures. | [noun] An organization or department responsible for providing security by enforcing laws, rules, and regulations as well as maintaining order. SEDATELY (12) SEDATEST (9) SEDATING (10) [verb] To calm or put (a person) to sleep using a sedative drug. | [verb] To make tranquil. SEDATION (9) [noun] The act of sedating, especially by use of sedatives. SEDATIVE (12) [noun] An agent or drug that sedates, having a calming or soothing effect, or inducing sleep. | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) Calming, soothing, inducing sleep, tranquilizing SEDERUNT (9) [noun] A formal meeting, especially of a judicial or ecclesiastical body. | [noun] Those people present at such a meeting. SEDGIEST (10) SEDILIUM (11) SEDIMENT (11) [noun] A collection of small particles, particularly dirt, that precipitates from a river or other body of water. | [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. SEDITION (9) [noun] Organized incitement of rebellion or civil disorder against authority or the state, usually by speech or writing. | [noun] Insurrection or rebellion. SEDUCERS (11) [noun] Someone who seduces, especially a man who seduces a woman SEDUCING (12) [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. SEDUCIVE (14) SEDULITY (12) SEDULOUS (9) [adjective] Of a person: diligent in application or pursuit; constant and persevering in business or in endeavours to effect a goal; steadily industrious. | [adjective] Of an activity: carried out with diligence. SEECATCH (15) SEEDBEDS (12) [noun] Ground prepared for the planting of seeds. | [noun] A place conducive to development and attainment. SEEDCAKE (15) SEEDCASE (11) SEEDIEST (9) [adjective] Full of seeds. | [adjective] Disreputable, run-down. | [adjective] Untidy; unkempt. SEEDLESS (9) [adjective] Not having (noticeable) seeds. SEEDLIKE (13) SEEDLING (10) [noun] A young plant grown from seed. | [noun] Any young plant, especially: SEEDPODS (12) SEEDSMAN (11) [noun] One who sows seeds. | [noun] A dealer in seed. SEEDSMEN (11) [noun] One who sows seeds. | [noun] A dealer in seed. SEEDTIME (11) [noun] The time to sow seeds. | [noun] A time for new development. SEEMINGS (11) [noun] Outward appearance. | [noun] Apprehension; judgement. SEEMLIER (10) [adjective] (of behavior) Appropriate; suited to the occasion or purpose; becoming. SEEPAGES (11) SEEPIEST (10) SEESAWED (12) [verb] To use a seesaw. | [verb] (by extension) To fluctuate. | [verb] To cause to move backward and forward in seesaw fashion. SEETHING (12) [verb] To boil. | [verb] (of a liquid) To boil vigorously. | [verb] (of a liquid) To foam in an agitated manner, as if boiling. SEGMENTS (11) [noun] A length of some object. | [noun] One of the parts into which any body naturally separates or is divided; a part divided or cut off; a section; a portion. | [noun] A portion. SEGUEING (10) [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. SEICENTO (10) SEIGNEUR (9) [noun] (history) A French feudal lord; a noble. | [noun] The hereditary feudal ruler of Sark. | [noun] A landowner in Canada; the holder of a seigneurie. SEIGNIOR (9) [noun] A feudal lord; a nobleman who held his lands by feudal grant; any lord (holder) of a manor | [noun] A title of respect, formerly corresponding (especially in France) approximately to Sir. SEIGNORY (12) SEISABLE (10) SEISINGS (9) SEISMISM (12) SEISURES (8) SEIZABLE (19) SEIZINGS (18) [noun] The act of grabbing or taking possession. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Something seized. | [noun] A type of lashing or binding by a small cord. SEIZURES (17) [noun] The act of taking possession, as by force or right of law. | [noun] A sudden attack or convulsion, (e.g. an epileptic seizure). | [noun] A sudden onset of pain or emotion. SELADANG (10) [noun] The Malayan gaur. SELAMLIK (14) SELCOUTH (13) SELDOMLY (14) [adverb] (sometimes proscribed) Seldom; rarely. 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. SELECTEE (10) [noun] A person who is selected. SELECTLY (13) SELECTOR (10) [noun] Someone or something which selects or chooses. | [noun] An administrator responsible for selecting which players will play for a side. | [noun] A matching expression in a stylesheet determining which elements in the markup are affected by a style. SELENATE (8) [noun] Any salt or ester of selenic acid | [verb] To react with a compound of selenium SELENIDE (9) [noun] Any compound in which selenium serves as an anion with an oxidation number of -2 | [noun] Any organic compound of general formula RSeR (R not = H) analogous to the ethers SELENITE (8) [noun] A soft, glassy form of gypsum (chemical formula CaSO4·2H2O). | [noun] The anion SeO32− derived from selenous acid; any salt or ester of selenous acid. SELENIUM (10) [noun] A nonmetallic chemical element (symbol Se) with an atomic number of 34, used mainly in glassmaking and pigments and as a semiconductor. | [noun] A single atom of this element. SELENOUS (8) SELFDOMS (14) SELFHEAL (14) [noun] A small, herbaceous European plant with blue-violet flowers from any species of genus Prunella. 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. SELFLESS (11) [adjective] Having, exhibiting or motivated by no concern for oneself but for others; unselfish. SELFNESS (11) [noun] The state, quality, or condition of self. | [noun] Personality. | [noun] Egotism. SELFSAME (13) [adjective] Precisely the same; the very same; identical. SELFWARD (15) SELLABLE (10) SELLOUTS (8) [noun] An action in which principles are compromised for financial gain. | [noun] A person who compromises his or her principles for financial gain. | [noun] The selling of an entire stock of something, especially tickets for an entertainment or sports event. SELTZERS (17) SELVAGED (13) SELVAGES (12) [noun] The edge of a woven fabric, where the weft (side-to-side) threads run around the warp (top to bottom) threads, creating a finished edge. | [noun] Any edge of fabric finished so as to prevent raveling. | [noun] The excess area of any printed or perforated sheet, such as the border on a sheet of postage stamps or the wide margins of an engraving. SELVEDGE (13) [noun] The edge of a woven fabric, where the weft (side-to-side) threads run around the warp (top to bottom) threads, creating a finished edge. | [noun] Any edge of fabric finished so as to prevent raveling. | [noun] The excess area of any printed or perforated sheet, such as the border on a sheet of postage stamps or the wide margins of an engraving. SEMANTIC (12) [noun] In such writing systems as the Chinese writing system, the portion of a phono-semantic character that provides an indication of its meaning; contrasted with phonetic. | [adjective] Of or relating to semantics or the meanings of words. | [adjective] (software design, of code) Reflecting intended structure and meaning. SEMESTER (10) [noun] Half of a school year or academic year such as fall or spring semester. | [noun] A period or term of six months. 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) SEMICOMA (14) SEMIDEAF (14) SEMIDOME (13) SEMIGALA (11) SEMIHARD (14) SEMIHIGH (17) SEMIHOBO (15) SEMIMATT (12) SEMIMUTE (12) SEMINARS (10) [noun] A class held for advanced studies in which students meet regularly to discuss original research, under the guidance of a professor. | [noun] A meeting held for the exchange of useful information by members of a common business community. SEMINARY (13) [noun] A theological school for the training of rabbis, priests, or ministers. | [noun] A private residential school for girls. | [noun] A class of religious education for youths ages 14–18 that accompanies normal secular education. SEMINUDE (11) SEMIOSES (10) SEMIOSIS (10) [noun] Any activity, conduct, or process that involves signs, including the production of meaning. SEMIOTIC (12) [adjective] Of or relating to semiotics or to semantics. | [adjective] Of or relating to the signs or symptoms of diseases. SEMIPROS (12) [noun] Semiprofessional. SEMISOFT (13) SEMITIST (10) SEMITONE (10) [noun] The musical interval equal (exactly or approximately) to half a tone or one-twelfth of an octave | [noun] Any of the pitches of the chromatic scale SEMIWILD (14) SEMOLINA (10) [noun] Coarse grains produced at an intermediate stage of wheat flour milling. | [noun] Such grains, usually from hard wheat, used in the preparation of pasta, couscous and various sweet dishes. | [noun] A soft dessert made by boiling a mixture of semolina, sugar and flavourings in milk. SEMPLICE (14) [adverb] (To be played) simply, without embellishments. SENARIUS (8) [noun] A verse having six metric feet. SENATORS (8) [noun] A member, normally elected, in the house or chamber of a legislature called a senate. The legislatures of the United States and Canada have senators. | [noun] A position in government held in ancient Rome by experienced, elder officials as advisors or consultants for younger, less experienced functionaries. | [noun] A member of the king's council. SENDABLE (11) SENDOFFS (15) [noun] A party for a person (i.e. a fellow employee) who is leaving; a farewell party. | [noun] A party to recognize the passing (death) of a friend and allow survivors to reminisce about the person's life. SENECIOS (10) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Senecio. SENHORAS (11) SENHORES (11) SENILELY (11) SENILITY (11) [noun] Senescence; the bodily and mental deterioration associated with old age. | [noun] The losing of memory and reason due to senescence. | [noun] An elderly, senile person. SENNIGHT (12) [noun] A period of seven nights; a week. | [adverb] After a sennight has passed. | [adverb] A sennight ago. SENOPIAS (10) SENORITA (8) [noun] A young, unmarried woman in or from a Hispanophone community. | [noun] A small species of wrasse, Oxyjulis californica. SENSATED (9) SENSATES (8) SENSEFUL (11) SENSIBLE (10) [noun] Sensation; sensibility. | [noun] That which impresses itself on the senses; anything perceptible. | [noun] That which has sensibility; a sensitive being. SENSIBLY (13) [adverb] In a sensible manner; in a way that shows good sense. | [adverb] In a way that can be sensed or noticed; perceptibly. SENSILLA (8) [noun] Any of several sensory organs in some arthropods SENSORIA (8) [noun] The entire sensory apparatus of an organism. | [noun] The central part of a nervous system that receives and coordinates all stimuli. | [noun] The brain or mind in relation to the senses. SENSUOUS (8) [adjective] Appealing to the senses, or to sensual gratification. | [adjective] Of or relating to the senses; sensory. SENTENCE (10) [noun] The decision or judgement of a jury or court; a verdict. | [noun] The judicial order for a punishment to be imposed on a person convicted of a crime. | [noun] A punishment imposed on a person convicted of a crime. SENTIENT (8) [noun] Lifeform with the capability to feel sensation, such as pain. | [noun] An intelligent, self-aware being. | [adjective] Experiencing sensation, thought, or feeling. SENTIMOS (10) SENTINEL (8) [noun] A sentry, watch, or guard. | [noun] A private soldier. | [noun] A unique string of characters recognised by a computer program for processing in a special way; a keyword. SENTRIES (8) [noun] A guard, particularly on duty at the entrance to a military base. | [noun] Sentry duty; time spent being a sentry. | [noun] A form of drag to be towed underwater, which on striking bottom is upset and rises to the surface. SEPALINE (10) SEPALLED (11) SEPALOID (11) SEPALOUS (10) SEPARATE (10) [noun] (usually in the plural) Anything that is sold by itself, especially an article of clothing. | [verb] To divide (a thing) into separate parts. | [verb] To disunite from a group or mass; to disconnect. SEPPUKUS (16) SEPTARIA (10) [noun] A flattened concretionary nodule, usually of limestone, intersected within by cracks which are often filled with calcite, barite, or other minerals. SEPTETTE (10) [noun] A set of seven persons or objects. | [noun] A musical composition for seven instruments or seven voices; a septuor. SEPTICAL (12) SEPTIMES (12) SEPTUPLE (12) [noun] A set of seven. | [noun] A sevenfold measure. | [verb] To multiply by seven. SEQUELAE (17) [noun] A disease or condition which is caused by an earlier disease or problem. | [noun] That which follows; an inference or corollary. SEQUENCE (19) [noun] A set of things next to each other in a set order; a series | [noun] The state of being sequent or following; order of succession. | [noun] A series of musical phrases where a theme or melody is repeated, with some change each time, such as in pitch or length (example: opening of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony). SEQUENCY (22) SEQUENTS (17) SEQUINED (18) SEQUITUR (17) SEQUOIAS (17) [noun] Sequoiadendron giganteum, a coniferous evergreen tree formerly in the genus Sequoia, now placed in Sequoiadendron. | [noun] Sequoia sempervirens, a coniferous evergreen tree, the only living species of the genus Sequoia. SERAGLIO (9) [noun] The palace of the Grand Seignior in Constantinople. | [noun] The sequestered living quarters used by wives and concubines (odalisques) in a Turkish Muslim household. | [noun] A brothel or place of debauchery. SERAPHIC (15) [adjective] Of or relating to a seraph or the seraphim. | [adjective] Pure and sublime; angelic. SERAPHIM (15) [noun] A six-winged angel; the highest choir or order of angels in Christian angelology, ranked above cherubim, and below God. They are the 5th highest order of angels in Jewish angelology. A detailed description can be found at the beginning of Isaiah chapter 6 SERAPHIN (13) SERENADE (9) [noun] A love song that is sung directly to one's love interest, especially one performed below the window of a loved one in the evening. | [noun] An instrumental composition in several movements. | [verb] To sing or play a serenade for (someone). SERENATA (8) [noun] A type of baroque cantata performed outdoors, in the evening, with mixed vocal and instrumental forces SERENATE (8) SERENELY (11) [adverb] In a serene manner. SERENEST (8) [adjective] Peaceful, calm, unruffled. | [adjective] Without worry or anxiety; unaffected by disturbance. | [adjective] Fair and unclouded (as of the sky); clear; unobscured. SERENITY (11) [noun] The state of being serene; calmness; peacefulness. | [noun] A lack of agitation or disturbance. | [noun] A title given to a reigning prince or similar dignitary. SERFAGES (12) SERFDOMS (14) SERFHOOD (15) SERFLIKE (15) SERGEANT (9) [noun] UK army rank with NATO code OR-6, senior to corporal and junior to warrant officer ranks. | [noun] The highest rank of noncommissioned officer in some non-naval military forces and police. | [noun] A lawyer of the highest rank, equivalent to the doctor of civil law. SERGINGS (10) SERIALLY (11) [adverb] In series, one after the other, as opposed to in parallel. SERIATED (9) [verb] To arrange in serial order. SERIATES (8) [verb] To arrange in serial order. SERIATIM (10) [adjective] Point by point; sequential. | [adverb] One after another, in order; taking one topic or subject at a time in an order; sequentially. SERICINS (10) SERIEMAS (10) [noun] Either of two species of bird in the family Cariamidae, endemic to South America. SERIFFED (15) SERINGAS (9) SERJEANT (15) [noun] UK army rank with NATO code OR-6, senior to corporal and junior to warrant officer ranks. | [noun] The highest rank of noncommissioned officer in some non-naval military forces and police. | [noun] A lawyer of the highest rank, equivalent to the doctor of civil law. SERMONIC (12) SEROLOGY (12) [noun] The science that studies the blood serum, and especially the reaction between antigens and antibodies in serum. | [noun] The characteristics of the blood serum in a particular disease or organism. | [noun] A blood test to detect the presence of, and often to measure the amount of, various components of the serum (such as electrolytes, antibodies, and antigens). SEROSITY (11) SEROTINE (8) [noun] Any of several small bats of the genus Eptesicus | [adjective] Late-flowering SEROTYPE (13) [noun] A group of microorganisms characterised by a specific set of antigens. | [verb] To assign or classify according to serotypes SERPENTS (10) [noun] A snake. | [noun] An obsolete wind instrument in the brass family, whose shape is suggestive of a snake (Wikipedia article). | [noun] A subtle, treacherous, malicious person. SERRANID (9) [noun] Any fish of the family Serranidae. SERRANOS (8) [noun] A chili pepper, a cultivar of Capsicum annuum which originated in the mountainous regions of the Mexican states of Puebla and Hidalgo and is used in cooking. SERRATED (9) [verb] To make serrate. | [verb] To cut or divide in a jagged way. | [adjective] Notched or cut like a saw. SERRATES (8) SERRYING (12) SERVABLE (13) SERVANTS (11) [noun] One who is hired to perform regular household or other duties, and receives compensation. As opposed to a slave. | [noun] One who serves another, providing help in some manner. | [noun] A person who dedicates themselves to God. SERVICED (14) [verb] To serve. | [verb] To perform maintenance. | [verb] To inseminate through sexual intercourse SERVICER (13) [noun] One who services a loan or other obligation, by collecting receivables and carrying out related actions such as enforcement SERVICES (13) [noun] An act of being of assistance to someone. | [noun] The practice of providing such a service as economic activity. | [noun] A department in a company, an organization, a government department, etc. SERVINGS (12) [noun] The action of the verb to serve. | [noun] A portion (especially, of a meal) served to someone. | [noun] A layer added to the outside of an electrical cable to protect it. SERVITOR (11) [noun] One who performs the duties of a servant. | [noun] One who serves in an army; a soldier. | [noun] An undergraduate who performed menial duties in exchange for financial support from his college, particularly at Oxford University. 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. SESSIONS (8) [noun] An informal gathering of musicians to play music, especially improvised jazz or a similar genre. | [noun] A period devoted to a particular activity, e.g. the annual or semiannual periods of a legislative body (that together comprise the legislative term) whose individual meetings are also called sessions. | [noun] A meeting of a council, court, school, or legislative body to conduct its business. SESSPOOL (10) SESTERCE (10) [noun] A sestertius. SESTINAS (8) [noun] A highly structured poem consisting of six six-line stanzas followed by a tercet or envoy, for a total of thirty-nine lines. | [noun] A chord comprising the first six members of the harmonic series. SESTINES (8) SETBACKS (16) [noun] An obstacle, delay, disadvantage, blow (an adverse event which retards or prevents progress towards a desired outcome) | [noun] The required distance between a structure and a road. | [noun] A step-like recession in a wall. SETENANT (8) SETIFORM (13) SETLINES (8) SETSCREW (13) [noun] A screw with threads along the entire length and no head. Typically, set screws have a hex or slot drive recessed in the threaded length; a grub screw or worm screw. | [noun] Any screw used to hold or adjust a setting: frequently a set screw (sense 1), but may also be any other machine screw or thumb screw used for the purpose of setting. | [noun] (NZ) A screw with a head, usually hexagonal, like a bolt but without a shank to allow it to screw into material rather than take a nut; a tap bolt. SETTINGS (9) [noun] The time, place and circumstance in which something (such as a story or picture) is set; context; scenario. | [noun] The act of setting. | [noun] A piece of metal in which a precious stone or gem is fixed to form a piece of jewelry. SETTLERS (8) [noun] Someone who settles in a new location, especially one who takes up residence in a previously uninhabited place; a colonist. | [noun] Someone who decides or settles something, such as a dispute. | [noun] That which settles or finishes, such as a blow that decides a contest. SETTLING (9) [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. SETTLORS (8) [noun] A person who settles property on express trust for the benefit of beneficiaries. SETULOSE (8) SETULOUS (8) SEVENTHS (14) [noun] The person or thing in the seventh position. | [noun] One of seven equal parts of a whole. | [noun] A tone of the seventh degree from a given tone, the interval between two such tones, or the two tones sounding in unison. SEVERALS (11) SEVERELY (14) [adverb] In a severe manner. SEVEREST (11) [adjective] Very bad or intense. | [adjective] Strict or harsh. | [adjective] Sober, plain in appearance, austere. | [verb] To cut free. SEVERING (12) [verb] To cut free. | [verb] To suffer disjunction; to be parted or separated. | [verb] To make a separation or distinction; to distinguish. SEVERITY (14) [noun] The state of being severe. | [noun] The degree of something undesirable; badness or seriousness. SEVICHES (16) [noun] Raw seafood cured by marination in an acidic medium such as citrus, vinegar, or other souring agent, found primarily in Latin America. SEVRUGAS (12) [noun] A type of sturgeon, Acipenser stellatus. | [noun] An expensive caviar made from its eggs. SEWERAGE (12) [noun] A sewer system. SEWERING (12) SEXINESS (15) [noun] The state or quality of being sexy, of possessing the traits of sexual appeal SEXOLOGY (19) [noun] The study of sex and sexuality, usually from a psychological or clinical perspective. SEXTAINS (15) SEXTANTS (15) [noun] A navigational device for deriving angular distances between objects so as to determine latitude and longitude. | [noun] One sixth of a circle or disc; a sector with an angle of 60°. | [noun] One of six groups of adjacent teeth, excluding the wisdom teeth. The front sextants go from canine to canine, and there are sextants on the right and left of these. See w:Periodontal examination. SEXTARII (15) SEXTETTE (15) [noun] Any group of six people or things. | [noun] A composition for six voices or instruments. | [noun] A group of six singers or instrumentalists. SEXTILES (15) SEXTUPLE (17) [noun] A sixfold amount | [verb] To make, or to become, six times as much (or as many). | [adjective] Having six parts. SEXTUPLY (20) SEXUALLY (18) [adverb] In a sexual manner: erotically. | [adverb] With respect to sex (either of the two divisions of organisms). | [adverb] With respect to sexual intercourse. SFORZATO (20) [adverb] (to be played) with particular emphasis SFUMATOS (13) SHABBIER (15) [adjective] Torn or worn; unkempt. | [adjective] Clothed with ragged, much worn, or soiled garments. | [adjective] Mean; paltry; despicable. SHABBILY (18) 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. SHACKLER (17) SHACKLES (17) [noun] (usually in the plural) A restraint fit over a human or animal appendage, such as a wrist, ankle or finger; normally used in pairs joined by a chain. | [noun] A U-shaped piece of metal secured with a pin or bolt across the opening, or a hinged metal loop secured with a quick-release locking pin mechanism. | [noun] (usually in the plural) A restraint on one's action, activity, or progress. SHACKOES (17) SHADBLOW (17) SHADBUSH (17) [noun] Any plant in the genus Amelanchier. SHADCHAN (17) [noun] (Jewish) marriage broker, matchmaker SHADDOCK (19) [noun] The large fruit of the Citrus maxima (syn. C. grandis), native to South Asia and Southeast Asia, with a thick green or yellow rind, a thick white pith, and semi-sweet translucent pale flesh. | [noun] The tree which produces this fruit. | [noun] The grapefruit. SHADIEST (12) [adjective] Abounding in shades. | [adjective] Causing shade. | [adjective] Overspread with shade; sheltered from the glare of light or sultry heat. SHADINGS (13) SHADOOFS (15) [noun] A device used to gather water, consisting of a pivoted stick with a bucket on the end of it. 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. SHADOWER (15) SHADRACH (17) SHAFTING (15) [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. SHAGBARK (18) SHAGGIER (13) [adjective] With long, thick, and uncombed hair, fur or wool. | [adjective] With a surface like shaggy hair; rough nap. SHAGGILY (16) SHAGGING (14) [verb] To make hairy or shaggy; to roughen. | [verb] To hang in shaggy clusters. | [verb] To shake, wiggle around. SHAGREEN (12) [noun] An untanned leather, often dyed green; originally made from horse skin, today mostly made from the skin of a shark or ray. | [noun] A rough or spiny surface of an insect's cuticle. | [verb] To give a texture resembling shagreen leather. SHAHDOMS (17) SHAITANS (11) [noun] A demon, a devil an enemy of divine | [noun] Iblis, Satan. | [noun] A dust storm. SHAKABLE (17) SHAKEOUT (15) [noun] An event that causes marginal constituents to be eliminated. | [noun] The separation of molds from their flask, the castings from the molding sand, and potentially the cores from the castings. | [noun] The shaking of an object to spread it wide and eject any debris. SHAKEUPS (17) [noun] A vigorous reorganization, especially of the personnel or procedures of an organization. SHAKIEST (15) [adjective] Shaking or trembling. | [adjective] Nervous, anxious. | [adjective] (of wood) Full of shakes or cracks; cracked. SHALIEST (11) SHALLOON (11) SHALLOPS (13) [noun] A kind of light boat; a dinghy. | [noun] A kind of large boat; a sloop. SHALLOTS (11) [noun] A vegetable in the onion family. SHALLOWS (14) [noun] A shallow portion of an otherwise deep body of water. | [noun] A fish, the rudd. | [noun] A costermonger's barrow. SHAMABLE (15) SHAMANIC (15) [adjective] Of or relating to a shaman or to shamanism. SHAMBLED (16) [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. SHAMBLES (15) [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. | [noun] Work done in a poor fashion | [noun] A scene of great disorder or ruin SHAMEFUL (16) [adjective] Causing or meriting shame or disgrace; disgraceful | [adjective] Giving offense. SHAMMASH (18) SHAMMERS (15) SHAMMIED (16) SHAMMIES (15) [noun] Chamois leather. | [noun] A cloth made of this leather. SHAMMING (16) [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. SHAMOSIM (15) SHAMOYED (17) SHAMPOOS (15) [noun] A traditional Indian and Persian body massage given after pouring warm water over the body and rubbing it with extracts from herbs. | [noun] A commercial liquid soap product for washing hair or other fibres/fibers, such as carpets. | [noun] An instance of washing the hair or other fibres with shampoo. SHAMROCK (19) [noun] The trefoil leaf of any small clover, especially Trifolium repens, or such a leaf from a clover-like plant, commonly used as a symbol of Ireland. | [noun] Any of several small plants, forms of clover, with trefoil leaves, especially Trifolium repens. SHAMUSES (13) [noun] A private detective; originally, a policeman or police detective. SHANDIES (12) [noun] A drink made by mixing beer and lemonade. | [noun] A glass of this drink. SHANGHAI (15) [noun] A tall dandy. | [verb] To force or trick (someone) into joining a ship as part of the crew. | [verb] To abduct or coerce. | [noun] A slingshot. SHANKING (16) [verb] To travel on foot. | [verb] To stab, especially with an improvised blade. | [verb] To remove another's trousers, especially in jest; to depants. SHANNIES (11) [noun] A fish, the prickleback. SHANTEYS (14) SHANTIES (11) [noun] A roughly-built hut or cabin. | [noun] A rudimentary or improvised dwelling, especially one not legally owned. | [noun] An unlicensed pub. SHANTIHS (14) SHANTUNG (12) [noun] A heavy fabric, with a rough surface, made from wild silk. | [noun] A fabric of some other material having the same characteristics. SHAPABLE (15) SHAPEUPS (15) SHARABLE (13) [adjective] Suitable for sharing. SHARKERS (15) SHARKING (16) [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. SHARPENS (13) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To make sharp. | [verb] To become sharp. SHARPERS (13) [noun] A swindler; a cheat; a professional gambler who makes his living by cheating. SHARPEST (13) [adjective] Terminating in a point or edge, especially one that can cut easily; not obtuse or rounded. | [adjective] Intelligent. | [adjective] Higher than usual by one semitone (denoted by the symbol ♯ after the name of the note). SHARPIES (13) [noun] Accipiter striatus, the smallest hawk to reside in USA and Canada, which preys on songbirds. | [noun] An alert person. | [noun] A knowledgeable fisherman. SHARPING (14) [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. SHASHLIK (18) [noun] A form of shish kebab, originally made of marinated lamb meat. SHASLIKS (15) SHATTERS (11) [verb] To violently break something into pieces. | [verb] To destroy or disable something. | [verb] To smash, or break into tiny pieces. SHAULING (12) SHAVABLE (16) SHAVINGS (15) [noun] A thin, shaved off slice of wood, metal, or other material. | [noun] The action of having a shave. SHAWLING (15) SHEAFING (15) [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. SHEALING (12) [noun] An area of summer pasture used for cattle, sheep etc. | [noun] A shepherd's hut or shack. SHEARERS (11) SHEARING (12) [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. 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. SHEATHER (14) SHEATHES (14) [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. SHEAVING (15) [verb] To gather and bind into a sheaf. SHEBANGS (14) [noun] The character string "#!" used at the beginning of a computer file to indicate which interpreter can process the commands in the file, chiefly used in Unix and related operating systems. SHEBEANS (13) SHEBEENS (13) [noun] An unlicensed drinking establishment, especially in Ireland, Scotland, and South Africa. SHEDABLE (14) SHEDDERS (13) [noun] Agent noun of shed; one who sheds. | [noun] A crab in the act of casting its shell, or immediately afterwards while still soft. SHEDDING (14) [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. SHEDLIKE (16) SHEENEYS (14) SHEENFUL (14) SHEENIER (11) [adjective] Having a sheen; glossy | [adjective] Bright; shining; radiant. SHEENIES (11) [noun] A Jew. | [noun] A cheat or fraudster. SHEENING (12) [verb] To shine; to glisten. SHEEPCOT (15) SHEEPDOG (15) [noun] A breed of dog, used for herding sheep. | [noun] A breed of dog used for guarding sheep. | [noun] A chaperon; an adult who accompanies other people in a supervisory role. SHEEPISH (16) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a sheep. | [adjective] Shy, meek, shameful or embarrassed. SHEEPMAN (15) [noun] A shepherd. SHEEPMEN (15) [noun] A shepherd. SHEEREST (11) [adjective] Very thin or transparent. | [adjective] Pure in composition; unmixed; unadulterated. | [adjective] (by extension) Downright; complete; pure. SHEERING (12) [verb] To swerve from a course. | [verb] To shear. SHEETERS (11) SHEETFED (15) SHEETING (12) [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. SHEIKDOM (18) SHEITANS (11) SHELDUCK (18) [noun] Any of various waterfowl of the genus Tadorna, native to Eurasia, Africa and Australasia. SHELFFUL (17) SHELLACK (17) SHELLACS (13) [noun] A processed secretion of the lac insect, Coccus lacca; used in polishes, varnishes etc. | [noun] A beating; a thrashing. SHELLERS (11) SHELLIER (11) SHELLING (12) [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). SHELTERS (11) [noun] A refuge, haven or other cover or protection from something. | [noun] An institution that provides temporary housing for homeless people, battered women etc. SHELTIES (11) [noun] A Shetland pony; any small pony. | [noun] Sheepdog. | [noun] A Shetlander. SHELVERS (14) SHELVIER (14) SHELVING (15) [verb] To place on a shelf. | [verb] To set aside; to quit or postpone. | [verb] To furnish with shelves. SHENDING (13) 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. SHEQALIM (22) SHERBERT (13) SHERBETS (13) [noun] A food of frozen fruit juice with a dairy product such as milk added; a sorbet with dairy ingredients. | [noun] An effervescent powder made of bicarbonate of soda, sugar and flavourings, intended to be eaten alone or mixed with water to make a drink. | [noun] A traditional West and South Asian sweet drink prepared from fruits or flower petals. SHEREEFS (14) [noun] A member of an Arab princely family descended from Muhammad through his son-in-law Ali and daughter Fatima, the "Grand Shereef" being the governor of Mecca. SHERIFFS (17) [noun] (except Scotland) (High Sheriff) An official of a shire or county office, responsible for carrying out court orders, law enforcement and other duties. | [noun] A judge in the sheriff court, the court of a county or sheriffdom. | [noun] A government official, usually responsible for law enforcement in his county and for administration of the county jail, sometimes an officer of the court, usually elected. SHERLOCK (17) [verb] To deduce. | [verb] To search. | [verb] To obsolete a unique feature in third-party software by introducing a similar or identical feature to the OS or a first-party program/app. SHEROOTS (11) SHERRIES (11) [noun] A fortified wine produced in Jerez de la Frontera in Spain, or a similar wine produced elsewhere. | [noun] A variety of sherry. | [noun] A glass of sherry. SHETLAND (12) SHIATSUS (11) SHIATZUS (20) SHICKERS (17) [noun] Drunk, drunkard SHICKSAS (17) SHIELDED (13) [verb] To protect, to defend. | [verb] To protect from the influence of | [adjective] Provided with a shield SHIELDER (12) SHIELING (12) [noun] An area of summer pasture used for cattle, sheep etc. | [noun] A shepherd's hut or shack. SHIFTERS (14) [noun] One who, or that which, shifts or changes. | [noun] A word whose meaning changes depending on the situation, as by deixis. | [noun] One who plays tricks or practices artifice; a cozener. SHIFTIER (14) [adjective] Subject to frequent changes in direction. | [adjective] (of a person's eyes) Moving from one object to another, not looking directly and steadily at the person with whom one is speaking. | [adjective] Having the appearance of being dishonest, criminal or unreliable. SHIFTILY (17) SHIFTING (15) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To move from one place to another; to redistribute. | [verb] To change in form or character; swap. | [verb] To change position. SHIGELLA (12) [noun] A bacterium in the genus Shigella, some kinds of which may cause a form of dysentery called shigellosis. SHIITAKE (15) [noun] A wide, brown variety of edible mushroom, Lentinula edodes. SHIKAREE (15) SHIKARIS (15) [noun] A hunter or tracker, especially in the Indian subcontinent. SHIKKERS (19) [noun] Drunk, drunkard SHILINGI (12) SHILLALA (11) SHILLING (12) [noun] A coin formerly used in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Malta, Australia, New Zealand and many other Commonwealth countries. | [noun] The currency of Kenya, Somalia, Tanzania and Uganda. | [noun] A currency in the United States, differing in value between states. | [verb] To promote or endorse in return for payment, especially dishonestly. SHIMMERS (15) [noun] A faint or veiled and tremulous gleam or shining. | [noun] A measure of the irregularities in the loudness of a particular pitch over time. | [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. SHIMMERY (18) [adjective] Appearing to shimmer, glistening. 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. SHIMMIES (15) [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. SHIMMING (16) [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. SHINBONE (13) [noun] The inner and usually the larger of the two bones of the leg or hind limb below the knee | [noun] A segment of an insect's leg. SHINDIES (12) [noun] A shindig. | [noun] An uproar or disturbance; a spree; a row; a riot. | [noun] Hockey; shinney SHINDIGS (13) [noun] A noisy party or festivities. 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. SHINGLER (12) SHINGLES (12) [noun] Herpes zoster, caused by Human herpes virus 3, in genus Varicellovirus. | [noun] A small, thin piece of building material, often with one end thicker than the other, for laying in overlapping rows as a covering for the roof or sides of a building. | [noun] A rectangular piece of steel obtained by means of a shingling process involving hammering of puddled steel. SHINIEST (11) [adjective] Reflecting light. | [adjective] Emitting light. | [adjective] Excellent; remarkable. SHINLEAF (14) SHINNERY (14) SHINNEYS (14) SHINNIED (12) [verb] To climb in an awkward manner. SHINNIES (11) [verb] To climb in an awkward manner. SHINNING (12) [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. SHIPLAPS (15) [noun] A type of wooden board that has rabbets to allow them to be overlapped. SHIPLOAD (14) [noun] The amount (of cargo) that a ship can carry. SHIPMATE (15) [noun] A fellow sailor serving on the same ship as another. | [noun] Any sailor (when used as a form of address by a sailor). SHIPMENT (15) [noun] A load of goods that is transported by any method (not just by ship) | [noun] The act of transporting goods SHIPPENS (15) [noun] A stable; a cowhouse. SHIPPERS (15) [noun] A seaman; mariner; skipper. | [noun] The person or organization that ships (sends) something. | [noun] A box for shipping something fragile, such as bottled beer or wine. SHIPPING (16) [noun] The transportation of goods. | [noun] The body of ships belonging to one nation, port or industry. | [noun] Passage or transport on a ship. | [verb] To send by water-borne transport. SHIPPONS (15) [noun] A cattle-shed. SHIPSIDE (14) SHIPWAYS (19) [noun] The sloping dry dock in which a ship is built and from where it is launched. | [noun] A navigable canal. SHIPWORM (18) [noun] Any of several wormlike marine mollusks (not true worms) of the family Teredinidae, that bore through the wooden hulls of ships and other woody material immersed in salt water. SHIPYARD (17) [noun] A place where ships are built and repaired. SHIRKERS (15) SHIRKING (16) [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. SHIRRING (12) [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. | [noun] Two or more rows of gathers used to decorate parts of garments, usually the sleeves, bodice and yoke. SHIRTIER (11) [adjective] Ill-tempered or annoyed. SHIRTING (12) [noun] Any fabric used to make shirts. | [noun] Shirts collectively. SHITAKES (15) [noun] A wide, brown variety of edible mushroom, Lentinula edodes. SHITHEAD (15) [noun] A stupid or contemptible person. | [noun] A card game, the aim of which is to lose one's cards SHITTAHS (14) SHITTIER (11) [adjective] Very bad; unpleasant; miserable; insignificant. | [adjective] Under the influence of illicit drugs or alcohol; drunk; high. | [adjective] Annoyed. SHITTIMS (13) SHITTING (12) [verb] To defecate. | [verb] To excrete (something) through the anus. | [verb] To fool or try to fool someone; to be deceitful. SHIVAREE (14) [noun] The noisy banging of pots and pans as a mock serenade to a newly married couple, or similar occasion. | [noun] Any loud cacophonous noise or hubbub. | [verb] To serenade (a newly married couple) with the noisy banging of pots and pans. 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. SHIVERER (14) SHKOTZIM (26) SHLEMIEL (13) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. SHLEPPED (16) SHLUMPED (16) SHMALTZY (25) SHMOOZED (23) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHMOOZES (22) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHOALEST (11) SHOALIER (11) SHOALING (12) [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. SHOCKERS (17) [noun] One who or that which shocks or startles. | [noun] A device for giving electric shocks. | [noun] A particular hand gesture with a sexual connotation. SHOCKING (18) [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. SHODDIER (13) [adjective] Of poor quality or construction | [adjective] Pretentious, sham, counterfeit | [adjective] Ambitious by reason of newly-acquired wealth; nouveau riche SHODDIES (13) [noun] A low-grade cloth made from by-products of wool processing, or from recycled wool. | [noun] Worthless goods. | [noun] Vulgar pretence or sham. SHODDILY (16) SHOEBILL (13) [noun] Balaeniceps rex, a tall wading bird related to the stork, native to tropical African swamps; the sole species of the family Balaenicipitidae. SHOEHORN (14) [noun] A smooth tool that assists in putting the foot into a shoe, by sliding the heel in after the toe is in place. This reduces discomfort and damage to the back of the shoe. By slipping it into the back of the shoe behind the heel, the user prevents the heel from squashing down the back of the shoe and causing difficulty; instead the heel slides down the smooth shoehorn, which then comes out easily once the foot is in place. | [noun] Anything by which a transaction is facilitated; a medium. | [noun] Anything which draws on or allures; an inducement. SHOELACE (13) [noun] A lace used for fastening a shoe. SHOELESS (11) SHOEPACK (19) [noun] A shoe, especially a warm, waterproofed boot. SHOEPACS (15) [noun] A shoe, especially a warm, waterproofed boot. SHOETREE (11) SHOFROTH (17) [noun] A ram’s-horn trumpet SHOGGING (14) SHOGUNAL (12) SHOOLING (12) SHOOTERS (11) [noun] Someone who shoots something; a gunner, archer etc. | [noun] A firearm. | [noun] A video game in which shooting enemies (or targets) is the main objective. SHOOTING (12) [verb] To launch a projectile. | [verb] To move or act quickly or suddenly. | [verb] To act or achieve. SHOOTOUT (11) [noun] A decisive battle, especially a gunfight. | [noun] A penalty shootout. | [noun] A series of penalty shots during which a tied game is resolved. SHOPBOYS (18) [noun] A boy employed in a shop. SHOPGIRL (14) [noun] A girl who works in a shop; a young saleswoman. SHOPHARS (16) SHOPLIFT (16) [noun] A shoplifter. | [verb] To steal something from a shop / store during trading hours. | [verb] To steal from shops / stores during trading hours. SHOPPERS (15) [noun] A person who shops. | [noun] A free local newspaper containing advertisements for local shops etc; sometimes includes discount coupons. | [noun] A kind of bicycle suited to riding short distances. SHOPPING (16) [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. SHOPTALK (17) [noun] Discussion of business in a social setting, especially using jargon. SHOPWORN (16) [adjective] Having been used, as a sample item in a retail store. | [adjective] Faded. | [adjective] Not fresh; tired or cliché. SHORINGS (12) SHORTAGE (12) [noun] A lack or deficiency; an insufficient amount. SHORTCUT (13) [noun] A path between two points that is faster than the commonly used paths. | [noun] A method to accomplish something that omits one or more steps. | [noun] (in the Microsoft family of operating systems) A file that points to the location of another file and serves as a quick way to access it. SHORTENS (11) [verb] To make shorter; to abbreviate. | [verb] To become shorter. | [verb] To make deficient (as to); to deprive (of). SHORTEST (11) [adjective] Having a small distance from one end or edge to another, either horizontally or vertically. | [adjective] (of a person) Of comparatively small height. | [adjective] Having little duration. SHORTIAS (11) SHORTIES (11) [noun] Short socks. | [noun] A short person. | [noun] A term of endearment for a child, younger sibling, shorter person, etc. SHORTING (12) [verb] To cause a short circuit in (something). | [verb] Of an electrical circuit, to short circuit. | [verb] To shortchange. SHORTISH (14) SHOTGUNS (12) [noun] A gun which fires loads typically consisting of small metal balls, called shot, from a cartridge. | [noun] The front passenger seat in a vehicle, next to the driver; so called because the position of the shotgun-armed guard on a horse-drawn stage-coach, wagon train, or gold transport was next to the driver on a forward-mounted bench seat. | [noun] A one-story dwelling with no hallways or corridors, with the rooms arranged in a straight line. SHOTTING (12) SHOULDER (12) [noun] The part of an animal's body between the base of the neck and forearm socket. | [noun] Anything forming a shape resembling a human shoulder. | [noun] (topography) A shelf between two levels. SHOULDST (12) SHOUTERS (11) SHOUTING (12) [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. SHOVELED (15) [verb] To move materials with a shovel. | [verb] To move with a shoveling motion. SHOVELER (14) [noun] One who, or that which, shovels. | [noun] Any of four species of dabbling duck, in the genus Anas, with distinctive spatulate bills. SHOWABLE (16) SHOWBOAT (16) [noun] A river steamboat having a resident theatre. | [noun] (by extension) A showoff. | [verb] To show off. SHOWCASE (16) [noun] A case for displaying merchandise or valuable items. | [noun] A setting, occasion, or medium for exhibiting something or someone, especially in an attractive or favorable aspect. | [verb] To display, demonstrate, show, or present. SHOWDOWN (18) [noun] The final battle between two nemeses, in which there can be but one victor. | [noun] The final round in a poker match, where the all remaining players' cards have to be put down on the table and shown. 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 SHOWERER (14) SHOWGIRL (15) [noun] A non-starring but physically beautiful female dancer in an often lavishly produced theatrical revue; a chorine. SHOWIEST (14) [adjective] (sometimes derogatory) calling attention; flashy; standing out to the eye SHOWINGS (15) [noun] An occasion when something is shown. | [noun] A result, a judgement. SHOWOFFS (20) [noun] A person given to egotistically attempting to demonstrate prowess or ability. SHOWRING (15) SHOWROOM (16) [noun] A room in a business set aside for the display of the company's products. | [noun] A room or apartment where a show is exhibited. | [verb] To inspect merchandise in a physical store, then purchase the identical product from an online merchant; to use a physical store as a showroom for an online merchant. SHRAPNEL (13) [noun] An anti-personnel artillery shell used in WWI which carries a large number of individual bullets close to the target and then ejects them to allow them to continue along the shell's trajectory and strike the target individually. | [noun] A collective term for shot, fragments, or debris thrown out by an exploding shell, bomb or landmine. | [noun] Loose change. 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. SHREDDER (13) [noun] A machine that tears up objects into smaller pieces, especially a paper shredder or garbage shredder. | [noun] A program that overwrites deleted data to prevent recovery. | [noun] Someone who snowboards; a snowboarder. SHREWDER (15) [adjective] Showing clever resourcefulness in practical matters. | [adjective] Artful, tricky or cunning. | [adjective] Streetwise. SHREWDIE (15) SHREWDLY (18) [adverb] In a shrewd manner. SHREWING (15) SHREWISH (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a shrew (a nagging, ill-tempered woman). | [adjective] Bad-tempered; ill-natured; obstinate, as a shrew. 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. SHRIEKER (15) SHRIEVAL (14) [adjective] Relating to a sheriff. SHRIEVED (15) SHRIEVES (14) SHRILLED (12) [verb] To make a shrill noise. SHRILLER (11) [adjective] High-pitched and piercing. | [adjective] Having a shrill voice. | [adjective] Sharp or keen to the senses. SHRIMPED (16) [verb] To fish for shrimp. | [verb] To contract; to shrink. SHRIMPER (15) [noun] One who fishes for or catches shrimp. | [noun] A boat used in fishing for shrimp. SHRINING (12) [verb] To enshrine; to place reverently, as if in a shrine. SHRINKER (15) SHRIVELS (14) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SHRIVERS (14) SHRIVING (15) [verb] To hear or receive a confession (of sins etc.) | [verb] To prescribe penance or absolution. | [verb] To confess, and receive absolution. 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. SHRUNKEN (15) [verb] To cause to become smaller. | [verb] To become smaller; to contract. | [verb] To cower or flinch. SHTETELS (11) SHUCKERS (17) SHUCKING (18) [verb] To remove the shuck from (walnuts, oysters, etc.). | [verb] To remove (any outer covering). | [verb] To fool; to hoax. SHUDDERS (13) [noun] A shivering tremor, often from fear or horror. | [noun] A moment of almost pleasurable fear; a frisson. | [verb] To shake nervously, often from fear or horror. SHUDDERY (16) [adjective] Characterized by shuddering motions. 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. SHUFFLER (17) SHUFFLES (17) [noun] The act of shuffling cards. | [noun] The act of reordering anything, such as music tracks in a media player. | [noun] An instance of walking without lifting one's feet. SHUNNERS (11) SHUNNING (12) [verb] To avoid, especially persistently. | [verb] To escape (a threatening evil, an unwelcome task etc). | [verb] To screen, hide. SHUNPIKE (17) SHUNTERS (11) [noun] A railway locomotive used for shunting; a switcher. | [noun] A person who carries out shunting operations. SHUNTING (12) [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. SHUSHING (15) [verb] To be quiet; to keep quiet. | [verb] To ask someone to be quiet, especially by saying shh. | [noun] The act of making a shush sound to silence somebody. SHUTDOWN (15) [noun] The action of stopping operations; a closing, of a computer, business, event, etc. | [noun] A statement, insult, etc. that prevents the opponent from replying further. | [noun] An autistic response to stress, etc. where the individual becomes silent and motionless. SHUTEYES (14) SHUTOFFS (17) [noun] A valve used to turn off something. | [noun] The act of turning off something. SHUTOUTS (11) [noun] Closing and forbidding entry, as a lockout in which management prevents works from working. | [noun] A game that ends with one side not having scored. SHUTTERS (11) [noun] One who shuts or closes something. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Protective panels, usually wooden, placed over windows to block out the light. | [noun] The part of a camera, normally closed, that opens for a controlled period of time to let light in when taking a picture. SHUTTING (12) [verb] To close, to stop from being open. | [verb] To close, to stop being open. | [verb] To close a business temporarily, or (of a business) to be closed. SHUTTLED (12) [verb] To go back and forth between two places. | [verb] To transport by shuttle or by means of a shuttle service. SHUTTLES (11) [noun] The part of a loom that carries the woof back and forth between the warp threads. | [noun] The sliding thread holder in a sewing machine, which carries the lower thread through a loop of the upper thread, to make a lock stitch. | [noun] A transport service (such as a bus or train) that goes back and forth between two places, sometimes more. SHWANPAN (16) SHYLOCKS (20) SHYSTERS (14) [noun] Someone who acts in a disreputable, unethical, or unscrupulous way, especially in the practice of law and politics. | [verb] To act in a disreputable, unethical, or unscrupulous way, especially in the practice of law and politics. | [verb] To exploit (someone or something) in this way. SIALIDAN (9) SIAMANGS (11) [noun] A large black gibbon, Symphalangus syndactylus, from Sumatra SIAMESES (10) SIBILANT (10) [noun] A consonant having a hissing sound such as the 's' or 'sh' in 'sash' or 'surge'. | [adjective] Characterized by a hissing sound such as the "s" or "sh" in sash or surge. SIBILATE (10) [verb] To hiss. | [verb] To speak with a hissing sound. SIBLINGS (11) [noun] A person who shares a parent; one's brother or sister who one shares a parent with. | [noun] A node in a data structure that shares its parent with another node. | [noun] The most closely related species, or one of several most closely species when none can be determined to be more closely related. SIBYLLIC (15) SICKBAYS (19) [noun] A place used as a hospital on board a ship, on a spaceship (in science fiction). | [noun] A room or area for the treatment of the sick or injured in a school. SICKBEDS (17) [noun] A bed used by a person who is sick. | [noun] A place for convalescence. SICKENED (15) [verb] To make ill. | [verb] To become ill. | [verb] To fill with disgust or abhorrence. SICKENER (14) [noun] One who, or that which, sickens. | [noun] A small, bright red and possibly poisonous russula or brittlegill (Russula emetica). SICKERLY (17) SICKLIED (15) SICKLIER (14) [adjective] Frequently ill or in poor health. | [adjective] Not in good health; (somewhat) sick. | [adjective] (of a plant) Characterized by poor or unhealthy growth. SICKLIES (14) SICKLILY (17) SICKLING (15) SICKNESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being sick or diseased; illness. | [noun] Nausea; qualmishness; as, sickness of stomach. | [noun] The analogical misuse of a rarer or marked grammatical case in the place of a more common or unmarked case. SICKOUTS (14) [noun] A labor action where employees refuse to work claiming they are sick. SICKROOM (16) [noun] A room to be used by someone who is ill. SIDDURIM (12) [noun] A prayer book containing a set order of daily prayers. 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. SIDEBARS (11) [noun] A short news story printed alongside a larger one. | [noun] A block of information placed at the side of a printed page. | [noun] A block of information placed at the side of a webpage. SIDECARS (11) [noun] A one-wheeled attachment to a motorcycle to allow for a separate seat for a passenger or cargo space. | [noun] A cocktail made with cognac (or brandy), triple sec liqueur, and lemon juice. SIDEHILL (12) [noun] The side or slope of a hill; a sloping descent. SIDEKICK (19) [noun] An assistant to another person, especially to a superior or more important person. SIDELINE (9) [noun] A line at the side of something. | [noun] Something that is additional or extra or that exists around the edges or margins of a main item. | [noun] A line for hobbling an animal by connecting the fore and the hind feet of the same side. SIDELING (10) SIDELONG (10) [adjective] Directed to the side; sideways. | [adjective] Slanting or sloping; oblique. | [adjective] Indirect; suggestive; not straightforward. SIDEREAL (9) [adjective] Of or relating to the stars. | [adjective] Relating to a measurement of time relative to the position of the stars. | [adjective] Relating to a measurement of time relative to the point of the vernal equinox. SIDERITE (9) [noun] A widespread brown mineral, FeCO3, having the structure of calcite | [noun] An iron meteorite | [noun] An indigo-blue variety of quartz. SIDESHOW (15) [noun] A minor attraction at a larger event such as a circus, fair, music festival or similar | [noun] An incidental spectacle that diverts attention from a larger concern | [noun] An incident in which drivers block traffic to perform donuts for an extended period of time SIDESLIP (11) [noun] A flight manoeuvre that moves the aircraft sideways without turning it. | [verb] To perform a flight manoeuvre that moves the aircraft sideways without turning it. SIDESPIN (11) [noun] Rotation around a vertical axis that makes a ball or other object curve in flight SIDESTEP (11) [noun] A step to the side. | [noun] A motion, physical or metaphorical, to avoid or dodge something. | [verb] To step to the side. SIDEWALK (16) [noun] A footpath, usually paved, at the side of a road for the use of pedestrians; a pavement (UK) or footpath (Australia, New Zealand) | [noun] (by extension) any paved footpath, even if not located at the side of a road SIDEWALL (12) [noun] The side of a tire. | [noun] The wall forming the side of a structure; a side wall. SIDEWARD (13) [adjective] Toward a side. | [adverb] Toward a side. SIDEWAYS (15) [noun] A footpath near a road. | [noun] A byway. | [adjective] Moving or directed toward one side. SIDEWISE (12) [adverb] Sideways SIENITES (8) SIEROZEM (19) SIFFLEUR (14) SIFTINGS (12) [noun] The act by which something is sifted. SIGANIDS (10) SIGHLESS (12) SIGHLIKE (16) SIGHTERS (12) SIGHTING (13) [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. SIGHTSAW (15) [verb] To go sightseeing; to visit places of interest in a city, town or geographical area. SIGHTSEE (12) [verb] To go sightseeing; to visit places of interest in a city, town or geographical area. SIGMOIDS (12) [noun] A function having a graph whose shape is sigmoid.. SIGNAGES (10) SIGNALED (10) [verb] To indicate; to convey or communicate by a signal. | [verb] To communicate with (a person or system) by a signal. SIGNALER (9) SIGNALLY (12) SIGNETED (10) SIGNIORI (9) SIGNIORS (9) SIGNIORY (12) SIGNORAS (9) [noun] Mrs; madam; title of address or respect for women in Italy. SIGNPOST (11) [noun] A post bearing a sign that gives information on directions | [noun] (cryptic crosswords) A word or phrase within a clue that serves as an indicator, rather than being fodder. | [verb] To install signposts on. SILENCED (11) [verb] To make (someone or something) silent. | [verb] To repress the expression of something. | [verb] To suppress criticism, etc. SILENCER (10) [noun] Something that silences. SILENCES (10) [noun] The absence of any sound. | [noun] The act of refraining from speaking. | [noun] Form of meditative worship practiced by the Society of Friends (Quakers); meeting for worship. SILENTER (8) SILENTLY (11) [adverb] In a silent manner; making no noise. SILESIAS (8) SILICATE (10) [noun] Any salt of silica or of one of the silicic acids; any mineral composed of silicates SILICIDE (11) [noun] Any compound of silicon with a more electropositive element SILICIFY (16) [verb] To impregnate something with silica. | [verb] To be impregnated with, or converted into silica. SILICIUM (12) SILICLES (10) SILICONE (10) [noun] Any of a class of inert, semi-inorganic polymeric compounds (polysiloxanes), that have a wide range of thermal stability and extreme water repellence, used in a very wide range of industrial applications, and in prosthetic replacements for body parts. SILICONS (10) SILICULA (10) SILIQUAE (17) [noun] A weight of four grains; a carat. | [noun] A long dry fruit (seed capsule), length more than twice the width, typical to cruciferous plants and consisting of two fused carpels that separate when ripe. SILIQUES (17) [noun] A long dry fruit (seed capsule), length more than twice the width, typical to cruciferous plants and consisting of two fused carpels that separate when ripe. SILKIEST (12) [adjective] Similar in appearance or texture (especially in softness and smoothness) to silk. | [adjective] Smooth and pleasant; seductive. | [adjective] Covered in long, slender, glistening hairs pressed close to the surface; sericeous. SILKLIKE (16) SILKWEED (16) SILKWORM (17) [noun] Any of various caterpillars of moths that produce silk cocoons, especially Bombyx mori, the source of most commercial silk. SILLABUB (12) [noun] A drink dating back to the 16th century consisting primarily of milk curdled with an alcoholic beverage or some acid such as lemon juice, which is usually then sweetened and spiced. | [noun] Also everlasting syllabub or solid syllabub: a dessert pudding derived from the drink. | [noun] Something lacking substance; something frothy, insubstantial, or lightweight. SILLIBUB (12) SILLIEST (8) [adjective] Laughable or amusing through foolishness or a foolish appearance. | [adjective] Blessed, particularly: | [adjective] Pitiful, inspiring compassion, particularly: SILOXANE (15) [noun] Any of a class of compound having a short repeating unit of silicon and oxygen atoms (either in a chain or a ring), typically with organic side chains SILTIEST (8) SILURIDS (9) 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. SILVERER (11) SILVERLY (14) SILVEXES (18) SILVICAL (13) SIMARUBA (12) SIMAZINE (19) [noun] The herbicide and algicide 6-chloro-N2,N4-diethyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4-diamine SIMITARS (10) 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. SIMOLEON (10) [noun] A dollar. SIMONIAC (12) [noun] One who carries on or is guilty of simony. | [adjective] Practising simony SIMONIES (10) SIMONIST (10) SIMONIZE (19) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMPERED (13) [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. SIMPERER (12) SIMPLEST (12) [adjective] Uncomplicated; taken by itself, with nothing added. | [adjective] Without ornamentation; plain. | [adjective] Free from duplicity; guileless, innocent, straightforward. SIMPLIFY (18) [verb] To make simpler, either by reducing in complexity, reducing to component parts, or making easier to understand. | [verb] To become simpler. SIMPLISM (14) [noun] The trait of oversimplifying things by ignoring complexity and complications. SIMPLIST (12) SIMULANT (10) [noun] Something that simulates something else such as, for example, a gemstone. | [adjective] Simulating, replacing, or having the form or appearance of something else. SIMULARS (10) SIMULATE (10) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. | [adjective] Feigned; pretended. SINAPISM (12) SINCERER (10) [adjective] Genuine; meaning what one says or does; heartfelt. | [adjective] Meant truly or earnestly. | [adjective] Clean; pure SINCIPUT (12) [noun] The front part of the head or skull (as contradistinct from occiput). SINECURE (10) [noun] A position that requires no work but still gives an ample payment; a cushy job. | [noun] An ecclesiastical benefice without the care of souls. | [verb] To put or place in a sinecure. SINEWING (12) SINFONIA (11) [noun] A symphony. | [noun] A piece or music serving as an overture, interlude or ritornello. | [noun] A small symphony orchestra. SINFONIE (11) SINFULLY (14) SINGABLE (11) SINGEING (10) [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. | [noun] The act or process of slightly burning. SINGLETS (9) [noun] A vest; a sleeveless garment with a low-cut neck, often worn underneath a shirt. | [noun] A multiplet having a single member, especially a single spectroscopic peak. | [noun] A quantum state having zero spin. SINGLING (10) [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. SINGSONG (10) [noun] A piece of verse with a simple, song-like rhythm. | [noun] An informal gathering at which songs are sung; a singing session. | [noun] Bad singing or poetry. SINGULAR (9) [noun] (grammar) A form of a word that refers to only one person or thing. | [noun] That which is not general; a specific determinate instance. | [adjective] Being only one of a larger population. SINICIZE (19) [verb] To make something Chinese in form or character. | [verb] To convert to Chinese characters or to enable to work with the Chinese script. SINISTER (8) [adjective] Inauspicious, ominous, unlucky, illegitimate (as in bar sinister). | [adjective] Evil or seemingly evil; indicating lurking danger or harm. | [adjective] Of the left side. SINKABLE (14) SINKAGES (13) [noun] An amount of material involved in a sinking. | [noun] An area of sunken ground; a depression. | [noun] The change in draft that a vessel obtains when moving through the water. SINKHOLE (15) [noun] A hole formed in soluble rock by the action of water, serving to conduct surface water to an underground passage | [noun] A depressed area in which waste or drainage collects. | [noun] A hole in the playfield that rewards the player when the ball is guided into it. SINOLOGY (12) [noun] The study of the history, language and culture of China; Chinese studies. | [noun] (Cold War) The study of the internal politics of the high members of the government of the People's Republic of China. SINOPIAS (10) SINTERED (9) [verb] To compact and heat a powder to form a solid mass. SINUATED (9) SINUATES (8) 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. SIPHONAL (13) [adjective] Resembling or relating to a siphon. SIPHONED (14) [verb] To transfer (liquid) by means of a siphon. | [verb] To steal or skim off in small amounts; to embezzle. SIPHONIC (15) SIRENIAN (8) [noun] Any of a group of aquatic, herbivorous mammals, of the order Sirenia, including the manatees and dugong. SIRLOINS (8) [noun] A cut of beef from the lower part of the back, where the last ribs are (called rump in UK English). | [noun] A cut of beef from the middle of the back (corresponding to short loin and partly rib in US English). SIROCCOS (12) [noun] A hot and often strong southerly to southeasterly wind on the Mediterranean that originates in the Sahara and adjacent North African regions. | [noun] A draft of hot air from an artificial source of heat. SIRVENTE (11) SISSIEST (8) [adjective] Effeminate. | [adjective] Cowardly. SISSYISH (14) SISTERED (9) SISTERLY (11) [adjective] Of or characteristic of sisters. | [adverb] In the manner of a sister, behaving as one would expect of a sister; as a sister, as sisters. SISTROID (9) SISTRUMS (10) SITARIST (8) SITHENCE (13) SITOLOGY (12) SITTINGS (9) [noun] A period during which one is seated for a specific purpose. | [noun] A special seat allotted to a seat-holder, at church, etc. | [noun] The part of the year in which judicial business is transacted. 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. SITUATES (8) [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. SITZMARK (23) [noun] An indentation in the snow made by a fallen skier. SIXPENCE (19) [noun] The value of six old pence; half of a shilling; or one-fortieth of a pound sterling. | [noun] A former British coin worth sixpence, first minted in 1551. SIXPENNY (20) [noun] A publication costing sixpence. | [noun] A stamp worth sixpence. | [adjective] Worth six pennies. SIXTEENS (15) SIXTIETH (18) [noun] The person or thing in the sixtieth position. | [noun] One of sixty equal parts of a whole. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number sixty. SIXTYISH (21) SIZEABLE (19) [adjective] Fairly large. SIZEABLY (22) SIZINESS (17) SIZZLERS (26) SIZZLING (27) [verb] To make the sound of water hitting a hot surface. | [verb] To be exciting or dazzling. | [noun] Such a hissing sound. SJAMBOKS (23) [noun] A stout whip, especially made of rhinoceros or hippopotamus hide. SKATINGS (13) SKATOLES (12) SKEETERS (12) [noun] Mosquito | [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. SKEINING (13) SKELETAL (12) [adjective] Of, or relating to the skeleton | [adjective] Haggard, cadaverous, emaciated or gaunt SKELETON (12) [noun] The system that provides support to an organism, internal and made up of bones and cartilage in vertebrates, external in some other animals. | [noun] An anthropomorphic representation of a skeleton. | [noun] A very thin person. | [noun] A type of tobogganing in which competitors lie face down, and descend head first. SKELLUMS (14) SKELPING (15) [verb] To beat or slap. | [verb] To move briskly along. | [verb] To form (a plate or bar of metal, etc.) into a skelp. SKELTERS (12) SKEPTICS (16) [noun] Someone who habitually doubts beliefs and claims presented as accepted by others, requiring strong evidence before accepting any belief or claim. | [noun] Someone undecided as to what is true. | [noun] A type of agnostic; someone skeptical towards religion. SKERRIES (12) [noun] A small rocky island which may be covered by the sea at high tide or during storms. SKETCHED (18) [verb] To make a brief, basic drawing. | [verb] To describe briefly and with very few details. SKETCHER (17) SKETCHES (17) [noun] A rapidly executed freehand drawing that is not intended as a finished work, often consisting of a multitude of overlapping lines. | [noun] A rough design, plan, or draft, as a rough draft of a book. | [noun] A brief description of a person or account of an incident; a general presentation or outline. SKEWBACK (23) [noun] The side of an arch; the course of masonry on the top of an abutment with a slope for the base of the arch to rest against. 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. SKEWNESS (15) SKIAGRAM (15) SKIDDERS (14) SKIDDIER (14) SKIDDING (15) [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. SKIDDOOS (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. 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. SKIDWAYS (19) SKIFFLED (19) SKIFFLES (18) SKIJORER (19) SKILLESS (12) [adjective] Without skill; unskilled, inept. SKILLETS (12) [noun] A pan for frying, generally large and heavy. | [noun] (sometimes attributive) A dish or meal cooked in such a pan. | [verb] To cook in a skillet. SKILLFUL (15) [adjective] Possessing skill. SKILLING (13) [verb] To set apart; separate. | [verb] To discern; have knowledge or understanding; to know how (to). | [verb] To know; to understand. | [noun] A Scandinavian monetary unit and coin up to the 19th century. (A subdivision of the Swedish riksdaler, the Danish and Norwegian rigsdaler and speciedaler). | [noun] A bay of a barn. SKIMMERS (16) [noun] A device that skims. | [noun] A person who skims. | [noun] Any of three species of bird in the genus Rynchops of the family Laridae, that feed by skimming the surface of water bodies with their bills in flight. SKIMMING (17) [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. SKIMPIER (16) [adjective] Small or inadequate; not generous, or of a garment, very small, light, or revealing. SKIMPILY (19) SKIMPING (17) [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. SKINFULS (15) [noun] Enough to fill a skin. | [noun] Enough alcoholic drink to cause inebriation. 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. SKINKERS (16) SKINKING (17) SKINLESS (12) SKINLIKE (16) SKINNERS (12) [noun] Someone who skins animals. | [noun] A hunting knife used for skinning animals. | [noun] One who deals in skins, pelts, or hides. SKINNIER (12) [adjective] Thin, generally in a negative sense (as opposed to slim, which is thin in a positive sense). | [adjective] (of food or beverages) Low-fat. | [adjective] Naked; nude (chiefly used in the phrase skinny dipping). SKINNING (13) [verb] To injure the skin of. | [verb] To remove the skin and/or fur of an animal or a human. | [verb] To high five. SKIORING (13) SKIPJACK (27) [noun] Any of several unrelated fish. | [noun] An upstart. | [noun] An elaterid; a click beetle. SKIPLANE (14) SKIPPERS (16) [noun] The master of a ship. | [noun] A coach, director, or other leader. | [noun] The captain of a sports team such as football, cricket, rugby or curling. SKIPPETS (16) [noun] A small boat; a skiff. | [noun] A small, round box used for keeping documents and seals or for covering seals attached to documents SKIPPING (17) [verb] To move by hopping on alternate feet. | [verb] To leap about lightly. | [verb] To skim, ricochet or bounce over a surface. SKIRLING (13) [verb] To make a shrill sound, as of bagpipes. | [noun] A small trout or salmon. | [noun] A shrill cry or sound; a crying shrilly; a skirl. SKIRMISH (17) [noun] A brief battle between small groups, usually part of a longer or larger battle or war. | [noun] (by extension) Any minor dispute. | [noun] A type of outdoor military style game using paintball or similar weapons. SKIRRETS (12) [noun] An umbelliferous plant (Sium sisarum), cultivated for its sweet edible tuberous roots. SKIRRING (13) [verb] To leave hastily; to flee, especially with a whirring sound | [verb] To make a whirring sound. | [verb] To search about in, scour SKIRTERS (12) SKIRTING (13) [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. SKITTERS (12) [noun] A skittering movement. | [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. SKITTERY (15) [adjective] Skittish SKITTISH (15) [adjective] Easily scared or startled; timid. | [adjective] Wanton; changeable; fickle | [adjective] Difficult to manage; tricky. SKITTLES (12) [noun] One of the wooden targets used in skittles. | [noun] (mostly British) A pub game in which a ball is rolled down a wooden alley in order to knock down as many of the nine skittles as possible. | [noun] An informal form of chess played without a clock. SKIVVIED (19) [verb] To perform menial work; to do chores, like a servant. SKIVVIES (18) [noun] Underwear, particularly men′s underwear. | [noun] A female domestic servant, especially one employed for menial work. | [noun] (Vietnam War) A prostitute. SKLENTED (13) SKOALING (13) SKREEGHS (16) SKREIGHS (16) SKULKERS (16) SKULKING (17) [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. SKULLCAP (16) [noun] A small domed cap that covers the area from the forehead to just above the back of the neck. | [noun] A yarmulke-like hat worn as an element of ghetto fashion. | [noun] The calvaria, the top part of the skull, covering the cranial cavity containing the brain. SKUNKING (17) [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. SKYBORNE (17) SKYBOXES (24) [noun] A seating area for VIPs in a stadium. | [noun] A cube with textures on its inner faces, used to simulate the sky or similar backdrop around a three-dimensional playfield. SKYDIVED (20) [verb] To be in freefall after jumping from an aircraft and landing safely by deploying a parachute. SKYDIVER (19) [noun] Someone who skydives. SKYDIVES (19) [noun] An instance of skydiving. SKYHOOKS (22) [noun] An hook imagined to be suspended in midair. | [noun] An overhead winch. | [noun] A helicopter that lifts and transports heavy objects suspended by a heavy cable. SKYJACKS (28) [verb] To steal or commandeer (hijack) an airplane, usually by threat of violence to the passengers. SKYLARKS (19) [noun] A small brown passerine bird, Alauda arvensis, that sings as it flies high into the air. | [verb] (originally nautical) To jump about joyfully, frolic; to play around, play tricks. SKYLIGHT (19) [noun] A window, dome, or opening in the roof or ceiling, to admit natural light. | [noun] Diffuse sky radiation—solar radiation reaching the earth's surface after having been scattered from the direct solar beam by molecules or suspensoids in the atmosphere. | [noun] A hole in the upper part of a lava tube, yielding a view of the lava within. SKYLINES (15) [noun] (earth sciences) The line at which the earth and sky meet. | [noun] The horizontal silhouette of a city or building against the sky. | [noun] A path of movement, especially military movement, producing a silhouette above terrain features visible from the location of likely observers. SKYSAILS (15) [noun] The sail set next above the royal. SKYWALKS (22) [noun] Skyway SKYWARDS (19) [adverb] In the direction of the sky, upwards. SKYWRITE (18) SKYWROTE (18) SLABBERS (12) [noun] Moisture falling from the mouth; slaver. | [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. SLABBERY (15) SLABBING (13) [verb] To make something into a slab. SLABLIKE (14) SLACKENS (14) [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. SLACKERS (14) [noun] One who procrastinates or is lazy. | [noun] A person lacking a sense of direction in life; an underachiever. | [noun] A person who seeks to avoid military service. SLACKEST (14) [adjective] (normally said of a rope) Lax; not tense; not firmly extended. | [adjective] Weak; not holding fast. | [adjective] Lacking diligence or care; not earnest or eager. SLACKING (15) [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. SLAGGIER (10) SLAGGING (11) [verb] To produce slag | [verb] To become slag; to agglomerate when heated below the fusion point | [verb] To reduce to slag SLAKABLE (14) SLALOMED (11) [verb] To race in a slalom. | [verb] To move in a slalom-like manner. SLAMMERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, slams. | [noun] (usually "the slammer") Jail, prison. | [noun] A tequila cocktail. SLAMMING (13) [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. SLANDERS (9) [noun] A false or unsupported, malicious statement (spoken, not written), especially one which is injurious to a person's reputation; the making of such a statement. | [verb] To utter a slanderous statement about; baselessly speak ill of. SLANGIER (9) [adjective] Including or given to slang. SLANGILY (12) SLANGING (10) [verb] To vocally abuse, or shout at. | [verb] To sell (especially illegal drugs). SLANTING (9) [verb] To lean, tilt or incline. | [verb] To bias or skew. | [verb] To lie or exaggerate. SLAPDASH (14) [verb] To apply, or apply something to, in a hasty, careless, or rough manner; to roughcast. | [adjective] Produced or carried out hastily; haphazard; careless. | [adverb] In a hasty or careless manner. SLAPJACK (23) [noun] A type of pancake, or flapjack. | [noun] A simple card game similar to snap. SLAPPERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, slaps. | [noun] A prostitute. | [noun] A woman of loose morals. SLAPPING (13) [verb] To give a slap to. | [verb] To cause something to strike soundly. | [verb] To strike soundly against something. SLASHERS (11) [noun] One who slashes. | [noun] A machine for applying size to warp yarns. | [noun] A horror movie with graphic blood and violence. A slasher movie SLASHING (12) [verb] To cut or attempt to cut, particularly: | [verb] To strike violently and randomly, particularly: | [verb] To move quickly and violently. SLATCHES (13) SLATHERS (11) [noun] A thick sauce or spread that is to be slathered (spread thickly) onto food. | [noun] Drool (especially if abundant). | [noun] (usually in the plural) A generous or abundant quantity. SLATIEST (8) SLATINGS (9) SLATTERN (8) [noun] A slut, a sexually promiscuous woman. | [noun] A dirty and untidy woman. SLATTING (9) SLAVERED (12) [verb] To drool saliva from the mouth; to slobber. | [verb] To fawn. | [verb] To smear with saliva issuing from the mouth. SLAVERER (11) SLEAVING (12) SLEAZIER (17) [adjective] Marked by low quality; inferior; inadequate. | [adjective] Raunchy or perverted in nature; tastelessly sexual | [adjective] Untrustworthy SLEAZILY (20) SLEDDERS (10) SLEDDING (11) [verb] To ride a sled. | [verb] To convey on a sled. | [noun] The act of sliding downhill, or transporting something, on a sled. SLEDGING (11) [verb] To hit with a sledgehammer. | [verb] To drag or draw a sledge. | [verb] To ride, travel with or transport in a sledge. SLEEKENS (12) SLEEKEST (12) [adjective] Having an even, smooth surface; smooth | [adjective] Glossy | [adjective] Not rough or harsh. SLEEKIER (12) SLEEKING (13) [verb] To make smooth or glossy; to polish or cause to be attractive. | [noun] A process of making smooth or glossy. SLEEPERS (10) [noun] Someone who sleeps. | [noun] That which lies dormant, as a law. | [noun] A spy, saboteur, or terrorist who lives unobtrusively in a community until activated by a prearranged signal; may be part of a sleeper cell. SLEEPIER (10) [adjective] Tired; feeling the need for sleep. | [adjective] Suggesting tiredness. | [adjective] Tending to induce sleep; soporific. SLEEPILY (13) SLEEPING (11) [verb] To rest in a state of reduced consciousness. | [verb] (of a spinning top or yo-yo) To spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. | [verb] To cause (a spinning top or yo-yo) to spin on its axis with no other perceptible motion. SLEETIER (8) SLEETING (9) [verb] (of the weather) To be in a state in which sleet is falling. SLEEVING (12) [verb] To fit a sleeve to | [verb] (magic tricks) To hide something up one's sleeve. | [noun] Hollow flexible tube used as insulation for wires and cables. SLEIGHED (13) [verb] To ride or drive a sleigh. SLEIGHER (12) SLEIGHTS (12) [noun] Cunning; craft; artful practice. | [noun] An artful trick; sly artifice; a feat so dexterous that the manner of performance escapes observation. | [noun] Dexterous practice; dexterity; skill. SLEUTHED (12) [verb] To act as a detective; to try to discover who committed a crime, or, more generally, to solve a mystery. SLICKERS (14) [noun] One who or that which slicks. | [noun] (originally North America) A waterproof coat or jacket. | [noun] A person who is perceived as clever, urbane and possibly disreputable. (abbreviation of city slicker.) SLICKEST (14) [adjective] Slippery or smooth due to a covering of liquid; often used to describe appearances. | [adjective] Appearing expensive or sophisticated. | [adjective] Superficially convincing but actually untrustworthy. SLICKING (15) [verb] To make slick. | [noun] A narrow vein of ore. | [noun] A whipping with a hickory switch. SLIDABLE (11) SLIDEWAY (15) [noun] Any form of track along which things can slide. 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. SLIGHTER (12) [adjective] Small | [adjective] Of slender build | [adjective] Even, smooth or level | [noun] One who slights. SLIGHTLY (15) [adverb] Slenderly; delicately. | [adverb] (degree) To a small extent or degree. SLIMIEST (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to slime | [adjective] Resembling, of the nature of, covered or daubed with, or abounding in slime | [adjective] Friendly in a false, calculating way; underhanded; sneaky; slick; smarmy. SLIMMERS (12) [noun] A person who is trying to become slim by dieting. SLIMMEST (12) [adjective] Slender, thin. | [adjective] (of something abstract like a chance or margin) Very small, tiny. | [adjective] (rural) Bad, of questionable quality; not strongly built, flimsy. SLIMMING (13) [verb] To lose weight in order to achieve slimness. | [verb] To make slimmer; to reduce in size. | [noun] The process of making or becoming slimmer. SLIMNESS (10) SLIMSIER (10) SLINGERS (9) SLINGING (10) [verb] To throw with a circular or arcing motion. | [verb] To throw with a sling. | [verb] To pass a rope around (a cask, gun, etc.) preparatory to attaching a hoisting or lowering tackle. SLINKIER (12) [adjective] Furtive, stealthy or catlike. | [adjective] Thin; lank; lean. | [adjective] Of a garment: close-fitting; clingy. SLINKILY (15) SLINKING (13) [verb] To sneak about furtively. | [verb] To give birth to an animal prematurely. | [noun] The act of one who slinks. SLIPCASE (12) [noun] A box, open on one end, for keeping a set of books together. SLIPFORM (15) [noun] A type of process for setting concrete which uses moveable forms that are moved and reused once the concrete is stiff enough to retain its shape under its own weight. | [noun] A moveable form used when setting concrete using the slipform technique. | [verb] To use the slipform technique when creating a concrete structure. SLIPKNOT (14) [noun] A knot which attaches a line to an object and tightens when pressure is applied. Also called a running knot. | [noun] A knot which attaches a line to the middle of another, allowing it to slide SLIPLESS (10) SLIPOUTS (10) SLIPOVER (13) [noun] Any garment that is easy to put on, especially a dress or top. | [adjective] Slip-on SLIPPAGE (13) [noun] The act of slipping, especially from a secure location. | [noun] The amount by which something has slipped. | [noun] A lessening of performance or achievement. SLIPPERS (12) [noun] A low soft shoe that can be slipped on and off easily. | [noun] Such a shoe intended for indoor use; a bedroom or house slipper. | [noun] A flip-flop (type of rubber sandal). SLIPPERY (15) [adjective] Of a surface, having low friction, often due to being covered in a non-viscous liquid, and therefore hard to grip, hard to stand on without falling, etc. | [adjective] (by extension) Evasive; difficult to pin down. | [adjective] Liable to slip; not standing firm. SLIPPIER (12) [adjective] (slightly informal) Slippery. | [adjective] Spry, nimble. SLIPPING (13) [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. SLIPSHOD (14) [adjective] Done poorly or too quickly; slapdash. | [adjective] Wearing slippers or similarly open shoes. SLIPSLOP (12) SLIPSOLE (10) SLIPWARE (13) [noun] A type of pottery identified by its primary decorating process where slip is placed onto the dry surface by dipping, painting or splashing. SLIPWAYS (16) [noun] A sloping surface, leading down to the shore or to a river, on which ships are built, repaired or stored and from which they are launched. SLITHERS (11) [verb] To move about smoothly and from side to side. | [verb] To slide SLITHERY (14) SLITLESS (8) SLITTERS (8) SLITTING (9) [verb] To cut a narrow opening. | [verb] To split into strips by lengthwise cuts. | [verb] To cut; to sever; to divide. SLIVERED (12) [verb] To cut or divide into long, thin pieces, or into very small pieces; to cut or rend lengthwise; to slit. SLIVERER (11) SLIVOVIC (16) SLOBBERS (12) [verb] To allow saliva or liquid to run from one's mouth; to drool. SLOBBERY (15) SLOBBIER (12) [adjective] Slobbish. | [adjective] Slobbery. | [adjective] Slushy, like slob ice. SLOBBISH (15) [adjective] Like a slob; slovenly. SLOGGERS (10) SLOGGING (11) [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. SLOPPIER (12) [adjective] Very wet; covered in or composed of slop. | [adjective] Messy; not neat, elegant, or careful. | [adjective] Imprecise or loose. SLOPPILY (15) SLOPPING (13) [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. SLOPWORK (17) SLOSHIER (11) [adjective] That sloshes or splashes SLOSHING (12) [verb] (of a liquid) To shift chaotically; to splash noisily. | [verb] (of a liquid) To cause to slosh | [verb] To make a sloshing sound. SLOTBACK (16) [noun] A particular position in American football, often a running back who lines up near the line of scrimmage and can function as a wide receiver. | [noun] A particular position in Canadian football, similar to a hybrid between wide receiver and running back. This position is more common in the Canadian game than its American counterpart. SLOTHFUL (14) [adjective] Lazy; idle; tending to sloth. SLOTTING (9) [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) 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. SLOUCHER (13) SLOUCHES (13) [noun] A hanging down of the head; a drooping posture; a limp appearance | [noun] Any depression or hanging down, as of a hat brim. | [noun] Someone who is slow to act. SLOUGHED (13) [verb] To shed (skin). | [verb] To slide off (like a layer of skin). | [verb] To discard. SLOVENLY (14) [adjective] Having an untidy appearance; unkempt. | [adjective] Dirty, unwashed; disorderly. | [adjective] Careless or negligent; sloppy. SLOWDOWN (15) [noun] A reduction in speed, or a decrease in the level of production, etc. SLOWNESS (11) [noun] The quality or state of being slow. | [noun] A unit, the reciprocal of velocity, that delineates the amount of time required for an object to travel a given distance. SLOWPOKE (17) [noun] (mildly) A person who moves slowly or takes a long time to do something. SLOWWORM (16) SLUBBERS (12) SLUBBING (13) [verb] To draw and twist fibers in order to prepare them for spinning. SLUDGIER (10) SLUFFING (15) SLUGABED (12) [noun] A lazy person who lies in bed after the usual time for getting up; a sluggard. SLUGFEST (12) [noun] A baseball game in which many runs are scored, especially by home runs. | [noun] A game or match in which heavy blows are exchanged. | [noun] Tough, heated contest 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. SLUGGERS (10) [noun] A boxer who tends to deliver hard punches | [noun] A batter who has a high percentage of extra base hits SLUGGING (11) [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. SLUGGISH (13) [adjective] Habitually idle and lazy; slothful; dull; inactive | [adjective] Slow; having little motion | [adjective] Having no power to move oneself or itself; inert. SLUICING (11) [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. SLUMBERS (12) [noun] A very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [noun] A state of ignorance or inaction. | [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. SLUMBERY (15) SLUMGUMS (13) SLUMISMS (12) SLUMLORD (11) [noun] A person who makes money by renting housing that is kept in poor condition. SLUMMERS (12) SLUMMIER (12) [adjective] Like a slum; run-down, dirty, decrepit. SLUMMING (13) [verb] To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own. | [noun] A period of associating with people or engaging in activities with a status below one's own. SLUMPING (13) [verb] To collapse heavily or helplessly. | [verb] To decline or fall off in activity or performance. | [verb] To slouch or droop. SLURPING (11) [verb] To eat or drink noisily. | [verb] To make a loud sucking noise. | [noun] A sound or motion that slurps. SLURRIED (9) SLURRIES (8) [noun] Any flowable suspension of small particles in liquid. | [noun] Liquid waste from some types of mining, such as mountain top removal mining, usually very toxic and stored nearby in large dams. | [noun] A mixture of animal waste, other organic material and sometimes water, stored in a slurry pit and used as fertilizer; also used in combination, as pig slurry, etc. SLURRING (9) [verb] To insult or slight. | [verb] To run together; to articulate poorly. | [verb] To play legato or without separate articulation; to connect (notes) smoothly. SLUSHIER (11) [adjective] Covered in slush. | [adjective] Having the consistency of slush. | [adjective] (of a person) Soupy. SLUSHILY (14) SLUSHING (12) [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. SLUTTIER (8) [adjective] Of or resembling a slut. SLUTTISH (11) [adjective] Like a slut; sexually promiscuous. | [adjective] Dirty or untidy; disorderly. SLYBOOTS (13) [noun] A person who is clever or shrewd, especially one who is stealthy, manipulative, and rather charming. SMACKERS (16) [noun] One who smacks or spanks. | [noun] One who makes a smacking noise, especially while eating. | [noun] A kiss. SMACKING (17) [verb] To get the flavor of. | [verb] To indicate or suggest something; used with of. | [verb] To have a particular taste; used with of. SMALLAGE (11) SMALLEST (10) [adjective] Not large or big; insignificant; few in number. | [adjective] Young, as a child. | [adjective] (writing, incomparable) Minuscule or lowercase, referring to written or printed letters. SMALLISH (13) [adjective] Somewhat small. SMALLPOX (19) [noun] An acute, highly infectious often fatal disease caused by Variola virus of the family Poxviridae. It was completely eradicated in the 1970s. Those who survived were left with pockmarks. SMALTINE (10) SMALTITE (10) [noun] A variety of skutterudite with the chemical formula (Co,Fe,Ni)As2, crystallizing in the cubic system. SMARAGDE (12) SMARAGDS (12) SMARMIER (12) [adjective] Falsely earnest, smug, or ingratiating. | [adjective] Unctuous, greasy, as hair from pomade SMARMILY (15) SMARTASS (10) [noun] One who is particularly insolent, who tends to make snide remarks or jokes. | [verb] To talk like a smartass, with a lot of snide remarks. | [adjective] Related to or characteristic of a smartass. SMARTENS (10) [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. SMARTEST (10) [adjective] Exhibiting social ability or cleverness. | [adjective] Exhibiting intellectual knowledge, such as that found in books. | [adjective] (often in combination) Equipped with intelligent behaviour (digital/computer technology). SMARTIES (10) [noun] An obnoxiously clever or quick-witted person. SMARTING (11) [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. SMASHERS (13) [noun] Something that, or someone who, smashes. | [noun] An attractive person (see also smashing). | [noun] Anything very large or extraordinary; a whopper. SMASHING (14) [verb] To break (something brittle) violently. | [verb] To be destroyed by being smashed. | [verb] To hit extremely hard. SMASHUPS (15) [noun] An abrupt, damaging breakdown or failure. | [noun] A violent collision involving one or more vehicles. SMATTERS (10) [verb] To talk superficially; to babble, chatter. | [verb] To speak (a language) with spotty or superficial knowledge. | [verb] To study or approach superficially; to dabble in. SMEARERS (10) SMEARIER (10) SMEARING (11) [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. SMECTITE (12) [noun] Any of many clay phyllosilicate minerals that have a relatively open structure. SMEDDUMS (14) SMEEKING (15) SMELLERS (10) SMELLIER (10) [adjective] Having a bad smell. | [adjective] Having a quality that arouses suspicion. | [adjective] (in extreme programming) Having signs that suggest a design problem; having a code smell. SMELLING (11) [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. SMELTERS (10) [noun] A person employed to do smelting. | [noun] A machine used to smelt metal. | [noun] A place where smelting is done. SMELTERY (13) SMELTING (11) [verb] To fuse or melt two things into one, especially in order to extract metal from ore; to meld | [noun] The process of melting or fusion, especially to extract a metal from its ore. SMERKING (15) SMIDGENS (12) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGEON (12) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIDGINS (12) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMILAXES (17) [noun] Any member of the Smilax genus of greenbriers. SMIRCHED (16) [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [verb] To harm the reputation of; to smear or slander. SMIRCHES (15) [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [verb] To harm the reputation of; to smear or slander. SMIRKERS (14) SMIRKIER (14) [adjective] Smirking, or as if smirking | [adjective] Smart; spruce. SMIRKING (15) [verb] To smile in a way that is affected, smug, insolent or contemptuous. | [noun] The act of one who smirks. SMITHERS (13) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A fragment or atom. | [noun] Light, fine rain. SMITHERY (16) [noun] The place where a smith works. | [noun] The trade or craft of a smith. SMITHIES (13) [noun] The location where a smith (particularly a blacksmith) works, a forge. SMOCKING (17) [verb] To provide with, or clothe in, a smock or a smock frock. | [verb] To apply smocking. | [noun] An embroidery technique in which the fabric is gathered and then embroidered with decorative stitches to hold the gathers in place; the product of the use of this embroidery technique. SMOGGIER (12) SMOGLESS (11) SMOKABLE (16) SMOKEPOT (16) SMOKIEST (14) [adjective] Filled with smoke. | [adjective] Giving off smoke. | [adjective] Of a colour or colour pattern similar to that of smoke. SMOLDERS (11) [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. SMOOCHED (16) [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOCHES (15) [noun] A kiss. | [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. SMOOTHEN (13) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMOOTHER (13) [adjective] Having a texture that lacks friction. Not rough. | [adjective] Without difficulty, problems, or unexpected consequences or incidents. | [adjective] Bland; glib. SMOOTHES (13) SMOOTHIE (13) [noun] A smooth-talking person. | [noun] A drink made from whole fruit, thus thicker than fruit juice. | [noun] A member of the mod subculture who is relatively non-violent and wears expensive clothing. SMOOTHLY (16) [adverb] In a smooth manner SMOTHERS (13) [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 SMOTHERY (16) SMOULDER (11) [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. SMUDGIER (12) [adjective] Marked with smudges. | [adjective] Like a thick smoke (such as is emitted by a smudge pot). SMUDGILY (15) SMUDGING (13) [verb] To obscure by blurring; to smear. | [verb] To soil or smear with dirt. | [verb] To use dense smoke to protect from insects. SMUGGEST (12) [adjective] Irritatingly pleased with oneself, offensively self-complacent, self-satisfied. | [adjective] Studiously neat or nice, especially in dress; spruce; affectedly precise; smooth and prim. 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. SMUGGLER (12) [noun] One who smuggles things. | [noun] A vessel employed in smuggling. SMUGGLES (12) [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. SMUGNESS (11) [noun] The state or quality of being smug. | [noun] The result or product of being smug. SMUTCHED (16) SMUTCHES (15) SMUTTIER (10) [adjective] Soiled with smut; blackened, dirty. | [adjective] Obscene, indecent. | [adjective] Affected with the smut fungus. SMUTTILY (13) SMUTTING (11) SNACKING (15) [verb] To eat a light meal. | [verb] To eat between meals. | [verb] To snatch. 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. SNAFFLES (14) [noun] A broad-mouthed, loose-ringed bit (metal in a horse's mouth). It brings pressure to bear on the tongue and bars and corners of the mouth. Often used as a training bit. | [noun] Decorative wear that looks like a snaffle. SNAFUING (12) [verb] To screw up or foul up. SNAGGIER (10) [adjective] Covered in snags, or similar sharp projections. SNAGGING (11) [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. SNAGLIKE (13) SNAILING (9) SNAKEBIT (14) SNAKIEST (12) [adjective] Resembling or relating to snakes. | [adjective] Windy; winding; twisty; sinuous, wavy. | [adjective] Sly; cunning; deceitful. SNAPBACK (18) [noun] The reimposition of an earlier and usually higher tariff. | [noun] An adjustable, flat-brimmed baseball cap with snap fasteners on the back. SNAPLESS (10) SNAPPERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, snaps. | [noun] Any of approximately 100 different species of fish. | [noun] A (human) baby. SNAPPIER (12) [adjective] Rapid and without delay. | [adjective] Irritable. | [adjective] Tidy; well-dressed; sharp. SNAPPILY (15) SNAPPING (13) [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. SNAPPISH (15) [adjective] Likely to snap or bite. | [adjective] Exhibiting irritation or impatience; curt; irascible. SNAPSHOT (13) [noun] A photograph, especially one taken quickly or in a moment of opportunity. | [noun] A glimpse of something; a portrayal of something at a moment in time. | [noun] A file or set of files captured at a particular time, often capable of being reloaded to restore the earlier state. SNAPWEED (14) SNARKIER (12) [adjective] Snide and sarcastic; usually out of irritation, often humorously. | [adjective] Irritable, irritated. SNARLERS (8) SNARLIER (8) [adjective] Given to snarling or growling. | [adjective] Full of snarls. SNARLING (9) [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. 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. SNATCHER (13) SNATCHES (13) [noun] A quick grab or catch. | [noun] A competitive weightlifting event in which a barbell is lifted from the platform to locked arms overhead in a smooth continuous movement. | [noun] A piece of some sound, usually music or conversation. SNAZZIER (26) [adjective] Elegant in manner of dress; stylish, modern or appealing in appearance; flashy. | [adjective] Excellent; clever, ingenious, or adept in behavior, operation, or execution. SNEAKERS (12) [noun] One who sneaks. | [noun] An athletic shoe with a soft, rubber sole. | [noun] A vessel of drink. SNEAKIER (12) [adjective] Difficult to catch due to constantly outwitting the adversaries | [adjective] Dishonest; deceitful. SNEAKILY (15) [adverb] In a sneaky manner. SNEAKING (13) [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. SNEAPING (11) SNEDDING (11) [verb] To lop. SNEERERS (8) SNEERFUL (11) SNEERING (9) [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. | [noun] The act of one who sneers. SNEESHES (11) SNEEZERS (17) SNEEZIER (17) SNEEZING (18) [verb] To expel air as a reflex induced by an irritation in the nose. | [verb] To expel air as if the nose were irritated. | [noun] The act of producing a sneeze. SNELLEST (8) SNELLING (9) [verb] To tie a hook to the end of a fishing line with a snell knot. SNIBBING (13) [verb] To latch (a door, window etc.). SNICKERS (14) [noun] A stifled or broken laugh. | [verb] To emit a snicker, a stifled or broken laugh. | [verb] To utter through a laugh of this kind. SNICKERY (17) SNICKING (15) [verb] To latch, to lock. | [verb] To cut. | [verb] To cut or snip. SNIFFERS (14) [noun] One who sniffs. | [noun] The nose. | [noun] A software or hardware tool for intercepting and logging network traffic. SNIFFIER (14) [adjective] Disdainful; haughty. | [adjective] Characterised by sniffing. SNIFFILY (17) SNIFFING (15) [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 SNIFFISH (17) 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. SNIFFLER (14) SNIFFLES (14) [noun] The act, or the sound of sniffling; the condition of having a runny or wet nose, as from a cold or allergies. | [verb] To make a whimpering or sniffing sound when breathing, because of a runny nose. | [verb] To utter with a whimpering or sniffing sound. SNIFTERS (11) [noun] A small alcoholic drink. | [noun] A pear-shaped glass for drinking brandy or other alcoholic beverages. | [noun] A severe storm. SNIGGERS (10) [verb] To emit a snigger. 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. SNIGGLER (10) SNIGGLES (10) [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. SNIPPERS (12) SNIPPETS (12) [noun] A small part of something, such as a song or fabric; sample. | [noun] A text file containing a relatively small amount of code, useless by itself, along with instructions for inserting that code into a larger codebase. SNIPPETY (15) SNIPPIER (12) [adjective] Fragmentary; snipped. | [adjective] Irritable; impatient; short-tempered. | [adjective] Stingy. SNIPPILY (15) SNIPPING (13) [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. 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. SNITCHER (13) SNITCHES (13) [noun] A thief. | [noun] An informer, usually one who betrays his group. | [noun] A nose. 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. SNIVELER (11) SNOBBERY (15) [noun] The property or trait of being a snob. SNOBBIER (12) [adjective] Characteristic of a snob. SNOBBILY (15) SNOBBISH (15) [adjective] Having the property of being a snob; arrogant and pretentious; smugly superior or dismissive of perceived inferiors. SNOBBISM (14) [noun] A snobbish attitude, particularly in relation to art or high culture. SNOGGING (11) [verb] To kiss passionately. SNOODING (10) SNOOKERS (12) [noun] A cue sport, popular in the UK and other Commonwealth of Nations countries. | [noun] The situation where the cue ball is in such a position that the opponent cannot directly hit the required ball with it. | [verb] To play the game of snooker. SNOOKING (13) SNOOLING (9) SNOOPERS (10) SNOOPIER (10) SNOOPILY (13) SNOOPING (11) [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. | [noun] A secret spying or investigation. SNOOTIER (8) [adjective] Pompous; snobbish; inclined to turn up one's nose | [adjective] Elite; exclusive SNOOTILY (11) SNOOTING (9) SNOOZERS (17) SNOOZIER (17) SNOOZING (18) [verb] To sleep, especially briefly; to nap, doze. | [verb] To pause; to postpone for a short while. SNOOZLED (18) SNOOZLES (17) SNORKELS (12) [noun] A hollow tube, held in the mouth, or mounted on and opening into a diving mask, used by swimmers for breathing underwater. | [noun] A retractable tube fitted in diesel-engine submarines to allow sufficient ventilation that the engines may be used at periscope depth. SNORTERS (8) [noun] One who snorts. | [noun] Something that is extraordinary or remarkable | [noun] Something that is extremely difficult SNORTING (9) [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. SNOTTIER (8) [adjective] Running or dirtied with snot. | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of snot, especially in texture. | [adjective] Ill-tempered or impertinent in an arrogant, conceited manner. SNOTTILY (11) SNOUTIER (8) SNOUTING (9) SNOUTISH (11) SNOWBALL (13) [noun] A ball of snow, usually one made in the hand and thrown for amusement in a snowball fight; also a larger ball of snow made by rolling a snowball around in snow that sticks to it and increases its diameter. | [noun] A cocktail made from lemonade and advocaat. | [noun] Something that snowballs (grows rapidly out of control). SNOWBANK (17) SNOWBELL (13) [noun] Any member of the genus Soldanella of flowering plants native to European mountains, typically with a basal rosette of simple, orbicular leaves and white to violet flowers. | [noun] A styrax. SNOWBELT (13) 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). SNOWBUSH (16) SNOWCAPS (15) [noun] A layer of snow covering a mountain top. | [noun] A small hummingbird, Microchera albocoronata, which is a resident breeder in Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and western Panama. SNOWDROP (14) [noun] Any of the 20 species of the genus Galanthus of the Amaryllidaceae, bulbous flowering plants, bearing a solitary, pendulous, white, bell-shaped flower that appears, depending on species, between autumn and late winter or early spring, all native to temperate Eurasia. | [verb] To steal clothing (especially women's underwear) from a clothesline. SNOWFALL (14) [noun] An instance of falling of snow. | [noun] The amount of snow that falls on one occasion. SNOWIEST (11) [adjective] Marked by snow, characterized by snow. | [adjective] Covered with snow, snow-covered, besnowed. | [adjective] Snow-white in color, white as snow. SNOWLAND (12) SNOWLESS (11) SNOWLIKE (15) SNOWMELT (13) [noun] Runoff from melting snow SNOWMOLD (14) SNOWPACK (19) [noun] An accumulation of packed snow, usually the seasonal amount. SNOWPLOW (16) [noun] A vehicle that is used to push snow off surfaces such as roads. | [noun] A device attached to a vehicle to enable it to be used for removing snow. | [noun] A maneuver/manoeuvre in skiing in which the tips of the skis point inwards and the back ends point outwards, imitating a snow plow. SNOWSHED (15) SNOWSHOE (14) [noun] A flat item of footwear worn to facilitate walking in deep snow. | [verb] To travel using snowshoes. SNOWSUIT (11) [noun] An all-in-one waterproof insulating garment. SNUBBERS (12) [noun] A device used to suppress ("snub") voltage transients in electrical systems, pressure transients in fluid systems, or excess force or rapid movement in mechanical systems. | [noun] One who snubs. SNUBBIER (12) SNUBBING (13) [verb] To slight, ignore or behave coldly toward someone. | [verb] To turn down; to dismiss. | [verb] To check; to reprimand. SNUBNESS (10) SNUFFBOX (23) [noun] A small box or container to hold snuff or loose tobacco. SNUFFERS (14) [noun] A device made to extinguish (snuff out) a candle. | [noun] A person who uses snuff (the tobacco product). | [noun] The common porpoise. SNUFFIER (14) SNUFFILY (17) SNUFFING (15) [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. 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. SNUFFLER (14) SNUFFLES (14) [noun] An act of snuffling; sniffing loudly | [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. SNUGGERY (13) [noun] A comfortable room or dwelling. SNUGGEST (10) [adjective] Warm and comfortable; cosy. | [adjective] Satisfactory. | [adjective] Close-fitting. SNUGGIES (10) SNUGGING (11) [verb] To make secure or snug. | [verb] To snuggle or nestle. | [verb] To make smooth. 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. SNUGGLES (10) [noun] An affectionate hug. | [noun] The final remnant left in a liquor bottle. | [verb] To lie close to another person or thing, hugging or being cosy. SNUGNESS (9) SOAKAGES (13) SOAPBARK (16) SOAPIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling soap. | [adjective] Resembling a soap opera. | [adjective] Full of soap. SOAPLESS (10) SOAPLIKE (14) SOAPSUDS (11) [noun] Lather, suds, foam produced by soap in water. SOAPWORT (13) [noun] Any perennial herb of the genus Saponaria. SOARINGS (9) SOBEREST (10) [adjective] Not drunk; not intoxicated | [adjective] Not given to excessive drinking of alcohol | [adjective] Moderate; realistic; serious; not playful; not passionate; cool; self-controlled SOBERING (11) [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 SOBERIZE (19) SOBRIETY (13) [noun] The quality or state of being sober. | [noun] Soundness of judgement. SOCAGERS (11) SOCCAGES (13) SOCIABLE (12) [noun] A sociable person. | [noun] A four-wheeled open carriage with seats facing each other. | [noun] A tricycle for two persons side by side. SOCIABLY (15) SOCIALLY (13) [adverb] In a social manner; sociably. | [adverb] In social contexts. SOCIETAL (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to society or social groups, or to their activities, customs, etc. SOCKETED (15) [adjective] Having a socket. SOCKEYES (17) [noun] A small salmon with red flesh, Oncorhynchus nerka, found in the coastal waters of the northern Pacific. | [noun] The edible flesh of this fish. SOCKLESS (14) SODALESS (9) SODALIST (9) SODALITE (9) [noun] A mineral of alkaline igneous and plutonic rocks that are low in silica, of the chemical composition of sodium aluminum silicate with chlorine, Na4Al3Si3O12Cl. Pink sodalite is sometimes called hackmanite. Sodalite and lazurite form the sodalite Group of silicate minerals. SODALITY (12) [noun] A fraternity, a society or association. | [noun] Companionship. | [noun] Spiritual communion with a divine being, a fellowship SODAMIDE (12) SODDENED (11) [verb] To drench, soak or saturate. | [verb] To become soaked. SODDENLY (13) SODOMIES (11) SODOMIST (11) SODOMITE (11) [noun] One who practices sodomy; a sodomist. | [noun] A native or inhabitant of Sodom SODOMIZE (20) [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. SOFTBACK (19) [noun] A softcover or paperback book. SOFTBALL (13) [noun] A game similar to baseball but played with a larger and softer ball which can be thrown overhand or underhand. | [noun] The ball used to play the sport. | [noun] (by analogy) A question designed to be easy to answer. SOFTENED (12) [verb] To make something soft or softer. | [verb] To undermine the morale of someone (often soften up). | [verb] To make less harsh SOFTENER (11) [noun] One who, or that which, softens. SOFTHEAD (15) SOFTNESS (11) [noun] The quality of being soft. SOFTWARE (14) [noun] Encoded computer instructions, usually modifiable (unless stored in some form of unalterable memory such as ROM). | [noun] The human beings involved in warfare, as opposed to hardware such as weapons and vehicles. 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. SOGGIEST (10) [adjective] Soaked with moisture or other liquid. SOILAGES (9) SOILLESS (8) SOILURES (8) SOJOURNS (15) [noun] A short stay somewhere. | [noun] A temporary residence. | [verb] To reside somewhere temporarily, especially as a guest or lodger. SOLACERS (10) SOLACING (11) [verb] To give solace to; comfort; cheer; console. | [verb] To allay or assuage. | [verb] To take comfort; to be cheered. SOLANDER (9) [noun] A box, in the form of a book, used for keeping botanical specimens etc; drop-spine or clamshell box SOLANINE (8) [noun] A poisonous glycoalkaloid found in many species of the nightshade family Solanaceae, including potato and tomato. SOLANINS (8) SOLANUMS (10) [noun] Any plant in the genus Solanum. | [noun] A traditional green vegetable in the genus Solanum, specifically Solanum nigrum, and sometimes Solanum macrocarpon, Solanum scabrun, and Solanum villosum. SOLARISE (8) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLARISM (10) SOLARIUM (10) [noun] An establishment with sunbeds in it or where one can rent sunbeds. | [noun] A room, with many windows, exposed to the sun. | [noun] A sundial. SOLARIZE (17) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLATING (9) SOLATION (8) SOLATIUM (10) [noun] A form of compensation for emotional rather than physical or financial harm. | [noun] Intangible or emotional compensation. 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. SOLDERER (9) SOLDIERS (9) [noun] A member of an army, of any rank. | [noun] A private in military service, as distinguished from an officer. | [noun] A guardsman. SOLDIERY (12) [noun] Soldiers considered as a group. | [noun] The profession or skill of being a soldier. SOLECISE (10) SOLECISM (12) [noun] An erroneous or improper usage. | [noun] (grammar) Error in the use of language. | [noun] A faux pas or breach of etiquette; a transgression against the norms of expected behavior. SOLECIST (10) SOLECIZE (19) SOLELESS (8) SOLEMNER (10) SOLEMNLY (13) [adverb] In a solemn manner. SOLENESS (8) 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. SOLERETS (8) SOLFEGES (12) SOLFEGGI (13) SOLICITS (10) [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. SOLIDAGO (10) [noun] The goldenrod, or any of various similar plants in the genus Solidago. SOLIDARY (12) [adjective] Having community of interests and responsibilities. SOLIDEST (9) SOLIDIFY (15) [verb] To make solid; convert into a solid body. | [verb] To concentrate; consolidate. | [verb] To become solid; to freeze, set. SOLIDITY (12) [noun] The state or quality of being solid. | [noun] Moral firmness; validity; truth; certainty. | [noun] The solid contents of a body; volume; amount of enclosed space. SOLIQUID (18) SOLITARY (11) [noun] One who lives alone, or in solitude; an anchoret, hermit or recluse. | [noun] Solitary confinement. | [adjective] Living or being by oneself; alone; having no companion present | [noun] The Rodrigues solitaire (Pezophaps solitaria), an extinct flightless bird. SOLITONS (8) [noun] A self-reinforcing pulse or travelling wave caused by any non-linear effect (found in many physical systems). SOLITUDE (9) [noun] Aloneness; state of being alone or solitary, by oneself. | [noun] A lonely or deserted place. SOLLERET (8) SOLOISTS (8) [noun] A person who performs a solo. SOLONETS (8) SOLONETZ (17) SOLSTICE (10) [noun] One of the two points in the ecliptic at which the sun is furthest from the celestial equator. This corresponds to one of two days in the year when the day is either longest or shortest. SOLUBLES (10) SOLUTION (8) [noun] A homogeneous mixture, which may be liquid, gas or solid, formed by dissolving one or more substances. | [noun] An act, plan or other means, used or proposed, to solve a problem. | [noun] The answer to a problem. SOLVABLE (13) SOLVATED (12) [verb] To form such a complex upon solution | [adjective] Combined with molecules of a solvent. SOLVATES (11) [noun] A complex formed by the attachment of solvent molecules to that of a solute | [verb] To form such a complex upon solution SOLVENCY (16) [noun] The state of having enough funds or liquid assets to pay all of one's debts; the state of being solvent. SOLVENTS (11) [noun] A liquid that dissolves a solid, liquid, or gaseous solute, resulting in a solution. | [noun] That which resolves. SOMBERLY (15) SOMBRELY (15) SOMBRERO (12) [noun] A kind of hat with a high conical or cylindrical crown and a saucer-shaped brim, highly embroidered, made of plush felt. | [noun] A mixed drink with coffee liqueur and cream. | [noun] A series of four consecutive strikes. SOMBROUS (12) SOMEBODY (16) [noun] A recognised or important person, a celebrity. | [pronoun] Some unspecified person. SOMEDEAL (11) SOMEONES (10) SOMERSET (10) SOMETIME (12) [adjective] Former, erstwhile; at some previous time. | [adjective] Occasional. | [adverb] At an indefinite but stated time in the past or future. SOMEWAYS (16) [adverb] Somehow, in an unspecified manner. SOMEWHAT (16) [noun] More or less; a certain quantity or degree; a part, more or less; something. | [noun] A person or thing of importance; a somebody. | [adverb] (degree) To a limited extent or degree. SOMEWHEN (16) [adverb] At some time; indefinitely; some time or other, sometime SOMEWISE (13) SONANCES (10) SONANTAL (8) SONANTIC (10) SONARMAN (10) SONARMEN (10) SONATINA (8) [noun] A musical composition resembling a sonata but shorter or simpler. SONATINE (8) SONGBIRD (12) [noun] A bird having a melodious song or call. SONGBOOK (15) [noun] A book containing songs. SONGFEST (12) SONGLESS (9) SONGLIKE (13) [adjective] Resembling a song SONGSTER (9) [noun] A man who sings songs, especially as a profession; a male singer. | [noun] A male songbird. | [noun] One who writes songs. SONHOODS (12) SONICATE (10) [verb] To disrupt with ultrasonic sound waves. SONNETED (9) [verb] To compose sonnets. | [verb] To celebrate in sonnets; to write a sonnet about. SONOBUOY (13) [noun] A buoy that sends a radio signal when it detects the sound of underwater objects (such as submarines). SONOGRAM (11) [noun] A medical image produced by ultrasound echo | [noun] A spectrogram | [verb] To perform a sonogram upon. SONORANT (8) [noun] A speech sound that is produced without turbulent airflow in the vocal tract; the generic term of vowel, approximant, nasal consonant, etc. SONORITY (11) [noun] The property of being sonorous. | [noun] Relative loudness (of a speech sound); degree of being sonorous. SONOROUS (8) [adjective] Capable of giving out a deep, resonant sound. | [adjective] Full of sound and rich, as in language or verse. | [adjective] Wordy or grandiloquent. SONSHIPS (13) SONSIEST (8) SOOCHONG (14) SOOTHERS (11) [noun] One who, or that which, soothes. | [noun] A plastic device that goes into a baby’s mouth, used to calm and quiet the baby. SOOTHEST (11) SOOTHING (12) [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. SOOTHSAY (14) SOOTIEST (8) [adjective] Of, relating to, or producing soot. | [adjective] Soiled with soot | [adjective] Of the color of soot. SOPHISMS (15) [noun] A method of teaching using the techniques of philosophy and rhetoric. | [noun] A flawed argument, superficially correct in its reasoning, usually designed to deceive. | [noun] An intentional fallacy. SOPHISTS (13) [noun] One of a class of teachers of rhetoric, philosophy, and politics in ancient Greece. | [noun] A teacher who used plausible but fallacious reasoning. | [noun] (by extension) One who is captious, fallacious, or deceptive in argument. SOPITING (11) SOPPIEST (12) [adjective] Very wet; sodden, soaked. | [adjective] Sentimental, maudlin, schmaltzy. SOPRANOS (10) [noun] Musical part or section higher in pitch than alto and other sections. | [noun] Person or instrument that performs the soprano part. SORBABLE (12) SORBATES (10) SORBENTS (10) [noun] A substance that can enable sorption. SORBITOL (10) [noun] A sugar alcohol (2R,3S,4S,5S)-hexane-1,2,3,4,5,6-hexol used as an artificial sweetener SORBOSES (10) SORCERER (10) [noun] A magician or wizard, sometimes specifically male. SORDIDLY (13) SORDINES (9) 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. SORENESS (8) [noun] The property, state, or condition of being sore; painfulness. SORGHUMS (14) [noun] A cereal, Sorghum bicolor (syn. Sorghum vulgare) the grains of which are used to make flour and as cattle feed. | [noun] Sorghum syrup. SORICINE (10) SOROCHES (13) SORORATE (8) SORORITY (11) [noun] A group of girls or women associated for a common purpose; a sisterhood. | [noun] A social organization of female students at a college or university; usually identified by Greek letters. SORPTION (10) [noun] Either of the processes of absorption and adsorption; sorbing. SORPTIVE (13) SORRIEST (8) [adjective] (of a person) Regretful for an action; grieved or saddened, especially by the loss of something or someone. | [adjective] Poor, pitifully sad or regrettable. | [adjective] Pathetic and inferior to the point of causing others disgust. SORROWED (12) [verb] To feel or express grief. | [verb] To feel grief over; to mourn, regret. | [adjective] Made sad, caused to feel sorrow. SORROWER (11) SORTABLE (10) SORTABLY (13) SOUBISES (10) [noun] A béchamel-based sauce containing strained or puréed onions. | [noun] A kind of cravat worn by men in the late 18th century. SOUCHONG (14) [noun] Any of several varieties of aromatic black tea from China. SOUFFLED (15) SOUFFLES (14) [noun] A murmuring or blowing sound. | [noun] A baked dish made from beaten egg whites and various other ingredients. SOUGHING (13) [verb] To make a soft rustling or murmuring sound. | [verb] To drain. | [noun] A rushing, rustling sound. SOULLESS (8) [adjective] As if without a soul; insensitive, unfeeling. SOULLIKE (12) SOUNDBOX (18) [noun] The open chamber (resonator) of a stringed musical instrument, which intensifies its tone. SOUNDERS (9) [noun] Something, or someone who makes a sound. | [noun] An instrument used in telegraphy in place of a register, the communications being read by sound. | [noun] A stethoscope. SOUNDEST (9) [adjective] Healthy. | [adjective] Complete, solid, or secure. | [adjective] Having the property of soundness. SOUNDING (10) [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. | [noun] Test made with a probe or sonde. SOUNDMAN (11) SOUNDMEN (11) SOUPCONS (12) [noun] A very small amount; a hint; a trace, slight idea; an inkling. | [noun] A suspicion; a suggestion. SOUPIEST (10) [adjective] Resembling soup; creamy. | [adjective] Extravagant sentimental; slushy. SOURBALL (10) SOURCING (11) [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. | [noun] The process by which something is sourced, or obtained from another place. SOURDINE (9) SOURNESS (8) SOURPUSS (10) [noun] A person who is habitually gloomy, sullen or miserable; a grouch. SOURSOPS (10) [noun] A small tropical evergreen tree, Annona muricata. | [noun] The tart, spiny, yellow-green fruit of this tree. 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. SOUTACHE (13) [noun] A narrow braid often decorated with a herringbone pattern SOUTANES (8) [noun] (Christian clerical dress) A long gown with sleeves and buttons at the front SOUTHERN (11) [noun] Someone from one of the states which seceded in 1861 and briefly formed the Confederate States of America, or, more broadly, from some neighboring states as well (but excluding geographically-southerly states like Arizona); compare the South. | [adjective] Of, facing, situated in, or related to the south. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a southern region, especially Southern Europe or the southern United States. SOUTHERS (11) SOUTHING (12) [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. | [noun] A distance traveled southward. SOUTHPAW (16) [noun] One who is left-handed, especially in sports. | [noun] A boxer who leads with the right hand and guards with the left SOUTHRON (11) SOUVENIR (11) [noun] An item of sentimental value, to remember an event or location. | [verb] To take (an article) as a souvenir, especially illicitly, for example during wartime. SOUVLAKI (15) [noun] Any of several Greek dishes such as kalamaki, giros, kebab and shawarma. | [noun] A wrapped pancake dish filled with meat, salad and some kind of sauce or dressing, commonly called a kebab. SOVKHOZY (30) [noun] A large, state-owned farm in the Soviet Union. SOVRANLY (14) SOVRANTY (14) SOWBELLY (16) SOWBREAD (14) [noun] Cyclamen, plant of the genus Cyclamen SOYBEANS (13) [noun] A legume plant (Glycine max), commonly cultivated for human and animal consumption and as a nitrogen-fixing ground cover. | [noun] The edible seed of this plant. SOYMILKS (17) [noun] A milky liquid made from soy beans and used as a beverage, cooking ingredient or substitute for dairy milk. | [noun] An individual serving of such a beverage. SPACEMAN (14) [noun] An astronaut, often a male astronaut. SPACEMEN (14) [noun] An astronaut, often a male astronaut. SPACIEST (12) [adjective] Spaced-out | [adjective] Eccentric | [adjective] Having much space SPACINGS (13) SPACIOUS (12) [adjective] Having plenty of space; roomy. | [adjective] Large in expanse. 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 SPACKLES (16) [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 SPADEFUL (14) SPADICES (13) [noun] A fleshy spike (inflorescence) with reduced flowers, usually enclosed by a spathe, characteristic of aroids. | [noun] A male sexual organ of certain cephalopods and hydrozoans (especially the nautilus), used to transfer sperm. SPADILLE (11) [noun] The ace of spades in omber and quadrille. SPADIXES (18) SPADONES (11) SPAEINGS (11) SPAETZLE (19) [noun] A heavy egg noodle or dumpling used in the cuisine of southern Germany and Austria SPAGYRIC (16) [noun] A spagyrist. | [adjective] Pertaining to alchemy; alchemical, especially regarding medicine. SPALLERS (10) SPALLING (11) [verb] To break into fragments or small pieces. | [verb] To reduce, as irregular blocks of stone, to an approximately level surface by hammering. | [noun] The process of reducing (stone blocks, etc.) to an approximately level surface by hammering. SPALPEEN (12) [noun] A poor migratory farm worker in Ireland, often viewed as a rascal or mischievous and cunning person. | [noun] (sometimes affectionate) A good-for-nothing person. SPANCELS (12) SPANDREL (11) [noun] The space (often more or less triangular) between the outer curve of an arch (the extrados) and a straight-sided figure that bounds it; the space between two contiguous arches and a straight feature above them. | [noun] Horizontal member between the windows of successive storeys of a tall building. | [noun] The triangular space under a stair; the material that fills the space. SPANDRIL (11) SPANGLED (12) [verb] To sparkle, flash or coruscate. | [verb] To fix spangles to; bespangle; to adorn with stars | [adjective] Having spangles. SPANGLES (11) [noun] A small piece of sparkling metallic material sewn on to a garment as decoration; a sequin. | [noun] Any small sparkling object. | [noun] The butterfly, Papilio demoleus, family Papilionidae, of Asia. SPANIELS (10) [noun] Any of various small to medium-sized breeds of gun dog having a broad muzzle, long, wavy fur and long ears that hang at the side of the head, bred for flushing and retrieving game. | [noun] A cringing, fawning person. | [verb] To follow loyally or obsequiously, like a spaniel. SPANKERS (14) [noun] Someone who spanks. | [noun] An instrument used to give someone a spanking or spank, such as a paddle. | [noun] A fore-and-aft gaff-rigged sail on the aft-most mast of a square-rigged vessel. SPANKING (15) [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 SPANLESS (10) SPANNERS (10) [noun] A hand tool for adjusting nuts and bolts; a wrench. | [noun] One who, or that which, spans. | [noun] A hand tool shaped like a small crank handle, for winding the spring of a wheel lock on a musket. SPANNING (11) [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. SPANWORM (15) [noun] A measuring worm or inchworm (Lepidoptera, Geometridae) SPARABLE (12) [noun] A small headless nail used in making shoes (especially the heels) SPARERIB (12) [noun] A cut of meat including the rib bones. SPARGERS (11) SPARGING (12) [verb] To sprinkle or spray. | [verb] To introduce bubbles into (a liquid). SPARKERS (14) SPARKIER (14) [adjective] Lively and animated. SPARKILY (17) SPARKING (15) [verb] To trigger, kindle into activity (an argument, etc). | [verb] To light; to kindle. | [verb] To give off a spark or sparks. SPARKISH (17) 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. SPARKLER (14) [noun] A hand-held firework that emits sparks. | [noun] A gem or ornament that sparkles. | [noun] A vivacious and charismatic person. SPARKLES (14) [noun] A little spark; a scintillation. | [noun] Brilliance; luster. | [noun] Liveliness; vivacity. SPARLIKE (14) SPARLING (11) [noun] The European smelt (Osmerus eperlanus). | [noun] A young salmon. | [noun] A tern. SPAROIDS (11) SPARRIER (10) SPARRING (11) [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. SPARROWS (13) [noun] The house sparrow, Passer domesticus; a small bird with a short bill, and brown, white and gray feathers. | [noun] A member of the family Passeridae, comprising small Old World songbirds. | [noun] A member of the family Emberizidae, comprising small New World songbirds. SPARSELY (13) [adverb] In a scattered or sparse manner; widely apart; thinly. SPARSEST (10) [adjective] Having widely spaced intervals. | [adjective] Not dense; meager; scanty | [adjective] Having few nonzero elements SPARSITY (13) SPASTICS (12) [noun] A person affected by spastic paralysis or spastic cerebral palsy. | [noun] A stupid, clumsy person. SPATHOSE (13) SPATTERS (10) [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. SPATTING (11) [verb] To spawn. Used of shellfish as above. | [verb] To quarrel or argue briefly. | [verb] To strike with a spattering sound. SPATULAR (10) SPATULAS (10) [noun] A kitchen utensil consisting of a flat surface attached to a long handle, used for turning, lifting or stirring food. | [noun] A kitchen utensil consisting of a flexible surface attached to a long handle, used for scraping the sides of bowls. | [noun] A palette knife. SPAVINED (14) SPAWNERS (13) SPAWNING (14) [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. SPEAKERS (14) [noun] One who speaks. | [noun] Loudspeaker. | [noun] Speakerphone. SPEAKING (15) [adjective] Used in speaking. | [adjective] Expressive; eloquent. | [adjective] Involving speaking. | [noun] One's ability to communicate vocally in a given language. | [verb] To communicate with one's voice, to say words out loud. SPEANING (11) SPEARERS (10) SPEARGUN (11) [noun] A tube-shaped gun that fires a barbed spear, almost always for underwater use. SPEARING (11) [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. SPEARMAN (12) [noun] A soldier who fights with a spear SPEARMEN (12) [noun] A soldier who fights with a spear SPECCING (15) [verb] To specify, especially in a formal specification document. SPECIALS (12) [noun] A reduction in consumer cost (usually for a limited time) for items or services rendered. | [noun] One of a rotation of meals systematically offered for a lower price at a restaurant. | [noun] Unusual or exceptional episode of a series. SPECIATE (12) [verb] To form new biological species by the division of an existing one SPECIFIC (17) [noun] A distinguishing attribute or quality. | [noun] A remedy for a specific disease or condition. | [noun] Specification SPECIMEN (14) [noun] An individual instance that represents a class; an example. | [noun] A sample, especially one used for diagnostic analysis. | [noun] (often preceded with “fine”) An eligible man. SPECIOUS (12) [adjective] Seemingly well-reasoned, plausible or true, but actually fallacious. | [adjective] Employing fallacious but deceptively plausible arguments; deceitful. | [adjective] Having an attractive appearance intended to generate a favorable response; deceptively attractive. SPECKING (17) [verb] To mark with specks; to speckle. SPECKLED (17) [adjective] Marked with dots or spots, spotted. | [adjective] Sporadically and irregularly marked. SPECKLES (16) [noun] A small spot or speck on the skin, plumage or foliage. | [noun] The random distribution of light when it is scattered by a rough surface. | [noun] Kind; sort. SPECTATE (12) [verb] To attend an event as a spectator; to observe. SPECTERS (12) [noun] A ghostly apparition, a phantom. | [noun] A threatening mental image. SPECTRAL (12) [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, spectres; ghostly. | [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, spectra; classified according to frequency or wavelength (of light etc) SPECTRES (12) [noun] A ghostly apparition, a phantom. | [noun] A threatening mental image. SPECTRUM (14) [noun] A range; a continuous, infinite, one-dimensional set, possibly bounded by extremes. | [noun] Specifically, a range of colours representing light (electromagnetic radiation) of contiguous frequencies; hence electromagnetic spectrum, visible spectrum, ultraviolet spectrum, etc. | [noun] The autism spectrum. SPECULAR (12) [adjective] Pertaining to mirrors; mirror-like, reflective. | [adjective] Of or relating to a speculum; conducted with the aid of a speculum. | [adjective] Assisting sight, like a lens etc. SPECULUM (14) [noun] A medical instrument used during an examination to dilate an orifice. | [noun] A mirror, especially one used in a telescope. | [noun] A bright, lustrous patch of colour found on the wings of ducks and some other birds, usually situated on the distal portions of the secondary quills, and much more brilliant in the adult male than in the female. SPEECHES (15) [noun] The faculty of uttering articulate sounds or words; the ability to speak or to use vocalizations to communicate. | [noun] A session of speaking, especially a long oral message given publicly by one person. | [noun] A style of speaking. SPEEDERS (11) SPEEDIER (11) [adjective] Rapid; swift SPEEDILY (14) [adverb] In a speedy or fast manner. SPEEDING (12) [verb] To succeed; to prosper, be lucky. | [verb] To help someone, to give them fortune; to aid or favour. | [verb] To go fast. SPEEDUPS (13) [noun] An amount or rate of decrease in time taken to do a certain amount of work. | [noun] The relationship between time taken and number of processors used. | [noun] (labor) An employer's demand for more output without more pay. SPEEDWAY (17) [noun] A form of motorcycle racing on flat (without camber) oval dirt tracks using motorcycles with neither brakes nor gears. | [noun] A form of bicycle racing on flat (non-banked) oval dirt tracks. | [noun] A racetrack venue designated especially for the sport of auto racing. SPEELING (11) SPEERING (11) SPEILING (11) SPEIRING (11) SPEISSES (10) SPELAEAN (10) SPELLERS (10) [noun] A person who spells. | [noun] A participant in a spelling bee. | [noun] A book used to learn how to spell properly. SPELLING (11) [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. SPELTERS (10) SPELTZES (19) SPELUNKS (14) SPENCERS (12) [noun] A short double-breasted men's overcoat worn in the 18th and 19th centuries. | [noun] A short, close-fitting jacket primarily worn by women and children in the early 19th century. | [noun] A (usually woollen) vest worn by women and girls for extra warmth. SPENDERS (11) SPENDING (12) [noun] Present participle of spend, expenditure. | [noun] An amount that has been, or is planned to be spent. | [verb] To pay out (money). SPERMARY (15) SPERMINE (12) [noun] A polyamine, N,N'-bis(3-aminopropyl) butane-1,4-diamine, originally extracted from sperm, that is involved in cellular metabolism SPERMOUS (12) SPHAGNUM (16) [noun] Any of various widely distributed mosses, of genus Sphagnum, which slowly decompose to form peat. 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. SPHERICS (15) SPHERIER (13) SPHERING (14) [noun] The practice of humans traveling in a sphere, generally made of transparent plastic, usually for fun. 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. SPHERULE (13) [noun] A small sphere. SPHINGES (14) SPHINGID (15) [noun] Any of many hawk moths of the family Sphingidae | [adjective] Of or pertaining to these moths. SPHINXES (20) [noun] A creature with the head of a person and the body of an animal (commonly a lion). | [noun] A person who keeps his/her thoughts and intentions secret; an enigmatic person. | [noun] A mandrill, Mandrillus sphinx, formerly classified a baboon, and called sphinx baboon. SPHYGMIC (21) SPHYGMUS (19) SPICATED (13) SPICCATO (14) [noun] A manner of playing a stringed instrument such that the bow is bounced off the strings after each note. | [adjective] Detached; separated; with every note performed in a distinct and pointed manner. SPICIEST (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or containing spice. | [adjective] (of flavors) Provoking a burning sensation due to the presence of chilis or similar hot spices | [adjective] (of flavors or odors) Tangy, zesty, or pungent. SPICULAE (12) [noun] A little spike; a spikelet. | [noun] A pointed fleshy appendage. SPICULAR (12) SPICULES (12) [noun] A sharp, needle-like piece. | [noun] A tiny glass flake formed during the manufacture of glass vials | [noun] Any of many needle-like crystalline structures that provide skeletal support in marine invertebrates like sponges. SPICULUM (14) SPIEGELS (11) SPIELERS (10) [noun] A swindler, a gambler. | [noun] A gambling club. | [noun] A person who speaks fluently and glibly; a barker. SPIELING (11) [verb] To talk at length. | [verb] To give a sales pitch; to promote by speaking. SPIERING (11) SPIFFIER (16) [adjective] Dapper; fine or neat, especially in style of clothing or other appearance. SPIFFILY (19) SPIFFING (17) [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) SPIKELET (14) [noun] A small, or secondary spike, especially one of many in the inflorescence of a grass or sedge. SPIKIEST (14) [adjective] Having spikes, spiny. | [adjective] Hostile; standoffish | [adjective] Of hair, erect, resembling spikes. SPILIKIN (14) SPILINGS (11) SPILLAGE (11) [noun] The process or action of spilling. | [noun] That which has been spilled. SPILLERS (10) SPILLING (11) [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. SPILLWAY (16) [noun] A path designed to take away overflow safely. SPINACHY (18) SPINAGES (11) SPINALLY (13) SPINDLED (12) SPINDLER (11) SPINDLES (11) [noun] (spinning) A rod used for spinning and then winding natural fibres (especially wool), usually consisting of a shaft and a circular whorl positioned at either the upper or lower end of the shaft when suspended vertically from the forming thread. | [noun] A rod which turns, or on which something turns. | [noun] A rotary axis of a machine tool or power tool. SPINELLE (10) SPINIEST (10) SPINIFEX (20) [noun] An Australian coastal grass, in genus Spinifex | [noun] A coastal grass, either in genera Trioidia or Spinifex. SPINLESS (10) SPINNERS (10) [noun] Agent noun of spin; someone or something who spins. | [noun] A conical cover at the center of some aircraft propellers. | [noun] A device that is spun in games to choose a number or symbol. SPINNERY (13) SPINNEYS (13) [noun] A small copse or wood, especially one planted as a shelter for game birds. SPINNIES (10) SPINNING (11) [verb] To rotate, revolve, gyrate (usually quickly); to partially or completely rotate to face another direction. | [verb] To make yarn by twisting and winding fibers together. | [verb] To present, describe, or interpret, or to introduce a bias or slant, so as to give something a favorable or advantageous appearance. SPINOFFS (16) [noun] An offshoot. | [noun] An incidental benefit or unexpected pay-off. | [noun] By-product. SPINOUTS (10) [noun] A skid that results in a car rotating so as not to be oriented in the direction of linear motion. | [noun] The formation of a subsidiary company that continues the operations of part of the parent company; the company so formed. SPINSTER (10) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A woman who has never been married, especially one past the typical marrying age according to social traditions. | [noun] One who spins (puts a spin on) a political media story so as to give something a favorable or advantageous appearance; a spin doctor, spin merchant or spin master. | [noun] Someone whose occupation was spinning thread. SPINULAE (10) SPINULES (10) SPIRACLE (12) [noun] A pore or opening used (especially by arthropods and some fish) for respiration. | [noun] The blowhole of a whale, dolphin or other similar species. | [noun] Any small aperture or vent for air or other fluid. SPIRAEAS (10) [noun] Any of many flowering shrubs, of the genus Spiraea, that have clusters of white or pink flowers | [noun] The Astilbe. SPIRALED (11) [verb] To move along the path of a spiral or helix. | [verb] To cause something to spiral. | [verb] To increase continually. SPIRALLY (13) SPIRANTS (10) [noun] A fricative. SPIREMES (12) SPIRIEST (10) SPIRILLA (10) [noun] Any of various aerobic bacteria of the genus Spirillum, having an elongated spiral form and bearing a tuft of flagella. | [noun] Any of various other spiral-shaped microorganisms. 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. SPIRTING (11) [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. SPIRULAE (10) SPIRULAS (10) SPITBALL (12) [noun] A pitch of a baseball that has been partly covered with saliva, illegal at most levels. | [noun] A balled-up piece of paper, moistened with saliva (by chewing) and shot through a drinking straw. | [verb] To moisten the ball with saliva before pitching it. SPITEFUL (13) [adjective] Filled with, or showing, spite; having a desire to annoy or harm. SPITFIRE (13) [noun] A cannon | [noun] A person with a fiery temper, someone easily provoked to anger, especially a woman or girl. SPITTERS (10) [noun] One who puts meat on a spit. | [noun] A young deer whose antlers are beginning to shoot or become sharp; a brocket, or pricket. | [noun] One who spits. SPITTING (11) [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 evacuate (saliva or another substance) from the mouth, etc. SPITTLES (10) SPITTOON (10) [noun] A receptacle for spit. 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 SPLASHER (13) SPLASHES (13) [noun] The sound made by an object hitting a liquid. | [noun] A small amount of liquid. | [noun] A small amount (of color). 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. SPLATTER (10) [noun] An uneven shape or mess created by something dispersing on impact. | [noun] A genre of gory horror. | [verb] To splash; to scatter; to land or strike in an uneven, distributed mess. SPLAYING (14) [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. SPLENDID (12) [adjective] Possessing or displaying splendor; shining; very bright. | [adjective] Showy; magnificent; sumptuous; pompous. | [adjective] Brilliant, excellent, of a very high standard. SPLENDOR (11) [noun] Great light, luster or brilliance. | [noun] Magnificent appearance, display or grandeur. | [noun] Great fame or glory. SPLENIAL (10) SPLENIUM (12) [noun] The thick posterior part of the corpus callosum of the brain. SPLENIUS (10) [noun] A broad muscle running up the top part of the back of the neck. SPLICERS (12) SPLICING (13) [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. SPLINING (11) [verb] To smooth (a curve or surface) by means of a spline. | [verb] To fit with a spline. | [verb] To fasten to or together with a spline. 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. SPLINTER (10) [noun] A long, sharp fragment of material, often wood. | [noun] A group that formed by splitting off from a larger membership. | [noun] A double-jump bid which indicates shortage in the bid suit. | [verb] To come apart into long sharp fragments. SPLITTER (10) [noun] A person or a thing that splits. | [noun] A quarry worker who splits slate into sheets. | [noun] A scientist in one of various fields who prefers to split categories such as species or dialects up into smaller groups. SPLODGED (13) [verb] To make a splodge; to render as a splodge. SPLODGES (12) [noun] An irregular-shaped splash, smear, or patch. SPLOSHED (14) [verb] To make a heavy splashing sound. | [verb] To traverse mushy or marshy wetlands. | [verb] To spill or spill over. SPLOSHES (13) [verb] To make a heavy splashing sound. | [verb] To traverse mushy or marshy wetlands. | [verb] To spill or spill over. SPLOTCHY (18) 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. SPLURGER (11) SPLURGES (11) [noun] An extravagant or ostentatious display. | [noun] An extravagant indulgence; a spending spree. SPLUTTER (10) [noun] A spluttering. | [verb] To sputter. | [verb] To spray droplets of saliva from the mouth while speaking. SPOILAGE (11) [noun] The part of something that has spoiled. | [noun] The process of spoiling. SPOILERS (10) [noun] One who spoils; a plunderer; a pillager; a robber; a despoiler. | [noun] One who corrupts, mars, or renders useless. | [noun] A document, review or comment that discloses the ending or some key surprise or twist in a story, or the internal rules controlling the behaviour of a video game, etc. SPOILING (11) [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.). SPOLIATE (10) [verb] To plunder | [verb] To engage in robbery; to plunder. SPONDAIC (13) [adjective] Having or relating to spondees. SPONDEES (11) [noun] A word or metrical foot of two syllables, either both long or both stressed. SPONGERS (11) [noun] One who uses a sponge. | [noun] A parasitic hanger-on. | [noun] A person or vessel employed in gathering sponges from the sea. SPONGIER (11) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a sponge, namely being absorbent, squishy or porous. | [adjective] Wet; drenched; soaked and soft, like sponge; rainy. | [adjective] Drunk. SPONGILY (14) SPONGING (12) [verb] To take advantage of the kindness of others. | [verb] To get by imposition; to scrounge. | [verb] To deprive (somebody) of something by imposition. SPONGINS (11) [noun] A horny, sulfur-containing protein, related to keratin, that forms the skeletal structure of certain classes of sponges. A proteinaceous compound of which the spicules in Demospongiae are composed. SPONSION (10) SPONSONS (10) [noun] A projection from the side of an aircraft, watercraft, or land vehicle. SPONSORS (10) [noun] A person or organisation with some sort of responsibility for another person or organisation, especially where the responsibility has a religious, legal, or financial aspect. | [noun] One that pays all or part of the cost of an event, a publication, or a media program, usually in exchange for advertising time. | [verb] To be a sponsor for. SPONTOON (10) SPOOFERS (13) SPOOFERY (16) SPOOFING (14) [verb] To gently satirize. | [verb] To deceive. | [verb] To falsify. SPOOKERY (17) SPOOKIER (14) [adjective] Eerie, or suggestive of ghosts or the supernatural. | [adjective] Spooked; afraid; frightened. | [adjective] Unpredictably excitable; skittish (used especially of horses). SPOOKILY (17) SPOOKING (15) [verb] To frighten or make nervous (especially by startling). | [verb] To become frightened (by something startling). | [verb] To haunt. SPOOKISH (17) SPOOLING (11) [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). | [noun] The operation of placing something in temporary storage, i.e. a spool. SPOONEYS (13) SPOONFUL (13) [noun] The amount that a spoon will hold, either level or heaped. SPOONIER (10) [adjective] Enamored in a silly or sentimental way. | [adjective] Feebly sentimental; gushy. SPOONIES (10) [noun] The northern shoveler (Anas clypeata). | [noun] A person with a chronic debilitating illness. | [noun] A foolish, simple, or silly person. SPOONILY (13) SPOONING (11) [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. SPOORING (11) [verb] To track an animal by following its spoor SPORADIC (13) [adjective] (of diseases) occurring in isolated instances; not epidemic. | [adjective] Rare and scattered in occurrence. | [adjective] Exhibiting random behavior; patternless. SPOROZOA (19) SPORRANS (10) [noun] A small pouch, usually made of either fur or plain or fur-trimmed leather, which is worn, suspended from a belt or chain, on the front of a kilt and used to hold various items normally carried in trouser pockets. SPORTERS (10) SPORTFUL (13) SPORTIER (10) [adjective] Favourable to sports | [adjective] Flashy in appearance. SPORTILY (13) SPORTING (11) [verb] To amuse oneself, to play. | [verb] To mock or tease, treat lightly, toy with. | [verb] To display; to have as a notable feature. SPORTIVE (13) [noun] Cyclosportive | [adjective] Lively; merry; spritely | [adjective] Playful, coltish. SPORULAR (10) SPORULES (10) SPOTLESS (10) [adjective] Exceptionally clean. | [adjective] Impeccable and free from blemish. | [adjective] Lacking spots; unspotted. SPOTTERS (10) [noun] A person who observes something. | [noun] A member of a sniper team who in addition to this function is responsible for providing additional information about targets from a different point of view. | [noun] One who supervises a person performing an activity, in order to help them should they be unable to complete it. SPOTTIER (10) [adjective] Having spots; spotted. | [adjective] Of inconsistent quality SPOTTILY (13) SPOTTING (11) [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). SPOUSALS (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) marriage; nuptials; espousal SPOUSING (11) SPOUTERS (10) SPOUTING (11) [noun] The process or result of something being spouted; that which is spouted. | [noun] A gutter under the eaves of a building; guttering. | [adjective] (of a liquid) That is propelled in a narrow stream or jet. SPRADDLE (12) [noun] A manner of walking with the legs spread out. | [verb] To spread apart (the legs). | [verb] To spread apart the legs of (someone or something). 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 SPRATTLE (10) SPRAWLED (14) [verb] To sit with the limbs spread out. | [verb] To spread out in a disorderly fashion; to straggle. SPRAWLER (13) SPRAYERS (13) SPRAYING (14) [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. SPREADER (11) [noun] An object or person who spreads. | [noun] A spacer or device for keeping two objects apart. | [noun] A device used to spread bulk material. SPRIGGED (13) [verb] To decorate with sprigs, or with representations of sprigs, as in embroidery or pottery. SPRIGGER (12) SPRIGHTS (14) SPRINGAL (11) SPRINGED (12) SPRINGER (11) [noun] A person that springs. | [noun] Anything that springs. | [noun] A spring salmon. SPRINGES (11) [verb] To sprinkle; to scatter. | [verb] To catch in a springe; to ensnare. SPRINKLE (14) [noun] A light covering with a sprinkled substance. | [noun] A light rain shower. | [noun] An aspersorium or utensil for sprinkling. SPRINTED (11) [verb] To run, cycle, etc. at top speed for a short period, SPRINTER (10) [noun] One who sprints. | [noun] Transition period between winter and spring: late winter. SPRITZED (20) [verb] To spray, sprinkle, or squirt lightly. | [verb] To drizzle, to rain lightly. SPRITZER (19) [noun] A chilled long drink, made from white wine and soda water. | [noun] A windscreen washer. | [noun] A spray bottle. SPRITZES (19) [noun] A sprinkling or spray of liquid; a small amount of liquid. | [verb] To spray, sprinkle, or squirt lightly. | [verb] To drizzle, to rain lightly. SPROCKET (16) [noun] A toothed wheel that enmeshes with a chain or other perforated band. | [noun] (usually in the plural) The tooth of such a wheel. | [noun] A flared extension at the base of a sloped roof. SPROUTED (11) [verb] To grow from seed; to germinate. | [verb] To cause to grow from a seed. | [verb] To deprive of sprouts. SPRUCELY (15) SPRUCEST (12) [adjective] Smart, trim, and elegant in appearance; fastidious (said of a person). SPRUCIER (12) SPRUCING (13) [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. SPRYNESS (13) SPUDDERS (12) SPUDDING (13) [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. SPUMIEST (12) SPUMONES (12) SPUMONIS (12) SPUNKIER (14) [adjective] Spirited or plucky. | [adjective] Pertaining to or like spunk (semen). | [adjective] Stained with semen. SPUNKIES (14) SPUNKILY (17) SPUNKING (15) SPURGALL (11) SPURIOUS (10) [adjective] False, not authentic, not genuine. | [adjective] Extraneous; stray; not relevant or wanted. | [adjective] Bastardly, illegitimate SPURNERS (10) SPURNING (11) [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) SPURRERS (10) SPURREYS (13) [noun] Any of several European annual herbs of the genus Spergula. SPURRIER (10) [noun] A maker of spurs. SPURRIES (10) [noun] Any of several European annual herbs of the genus Spergula. SPURRING (11) [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 SPURTING (11) [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. SPURTLES (10) SPUTNIKS (14) [noun] Any of a series of Soviet robotic space satellites, especially the first one in 1957. | [noun] Any artificial satellite. SPUTTERS (10) [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. SPYGLASS (14) [noun] A small portable telescope. | [noun] A pair of binoculars. SQUABBLE (21) [noun] A minor fight or argument. | [verb] To participate in a minor fight or argument. | [verb] To disarrange, so that the letters or lines stand awry and require readjustment. SQUADDED (20) SQUADRON (18) [noun] Primarily, a square; hence, a square body of troops; a body of troops drawn up in a square. | [noun] A body of cavalry comprising two companies or troops, averaging from one hundred and twenty to two hundred soldiers. | [noun] A body of infantrymen made up of several platoons, averaging from eighty to one hundred and fifty men, and led by a captain or a major. SQUALENE (17) [noun] A linear triterpene hydrocarbon found in shark liver oil and in human sebum; it plays a role in the biosynthesis of steroids. SQUALLED (18) [verb] To cry or wail loudly. SQUALLER (17) SQUALORS (17) SQUAMATE (19) [noun] Any reptile of the order Squamata. | [adjective] Covered in scales. SQUAMOSE (19) [adjective] Covered with, made of, or resembling scales; scaly. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the squamosal bone; squamosal SQUAMOUS (19) [adjective] Covered with, made of, or resembling scales; scaly. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the squamosal bone; squamosal SQUANDER (18) [verb] To waste, lavish, splurge; to spend lavishly or profusely; to dissipate. | [verb] To scatter; to disperse. | [verb] To wander at random; to scatter. SQUARELY (20) [adverb] In the shape of a square; at right angles | [adverb] Firmly and solidly | [adverb] In a direct, straightforward and honest manner SQUARERS (17) SQUAREST (17) [adjective] Shaped like a square (the polygon). | [adjective] Forming a right angle, especially at right angles with the mast or the keel, and parallel to the horizon; said of the yards of a square-rigged vessel when they are so braced. | [adjective] Of numbers formed by multiplying two equal numbers. SQUARING (18) [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. SQUARISH (20) 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. SQUASHER (20) SQUASHES (20) [noun] A sport played in a walled court with a soft rubber ball and bats like tennis racquets. | [noun] A soft drink made from a fruit-based concentrate diluted with water. | [noun] A place or a situation where people have limited space to move. 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. SQUATTER (17) [noun] One who squats, sits down idly. | [noun] One who occupies a building or land without title or permission. | [noun] A large-scale grazier and landowner. 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. SQUAWKER (24) 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. SQUEAKER (21) [noun] One who or that which squeaks. | [noun] A party toy that uncoils with a squeaking sound when blown; a party puffer. | [noun] An informer. 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. SQUEALER (17) [noun] Any animal or person who squeals. | [noun] A pig. | [noun] An informant. SQUEEGEE (18) [noun] A tool consisting of a rubber or similar blade attached at a right angle to a handle, particularly | [noun] A roller used to similar effect, particularly | [noun] A person who uses a squeegee, especially one who "cleans" the windshield of a car stopped at a traffic light and then demands payment. 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. SQUEEZER (26) SQUEEZES (26) [noun] A close or tight fit. | [noun] A difficult position. | [noun] A hug or other affectionate grasp. SQUEGGED (20) SQUELCHY (25) 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 SQUIGGLE (19) [noun] A short twisting or wiggling line or mark | [noun] The tilde | [noun] An illegible scrawl SQUIGGLY (22) SQUILGEE (18) SQUILLAE (17) SQUILLAS (17) 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. SQUINTER (17) SQUIREEN (17) [noun] (originally Ireland) A minor squire; a small landowner. SQUIRING (18) [verb] To attend as a squire. | [verb] To attend as a beau, or gallant, for aid and protection. SQUIRISH (20) 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. SQUIRMER (19) SQUIRREL (17) [noun] Any of the rodents of the family Sciuridae distinguished by their large bushy tail. | [noun] A person, usually a freezoner, who applies L. Ron Hubbard's technology in a heterodox manner. | [noun] One of the small rollers of a carding machine which work with the large cylinder. 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. SQUIRTER (17) SQUISHED (21) [verb] To squeeze, compress, or crush (especially something moist). | [verb] To be compressed or squeezed. SQUISHES (20) [noun] The sound or action of something, especially something moist, being squeezed or crushed. | [noun] A political moderate. | [noun] Marmalade. SQUOOSHY (23) SQUUSHED (21) SQUUSHES (20) SRADDHAS (13) STABBERS (12) STABBING (13) [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). STABILES (10) [noun] Abstract sculpture or structure of wire, sheet metal, etc. STABLERS (10) STABLEST (10) STABLING (11) [verb] To put or keep (an animal) in a stable. | [verb] To dwell in a stable. | [verb] To park (a rail vehicle). STABLISH (13) [verb] To establish. STACCATI (12) STACCATO (12) [noun] An articulation marking directing that a note or passage of notes are to be played in an abruptly disconnected manner, with each note sounding for a very short duration, and a short break lasting until the sounding of the next note; as opposed to legato. Staccato is indicated by a dot directly above or below the notehead. | [noun] A passage having this mark. | [noun] Any sound resembling a musical staccato. STACKERS (14) STACKING (15) [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. STACKUPS (16) STADDLES (10) [noun] A prop or support; a staff, crutch. | [noun] The lower part or supporting frame of a stack, a stack-stand. | [noun] Any supporting framework or base. STADIUMS (11) [noun] A venue where sporting events are held. | [noun] An Ancient Greek racecourse, especially, the Olympic course for foot races. | [noun] A Greek measure of length, being the chief one used for itinerary distances, also adopted by the Romans for nautical and astronomical measurements, equal to 600 Greek or 625 Roman feet, or 125 Roman paces, or to 606 feet, 9 inches. STAFFERS (14) [noun] A member of a staff. STAFFING (15) [verb] To supply (a business, volunteer organization, etc.) with employees or staff members. | [noun] The practice of hiring and firing staff | [noun] The personnel required for some project STAGEFUL (12) STAGGARD (11) STAGGART (10) STAGGERS (10) [noun] An unsteady movement of the body in walking or standing as if one were about to fall; a reeling motion | [noun] A disease of horses and other animals, attended by reeling, unsteady gait or sudden falling | [noun] Bewilderment; perplexity. STAGGERY (13) STAGGIER (10) STAGGIES (10) STAGGING (11) [verb] To act as a "stag", an irregular dealer in stocks. | [verb] To watch; to dog, or keep track of. STAGIEST (9) [adjective] Theatrical | [adjective] Unnaturally showy | [adjective] Melodramatic; sensationalized STAGINGS (10) [noun] A performance of a play | [noun] The scenery and/or organization of actors' movements on stage. | [noun] (by extension) The arrangement or layout of something in order to create an impression. STAGNANT (9) [adjective] Lacking freshness, motion, or flow; decaying through stillness. | [adjective] Without progress or change; stale; inactive. STAGNATE (9) [verb] To cease motion, activity, or progress: STAIDEST (9) STAINERS (8) STAINING (9) [verb] To discolour. | [verb] To taint or tarnish someone's character or reputation | [verb] To coat a surface with a stain STAIRWAY (14) [noun] A set of steps allowing one to walk up or down. STAITHES (11) [noun] A riverbank | [noun] A fixed structure where ships land, especially to load and unload; wharf; landing stage. | [noun] An installation built at the railside or nearby for the storage of coal unloaded from wagons. STAKEOUT (12) [noun] The act of watching a location and/or people, generally covertly. STALKERS (12) [noun] A person who engages in stalking, i.e. quietly approaching animals to be hunted; a tracker or guide in hunting game. | [noun] A person who secretly follows someone, sometimes with unlawful intentions. | [noun] Any of various devices for removing the stalk from plants during harvesting. STALKIER (12) STALKILY (15) STALKING (13) [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. | [noun] The act of going stealthily. | [noun] The removal of stalks from bunches of grapes prior to winemaking. STALLING (9) [verb] To put (an animal, etc.) in a stall. | [verb] To fatten. | [verb] To come to a standstill. STALLION (8) [noun] An adult male horse. | [noun] A very virile and sexually-inclined man or (rarely) woman. STALWART (11) [noun] One who has a strong build. | [noun] One who firmly supports a cause. | [noun] One who is dependable. STAMINAL (10) STAMINAS (10) STAMMELS (12) STAMMERS (12) [noun] The involuntary repetition of a sound in speech. | [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. STAMPEDE (13) [noun] A wild, headlong scamper, or running away, of a number of animals; usually caused by fright; hence, any sudden flight or dispersion, as of a crowd or an army in consequence of a panic. | [noun] A situation in which many people in a crowd are trying to go in the same direction at the same time. | [noun] Any sudden unconcerted moving or acting together of a number of persons, as from some common impulse. STAMPERS (12) STAMPING (13) [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. STANCHED (14) [verb] To stop the flow of. | [verb] To cease, as the flowing of blood. | [verb] To prop; to make stanch, or strong. STANCHER (13) [noun] One who, or that which, stanches or stops a flow. STANCHES (13) [verb] To stop the flow of. | [verb] To cease, as the flowing of blood. | [verb] To prop; to make stanch, or strong. STANCHLY (16) 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. STANDBYS (14) [noun] A state of readiness without immediate involvement; remaining in preparation for (a sudden or unforeseen event or situation). | [noun] Sleep mode | [noun] (travel) Waiting at the airport in the hope of getting a seat on a flight that is already booked out. STANDEES (9) [noun] Somebody who is forced to stand up, for example, on a crowded bus. | [noun] A free-standing, rigid print (usually life-sized), for instance of a celebrity, often displayed for advertising and promotional purposes; a cut-out. STANDERS (9) STANDING (10) [verb] (heading) To position or be positioned physically. | [verb] (heading) To position or be positioned mentally. | [verb] (heading) To position or be positioned socially. | [noun] Position or reputation in society or a profession. STANDISH (12) [noun] A stand to hold ink, pens, and other writing accessories; an inkstand. STANDOFF (15) [verb] To stand some distance apart from something or someone. | [verb] To prevent any would-be attacker from coming close by adopting an offensive posture. | [verb] To move away from shore. STANDOUT (9) [noun] An exceptional or noteworthy person or thing. | [adjective] Exceptional; noteworthy STANDPAT (11) STANGING (10) STANHOPE (13) [noun] A gig, buggy or light phaeton, typically with a high seat and closed back. STANINES (8) STANNARY (11) [noun] A tin mine or tin works. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to tin mining, especially in Cornwall. STANNITE (8) STANNOUS (8) [adjective] Containing bivalent tin. STANNUMS (10) STANZAED (18) STANZAIC (19) STAPEDES (11) STAPELIA (10) [noun] Any of the genus Stapelia of low-growing succulent plants, predominantly from South Africa, and often giving off an odour of rotten flesh. STAPLERS (10) [noun] A device which binds together sheets of paper by driving a thin metal staple through the sheets and simultaneously folding over the ends of the staple against the back surface of the paper. | [noun] A dealer in staple goods. | [noun] One employed to sort wool according to its staple. STAPLING (11) [verb] To sort according to its staple. | [verb] To secure with a staple. | [noun] The act by which something is stapled. 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. STARCHES (13) [noun] A widely diffused vegetable substance found especially in seeds, bulbs, and tubers, and extracted (as from potatoes, corn, rice, etc.) as a white, glistening, granular or powdery substance, without taste or smell, and giving a very peculiar creaking sound when rubbed between the fingers. It is used as a food, in the production of commercial grape sugar, for stiffening linen in laundries, in making paste, etc. | [noun] (nutrition) Carbohydrates, as with grain and potato based foods. | [noun] A stiff, formal manner; formality. STARDOMS (11) STARDUST (9) [noun] A powder with supposedly magic or charismatic qualities. | [noun] A type of cosmic dust that condensed from cooling ejected gases from individual presolar stars and incorporated into the cloud from which the Solar System condensed. | [noun] A distant cluster of stars, resembling a cloud, the individual stars of which cannot be resolved. STARFISH (14) [noun] Any of various asteroids or other echinoderms (not in fact fish) with usually five arms, many of which eat bivalves or corals by everting their stomach. | [noun] Any many-armed or tentacled sea invertebrate, whether cnidarian, echinoderm, or cephalopod. | [noun] A woman who reluctantly takes part in sexual intercourse, and lays on her back while spreading her limbs. STARGAZE (18) [verb] To look at the stars at night. STARKERS (12) [adjective] Completely nude. | [adjective] Stark raving mad. STARKEST (12) [adjective] Hard, firm; obdurate. | [adjective] Severe; violent; fierce (now usually in describing the weather). | [adjective] Strong; vigorous; powerful. STARLESS (8) STARLETS (8) [noun] A young actress with a promising career ahead of her. | [noun] An accomplished and important supporting player in a sports team. | [noun] A small star. STARLIKE (12) STARLING (9) [noun] A family, Sturnidae, of passerine birds. | [noun] A structure of pilings that protects the piers of a bridge. | [noun] A California fish, the rock trout, Hexagrammos, especially, Hexagrammos decagrammus, the boregat or bodieron. STARNOSE (8) STARRIER (8) [adjective] Having stars visible. | [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a star. | [adjective] Full of stars or celebrities; star-studded. STARRING (9) [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. STARSHIP (13) [noun] A type of spacecraft capable of traveling to the solar systems of other stars STARTERS (8) [noun] Someone who starts something. | [noun] Something that starts something. | [noun] The first course of a meal, consisting of a small, usually savoury, dish. STARTING (9) [verb] To begin, commence, initiate. | [verb] To begin an activity. | [verb] To have its origin (at), begin. 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. STARTLER (8) STARTLES (8) [noun] A sudden motion or shock caused by an unexpected alarm, surprise, or apprehension of danger. | [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. STARTUPS (10) [noun] The act or process of starting a process or machine. | [noun] A new company or organization or business venture designed for rapid growth. | [noun] (chiefly in plural) A kind of high-low or thigh-high boot worn by rustic people. STARVERS (11) STARVING (12) [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. STARWORT (11) [noun] Any of several unrelated plants that have a star-shaped flowers or leaves, but especially members of the genus Stellaria. STASHING (12) [verb] To hide or store away for later use. STASIMON (10) STATABLE (10) STATEDLY (12) STATICAL (10) STATICES (10) [noun] Plants of the genus Limonium having spikes of white or mauve flowers. STATICKY (17) STATIONS (8) [noun] A stopping place. | [noun] A place where workers are stationed. | [noun] Any of the Stations of the Cross. STATISMS (10) STATISTS (8) [noun] A skilled politician or one with political power, knowledge or influence. | [noun] A statistician. | [noun] A supporter of statism. STATIVES (11) [noun] (grammar) A construct asserting that a subject has a particular property. STATUARY (11) [noun] The craft of making statues. | [noun] A person who makes or deals in statues. | [noun] Statues considered collectively. STATURES (8) STATUSES (8) [noun] A person’s condition, position or standing relative to that of others. | [noun] Prestige or high standing. | [noun] A situation or state of affairs. STATUTES (8) [noun] Written law, as laid down by the legislature. | [noun] (common law) Legislated rule of society which has been given the force of law by those it governs. STAUMREL (10) STAYSAIL (11) [noun] A fore-and-aft rigged sail whose luff can be affixed to a stay running forward from a mast to the deck, the bowsprit or to another mast. STEADIED (10) [verb] To stabilize something; to prevent from shaking. STEADIER (9) [noun] That which steadies something. | [adjective] Firm in standing or position; not tottering or shaking; fixed; firm. | [adjective] Constant in feeling, purpose, or pursuit; not fickle, changeable, or wavering; not easily moved or persuaded to alter a purpose; resolute. STEADIES (9) [verb] To stabilize something; to prevent from shaking. STEADILY (12) [adverb] In a steady manner. STEADING (10) [verb] To help, support, benefit or assist; to be helpful or noteful. | [verb] To fill stead or place of. | [noun] A farmhouse and outer buildings such as barns, stables, cattle-sheds, etc.; a farmstead; a homestead, an onstead, an estate STEALAGE (9) STEALERS (8) [noun] (chiefly in combination) One who steals; a thief. | [noun] The endmost plank of a strake which stops short of the stem or stern. STEALING (9) [verb] To take illegally, or without the owner's permission, something owned by someone else. | [verb] (of ideas, words, music, a look, credit, etc.) To appropriate without giving credit or acknowledgement. | [verb] To get or effect surreptitiously or artfully. STEALTHS (11) STEALTHY (14) [adjective] Characterized by or resembling stealth or secrecy. STEAMERS (10) [noun] A device or object that works by the operation of steam. | [noun] A mode of transportation propelled by steam. | [noun] A babycino (frothy milk drink). STEAMIER (10) [adjective] Warm and humid; full of steam | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of steam | [adjective] Erotic STEAMILY (13) STEAMING (11) [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. STEAPSIN (10) STEARATE (8) [noun] Any salt or ester of stearic acid. STEARINE (8) [noun] Solid fat. | [noun] The triglyceride of stearic acid. STEARINS (8) STEATITE (8) [noun] Soapstone STEDFAST (12) STEEKING (13) STEELIER (8) [adjective] Having qualities resembling those of steel, especially hard and resolute. | [adjective] Made of steel. STEELIES (8) STEELING (9) [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. STEENBOK (14) [noun] A common small antelope of southern and eastern Africa, Raphicerus campestris. STEEPENS (10) [verb] To make steeper. | [verb] To become steeper. STEEPERS (10) STEEPEST (10) [adjective] Of a near-vertical gradient; of a slope, surface, curve, etc. that proceeds upward at an angle near vertical. | [adjective] Expensive | [adjective] Difficult to access; not easy reached; lofty; elevated; high. STEEPING (11) [verb] (middle voice) To soak or wet thoroughly. | [verb] To imbue with something; to be deeply immersed in. | [noun] An instance of something being steeped; a wetting. | [noun] A 13th-century coin circulated in Ireland as a debased sterling silver penny, outlawed under King Edward I. STEEPISH (13) 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 STEEPLES (10) [noun] A tall tower, often on a church, normally topped with a spire. | [noun] A spire. | [noun] A high headdress of the 14th century. STEERAGE (9) [noun] The art of steering. | [noun] The section of a passenger ship that provided inexpensive accommodation with no individual cabins. | [noun] The effect of the helm on a ship. STEERERS (8) [noun] Someone or something that steers. | [noun] A person hired by a gambling establishment to locate potential customers and bring them in. STEERING (9) [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. STEEVING (12) [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. STEGODON (10) STEINBOK (14) [noun] A common small antelope of southern and eastern Africa, Raphicerus campestris. STELLATE (8) [noun] A stellate cell | [adjective] Shaped like a star, having points, or rays radiating from a center. STELLIFY (14) STEMLESS (10) STEMLIKE (14) STEMMATA (12) [noun] A family tree or recorded genealogy | [noun] In the study of stemmatics, a diagram showing the relationship of a text to its manuscripts | [noun] One of the types of simple eyes in arthropods STEMMERS (12) STEMMERY (15) STEMMIER (12) STEMMING (13) [verb] To remove the stem from. | [verb] To be caused or derived; to originate. | [verb] To descend in a family line. STEMSONS (10) STEMWARE (13) [noun] Drinking glasses that have a stem, such as wine glasses or champagne flutes. STENCHES (13) [noun] A strong foul smell; a stink. | [noun] A foul quality. | [noun] A smell or odour, not necessarily bad. STENCILS (10) [noun] A thin sheet, either perforated or using some other technique, with which a pattern may be produced upon a surface. | [noun] A utensil that contains a perforated sheet through which ink can be forced to create a printed pattern on a surface. | [noun] A two-ply master sheet for use with a mimeograph. STENGAHS (12) STENOSED (9) STENOSES (8) [noun] An abnormal narrowing or stricture in a blood vessel or other tubular organ | [noun] A reduction in capacity (physical or mental) STENOSIS (8) [noun] An abnormal narrowing or stricture in a blood vessel or other tubular organ | [noun] A reduction in capacity (physical or mental) STENOTIC (10) STENTORS (8) [noun] A person with a powerful or stentorian voice. | [noun] Any protozoan of the genus Stentor. | [noun] A part of the amplification system of a carillon. STEPDAME (13) STEPLIKE (14) STEPPERS (12) [noun] A person or animal that steps, especially energetically or high. | [noun] A dancer. | [noun] A kind of electric motor (a stepper motor) that advances in steps rather than smoothly. STEPPING (13) [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. STEPSONS (10) [noun] The son of one's spouse, but not one's own child. STEPWISE (13) [adjective] One (small) step or stage at a time; gradual; piecemeal | [adverb] One step or stage at a time; step by step STEREOED (9) STERICAL (10) STERIGMA (11) [noun] A slim projecting part of the basidium of some species of fungi that carries the basidiospore. | [noun] A woody projection from the tip of the leaf base in certain conifers (Picea and Tsuga). | [noun] Part of the genitalia of moths. STERLETS (8) [noun] A smaller, common Eurasian sturgeon, of the species Acipenser ruthenus. STERLING (9) [noun] The currency of the United Kingdom; especially the pound. | [noun] Former British gold or silver coinage of a standard fineness: for gold 0.91666 and for silver 0.925. | [noun] Sterling silver, or articles made from this material. STERNEST (8) [adjective] Having a hardness and severity of nature or manner. | [adjective] Grim and forbidding in appearance. STERNITE (8) [noun] The ventral plate of each segment of an arthropod. STERNSON (8) STERNUMS (10) [noun] The breastbone | [noun] The sclerotized plate of spiders, between the coxae, marking the floor of the cephalothorax STERNWAY (14) [noun] A backwards motion of a vessel. STEROIDS (9) [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. STERTORS (8) STETTING (9) [verb] To let (edited material) stand, or remain as it was. STEWARDS (12) [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. STEWBUMS (15) [noun] A homeless alcoholic. STEWPANS (13) STHENIAS (11) STIBINES (10) STIBIUMS (12) STIBNITE (10) [noun] A grey mineral, Sb2S3, that is the main ore of antimony; used in ancient times as the cosmetic kohl. STICKERS (14) [noun] Something or someone that sticks. | [noun] One who sticks to something, or does not give up; a stayer. | [noun] An adhesive label or decal. STICKFUL (17) STICKIER (14) [adjective] Able or likely to stick. | [adjective] Potentially difficult to escape from. | [adjective] Of weather, hot and windless and with high humidity, so that people feel sticky from sweating. STICKILY (17) STICKING (15) [verb] To cut a piece of wood to be the stick member of a cope-and-stick joint. | [verb] To compose; to set, or arrange, in a composing stick. | [verb] To furnish or set with sticks. STICKLED (15) STICKLER (14) [noun] A referee or adjudicator at a fight, wrestling match, duel, etc. who ensures fair play. | [noun] Someone who insistently advocates for something. STICKLES (14) STICKMAN (16) STICKMEN (16) STICKOUT (14) STICKPIN (16) [noun] An ornamented pin used to secure a necktie's end flat against the shirt, a tie tack. STICKUMS (16) STICKUPS (16) [noun] A robbery at gunpoint | [noun] A small diameter tree branch or limb that extends out of the water in flooded or submerged timber, as in a lake or river. STICTION (10) [noun] The static friction that needs to be overcome to enable relative motion of stationary objects in contact STIFFENS (14) [verb] To make stiff. | [verb] To become stiff. STIFFEST (14) [adjective] (of an object) Rigid; hard to bend; inflexible. | [adjective] (of policies and rules and their application and enforcement) Inflexible; rigid. | [adjective] (of a person) Formal in behavior; unrelaxed. STIFFING (15) [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 STIFFISH (17) STIFLERS (11) STIFLING (12) [verb] To interrupt or cut off. | [verb] To repress, keep in or hold back. | [verb] To smother or suffocate. STIGMATA (11) [noun] A mark of infamy or disgrace. | [noun] A scar or birthmark. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural stigmata) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion on Jesus' body, and sometimes reported to bleed periodically. STILBENE (10) [noun] Either of two isomeric hydrocarbons, diphenylethylene, but especially the trans isomer, used in the manufacture of dyes and many other compounds. STILBITE (10) STILETTO (8) [noun] A small, slender knife or dagger-like weapon intended for stabbing. | [noun] A rapier. | [noun] An awl. STILLEST (8) [adjective] Not moving; calm. | [adjective] Not effervescing; not sparkling. | [adjective] Uttering no sound; silent. STILLIER (8) STILLING (9) [verb] To calm down, to quiet | [verb] To trickle, drip. | [verb] To cause to fall by drops. | [noun] A stillion. STILLMAN (10) STILLMEN (10) STILTING (9) STIMULUS (10) [noun] Any external phenomenon that has an influence on a system, by triggering or modifying an internal phenomenon. | [noun] Something external that elicits or influences a physiological or psychological activity or response. | [noun] Anything effectively impinging upon any of the sensory apparatuses of a living organism, including physical phenomena both internal and external to the body. STIMYING (14) STINGERS (9) [noun] A pointed portion of an insect or arachnid used for attack. | [noun] Anything that is used to sting, as a means of attack. | [noun] Anything, such as an insult, that stings mentally or psychologically. STINGIER (9) [adjective] Unwilling to spend, give, or share; ungenerous; mean | [adjective] Small, scant, meager, insufficient | [adjective] Stinging; able to sting. STINGILY (12) STINGING (10) [verb] To hurt, usually by introducing poison or a sharp point, or both. | [verb] (of an insect) To bite. | [verb] (sometimes figurative) To hurt, to be in pain. STINGRAY (12) [noun] Any of various large, venomous rays, of the orders Rajiformes and Myliobatiformes, having a barbed, whiplike tail. | [noun] A device that simulates a cell tower, used to intercept cell phone communications. STINKARD (13) [noun] Any of various malodorous animals. | [noun] The teledu. | [noun] A person whose behavior is hurtful and unsavory; a stinker. STINKBUG (15) [noun] Any of several insects, usually shield-shaped, possessing a gland that produces a foul-smelling liquid, usually containing aldehydes which they use to discourage predators. | [noun] A common name applied to various insects of the Hemiptera order (the "true bugs"), in the Heteroptera suborder, principally in the superfamilies Pentatomoidea and Coreoidea. | [noun] (US Southwest) A pinacate beetle or stink beetle (genus Eleodes) that releases a pungent odor when threatened. STINKERS (12) [noun] A person who stinks. | [noun] A contemptible person. | [noun] Something difficult (e.g. a given puzzle) or unpleasant (e.g. negative review, nasty letter). STINKIER (12) [adjective] Having a strong, unpleasant smell; stinking. | [adjective] Bad, undesirable. STINKING (13) [verb] To have a strong bad smell. | [verb] To be greatly inferior; to perform badly. | [verb] To give an impression of dishonesty or untruth. | [noun] The emission of a foul smell. STINKPOT (14) [noun] An annoying, bad or undesirable person. | [noun] The common musk turtle, a species of turtle from southeastern Canada, Sternotherus odoratus. | [noun] The southern giant petrel, Macronectes giganteus. STINTERS (8) STINTING (9) [verb] To stop (an action); cease, desist. | [verb] To stop speaking or talking (of a subject). | [verb] To be sparing or mean. STIPENDS (11) [noun] A scholarship granted to a student. | [noun] A fixed payment, generally small and occurring at regular intervals; a modest allowance. STIPITES (10) [noun] The vertical beam of a cross used for crucifixion. | [noun] The basal segment of the maxilla of an insect or a crustacean. | [noun] A stipe; a stalk or stem. STIPPLED (13) [verb] To use small dots to give the appearance of shading to. STIPPLER (12) STIPPLES (12) [noun] The use of small dots that give the appearance of shading; the dots thus used. | [verb] To use small dots to give the appearance of shading to. STIPULAR (10) STIPULED (11) STIPULES (10) [noun] Basal appendage of a typical leaf of a flowering plant, usually appearing paired beside the petiole although sometimes absent or highly modified. STIRRERS (8) [noun] A device used to stir. | [noun] A person who stirs something. | [noun] A person who spreads rumours or causes agitation. STIRRING (9) [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. STIRRUPS (10) [noun] A ring or hoop suspended by a rope or strap from the saddle, for a horseman's foot while mounting or riding. | [noun] (by extension) Any piece shaped like the stirrup of a saddle, used as a support, clamp, etc. | [noun] A stapes. 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. STITCHER (13) [noun] One who stitches. STITCHES (13) [noun] A single pass of a needle in sewing; the loop or turn of the thread thus made. | [noun] An arrangement of stitches in sewing, or method of stitching in some particular way or style. | [noun] An intense stabbing pain under the lower edge of the ribcage, brought on by exercise. STITHIED (12) STITHIES (11) STOBBING (13) STOCCADO (13) STOCCATA (12) STOCKADE (15) [noun] An enclosure protected by a wall of wooden posts | [noun] A military prison | [verb] To enclose in a stockade. STOCKCAR (16) [noun] A racing car, such as those sanctioned by NASCAR and ARCA, based on one of the regular production models available for purchase by the public. | [noun] A railway car for carrying cattle. STOCKERS (14) [noun] Livestock that is wintered and then sold in the spring; often contrasted with a feeder when the focus is on intended disposition. | [noun] A racecar in certain classes of auto racing whose origins are nominally or notionally related to factory-stock autos, such as stock car racing or super-stock drag racing. | [noun] One who crafts gun stocks STOCKIER (14) [adjective] (of a person or an animal) Sturdy; solidly built; heavy and compact. STOCKILY (17) STOCKING (15) [noun] A soft garment, usually knit or woven, worn on the foot and lower leg under shoes or other footwear. | [noun] A broad ring of a different fur colour on the lower part of the leg of a quadruped. | [noun] A knitted hood of cotton thread which is eventually converted by a special process into an incandescent mantle for gas lighting. | [verb] To have on hand for sale. STOCKISH (17) STOCKIST (14) [noun] A retailer or distributor who has stocks of a certain type of item for sale. STOCKMAN (16) [noun] A man who raises or looks after livestock. | [noun] A person who works in a stockroom. STOCKMEN (16) [noun] A man who raises or looks after livestock. | [noun] A person who works in a stockroom. STOCKPOT (16) [noun] A large pot, such as is used for making stock or for cooking large amounts of soup. STODGIER (10) [adjective] (of food) Having a thick, semi-solid consistency; glutinous; heavy on the stomach. | [adjective] Dull, old-fashioned. | [adjective] Badly put together. STODGILY (13) STODGING (11) STOICISM (12) [noun] A school of philosophy popularized during the Roman Empire that emphasized reason as a means of understanding the natural state of things, or logos, and as a means of freeing oneself from emotional distress. | [noun] A real or pretended indifference to pleasure or pain; insensibility; impassiveness. STOKESIA (12) STOLIDER (9) STOLIDLY (12) STOLLENS (8) [noun] A traditional German cake eaten at Christmas time, made with nuts, raisins and other dried fruits. STOLONIC (10) STOLPORT (10) STOMACHS (15) [noun] An organ in animals that stores food in the process of digestion. | [noun] The belly. | [noun] Pride, haughtiness. STOMACHY (18) STOMATAL (10) [adjective] Relating to, or containing, a stoma STOMATES (10) [noun] Stoma STOMATIC (12) STOMODEA (11) STOMPERS (12) STOMPING (13) [verb] To trample heavily. | [verb] To severely beat someone physically or figuratively. | [noun] The act of one who stomps. STONABLE (10) STONEFLY (14) [noun] Any of the freshwater aquatic insects in the order Plecoptera. STONIEST (8) [adjective] As hard as stone. | [adjective] Containing or made up of stones. | [adjective] Of a person, lacking warmth and emotion. STOOGING (10) [verb] To act as a straight man. STOOKERS (12) STOOKING (13) [verb] To make stooks. STOOLIES (8) [noun] A stool pigeon. STOOLING (9) [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. STOOPERS (10) STOOPING (11) [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. STOPBANK (16) [noun] Levee, dyke STOPCOCK (18) [noun] A valve, tap or faucet which regulates the flow of liquid or gas through a pipe. | [noun] A main shutoff for water to a home from a municipal supply. Usually these valves exist in pairs, one outside the property boundary and one inside the property boundary. STOPGAPS (13) [noun] That which fills a gap or hiatus. | [noun] A temporary measure or short-term fix used until something better can be obtained; that which serves as an expedient in an emergency; a band-aid solution. STOPOVER (13) [noun] A short interruption in a journey or the place visited during such an interruption. STOPPAGE (13) [noun] A pause or halt of some activity. | [noun] Something that forms an obstacle to continued activity; a blockage or obstruction. STOPPERS (12) [noun] Agent noun of stop, someone or something that stops something. | [noun] A type of knot at the end of a rope, to prevent it from unravelling. | [noun] A bung or cork. STOPPING (13) [verb] To cease moving. | [verb] To not continue. | [verb] To cause (something) to cease moving or progressing. STOPPLED (13) [verb] To plug; to stop up. STOPPLES (12) [noun] A plug; a stopper. STORABLE (10) STORAGES (9) STORAXES (15) [noun] Any member of the genus Styrax of trees and shrubs. | [noun] The resin of the oriental sweetgum tree (Liquidambar orientalis), formerly used as a stimulating expectorant. STOREYED (12) [adjective] Much talked or written about | [adjective] Historical | [adjective] Having multiple storeys; multistoried STORMIER (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to storms. | [adjective] Characterized by, or proceeding from, a storm; subject to storms; agitated with strong winds and heavy rain. | [adjective] Proceeding from violent agitation or fury. STORMILY (13) STORMING (11) [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. STORYING (12) STOTINKA (12) [noun] A unit of currency in Bulgaria, worth one hundredth of a lev. STOTINKI (12) [noun] A unit of currency in Bulgaria, worth one hundredth of a lev. STOUNDED (10) STOUTENS (8) STOUTEST (8) [adjective] Large; bulky. | [adjective] Bold, strong-minded. | [adjective] Proud; haughty. STOUTISH (11) [adjective] Reasonably stout, somewhat stout STOWABLE (13) STOWAGES (12) [noun] The act or practice of stowing. | [noun] A place where things are stowed. | [noun] Things that are stowed. STOWAWAY (17) [noun] A person who hides on board a ship, train, etc. so as to get a free passage. STRADDLE (10) [noun] A posture in which one straddles something. | [noun] An investment strategy involving simultaneous trade with put and call options on same security with positions that offset one another. | [noun] A voluntary raise made prior to receiving cards by the first player after the blinds. STRAFERS (11) STRAFING (12) [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). | [noun] The act of one who strafes. STRAGGLE (10) [noun] An irregular, spread-out group. | [noun] An outlier; something that has strayed beyond the normal limits. | [verb] To stray from the road, course or line of march. STRAGGLY (13) [adjective] Spread around in a chaotic and disorganized manner. | [adjective] Not arranged in a line. STRAIGHT (12) [noun] Something that is not crooked or bent such as a part of a road or track. | [noun] Five cards in sequence. | [noun] A heterosexual. 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. STRAINER (8) [noun] A device through which a liquid is passed for purification, filtering or separation from solid matter; anything (including a screen or a cloth) used to strain a liquid. | [noun] A perforated screen or openwork (usually at the end of a suction pipe of a pump), used to prevent solid bodies from mixing in a liquid stream or flowline. | [noun] One who strains. STRAITEN (8) [verb] To make strait; to narrow or confine to a smaller space. | [verb] To restrict or diminish, especially financially. STRAITER (8) STRAITLY (11) STRAMASH (13) [noun] A tumult or disturbance. | [verb] A noise, an uproar, a disturbance | [verb] To strike, beat, or bang; to break; to destroy. STRAMONY (13) 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. STRANDER (9) STRANGER (9) [adjective] Not normal; odd, unusual, surprising, out of the ordinary. | [adjective] Unfamiliar, not yet part of one's experience. | [adjective] Having the quantum mechanical property of strangeness. STRANGLE (9) [noun] A trading strategy using options, constructed through taking equal positions in a put and a call with different strike prices, such that there is a payoff if the underlying asset's value moves beyond the range of the two strike prices. | [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. 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 STRAPPER (12) [noun] A large, strong, robust person (usually a man). | [noun] A person who works with straps, as on leather goods. | [noun] One who straps horses. STRASSES (8) STRATEGY (12) [noun] The science and art of military command as applied to the overall planning and conduct of warfare. | [noun] A plan of action intended to accomplish a specific goal. | [noun] The use of advance planning to succeed in politics or business. STRATIFY (14) [verb] To become separated out into distinct layers or strata. | [verb] To separate out into distinct layers or strata. STRATOUS (8) STRATUMS (10) STRAVAGE (12) [verb] To wander aimlessly. | [verb] To gallivant. STRAVAIG (12) [verb] To stroll, meander STRAWHAT (14) STRAWIER (11) STRAWING (12) STRAYERS (11) STRAYING (12) [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. STREAKED (13) [verb] To have or obtain streaks. | [verb] To run naked in public. (Contrast flash) | [verb] To create streaks. STREAKER (12) [noun] One who runs naked through a public place as a prank. | [noun] The dolphin Stenella coeruleoalba. 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. STREAMER (10) [noun] A long, narrow flag, or piece of material used or seen as a decoration. | [noun] Strips of paper or other material used as confetti. | [noun] A newspaper headline that runs along the top of a page. STREEKED (13) STREEKER (12) STREELED (9) [verb] To trail along; to saunter or be drawn along, carelessly, swaying in a kind of zigzag motion. STRENGTH (12) [noun] The quality or degree of being strong. | [noun] The intensity of a force or power; potency. | [noun] The strongest part of something; that on which confidence or reliance is based. 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. STRESSES (8) [noun] (Cause of) discomfort. | [noun] Serious danger. | [noun] An aversive state of stress to which a person cannot fully adapt. STRESSOR (8) [noun] An environmental condition or influence that stresses (i.e. causes stress for) an organism. STRETCHY (16) [adjective] Capable of stretching; elastic. | [adjective] Inclined to stretch, as from weariness. STRETTAS (8) STRETTOS (8) STREUSEL (8) [noun] A crumbly topping for cakes and quick breads. It is made of sugar, flour, butter, cinnamon, and often chopped nuts. STREWERS (11) STREWING (12) [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. STRIATED (9) [verb] To mark something with striations. | [adjective] Having parallel lines or grooves on the surface. STRIATES (8) [verb] To mark something with striations. STRICKEN (14) [adjective] Struck by something. | [adjective] Disabled or incapacitated by something. | [verb] (sometimes with out or through) To delete or cross out; to scratch or eliminate. STRICKLE (14) [noun] A rod used to level grain etc. when being measured, or concrete after pouring. | [noun] A tool for sharpening scythes. | [noun] An instrument used for smoothing the surface of a core. STRICTER (10) [adjective] Strained; drawn close; tight. | [adjective] Tense; not relaxed. | [adjective] Exact; accurate; precise; rigorously particular. STRICTLY (13) [adverb] In a strict manner. | [adverb] In a limited manner; only | [adverb] In a narrow or limited sense. STRIDDEN (10) [verb] To walk with long steps. | [verb] To stand with the legs wide apart; to straddle. | [verb] To pass over at a step; to step over. STRIDENT (9) [noun] One of a class of s-like fricatives produced by an airstream directed at the upper teeth. | [adjective] Loud; shrill, piercing, high-pitched; rough-sounding | [adjective] Grating or obnoxious STRIDERS (9) STRIDING (10) [verb] To walk with long steps. | [verb] To stand with the legs wide apart; to straddle. | [verb] To pass over at a step; to step over. | [noun] The act of one who strides; a long step. STRIDORS (9) STRIGILS (9) [noun] A grooming tool used to scrape away dead skin, oil, dirt, etc. STRIGOSE (9) [adjective] Having fine grooves, ridges, or streaks. | [adjective] Having stiff hairs, pressed together. STRIKERS (12) [noun] An individual who is on strike. | [noun] Someone or something that hits someone or something else. | [noun] One of the players on a team in football (soccer) in the row nearest to the opposing team's goal, who are therefore principally responsible for scoring goals. STRIKING (13) [verb] (sometimes with out or through) To delete or cross out; to scratch or eliminate. | [verb] (physical) To have a sharp or sudden effect. | [verb] To thrust in; to cause to enter or penetrate. STRINGED (10) [adjective] Having strings. STRINGER (9) [noun] Someone who threads something; one who makes or provides strings, especially for bows. | [noun] Someone who strings someone along. | [noun] A horizontal timber that supports upright posts, or supports the hull of a vessel. STRIPERS (10) [noun] A device that applies stripes | [noun] The striped bass, Morone saxatilis, a popular sport fish native to North America | [noun] A person who is authorized to wear a certain number of stripes on his or her uniform STRIPIER (10) [adjective] Having stripes; striped. STRIPING (11) [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. 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. STRIPPER (12) [noun] Someone who removes their clothing in a sexually provocative manner, especially as a form of paid entertainment. | [noun] A chemical or tool used to remove paint, sheathing, etc. from something. | [noun] A tool used to strip tubing: to empty it by applying pressure to the outside of the tubing and moving that pressure along the tubing. STRIVERS (11) STRIVING (12) [noun] Effort; the act of one who strives. STROBILA (10) [noun] The jointed series of segments of the body of a tapeworm, posterior to the unjointed collum. STROBILE (10) STROBILI (10) [noun] A cone-shaped fruiting body in general | [noun] More particularly a more-or-less cone-shaped fruiting body of any of various gymnosperms and vascular sporophytes. According to source and context it might refer to a structure bearing either seeds or spores, that might or might not be seen as an infructescence; usage has varied arbitrarily among authors during the last two centuries. | [noun] A layered reproductive stage in jellyfish, in which the swimming medusa form is produced. STROBILS (10) STROKERS (12) STROKING (13) [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. 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. STROLLER (8) [noun] A seat or chair on wheels, pushed by somebody walking behind it, typically used for transporting babies and young children. | [noun] One who strolls. | [noun] A vagrant. STROMATA (10) [noun] The tissue structure of an organ, etc., that serves to support it. STRONGER (9) [adjective] Capable of producing great physical force. | [adjective] Capable of withstanding great physical force. | [adjective] (of water, wind, etc.) Having a lot of power. STRONGLY (12) [adverb] In a strong or powerful manner. | [adverb] Very much. STRONGYL (12) STRONTIA (8) [noun] A pale earth composed of strontium oxide (SrO) STRONTIC (10) STROPHES (13) [noun] A turn in verse, as from one metrical foot to another, or from one side of a chorus to the other. | [noun] The section of an ode that the chorus chants as it moves from right to left across the stage. | [noun] A pair of stanzas of alternating form on which the structure of a given poem is based. STROPHIC (15) 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. STROPPER (12) STROWING (12) [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. STROYERS (11) STROYING (12) STRUCKEN (14) STRUDELS (9) [noun] The symbol @, most commonly used in e-mail addresses. | [noun] A pastry made from multiple thin layers of dough rolled up and filled with fruit, etc. | [noun] A vertical hole in sea ice through which downward jet-like, buoyancy-driven drainage of flood water is thought to occur. STRUGGLE (10) [noun] A contortion of the body in an attempt to escape or to perform a difficult task. | [noun] Strife, contention, great effort. | [verb] To strive, to labour in difficulty, to fight (for or against), to contend. STRUMMED (13) [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. STRUMMER (12) STRUMOSE (10) STRUMOUS (10) [adjective] Scrofulous; having struma STRUMPET (12) [noun] A female prostitute | [noun] A woman who is very sexually active. | [noun] A female adulterer. 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. STRUTTER (8) STUBBIER (12) [adjective] Abounding with stubs. | [adjective] Like a stub; short, especially cut short, thick and stiff; stunted; stubbed. STUBBILY (15) STUBBING (13) [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. STUBBLED (13) STUBBLES (12) STUBBORN (12) [noun] Stubbornness. | [noun] A disease of citrus trees characterized by stunted growth and misshapen fruit, caused by Spiroplasma citri. | [adjective] Refusing to move or to change one's opinion; obstinate; firmly resisting; persistent in doing something. STUCCOED (13) [verb] To coat or decorate with stucco. STUCCOER (12) STUCCOES (12) [noun] A plaster that is used to coat (interior or) exterior walls, or used for mouldings. | [noun] Work made of stucco; stuccowork. STUDBOOK (15) [noun] In livestock breeding, a written record of the genealogy of animals. STUDDIES (10) STUDDING (11) [verb] To set with studs; to furnish with studs. | [verb] To be scattered over the surface of (something) at intervals. | [verb] To set (something) over a surface at intervals. STUDENTS (9) [noun] A person who studies or learns about a particular subject. | [noun] A person who is formally enrolled at a school, a college or university, or another educational institution. STUDFISH (15) STUDIERS (9) STUDIOUS (9) [adjective] Given to thought, or to the examination of subjects by contemplation; contemplative. | [adjective] Dedicated to study; devoted to the acquisition of knowledge from books | [adjective] (usually followed by an infinitive or by "of") Earnest in endeavors; attentive; diligent STUDLIER (9) [adjective] Like a stud; being or relating to a sexually attractive male. STUDWORK (16) STUDYING (13) [verb] (usually academic) To review materials already learned in order to make sure one does not forget them, usually in preparation for an examination. | [verb] (academic) To take a course or courses on a subject. | [verb] To acquire knowledge on a subject with the intention of applying it in practice. STUFFERS (14) STUFFIER (14) [adjective] Poorly ventilated; partially plugged. | [adjective] Stout; mettlesome; resolute. | [adjective] Angry and obstinate; sulky. STUFFILY (17) STUFFING (15) [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. STUIVERS (11) STULTIFY (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. 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. STUMBLER (12) STUMBLES (12) [noun] A fall, trip or substantial misstep. | [noun] An error or blunder. | [noun] A clumsy walk. STUMMING (13) [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. STUMPAGE (13) STUMPERS (12) [noun] One who stumps, or speaks, or orates, as a politician. | [noun] A difficult puzzle or problem. | [noun] A boastful person. STUMPIER (12) [adjective] Like or resembling a stump; short and cut off. | [adjective] Full of stumps. STUMPING (13) [verb] To stop, confuse, or puzzle. | [verb] To baffle; to make unable to find an answer to a question or problem. | [verb] To campaign. STUNNERS (8) [noun] Anything that is stunning. | [noun] A professional wrestling maneuver in which an attacking wrestler applies a facelock to an opponent and falls to a seated position, forcing the opponent's jaw or neck to drop on the attacker's shoulder. | [noun] A pistol firing a beam capable of stunning an enemy. STUNNING (9) [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 | [noun] The act by which a person or animal is physically stunned. STUNSAIL (8) [noun] Studding sail STUNTING (9) [verb] (cheerleading) To perform a stunt. | [verb] To show off; to posture. | [verb] To check or hinder the growth or development of. STUNTMAN (10) [noun] In films, someone who performs stunts that are deemed too dangerous or physically difficult for the main actors to attempt. STUNTMEN (10) [noun] In films, someone who performs stunts that are deemed too dangerous or physically difficult for the main actors to attempt. STUPIDER (11) [adjective] Lacking in intelligence or exhibiting the quality of having been done by someone lacking in intelligence. | [adjective] To the point of stupor. | [adjective] Characterized by or in a state of stupor; paralysed. STUPIDLY (14) [adverb] In a stupid manner. STURDIED (10) STURDIER (9) [adjective] Of firm build; stiff; stout; strong. | [adjective] Solid in structure or person. | [adjective] Foolishly obstinate or resolute; stubborn. STURDIES (9) STURDILY (12) STURGEON (9) [noun] Any marine or freshwater fish of the family Acipenseridae that are prized for their roe and are endemic to temperate seas and rivers of the northern hemisphere, especially central Eurasia. STUTTERS (8) [noun] A speech disorder characterised by stuttering. | [noun] One who stutters. | [verb] To speak with a spasmodic repetition of vocal sounds. STYLINGS (12) [noun] Any form of decoration or stylistic approach. 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. STYLISER (11) STYLISES (11) [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. STYLISTS (11) [noun] Designer. | [noun] Hairdresser. | [noun] A writer or speaker distinguished for excellence or individuality of style; one who cultivates, or is a master or critic of, literary style. STYLITES (11) [noun] A Christian ascetic in ancient times who lived alone on top of a tall pillar. STYLITIC (13) 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. STYLIZER (20) STYLIZES (20) [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. STYLUSES (11) [noun] Senses relating to a thin, pointed object. | [noun] (by extension from sense 1.1) A particular manner of expression in writing or speech, especially one regarded as good. | [noun] A particular manner of creating, doing, or presenting something, especially a work of architecture or art. STYMYING (17) STYPTICS (15) [noun] A substance used for styptic results. STYRAXES (18) [noun] Any member of the genus Styrax of about 130 species of large shrubs or small trees, mostly native to temperate or tropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere. STYRENES (11) SUASIONS (8) SUBABBOT (14) SUBACRID (13) SUBACUTE (12) [noun] A patient whose condition is less than acute. | [adjective] Less than acute. | [adjective] Having a pointed tip, but with a broad or slightly rounded angle. SUBADARS (11) SUBADULT (11) [noun] A person who, or animal that, is not yet an adult. | [adjective] Not yet adult. SUBAGENT (11) [noun] A person employed by an agent to transact the whole, or a part, of the business entrusted to the latter. SUBAHDAR (14) SUBAREAS (10) SUBATOMS (12) SUBAXIAL (17) SUBBASES (12) SUBBASIN (12) SUBBINGS (13) SUBBLOCK (18) SUBBREED (13) SUBCASTE (12) SUBCAUSE (12) SUBCELLS (12) SUBCHIEF (18) SUBCLANS (12) SUBCLASS (12) [noun] An object class derived from another class (its superclass) from which it inherits a base set of properties and methods. | [noun] A rank directly below class | [noun] A secondary class within a main class. SUBCLERK (16) SUBCODES (13) SUBCOOLS (12) SUBCULTS (12) SUBCUTES (12) SUBCUTIS (12) SUBDEANS (11) SUBDEPOT (13) SUBDUALS (11) SUBDUCED (14) SUBDUCES (13) SUBDUCTS (13) SUBDUERS (11) SUBDUING (12) [verb] To overcome, quieten, or bring under control. | [verb] To bring (a country) under control by force. SUBDURAL (11) [noun] Subdural hematoma. | [adjective] Located beneath the dura mater and above the arachnoid mater SUBEDITS (11) [verb] To perform the work of a subeditor or copy editor. SUBENTRY (13) SUBEPOCH (17) SUBERECT (12) SUBERINS (10) SUBERISE (10) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBERIZE (19) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBEROSE (10) SUBEROUS (10) SUBFIELD (14) SUBFILES (13) SUBFIXES (20) SUBFLOOR (13) [noun] The floor structure supporting and underlying the visible flooring or other finishing surface such as a carpet SUBFLUID (14) SUBFRAME (15) [noun] A subsidiary frame (chunk of data). | [noun] A structural component of a vehicle, such as an automobile or aircraft, that uses a discrete, separate structure within a larger body-on-frame or unit body to carry certain components, such as the engine, drivetrain, or suspension. | [noun] One of the HTML frames that make up a frameset. SUBGENRE (11) [noun] One of several categories within a particular genre. SUBGENUS (11) [noun] A subdivision of a genus. SUBGOALS (11) SUBGRADE (12) SUBGRAPH (16) SUBGROUP (13) [noun] A group within a larger group; a group whose members are some, but not all, of the members of a larger group. | [noun] A subset H of a group G that is itself a group and has the same binary operation as G. | [verb] To divide or classify into subgroups SUBHEADS (14) [noun] A subheading or subtitle SUBHUMAN (15) [noun] Anything which is less than human. | [adjective] Less than human; lacking characteristics of a human. SUBHUMID (16) SUBIDEAS (11) SUBINDEX (18) SUBITEMS (12) SUBJECTS (19) [noun] (grammar) In a clause: the word or word group (usually a noun phrase) that is dealt with. In active clauses with verbs denoting an action, the subject and the actor are usually the same. | [noun] An actor; one who takes action. | [noun] The main topic of a paper, work of art, discussion, field of study, etc. | [verb] (construed with to) To cause (someone or something) to undergo a particular experience, especially one that is unpleasant or unwanted. SUBJOINS (17) [verb] To add something to the end; to append or annex SUBLATED (11) [verb] To negate, deny or contradict. | [verb] To take or carry away; to remove. SUBLATES (10) [verb] To negate, deny or contradict. | [verb] To take or carry away; to remove. SUBLEASE (10) [noun] A lease on something made by someone who already leases it. | [verb] To lease something that is already leased; to sublet. SUBLEVEL (13) SUBLIMED (13) [verb] To sublimate. | [verb] To raise on high. | [verb] To exalt; to heighten; to improve; to purify. SUBLIMER (12) [adjective] Noble and majestic. | [adjective] Impressive and awe-inspiring, yet simple. | [adjective] Lifted up; high in place; exalted aloft; uplifted; lofty. SUBLIMES (12) [noun] Something sublime. SUBLINES (10) SUBLUNAR (10) [adjective] Situated beneath the Moon. | [adjective] Of this world; earthly. SUBMENUS (12) [noun] A secondary menu available through another menu, especially one that branches off the first. SUBMERGE (13) [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. SUBMERSE (12) [verb] To submerge. | [adjective] Growing entirely under water. SUBNASAL (10) SUBNICHE (15) SUBNODAL (11) SUBOPTIC (14) SUBORDER (11) [noun] A taxonomic category below order and above infraorder. 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. SUBORNER (10) SUBOVATE (13) SUBOXIDE (18) [noun] Any oxide containing a small proportion of oxygen SUBPANEL (12) SUBPARTS (12) SUBPENAS (12) SUBPHASE (15) SUBPHYLA (18) [noun] A taxonomic category below phylum and above class SUBPLOTS (12) [noun] A plot within a story, subsidiary to the main plot. | [noun] A subdivision of a plot of land, especially one used for an agricultural experiment. SUBPOENA (12) [noun] A writ requiring a defendant to appear in court to answer a plaintiff's claim. | [noun] A writ requiring someone to appear in court to give testimony. | [verb] To summon with a subpoena. SUBPOLAR (12) SUBPUBIC (16) SUBRACES (12) SUBRENTS (10) SUBRINGS (11) SUBRULES (10) SUBSALES (10) SUBSCALE (12) [noun] A subdivision of a scale. SUBSECTS (12) SUBSENSE (10) [noun] A sense of a word that reflects a part or aspect of a more general sense SUBSERES (10) SUBSERVE (13) [verb] To serve to promote (an end); to be useful to. | [verb] To assist in carrying out. SUBSHAFT (16) SUBSHELL (13) SUBSHRUB (15) [noun] A low-growing woody shrub or perennial with woody base. 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. SUBSIDER (11) SUBSIDES (11) [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. SUBSISTS (10) [verb] To survive on a minimum of resources. | [verb] To have ontological reality; to exist. | [verb] To retain a certain state; to continue. SUBSITES (10) SUBSKILL (14) SUBSOILS (10) [noun] The layer of earth that is below the topsoil. SUBSOLAR (10) [adjective] Directly beneath the sun | [adjective] Between the tropics; equatorial SUBSONIC (12) [noun] An aircraft whose maximum speed is less than the speed of sound | [adjective] (of a sound, scientific) having a frequency too low to be audible | [adjective] (of a sound, literary) very quiet, almost inaudible SUBSPACE (14) [noun] A subset of a space which is a space in its own right. | [noun] Any (often unspecified) method of communicating faster than light speed. | [noun] (BDSM) The psychological state of the submissive or "bottom" during sadomasochistic activity. SUBSTAGE (11) [noun] The stage, below the main stage of a microscope, to which attachments are fixed. | [noun] A stage making up part of a larger stage. SUBSTATE (10) 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 SUBSUMES (12) [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 SUBTASKS (14) SUBTAXON (17) SUBTEENS (10) SUBTENDS (11) [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 SUBTESTS (10) SUBTEXTS (17) [noun] (authorship) The implicit meaning of a text, often a literary one, or a speech or dialogue. SUBTHEME (15) SUBTILER (10) SUBTILIN (10) SUBTILTY (13) SUBTITLE (10) [noun] (authorship) A heading below or after a title. | [noun] Textual versions of the dialog in films, usually displayed at the bottom of the screen. | [verb] To create subtitles for the dialog in a film. SUBTLEST (10) [adjective] Hard to grasp; not obvious or easily understood; barely noticeable. | [adjective] (of a thing) Cleverly contrived. | [adjective] (of a person or animal) Cunning, skillful. SUBTLETY (13) [noun] The quality of being subtle. | [noun] An instance of being subtle, a subtle thing, especially a subtle argument or distinction. | [noun] An ornate medieval illusion dish or table decoration, especially when made from one thing but crafted to look like another. SUBTONES (10) SUBTONIC (12) [noun] The note immediately below the upper note of a musical scale. | [noun] An imperfectly articulated sound or utterance, as characterized by Dr. James Rush (Guide to Pronunciation, 1833). | [adjective] Of or pertaining to imperfectly articulated sounds or utterances that are inaudible or barely audible, as characterized by Dr. James Rush (Guide to Pronunciation, 1833). SUBTOPIA (12) [noun] Sprawling suburbs, collectively. SUBTOPIC (14) SUBTOTAL (10) [noun] The total for a part of a list of numbers being summed. | [verb] To calculate a subtotal. | [adjective] Less than total; partial. SUBTRACT (12) [verb] To remove or reduce; especially to reduce a quantity or number SUBTREND (11) SUBTRIBE (12) SUBTUNIC (12) SUBTYPES (15) [noun] A group of specific things within a larger, more general group. | [noun] The data type represented by a subclass. SUBULATE (10) [adjective] Awl-shaped; tapering into a sharp point from a broader base. SUBUNITS (10) [noun] Any subdivision of a larger unit. | [noun] A protein subunit. SUBURBAN (12) [noun] A person who lives in a suburb. | [noun] An automobile with a station wagon body on a truck chassis. | [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of or situated on the outskirts of a city. SUBURBED (13) SUBURBIA (12) [noun] The suburbs and all that pertains to or characterizes them; the suburbs as represented or encapsulated by their typical qualities or characteristics. SUBVENED (14) SUBVENES (13) SUBVERTS (13) [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). SUBVICAR (15) SUBVIRAL (13) SUBVOCAL (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining words or statements formed in thought and expressed inwardly but not, or not yet, uttered aloud. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to imperfectly articulated speech that is inaudible or barely audible; subtonic. SUBWAYED (17) SUBWORLD (14) SUBZONES (19) SUCCEEDS (13) [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. SUCCINCT (14) [adjective] Brief and to the point | [adjective] Compressed into a tiny area. | [adjective] Wrapped by, or as if by a girdle; closely fitting, wound or wrapped or drawn up tightly. SUCCINIC (14) SUCCINYL (15) 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. SUCCORER (12) SUCCOURS (12) [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. SUCCUBAE (14) SUCCUBUS (14) [noun] A female demon which comes to men, especially monks, in their dreams to seduce them and have sexual intercourse, drawing energy from the men to sustain themselves, often until the point of exhaustion or death. | [noun] A strumpet, whore or prostitute. SUCCUMBS (16) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUCHLIKE (17) [adjective] Of the same or similar kind. | [pronoun] Other things of the same kind or type. SUCHNESS (13) 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. SUCKFISH (20) SUCKLERS (14) [noun] An animal that has not yet been weaned. | [noun] Any animal that suckles its young; a mammal. | [noun] A plant: red clover or white clover. SUCKLESS (14) SUCKLING (15) [noun] An infant that is still being breastfed (being suckled) by its mother. | [noun] A young mammal not yet weaned and still being fed milk by its mother. | [verb] To give suck to; to nurse at the breast, udder, or dugs. SUCRASES (10) SUCROSES (10) SUCTIONS (10) [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. SUDARIES (9) SUDARIUM (11) [noun] A napkin or handkerchief. SUDATION (9) SUDATORY (12) SUDDENLY (13) [adverb] Happening quickly and with little or no warning; in a sudden manner. SUDSIEST (9) SUDSLESS (9) SUFFARIS (14) SUFFERED (15) [verb] To undergo hardship. | [verb] To feel pain. | [verb] To become worse. SUFFERER (14) [noun] One who suffers. | [noun] One who is afflicted. 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. SUFFICER (16) SUFFICES (16) [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. SUFFIXAL (21) SUFFIXED (22) [verb] To append (something) to the end of something else. SUFFIXES (21) [noun] (grammar) A morpheme added at the end of a word to modify the word's meaning. | [noun] A subscript. | [noun] A final segment of a string of characters. SUFFLATE (14) SUFFRAGE (15) [noun] The right or chance to vote, express an opinion, or participate in a decision. | [noun] The right to vote for elected officials in a representative democracy. | [noun] A vote in deciding a particular question. 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. SUFFUSES (14) [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. SUGARIER (9) SUGARING (10) [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. SUGGESTS (10) [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 SUICIDAL (11) [noun] Someone suicidal, someone likely to kill themselves | [adjective] Pertaining to suicide. | [adjective] (of a person) Likely to commit, or to attempt to commit, suicide. 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. SUICIDES (11) [noun] Intentional killing of oneself. | [noun] A particular instance of a person intentionally killing himself or herself, or of multiple people doing so. | [noun] A person who has intentionally killed him/herself. SUITABLE (10) [adjective] Having sufficient or the required properties for a certain purpose or task; appropriate to a certain occasion. SUITABLY (13) [adverb] In a suitable manner; with propriety. SUITCASE (10) [noun] A large (usually rectangular) piece of luggage used for carrying clothes, and sometimes suits, when travelling. | [verb] To trade using samples in a suitcase. | [verb] To smuggle in one's rectum. SUITINGS (9) [noun] Fabric for making suits SUITLIKE (12) SUKIYAKI (19) [noun] A Japanese dish of thinly-sliced beef and tofu with dashi, mirin and soy sauce cooked quickly at the table. SULCATED (11) SULFATED (12) SULFATES (11) [noun] Any ester of sulfuric acid. | [noun] Any salt of sulfuric acid. | [verb] To treat something with sulfuric acid, a sulfate, or with sulfur dioxide. SULFIDES (12) [noun] Any compound of sulfur and a metal or other electropositive element or group. SULFINYL (14) SULFITES (11) [noun] Any salt of sulfurous acid. SULFITIC (13) SULFONES (11) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds that have a sulfonyl functional group attached to two carbon atoms; drugs of this structure have been used to treat leprosy. SULFONIC (13) SULFONYL (14) [noun] The bivalent radical or functional group -SO2- | [noun] Any univalent radical derived from a sulfonic acid SULFURED (12) [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. | [adjective] Treated with sulfur SULFURET (11) SULFURIC (13) [adjective] Of, or relating to sulfur, especially in its higher oxidation state SULFURYL (14) SULKIEST (12) [adjective] Silent and withdrawn after being upset SULLAGES (9) SULLENER (8) SULLENLY (11) SULLYING (12) [verb] To soil or stain; to dirty. | [verb] To corrupt or damage. | [verb] (intransitive ) To become soiled or tarnished. SULPHATE (13) [noun] Any ester of sulfuric acid. | [noun] Any salt of sulfuric acid. | [verb] To treat something with sulfuric acid, a sulfate, or with sulfur dioxide. SULPHIDE (14) [noun] Any compound of sulfur and a metal or other electropositive element or group. | [noun] A kind of clear marble with a small statuette or figure inside. SULPHIDS (14) SULPHITE (13) [noun] Any salt of sulfurous acid. | [noun] A person who is spontaneous and original in thought and conversation. SULPHONE (13) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds that have a sulfonyl functional group attached to two carbon atoms; drugs of this structure have been used to treat leprosy. SULPHURS (13) [noun] A chemical element (symbol S) with an atomic number of 16. | [noun] A yellowish green colour, like that of sulfur. | [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. SULPHURY (16) SULTANAS (8) [noun] A pale yellow raisin made from a seedless grape. | [noun] A female sultan or wife or mistress of a sultan. | [noun] A female ruler of a sultanate. SULTANIC (10) SULTRIER (8) [adjective] Hot and humid. | [adjective] Very hot and dry; torrid. | [adjective] Sexually enthralling. SULTRILY (11) SUMMABLE (14) SUMMANDS (13) [noun] Something which is added or summed. SUMMATED (13) SUMMATES (12) SUMMERED (13) [verb] To spend the summer, as in a particular place on holiday. SUMMERLY (15) SUMMITAL (12) SUMMITED (13) [verb] (hiking) To reach the summit of a mountain. | [adjective] Having a summit. SUMMITRY (15) 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 SUMMONER (12) SUMPTERS (12) [noun] The driver of a packhorse. | [noun] A packhorse; a beast of burden. | [noun] A pack; a burden. SUMPWEED (16) SUNBAKED (15) [verb] To bake in the sun. | [verb] To sunbathe. | [adjective] Baked by the heat of the sun. SUNBATHE (13) [noun] A sunbathing session: a sunbath. | [verb] To expose one's body to the sun in order to relax or to obtain a suntan. SUNBATHS (13) [noun] A period spent tanning (sunbathing) in the sun. SUNBEAMS (12) [noun] A visible, narrow, and intense (relative to ambient light) ray of sunlight. | [noun] An item of cutlery or crockery laid out on a table, but not used, and which can be returned to the drawer without being washed. | [noun] Any of various lycaenid butterflies of the genus Curetis. SUNBEAMY (15) SUNBELTS (10) [noun] A geographical region loosely described as the southern and western states of the USA where the weather is typically sunny. | [noun] A political geographical region approximately the same as above, where the voting tendency of the population is right wing. SUNBIRDS (11) [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. SUNBLOCK (16) [noun] A sunscreen with high sun protection factor (SPF). SUNBURNS (10) [noun] A burn on the skin caused by excess exposure to the sun's rays. | [noun] A burn on the tissue of crop plants or their fruits (especially if they are rich in water like tomatoes, grapes, apples, gooseberries) caused by excess exposure to the sun's rays. | [verb] To receive a sunburn. SUNBURNT (10) [adjective] (of human skin) Having a sunburn or dark tan; having been burned by the sun's rays. | [adjective] (of plants and other objects) Dried by the sun's rays. | [adjective] (of places or objects) Subject to the strong heat and/or light of the sun. SUNBURST (10) [noun] A figure or shape showing rays radiating from a central point. | [noun] A strong outburst of sunlight. SUNCHOKE (17) [noun] A variety of sunflower, Helianthus tuberosus, native to North America, having yellow flower heads and edible tubers. | [noun] The tuber of this plant, eaten as a vegetable. SUNDECKS (15) [noun] An area on a ship's deck or on the roof of a house used for sunbathing. 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. SUNDERER (9) SUNDIALS (9) [noun] A device measuring the time of day by the position of a shadow cast by a pole or plate (gnomon) upon an engraved series of marks. SUNDOWNS (12) [noun] Sunset. | [noun] A hat with a wide brim to shade the eyes from sunlight. | [verb] To experience an episode or an onset of some detrimental mental condition like agitation, anxiety, hallucination or dementia, daily at nightfall. SUNDRESS (9) [noun] A typically sleeveless dress, usually a minidress, made of light, loose-fitting material for spring and summer wear. SUNDRIES (9) [noun] (usually in the plural) A minor miscellaneous item. | [noun] (in the plural) A category for irregular or miscellaneous items not otherwise classified. | [noun] (usually in the plural) An extra. SUNDROPS (11) [noun] Evening primrose SUNGLASS (9) SUNGLOWS (12) SUNLAMPS (12) [noun] A lamp that produces ultraviolet radiation; used for therapeutic or cosmetic purposes. | [noun] A high-intensity lamp, used to produce an illusion of daylight. SUNLANDS (9) SUNLIGHT (12) [noun] All the electromagnetic radiation given off by the Sun, especially that in the visible spectrum that bathes the Earth. | [noun] Brightness, hope; a positive outlook. | [verb] To work on the side (at a secondary job) during the daytime. SUNNIEST (8) [adjective] (of weather or a day) Featuring a lot of sunshine. | [adjective] (of a place) Receiving a lot of sunshine. | [adjective] (of a person or a person's mood) cheerful SUNPORCH (15) SUNPROOF (13) SUNRISES (8) [noun] The time of day when the sun appears above the eastern horizon. | [noun] The change in color of the sky at dawn. | [noun] Any great awakening. SUNROOFS (11) [noun] A fixed or operable opening in a vehicle roof (car or truck) which allows fresh air and/or light to enter the passenger compartment. A sunroof may include a transparent or opaque panel and may be manually operated or power driven. SUNROOMS (10) [noun] A room in a residence with numerous large windows admitting sunlight. | [noun] Solarium SUNSCALD (11) [noun] Localized damage to the tissues of trees or their fruits caused by bright sunlight | [verb] To suffer such damage. SUNSHADE (12) [noun] Something to keep the sun off, or create shade from the sun; a parasol or awning. SUNSHINE (11) [noun] The direct rays, light or warmth of the sun. | [noun] A location on which the sun's rays fall. | [noun] Geniality or cheerfulness. SUNSHINY (14) SUNSPOTS (10) [noun] A region on the sun's surface with a lower temperature than its surroundings and intense magnetic activity. SUNSTONE (8) [noun] A translucent form of feldspar having flakes of hematite, used as an ornamental stone. SUNSUITS (8) [noun] A costume designed to protect a child from the sun. SUNWARDS (12) [adverb] Toward the sun. SUPERADD (12) [verb] To add on top of a previous addition. SUPERBAD (13) SUPERBER (12) SUPERBLY (15) [adverb] Excellently, done to the best possibly degree, admirably. | [adverb] Haughtily SUPERCAR (12) [noun] Any high-performance sports car SUPERCOP (14) SUPEREGO (11) [noun] The part of the mind that acts as a self-critical conscience, reflecting social standards that have been learnt. SUPERFAN (13) [noun] An extremely dedicated fan SUPERFIX (20) SUPERHIT (13) [noun] A very successful hit. SUPERHOT (13) SUPERING (11) SUPERIOR (10) [noun] A person of higher rank or quality. | [noun] The senior person in a monastic community. | [noun] The head of certain churches and colleges. SUPERJET (17) SUPERLAY (13) SUPERLIE (10) SUPERMAN (12) [noun] An imagined superior type of human being representing a new stage of human development; an übermensch, an overman. | [noun] A person of extraordinary or seemingly superhuman powers. SUPERMEN (12) [noun] An imagined superior type of human being representing a new stage of human development; an übermensch, an overman. | [noun] A person of extraordinary or seemingly superhuman powers. SUPERMOM (14) [noun] A mother who looks after her home and children whilst being in full-time employment SUPERNAL (10) [adjective] Pertaining to heaven or to the sky; celestial. | [adjective] Exalted, exquisite, superlative. SUPERPRO (12) SUPERSEX (17) SUPERSPY (15) SUPERTAX (17) [noun] An additional tax on something that has already been taxed | [noun] A higher rate of an existing tax SUPINATE (10) [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. SUPINELY (13) SUPPLANT (12) [verb] To take the place of; to replace, to supersede. | [verb] To uproot, to remove violently. SUPPLELY (15) SUPPLEST (12) [adjective] Pliant, flexible, easy to bend | [adjective] Lithe and agile when moving and bending | [adjective] Compliant; yielding to the will of others 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. SUPPLIER (12) [noun] One who supplies; a provider. | [noun] Someone who assists (sets up) a goal. SUPPLIES (12) [noun] The act of supplying. | [noun] An amount of something supplied. | [noun] (in the plural) provisions. SUPPLING (13) [verb] To make or become supple. | [verb] To make compliant, submissive, or obedient. SUPPORTS (12) [noun] (sometimes attributive) Something which supports. | [noun] Financial or other help. | [noun] Answers to questions and resolution of problems regarding something sold. SUPPOSAL (12) 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. SUPPOSER (12) SUPPOSES (12) [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. SUPPRESS (12) [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. SUPREMER (12) SUPREMOS (12) [noun] The most important person in an organization. SURBASED (11) SURBASES (10) SURCEASE (10) [noun] Cessation; stop; end. | [verb] To come to an end; to desist. | [verb] To bring to an end. SURCOATS (10) [noun] A loose garment without sleeves worn over a suit of armor, sometimes colored or embroidered with the wearer's coat of arms. | [noun] An overgarment worn over a woman's gown; a kind of short robe worn over the tunic at the close of the 11th century. SUREFIRE (11) [adjective] Guaranteed to work SURENESS (8) SURETIES (8) [noun] Certainty. | [noun] That which makes sure; that which confirms; ground of confidence or security. | [noun] A promise to pay a sum of money in the event that another person fails to fulfill an obligation. SURFABLE (13) SURFACED (14) [verb] To provide something with a surface. | [verb] To apply a surface to something. | [verb] To rise to the surface. SURFACER (13) SURFACES (13) [noun] The overside or up-side of a flat object such as a table, or of a liquid. | [noun] The outside hull of a tangible object. | [noun] Outward or external appearance. SURFBIRD (14) [noun] A small sandpiper, Aphriza virgata, endemic to the northwestern parts of North America. SURFBOAT (13) SURFEITS (11) [noun] An excessive amount of something. | [noun] Overindulgence in either food or drink; overeating. | [noun] A sickness or condition caused by overindulgence. SURFFISH (17) SURFIEST (11) SURFINGS (12) SURFLIKE (15) SURGEONS (9) [noun] One who performs surgery; a doctor who performs operations on people or animals. | [noun] A surgeonfish. SURGICAL (11) [adjective] Of, relating to, used in, or resulting from surgery. | [adjective] Precise or very accurate. SURICATE (10) [noun] The meerkat, a member of the mongoose family. SURLIEST (8) [adjective] Irritated, bad-tempered, unfriendly. | [adjective] Threatening, menacing, gloomy. | [adjective] Lordly, arrogant, supercilious. SURMISED (11) [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. SURMISER (10) SURMISES (10) [noun] Thought, imagination, or conjecture, which may be based upon feeble or scanty evidence; suspicion; guess. | [noun] Reflection; thought; posit. | [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. SURMOUNT (10) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. SURNAMED (11) [verb] To give a surname to. | [verb] To call by a surname. SURNAMER (10) SURNAMES (10) [noun] An additional name, particularly those derived from a birthplace, quality, or achievement; an epithet. | [noun] An additional name given to a person, place, or thing; a byname or nickname. | [noun] The name a person shares with other members of that person's family, distinguished from that person's given name or names; a family name. SURPLICE (12) [noun] A liturgical vestment of the Christian Church. It has the form of a tunic of white linen or cotton material, with wide or moderately wide sleeves, reaching to the hips or knees. It usually features lace decoration and may have embroidered bordures. SURPRINT (10) SURPRISE (10) [noun] Something unexpected. | [noun] The feeling that something unexpected has happened. | [noun] A dish covered with a crust of raised pastry, but with no other contents. SURPRIZE (19) 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. SURROYAL (11) SURTAXED (16) SURTAXES (15) [noun] An additional or extra tax. SURTOUTS (8) [noun] A man's overcoat; a close-bodied frock coat. | [noun] (fortifications) A raised portion of the parapet of a work at the angles, to protect from enfilade fire. SURVEILS (11) [verb] To keep someone or something under surveillance. 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 SURVEYOR (14) [noun] A person occupied with surveying -- the process of determining positions on the earth's surface. | [noun] A person charged with inspecting something for the purpose of determining its condition, value, etc. SURVIVAL (14) [noun] The fact or act of surviving; continued existence or life. | [noun] (as a modifier) Of, relating to or aiding survival. | [noun] The avoidance of relegation or demotion to a lower league or division. 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. SURVIVER (14) SURVIVES (14) [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. SURVIVOR (14) [noun] One who survives, especially one who survives a traumatic experience. | [noun] A person who is able to endure hardship. | [noun] One who knew a specific decedent. SUSPECTS (12) [noun] A person who is suspected of something, in particular of committing a crime. | [verb] To imagine or suppose (something) to be true, or to exist, without proof. | [verb] To distrust or have doubts about (something or someone). SUSPENDS (11) [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. SUSPENSE (10) [noun] The condition of being suspended; cessation for a time. | [noun] The pleasurable emotion of anticipation and excitement regarding the outcome or climax of a book, film etc. | [noun] The unpleasant emotion of anxiety or apprehension in an uncertain situation. SUSPIRED (11) [verb] To breathe. | [verb] To exhale. | [verb] To sigh. SUSPIRES (10) [verb] To breathe. | [verb] To exhale. | [verb] To sigh. SUSTAINS (8) [noun] A mechanism which can be used to hold a note, as the right pedal on a piano. | [verb] To maintain, or keep in existence. | [verb] To provide for or nourish. SUSURRUS (8) [noun] A whispering or rustling sound; a murmur. SUTURING (9) [verb] To sew up or join by means of a suture. SUZERAIN (17) [noun] A dominant nation or state that has control over the international affairs of a subservient state which otherwise has domestic autonomy. | [noun] A feudal landowner to whom vassals were forced to pledge allegiance. SVARAJES (18) SVEDBERG (15) [noun] A non-SI unit of sedimentation rate (symbol S or Sv), the rate at which particles of a given size and shape travel to the bottom of a tube under centrifugal force. SVELTELY (14) SVELTEST (11) [adjective] Attractively thin; gracefully slender. | [adjective] Refined, delicate. SWABBERS (15) SWABBIES (15) [noun] A sailor. SWABBING (16) [verb] To use a swab on something, or clean something with a swab. | [noun] The act of one who swabs. SWADDLED (14) [verb] To bind (a baby) with long narrow strips of cloth. | [verb] To beat; cudgel. SWADDLES (13) [verb] To bind (a baby) with long narrow strips of cloth. | [verb] To beat; cudgel. SWAGGERS (13) [noun] Confidence, pride. | [noun] A bold or arrogant strut. | [noun] A prideful boasting or bragging. SWAGGIES (13) [noun] A swagman. SWAGGING (14) [verb] To (cause to) sway. | [verb] To droop; to sag. | [verb] To decorate (something) with loops of draped fabric. SWAINISH (14) SWALLOWS (14) [noun] A deep chasm or abyss in the earth. | [noun] The amount swallowed in one gulp; the act of swallowing. | [noun] Any of various carbohydrate-based dishes that are swallowed without much chewing. SWAMPERS (15) [noun] A person who lives in a swampy area. | [noun] A person who clears a road for lumberers in a forest or swamp. | [noun] Someone or something that swamps or overwhelms. SWAMPIER (15) [adjective] Soggy and marshy; wet like a swamp. | [adjective] Flowing smoothly with no harsh tones but possibly including muddy tones. SWAMPING (16) [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. SWAMPISH (18) SWANHERD (15) SWANKEST (15) SWANKIER (15) [adjective] Rather posh, elegant, ritzy. SWANKILY (18) SWANKING (16) [verb] To swagger, to show off. SWANLIKE (15) SWANNERY (14) [noun] A place where swans are bred. SWANNING (12) [verb] To travel or move about in an aimless, idle, or pretentiously casual way. | [verb] To declare (chiefly in first-person present constructions). SWANPANS (13) SWANSKIN (15) SWAPPERS (15) SWAPPING (16) [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. SWARAJES (18) SWARDING (13) SWARMERS (13) [noun] Something that swarms. SWARMING (14) [verb] To move as a swarm. | [verb] To teem, or be overrun with insects, people, etc. | [verb] To fill a place as a swarm. SWASHERS (14) SWASHING (15) [verb] To swagger; to bluster and brag. | [verb] To dash or flow noisily; to splash. | [verb] To fall violently or noisily. SWASTICA (13) SWASTIKA (15) [noun] A cross with arms of equal length all bent halfway along at a 90° angle to the right or to the left, used as a religious symbol by various ancient and modern civilizations, and adopted more recently (with arms angled to the right) as a symbol of National Socialism and fascism. | [noun] (fascism, history, metonym) Nazi rule. SWATCHES (16) [noun] A piece, pattern, or sample, generally of cloth or a similar material. | [noun] A selection of such samples bound together. | [noun] A clump or portion of something. SWATHERS (14) [noun] A device on a mowing machine or combine harvester that raises uncut grain and marks the edge of the swath SWATHING (15) [verb] To bind with a swathe, band, bandage, or rollers | [noun] A wrapping. SWATTERS (11) SWATTING (12) [verb] To beat off, as insects; to bat, strike, or hit. | [verb] To illegitimately provoke a SWAT assault upon (someone). | [noun] A motion or gesture that swats; a swat. SWAYABLE (16) SWAYBACK (22) [noun] An excessive sagging of the spine of a quadruped animal, especially a horse. | [noun] An animal with such excessive sagging. SWEARERS (11) SWEARING (12) [verb] To take an oath, to promise. | [verb] To use offensive, profane, or obscene language. | [verb] To be lazy; rest for a short while during working hours. SWEATBOX (20) [noun] Any box or boxlike structure used to induce sweating, such as of hides or tobacco | [noun] A jail cell. | [noun] A small overheated cell or room used for solitary confinement or torture. SWEATERS (11) [noun] A knitted jacket or jersey, usually of thick wool, worn by athletes before or after exercise. | [noun] A similar garment worn for warmth. | [noun] One who sweats (produces sweat). SWEATIER (11) [adjective] Covered in sweat. | [adjective] Having a tendency to sweat. | [adjective] Likely to cause one to sweat. SWEATILY (14) SWEATING (12) [verb] To emit sweat. | [verb] To cause to excrete moisture through skin. | [verb] To work hard. SWEENIES (11) SWEEPERS (13) [noun] One who sweeps floors or chimneys. | [noun] A detector (for mines). | [noun] Any of the small, tropical marine perciform fishes of the family Pempheridae, typically with deeply keeled, compressed bodies and large eyes. SWEEPIER (13) SWEEPING (14) [verb] To clean (a surface) by means of a stroking motion of a broom or brush. | [verb] To move through a (horizontal) arc or similar long stroke. | [verb] To search (a place) methodically. SWEETENS (11) [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. SWEETEST (11) [adjective] Having a pleasant taste, especially one relating to the basic taste sensation induced by sugar. | [adjective] Having a taste of sugar. | [adjective] Retaining a portion of sugar. SWEETIES (11) [noun] (often as a term of address) A person who is much loved. | [noun] A sweetheart. | [noun] A fruit that is a crossbreed between a grapefruit and a pomelo, originating in Israel. SWEETING (12) [verb] To sweeten. | [noun] A sweet apple. | [noun] A darling; term of endearment. SWEETISH (14) SWEETSOP (13) [noun] The sugar apple, Annona squamosa. | [noun] The tropical American evergreen tree on which it grows. SWELLEST (11) SWELLING (12) [verb] To become bigger, especially due to being engorged. | [verb] To cause to become bigger. | [verb] To grow gradually in force or loudness. SWELTERS (11) [noun] Intense heat. | [verb] To suffer terribly from intense heat. | [verb] To perspire greatly from heat. SWERVERS (14) SWERVING (15) [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. SWIDDENS (13) [noun] An area of land that has been cleared by cutting the vegetation and burning it; slash and burn. SWIFTERS (14) SWIFTEST (14) [adjective] Fast; quick; rapid. | [adjective] Capable of moving at high speeds. SWIFTLET (14) [noun] Any of the various tropical and subtropical birds of the four genera Aerodramus, Hydrochous, Schoutedenapus, and Collocalia in the swift family, many of which can navigate in darkness using echolocation. SWIGGERS (13) SWIGGING (14) [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. SWILLERS (11) SWILLING (12) [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. SWIMMERS (15) [noun] One who swims. | [noun] A protuberance on the leg of a horse. | [noun] A webfooted aquatic bird. SWIMMIER (15) SWIMMILY (18) SWIMMING (16) [noun] The act or art of sustaining and propelling the body in water. | [noun] The state of being dizzy or in vertigo. | [verb] To move through the water, without touching the bottom; to propel oneself in water by natural means. SWIMSUIT (13) [noun] A garment worn for swimming. | [noun] A tight-fitting one-piece garment worn by women and girls. SWIMWEAR (16) [noun] Items of clothing appropriate for swimming SWINDLED (13) [verb] To defraud. | [verb] To obtain (money or property) by fraudulent or deceitful methods. SWINDLER (12) [noun] A person who swindles, cheats or defrauds. SWINDLES (12) [noun] An instance of swindling. | [noun] Anything that is deceptively not what it appears to be. | [verb] To defraud. SWINEPOX (20) SWINGBYS (17) [noun] An interplanetary flight in which the gravitational attraction of a planet is used to provide acceleration and a change in course. SWINGERS (12) [noun] One who swings. | [noun] A person who practices swinging (sex with different partners). | [noun] A bet in which the bettor must correctly pick two runners to finish in any of the places in any order. SWINGIER (12) [adjective] Having a swinging motion. | [adjective] Characteristic of swing music. | [adjective] Having many swing voters. SWINGING (13) [verb] To rotate about an off-centre fixed point. | [verb] To dance. | [verb] To ride on a swing. 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. SWINGLES (12) [noun] An implement used to separate the fibres of flax by beating them; a scutch. | [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. SWINGMAN (14) [noun] A player who can swing between two different positions, often the small forward and shooting guard positions in basketball. SWINGMEN (14) [noun] A player who can swing between two different positions, often the small forward and shooting guard positions in basketball. SWINKING (16) SWINNEYS (14) SWIPPLES (15) [noun] The part of a flail that is free to swing, and which strikes the grain in threshing. SWIRLIER (11) [adjective] Having swirls; swirling. SWIRLING (12) [verb] To twist or whirl, as an eddy. | [verb] To be arranged in a twist, spiral or whorl. | [verb] To circulate. SWISHERS (14) SWISHIER (14) [adjective] Producing a swishing sound. | [adjective] Swish; fancy, posh, impressive. | [adjective] (of a man) Effeminate; gay SWISHING (15) [verb] To make a rustling sound while moving. | [verb] To flourish with a swishing sound. | [verb] To flog; to lash. SWITCHED (17) [verb] To exchange. | [verb] To change (something) to the specified state using a switch. | [verb] To whip or hit with a switch. SWITCHER (16) [noun] One who or that which switches. | [noun] A switchmode power supply. | [noun] A railway locomotive used for shunting; a shunter. SWITCHES (16) [noun] A bundle of thin sticks, typically made of wood, sometimes bond in such a way that binding can be moved so that it varies the tightness of the binding. | [noun] A device to turn electric current on and off or direct its flow. | [noun] A change or exchange. SWITHERS (14) [verb] To be indecisive or in a state of confusion; to dither. 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. SWIZZLER (29) SWIZZLES (29) [noun] A beverage of water and vinegar, often seasoned with ginger and sweetened with molasses, honey, or similar. | [noun] Any of various kinds of alcoholic drink. SWOBBERS (15) SWOBBING (16) [verb] To use a swab on something, or clean something with a swab. SWOONERS (11) SWOONING (12) [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. SWOOPERS (13) SWOOPING (14) [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. SWOOSHED (15) [verb] To move with a rushing or swirling sound SWOOSHES (14) [noun] A swooshing movement or sound | [noun] A pattern or logo suggesting a swooshing movement. | [verb] To move with a rushing or swirling sound SWOPPING (16) [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. SWORDMAN (14) SWORDMEN (14) SWOTTERS (11) SWOTTING (12) [verb] To study with effort or determination (object of study indicated by "up on"). SWOUNDED (13) SWOUNING (12) SYBARITE (13) [noun] A person devoted to pleasure and luxury. SYCAMINE (15) [noun] A tree, mentioned in Luke's Gospel, and thought to be the black mulberry. SYCAMORE (15) [noun] Any of several North American plane trees, of the genus Platanus, especially Platanus occidentalis (American sycamore). | [noun] A large British and European species of maple, Acer pseudoplatanus, known in North America as the sycamore maple. | [noun] A large tree bearing edible fruit, Ficus sycomorus, allied to the common fig and found in Egypt and Syria; also called the sycamore fig or the fig-mulberry; the Biblical sycomore. SYCOMORE (15) [noun] A type of fig, Ficus sycomorus, native to the Middle East; the sycamore tree of the Bible. SYCONIUM (15) [noun] A collective fleshy fruit, in which the ovaries are hidden within a hollow receptacle, as in the fig; a hollow ball with a stalk at one end and an opening (ostiole) at the other, with flowers or fruits on the inside SYENITES (11) [noun] Granite. | [noun] An igneous rock composed of feldspar and hornblende. SYENITIC (13) SYLLABIC (15) [noun] A syllabic sound. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or consisting of a syllable or syllables. | [adjective] Pronounced with every syllable distinct. SYLLABLE (13) [noun] A unit of human speech that is interpreted by the listener as a single sound, although syllables usually consist of one or more vowel sounds, either alone or combined with the sound of one or more consonants; a word consists of one or more syllables. | [noun] The written representation of a given pronounced syllable. | [noun] A small part of a sentence or discourse; anything concise or short; a particle. SYLLABUB (15) [noun] A drink dating back to the 16th century consisting primarily of milk curdled with an alcoholic beverage or some acid such as lemon juice, which is usually then sweetened and spiced. | [noun] Also everlasting syllabub or solid syllabub: a dessert pudding derived from the drink. | [noun] Something lacking substance; something frothy, insubstantial, or lightweight. SYLLABUS (13) [noun] A summary of topics which will be covered during an academic course, or a text or lecture. | [noun] The headnote of a reported case; the brief statement of the points of law determined prefixed to a reported case. SYLPHIDS (17) SYLPHISH (19) SYLVATIC (16) [noun] A wild animal | [adjective] Of or pertaining to woods or woodland organisms; sylvan | [adjective] Of or pertaining to wild rather than domestic animals SYLVINES (14) SYLVITES (14) SYMBIONS (15) SYMBIONT (15) [noun] An organism that lives in a symbiotic relationship; a symbiote. SYMBIOTE (15) [noun] An organism in a partnership with another such that each profits from their being together; a symbiont SYMBIOTS (15) SYMBOLED (16) [verb] To symbolize. SYMBOLIC (17) [adjective] Pertaining to a symbol. | [adjective] Implicitly representing or referring to another thing. SYMMETRY (18) [noun] Exact correspondence on either side of a dividing line, plane, center or axis. | [noun] The satisfying arrangement of a balanced distribution of the elements of a whole. SYMPATHY (21) [noun] A feeling of pity or sorrow for the suffering or distress of another; compassion. | [noun] The ability to share the feelings of another. | [noun] A mutual relationship between people or things such that they are correspondingly affected by any condition. SYMPATRY (18) SYMPHONY (21) [noun] An extended piece of music of sophisticated structure, usually for orchestra. | [noun] An instrumental introduction or termination to a vocal composition. | [noun] Harmony in music or colour, or a harmonious combination of elements. SYMPODIA (16) [noun] A pattern of branching, similar to dichotomous branching, where the axis or stem is morphologically made up of a series of superposed branches imitating a simple stem. SYMPOSIA (15) [noun] A conference or other meeting for discussion of a topic, especially one in which the participants make presentations. | [noun] A drinking party in Ancient Greece, especially one with intellectual discussion. SYMPTOMS (17) [noun] A perceived change in some function, sensation or appearance of a person that indicates a disease or disorder, such as fever, headache or rash. | [noun] A signal; anything that indicates, or is characteristic of, the presence of something else, especially of something undesirable. SYNAGOGS (13) SYNANONS (11) SYNAPSED (14) SYNAPSES (13) [noun] The junction between the terminal of a neuron and either another neuron or a muscle or gland cell, over which nerve impulses pass. | [verb] To form a synapse. | [verb] To undergo synapsis. 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. SYNAPSIS (13) [noun] The junction between the terminal of a neuron and either another neuron or a muscle or gland cell, over which nerve impulses pass. | [noun] The association of homologous maternal and paternal chromosomes during the initial part of meiosis. SYNAPTIC (15) [adjective] Of or relating to a synapse—the junction between the terminal of a neuron and another cell. | [adjective] Of or relating to a synapsis—the association of homologous maternal and paternal chromosomes during the initial part of meiosis. SYNCARPS (15) SYNCARPY (18) SYNCHING (17) [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. SYNCHROS (16) [noun] Any synchronized event, such as synchronized swimming | [noun] A type of rotary electrical transformer that is used for measuring the angle of a rotating machine such as an antenna platform. In its general physical construction, it is much like an electric motor SYNCLINE (13) [noun] A concave-upward fold in rock strata SYNCOPAL (15) SYNCOPES (15) SYNCOPIC (17) SYNCYTIA (16) [noun] A mass of cytoplasm containing many nuclei SYNDESES (12) SYNDESIS (12) SYNDETIC (14) [adjective] (grammar) Connected by a conjunction. | [adjective] (grammar) Serving to connect; conjunctive. SYNDICAL (14) SYNDROME (14) [noun] A recognizable pattern of signs, symptoms and/or behaviours, especially of a disease or medical or psychological condition. | [noun] Any set of characteristics regarded as identifying a certain type, condition, etc., usually adverse. SYNECTIC (15) SYNERGIA (12) SYNERGIC (14) SYNERGID (13) SYNFUELS (14) [noun] Any of several fuels synthesized from coal or shale etc, or fermented from grain etc SYNGAMIC (16) SYNGASES (12) SYNONYME (16) SYNONYMS (16) [noun] (strictly) A word whose meaning is the same as that of another word. | [noun] A word or phrase with a meaning that is the same as, or very similar to, another word or phrase. | [noun] Any of the formal names for a taxon, including the valid name (i.e. the senior synonym). SYNONYMY (19) [noun] The quality of being synonymous; sameness of meaning. | [noun] A list or collection of synonyms, often compared and contrasted. | [noun] The study of synonyms. SYNOPSES (13) [noun] (authorship) A brief summary of the major points of a written work, either as prose or as a table; an abridgment or condensation of a work. | [noun] A reference work containing brief articles that taken together give an overview of an entire field. | [noun] (Orthodoxy) A prayer book for use by the laity of the church. SYNOPSIS (13) [noun] (authorship) A brief summary of the major points of a written work, either as prose or as a table; an abridgment or condensation of a work. | [noun] A reference work containing brief articles that taken together give an overview of an entire field. | [noun] (Orthodoxy) A prayer book for use by the laity of the church. SYNOPTIC (15) [adjective] Of or relating to a synopsis. | [adjective] (especially of meteorological data) Obtained simultaneously over a wide area, for presenting a comprehensive and nearly instantaneous picture of the state of the atmosphere. | [adjective] Pertaining to the gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke. SYNOVIAL (14) [adjective] Relating to synovia | [adjective] Relating to the synovium SYNOVIAS (14) SYNTAGMA (14) [noun] A constituent segment within a text, such as a word or a phrase that forms a syntactic unit. | [noun] An arrangement of units that together bears a meaning. | [noun] (history) A Macedonian phalanx fighting formation consisting of 256 men with long spears (sarissae). SYNTAXES (18) [noun] A set of rules that govern how words are combined to form phrases and sentences. | [noun] The formal rules of formulating the statements of a computer language. | [noun] The study of the structure of phrases, sentences and language. SYNTONIC (13) [adjective] In harmony or synergy with one's personality and milieu. | [adjective] (of oscillating systems) Having the same frequency. SYPHERED (17) SYPHILIS (16) [noun] A disease spread via sexual activity, caused by the bacterium Treponema pallidum. SYPHONED (17) [verb] To transfer (liquid) by means of a siphon. | [verb] To steal or skim off in small amounts; to embezzle. SYRINGAS (12) [noun] Sweet mock orange, Philadelphus coronarius. | [noun] Hence any of several flowering plants of the genus Philadelphus, such as now in the Western United States Philadelphus lewisii. | [noun] Any of several flowering plants, of the genus Syringa, such as the lilacs. SYRINGED (13) [verb] To clean, or inject fluid, by means of a syringe. SYRINGES (12) [noun] A device used for injecting or drawing fluids through a membrane. | [noun] A device consisting of a hypodermic needle, a chamber for containing liquids, and a piston for applying pressure (to inject) or reducing pressure (to draw); a hypodermic syringe. | [noun] A set of panpipes. SYRINXES (18) [noun] A set of panpipes. | [noun] A narrow channel cut in rock, especially in ancient Egyptian tombs. | [noun] The voice organ in birds. SYRPHIAN (16) SYRPHIDS (17) [noun] Any species of the hoverfly family Syrphidae. SYSTEMIC (15) [adjective] Embedded within and spread throughout and affecting a whole system, group, body, economy, market, or society. | [adjective] Pertaining to an entire organism. SYSTOLES (11) [noun] The rhythmic contraction of the heart, by which blood is driven through the arteries. | [noun] A shortening of a naturally long vowel. SYSTOLIC (13) [noun] Short for systolic blood pressure. | [adjective] Pertaining to a systole or heart contraction | [adjective] Relating to a systolic array SYZYGIAL (24) SYZYGIES (24) [noun] An alignment of three celestial bodies (for example, the Sun, Earth, and Moon) such that one body is directly between the other two, such as occurs at an eclipse. | [noun] An archetypal pairing of contrasexual opposites, symbolizing the communication of the conscious and unconscious minds. | [noun] A relation between generators of a module.

9-Letter Words (2898)

SABADILLA (12) [noun] A Mexican and Central American plant of the lily family (Schoenocaulon officinale). | [noun] The seeds of this plant, used in medicine and insecticides. SABLEFISH (17) [noun] A dark-coloured marine fish, Anoplopoma fimbria, of North American Pacific waters. SABOTAGED (13) [verb] To deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful. SABOTAGES (12) [noun] A deliberate action aimed at weakening an enemy through subversion, obstruction, disruption, and/or destruction. | [noun] An act or acts with intent to injure, interfere with, or obstruct the national defense of a country by willfully injuring or destroying, or attempting to injure or destroy, any national defense or war materiel, premises, or utilities, to include human and natural resources. | [verb] To deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful. SABOTEURS (11) [noun] A person who intentionally causes the destruction of property in order to hinder the efforts of his/her enemy. SACCHARIN (16) [noun] A white, crystalline powder, C7H5NO3S, used as an artificial sweetener in food products SACCULATE (13) SACKCLOTH (20) [noun] A coarse hessian style of cloth used to make sacks. | [noun] (Usually paired with 'ashes'), garments worn as an act of penance. Now often used figuratively. SACRAMENT (13) [noun] A sacred act or ceremony in Christianity. In Catholic theology, a sacrament is defined as "an outward sign instituted by Christ to give grace." | [noun] (in particular) The Eucharist. | [noun] The consecrated Eucharist (especially the bread). SACRARIUM (13) [noun] In Ancient Rome, a place where sacred objects were kept, either in a temple (the adytum) or in a house (holding the penates) | [noun] The area surrounding the altar of a Christian church; the sanctuary or piscina. Sometimes specifically a drain directly to the earth, perhaps including reference to a basin, for washing vessels from consecration. | [noun] The complex sacrum of any bird. SACRIFICE (16) [noun] The offering of anything to a god; a consecratory rite. | [noun] The destruction or surrender of anything for the sake of something else; the devotion of something desirable to something higher, or to a calling deemed more pressing. | [noun] Something sacrificed. SACRILEGE (12) [noun] Desecration, profanation, misuse or violation of something regarded as sacred. SACRISTAN (11) [noun] The person who maintains the sacristy and the sacred objects it contains. SADDENING (12) [verb] To make sad or unhappy. | [verb] To become sad or unhappy. | [verb] To darken a color during dyeing. SADDLEBAG (14) [noun] A covered pouch, usually one of a pair, laid across the back of a horse, donkey, or mule behind its saddle, or hanging over the rear wheel of a bicycle or motorcycle; often made of leather or (on a bicycle or motorcycle) a rigid material. | [noun] (in the plural) Loose fatty flesh on a person's upper thighs or buttocks, that hangs like saddlebags. | [noun] A style of house with two rooms separated by a small hall and open space. SADDLEBOW (16) SADNESSES (10) [noun] The state or emotion of being sad. | [noun] An event in one's life that causes sadness. SAFARIING (13) 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. SAFELIGHT (16) [noun] The lamp in a photographic darkroom. SAFETYING (16) SAFETYMAN (17) SAFETYMEN (17) SAFFLOWER (18) [noun] A cultivated thistle-like plant, Carthamus tinctorius, family Asteraceae, now grown mainly for its oil. SAFRANINE (12) [noun] Any of a class of red to blue azine dyes SAFRANINS (12) [noun] A biological stain used in histology and cytology. SAGACIOUS (12) [adjective] Having or showing keen discernment, sound judgment, and farsightedness; mentally shrewd. SAGAMORES (12) [noun] A chief of one or several Native American tribe(s), especially of the Algonquians. | [noun] A juice used in medicine. SAGEBRUSH (15) [noun] Any of several North American aromatic shrubs of the genus Artemisia, having silvery-grey, green leaves. SAGGARING (12) SAGGERING (12) SAGITTATE (10) [adjective] Shaped like an arrowhead, with one point at one end, and two points at the other. | [adjective] (of leaves) Shaped like an arrowhead, with two pointed lobes extending downward from the base. 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. SAILBOATS (11) [noun] A boat propelled by a sail. | [noun] A playing card with the rank of four. SAILCLOTH (14) [noun] A strong, durable fabric suitable for making sails for ships or boats. SAILPLANE (11) [noun] A glider that is optimised for soaring and is equipped with fixed wings and fuselage. | [verb] To fly in a sailplane. SAINFOINS (12) SAINTDOMS (12) SAINTHOOD (13) [noun] The state of being a saint | [noun] Saints collectively SAINTLIER (9) [adjective] Like or characteristic of a saint; befitting a holy person; saintlike. SAINTLIKE (13) SAINTSHIP (14) SALAAMING (12) [verb] To perform a salaam (to someone). SALACIOUS (11) [adjective] Promoting sexual desire or lust. | [adjective] Lascivious, bawdy, obscene, lewd. SALADANGS (11) SALARIATS (9) SALARYING (13) [verb] To pay on the basis of a period of a week or longer, especially to convert from another form of compensation. SALARYMAN (14) [noun] (Engrish) An employee, a worker; now especially a Japanese white-collar worker who works long hours and has an insignificant position within the corporate hierarchy. SALARYMEN (14) [noun] (Engrish) An employee, a worker; now especially a Japanese white-collar worker who works long hours and has an insignificant position within the corporate hierarchy. SALERATUS (9) [noun] Sodium bicarbonate | [noun] Potassium bicarbonate SALEROOMS (11) [noun] A room in which items for sale are displayed; a showroom | [noun] A room in which items are auctioned SALESGIRL (10) [noun] A young woman employed as a salesclerk. SALESLADY (13) [noun] A woman who is employed as a salesclerk. SALESROOM (11) [noun] The room where sales are made SALICINES (11) SALIENCES (11) SALIENTLY (12) SALIFYING (16) SALINIZED (19) SALINIZES (18) SALIVATED (13) [verb] To produce saliva. | [verb] To show eager anticipation at the expectation of something. SALIVATES (12) [verb] To produce saliva. | [verb] To show eager anticipation at the expectation of something. SALIVATOR (12) SALLOWEST (12) [adjective] (of skin) Yellowish. | [adjective] (of a person) Having skin (especially on the face) of a sickly pale colour. | [adjective] (of objects or dim light) Having a similar pale, yellowish colour. SALLOWING (13) SALLOWISH (15) SALMONIDS (12) [noun] A fish of the Salmonidae family. SALMONOID (12) [noun] Any of these fish. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the family Salmonidae of salmon and close relatives. SALOMETER (11) SALPINGES (12) SALSIFIES (12) SALSILLAS (9) SALTATION (9) [noun] A leap, jump or dance. | [noun] Beating or palpitation. | [noun] A sudden change from one generation to the next; a mutation. SALTATORY (12) SALTBOXES (18) [noun] A box for keeping salt in. | [noun] A similar box formerly used as a percussion instrument in burlesque music. | [noun] A distinctively shaped wooden frame house with two storeys at the front and one behind, characteristic of New England SALTINESS (9) SALTPETER (11) [noun] Potassium nitrate. | [noun] Sodium nitrate. SALTWATER (12) [noun] Any water containing dissolved salt; brine | [adjective] New Keynesian or Keynesian, in reference to macroeconomics and economics departments on the East Coast and West Coast of the United States of America. SALTWORKS (16) SALTWORTS (12) [noun] Batis maritima, a plant distributed in the southwestern United States, Caribbean, and South America in coastal saltmarshes. | [noun] Glaux maritima, a plant in the primrose family (Primulaceae) and which grows along coasts throughout the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. SALUBRITY (14) SALVAGEES (13) SALVAGERS (13) SALVAGING (14) [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. SALVARSAN (12) [noun] An organoarsenic compound that was once used in the treatment of syphilis SALVATION (12) [noun] The process of being saved, the state of having been saved (from hell). | [noun] The process of being restored or made new for the purpose of becoming saved; the process of being rid of the old poor quality conditions and becoming improved. | [verb] To save, in the religious sense; to bring to salvation. SAMARITAN (11) [noun] A Good Samaritan SAMARIUMS (13) SAMIZDATS (21) SAMPHIRES (16) [noun] One of several salt-tolerant plants, some edible SAMPLINGS (14) [noun] The process or technique of obtaining a representative sample. | [noun] A sample. | [noun] The analysis of a group by determining the characteristics of a significant percentage of its members chosen at random. SANATORIA (9) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANBENITO (11) SANCTIONS (11) [noun] An approval, by an authority, generally one that makes something valid. | [noun] A penalty, punishment, or some coercive measure, intended to ensure compliance; especially one adopted by several nations, or by an international body. | [noun] A law, treaty, or contract, or a clause within a law, treaty, or contract, specifying any of the above. SANCTUARY (14) [noun] A place of safety, refuge or protection. | [noun] An area set aside for protection. | [noun] A state of being protected, asylum. SANDALING (11) SANDALLED (11) [adjective] Wearing a sandal or sandals. SANDARACS (12) SANDBANKS (16) [noun] A ridge of sand along a shore that is partially or totally submerged and thus a hazard to shipping. SANDBLAST (12) [noun] Sand driven by a blast of air or steam for cutting and engraving figures on glass or metal. | [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. SANDBOXES (19) [noun] A children's play area consisting of a box filled with sand. | [noun] A box filled with sand that is shaped to form a mould for metal casting. | [noun] A container for sand or pounce, used historically before blotting paper. SANDBURRS (12) SANDFLIES (13) [noun] Any of various small flies of the genera Lutzomyia and Phlebotomus whose females suck the blood of vertebrates and thus spread leishmaniasis. | [noun] A small fly of the genus Austrosimulium. | [noun] A biting midge (family Ceratopogonidae). SANDGLASS (11) [noun] An instrument for measuring the passage of time by the passage of sand through a narrow opening. SANDINESS (10) SANDLINGS (11) SANDPAPER (14) [noun] A strong paper coated with sand, ground glass, or other abrasive material for smoothing and polishing. | [noun] A sheet of such paper. | [verb] To polish or grind (a surface) with or as if with sandpaper. SANDPEEPS (14) SANDPILES (12) SANDPIPER (14) [noun] Any of various small wading birds of the family Scolopacidae. SANDSHOES (13) [noun] A sports or walking shoe with canvas upper and rubber sole; a sneaker. SANDSOAPS (12) SANDSPURS (12) SANDSTONE (10) [noun] A sedimentary rock produced by the consolidation and compaction of sand, cemented with clay etc. SANDSTORM (12) [noun] A strong wind carrying clouds of sand and dust through the air. SANDWORMS (15) SANDWORTS (13) [noun] Any of several plants in the genera Arenaria, Minuartia, and Moehringia. SANGAREES (10) [noun] A mixed drink common in the West Indies, similar to sangria and usually featuring wine or fortified wine and spices. SANGFROID (14) [noun] Composure, self-possession or imperturbability especially when in a dangerous situation. SANGUINES (10) SANITARIA (9) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANITATED (10) SANITATES (9) 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. SANITISES (9) [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. SANITIZES (18) [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. SANITORIA (9) SANNYASIN (12) [noun] A Hindu in the sannyasa stage. SANNYASIS (12) SANSERIFS (12) SANTALOLS (9) SANTOLINA (9) [noun] Any of the genus Santolina of evergreen shrubs in the sunflower family. SANTONINS (9) SAPHEADED (16) SAPHENOUS (14) [adjective] Relating to, or situated near, the saphenous vein. SAPIENCES (13) SAPIENTLY (14) SAPODILLA (12) [noun] Manilkara zapota, a long-lived evergreen tree native to the New World tropics. | [noun] The fruit from the sapodilla tree. The fruit is 4-8 cm in diameter, has a fuzzy brown skin with earthy brown flesh. SAPOGENIN (12) SAPONINES (11) SAPONITES (11) SAPPHIRES (16) [noun] A clear deep blue variety of corundum, valued as a precious stone. | [noun] A white, yellow, or purple variety of corundum, either clear or translucent. | [noun] A deep blue colour. SAPPHISMS (18) SAPPHISTS (16) SAPPINESS (13) SAPREMIAS (13) SAPROLITE (11) SAPROPELS (13) SAPROZOIC (22) SAPSUCKER (17) [noun] A woodpecker of the eastern United States (of the genus Sphyrapicus) that feeds mainly on the sap of trees | [noun] Any woodpecker that punctures the bark of trees and feeds upon the sap. SARABANDE (12) [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. SARABANDS (12) [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. SARCASTIC (13) [adjective] Containing sarcasm. | [adjective] (of a person) Having the personality trait of expressing sarcasm. SARCENETS (11) [noun] A very fine and soft silk ribbon woven in a plain weave with a fine warp and higher density weft. Now chiefly used for linings. SARCOMATA (13) [noun] A type of malignant tumor of the bone, cartilage, fat, muscle, blood vessels, or other connective or supportive tissue. SARCOMERE (13) [noun] The contractile unit of the myofibril of a striated muscle. SARCOSOME (13) SARDIUSES (10) SARGASSOS (10) SARGASSUM (12) [noun] Any of many brown algae of the genus Sargassum; gulfweed SARMENTUM (13) SARODISTS (10) SARSENETS (9) [noun] A very fine and soft silk ribbon woven in a plain weave with a fine warp and higher density weft. Now chiefly used for linings. SARTORIAL (9) [adjective] Of or relating to the tailoring of clothing. | [adjective] Of or relating to the quality of dress. | [adjective] Of or relating to the sartorius muscle. SARTORIUS (9) [noun] A long, thin muscle that runs down the length of the thigh; the longest muscle in the human body. SASHAYING (16) [verb] To walk casually, showily or in a flirty manner; to strut, swagger or flounce. | [verb] To chassé when dancing. | [verb] To move sideways. SASKATOON (13) SASSABIES (11) [noun] A large African antelope (Alcelaphus lunata, now Damaliscus lunatus), similar to the hartebeest, but having its horns regularly curved. SASSAFRAS (12) [noun] A tree of species Sassafras albidum of the eastern United States and Asia having mitten-shaped leaves and red, aromatic heartwood. | [noun] A tree of any species in the genus Sassafras. | [noun] The bark of the root of this plant, used for medicinal and (mostly historically) culinary purposes and formerly a main ingredient in root beer. SASSWOODS (13) SATANISMS (11) SATANISTS (9) SATELLITE (9) [noun] A moon or other smaller body orbiting a larger one. | [noun] A man-made apparatus designed to be placed in orbit around a celestial body, generally to relay information, data etc. to Earth. | [noun] A country, state, office, building etc. which is under the jurisdiction, influence, or domination of another body. SATIATING (10) [verb] To fill to satisfaction; to satisfy. | [verb] To satisfy to excess. To fill to satiety. SATIATION (9) SATIETIES (9) SATINPODS (12) 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. SATIRICAL (11) [adjective] Of, pertaining to or connected with satire SATIRISED (10) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATIRISES (9) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATIRISTS (9) [noun] A person who writes satire. SATIRIZED (19) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATIRIZES (18) [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. SATISFIES (12) [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. SATRAPIES (11) [noun] The territory governed by a satrap; a province of any of several ancient empires of Western Asia (specifically, of the Median or Achaemenid empires or certain of their successors, including the Sassanian Empire and Hellenistic empires). SATURABLE (11) [adjective] Capable of being saturated, of achieving saturation SATURANTS (9) 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. SATURATES (9) [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. SATURATOR (9) SATURNIID (10) [noun] Any moth of the family Saturniidae SATURNINE (9) [adjective] Of a person: having a tendency to be cold, bitter, gloomy, sarcastic, and slow to change and react. | [adjective] Of a setting: depressing, dull, gloomy. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or containing lead (which was symbolically associated with the planet Saturn by alchemists). SATURNISM (11) [noun] Lead poisoning SAUCEBOAT (13) [noun] A dish used to serve gravy. | [noun] A source of easily obtained money or benefits. SAUCEPANS (13) [noun] A deep cooking vessel with a handle and sometimes a lid; used for boiling, stewing and making sauces. SAUCINESS (11) SAUNTERED (10) [verb] To stroll, or walk at a leisurely pace. SAUNTERER (9) SAUROPODS (12) [noun] A member of the Sauropoda suborder of dinosaurs SAUTERNES (9) [noun] A wine imitating those of Sauternes. SAUTOIRES (9) SAVAGISMS (15) SAVANNAHS (15) [noun] A tropical grassland with scattered trees SAVORIEST (12) SAVORLESS (12) SAVOURERS (12) SAVOURIER (12) SAVOURIES (12) [noun] A savory snack. | [noun] Any of several Mediterranean herbs, of the genus Satureja, grown as culinary flavourings. | [noun] The leaves of these plants used as a flavouring. SAVOURING (13) [noun] The act by which something is savored. | [verb] To possess a particular taste or smell, or a distinctive quality. | [verb] To appreciate, enjoy or relish something. SAWFISHES (18) [noun] Any ray (marine fish with a flat body and wing-like fins) of the family Pristidae, having a snout that resembles a saw. SAWHORSES (15) [noun] A structure with a crosspiece used to support timber or other material for working. SAWTIMBER (16) SAXIFRAGE (20) [noun] Any plant in the genus Saxifraga. SAXITOXIN (23) SAXOPHONE (21) [noun] A single-reed instrument musical instrument of the woodwind family, usually made of brass and with a distinctive loop bringing the bell upwards. SAYONARAS (12) SCABBARDS (16) [noun] The sheath of a sword. | [verb] To put an object (especially a sword) into its scabbard. SCABBIEST (15) [adjective] Affected with scabs; full of scabs. | [adjective] Diseased with the scab, or mange; mangy. | [adjective] Having a blotched, uneven appearance. SCABBLING (16) SCABIETIC (15) SCABIOSAS (13) SCABLANDS (14) [noun] High, flat land of igneous rock, with thin soil and deep channels formed by glaciers or glacial floods. SCAFFOLDS (18) [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. SCAGLIOLA (12) [noun] Plasterwork imitating marble, granite, etc. SCALAWAGS (15) [noun] A scrawny cow. | [noun] A rascal. | [noun] Any white Southerner who supported the federal plan of Reconstruction after the American Civil War or who joined with the black freedmen and the carpetbaggers in support of Republican Party policies. SCALELESS (11) SCALELIKE (15) SCALEPANS (13) SCALINESS (11) SCALLIONS (11) [noun] A spring onion, Allium fistulosum. | [noun] Any of various similar members of the genus Allium. | [noun] Any onion that lacks a fully developed bulb. 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 SCALLOPER (13) SCALLYWAG (18) [noun] A disreputable fellow, a good-for-nothing, a scapegrace, a blackguard | [noun] A badly behaved person, especially a child; a mischief-maker; a rascal SCALOGRAM (14) SCAMPERED (16) [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. | [adjective] Achieved by a scampering motion. SCANDALED (13) SCANDIUMS (14) SCANNABLE (13) SCANNINGS (12) SCANSIONS (11) SCANTIEST (11) [adjective] Somewhat less than is needed in amplitude or extent. | [adjective] Sparing; niggardly; parsimonious; stingy. SCANTLING (12) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The set size or dimension of a piece of timber, stone etc., or materials used to build ships or aircraft. | [noun] A small portion, a scant amount. | [noun] A small, upright beam of timber used in construction, especially less than five inches square. SCANTNESS (11) SCAPEGOAT (14) [noun] In the Mosaic Day of Atonement ritual, a goat symbolically imbued with the sins of the people, and sent out alive into the wilderness while another was sacrificed. | [noun] Someone punished for the error or errors of someone else. | [verb] To punish someone for the error or errors of someone else; to make a scapegoat of. SCAPHOIDS (17) [noun] Carpal navicular bone. SCAPOLITE (13) SCAPULARS (13) [noun] A short cloak worn around the shoulders, adopted as part of the uniform of various religious orders, later often with an embroidered image of a saint. | [noun] One of a special group of feathers which arise from each of the scapular regions and lie along the sides of the back. | [noun] A bandage passing over the shoulder to support it, or to retain another bandage in place. SCARECROW (16) [noun] An effigy, typically made of straw and dressed in old clothes, fixed to a pole in a field to deter birds from eating seeds or crops planted there. | [noun] A tall, thin, awkward person. | [noun] Anything that appears terrifying but presents no danger. SCAREHEAD (15) SCARFPINS (16) SCARFSKIN (18) [noun] The epidermis, the outermost layer of skin, especially that which forms the cuticle of a nail. 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. SCARIFIER (14) [noun] One who scarifies. | [noun] The instrument used for scarifying. | [noun] An implement for stripping and loosening the soil, without bringing up a fresh surface. SCARIFIES (14) [verb] To remove thatch (build-up of organic matter on the soil) from a lawn, to dethatch. | [verb] To make scratches or cuts on. | [verb] To harrow the feelings. SCARPERED (14) [verb] To run away; to flee; to escape. SCARPHING (17) SCARRIEST (11) SCATBACKS (19) SCATOLOGY (15) [noun] The scientific study or chemical analysis of faeces. | [noun] A filthy epithet. | [noun] Interest in or obsession with faeces or other excrement. 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). SCATTERER (11) SCATTIEST (11) [adjective] Scatterbrained; flighty. 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 SCAVENGER (15) [noun] Someone who scavenges, especially one who searches through rubbish for food or useful things. | [noun] An animal that feeds on decaying matter such as carrion. | [noun] A street sweeper. SCAVENGES (15) [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 SCENARIOS (11) [noun] An outline of the plot of a dramatic or literary work. | [noun] A screenplay itself, or an outline or a treatment of it. | [noun] An outline or model of an expected or supposed sequence of events. SCENARIST (11) [noun] A writer of screenplays; a screenwriter SCENERIES (11) SCENTLESS (11) SCEPTERED (14) SCEPTICAL (15) [adjective] Having, or expressing doubt; questioning. | [adjective] Of or relating to philosophical skepticism or the skeptics. SCEPTRING (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. SCHEDULER (15) [noun] A person or device that determines a schedule, that determines the order that tasks are to be done. | [noun] An operating system component responsible for allocating several resources, most commonly the use of processors by different concurrent processes or threads. SCHEDULES (15) [noun] A slip of paper; a short note. | [noun] A written or printed table of information, often forming an annex or appendix to a statute or other regulatory instrument, or to a legal contract. | [noun] A serial record of items, systematically arranged. SCHEELITE (14) [noun] A mineral composed of calcium tungstate, with the chemical formula CaWO4; an important tungsten ore. SCHEMATIC (18) [noun] A simplified line drawing used by scientists, engineers, technologists and others to illustrate a system at an abstract level. Schematic drawings often use standard symbols for clarity. | [adjective] Represented too simply or in an overly formulaic way, reflecting a shallow or incomplete understanding of complex subject matter | [adjective] Sketchy, incomplete SCHILLERS (14) SCHILLING (15) [noun] The old currency of Austria, divided into 100 groschen SCHISTOSE (14) [adjective] Of or relating to schist. | [adjective] Having the character of schist. SCHIZIEST (23) SCHIZOIDS (24) [noun] Someone with schizoid personality disorder | [noun] Someone with schizophrenia SCHIZONTS (23) [noun] A cell that divides by schizogony. SCHIZZIER (32) SCHLEMIEL (16) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. 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. SCHLIEREN (14) [noun] Regions of a fluid having different refractive index because of their different density. | [noun] Irregular streaks of different composition in some igneous rocks. SCHLIERIC (16) SCHLUMPED (19) SCHMALTZY (28) [adjective] Overly sentimental, emotional, maudlin or bathetic. SCHMALZES (25) SCHMEERED (17) [verb] To spread something, often a bagel spread. | [verb] To bribe. SCHMELZES (25) SCHMOOSED (17) SCHMOOSES (16) SCHMOOZED (26) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHMOOZES (25) [noun] A casual conversation, especially one held in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. | [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHNAUZER (23) [noun] A dog of a particular breed originating in Germany. SCHNECKEN (20) SCHNITZEL (23) [noun] A dish consisting of fried veal cutlet. | [noun] (by extension) A Germanic dish of breaded and deep-fried meat cutlet. SCHNORKEL (18) SCHNORRER (14) [noun] Beggar | [noun] Sponger (person who takes advantage of the generosity of others) SCHNOZZES (32) [noun] Nose. SCHNOZZLE (32) SCHOLARLY (17) [adjective] Characteristic of a scholar. | [adjective] Of or relating to scholastics or scholarship. | [adverb] In a scholarly manner SCHOLIAST (14) [noun] A scholar who writes commentary on the works of an author, especially one of the ancient commentators on classical authors. SCHOLIUMS (16) SCHOOLBAG (17) SCHOOLBOY (19) [noun] A boy attending school. | [adjective] Characteristic of a schoolboy, especially being cheeky, clumsy and socially unaware. SCHOOLING (15) [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. SCHOOLKID (19) [noun] A schoolchild, a kid who attends school; a schoolboy or schoolgirl. SCHOOLMAN (16) [noun] A medieval writer, scholar or teacher of the subjects taught at early European universities (such as theology, metaphysics and logic); a scholastic. SCHOOLMEN (16) [noun] A medieval writer, scholar or teacher of the subjects taught at early European universities (such as theology, metaphysics and logic); a scholastic. SCHOONERS (14) [noun] A sailing ship with two or more masts, all with fore-and-aft sails; if two masted, having a foremast and a mainmast. | [noun] A glass of beer, of a size which varies between states (Wikipedia). | [noun] A large goblet or drinking glass, used for lager or ale (Wikipedia). SCHUSSERS (14) SCHUSSING (15) [verb] To ski a schuss. | [noun] Fast downhill skiing. SCIAENIDS (12) [noun] Any fish belonging to the family Sciaenidae. SCIATICAS (13) SCIENTIAL (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to science or to knowledge. | [adjective] Knowledgable. SCIENTISM (13) [noun] The belief that the scientific method and the assumptions and research methods of the physical sciences are applicable to all other disciplines (such as the humanities and social sciences), or that those other disciplines are not as valuable. | [noun] The belief that all truth is exclusively discovered through science. SCIENTIST (11) [noun] One whose activities make use of the scientific method to answer questions regarding the measurable universe. A scientist may be involved in original research, or make use of the results of the research of others. SCIENTIZE (20) SCIMETARS (13) SCIMITARS (13) [noun] A sword of Persian origin that features a curved blade. | [noun] A long-handled billhook. SCIMITERS (13) SCINCOIDS (14) SCINTILLA (11) [noun] A small spark or flash. | [noun] A small or trace amount. SCIOLISMS (13) SCIOLISTS (11) [noun] One who exhibits only superficial knowledge; a self-proclaimed expert with little real understanding. SCIROCCOS (15) [noun] A hot and often strong southerly to southeasterly wind on the Mediterranean that originates in the Sahara and adjacent North African regions. | [noun] A draft of hot air from an artificial source of heat. SCIRRHOUS (14) SCISSIONS (11) [noun] The act of division, separation, cutting or severing | [noun] Cleavage 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. SCISSURES (11) SCIURINES (11) SCLAFFERS (17) SCLAFFING (18) SCLEREIDS (12) SCLERITES (11) [noun] A hardened body part, especially in arthropod exoskeletons. SCLEROSED (12) [adjective] Hardened by sclerosis | [adjective] Lignified SCLEROSES (11) [noun] The abnormal hardening of body tissues, such as an artery. | [noun] Inability to create change. SCLEROSIS (11) [noun] The abnormal hardening of body tissues, such as an artery. | [noun] Inability to create change. SCLEROTIA (11) [noun] A compact mass of hardened mycelium stored with reserve food material that, in some higher fungi such as ergot, becomes detached and remains dormant until a favourable opportunity for growth occurs. SCLEROTIC (13) [noun] The sclerotic coat of the eye, cornea. | [adjective] Of or relating to the sclera. | [adjective] Having or relating to sclerosis. SCLEROTIN (11) [noun] The crosslinked protein component of the cuticles of insects. SCOFFLAWS (20) [noun] One who habitually violates minor laws or fails to answer trivial court summonses (such as parking tickets). SCOLDINGS (13) [noun] A succession of critical remarks, such as those directed by a parent towards a misbehaving child. SCOLECITE (13) SCOLIOMAS (13) SCOLIOSES (11) SCOLIOSIS (11) [noun] A condition in which there is abnormal lateral curvature of the spine. SCOLIOTIC (13) 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. SCOOPFULS (16) SCOOPSFUL (16) SCORBUTIC (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or suffering from scurvy. SCORCHERS (16) [noun] One who, or that which, scorches. | [noun] A very hot day. | [noun] A very good goal, notably made with a very hard shot. SCORCHING (17) [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 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. SCORELESS (11) [adjective] No points or goals etc having been scored SCOREPADS (14) SCORIFIED (15) SCORIFIES (14) SCORPIONS (13) [noun] Any of various arachnids of the order Scorpiones, related to the spiders, characterised by two large front pincers and a curved tail with a venomous sting in the end. | [noun] An ancient military engine for hurling stones and other missiles. | [noun] A very spiteful or vindictive person. SCOTCHING (17) [verb] To cut or score; to wound superficially. | [verb] To prevent (something) from being successful. | [verb] To debunk or discredit an idea or rumor. SCOTOMATA (13) [noun] An area of impaired or lost vision within a field of vision otherwise in a good (or at least healthy) state. SCOTOPIAS (13) SCOUNDREL (12) [noun] A mean, worthless fellow; a rascal; a villain; a person without honour or virtue. SCOURGERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, scourges. SCOURGING (13) [verb] To strike with a scourge; to flog. | [noun] A beating with a scourge; a flogging. SCOURINGS (12) SCOUTHERS (14) SCOUTINGS (12) 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. SCRABBLER (15) SCRABBLES (15) [noun] A scramble. | [verb] To scrape or scratch powerfully with hands or claws. | [verb] To gather hastily. SCRAGGIER (13) [adjective] Rough and irregular; jagged. | [adjective] Lean or thin, scrawny. SCRAGGING (14) [verb] To hang on a gallows, or to choke, garotte, or strangle. | [verb] To harass;, to manhandle. | [verb] To destroy or kill. 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. SCRAMBLER (15) [noun] Someone or something that scrambles (in various senses). | [noun] A vine that does not attach itself to its supports. | [noun] A device that makes messages intentionally, but reversibly, unintelligible for reasons of privacy or security. SCRAMBLES (15) [noun] A rush or hurry, especially making use of the limbs against a surface. | [noun] An emergency defensive air force mission to intercept attacking enemy aircraft. | [noun] A motocross race. SCRAMJETS (20) [noun] A jet engine capable of propelling an aircraft at hypersonic speeds; combustion of the fuel/air mixture occurs at supersonic speeds. SCRAMMING (16) [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. SCRANNELS (11) SCRAPBOOK (19) [noun] A book, similar to a notebook or journal, in which personal or family memorabilia and photos are collected and arranged | [verb] To create scrapbooks. SCRAPINGS (14) [noun] The sound or action of something being scraped. | [noun] What has been removed when something has been scraped. SCRAPPAGE (16) [noun] The practice of scrapping something. | [noun] An amount of money paid by the government to a person trading in an old car (to be scrapped) for a more environmentally-friendly new one. SCRAPPERS (15) SCRAPPIER (15) [adjective] Consisting of scraps; fragmentary; lacking unity or consistency. | [adjective] Having an aggressive spirit; inclined to fight or strive. | [adjective] (Of a fight) characterised by lots of ungainly or wild punches, grabs, wrestling, etc. SCRAPPILY (18) SCRAPPING (16) [verb] To discard. | [verb] (of a project or plan) To stop working on indefinitely. | [verb] To scrapbook; to create scrapbooks. SCRAPPLES (15) 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). SCRATCHER (16) SCRATCHES (16) [noun] A disruption, mark or shallow cut on a surface made by scratching. | [noun] An act of scratching the skin to alleviate an itch or irritation. | [noun] A starting line (originally and simply, a line scratched in the ground), as in boxing. | [noun] Synonym of pastern dermatitis SCRAWLERS (14) SCRAWLIER (14) SCRAWLING (15) [verb] To write something hastily or illegibly. | [verb] To write in an irregular or illegible manner. | [verb] To write unskilfully and inelegantly. SCRAWNIER (14) [adjective] Thin, malnourished and weak. SCREAKING (16) SCREAMERS (13) [noun] One who screams; one who shouts; one who sings harshly. | [noun] Any bird in the taxonomic family Anhimidae, endemic to South America, being large, bulky birds with a small downy head, long legs and large feet. | [noun] A healthy, vigorous animal. SCREAMING (14) [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. SCREECHED (17) [verb] To make such a sound. | [verb] To travel very fast, as if making the sounds of brakes being released SCREECHER (16) SCREECHES (16) [noun] A high-pitched strident or piercing sound, such as that between a moving object and any surface. | [noun] A harsh, shrill cry, as of one in acute pain or in fright; a shriek; a scream. | [noun] (Newfoundlander) Newfoundland rum. SCREEDING (13) [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. SCREENERS (11) SCREENING (12) [verb] To filter by passing through a screen. | [verb] To shelter or conceal. | [verb] To remove information, or censor intellectual material from viewing. SCREWBALL (16) [noun] A pitch thrown with added pressure by the index finger and a twisting wrist motion resulting in a motion to the right when thrown by a right-handed pitcher. | [noun] One who behaves in a crazy manner. | [adjective] (originally US) Crazy, offbeat, bizarre, zany, or weird. SCREWBEAN (16) SCREWIEST (14) [adjective] Crazy; silly; ridiculous | [adjective] Tipsy; slightly drunk. | [adjective] Exacting; extortionate; close. SCREWLIKE (18) SCREWWORM (19) [noun] The larva of the fly Cochliomyia hominivorax (New World screwworm) or Chrysomya bezziana (Old World screwworm). The larvae are parasitic in humans and animals and are distinctive in eating living flesh of mammals, unlike most maggots, which eat only dead flesh. 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. SCRIBBLER (15) [noun] One who scribbles; a hasty or untalented writer or artist. | [noun] A machine for coarse carding or teasing of wool. | [noun] A ruled notebook or exercise book, especially in grade school. SCRIBBLES (15) [noun] Careless, hasty writing, doodle or drawing | [verb] To write or draw carelessly and in a hurry | [verb] To doodle SCRIEVING (15) SCRIMMAGE (16) [noun] A rough fight. | [noun] In some team sports, especially soccer, a practice game which does not count on a team's record. | [noun] In American football or Canadian football, a play that begins with a snap from the center while opposing teams are on either side of a line of scrimmage. SCRIMPERS (15) SCRIMPIER (15) SCRIMPING (16) [verb] To make too small or short. | [verb] To limit or straiten; to put on short allowance. | [verb] To be frugal. SCRIMSHAW (19) [noun] The manufacture of handicrafts by sailors on long voyages, especially as whittled from wood or bone. | [noun] An item produced by scrimshaw. | [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. SCRIPTERS (13) SCRIPTING (14) [verb] To make or write a script. | [noun] The act by which something is scripted. SCRIPTURE (13) [noun] A sacred writing or holy book. | [noun] (by extension) An authoritative statement. SCRIVENER (14) [noun] A professional writer; one whose occupation is to draw contracts or prepare writings. | [noun] One whose business is to place money at interest; a broker. | [noun] A writing master. SCROFULAS (14) SCROGGIER (13) SCROLLING (12) [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. SCROOCHED (17) [verb] To crouch, or hunker down. SCROOCHES (16) [verb] To crouch, or hunker down. SCROOPING (14) SCROUGING (13) 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. SCROUNGER (12) [noun] One who scrounges. SCROUNGES (12) [noun] Someone who scrounges; a scrounger. SCRUBBERS (15) [noun] A person or appliance that cleans floors or similar by scrubbing. | [noun] A device that removes impurities from gases. | [noun] A machine for washing leather after the tanpit. SCRUBBIER (15) SCRUBBING (16) [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 SCRUBLAND (14) [noun] A plant community characterized by scrub vegetation, consisting of low shrubs, mixed with grasses, herbs, and geophytes. SCRUFFIER (17) [adjective] Untidy in appearance. | [adjective] Scurfy. SCRUFFILY (20) SCRUMMAGE (16) [noun] An ordered formation of forwards, typically bending down, binding to one another with their arms, and pushing opponents shoulder to shoulder, in which each side aims to gain control of the ball; a scrum. | [noun] A scrimmage. | [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SCRUMMING (16) SCRUNCHED (17) [verb] To grind with the teeth, and with a crackling sound; to craunch. | [verb] To crumple and squeeze to make more compact. SCRUNCHES (16) [verb] To grind with the teeth, and with a crackling sound; to craunch. | [verb] To crumple and squeeze to make more compact. SCRUPLING (14) [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. SCRUTABLE (13) SCUFFLERS (17) SCUFFLING (18) [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. SCULLIONS (11) [noun] A spring onion, Allium fistulosum. | [noun] Any of various similar members of the genus Allium. | [noun] Any onion that lacks a fully developed bulb. SCULPTING (14) [verb] To form by sculpture. | [verb] To work as a sculptor. | [noun] The act or product of one who sculpts; sculpture. SCULPTORS (13) [noun] A person who sculpts; an artist who produces sculpture. SCULPTURE (13) [noun] A three dimensional work of art created by shaping malleable objects and letting them harden or by chipping away pieces from a rock (sculpting). | [noun] Works of art created by sculpting, as a group. | [noun] The three-dimensional ornamentation on the outer surface of a shell SCUMBLING (16) [verb] To apply an opaque glaze to an area of a painting to make it softer or duller. | [noun] An application of scumbling; an opaque glaze. SCUMMIEST (15) SCUNGILLI (12) [noun] Whelk SCUNNERED (12) [verb] To be sick of. | [verb] To dislike. | [verb] To cause to loathe, or feel disgust at. SCUPPAUGS (16) SCUPPERED (16) [verb] Thwart or destroy, especially something belonging or pertaining to another; compare scuttle. SCURFIEST (14) SCURRYING (15) [verb] To run with quick light steps, to scamper. | [noun] The motion of something that scurries. SCURVIEST (14) [adjective] Covered or affected with scurf or scabs; scabby; scurfy; specifically, diseased with the scurvy. | [adjective] Contemptible, despicable, low, disgustingly mean. SCUTCHEON (16) [noun] An escutcheon; an emblazoned shield. | [noun] An escutcheon; a small plate of metal, such as the shield around a keyhole. SCUTCHERS (16) SCUTCHING (17) [verb] To beat or whip; to drub. | [verb] To separate the woody fibre from (flax, hemp, etc.) by beating; to swingle. | [noun] The separation of the woody shives from flax, hemp, and jute fibres by beating with a scutch. SCUTELLAR (11) [noun] Short for scutellar bristles. | [adjective] Relating to the scutellum SCUTELLUM (13) [noun] Any of several shield-shaped structures in insects, grasses etc SCUTTERED (12) [verb] To void thin excrement. | [verb] To run with a light pattering noise; to skitter. | [adjective] Drunk SCUTTLING (12) [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. SCUZZIEST (29) [adjective] Dirty or grimy. | [adjective] Disreputable; sleazy. SEABOARDS (12) [noun] The area bordering the sea; a coastline; a sealine. SEACOASTS (11) [noun] The coastal land bordering a sea or ocean SEACRAFTS (14) SEADROMES (12) SEAFARERS (12) [noun] A sailor or mariner. | [noun] One who travels by sea. SEAFARING (13) [adjective] Living one's life at sea. | [adjective] Fit to travel on the sea; seagoing. | [noun] The act, process, or practice of travelling the seas SEAFLOORS (12) SEAFRONTS (12) [noun] The seashore, the coast. | [noun] The waterfront of a seaside town. SEALERIES (9) SEALSKINS (13) [noun] A type of fabric made from the skin of seals. | [noun] Any fabric manufactured to resemble sealskin. | [noun] An item of clothing made from sealskin (whether real or imitation). SEAMINESS (11) SEAMOUNTS (11) [noun] A mountain that rises from the floor of the ocean and does not breach the water's surface. SEAMSTERS (11) SEAPIECES (13) SEAPLANES (11) [noun] Any aircraft capable of taking off from, and alighting on the surface of water. SEAQUAKES (22) [noun] A hydrostatic pressure disturbance caused by an earthquake or volcano in the seabed. SEARCHERS (14) SEARCHING (15) [verb] To look in (a place) for something. | [verb] (followed by "for") To look thoroughly. | [verb] To look for, seek. SEARINGLY (13) SEAROBINS (11) SEASCAPES (13) [noun] A piece of art that depicts the sea or shoreline. SEASCOUTS (11) SEASHELLS (12) [noun] The empty shell of a marine mollusk | [noun] A very light pink colour, like that of some seashells. SEASHORES (12) [noun] The coastal land bordering a sea or an ocean. | [noun] The foreshore, the strip of land between low water and high water. SEASONERS (9) SEASONING (10) [noun] Something used to add taste or flavour to food, such as salt and pepper or other condiment, herb or spice. | [noun] (by extension) Anything added to increase enjoyment. | [noun] A coat of polymerized oil inside a cooking vessel which renders the surface non-stick. | [verb] To make fit for any use by time or habit; to habituate; to accustom; to inure. SEASTRAND (10) SEATMATES (11) SEATRAINS (9) SEATWORKS (16) SEAWATERS (12) SEAWORTHY (18) [adjective] Fit for service at sea. SEBACEOUS (13) [adjective] Of or relating to fat, sebum | [adjective] Oozing fat | [adjective] Tallowy, waxy SEBORRHEA (14) [noun] A skin disorder causing scaly, flaky, itchy, red skin. SECALOSES (11) SECATEURS (11) [noun] Small, handheld pruning shears. SECERNING (12) SECESSION (11) [noun] The act of seceding. SECLUDING (13) [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. SECLUSION (11) [noun] The act of secluding, shutting out or keeping apart. | [noun] The state of being secluded or shut out, as from company, society, the world, etc.; solitude. | [noun] A secluded, isolated or private place. SECLUSIVE (14) SECONDARY (15) [noun] Any flight feather attached to the ulna (forearm) of a bird. | [noun] An act of issuing more stock by an already publicly traded corporation. | [noun] The defensive backs. SECONDERS (12) SECONDING (13) [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. SECRECIES (13) SECRETARY (14) [noun] Someone entrusted with a secret; a confidant. | [noun] A person who keeps records, takes notes and handles general clerical work. | [noun] (often capitalized) The head of a department of government. SECRETEST (11) SECRETING (12) [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. SECRETINS (11) SECRETION (11) [noun] Any substance that is secreted by an organism | [noun] The act of secreting a substance, especially from a gland | [noun] The act of hiding something SECRETIVE (14) [adjective] Having an inclination to secrecy | [adjective] Relating to secretion SECRETORS (11) [noun] A person who or animal that secretes (emits a bodily fluid). | [noun] A person who secretes comparatively large quantities of blood-group antigens in their bodily fluids. | [noun] A cell, tissue or organ (such as a gland) that produces a bodily secretion. SECRETORY (14) SECTARIAN (11) [noun] A member of a sect. | [noun] A bigot. | [adjective] Of, or relating to a sect. SECTARIES (11) [noun] A member of a particular sect, school of thought or practice, party, or profession; a sectarian. | [noun] A Protestant dissenter or nonconformist. SECTILITY (14) SECTIONAL (11) [noun] An item of furniture composed of modular sections; usually specifically a sectional sofa | [noun] A tournament or match held at the section level, typically between the regionals and the championships | [noun] A band sectional, in which one section of a band or orchestra practices separately 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. SECTORIAL (11) [noun] A sectorial, or carnassial, tooth. | [adjective] Adapted for cutting | [adjective] Of or pertaining to sectors SECTORING (12) SECULARLY (14) SEDATIONS (10) SEDATIVES (13) [noun] An agent or drug that sedates, having a calming or soothing effect, or inducing sleep. SEDENTARY (13) [noun] A sedentary person | [adjective] Not moving; relatively still; staying in the vicinity. | [adjective] (of a human population) Living in a fixed geographical location; the opposite of nomadic. SEDERUNTS (10) [noun] A formal meeting, especially of a judicial or ecclesiastical body. | [noun] Those people present at such a meeting. SEDIMENTS (12) [noun] A collection of small particles, particularly dirt, that precipitates from a river or other body of water. | [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. SEDITIONS (10) [noun] Organized incitement of rebellion or civil disorder against authority or the state, usually by speech or writing. | [noun] Insurrection or rebellion. SEDITIOUS (10) [adjective] Of, related to, or being involved in sedition. SEDUCTION (12) [noun] The act of seducing. | [noun] (in English common law) The felony of, as a man, inducing a previously chaste unmarried female to engage in sexual intercourse on a promise of marriage. SEDUCTIVE (15) [adjective] Attractive, alluring, tempting. SEEDCAKES (16) SEEDCASES (12) SEEDEATER (10) [noun] An individual or species which eats seeds. | [noun] A bird species which feeds mainly on seeds. | [noun] Any bird in the genus Sporophila of the tanager family, Thraupidae SEEDINESS (10) SEEDLINGS (11) [noun] A young plant grown from seed. | [noun] Any young plant, especially: SEEDTIMES (12) SEEMINGLY (15) [adverb] As it appears; apparently. | [adverb] In a seemly manner; decorously; with propriety. SEEMLIEST (11) [adjective] (of behavior) Appropriate; suited to the occasion or purpose; becoming. SEERESSES (9) SEESAWING (13) [verb] To use a seesaw. | [verb] (by extension) To fluctuate. | [verb] To cause to move backward and forward in seesaw fashion. SEGMENTAL (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or constructed from segments SEGMENTED (13) [verb] To divide into segments or sections. | [adjective] Having or made of segments. SEGREGANT (11) SEGREGATE (11) [verb] To separate, especially by social policies that directly or indirectly keep races or ethnic groups apart. | [adjective] Separate; select. | [adjective] Separated from others of the same kind. SEICENTOS (11) SEIGNEURS (10) [noun] (history) A French feudal lord; a noble. | [noun] The hereditary feudal ruler of Sark. | [noun] A landowner in Canada; the holder of a seigneurie. SEIGNEURY (13) [noun] (history) An area governed by a seigneur (French noble). | [noun] The estate of a seigneur. | [noun] (Channel Islands) The official residence of a Seigneur. SEIGNIORS (10) [noun] A feudal lord; a nobleman who held his lands by feudal grant; any lord (holder) of a manor | [noun] A title of respect, formerly corresponding (especially in France) approximately to Sir. SEIGNIORY (13) [noun] The estate of a feudal lord. | [noun] The power or authority of a lord; dominion. | [noun] The lordship (authority) remaining to a grantor after the grant of an estate in fee simple. SEISMISMS (13) SELACHIAN (14) [noun] Any organism of the superorder Selachimorpha or subclass Elasmobranchii; an extant shark (or related species). | [adjective] Pertaining to (what is now classified as) the superorder Selachimorpha or division Selachii, comprising the sharks; or, sometimes more broadly, to the subclass Elasmobranchii, including sharks, rays and related species. | [adjective] Sharklike. SELADANGS (11) [noun] The Malayan gaur. SELAMLIKS (15) SELECTEES (11) [noun] A person who is selected. SELECTING (12) [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. SELECTION (11) [noun] A process by which heritable traits conferring survival and reproductive advantage to individuals, or related individuals, tend to be passed on to succeeding generations and become more frequent in a population, whereas other less favourable traits tend to become eliminated; the differential survival and reproduction of phenotypes. | [noun] The process or act of selecting. | [noun] Something selected. SELECTIVE (14) [adjective] Of or relating to the process of selection. | [adjective] Of or relating to natural selection. | [adjective] (of a person) choosy, fussy or discriminating when selecting. SELECTMAN (13) [noun] Any of a board of municipal officers elected to manage some New England towns. SELECTMEN (13) [noun] Any of a board of municipal officers elected to manage some New England towns. SELECTORS (11) [noun] Someone or something which selects or chooses. | [noun] An administrator responsible for selecting which players will play for a side. | [noun] A matching expression in a stylesheet determining which elements in the markup are affected by a style. SELENATES (9) [noun] Any salt or ester of selenic acid SELENIDES (10) [noun] Any compound in which selenium serves as an anion with an oxidation number of -2 | [noun] Any organic compound of general formula RSeR (R not = H) analogous to the ethers SELENITES (9) [noun] A soft, glassy form of gypsum (chemical formula CaSO4·2H2O). | [noun] The anion SeO32− derived from selenous acid; any salt or ester of selenous acid. SELENIUMS (11) SELFHEALS (15) [noun] A small, herbaceous European plant with blue-violet flowers from any species of genus Prunella. SELFHOODS (16) SELFISHLY (18) [adverb] In a selfish manner; with regard to private interest only or chiefly. SELVEDGED (15) SELVEDGES (14) [noun] The edge of a woven fabric, where the weft (side-to-side) threads run around the warp (top to bottom) threads, creating a finished edge. | [noun] Any edge of fabric finished so as to prevent raveling. | [noun] The excess area of any printed or perforated sheet, such as the border on a sheet of postage stamps or the wide margins of an engraving. SEMANTICS (13) [noun] A branch of linguistics studying the meaning of words. | [noun] The study of the relationship between words and their meanings. | [noun] The individual meanings of words, as opposed to the overall meaning of a passage. SEMAPHORE (16) [noun] Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words. | [noun] A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore. | [noun] A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes. SEMBLABLE (15) [noun] Something similar; likeness; representation | [adjective] Similar | [adjective] Apparent SEMBLABLY (18) SEMBLANCE (15) [noun] Likeness, similarity; the quality of being similar. | [noun] The way something looks; appearance; form SEMEIOTIC (13) SEMESTERS (11) [noun] Half of a school year or academic year such as fall or spring semester. | [noun] A period or term of six months. SEMESTRAL (11) SEMIBREVE (16) [noun] A musical note four beats long in 4/4 time; a whole note (US) SEMICOLON (13) [noun] The punctuation mark ;. SEMICOMAS (15) SEMIDEIFY (18) SEMIDOMED (15) SEMIDOMES (14) SEMIDWARF (18) SEMIERECT (13) SEMIFINAL (14) [noun] A playoff in the round with only four players or teams left, the stage before the final. | [noun] (general) A competition that narrows a field of contestants (semifinalists) to a set of finalists, for a subsequent final. SEMIFLUID (15) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. | [adjective] Having properties intermediate between liquids and solids SEMIGLOSS (12) SEMIGROUP (14) SEMIHOBOS (16) SEMILUNAR (11) [noun] The lunate bone, or semilunar bone. | [adjective] Shaped like a half-moon; crescent-shaped. SEMIMATTE (13) SEMIMETAL (13) [noun] A metalloid. SEMIMICRO (15) SEMIMOIST (13) SEMINALLY (14) SEMINOMAD (14) SEMIOLOGY (15) [noun] Semiotics, the study of signs. | [noun] The science of the signs or symptoms of disease; symptomatology. | [noun] The art of using signs in signalling. SEMIOTICS (13) [noun] The study of signs and symbols, especially as means of language or communication. | [noun] The study of medical signs and symptoms; symptomatology. SEMIRIGID (13) [adjective] Partially rigid SEMIRURAL (11) 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. SEMISWEET (14) [adjective] Partially sweet or sweetened, but having a distinct bitter component. Especially used to describe dark chocolate that is much less sugary than milk chocolate. SEMITISTS (11) SEMITONAL (11) SEMITONES (11) [noun] The musical interval equal (exactly or approximately) to half a tone or one-twelfth of an octave | [noun] Any of the pitches of the chromatic scale SEMITONIC (13) SEMIVOWEL (17) [noun] A sound in speech which has some qualities of a consonant and some qualities of a vowel. | [noun] A letter which represents a semivowel sound, such as w or y in English. SEMIWORKS (18) SEMOLINAS (11) SENESCENT (11) SENESCHAL (14) [noun] A steward, particularly one in charge of a medieval nobleman's estate. | [noun] An officer of the crown in late medieval and early modern France who served as a kind of governor and chief justice of the royal court in Normandy and Languedoc. SENHORITA (12) [noun] A young woman in or from a Lusophone community. SENIORITY (12) [noun] A measure of the amount of time a person has been a member of an organization, as compared to other members, and with an eye towards awarding privileges to those who have been members longer. SENNIGHTS (13) [noun] A period of seven nights; a week. SENORITAS (9) [noun] A young, unmarried woman in or from a Hispanophone community. | [noun] A small species of wrasse, Oxyjulis californica. SENSATELY (12) SENSATING (10) SENSATION (9) [noun] A physical feeling or perception from something that comes into contact with the body; something sensed. | [noun] A widespread reaction of interest or excitement. SENSELESS (9) [adjective] Without feeling or consciousness; deprived of sensation | [adjective] Lacking meaning or purpose; without common sense | [adjective] Without consideration, awareness or sound judgement SENSIBLER (11) SENSIBLES (11) SENSILLAE (9) SENSILLUM (11) [noun] Any of several sensory organs in some arthropods SENSITISE (9) [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. SENSITIVE (12) [noun] A person with a paranormal sensitivity to something that most cannot perceive. | [adjective] Having the faculty of sensation; pertaining to the senses. | [adjective] Responsive to stimuli. SENSITIZE (18) [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. SENSORIAL (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to sensation or the senses; sensory. SENSORIUM (11) [noun] The entire sensory apparatus of an organism. | [noun] The central part of a nervous system that receives and coordinates all stimuli. | [noun] The brain or mind in relation to the senses. SENSUALLY (12) 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. SENTENCES (11) [noun] The decision or judgement of a jury or court; a verdict. | [noun] The judicial order for a punishment to be imposed on a person convicted of a crime. | [noun] A punishment imposed on a person convicted of a crime. SENTENTIA (9) SENTIENCE (11) SENTIENTS (9) SENTIMENT (11) [noun] A general thought, feeling, or sense. | [noun] Feelings, especially tender feelings, as apart from reason or judgment, or of a weak or foolish kind. SENTINELS (9) [noun] A sentry, watch, or guard. | [noun] A private soldier. | [noun] A unique string of characters recognised by a computer program for processing in a special way; a keyword. SEPARABLE (13) [adjective] Able to be separated. | [adjective] Of a topological space, having a countable dense subset. 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. SEPARATES (11) [noun] (usually in the plural) Anything that is sold by itself, especially an article of clothing. | [verb] To divide (a thing) into separate parts. | [verb] To disunite from a group or mass; to disconnect. SEPARATOR (11) [noun] An object located between two or more things and hence separating them. | [noun] A device for removing one substance from another, such as cream from milk. | [noun] One who separates; an agent performing the action of separating. SEPIOLITE (11) SEPTARIUM (13) [noun] A flattened concretionary nodule, usually of limestone, intersected within by cracks which are often filled with calcite, barite, or other minerals. SEPTETTES (11) [noun] A set of seven persons or objects. | [noun] A musical composition for seven instruments or seven voices; a septuor. SEPTUPLED (14) [verb] To multiply by seven. | [verb] To increase by a factor of seven. SEPTUPLES (13) [verb] To multiply by seven. | [verb] To increase by a factor of seven. SEPULCHER (16) [noun] A burial chamber. | [verb] To bury the dead. SEPULCHRE (16) [noun] A burial chamber. | [noun] A recess in some early churches in which the reserved sacrament, etc. were kept from Good Friday till Easter. | [verb] To place in a sepulchre. SEPULTURE (11) [noun] A burial chamber. | [noun] A recess in some early churches in which the reserved sacrament, etc. were kept from Good Friday till Easter. | [noun] The act of sepulchring, committing the remains of a deceased person to the grave or sepulchre. SEQUACITY (23) 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 SEQUENCER (20) [noun] Any device that activates or deactivates the components of a machine or system according to a preplanned sequence (as in a washing machine, or central heating system). | [noun] A device or system that orders and/or modifies digitally stored music and sound for playback. | [noun] A device for determining the sequence of monomers in a polymer, especially amino acids in protein, or bases in DNA; A sequenator. SEQUENCES (20) [noun] A set of things next to each other in a set order; a series | [noun] The state of being sequent or following; order of succession. | [noun] A series of musical phrases where a theme or melody is repeated, with some change each time, such as in pitch or length (example: opening of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony). SEQUESTER (18) [noun] Sequestration; separation | [noun] A person with whom two or more contending parties deposit the subject matter of the controversy; one who mediates between two parties; a referee. | [noun] A sequestrum. SEQUESTRA (18) [noun] A fragment of bone or other dead tissue that has separated during necrosis SEQUINNED (19) SEQUITURS (18) SERAGLIOS (10) [noun] The palace of the Grand Seignior in Constantinople. | [noun] The sequestered living quarters used by wives and concubines (odalisques) in a Turkish Muslim household. | [noun] A brothel or place of debauchery. SERAPHIMS (16) SERENADED (11) [verb] To sing or play a serenade for (someone). SERENADER (10) SERENADES (10) [noun] A love song that is sung directly to one's love interest, especially one performed below the window of a loved one in the evening. | [noun] An instrumental composition in several movements. SERENATAS (9) [noun] A type of baroque cantata performed outdoors, in the evening, with mixed vocal and instrumental forces SERFHOODS (16) SERGEANCY (15) SERGEANTS (10) [noun] UK army rank with NATO code OR-6, senior to corporal and junior to warrant officer ranks. | [noun] The highest rank of noncommissioned officer in some non-naval military forces and police. | [noun] A lawyer of the highest rank, equivalent to the doctor of civil law. SERGEANTY (13) SERIALISE (9) [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. SERIALISM (11) [noun] Music, especially from the 20th century, in which themes are based on a definite order of notes of an equal-tempered scale. SERIALIST (9) SERIALIZE (18) [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. SERIATELY (12) SERIATING (10) [verb] To arrange in serial order. SERICEOUS (11) SERIGRAPH (15) [noun] A silkscreen print made by serigraphy | [noun] An autographic device to test the strength of raw silk SERIOUSLY (12) [adverb] (manner) In a serious or literal manner. | [adverb] Gravely; deeply; very much. | [adverb] Used to attempt to introduce a serious point in a less serious conversation SERJEANTS (16) [noun] UK army rank with NATO code OR-6, senior to corporal and junior to warrant officer ranks. | [noun] The highest rank of noncommissioned officer in some non-naval military forces and police. | [noun] A lawyer of the highest rank, equivalent to the doctor of civil law. SERJEANTY (19) [noun] A form of land ownership under the feudal system, where a family held an estate in exchange for rendering a service to their liege lord. SERMONIZE (20) [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. SEROLOGIC (12) SEROTINAL (9) SEROTINES (9) [noun] Any of several small bats of the genus Eptesicus SEROTONIN (9) [noun] An indoleamine neurotransmitter, 5-hydroxytryptamine, that is involved in depression, appetite, etc., and is crucial in maintaining a sense of well-being, security, etc. SEROTYPES (14) [noun] A group of microorganisms characterised by a specific set of antigens. SERPIGOES (12) SERRANIDS (10) [noun] Any fish of the family Serranidae. SERRATING (10) SERRATION (9) [noun] The state of being serrated. | [noun] A set of teeth or notches. | [noun] One of the teeth in a serrated or serrate edge. SERRIEDLY (13) SERVICERS (14) [noun] One who services a loan or other obligation, by collecting receivables and carrying out related actions such as enforcement SERVICING (15) [verb] To serve. | [verb] To perform maintenance. | [verb] To inseminate through sexual intercourse SERVIETTE (12) [noun] A table napkin, now especially a paper one. | [noun] A lazy Susan SERVILELY (15) SERVILITY (15) [noun] The condition of being servile. SERVITORS (12) [noun] One who performs the duties of a servant. | [noun] One who serves in an army; a soldier. | [noun] An undergraduate who performed menial duties in exchange for financial support from his college, particularly at Oxford University. SERVITUDE (13) [noun] The state of being a slave; slavery. | [noun] A qualified beneficial interest severed or fragmented from the ownership of an inferior property and attached to a superior property or to some person other than the owner; the most common form is an easement. | [noun] Service rendered in the army or navy. SESAMOIDS (12) [noun] A sesamoid bone or sesamoid cartilage. SESSIONAL (9) SESSPOOLS (11) SESTERCES (11) [noun] A sestertius. SESTERTIA (9) SETACEOUS (11) SETENANTS (9) SETSCREWS (14) [noun] A screw with threads along the entire length and no head. Typically, set screws have a hex or slot drive recessed in the threaded length; a grub screw or worm screw. | [noun] Any screw used to hold or adjust a setting: frequently a set screw (sense 1), but may also be any other machine screw or thumb screw used for the purpose of setting. | [noun] (NZ) A screw with a head, usually hexagonal, like a bolt but without a shank to allow it to screw into material rather than take a nut; a tap bolt. SETTLINGS (10) SEVENFOLD (16) [adjective] Seven times as much; multiplied by seven. | [adjective] Having seven parts; composed of seven items. | [adverb] By a factor of seven. SEVENTEEN (12) [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after sixteen and before eighteen, represented in Roman numerals as XVII and in Arabic numerals as 17. SEVENTIES (12) [noun] The decade of the 1870s, 1970s, etc. | [noun] The decade of one's life from age 70 through age 79. | [noun] (temperature, rates) The range between 70 and 79. SEVERABLE (14) SEVERALLY (15) [adverb] Separately | [adverb] Several times, repeatedly SEVERALTY (15) [noun] The sole ownership of property by someone. SEVERANCE (14) [noun] The act of severing or the state of being severed. | [noun] A separation. | [noun] A severance payment. SEWERAGES (13) SEXLESSLY (19) SEXTARIUS (16) SEXTETTES (16) [noun] Any group of six people or things. | [noun] A composition for six voices or instruments. | [noun] A group of six singers or instrumentalists. SEXTUPLED (19) [verb] To make, or to become, six times as much (or as many). SEXTUPLES (18) [noun] A sixfold amount SEXTUPLET (18) [noun] A group of six objects. | [noun] One of a group of six persons or animals born from the same mother during the same birth. | [noun] A group of six notes played in the time of four. SEXUALITY (19) [noun] The quality of being sexual; that which is characterized or distinguished by sex. | [noun] Sexual activity; concern with, or interest in, sexual activity. | [noun] Sexual potency. SEXUALIZE (25) [verb] To make sexual, or give sex appeal to. | [verb] To distinguish as belonging to separate sexes. SFORZANDI (22) [noun] A mark that indicates that a note is to be played with a strong initial attack. | [noun] A passage having this mark. SFORZANDO (22) [noun] A mark that indicates that a note is to be played with a strong initial attack. | [noun] A passage having this mark. | [adjective] Describing a passage having this mark. SFORZATOS (21) SGRAFFITI (16) [noun] A technique in ceramics, art and wall design, where the top layer of pigment or slip is scratched through to reveal an underlying layer. | [noun] An instance or sample of sgraffito. SGRAFFITO (16) [noun] A technique in ceramics, art and wall design, where the top layer of pigment or slip is scratched through to reveal an underlying layer. | [noun] An instance or sample of sgraffito. | [verb] To produce a design using this technique. SHABBIEST (16) [adjective] Torn or worn; unkempt. | [adjective] Clothed with ragged, much worn, or soiled garments. | [adjective] Mean; paltry; despicable. SHACKLERS (18) SHACKLING (19) [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. SHADBERRY (18) SHADBLOWS (18) SHADCHANS (18) [noun] (Jewish) marriage broker, matchmaker SHADDOCKS (20) [noun] The large fruit of the Citrus maxima (syn. C. grandis), native to South Asia and Southeast Asia, with a thick green or yellow rind, a thick white pith, and semi-sweet translucent pale flesh. | [noun] The tree which produces this fruit. | [noun] The grapefruit. SHADELESS (13) SHADFLIES (16) SHADINESS (13) SHADOWBOX (25) [noun] A diorama | [verb] To practice moves without an actual opponent, often in front of a mirror. SHADOWERS (16) SHADOWIER (16) [adjective] In shadow; darkened by shadows. | [adjective] (of character) Dark, obscure. | [adjective] Indulging in fancies; daydreaming. SHADOWILY (19) SHADOWING (17) [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. SHADRACHS (18) SHAFTINGS (16) [noun] Shafts collectively. | [noun] A system of connected shafts for communicating motion. SHAGBARKS (19) SHAGGIEST (14) [adjective] With long, thick, and uncombed hair, fur or wool. | [adjective] With a surface like shaggy hair; rough nap. SHAGREENS (13) SHAKEABLE (18) SHAKEDOWN (20) [noun] Extortion, especially through blackmail | [noun] A thorough search; a frisk | [noun] A trial or test period, especially of a ship or aircraft SHAKEOUTS (16) [noun] An event that causes marginal constituents to be eliminated. | [noun] The separation of molds from their flask, the castings from the molding sand, and potentially the cores from the castings. | [noun] The shaking of an object to spread it wide and eject any debris. SHAKINESS (16) SHALLOONS (12) SHALLOWED (16) [verb] To make or become less deep. SHALLOWER (15) [adjective] Having little depth; significantly less deep than wide. | [adjective] Extending not far downward. | [adjective] Concerned mainly with superficial matters. SHALLOWLY (18) SHAMANISM (16) SHAMANIST (14) SHAMBLING (17) [verb] To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet. | [noun] An awkward, irregular gait. | [adjective] Who walks while dragging or shuffling the feet. SHAMBOLIC (18) [adjective] Chaotic, disorganised or mismanaged. SHAMEFAST (17) SHAMELESS (14) [adjective] Having no shame, no guilt nor remorse over something considered wrong; immodest; unable to feel disgrace. SHAMMASIM (18) SHAMMOSIM (18) SHAMMYING (20) SHAMOYING (18) 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. SHAMPOOER (16) SHAMROCKS (20) [noun] The trefoil leaf of any small clover, especially Trifolium repens, or such a leaf from a clover-like plant, commonly used as a symbol of Ireland. | [noun] Any of several small plants, forms of clover, with trefoil leaves, especially Trifolium repens. SHANGHAIS (16) [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. SHANTUNGS (13) SHANTYMAN (17) [noun] The sailor who sings the main line of a sea shanty (the other sailors singing the responses or choruses) SHANTYMEN (17) [noun] The sailor who sings the main line of a sea shanty (the other sailors singing the responses or choruses) SHAPEABLE (16) SHAPELESS (14) [adjective] Without a clearly defined or identifiable shape SHAPELIER (14) [adjective] Having a pleasing shape, pleasant to look at. SHAREABLE (14) [adjective] Suitable for sharing. SHARECROP (16) [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. SHAREWARE (15) [noun] A type of software that is distributed without payment but is limited in any combination of functionality, availability, or convenience. SHARIFIAN (15) SHARKLIKE (20) SHARKSKIN (20) [noun] The skin of a shark. | [noun] A shiny fabric made from synthetic fibers. SHARPENED (15) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To make sharp. | [verb] To become sharp. | [adjective] Having a sharp point or edge. SHARPENER (14) [noun] A device for making things sharp. | [noun] That which makes something sharp. | [noun] An alcoholic drink taken at the start of the day, or just before a meal. SHARPNESS (14) [noun] The cutting ability of an edge; keenness | [noun] The fineness of the point a pointed object | [noun] The product or result of being sharp. SHASHLICK (21) SHASHLIKS (19) [noun] A form of shish kebab, originally made of marinated lamb meat. SHATTERED (13) [verb] To violently break something into pieces. | [verb] To destroy or disable something. | [verb] To smash, or break into tiny pieces. SHAVELING (16) [noun] Someone with all or part of their head shaved, notably a tonsured clergyman; a priest or monk. | [noun] A shaver, stripling, young man physically mature enough to shave. SHAVETAIL (15) [noun] An inexperienced person, especially a newly-commissioned military officer. SHEAFLIKE (19) SHEALINGS (13) [noun] An area of summer pasture used for cattle, sheep etc. | [noun] A shepherd's hut or shack. SHEARINGS (13) SHEARLING (13) [noun] A sheep that has been shorn for the first time | [noun] A sheepskin or lambskin that has gone through a limited shearing process so that the fibers are of uniform depth SHEATHERS (15) SHEATHING (16) [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. SHEENIEST (12) [adjective] Having a sheen; glossy | [adjective] Bright; shining; radiant. SHEEPCOTE (16) SHEEPCOTS (16) SHEEPDOGS (16) [noun] A breed of dog, used for herding sheep. | [noun] A breed of dog used for guarding sheep. | [noun] A chaperon; an adult who accompanies other people in a supervisory role. SHEEPFOLD (18) [noun] An enclosure for keeping sheep. | [noun] A flock of sheep. SHEEPSKIN (18) [noun] The skin of a sheep, especially when used to make parchment or in bookbinding. | [noun] A diploma. | [noun] The tanned skin of a sheep with the fleece left on, especially when used for clothing, rugs, etc. SHEERLEGS (13) [noun] A form of derrick, consisting of three poles and a block and tackle, used to hoist and lower heavy weights, especially the masts of sailing ships. SHEERNESS (12) SHEETINGS (13) SHEETLIKE (16) SHEIKDOMS (19) SHEIKHDOM (22) SHELDRAKE (17) [noun] An Old World duck of the genus Tadorna. | [noun] A merganser. | [noun] A male shelduck. SHELDUCKS (19) [noun] Any of various waterfowl of the genus Tadorna, native to Eurasia, Africa and Australasia. SHELFFULS (18) SHELFLIKE (19) SHELLACKS (18) [noun] A processed secretion of the lac insect, Coccus lacca; used in polishes, varnishes etc. | [noun] A beating; a thrashing. SHELLBACK (20) [noun] A worldly sailor. | [noun] A sailor who has crossed the equator. SHELLFISH (18) [noun] An aquatic invertebrate having a shell, such as a mollusc or crustacean, especially when edible. SHELLIEST (12) SHELLWORK (19) [noun] The decoration made from patterns of shells. 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. SHELTERER (12) SHELVIEST (15) SHELVINGS (16) SHEPHERDS (18) [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. SHERBERTS (14) SHERLOCKS (18) [verb] To deduce. | [verb] To search. | [verb] To obsolete a unique feature in third-party software by introducing a similar or identical feature to the OS or a first-party program/app. SHERRISES (12) SHETLANDS (13) SHEWBREAD (18) [noun] Twelve loaves of bread placed on the alter in Jewish Temples and renewed periodically. See showbread. SHIELDERS (13) SHIELDING (14) [verb] To protect, to defend. | [verb] To protect from the influence of | [noun] The situation, in NMR spectroscopy, in which a local magnetic field is weakened by the presence of neighbouring nuclei SHIELINGS (13) [noun] An area of summer pasture used for cattle, sheep etc. | [noun] A shepherd's hut or shack. SHIFTABLE (17) SHIFTIEST (15) [adjective] Subject to frequent changes in direction. | [adjective] (of a person's eyes) Moving from one object to another, not looking directly and steadily at the person with whom one is speaking. | [adjective] Having the appearance of being dishonest, criminal or unreliable. SHIFTLESS (15) [adjective] Lazy, unmotivated | [adjective] Untrustworthy as a result of being incompetent at the job | [adjective] Destitute of shifts or expedients; lacking proper means SHIGELLAE (13) [noun] A bacterium in the genus Shigella, some kinds of which may cause a form of dysentery called shigellosis. SHIGELLAS (13) SHIITAKES (16) [noun] A wide, brown variety of edible mushroom, Lentinula edodes. SHIKAREES (16) SHIKARRED (17) SHILLALAH (15) SHILLALAS (12) SHILLINGS (13) [noun] A coin formerly used in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Malta, Australia, New Zealand and many other Commonwealth countries. | [noun] The currency of Kenya, Somalia, Tanzania and Uganda. | [noun] A currency in the United States, differing in value between states. SHIMMERED (17) [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. SHIMMYING (20) [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. SHINBONES (14) [noun] The inner and usually the larger of the two bones of the leg or hind limb below the knee | [noun] A segment of an insect's leg. SHINGLERS (13) SHINGLING (14) [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. SHININESS (12) SHINLEAFS (15) SHINNEYED (16) SHINNYING (16) [verb] To climb in an awkward manner. 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) SHIPBORNE (16) SHIPLOADS (15) [noun] The amount (of cargo) that a ship can carry. SHIPMATES (16) [noun] A fellow sailor serving on the same ship as another. | [noun] Any sailor (when used as a form of address by a sailor). SHIPMENTS (16) [noun] A load of goods that is transported by any method (not just by ship) | [noun] The act of transporting goods SHIPOWNER (17) [noun] Someone who owns a ship. SHIPPABLE (18) SHIPPINGS (17) SHIPSHAPE (19) [adjective] (originally nautical) Meticulously neat and tidy. | [adverb] (originally nautical) Neatly and tidily to a meticulous extent. SHIPSIDES (15) SHIPWORMS (19) [noun] Any of several wormlike marine mollusks (not true worms) of the family Teredinidae, that bore through the wooden hulls of ships and other woody material immersed in salt water. SHIPWRECK (23) [noun] A ship that has sunk or run aground so that it is no longer seaworthy. | [noun] An event where a ship sinks or runs aground. | [noun] Destruction; ruin; irretrievable loss SHIPYARDS (18) [noun] A place where ships are built and repaired. SHIRRINGS (13) SHIRTIEST (12) [adjective] Ill-tempered or annoyed. SHIRTINGS (13) [noun] Any fabric used to make shirts. | [noun] Shirts collectively. SHIRTLESS (12) [adjective] (chiefly of a man) Not wearing a shirt; having a bare torso. | [adjective] Very poor. SHIRTTAIL (12) [noun] The single or split (then rather plural) bottom part of a shirt, below the waist, especially in the back, which, when not tucked into trousers or other vestment, hangs over the wearer's tail-end, like a tail. | [noun] (by extension) The tail-end or periphery of something. | [noun] A tenuous connection. SHITHEADS (16) [noun] A stupid or contemptible person. | [noun] A card game, the aim of which is to lose one's cards SHITTIEST (12) [adjective] Very bad; unpleasant; miserable; insignificant. | [adjective] Under the influence of illicit drugs or alcohol; drunk; high. | [adjective] Annoyed. SHIVAREED (16) SHIVAREES (15) [noun] The noisy banging of pots and pans as a mock serenade to a newly married couple, or similar occasion. | [noun] Any loud cacophonous noise or hubbub. SHIVERERS (15) SHIVERING (16) [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. SHLEMIEHL (17) SHLEMIELS (14) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. SHLEPPING (17) SHLUMPING (17) SHMALTZES (23) SHMOOZING (24) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SHOALIEST (12) SHOCKABLE (20) SHODDIEST (14) [adjective] Of poor quality or construction | [adjective] Pretentious, sham, counterfeit | [adjective] Ambitious by reason of newly-acquired wealth; nouveau riche SHOEBILLS (14) [noun] Balaeniceps rex, a tall wading bird related to the stork, native to tropical African swamps; the sole species of the family Balaenicipitidae. SHOEBLACK (20) [noun] One who cleans and polishes shoes (and boots) as an occupation. SHOEHORNS (15) [noun] A smooth tool that assists in putting the foot into a shoe, by sliding the heel in after the toe is in place. This reduces discomfort and damage to the back of the shoe. By slipping it into the back of the shoe behind the heel, the user prevents the heel from squashing down the back of the shoe and causing difficulty; instead the heel slides down the smooth shoehorn, which then comes out easily once the foot is in place. | [noun] Anything by which a transaction is facilitated; a medium. | [noun] Anything which draws on or allures; an inducement. SHOELACES (14) [noun] A lace used for fastening a shoe. SHOEMAKER (18) [noun] A person who makes shoes | [noun] The threadfish. | [noun] A fish, Elagatis pinnulatis, the runner. SHOEPACKS (20) [noun] A shoe, especially a warm, waterproofed boot. SHOETREES (12) SHOGUNATE (13) SHOOFLIES (15) SHOOTINGS (13) [noun] An instance of shooting with a gun or other weapon. | [noun] The sport or activity of firing a gun or other weapon. | [noun] A district in which people have the right to kill game with firearms. SHOOTOUTS (12) [noun] A decisive battle, especially a gunfight. | [noun] A penalty shootout. | [noun] A series of penalty shots during which a tied game is resolved. SHOPGIRLS (15) [noun] A girl who works in a shop; a young saleswoman. SHOPHROTH (20) SHOPLIFTS (17) [verb] To steal something from a shop / store during trading hours. | [verb] To steal from shops / stores during trading hours. SHOPPINGS (17) SHOPTALKS (18) SHOREBIRD (15) [noun] A bird, or species of birds, that is found near the edge of bodies of water. SHORELINE (12) [noun] The divide between land and a body of water. | [noun] The line on a map that illustrates this. SHORESIDE (13) [adjective] Located on or near a shore SHOREWARD (16) [noun] The side facing the shore. | [adjective] In the direction of the shoreline, relatively speaking. | [adjective] Facing the shore. SHORTAGES (13) [noun] A lack or deficiency; an insufficient amount. SHORTCAKE (18) [noun] A sweet cake or biscuit (crumbly leavened bread) typically made with flour, sugar, salt, butter, milk or cream, and sometimes eggs, and leavened with baking powder or baking soda. | [noun] A dessert made with such a cake, typically having layers of cream and fruit. SHORTCUTS (14) [noun] A path between two points that is faster than the commonly used paths. | [noun] A method to accomplish something that omits one or more steps. | [noun] (in the Microsoft family of operating systems) A file that points to the location of another file and serves as a quick way to access it. SHORTENED (13) [verb] To make shorter; to abbreviate. | [verb] To become shorter. | [verb] To make deficient (as to); to deprive (of). SHORTENER (12) SHORTFALL (15) [noun] An instance of not meeting a quota, debt, or monthly payment on a debt or other obligation, or of having an insufficient amount to cover such obligations. | [noun] The amount by which a quota, debt, or monthly payment on a debt or other obligation is missed; the difference between the actual quota or debt and the lesser amount available to pay such obligations. SHORTHAIR (15) [noun] Any of several breeds of domestic cat with relatively short hair, slender body and large head. 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. SHORTHORN (15) [noun] One of a breed of cattle, originating in England, with distinctively short horns (in contrast to longhorn cattle). | [adjective] Describing cattle that have distinctively short horns. SHORTLIST (12) [noun] A list of candidates selected from a longer list, and from which one or more successful candidates are in turn selected. | [verb] To place something on a short list SHORTNESS (12) [noun] The property of being short, of being small of stature or brief. | [noun] The result or product of being short. | [noun] The property of being short or terse. SHORTSTOP (14) [noun] The infield defensive player that stands between the second baseman and the third baseman. | [noun] A nimble defender. | [noun] A player who is short of money. SHORTWAVE (18) [noun] An electromagnetic wave having a wavelength between approximately 10 and 100 meters, corresponding to frequencies between 3 and 30 MHz. | [noun] (usually in plural) Any frequency in this range, especially when used in broadcasting. | [adjective] (of radio waves) Having a wavelength of approximately 10 to 100 meters SHOULDERS (13) [noun] The part of an animal's body between the base of the neck and forearm socket. | [noun] Anything forming a shape resembling a human shoulder. | [noun] (topography) A shelf between two levels. SHOULDEST (13) SHOVELERS (15) [noun] One who, or that which, shovels. | [noun] Any of four species of dabbling duck, in the genus Anas, with distinctive spatulate bills. SHOVELFUL (18) SHOVELING (16) [verb] To move materials with a shovel. | [verb] To move with a shoveling motion. | [noun] The act by which something is shovelled. SHOVELLED (16) [verb] To move materials with a shovel. | [verb] To move with a shoveling motion. SHOVELLER (15) [noun] One who, or that which, shovels. | [noun] Any of four species of dabbling duck, in the genus Anas, with distinctive spatulate bills. SHOWBIZZY (38) [adjective] Of or pertaining to showbiz; glitzy, glamorous (possibly implying a lack of intellectual depth). SHOWBOATS (17) [noun] A river steamboat having a resident theatre. | [noun] (by extension) A showoff. | [verb] To show off. 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. SHOWCASES (17) [noun] A case for displaying merchandise or valuable items. | [noun] A setting, occasion, or medium for exhibiting something or someone, especially in an attractive or favorable aspect. | [verb] To display, demonstrate, show, or present. SHOWDOWNS (19) [noun] The final battle between two nemeses, in which there can be but one victor. | [noun] The final round in a poker match, where the all remaining players' cards have to be put down on the table and shown. SHOWERERS (15) SHOWERING (16) [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 SHOWGIRLS (16) [noun] A non-starring but physically beautiful female dancer in an often lavishly produced theatrical revue; a chorine. SHOWINESS (15) SHOWPIECE (19) [noun] Something that exhibits exceptional quality, something worth being shown. | [noun] Something made specifically to be displayed. SHOWPLACE (19) [noun] A building or estate shown for its beauty or noteworthiness. | [noun] A location kept for display only. SHOWRINGS (16) SHOWROOMS (17) [noun] A room in a business set aside for the display of the company's products. | [noun] A room or apartment where a show is exhibited. SHREDDERS (14) [noun] A machine that tears up objects into smaller pieces, especially a paper shredder or garbage shredder. | [noun] A program that overwrites deleted data to prevent recovery. | [noun] Someone who snowboards; a snowboarder. SHREDDING (15) [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. SHREWDEST (16) [adjective] Showing clever resourcefulness in practical matters. | [adjective] Artful, tricky or cunning. | [adjective] Streetwise. SHREWDIES (16) SHREWLIKE (19) SHRIEKERS (16) SHRIEKIER (16) SHRIEKING (17) [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. | [noun] A sound that shrieks. SHRIEVING (16) SHRILLEST (12) [adjective] High-pitched and piercing. | [adjective] Having a shrill voice. | [adjective] Sharp or keen to the senses. SHRILLING (13) [verb] To make a shrill noise. | [noun] A sound that shrills. SHRIMPERS (16) [noun] One who fishes for or catches shrimp. | [noun] A boat used in fishing for shrimp. SHRIMPIER (16) SHRIMPING (17) [verb] To fish for shrimp. | [verb] To contract; to shrink. SHRINKAGE (17) [noun] The act of shrinking, or the proportion by which something shrinks. | [noun] The loss of merchandise through theft, spoilage, and obsolescence. | [noun] The reduction in size of the male genitalia when cold, such as from immersion in cold water. SHRINKERS (16) SHRINKING (17) [verb] To cause to become smaller. | [verb] To become smaller; to contract. | [verb] To cower or flinch. SHRIVELED (16) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SHROFFING (19) SHROUDING (14) [verb] To cover with a shroud. | [verb] To conceal or hide from view, as if by a shroud. | [verb] To take shelter or harbour. SHRUBBERY (19) [noun] A planting of shrubs; a wide border to a garden where shrubs are thickly planted; or a similar larger area with a path winding through it. | [noun] Shrubs collectively. SHRUBBIER (16) SHRUGGING (15) [verb] To raise (the shoulders) to express uncertainty, lack of concern, (formerly) dread, etc. | [noun] The act of one who shrugs. SHTETLACH (17) [noun] A Jewish village or small town, especially one in Eastern Europe. SHUCKINGS (19) SHUDDERED (15) [verb] To shake nervously, often from fear or horror. | [verb] To vibrate jerkily. SHUFFLERS (18) SHUFFLING (19) [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. SHUNPIKED (19) SHUNPIKER (18) SHUNPIKES (18) SHUTDOWNS (16) [noun] The action of stopping operations; a closing, of a computer, business, event, etc. | [noun] A statement, insult, etc. that prevents the opponent from replying further. | [noun] An autistic response to stress, etc. where the individual becomes silent and motionless. SHUTTERED (13) [verb] To close shutters covering. | [verb] To close up (a building) for a prolonged period of inoccupancy. | [verb] To cancel or terminate. SHUTTLING (13) [verb] To go back and forth between two places. | [verb] To transport by shuttle or by means of a shuttle service. | [noun] The act by which something is shuttled. SHWANPANS (17) SHYLOCKED (22) SHYNESSES (15) SIALIDANS (10) SIBILANCE (13) SIBILANTS (11) [noun] A consonant having a hissing sound such as the 's' or 'sh' in 'sash' or 'surge'. SIBILATED (12) [verb] To hiss. | [verb] To speak with a hissing sound. SIBILATES (11) [verb] To hiss. | [verb] To speak with a hissing sound. SIBYLLINE (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a sibyl or female oracle, especially the Cumaean Sibyl and the Sibylline Books. | [adjective] (by extension) Having oracle-like predicting powers, clairvoyant. | [adjective] Mysterious. SICKENERS (15) [noun] One who, or that which, sickens. | [noun] A small, bright red and possibly poisonous russula or brittlegill (Russula emetica). SICKENING (16) [verb] To make ill. | [verb] To become ill. | [verb] To fill with disgust or abhorrence. SICKISHLY (21) SICKLEMIA (17) SICKLIEST (15) [adjective] Frequently ill or in poor health. | [adjective] Not in good health; (somewhat) sick. | [adjective] (of a plant) Characterized by poor or unhealthy growth. SICKLYING (19) SICKROOMS (17) [noun] A room to be used by someone who is ill. SIDEBANDS (13) [noun] The band of frequencies each side of the frequency of a carrier wave; formed as a result of modulation of the carrier. 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. SIDEBURNS (12) [noun] Facial hair reaching from the top of the head down the side of the face to the side of the chin. SIDEDNESS (11) SIDEDRESS (11) SIDEHILLS (13) [noun] The side or slope of a hill; a sloping descent. SIDEKICKS (20) [noun] An assistant to another person, especially to a superior or more important person. SIDELIGHT (14) [noun] A light found at the side of something; especially of a vehicle. | [noun] A window found at one or both sides of a door. 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. SIDELINER (10) SIDELINES (10) [noun] A line at the side of something. | [noun] Something that is additional or extra or that exists around the edges or margins of a main item. | [noun] A line for hobbling an animal by connecting the fore and the hind feet of the same side. SIDEPIECE (14) SIDERITES (10) SIDESHOWS (16) [noun] A minor attraction at a larger event such as a circus, fair, music festival or similar | [noun] An incidental spectacle that diverts attention from a larger concern | [noun] An incident in which drivers block traffic to perform donuts for an extended period of time SIDESLIPS (12) [noun] A flight manoeuvre that moves the aircraft sideways without turning it. SIDESPINS (12) SIDESTEPS (12) [noun] A step to the side. | [noun] A motion, physical or metaphorical, to avoid or dodge something. | [verb] To step to the side. SIDESWIPE (15) [noun] A blow with the side of something, such as the side of car that is changing lanes incautiously. | [noun] A catty or sarcastic remark. | [verb] To give a blow with the side, as to strike with the side of a car when turning. SIDETRACK (16) [noun] A second, relatively short length of track just to the side of a railroad track, joined to the main track by switches at one or both ends, used either for unloading freight, or to allow two trains on a same track to meet (opposite directions) or pass (same direction); a railroad siding. | [noun] (sometimes) Any auxiliary railroad track, as differentiated from a siding, that runs adjacent to the main track. | [noun] A smaller tunnel or well drilled as an auxiliary off a main tunnel or well. SIDEWALKS (17) [noun] A footpath, usually paved, at the side of a road for the use of pedestrians; a pavement (UK) or footpath (Australia, New Zealand) | [noun] (by extension) any paved footpath, even if not located at the side of a road SIDEWALLS (13) SIDEWARDS (14) [adjective] Toward a side. | [adverb] Toward a side. SIEROZEMS (20) SIFFLEURS (15) SIGHTINGS (14) [noun] The act of catching sight of something, especially something searched for. SIGHTLESS (13) [adjective] Unable to be seen; out of sight; not visible. | [adjective] Not appearing on the surface. | [adjective] Apparently, but not actually, offline. SIGHTLIER (13) SIGHTSEEN (13) [verb] To go sightseeing; to visit places of interest in a city, town or geographical area. SIGHTSEER (13) [noun] One who goes sightseeing; one who goes around to look at sights or see things of interest; a tourist. SIGHTSEES (13) [verb] To go sightseeing; to visit places of interest in a city, town or geographical area. SIGMOIDAL (13) SIGNALERS (10) SIGNALING (11) [verb] To indicate; to convey or communicate by a signal. | [verb] To communicate with (a person or system) by a signal. | [noun] (usually biochemistry) The sending of a biochemical or other type of signal. SIGNALISE (10) [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. SIGNALIZE (19) [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. SIGNALLED (11) [verb] To indicate; to convey or communicate by a signal. | [verb] To communicate with (a person or system) by a signal. SIGNALLER (10) SIGNALMAN (12) [noun] Somebody employed to operate the signals and points of a railway. | [noun] A member of the armed forces responsible for signalling. | [noun] Somebody employed to direct rigging or crane operations by providing a different point of view. SIGNALMEN (12) [noun] Somebody employed to operate the signals and points of a railway. | [noun] A member of the armed forces responsible for signalling. | [noun] Somebody employed to direct rigging or crane operations by providing a different point of view. SIGNATORY (13) [noun] One who signs or has signed something. | [adjective] Relating to a seal; used in sealing. | [adjective] Signing; joining or sharing in a signature. SIGNATURE (10) [noun] A person's name, written by that person, used as identification or to signify approval of accompanying material, such as a legal contract. | [noun] An act of signing one's name; an act of producing a signature. | [noun] The part of a doctor’s prescription containing directions for the patient. SIGNBOARD (13) [noun] A board carrying a sign, or on which signs may be posted. SIGNETING (11) SIGNIFICS (15) 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. SIGNIFIER (13) [noun] Something or someone that signifies, makes something more significant or important. | [noun] The sound of spoken word or string of letters on a page that a person recognizes as a sign. SIGNIFIES (13) [verb] To create a sign out of something. | [verb] To give (something) a meaning or an importance. | [verb] To show one’s intentions with a sign etc.; to indicate, announce. SIGNORIES (10) [noun] A territory or domain, especially under a feudal lordship. | [noun] Overlordship, dominion. | [noun] A ruling assembly, specifically of various Italian republics; a signoria. SIGNORINA (10) [noun] A courtesy title for an unmarried woman of Italian origin. | [noun] Maitake, hen of the woods (mushroom) SIGNORINE (10) SIGNPOSTS (12) [noun] A post bearing a sign that gives information on directions | [noun] (cryptic crosswords) A word or phrase within a clue that serves as an indicator, rather than being fodder. SILENCERS (11) [noun] Something that silences. SILENCING (12) [verb] To make (someone or something) silent. | [verb] To repress the expression of something. | [verb] To suppress criticism, etc. SILENTEST (9) SILICATES (11) [noun] Any salt of silica or of one of the silicic acids; any mineral composed of silicates SILICEOUS (11) [adjective] Of, relating to, consisting of, or resembling silica or silicates. SILICIDES (12) [noun] Any compound of silicon with a more electropositive element SILICIOUS (11) [adjective] Of, relating to, consisting of, or resembling silica or silicates. SILICIUMS (13) SILICONES (11) [noun] Any of a class of inert, semi-inorganic polymeric compounds (polysiloxanes), that have a wide range of thermal stability and extreme water repellence, used in a very wide range of industrial applications, and in prosthetic replacements for body parts. SILICOSES (11) SILICOSIS (11) [noun] A disease of the lungs caused by the inhalation of crystalline silica dust. SILICOTIC (13) SILICULAE (11) SILKALINE (13) SILKINESS (13) SILKOLINE (13) SILKWEEDS (17) SILKWORMS (18) [noun] Any of various caterpillars of moths that produce silk cocoons, especially Bombyx mori, the source of most commercial silk. SILLABUBS (13) [noun] A drink dating back to the 16th century consisting primarily of milk curdled with an alcoholic beverage or some acid such as lemon juice, which is usually then sweetened and spiced. | [noun] Also everlasting syllabub or solid syllabub: a dessert pudding derived from the drink. | [noun] Something lacking substance; something frothy, insubstantial, or lightweight. SILLIBUBS (13) SILLINESS (9) [noun] That which is perceived as silly or frivolous. | [noun] An act that is silly; a result of being silly. SILOXANES (16) [noun] Any of a class of compound having a short repeating unit of silicon and oxygen atoms (either in a chain or a ring), typically with organic side chains SILTATION (9) SILTSTONE (9) [noun] A sedimentary rock whose composition is intermediate in grain size between the coarser sandstone and the finer mudstone. SILUROIDS (10) [noun] Any catfish of the Siluridae family. SILVERERS (12) SILVERING (13) [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. SIMARUBAS (13) SIMAZINES (20) SIMILARLY (14) [adverb] (manner) In a like style or manner. | [adverb] Used to link similar items SIMMERING (14) [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. SIMOLEONS (11) [noun] A dollar. SIMONIACS (13) [noun] One who carries on or is guilty of simony. SIMONISTS (11) SIMONIZED (21) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMONIZES (20) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMPATICO (15) [adjective] (of a person) Having a compatible temperament or pleasing qualities. SIMPERERS (13) SIMPERING (14) [verb] To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, or smug manner. | [verb] To glimmer; to twinkle. | [noun] The act of one who simpers. SIMPLETON (13) [noun] A simple-minded person lacking common sense. SIMPLEXES (20) [noun] An analogue in any dimension of the triangle or tetrahedron: the convex hull of n+1 points in n-dimensional space. | [noun] A simple word, one without affixes. SIMPLICES (15) SIMPLICIA (15) SIMPLISMS (15) SIMPLISTS (13) SIMULACRA (13) [noun] An image or representation. | [noun] A faint trace or semblance. SIMULACRE (13) SIMULANTS (11) [noun] Something that simulates something else such as, for example, a gemstone. 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. SIMULATES (11) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. SIMULATOR (11) [noun] One who simulates or feigns. | [noun] A machine or system that simulates an environment (such as an aircraft cockpit), often for training purposes. SIMULCAST (13) [noun] A program or event that is broadcast across more than one medium or service at the same time. | [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SINAPISMS (13) SINCERELY (14) [adverb] In a sincere or earnest manner; honestly. | [adverb] A conventional formula for ending a letter, used when the salutation addresses the person for whom the letter is intended by his or her name. SINCEREST (11) [adjective] Genuine; meaning what one says or does; heartfelt. | [adjective] Meant truly or earnestly. | [adjective] Clean; pure SINCERITY (14) [noun] The quality or state of being sincere; honesty of mind or intention; freedom from simulation, hypocrisy, disguise, or false pretense. SINCIPITA (13) SINCIPUTS (13) [noun] The front part of the head or skull (as contradistinct from occiput). SINECURES (11) [noun] A position that requires no work but still gives an ample payment; a cushy job. | [noun] An ecclesiastical benefice without the care of souls. SINGLETON (10) [noun] A playing card that is the only one of its suit in a hand, especially at bridge. | [noun] A hand containing only one card of a certain suit. | [noun] A single object, especially one of a group. SINGSONGS (11) [noun] A piece of verse with a simple, song-like rhythm. | [noun] An informal gathering at which songs are sung; a singing session. | [noun] Bad singing or poetry. SINGSONGY (14) SINGSPIEL (12) [noun] An early German form of opera consisting of spoken dialogue interspersed with song. | [noun] An opera in this style. SINGULARS (10) [noun] (grammar) A form of a word that refers to only one person or thing. | [noun] That which is not general; a specific determinate instance. 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. SINICIZES (20) [verb] To make something Chinese in form or character. | [verb] To convert to Chinese characters or to enable to work with the Chinese script. SINISTRAL (9) [adjective] Of, facing, or on the left side. | [adjective] Left-handed. | [adjective] (of certain spiral shells) Having the whorls of the spire revolving or rising to the left; reversed. SINKHOLES (16) [noun] A hole formed in soluble rock by the action of water, serving to conduct surface water to an underground passage | [noun] A depressed area in which waste or drainage collects. | [noun] A hole in the playfield that rewards the player when the ball is guided into it. SINLESSLY (12) SINOLOGUE (10) SINTERING (10) [verb] To compact and heat a powder to form a solid mass. | [noun] A process in which the particles of a powder are welded together by pressure and heating to a temperature below its melting point SINUATING (10) SINUOSITY (12) [noun] The property of being sinuous. SINUOUSLY (12) SINUSITIS (9) [noun] An inflammation of one or more paranasal sinuses. SINUSOIDS (10) [noun] A curve having the shape of a sine wave. | [noun] Any of several channels through which venous blood passes in various organs. SIPHONING (15) [verb] To transfer (liquid) by means of a siphon. | [verb] To steal or skim off in small amounts; to embezzle. SIRENIANS (9) [noun] Any of a group of aquatic, herbivorous mammals, of the order Sirenia, including the manatees and dugong. SIRVENTES (12) SISSIFIED (13) [adjective] Made like a sissy; effete. | [verb] To make sissy; to emasculate. SISTERING (10) SITARISTS (9) SITUATING (10) [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. SITUATION (9) [noun] The combination of circumstances at a given moment; a state of affairs. | [noun] The way in which something is positioned vis-à-vis its surroundings. | [noun] The place in which something is situated; a location. SITZMARKS (24) [noun] An indentation in the snow made by a fallen skier. SIXPENCES (20) [noun] The value of six old pence; half of a shilling; or one-fortieth of a pound sterling. | [noun] A former British coin worth sixpence, first minted in 1551. SIXTEENMO (18) [noun] Sextodecimo (as a paper size in printing). SIXTEENTH (19) [noun] One of sixteen equal parts of a whole. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number sixteen. SIXTIETHS (19) [noun] The person or thing in the sixtieth position. | [noun] One of sixty equal parts of a whole. SJAMBOKED (25) SKEDADDLE (16) [noun] The act of running away; a scurrying off. | [verb] To move or run away quickly. | [verb] To spill; to scatter. SKELETONS (13) [noun] The system that provides support to an organism, internal and made up of bones and cartilage in vertebrates, external in some other animals. | [noun] An anthropomorphic representation of a skeleton. | [noun] A very thin person. SKELTERED (14) SKEPSISES (15) SKEPTICAL (17) [adjective] Having, or expressing doubt; questioning. | [adjective] Of or relating to philosophical skepticism or the skeptics. SKETCHERS (18) SKETCHIER (18) [adjective] Roughly or hastily laid out; intended for later refinement. | [adjective] Resembling a comedy sketch, of sketch quality. | [adjective] Of questionable or doubtful quality. SKETCHILY (21) SKETCHING (19) [verb] To make a brief, basic drawing. | [verb] To describe briefly and with very few details. | [noun] Something drawn briefly and basically; a sketch. SKEWBACKS (24) [noun] The side of an arch; the course of masonry on the top of an abutment with a slope for the base of the arch to rest against. SKEWBALDS (19) [noun] A skewbald horse. SKEWERING (17) [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. SKIAGRAMS (16) SKIBOBBER (19) SKIDDIEST (15) 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. SKIDOOING (15) [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. SKIDPROOF (19) SKIFFLING (20) SKIJORERS (20) SKIJORING (21) [noun] The winter sport of a person being towed on skis, especially by sled dogs | [verb] To cross-country ski behind one or more dogs or horses, or a vehicle. SKILLINGS (14) [noun] A Scandinavian monetary unit and coin up to the 19th century. (A subdivision of the Swedish riksdaler, the Danish and Norwegian rigsdaler and speciedaler). | [noun] A bay of a barn. | [noun] A small addition to a cottage. SKIMMINGS (18) SKIMOBILE (17) [noun] Snowmobile SKIMPIEST (17) [adjective] Small or inadequate; not generous, or of a garment, very small, light, or revealing. SKINFLINT (16) [noun] One who is excessively stingy or cautious with money; a tightwad; a miser. SKINHEADS (17) [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. SKINNIEST (13) [adjective] Thin, generally in a negative sense (as opposed to slim, which is thin in a positive sense). | [adjective] (of food or beverages) Low-fat. | [adjective] Naked; nude (chiefly used in the phrase skinny dipping). SKINTIGHT (17) [adjective] Conforming tightly to the body, snug against the skin. SKIORINGS (14) SKIPJACKS (28) [noun] Any of several unrelated fish. | [noun] An upstart. | [noun] An elaterid; a click beetle. SKIPLANES (15) SKIPPABLE (19) [adjective] Capable of being skipped. | [adjective] Not worth watching or doing; missable. SKIPPERED (18) [verb] To captain a ship or a sports team. | [verb] To take shelter in a barn or shed. SKIRTINGS (14) [noun] Skirting board | [noun] Skirts collectively; material for skirts | [noun] The act of one who skirts around something, or avoids it. 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. SKIVVYING (23) [verb] To perform menial work; to do chores, like a servant. SKLENTING (14) SKREEGHED (18) SKREIGHED (18) SKULLCAPS (17) [noun] A small domed cap that covers the area from the forehead to just above the back of the neck. | [noun] A yarmulke-like hat worn as an element of ghetto fashion. | [noun] The calvaria, the top part of the skull, covering the cranial cavity containing the brain. SKYDIVERS (20) [noun] Someone who skydives. SKYDIVING (21) [verb] To be in freefall after jumping from an aircraft and landing safely by deploying a parachute. | [noun] The practice of performing acrobatic movements during the freefall phase of a parachute jump. SKYJACKED (30) [verb] To steal or commandeer (hijack) an airplane, usually by threat of violence to the passengers. SKYJACKER (29) SKYLARKED (21) [verb] (originally nautical) To jump about joyfully, frolic; to play around, play tricks. SKYLARKER (20) SKYLIGHTS (20) [noun] A window, dome, or opening in the roof or ceiling, to admit natural light. | [noun] Diffuse sky radiation—solar radiation reaching the earth's surface after having been scattered from the direct solar beam by molecules or suspensoids in the atmosphere. | [noun] A hole in the upper part of a lava tube, yielding a view of the lava within. SKYROCKET (22) [noun] A type of firework that uses a solid rocket engine to rise quickly into the sky where it emits a variety of effects such as stars, bangs, crackles, etc. | [noun] (by extension) A rebuke, a scolding. | [noun] Pocket. SKYWRITER (19) SKYWRITES (19) 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. SLACKNESS (15) SLAGGIEST (11) SLALOMING (12) [verb] To race in a slalom. | [verb] To move in a slalom-like manner. SLANDERED (11) [verb] To utter a slanderous statement about; baselessly speak ill of. SLANDERER (10) SLANGIEST (10) [adjective] Including or given to slang. SLANGUAGE (11) [noun] (somewhat informal) A particular vernacular or vocabulary of slang; the jargon or lingo of a particular group. SLANTWAYS (15) SLANTWISE (12) [adjective] Diagonal, in a direction or orientation between cardinal axes | [adverb] Diagonally, in a direction or orientation between cardinal axes SLAPHAPPY (21) [adjective] Incoherent from being struck; punch drunk. | [adjective] In a humorous mood as a result of fatigue; silly from being tired. | [adjective] Irresponsibly free. SLAPJACKS (24) [noun] A type of pancake, or flapjack. | [noun] A simple card game similar to snap. SLAPSTICK (17) [noun] A style of humor focusing on physical comedy, such as slipping on a banana peel, and with foolish characters who get into humiliating situations. | [noun] A pair of sticks attached at one end and used to create a slapping sound effect, used especially in slapstick comedy; a type of clapper. SLASHINGS (13) SLATELIKE (13) 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. SLATTERNS (9) [noun] A slut, a sexually promiscuous woman. | [noun] A dirty and untidy woman. SLATTINGS (10) SLAUGHTER (13) [noun] The killing of animals, generally for food. | [noun] A massacre; the killing of a large number of people. | [noun] A rout or decisive defeat. SLAVERERS (12) SLAVERIES (12) SLAVERING (13) [verb] To drool saliva from the mouth; to slobber. | [verb] To fawn. | [verb] To smear with saliva issuing from the mouth. SLAVISHLY (18) [adverb] In a slavish manner. SLEAZEBAG (21) [noun] A morally reprehensible, disreputable, or sleazy person. SLEAZIEST (18) [adjective] Marked by low quality; inferior; inadequate. | [adjective] Raunchy or perverted in nature; tastelessly sexual | [adjective] Untrustworthy SLEDDINGS (12) [noun] The act of sliding downhill, or transporting something, on a sled. SLEEKENED (14) SLEEKIEST (13) SLEEKNESS (13) SLEEPIEST (11) [adjective] Tired; feeling the need for sleep. | [adjective] Suggesting tiredness. | [adjective] Tending to induce sleep; soporific. SLEEPINGS (12) SLEEPLESS (11) [adjective] Characterized by an absence of sleep. SLEEPLIKE (15) SLEEPOVER (14) [noun] The act of spending the night as a guest in another's house, especially when the participants are children. | [noun] An overnight guest. SLEEPWALK (18) [verb] To walk and/or perform other actions while sleeping; to somnambulate. SLEEPWEAR (14) [noun] Garments designed to be worn in bed; nightclothes SLEETIEST (9) SLEEVELET (12) SLEIGHERS (13) SLEIGHING (14) [verb] To ride or drive a sleigh. | [noun] A ride on a sleigh. SLENDERER (10) [adjective] Thin; slim. | [adjective] Meagre; deficient | [adjective] (Gaelic languages) Palatalized. SLENDERLY (13) SLEUTHING (13) [verb] To act as a detective; to try to discover who committed a crime, or, more generally, to solve a mystery. | [noun] Detective work SLICEABLE (13) SLICKNESS (15) SLICKROCK (21) SLIDEWAYS (16) [noun] Any form of track along which things can slide. SLIGHTEST (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. SLIGHTING (14) [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. SLIMEBALL (13) [noun] A round lump made up of or coated with slime or a slime-like substance such as mucus. | [noun] (originally United States) A person who is regarded as slimy (that is, sneaky or underhanded) or otherwise undesirable. SLIMINESS (11) SLIMPSIER (13) SLIMSIEST (11) SLINGSHOT (13) [noun] A Y-shaped stick with an elastic sling between the arms used for shooting small projectiles. | [noun] A stationary, often triangular object that launches any ball that hits its longest side back at a high force, now usually located above the flipper and between it and the inlane, with one each for both lower flippers. | [verb] To move or cause to move in a manner resembling a projectile shot from a slingshot. SLINKIEST (13) [adjective] Furtive, stealthy or catlike. | [adjective] Thin; lank; lean. | [adjective] Of a garment: close-fitting; clingy. SLIPCASED (14) SLIPCASES (13) [noun] A box, open on one end, for keeping a set of books together. SLIPCOVER (16) [noun] A fitted protective or decorative cover that may be slipped off and on a piece of upholstered furniture, usually made of cloth. SLIPFORMS (16) [noun] A type of process for setting concrete which uses moveable forms that are moved and reused once the concrete is stiff enough to retain its shape under its own weight. | [noun] A moveable form used when setting concrete using the slipform technique. | [verb] To use the slipform technique when creating a concrete structure. SLIPKNOTS (15) [noun] A knot which attaches a line to an object and tightens when pressure is applied. Also called a running knot. | [noun] A knot which attaches a line to the middle of another, allowing it to slide SLIPOVERS (14) [noun] Any garment that is easy to put on, especially a dress or top. SLIPPAGES (14) [noun] The act of slipping, especially from a secure location. | [noun] The amount by which something has slipped. | [noun] A lessening of performance or achievement. SLIPPERED (14) [verb] To spank with a plimsoll as corporal punishment. | [adjective] Wearing slippers. SLIPPIEST (13) [adjective] (slightly informal) Slippery. | [adjective] Spry, nimble. SLIPSLOPS (13) SLIPSOLES (11) SLIPWARES (14) SLITHERED (13) [verb] To move about smoothly and from side to side. | [verb] To slide SLIVERERS (12) SLIVERING (13) [verb] To cut or divide into long, thin pieces, or into very small pieces; to cut or rend lengthwise; to slit. SLIVOVITZ (24) [noun] A type of rakija made mostly in Eastern European countries from distilled, fermented plum juice. | [noun] A serving of this alcoholic drink. SLOBBERED (14) [verb] To allow saliva or liquid to run from one's mouth; to drool. SLOBBERER (13) SLOBBIEST (13) [adjective] Slobbish. | [adjective] Slobbery. | [adjective] Slushy, like slob ice. SLOGANEER (10) [noun] Someone who makes and spreads slogans | [verb] To make and disseminate slogans; often contrasted with substantive debate SLOGANIZE (19) SLOPPIEST (13) [adjective] Very wet; covered in or composed of slop. | [adjective] Messy; not neat, elegant, or careful. | [adjective] Imprecise or loose. SLOPWORKS (18) SLOSHIEST (12) [adjective] That sloshes or splashes SLOTBACKS (17) [noun] A particular position in American football, often a running back who lines up near the line of scrimmage and can function as a wide receiver. | [noun] A particular position in Canadian football, similar to a hybrid between wide receiver and running back. This position is more common in the Canadian game than its American counterpart. SLOUCHERS (14) SLOUCHIER (14) [adjective] Given to slouching. SLOUCHILY (17) SLOUCHING (15) [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. SLOUGHIER (13) SLOUGHING (14) [verb] To shed (skin). | [verb] To slide off (like a layer of skin). | [verb] To discard. SLOWDOWNS (16) [noun] A reduction in speed, or a decrease in the level of production, etc. SLOWPOKES (18) [noun] (mildly) A person who moves slowly or takes a long time to do something. SLOWWORMS (17) SLUBBERED (14) SLUBBINGS (14) SLUDGIEST (11) SLUGABEDS (13) [noun] A lazy person who lies in bed after the usual time for getting up; a sluggard. SLUGFESTS (13) [noun] A baseball game in which many runs are scored, especially by home runs. | [noun] A game or match in which heavy blows are exchanged. | [noun] Tough, heated contest SLUGGARDS (12) [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. SLUICEWAY (17) [noun] A man-made channel designed to redirect excess water 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. SLUMBERER (13) SLUMBROUS (13) SLUMLORDS (12) [noun] A person who makes money by renting housing that is kept in poor condition. SLUMMIEST (13) [adjective] Like a slum; run-down, dirty, decrepit. SLUNGSHOT (13) SLURRYING (13) SLUSHIEST (12) [adjective] Covered in slush. | [adjective] Having the consistency of slush. | [adjective] (of a person) Soupy. SLUTTIEST (9) [adjective] Of or resembling a slut. SLYNESSES (12) SMALLAGES (12) SMALLNESS (11) [noun] The state or quality of being small. | [noun] The result or product of being small. SMALTINES (11) SMALTITES (11) SMARAGDES (13) SMARMIEST (13) [adjective] Falsely earnest, smug, or ingratiating. | [adjective] Unctuous, greasy, as hair from pomade 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. SMARTNESS (11) SMARTWEED (15) [noun] Any of a number of plants in the genus Persicaria (formerly Polygonum). SMATTERED (12) SMATTERER (11) [noun] One who smatters; one who dabbles in or experiments with a little bit of everything, especially knowledge. SMEARCASE (13) SMEARIEST (11) SMECTITES (13) [noun] Any of many clay phyllosilicate minerals that have a relatively open structure. SMECTITIC (15) SMELLIEST (11) [adjective] Having a bad smell. | [adjective] Having a quality that arouses suspicion. | [adjective] (in extreme programming) Having signs that suggest a design problem; having a code smell. SMIDGEONS (13) [noun] A very small quantity or amount. SMIERCASE (13) SMILELESS (11) SMILINGLY (15) SMIRCHING (17) [verb] To dirty; to make dirty. | [verb] To harm the reputation of; to smear or slander. SMIRKIEST (15) [adjective] Smirking, or as if smirking | [adjective] Smart; spruce. SMOCKINGS (18) SMOGGIEST (13) SMOKEABLE (17) SMOKEJACK (28) SMOKELESS (15) [adjective] Without smoke. SMOKELIKE (19) SMOKEPOTS (17) SMOKINESS (15) 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. SMOOCHING (17) [verb] To kiss. | [verb] To soil, stain or smudge. SMOOTHENS (14) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMOOTHERS (14) [noun] One who, or that which, smooths. | [noun] In glass-cutting, an abrading-wheel for polishing the aces of the grooves cut by another wheel. | [noun] A flatterer. SMOOTHEST (14) [verb] To make smooth or even. | [verb] To make straightforward or easy. | [verb] To calm or palliate. SMOOTHIES (14) [noun] A smooth-talking person. | [noun] A drink made from whole fruit, thus thicker than fruit juice. | [noun] A member of the mod subculture who is relatively non-violent and wears expensive clothing. SMOOTHING (15) [verb] To make smooth or even. | [verb] To make straightforward or easy. | [verb] To calm or palliate. 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 SMOULDERS (12) [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. SMUDGIEST (13) [adjective] Marked with smudges. | [adjective] Like a thick smoke (such as is emitted by a smudge pot). SMUGGLERS (13) [noun] One who smuggles things. | [noun] A vessel employed in smuggling. SMUGGLING (14) [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. SMUTCHIER (16) SMUTCHING (17) SMUTTIEST (11) [adjective] Soiled with smut; blackened, dirty. | [adjective] Obscene, indecent. | [adjective] Affected with the smut fungus. SNAFFLING (16) [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. SNAGGIEST (11) [adjective] Covered in snags, or similar sharp projections. SNAILLIKE (13) SNAKEBIRD (16) [noun] A darter: any bird of the genus Anhinga. | [noun] A wryneck SNAKEBITE (15) [noun] The bite of a snake. | [noun] A mixture of cider and lager. | [noun] One of a pair of lip piercings below the lower lip, supposed to resemble the fangs of a snake. SNAKELIKE (17) SNAKEROOT (13) [noun] Any member of the genus Ageratina of perennials and rounded shrubs from the sunflower family, growing mainly in the warmer regions of the Americas. | [noun] Any of various plants of other genera, including Eupatorium, Asarum canadense (Canadian snakeroot), Aristolochia serpentaria (Virginia snakeroot), Eryngium cuneifolium, Plantago major, Polygala senega (Seneca snakeroot) and Rauvolfia serpentina (Indian snakeroot). SNAKESKIN (17) [noun] The skin of a snake | [adjective] Made of snakeskin. SNAKEWEED (17) [noun] Any of various unrelated plants reputed to cure snakebite. | [noun] A poisonous American plant of the genus Gutierrezia. SNAPBACKS (19) [noun] The reimposition of an earlier and usually higher tariff. | [noun] An adjustable, flat-brimmed baseball cap with snap fasteners on the back. SNAPPIEST (13) [adjective] Rapid and without delay. | [adjective] Irritable. | [adjective] Tidy; well-dressed; sharp. SNAPSHOTS (14) [noun] A photograph, especially one taken quickly or in a moment of opportunity. | [noun] A glimpse of something; a portrayal of something at a moment in time. | [noun] A file or set of files captured at a particular time, often capable of being reloaded to restore the earlier state. SNAPWEEDS (15) SNARKIEST (13) [adjective] Snide and sarcastic; usually out of irritation, often humorously. | [adjective] Irritable, irritated. SNARLIEST (9) [adjective] Given to snarling or growling. | [adjective] Full of snarls. SNATCHERS (14) SNATCHIER (14) SNATCHING (15) [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. SNAZZIEST (27) [adjective] Elegant in manner of dress; stylish, modern or appealing in appearance; flashy. | [adjective] Excellent; clever, ingenious, or adept in behavior, operation, or execution. SNEAKERED (14) SNEAKIEST (13) [adjective] Difficult to catch due to constantly outwitting the adversaries | [adjective] Dishonest; deceitful. SNEEZIEST (18) 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. SNICKERER (15) SNIDENESS (10) SNIFFIEST (15) [adjective] Disdainful; haughty. | [adjective] Characterised by sniffing. SNIFFLERS (15) SNIFFLING (16) [verb] To make a whimpering or sniffing sound when breathing, because of a runny nose. | [verb] To utter with a whimpering or sniffing sound. | [noun] A sniffle sound or action. SNIGGERED (12) [verb] To emit a snigger. SNIGGERER (11) SNIGGLERS (11) SNIGGLING (12) [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. SNIPPIEST (13) [adjective] Fragmentary; snipped. | [adjective] Irritable; impatient; short-tempered. | [adjective] Stingy. SNITCHERS (14) SNITCHING (15) [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. SNIVELERS (12) SNIVELING (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. 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. SNOBBIEST (13) [adjective] Characteristic of a snob. SNOBBISMS (15) 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. SNOOPIEST (11) SNOOTIEST (9) [adjective] Pompous; snobbish; inclined to turn up one's nose | [adjective] Elite; exclusive SNOOZIEST (18) SNOOZLING (19) SNORKELED (14) [verb] To use a snorkel. SNORKELER (13) SNOTTIEST (9) [adjective] Running or dirtied with snot. | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of snot, especially in texture. | [adjective] Ill-tempered or impertinent in an arrogant, conceited manner. SNOUTIEST (9) SNOWBALLS (14) [noun] A ball of snow, usually one made in the hand and thrown for amusement in a snowball fight; also a larger ball of snow made by rolling a snowball around in snow that sticks to it and increases its diameter. | [noun] A cocktail made from lemonade and advocaat. | [noun] Something that snowballs (grows rapidly out of control). SNOWBANKS (18) SNOWBELLS (14) [noun] Any member of the genus Soldanella of flowering plants native to European mountains, typically with a basal rosette of simple, orbicular leaves and white to violet flowers. | [noun] A styrax. SNOWBELTS (14) SNOWBERRY (17) [noun] A shrub bearing white berries: | [noun] The fruit of shrubs of these genera. SNOWBIRDS (15) [noun] A bird, Junco hyemalis, the dark-eyed junco. | [noun] A bird seen primarily in the winter time. | [noun] The snow bunting (Plectrophenax nivalis). 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. SNOWBRUSH (17) SNOWDRIFT (16) [noun] A bank of snow accumulated by the wind. SNOWDROPS (15) [noun] Any of the 20 species of the genus Galanthus of the Amaryllidaceae, bulbous flowering plants, bearing a solitary, pendulous, white, bell-shaped flower that appears, depending on species, between autumn and late winter or early spring, all native to temperate Eurasia. | [verb] To steal clothing (especially women's underwear) from a clothesline. SNOWFALLS (15) [noun] An instance of falling of snow. | [noun] The amount of snow that falls on one occasion. SNOWFIELD (16) [noun] A large permanent expanse of snow on a mountain or at the head of a glacier. SNOWFLAKE (19) [noun] A crystal of snow, having approximate hexagonal symmetry. | [noun] Any of several bulbous European plants, of the genus Leucojum, having white flowers. | [noun] The snow bunting, Plectrophenax nivalis. SNOWINESS (12) SNOWLANDS (13) SNOWMAKER (18) SNOWMELTS (14) SNOWMOLDS (15) SNOWPACKS (20) [noun] An accumulation of packed snow, usually the seasonal amount. SNOWPLOWS (17) [verb] To clear (roads, etc) using a snow plow. | [verb] To perform a snow plow in skiing. SNOWSCAPE (16) [noun] A landscape dominated by snow. SNOWSHEDS (16) SNOWSHOED (16) [verb] To travel using snowshoes. SNOWSHOER (15) SNOWSHOES (15) [noun] A flat item of footwear worn to facilitate walking in deep snow. | [verb] To travel using snowshoes. SNOWSLIDE (13) [noun] An avalanche of snow SNOWSTORM (14) [noun] Bad weather involving blowing winds and snow, or blowing winds and heavy snowfall amount. | [noun] A snow globe. SNOWSUITS (12) [noun] An all-in-one waterproof insulating garment. SNUBBIEST (13) SNUFFIEST (15) SNUFFLERS (15) SNUFFLIER (15) SNUFFLING (16) [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. | [noun] A breathy noise; a snuffle SNUGGLING (12) [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. | [noun] A snuggle. SOAPBARKS (17) SOAPBERRY (16) [noun] Any woody plant of the genus Sapindus, which is eponymous of the Sapindaceae family | [noun] The fruit of such a plant, especially of the tree Sapindus saponaria. SOAPBOXES (20) [noun] A crate for packing soap. | [noun] Any physical or media platform which gives prominence to the person on it and the views they espouse. | [noun] A talk about one's pet topic (or the topic itself), especially when only tangentially relevant to an ongoing discussion. SOAPINESS (11) SOAPSTONE (11) [noun] A soft rock, rich in talc, also containing serpentine and either magnetite, dolomite or calcite | [verb] To scrub with soapstone. SOAPWORTS (14) [noun] Any perennial herb of the genus Saponaria. SOBERIZED (21) SOBERIZES (20) SOBERNESS (11) [noun] The state or quality of being sober. SOBRIQUET (20) [noun] A familiar name for a person (typically a shortened version of a person’s given name). SOCIABLES (13) [noun] A sociable person. | [noun] A four-wheeled open carriage with seats facing each other. | [noun] A tricycle for two persons side by side. SOCIALISE (11) [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 SOCIALISM (13) [noun] Any of various economic and political theories advocating collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods. | [noun] The intermediate phase of social development between capitalism and communism in Marxist theory in which the state has control of the means of production. | [noun] Any left-wing ideology, government regulations, or policies promoting a welfare state, nationalisation, etc. SOCIALIST (11) [noun] One who practices or advocates socialism. | [adjective] Of, promoting, practicing, or characteristic of socialism. SOCIALITE (11) [noun] A person (often a woman) of social prominence, considered to be an influential figure. | [noun] A person who goes to fashionable parties and is often written about in the newspapers, etc. SOCIALITY (14) SOCIALIZE (20) [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 SOCIETIES (11) [noun] A long-standing group of people sharing cultural aspects such as language, dress, norms of behavior and artistic forms. | [noun] A group of people who meet from time to time to engage in a common interest; an association or organization. | [noun] The sum total of all voluntary interrelations between individuals. SOCIOGRAM (14) SOCIOLOGY (15) [noun] The study of society, human social interaction and the rules and processes that bind and separate people not only as individuals, but as members of associations, groups and institutions SOCIOPATH (16) [noun] A person with an antisocial personality disorder, exhibiting antisocial behavior that usually is the result of social and environmental factors in the person's early life. SOCKETING (16) [verb] To place or fit in a socket. SODALISTS (10) SODALITES (10) SODAMIDES (13) SODBUSTER (12) [noun] An agricultural labourer or farmer. SODDENING (12) [verb] To drench, soak or saturate. | [verb] To become soaked. SODOMISTS (12) SODOMITES (12) [noun] One who practices sodomy; a sodomist. | [noun] A native or inhabitant of Sodom SODOMITIC (14) 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. SODOMIZES (21) [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. SOFTBACKS (20) [noun] A softcover or paperback book. SOFTBALLS (14) [noun] A game similar to baseball but played with a larger and softer ball which can be thrown overhand or underhand. | [noun] The ball used to play the sport. | [noun] (by analogy) A question designed to be easy to answer. SOFTBOUND (15) SOFTCOVER (17) [noun] A book having such covers. | [adjective] (of a book) Having covers made of paper or thin cardboard; paperback. SOFTENERS (12) [noun] One who, or that which, softens. SOFTENING (13) [verb] To make something soft or softer. | [verb] To undermine the morale of someone (often soften up). | [verb] To make less harsh | [noun] The process of making something soft. SOFTHEADS (16) SOFTSHELL (15) [noun] A softshell turtle (Trionychidae). | [adjective] Having a relatively soft shell. SOFTWARES (15) SOFTWOODS (16) [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. SOGGINESS (11) SOILBORNE (11) SOJOURNED (17) [verb] To reside somewhere temporarily, especially as a guest or lodger. SOJOURNER (16) SOLANDERS (10) [noun] A box, in the form of a book, used for keeping botanical specimens etc; drop-spine or clamshell box SOLANINES (9) SOLARISED (10) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLARISES (9) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLARISMS (11) SOLARIUMS (11) [noun] An establishment with sunbeds in it or where one can rent sunbeds. | [noun] A room, with many windows, exposed to the sun. | [noun] A sundial. SOLARIZED (19) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLARIZES (18) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLATIONS (9) SOLDERERS (10) SOLDERING (11) [verb] To join items together, or to coat them with solder | [verb] To join things as if with solder. | [noun] A method of joining two metallic surfaces by melting an alloy between them. 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. SOLDIERLY (13) [adjective] In the way of, or appropriate to, a soldier. SOLECISED (12) SOLECISES (11) SOLECISMS (13) [noun] An erroneous or improper usage. | [noun] (grammar) Error in the use of language. | [noun] A faux pas or breach of etiquette; a transgression against the norms of expected behavior. SOLECISTS (11) SOLECIZED (21) SOLECIZES (20) SOLEMNEST (11) SOLEMNIFY (17) SOLEMNITY (14) [noun] The quality of being deeply serious and sober or solemn. | [noun] An instance or example of solemn behavior; a rite or ceremony performed with reverence. | [noun] A feast day of the highest rank celebrating a mystery of faith such as the Trinity, an event in the life of Jesus, the Virgin Mary, or another important saint. SOLEMNIZE (20) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLENOIDS (10) [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. SOLEPLATE (11) [noun] The flat metal plate forming the underside of an iron (for ironing laundry). | [noun] A solepiece (timber). SOLFATARA (12) [noun] An area of volcanic activity that gives off sulfurous steam. SOLFEGGIO (14) [noun] A method of sight singing music that uses the syllables do (originally ut), re, mi, fa, sol (or so), la, and si (or ti) to represent the pitches of the scale, most commonly the major scale. The fixed-do system uses do for C, and the movable-do system uses do for whatever key the melody uses (thus B is do if the piece is in the key of B). 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. SOLICITOR (11) [noun] One who solicits. | [noun] In many common law jurisdictions, a type of lawyer whose traditional role is to offer legal services to clients apart from acting as their advocate in court. A solicitor instructs a barrister to act as an advocate for their client in court, although rights of audience for solicitors vary according to jurisdiction. | [noun] In English Canada and in parts of Australia, a type of lawyer who historically held the same role as above, but whose role has in modern times been merged with that of a barrister. SOLIDAGOS (11) [noun] The goldenrod, or any of various similar plants in the genus Solidago. SOLIDNESS (10) SOLILOQUY (21) [noun] The act of a character speaking to themselves so as to reveal their thoughts to the audience. | [noun] (authorship) A speech or written discourse in this form. | [verb] (very rare) To issue a soliloquy. SOLIPSISM (13) [noun] The theory that the self is all that exists or that can be proven to exist. | [noun] Self-absorption, an unawareness of the views or needs of others; self-centeredness; egoism. SOLIPSIST (11) SOLIQUIDS (19) SOLITAIRE (9) [noun] A person who lives alone; a recluse or hermit. | [noun] A game for one person, played on a board with pegs or balls, in which the object is, beginning with all the places filled except one, to remove all but one of the pieces by "jumping", as in draughts. | [noun] Any of various card games that can be played by one person. Called patience in the rest of the world. SOLITUDES (10) [noun] Aloneness; state of being alone or solitary, by oneself. | [noun] A lonely or deserted place. SOLLERETS (9) SOLONCHAK (18) SOLSTICES (11) [noun] One of the two points in the ecliptic at which the sun is furthest from the celestial equator. This corresponds to one of two days in the year when the day is either longest or shortest. SOLUTIONS (9) [noun] A homogeneous mixture, which may be liquid, gas or solid, formed by dissolving one or more substances. | [noun] An act, plan or other means, used or proposed, to solve a problem. | [noun] The answer to a problem. SOLVATING (13) [verb] To form such a complex upon solution SOLVATION (12) SOLVENTLY (15) SOMBREROS (13) [noun] A kind of hat with a high conical or cylindrical crown and a saucer-shaped brim, highly embroidered, made of plush felt. | [noun] A mixed drink with coffee liqueur and cream. | [noun] A series of four consecutive strikes. SOMEPLACE (15) [noun] An unspecified location. | [adverb] Somewhere. SOMERSETS (11) SOMETHING (15) [noun] An object whose nature is yet to be defined. | [noun] An object whose name is forgotten by, unknown or unimportant to the user, e.g., from words of a song. Also used to refer to an object earlier indefinitely referred to as 'something' (pronoun sense). | [verb] Applied to an action whose name is forgotten by, unknown or unimportant to the user, e.g. from words of a song. SOMETIMES (13) [adjective] Former; sometime. | [adverb] On certain occasions, or in certain circumstances, but not always. | [adverb] On a certain occasion in the past; once. SOMEWHATS (17) SOMEWHERE (17) [noun] Unspecified or unknown (unlocated) place or location. | [adverb] In an uncertain or unspecified location. | [adverb] To an uncertain or unspecified location. SOMMELIER (13) [noun] The member of staff at a restaurant who keeps the wine cellar and advises the guests on a choice of wines; a wine steward / stewardess, a wine waiter / waitress / server. | [verb] To act as a sommelier. SOMNOLENT (11) [adjective] Drowsy or sleepy. | [adjective] Causing literal or figurative sleepiness; soporific. SONATINAS (9) [noun] A musical composition resembling a sonata but shorter or simpler. SONGBIRDS (13) [noun] A bird having a melodious song or call. SONGBOOKS (16) [noun] A book containing songs. SONGFESTS (13) SONGFULLY (16) SONGSMITH (15) [noun] A writer of songs. SONGSTERS (10) [noun] A man who sings songs, especially as a profession; a male singer. | [noun] A male songbird. | [noun] One who writes songs. SONICALLY (14) SONICATED (12) [verb] To disrupt with ultrasonic sound waves. SONICATES (11) [verb] To disrupt with ultrasonic sound waves. SONNETEER (9) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A writer of sonnets or small poems. | [verb] To compose sonnets. SONNETING (10) [verb] To compose sonnets. | [verb] To celebrate in sonnets; to write a sonnet about. SONNETTED (10) SONOBUOYS (14) [noun] A buoy that sends a radio signal when it detects the sound of underwater objects (such as submarines). SONOGRAMS (12) [noun] A medical image produced by ultrasound echo | [noun] A spectrogram SONORANTS (9) [noun] A speech sound that is produced without turbulent airflow in the vocal tract; the generic term of vowel, approximant, nasal consonant, etc. SONOVOXES (19) SOOCHONGS (15) SOOTHFAST (15) SOOTHSAID (13) SOOTHSAYS (15) SOOTINESS (9) SOPAPILLA (13) [noun] A small, crisp, puffy, deep-fried pastry often served with honey. SOPHISTIC (16) SOPHISTRY (17) [noun] Cunning, sometimes manifested as trickery. | [noun] The art of using deceptive speech or writing. | [noun] An argument that seems plausible, but is fallacious or misleading, especially one devised deliberately to be so. SOPHOMORE (16) [noun] A second-year undergraduate student in a college or university, or a second-year student in a four-year secondary school or high school. | [noun] A three-year-old horse. | [adjective] The second in a series, especially, the second of an artist’s albums or the second of four years in a high school (tenth grade) or university. SOPORIFIC (16) [noun] Something inducing sleep, especially a drug. | [noun] Something boring or dull. | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) Tending to induce sleep. SOPPINESS (13) SOPRANINO (11) [noun] A musical instrument, especially a saxophone or recorder, that is a pitch higher than the soprano instrument of its class SORBITOLS (11) SORCERERS (11) [noun] A magician or wizard, sometimes specifically male. SORCERESS (11) [noun] A female sorcerer, especially one who is elegant; compare witch. SORCERIES (11) SORCEROUS (11) SOREHEADS (13) [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. SORORATES (9) SOROSISES (9) SORPTIONS (11) SORRINESS (9) SORROWERS (12) SORROWFUL (15) [adjective] (of a person) exhibiting sorrow; dejected; distraught. | [adjective] Producing sorrow; causing grief. SORROWING (13) [verb] To feel or express grief. | [verb] To feel grief over; to mourn, regret. | [noun] The act of feeling sorrow. SORTIEING (10) [verb] To sally. SORTILEGE (10) [noun] Witchcraft, magic, especially as a means of making decisions or predictions. SORTITION (9) [noun] Selection by drawing lots SOSTENUTO (9) [noun] A note or passage marked to be sustained | [adverb] Played in a sustained manner beyond the notes normal value SOTTISHLY (15) SOUBRETTE (11) [noun] A female attendant or servant, especially one who is cheeky or mischievous, often featuring in theatrical comedies. SOUCHONGS (15) SOUFFLEED (16) SOULFULLY (15) SOUNDABLE (12) SOUNDINGS (11) [noun] The action of the verb to sound. | [noun] Test made with a probe or sonde. | [noun] A measured depth of water. SOUNDLESS (10) [adjective] Without sound. | [adjective] Not capable of being sounded or fathomed. SOUNDNESS (10) [noun] The state or quality of being sound. | [noun] The result or product of being sound. | [noun] The property (of an argument) of not only being valid, but also of having true premises. SOUPSPOON (13) [noun] A spoon for eating soup, characterised by having a round bowl rather than the usual oval bowl of other types of spoon. | [noun] A soupspoonful. SOURBALLS (11) SOURDINES (10) SOURDOUGH (14) [noun] A type of bread dough leavened with yeast and lactobacilli that produce acids giving a sour taste. | [noun] An old-timer, especially in Alaska. | [noun] A permanent resident of the territory. Someone who has lived in the Yukon during all four seasons. SOURWOODS (13) [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. SOUTACHES (14) [noun] A narrow braid often decorated with a herringbone pattern SOUTHEAST (12) [noun] The direction of the cardinal compass point halfway between south and east, specifically 135°, abbreviated as SE. | [adjective] Southeastern, southeasternmost; occupying a position that is relatively southeast of another. | [adjective] Towards the southeast; southeastwards. SOUTHERLY (15) [noun] A wind blowing from the south. | [adjective] Coming from the south. | [adjective] Facing the south; directed towards the south. SOUTHERNS (12) SOUTHINGS (13) [noun] A distance traveled southward. | [noun] The time when the moon souths. SOUTHLAND (13) SOUTHPAWS (17) [noun] One who is left-handed, especially in sports. | [noun] A boxer who leads with the right hand and guards with the left SOUTHRONS (12) 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. SOUTHWEST (15) [noun] The compass point halfway between south and west, specifically 225°, abbreviated as SW. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the southwest; southwestern. | [adjective] Towards the southwest, southwestwards, southwestern. SOUVENIRS (12) [noun] An item of sentimental value, to remember an event or location. | [verb] To take (an article) as a souvenir, especially illicitly, for example during wartime. SOUVLAKIA (16) [noun] Any of several Greek dishes such as kalamaki, giros, kebab and shawarma. | [noun] A wrapped pancake dish filled with meat, salad and some kind of sauce or dressing, commonly called a kebab. SOUVLAKIS (16) [noun] Any of several Greek dishes such as kalamaki, giros, kebab and shawarma. | [noun] A wrapped pancake dish filled with meat, salad and some kind of sauce or dressing, commonly called a kebab. SOVEREIGN (13) [noun] A monarch; the ruler of a country. | [noun] One who is not a subject to a ruler or nation. | [noun] A gold coin of the United Kingdom, with a nominal value of one pound sterling but in practice used as a bullion coin. SOVIETISM (14) SOVIETIZE (21) SOVKHOZES (28) [noun] A large, state-owned farm in the Soviet Union. SOWBREADS (15) [noun] Cyclamen, plant of the genus Cyclamen SPACEBAND (16) SPACELESS (13) SPACEPORT (15) [noun] A site for launching spacecraft. SPACESHIP (18) [noun] A vehicle that flies through space. | [noun] A finite pattern that reappears after a certain number of generations in the same orientation but in a different position. | [noun] The operator <=> in the Perl, PHP and Ruby programming languages, which compares two values and indicates whether the first is lesser than, greater than, or equal to the second. SPACEWALK (20) [noun] Any activity by an astronaut outside of a spacecraft or space station in space; extravehicular activity. | [verb] To perform a spacewalk. SPACEWARD (17) SPACKLING (18) [noun] Something used to spackle; a material that fills cracks or holes. SPADEFISH (18) [noun] Any of several marine fish of the family Ephippidae | [noun] Polyodon spathula, the paddlefish. SPADEFULS (15) SPADEWORK (19) [noun] Work done by digging with a spade. | [noun] Work done in preparation for something else. SPADILLES (12) [noun] The ace of spades in omber and quadrille. SPAETZLES (20) SPAGHETTI (15) [noun] A type of pasta made in the shape of long thin strings. | [noun] A dish that has spaghetti as a main part of it, such as spaghetti bolognese. | [noun] Any type of pasta. SPAGYRICS (17) [noun] A spagyrist. SPALLABLE (13) SPALPEENS (13) [noun] A poor migratory farm worker in Ireland, often viewed as a rascal or mischievous and cunning person. | [noun] (sometimes affectionate) A good-for-nothing person. SPANCELED (14) SPANDEXES (19) SPANDRELS (12) [noun] The space (often more or less triangular) between the outer curve of an arch (the extrados) and a straight-sided figure that bounds it; the space between two contiguous arches and a straight feature above them. | [noun] Horizontal member between the windows of successive storeys of a tall building. | [noun] The triangular space under a stair; the material that fills the space. SPANDRILS (12) SPANGLIER (12) SPANGLING (13) [verb] To sparkle, flash or coruscate. | [verb] To fix spangles to; bespangle; to adorn with stars | [noun] A sparkling metallic ornamentation. SPANKINGS (16) [noun] A form of physical punishment in which a beating is applied to the buttocks. | [noun] An incident of such punishment, or such physical act in a non-punitive context, such as a birthday spanking. SPANWORMS (16) [noun] A measuring worm or inchworm (Lepidoptera, Geometridae) SPARABLES (13) [noun] A small headless nail used in making shoes (especially the heels) SPAREABLE (13) SPARENESS (11) SPARERIBS (13) [noun] A cut of meat including the rib bones. SPARINGLY (15) [adverb] In a sparing manner; with frugality, moderation, scantiness, reserve, forbearance, or the like; sparsely. SPARKIEST (15) [adjective] Lively and animated. SPARKLERS (15) [noun] A hand-held firework that emits sparks. | [noun] A gem or ornament that sparkles. | [noun] A vivacious and charismatic person. SPARKLIER (15) [adjective] Giving off sparks, or small flashes of light; glittery | [adjective] Lively and high-spirited | [adjective] Bubbly or effervescent SPARKLING (16) [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. SPARKPLUG (18) [noun] The part of an internal combustion engine which forms a high-voltage electric spark which ignites the fuel-air mixture to begin the power stroke. | [noun] Someone who is a driving force in new endeavours. SPARLINGS (12) [noun] The European smelt (Osmerus eperlanus). | [noun] A young salmon. | [noun] A tern. SPARRIEST (11) SPARTEINE (11) SPASMODIC (16) [noun] A medicine for suppressing spasms. | [adjective] Of or relating to a spasm; resembling a sudden contraction of the muscles. | [adjective] Convulsive; consisting of spasms. SPATIALLY (14) [adverb] With reference to space or arrangement in space. 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. SPATULATE (11) [verb] To treat or mix with a spatula. | [verb] To incise the end of a pliable cylindrical structure such that the cut end can be splayed apart and flattened | [adjective] Shaped like a spatula; having a rounded, flattened extremity. SPEAKABLE (17) SPEAKEASY (18) [noun] An illegal saloon or tavern, especially one operated during the American Prohibition period in the 1920s. SPEAKINGS (16) SPEARFISH (17) [noun] Any of the marlins in the genus Tetrapturus, a type of fish with the upper jaw elongated into a spearlike bill. | [noun] A striped marlin (Kajikia audax) | [noun] A quillback (Carpioides cyprinus SPEARGUNS (12) [noun] A tube-shaped gun that fires a barbed spear, almost always for underwater use. 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. SPEARMINT (13) [noun] Mentha spicata, A herb of the mint family, commonly used in herb tea, candy and to treat mild stomach ache. SPEARWORT (14) [noun] Any of various perennial herbaceous plants in the Ranunculus (buttercup) genus. SPECIALER (13) SPECIALLY (16) [adverb] For a special purpose, person, or occasion. | [adverb] Extremely | [adverb] In particular SPECIALTY (16) [noun] That in which one specializes; a chosen expertise or talent. | [noun] Particularity. | [noun] A particular or peculiar case. SPECIATED (14) [verb] To form new biological species by the division of an existing one SPECIATES (13) [verb] To form new biological species by the division of an existing one SPECIFICS (18) [noun] A distinguishing attribute or quality. | [noun] A remedy for a specific disease or condition. | [noun] Specification SPECIFIED (17) [adjective] Thoroughly explained. | [verb] To state explicitly, or in detail, or as a condition. | [verb] To include in a specification. SPECIFIER (16) SPECIFIES (16) [verb] To state explicitly, or in detail, or as a condition. | [verb] To include in a specification. | [verb] To bring about a specific result. SPECIMENS (15) [noun] An individual instance that represents a class; an example. | [noun] A sample, especially one used for diagnostic analysis. | [noun] (often preceded with “fine”) An eligible man. SPECKLING (18) [verb] To mark with speckles. | [noun] A pattern of small spots | [noun] Ticking (the fabric) SPECTACLE (15) [noun] An exciting or extraordinary scene, exhibition, performance etc. | [noun] An embarrassing or unedifying scene or situation. | [noun] (usually in the plural) An optical instrument consisting of two lenses set in a light frame, and worn to assist sight, to obviate some defect in the organs of vision, or to shield the eyes from bright light. SPECTATED (14) [verb] To attend an event as a spectator; to observe. SPECTATES (13) [verb] To attend an event as a spectator; to observe. SPECTATOR (13) [noun] One who watches an event; especially, one held outdoors. SPECTRUMS (15) [noun] A range; a continuous, infinite, one-dimensional set, possibly bounded by extremes. | [noun] Specifically, a range of colours representing light (electromagnetic radiation) of contiguous frequencies; hence electromagnetic spectrum, visible spectrum, ultraviolet spectrum, etc. | [noun] The autism spectrum. SPECULATE (13) [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. SPECULUMS (15) SPEECHIFY (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. SPEEDBALL (14) [noun] A mix of heroin and cocaine. | [noun] Coffee with espresso. | [noun] A fastball. SPEEDBOAT (14) [noun] A fast boat, usually small (for 1-8 people). | [noun] A boat designed and built for racing. | [noun] A boat used for waterskiing. SPEEDIEST (12) [adjective] Rapid; swift SPEEDINGS (13) SPEEDSTER (12) [noun] One who is noted for being very fast. | [noun] A person who speeds (drives fast). | [noun] A vehicle or other device used for racing. SPEEDWAYS (18) [noun] A form of motorcycle racing on flat (without camber) oval dirt tracks using motorcycles with neither brakes nor gears. | [noun] A form of bicycle racing on flat (non-banked) oval dirt tracks. | [noun] A racetrack venue designated especially for the sport of auto racing. SPEEDWELL (15) [noun] A plant of the genus Veronica SPEERINGS (12) SPELLBIND (14) [verb] To captivate, or hold the attention of, as if by a magic spell; to entrance. SPELLINGS (12) [noun] The act, practice, ability, or subject of forming words with letters, or of reading the letters of words; orthography. | [noun] The manner of spelling of words; correct spelling. | [noun] A specific spelling of a word. SPELUNKED (16) SPELUNKER (15) SPENDABLE (14) SPERMATIA (13) SPERMATIC (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling sperm | [adjective] Producing, conveying or containing sperm; seminiferous | [adjective] Generative SPERMATID (14) [noun] A haploid cell, produced by meiosis of a spermatocyte, that develops into a spermatozoon SPERMINES (13) SPHAGNOUS (15) SPHAGNUMS (17) SPHENODON (15) SPHENOIDS (15) [noun] The sphenoid bone. | [noun] A wedge-shaped crystal bounded by four equal isosceles triangles; the hemihedral form of a square pyramid. SPHERICAL (16) [adjective] Shaped like a sphere. | [adjective] Of, or pertaining to, spheres. | [adjective] Of a coordinate system, specifying the location of a point in a plane by using a radius and two angles. SPHERIEST (14) SPHEROIDS (15) [noun] A solid of revolution generated by rotating an ellipse about its major (prolate), or minor (oblate) axis. SPHERULES (14) [noun] A small sphere. SPHINCTER (16) [noun] A ringlike band of muscle that surrounds a bodily opening, constricting and relaxing as required for normal physiological functioning. SPHINGIDS (16) [noun] Any of many hawk moths of the family Sphingidae SPICCATOS (15) SPICEBUSH (18) [noun] The common spicebush, Lindera benzoin, whose leaves have a distinctive strong citrusy aroma. | [noun] Any plant in the genus Calycanthus SPICELESS (13) SPICERIES (13) SPICINESS (13) SPIDERIER (12) SPIDERISH (15) SPIDERWEB (17) [noun] The net-like construct of a spider containing sticky strands to catch prey. | [noun] Something that resembles a spider's web in being mesh-like, entrapping, or fragile. | [verb] To connect or cover as if with spiderwebs. SPIFFIEST (17) [adjective] Dapper; fine or neat, especially in style of clothing or other appearance. SPIKELETS (15) [noun] A small, or secondary spike, especially one of many in the inflorescence of a grass or sedge. SPIKELIKE (19) 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. SPIKINESS (15) SPILIKINS (15) SPILLABLE (13) SPILLAGES (12) [noun] The process or action of spilling. | [noun] That which has been spilled. SPILLIKIN (15) [noun] One of the straws (or small pieces of wood, ivory, etc.) used in the game of jackstraws or spillikins. SPILLOVER (14) [noun] That which overflows; the excess or side effect. | [noun] The spread of infectious disease between different species of animal and particularly to humans. SPILLWAYS (17) [noun] A path designed to take away overflow safely. SPINACHES (16) [noun] A particular edible plant, Spinacia oleracea, or its leaves. | [noun] Any of numerous plants, or their leaves, which are used for greens in the same way Spinacia oleraceae is. | [noun] Plants with spinach-like leaves that are noxious in some way SPINDLERS (12) SPINDLIER (12) [adjective] Characteristic of a spindle; slender and of weak appearance. SPINDLING (13) [verb] To make into a long tapered shape. | [verb] To take on a long tapered shape. | [verb] To impale on a device for holding paper documents. SPINDRIFT (15) [noun] Sea spray blown from the tops of waves by the wind | [noun] Snow blown by the wind at sea SPINELESS (11) [adjective] Having no spine. | [adjective] Cowardly; uncourageous. SPINELIKE (15) SPINELLES (11) SPININESS (11) SPINNAKER (15) [noun] A supplemental sail to the mainsail, especially a triangular one, used on yachts for running before the wind. SPINNERET (11) [noun] The organ a spider uses to spin its web. | [noun] A multipored device through which a plastic polymer melt is extruded into fibers. SPINNINGS (12) SPINOSITY (14) SPINSTERS (11) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A woman who has never been married, especially one past the typical marrying age according to social traditions. | [noun] One who spins (puts a spin on) a political media story so as to give something a favorable or advantageous appearance; a spin doctor, spin merchant or spin master. | [noun] Someone whose occupation was spinning thread. SPINULOSE (11) [adjective] Covered with small spines. SPIRACLES (13) [noun] A pore or opening used (especially by arthropods and some fish) for respiration. | [noun] The blowhole of a whale, dolphin or other similar species. | [noun] Any small aperture or vent for air or other fluid. SPIRALING (12) [verb] To move along the path of a spiral or helix. | [verb] To cause something to spiral. | [verb] To increase continually. SPIRALLED (12) [verb] To move along the path of a spiral or helix. | [verb] To cause something to spiral. | [verb] To increase continually. SPIRILLUM (13) [noun] Any of various aerobic bacteria of the genus Spirillum, having an elongated spiral form and bearing a tuft of flagella. | [noun] Any of various other spiral-shaped microorganisms. SPIRITING (12) [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. | [noun] The action of a spirit or ghost. SPIRITISM (13) [noun] Spiritualism | [noun] Alternative form of Spiritism SPIRITIST (11) SPIRITOSO (11) SPIRITOUS (11) [adjective] Spirituous | [adjective] High-spirited | [adjective] Of the nature of spirit SPIRITUAL (11) [noun] A Christian religious song, especially one in an African-American style, or a similar non-religious song. | [noun] Any spiritual function, office, or affair. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the spirit or the soul. SPIRITUEL (11) SPIROGYRA (15) [noun] Any of a group of freshwater, filamentous green algae, of the genus Spirogyra, having chloroplasts arranged in spirals. SPITBALLS (13) [noun] A pitch of a baseball that has been partly covered with saliva, illegal at most levels. | [noun] A balled-up piece of paper, moistened with saliva (by chewing) and shot through a drinking straw. SPITFIRES (14) [noun] A cannon | [noun] A person with a fiery temper, someone easily provoked to anger, especially a woman or girl. SPITTOONS (11) [noun] A receptacle for spit. SPLASHERS (14) SPLASHIER (14) [adjective] Relating to making splashes or the sound of splashing. | [adjective] Showy, ostentatious. | [adjective] Splashed with color. SPLASHILY (17) SPLASHING (15) [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 SPLATTERS (11) [noun] An uneven shape or mess created by something dispersing on impact. | [noun] A genre of gory horror. | [verb] To splash; to scatter; to land or strike in an uneven, distributed mess. SPLATTING (12) [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. SPLAYFEET (17) SPLAYFOOT (17) SPLEENFUL (14) [adjective] Full of spleen; spiteful. | [noun] A quantity of invective. | [noun] More than one can take. SPLEENIER (11) SPLENDENT (12) [adjective] Shining; glossy; lustrous | [adjective] Very conspicuous; illustrious. | [adjective] Splendid, marvellous, wonderful SPLENDORS (12) [noun] Great light, luster or brilliance. | [noun] Magnificent appearance, display or grandeur. | [noun] Great fame or glory. SPLENDOUR (12) [noun] Great light, luster or brilliance. | [noun] Magnificent appearance, display or grandeur. | [noun] Great fame or glory. SPLENETIC (13) [noun] A person affected with spleen. | [adjective] Bad-tempered, irritable, peevish, spiteful, habitually angry. | [adjective] Related to the spleen. SPLEUCHAN (16) SPLINTERS (11) [noun] A long, sharp fragment of material, often wood. | [noun] A group that formed by splitting off from a larger membership. | [noun] A double-jump bid which indicates shortage in the bid suit. SPLINTERY (14) SPLINTING (12) [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. SPLITTERS (11) [noun] A person or a thing that splits. | [noun] A quarry worker who splits slate into sheets. | [noun] A scientist in one of various fields who prefers to split categories such as species or dialects up into smaller groups. SPLITTING (12) [verb] Of something solid, to divide fully or partly along a more or less straight line. | [verb] Of something solid, particularly wood, to break along the grain fully or partly along a more or less straight line. | [verb] To share; to divide. SPLODGING (14) [verb] To make a splodge; to render as a splodge. SPLOSHING (15) [verb] To make a heavy splashing sound. | [verb] To traverse mushy or marshy wetlands. | [verb] To spill or spill over. SPLOTCHED (17) [verb] To mark with splotches. SPLOTCHES (16) [noun] An irregular-shaped spot or stain. SPLURGERS (12) SPLURGIER (12) SPLURGING (13) [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. SPLUTTERS (11) [verb] To sputter. | [verb] To spray droplets of saliva from the mouth while speaking. | [verb] To speak hurriedly and confusedly. SPLUTTERY (14) SPODUMENE (14) [noun] A greenish, yellowish or pinkish mineral, a lithium pyroxene (LiAl(SiO3)2) that is an ore of lithium, and a gemstone. SPOILABLE (13) SPOILAGES (12) SPOILSMAN (13) [noun] A politician who serves only for a share of the spoils. SPOILSMEN (13) [noun] A politician who serves only for a share of the spoils. SPOKESMAN (17) [noun] One who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPOKESMEN (17) [noun] One who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPOLIATED (12) [verb] To plunder | [verb] To engage in robbery; to plunder. SPOLIATES (11) [verb] To plunder | [verb] To engage in robbery; to plunder. SPOLIATOR (11) SPONDAICS (14) SPONGIEST (12) [adjective] Having the characteristics of a sponge, namely being absorbent, squishy or porous. | [adjective] Wet; drenched; soaked and soft, like sponge; rainy. | [adjective] Drunk. SPONSIONS (11) SPONSORED (12) [verb] To be a sponsor for. SPONTOONS (11) SPOOKIEST (15) [adjective] Eerie, or suggestive of ghosts or the supernatural. | [adjective] Spooked; afraid; frightened. | [adjective] Unpredictably excitable; skittish (used especially of horses). SPOOLINGS (12) SPOONBILL (13) [noun] Any of various large, long-legged wading birds in the family Threskiornithidae, which also includes the ibises, that have a large, flat, spatulate bill. | [noun] A species of fish, Polyodon spathula, native to the Mississippi/Ohio/Missouri river basin, or extinct close relatives. SPOONFULS (14) [noun] The amount that a spoon will hold, either level or heaped. SPOONIEST (11) [adjective] Enamored in a silly or sentimental way. | [adjective] Feebly sentimental; gushy. SPOONSFUL (14) SPORANGIA (12) [noun] A case, capsule, or container in which spores are produced by an organism. SPORICIDE (14) SPOROCARP (15) SPOROCYST (16) [noun] A cyst that develops from a sporoblast and from which sporozoites develop | [noun] A larval stage in many trematode worms | [noun] A structure in Ascosphaera fungi within which the asci form SPOROGONY (15) [noun] The formation of sporozoites from spores or zygotes. SPOROZOAN (20) [noun] Any of many parasitic protozoans, of the class Sporozoa, that reproduce alternately sexually and asexually via spores; they are responsible for diseases such as malaria SPOROZOON (20) SPORTIEST (11) [adjective] Favourable to sports | [adjective] Flashy in appearance. SPORTSMAN (13) [noun] A man who engages in sports; a male athlete. | [noun] A man who engages in country sports, such as hunting or fishing. SPORTSMEN (13) [noun] A man who engages in sports; a male athlete. | [noun] A man who engages in country sports, such as hunting or fishing. SPORULATE (11) [verb] To produce spores | [adjective] That produces spores SPOTLIGHT (15) [noun] A bright, directional light or lamp, especially one used to illuminate the focus or center of attention on a stage. | [noun] The circle of light shed by a spotlight. | [noun] The center of attention; the highlight or most important part. SPOTTABLE (13) SPOTTIEST (11) [adjective] Having spots; spotted. | [adjective] Of inconsistent quality 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. SPRADDLES (13) [noun] A manner of walking with the legs spread out. | [verb] To spread apart (the legs). | [verb] To spread apart the legs of (someone or something). SPRAINING (12) [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 SPRATTLED (12) SPRATTLES (11) SPRAWLERS (14) SPRAWLIER (14) SPRAWLING (15) [verb] To sit with the limbs spread out. | [verb] To spread out in a disorderly fashion; to straggle. | [noun] The act of one who sprawls. SPREADERS (12) [noun] An object or person who spreads. | [noun] A spacer or device for keeping two objects apart. | [noun] A device used to spread bulk material. SPREADING (13) [verb] To stretch out, open out (a material etc.) so that it more fully covers a given area of space. | [verb] To extend (individual rays, limbs etc.); to stretch out in varying or opposing directions. | [verb] To disperse, to scatter or distribute over a given area. SPRIGGERS (13) SPRIGGIER (13) SPRIGGING (14) [verb] To decorate with sprigs, or with representations of sprigs, as in embroidery or pottery. | [noun] Ornamentation in the form of sprigs or sprays SPRIGHTLY (18) [adjective] Animated, gay or vivacious; lively, spirited. | [adjective] Of a person: full of life and vigour, especially with a light and springy step. | [adjective] Of or relating to a sprite; ghostly, spectral. | [adverb] In a lively and vigorous way; sprightlily. SPRINGALD (13) SPRINGALS (12) SPRINGBOK (18) [noun] A small, fast antelope native to southern Africa, Antidorcas marsupialis. SPRINGERS (12) [noun] A person that springs. | [noun] Anything that springs. | [noun] A spring salmon. SPRINGIER (12) [adjective] That returns rapidly to its original form (as a spring does) after being bent, compressed, stretched, etc. | [adjective] Lively; bouncy. | [adjective] Characteristic of the spring season. SPRINGILY (15) SPRINGING (13) [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 | [verb] To burst forth. | [verb] (of beards) To grow. 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. SPRINKLER (15) [noun] Anything that sprinkles. | [noun] An irrigation device that sprays water into the air whilst moving back and forth. | [noun] A heat-activated device that sprays water in the event of a fire, usually mounted on a ceiling. SPRINKLES (15) [noun] A light covering with a sprinkled substance. | [noun] A light rain shower. | [noun] An aspersorium or utensil for sprinkling. SPRINTERS (11) [noun] One who sprints. SPRINTING (12) [verb] To run, cycle, etc. at top speed for a short period, | [noun] The act or action of the verb to sprint (to run, cycle, etc. at top speed for a short period). SPRITSAIL (11) [noun] A form of three- or four-sided fore-and-aft sail and its rig, supporting the leech of the sail by means of a sprit. SPRITZERS (20) [noun] A chilled long drink, made from white wine and soda water. | [noun] A windscreen washer. | [noun] A spray bottle. SPRITZING (21) [verb] To spray, sprinkle, or squirt lightly. | [verb] To drizzle, to rain lightly. | [noun] The amount applied by a spritz; a small amount of liquid, lightly applied; a sprinkling. SPROCKETS (17) [noun] A toothed wheel that enmeshes with a chain or other perforated band. | [noun] (usually in the plural) The tooth of such a wheel. | [noun] A flared extension at the base of a sloped roof. SPROUTING (12) [verb] To grow from seed; to germinate. | [verb] To cause to grow from a seed. | [verb] To deprive of sprouts. SPRUCIEST (13) SPUNKIEST (15) [adjective] Spirited or plucky. | [adjective] Pertaining to or like spunk (semen). | [adjective] Stained with semen. SPURGALLS (12) SPURRIERS (11) [noun] A maker of spurs. 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. SPUTTERER (11) SPYMASTER (16) [noun] The leader of a group of spies. SQUABBIER (22) 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. SQUABBLER (22) SQUABBLES (22) [noun] A minor fight or argument. | [verb] To participate in a minor fight or argument. | [verb] To disarrange, so that the letters or lines stand awry and require readjustment. SQUADDING (21) SQUADRONS (19) [noun] Primarily, a square; hence, a square body of troops; a body of troops drawn up in a square. | [noun] A body of cavalry comprising two companies or troops, averaging from one hundred and twenty to two hundred soldiers. | [noun] A body of infantrymen made up of several platoons, averaging from eighty to one hundred and fifty men, and led by a captain or a major. SQUALENES (18) SQUALIDER (19) SQUALIDLY (22) SQUALLERS (18) SQUALLIER (18) [adjective] Characterized by squalls, or sudden violent bursts of wind; gusty. | [adjective] Producing or characteristic of loud wails. | [adjective] Interrupted by unproductive spots, as a field of turnips or grain. SQUALLING (19) [verb] To cry or wail loudly. | [noun] The act of one who squalls. SQUAMOSAL (20) [noun] The platelike part of the temporal bone | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the platelike part of the temporal bone SQUANDERS (19) [verb] To waste, lavish, splurge; to spend lavishly or profusely; to dissipate. | [verb] To scatter; to disperse. | [verb] To wander at random; to scatter. SQUASHERS (21) SQUASHIER (21) [adjective] Easily squashed when pressed. | [adjective] Resembling a bog or marsh underfoot. SQUASHILY (24) SQUASHING (22) [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. SQUATNESS (18) SQUATTERS (18) [noun] One who squats, sits down idly. | [noun] One who occupies a building or land without title or permission. | [noun] A large-scale grazier and landowner. SQUATTEST (18) [adjective] Relatively short or low, and thick or broad. | [adjective] Sitting on the hams or heels; sitting close to the ground; cowering; crouching. SQUATTIER (18) SQUATTING (19) [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. SQUAWFISH (27) [noun] A cyprinid fish of the genus Ptychocheilus, a voracious predator on small trout and salmon. SQUAWKERS (25) SQUAWKING (26) [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. SQUAWROOT (21) [noun] Either of two unrelated plants from eastern North America: SQUEAKERS (22) [noun] One who or that which squeaks. | [noun] A party toy that uncoils with a squeaking sound when blown; a party puffer. | [noun] An informer. SQUEAKIER (22) [adjective] Tending to produce a high-pitched sound or squeak. SQUEAKING (23) [verb] To emit a short, high-pitched sound. | [verb] To inform, to squeal. | [verb] To speak or sound in a high-pitched manner. SQUEALERS (18) [noun] Any animal or person who squeals. | [noun] A pig. | [noun] An informant. SQUEALING (19) [verb] To scream with a shrill, prolonged sound. | [verb] To give sensitive information about someone to a third party; to rat on someone. | [noun] The sound of one who squeals; a squeal. SQUEAMISH (23) [adjective] Easily bothered or upset; tending to be nauseated or nervous; oversensitive | [adjective] Averse or reluctant SQUEEGEED (20) [verb] To use a squeegee. SQUEEGEES (19) [noun] A tool consisting of a rubber or similar blade attached at a right angle to a handle, particularly | [noun] A roller used to similar effect, particularly | [noun] A person who uses a squeegee, especially one who "cleans" the windshield of a car stopped at a traffic light and then demands payment. SQUEEZERS (27) SQUEEZING (28) [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. SQUEGGING (21) 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 SQUELCHER (23) SQUELCHES (23) [noun] A squelching sound. | [noun] (radio technology) The suppression of the unwanted hiss or static between received transmissions by adjusting the gain of the receiver. | [noun] A heavy blow or fall. SQUIBBING (23) [verb] To make a sound like a small explosion. | [verb] To throw squibs; to utter sarcastic or severe reflections; to contend in petty dispute. | [noun] A squib; a sarcastic jibe or petty dispute. SQUIDDING (21) [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). | [noun] (parachuting) An improper, partial, parachute inflation, that results in the sides of the parachute folding in on the center, and pulsating back and forth. The action of "to squid". SQUIFFIER (24) [adjective] Slightly drunk or intoxicated; tipsy | [adjective] Crooked, askew; awry SQUIGGLED (21) [verb] To wriggle or squirm | [verb] To make a squiggle | [verb] To write (something) illegibly SQUIGGLES (20) [noun] A short twisting or wiggling line or mark | [noun] The tilde | [noun] An illegible scrawl SQUILGEED (20) SQUILGEES (19) SQUINCHED (24) [verb] To scrunch up (one's face, etc.). SQUINCHES (23) [noun] A structure constructed between two adjacent walls to aid in the transition from a polygonal to a circular structure, as when a dome is constructed on top of a square room. SQUINNIED (19) [verb] To squint. SQUINNIER (18) SQUINNIES (18) [verb] To squint. SQUINTERS (18) SQUINTEST (18) SQUINTIER (18) SQUINTING (19) [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. SQUIREENS (18) [noun] (originally Ireland) A minor squire; a small landowner. SQUIRMERS (20) SQUIRMIER (20) SQUIRMING (21) [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. SQUIRRELS (18) [noun] Any of the rodents of the family Sciuridae distinguished by their large bushy tail. | [noun] A person, usually a freezoner, who applies L. Ron Hubbard's technology in a heterodox manner. | [noun] One of the small rollers of a carding machine which work with the large cylinder. SQUIRTERS (18) SQUIRTING (19) [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. SQUISHIER (21) [adjective] (of an object or substance) Yielding easily to pressure; very soft; especially, soft and wet, as mud. | [adjective] (of a person) Used as a term of endearment. | [adjective] Subjective or vague. SQUISHING (22) [verb] To squeeze, compress, or crush (especially something moist). | [verb] To be compressed or squeezed. SQUOOSHED (22) SQUOOSHES (21) SQUUSHING (22) STABILITY (14) [noun] The condition of being stable or in equilibrium, and thus resistant to change. | [noun] The tendency to recover from perturbations. STABILIZE (20) [verb] To make stable. | [verb] To become stable. STABLEMAN (13) [noun] A person employed to take care of horses in a stable. STABLEMEN (13) [noun] A person employed to take care of horses in a stable. STABLINGS (12) STACCATOS (13) [noun] An articulation marking directing that a note or passage of notes are to be played in an abruptly disconnected manner, with each note sounding for a very short duration, and a short break lasting until the sounding of the next note; as opposed to legato. Staccato is indicated by a dot directly above or below the notehead. | [noun] A passage having this mark. | [noun] Any sound resembling a musical staccato. STACKABLE (17) STAGEABLE (12) STAGEFULS (13) STAGEHAND (14) [noun] A person who works behind the scenes at a theatre or in other theatrical media. STAGELIKE (14) STAGGARDS (12) STAGGARTS (11) 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). STAGGERER (11) STAGGIEST (11) STAGHOUND (14) [noun] Any of several large dogs once bred to hunt stags. STAGINESS (10) STAGNANCY (15) STAGNATED (11) [verb] To cease motion, activity, or progress: STAGNATES (10) [verb] To cease motion, activity, or progress: STAIDNESS (10) STAINABLE (11) STAINLESS (9) [noun] Short for stainless steel. | [adjective] Describing an alloy that is resistant to corrosion and discoloration. | [adjective] Unmarked, spotless. STAIRCASE (11) [noun] A flight of stairs; a stairway. | [noun] A connected set of flights of stairs; a stairwell. | [noun] A set of locks (enclosed sections of waterway) mounted one above the next. STAIRWAYS (15) [noun] A set of steps allowing one to walk up or down. STAIRWELL (12) [noun] A shaft in a multi-story building enclosing a stairway or staircase. STAKEOUTS (13) [noun] The act of watching a location and/or people, generally covertly. STALEMATE (11) [noun] The state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves, resulting in a draw. | [noun] Any situation that has no obvious possible movement, but does not involve any personal loss. | [verb] To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves. STALENESS (9) STALKIEST (13) STALKLESS (13) STALLIONS (9) [noun] An adult male horse. | [noun] A very virile and sexually-inclined man or (rarely) woman. STALWARTS (12) [noun] One who has a strong build. | [noun] One who firmly supports a cause. | [noun] One who is dependable. STALWORTH (15) STAMINATE (11) [adjective] Having functional stamens, but (typically) no pistils. 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. STAMMERER (13) 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. STAMPEDER (14) STAMPEDES (14) [noun] A wild, headlong scamper, or running away, of a number of animals; usually caused by fright; hence, any sudden flight or dispersion, as of a crowd or an army in consequence of a panic. | [noun] A situation in which many people in a crowd are trying to go in the same direction at the same time. | [noun] Any sudden unconcerted moving or acting together of a number of persons, as from some common impulse. STAMPLESS (13) STANCHERS (14) STANCHEST (14) [adjective] Strong and tight; sound; firm. | [adjective] Firm in principle; constant and zealous; loyal; hearty; steadfast. | [adjective] Close; secret; private. STANCHING (15) [verb] To stop the flow of. | [verb] To cease, as the flowing of blood. | [verb] To prop; to make stanch, or strong. STANCHION (14) [noun] A vertical pole, post, or support. | [noun] A framework of such posts, used to secure or confine cattle. | [verb] To erect stanchions, or equip something with stanchions. STANDARDS (11) [noun] A principle or example or measure used for comparison. | [noun] A vertical pole with something at its apex. | [noun] A manual transmission vehicle. STANDAWAY (16) STANDINGS (11) [noun] Position or reputation in society or a profession. | [noun] Duration. | [noun] The act of a person who stands, or a place where someone stands. STANDOFFS (16) [noun] A device which maintains a fixed distance between two objects, especially between a surface and a sign or electrical wiring. | [noun] A deadlocked confrontation between antagonists (see stand off and verb below). STANDOUTS (10) [noun] An exceptional or noteworthy person or thing. STANDPIPE (14) [noun] A vertical pipe into which water is pumped so that a desired pressure is available at the bottom. | [noun] The water supply of a building for the use of firefighters. STANHOPES (14) [noun] A gig, buggy or light phaeton, typically with a high seat and closed back. STANNITES (9) STAPEDIAL (12) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the stapes STAPELIAS (11) [noun] Any of the genus Stapelia of low-growing succulent plants, predominantly from South Africa, and often giving off an odour of rotten flesh. 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. STARCHIER (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to starch. | [adjective] Containing starch. | [adjective] Having the quality of fabric starch as applied to fabric; stiff, hard; starched. STARCHILY (17) STARCHING (15) [verb] To apply or treat with laundry starch, to create a hard, smooth surface. STARDUSTS (10) STARFRUIT (12) [noun] The fruit of the carambola tree, Averrhoa carambola. STARGAZED (20) [verb] To look at the stars at night. STARGAZER (19) [noun] One who stargazes. | [noun] A perciform fish in the family Uranoscopidae. STARGAZES (19) [verb] To look at the stars at night. STARKNESS (13) STARLIGHT (13) [noun] Light emitted from stars other than the Sun. STARLINGS (10) [noun] A family, Sturnidae, of passerine birds. | [noun] A structure of pilings that protects the piers of a bridge. | [noun] A California fish, the rock trout, Hexagrammos, especially, Hexagrammos decagrammus, the boregat or bodieron. STARNOSES (9) STARRIEST (9) [adjective] Having stars visible. | [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a star. | [adjective] Full of stars or celebrities; star-studded. STARSHIPS (14) [noun] A type of spacecraft capable of traveling to the solar systems of other stars STARTLERS (9) STARTLING (10) [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. STARWORTS (12) [noun] Any of several unrelated plants that have a star-shaped flowers or leaves, but especially members of the genus Stellaria. STATEABLE (11) STATEHOOD (13) [noun] The property of being a state. | [noun] The condition of being a country. STATELESS (9) [adjective] Of a system or protocol, such that it does not keep a persistent state between transactions. | [adjective] Without state or pomp. | [adjective] Without a state or nationality, not subject to any state. STATELIER (9) [adjective] Of people: worthy of respect; dignified, regal. | [adjective] Of movement: deliberate, unhurried; dignified. | [adjective] Grand, impressive, imposing. STATEMENT (11) [noun] A declaration or remark. | [noun] A presentation of opinion or position. | [noun] A document that summarizes financial activity. | [verb] To provide an official document of a proposition, especially in the UK a Statement of Special Educational Needs. STATEROOM (11) [noun] An apartment in a palace or great house for use on ceremonial occasions. | [noun] A superior cabin for a ship's officer or captain. | [noun] A private cabin in a ship or train. STATESIDE (10) [adjective] (chiefly outside USA) In the United States. | [adjective] (Alaska) In the 48 contiguous states. | [adverb] (chiefly outside USA) In or to the United States, especially the lower forty-eight. STATESMAN (11) [noun] A man who is a leader in national or international affairs. | [noun] A male political leader who promotes the public good or who is recognized for probity, leadership, or the qualities necessary to govern a state. | [noun] In the dialect of the English Lake District and nearby, a man who lives on a landed estate; a small landholder. STATESMEN (11) [noun] A man who is a leader in national or international affairs. | [noun] A male political leader who promotes the public good or who is recognized for probity, leadership, or the qualities necessary to govern a state. | [noun] In the dialect of the English Lake District and nearby, a man who lives on a landed estate; a small landholder. STATEWIDE (13) [noun] An agency or association operating through a state (political subdivision). | [adjective] Happening in or affecting an entire state (political subdivision of a federal union). | [adjective] Happening in or affecting an entire sovereign state; nationwide. STATIONAL (9) STATIONED (10) [verb] (usually passive) To put in place to perform a task. | [verb] To put in place to perform military duty. STATIONER (9) [noun] A person or business that sells stationery. STATISTIC (11) [noun] A single item in a statistical study. | [noun] A quantity calculated from the data in a sample, which characterises an important aspect in the sample (such as mean or standard deviation). | [noun] A person, or personal event, reduced to being an item of statistical information. STATOCYST (14) [noun] An organ of balance found in some aquatic invertebrates, consisting of a sac-like structure containing a statolith and numerous innervated setae. STATOLITH (12) [noun] A specialized form of amyloplast involved in graviperception by plant roots and most invertebrates. STATUETTE (9) [noun] A small statue, usually a figure much less than life size, especially when of marble or bronze, or of plaster or clay as a preparation for the marble or bronze, as distinguished from a figure in terra cotta etc. STATUTORY (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, enacted or regulated by a statute. STAUMRELS (11) STAUNCHED (15) [verb] To stop the flow of (blood). | [verb] To stop, check, or deter an action. STAUNCHER (14) [adjective] Loyal, trustworthy, reliable. | [adjective] Dependable, persistent. | [noun] One who or that which staunches. STAUNCHES (14) [verb] To stop the flow of (blood). | [verb] To stop, check, or deter an action. STAUNCHLY (17) [adverb] In a staunch manner. STAYSAILS (12) [noun] A fore-and-aft rigged sail whose luff can be affixed to a stay running forward from a mast to the deck, the bowsprit or to another mast. STEADFAST (13) [adjective] Fixed or unchanging; steady. | [adjective] Firmly loyal or constant; unswerving. STEADIERS (10) STEADIEST (10) [adjective] Firm in standing or position; not tottering or shaking; fixed; firm. | [adjective] Constant in feeling, purpose, or pursuit; not fickle, changeable, or wavering; not easily moved or persuaded to alter a purpose; resolute. | [adjective] Smooth and not bumpy or with obstructions. STEADINGS (11) [noun] A farmhouse and outer buildings such as barns, stables, cattle-sheds, etc.; a farmstead; a homestead, an onstead, an estate STEADYING (14) [verb] To stabilize something; to prevent from shaking. | [noun] The process of making something steady; stabilization. STEALABLE (11) STEALAGES (10) STEALINGS (10) STEAMBOAT (13) [noun] A boat or vessel propelled by steam power. | [noun] Hot pot (Chinese dish). | [verb] To travel by steamboat. STEAMERED (12) STEAMIEST (11) [adjective] Warm and humid; full of steam | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of steam | [adjective] Erotic STEAMROLL (11) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEAMSHIP (16) [noun] A ship or vessel propelled by steam power. STEAPSINS (11) STEARATES (9) [noun] Any salt or ester of stearic acid. STEARINES (9) STEATITES (9) [noun] Soapstone STEATITIC (11) STEELHEAD (13) [noun] The anadromous form of the rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. | [noun] The ruddy duck. STEELIEST (9) [adjective] Having qualities resembling those of steel, especially hard and resolute. | [adjective] Made of steel. STEELWORK (16) [noun] All the steel components of a structure. 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. STEENBOKS (15) [noun] A common small antelope of southern and eastern Africa, Raphicerus campestris. STEEPENED (12) [verb] To make steeper. | [verb] To become steeper. STEEPNESS (11) STEERABLE (11) STEERAGES (10) STEERSMAN (11) [noun] One who steers a ship or other vessel; the helmsman. STEERSMEN (11) [noun] One who steers a ship or other vessel; the helmsman. STEEVINGS (13) STEGODONS (11) STEGOSAUR (10) [noun] Any of several extinct herbivorous dinosaurs, of the suborder Stegosauria, having two rows of bony plates along the back. STEINBOKS (15) [noun] A common small antelope of southern and eastern Africa, Raphicerus campestris. STEMMATIC (15) STEMMIEST (13) STEMWARES (14) STENCHFUL (17) STENCHIER (14) STENCILED (12) [verb] To print with a stencil. STENCILER (11) STENOKIES (13) STENOTYPE (14) [noun] A keyboard machine used to record a version of shorthand using a series of phonetic symbols. | [noun] Any of the characters used in this shorthand system. | [verb] To record using a stenotype. STENOTYPY (17) 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. STEPDAMES (14) STEREOING (10) STERIGMAS (12) STERILANT (9) [noun] Any substance used to sterilize something STERILELY (12) STERILITY (12) [noun] The state or quality of being sterile. STERILIZE (18) [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. STERLINGS (10) STERNITES (9) [noun] The ventral plate of each segment of an arthropod. STERNMOST (11) STERNNESS (9) STERNPOST (11) [noun] A timber or steel bar extending from the keel to the main deck at the stern of a vessel. STERNSONS (9) STERNWARD (13) STERNWAYS (15) STEROIDAL (10) STEVEDORE (13) [noun] A dockworker involved in loading and unloading cargo, or in supervising such work. | [verb] To load or unload a ship's cargo. STEWARDED (14) [verb] To act as the steward or caretaker of (something) STIBNITES (11) [noun] A grey mineral, Sb2S3, that is the main ore of antimony; used in ancient times as the cosmetic kohl. STICKBALL (17) [noun] A street game similar to baseball, played with a stick, a ball and various ad hoc materials; found primarily in large cities in the northeastern United States. | [noun] The ball used in this game. STICKFULS (18) STICKIEST (15) [adjective] Able or likely to stick. | [adjective] Potentially difficult to escape from. | [adjective] Of weather, hot and windless and with high humidity, so that people feel sticky from sweating. STICKLERS (15) [noun] A referee or adjudicator at a fight, wrestling match, duel, etc. who ensures fair play. | [noun] Someone who insistently advocates for something. STICKLIKE (19) STICKLING (16) STICKOUTS (15) STICKPINS (17) [noun] An ornamented pin used to secure a necktie's end flat against the shirt, a tie tack. 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 STICKWORK (22) STICTIONS (11) STIFFENED (16) [verb] To make stiff. | [verb] To become stiff. STIFFENER (15) STIFFNESS (15) [noun] Rigidity or a measure of rigidity. | [noun] Inflexibility or a measure of inflexibility. | [noun] Inelegance; a lack of relaxedness. STIGMATIC (14) [noun] One who has been branded as punishment. | [noun] One who has been marked or deformed by nature. | [noun] One who displays stigmata, the five wounds of Christ. STILBENES (11) STILBITES (11) STILETTOS (9) [noun] A small, slender knife or dagger-like weapon intended for stabbing. | [noun] A rapier. | [noun] An awl. STILLBORN (11) [noun] A baby that is born dead. | [adjective] Dead at birth. | [adjective] (by extension) Ignored, without influence, or unsuccessful from the outset; abortive. STILLIEST (9) STILLNESS (9) [noun] The quality or state of being still | [noun] Habitual silence or quiet; taciturnity. STILLROOM (11) [noun] A room containing a still (for distillation). | [noun] A pantry adjoining a kitchen where drinks etc were stored or prepared. STILTEDLY (13) STIMULANT (11) [noun] A substance that acts to increase physiological or nervous activity in the body. | [noun] Something that promotes activity, interest, or enthusiasm. | [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) Acting as a stimulant. STIMULATE (11) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. STINGAREE (10) [noun] A stingray. STINGIEST (10) [adjective] Unwilling to spend, give, or share; ungenerous; mean | [adjective] Small, scant, meager, insufficient | [adjective] Stinging; able to sting. STINGLESS (10) STINGRAYS (13) [noun] Any of various large, venomous rays, of the orders Rajiformes and Myliobatiformes, having a barbed, whiplike tail. | [noun] A device that simulates a cell tower, used to intercept cell phone communications. STINKARDS (14) [noun] Any of various malodorous animals. | [noun] The teledu. | [noun] A person whose behavior is hurtful and unsavory; a stinker. STINKBUGS (16) [noun] Any of several insects, usually shield-shaped, possessing a gland that produces a foul-smelling liquid, usually containing aldehydes which they use to discourage predators. | [noun] A common name applied to various insects of the Hemiptera order (the "true bugs"), in the Heteroptera suborder, principally in the superfamilies Pentatomoidea and Coreoidea. | [noun] (US Southwest) A pinacate beetle or stink beetle (genus Eleodes) that releases a pungent odor when threatened. STINKHORN (16) [noun] Any fungus of the order Phallales, which produce a foul-scented, rod-shaped mushroom. STINKIEST (13) [adjective] Having a strong, unpleasant smell; stinking. | [adjective] Bad, undesirable. STINKPOTS (15) [noun] An annoying, bad or undesirable person. | [noun] The common musk turtle, a species of turtle from southeastern Canada, Sternotherus odoratus. | [noun] The southern giant petrel, Macronectes giganteus. 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 STIPPLERS (13) STIPPLING (14) [verb] To use small dots to give the appearance of shading to. | [noun] A stippled pattern. STIPULATE (11) [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." | [adjective] Having stipules; that is, having outgrowths borne on either side of the base of the leafstalk. STIRABOUT (11) [noun] Porridge | [noun] A commotion. STITCHERS (14) [noun] One who stitches. STITCHERY (17) STITCHING (15) [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. STITHYING (16) STOCCADOS (14) STOCCATAS (13) STOCKADED (17) [verb] To enclose in a stockade. STOCKADES (16) [noun] An enclosure protected by a wall of wooden posts | [noun] A military prison STOCKCARS (17) [noun] A racing car, such as those sanctioned by NASCAR and ARCA, based on one of the regular production models available for purchase by the public. | [noun] A railway car for carrying cattle. STOCKFISH (21) [noun] A cod (or similar fish) having been cut open and cured in the open air without salt. | [noun] The shallow-water Cape hake (Merluccius capensis) | [noun] A cod (or similar fish) having been cut open and cured in the open air without salt. STOCKIEST (15) [adjective] (of a person or an animal) Sturdy; solidly built; heavy and compact. STOCKINET (15) [noun] An elastic textile fabric imitating knitting, of which stockings, undergarments, etc., are made. STOCKINGS (16) [noun] A soft garment, usually knit or woven, worn on the foot and lower leg under shoes or other footwear. | [noun] A broad ring of a different fur colour on the lower part of the leg of a quadruped. | [noun] A knitted hood of cotton thread which is eventually converted by a special process into an incandescent mantle for gas lighting. STOCKISTS (15) [noun] A retailer or distributor who has stocks of a certain type of item for sale. STOCKPILE (17) [noun] A supply, especially a large one, of something kept for future use. | [verb] To accumulate a stockpile. STOCKPOTS (17) [noun] A large pot, such as is used for making stock or for cooking large amounts of soup. STOCKROOM (17) [noun] A room where a store keeps its stock of merchandise. 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. STODGIEST (11) [adjective] (of food) Having a thick, semi-solid consistency; glutinous; heavy on the stomach. | [adjective] Dull, old-fashioned. | [adjective] Badly put together. STOICALLY (14) [adverb] In a manner that endures pain and hardship without outwardly showing suffering or expressing complaint. | [adverb] In an unfeeling manner that inwardly is unaffected by pain or distress. | [adverb] In a manner consistent with the philosophy of stoicism. STOICISMS (13) STOKEHOLD (17) [noun] A chamber where a ship's furnaces are stoked. STOKESIAS (13) STOLIDEST (10) STOLIDITY (13) STOLPORTS (11) 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. STOMACHER (16) [noun] A type of men's waistcoat. | [noun] An ornamental cloth, often embellished with embroidery or jewelry, worn over the chest by women beneath their bodices or by men and women as the central part of an open shirt, blouse, or jacket. | [noun] A blow to the stomach. STOMACHIC (18) [noun] A medicine for the stomach. | [adjective] Of or relating to the stomach. | [adjective] Beneficial to the stomach or to digestion. STOMODAEA (12) STOMODEAL (12) STOMODEUM (14) STONEBOAT (11) STONECHAT (14) [noun] Any of various small Old World passerine birds of the genus Saxicola that feed on insects. STONECROP (13) [noun] Any of various succulent plants of the Crassulaceae family, native to temperate zones, especially in genus Sedum | [noun] Certain plants of genus Lithospermum, in family Boraginaceae. STONEFISH (15) [noun] A venomous tropical marine fish resembling a piece of rock, of the genus Synanceia, found in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Ocean STONEWALL (12) [noun] A wall made from stone. | [noun] An obstruction. | [noun] A refusal to cooperate. | [adjective] Certain, definite. STONEWARE (12) [noun] A type of pottery that is fired at a high temperature and is dense, opaque and nonporous. STONEWORK (16) [noun] Constructions made of stone. | [noun] The skill of constructing with stone; stonecraft. STONEWORT (12) [noun] Any of various complex algae of the family Characeae, known for being branched and having enclosed egg cells. STONINESS (9) STONISHED (13) STONISHES (12) STOOPBALL (13) STOPBANKS (17) [noun] Levee, dyke STOPCOCKS (19) [noun] A valve, tap or faucet which regulates the flow of liquid or gas through a pipe. | [noun] A main shutoff for water to a home from a municipal supply. Usually these valves exist in pairs, one outside the property boundary and one inside the property boundary. STOPLIGHT (15) [noun] A traffic control signal, traditionally consisting of three lights, colored green, yellow/amber and red, meaning proceed, prepare to stop and stop, respectively. | [noun] A light on the rear of a vehicle that is activated when braking; a brake light. STOPOVERS (14) [noun] A short interruption in a journey or the place visited during such an interruption. STOPPABLE (15) STOPPAGES (14) [noun] A pause or halt of some activity. | [noun] Something that forms an obstacle to continued activity; a blockage or obstruction. STOPPERED (14) [verb] To close a container by using a stopper. | [adjective] Fitted with a stopper STOPPLING (14) [verb] To plug; to stop up. STOPWATCH (19) [noun] A timepiece designed to measure the amount of time elapsed from a particular time when activated and when the piece is deactivated. STORABLES (11) STOREROOM (11) [noun] A room used for storage. STORESHIP (14) STOREWIDE (13) STORMIEST (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to storms. | [adjective] Characterized by, or proceeding from, a storm; subject to storms; agitated with strong winds and heavy rain. | [adjective] Proceeding from violent agitation or fury. STORYBOOK (18) [noun] A book containing stories, especially children's stories. | [adjective] As in a story for children; pleasant and idealized, or having a happy conclusion. STOUNDING (11) STOUTENED (10) STOUTNESS (9) [noun] (usually uncountable) The state or quality of being stout. | [noun] The result or product of being stout. STOVEPIPE (16) [noun] Sheet-metal tubing used as a chimney for a stove or furnace. | [noun] A channel for information which is compartmentalized in such a manner that some parties who might be interested in its use or be able to utilize it are restricted from accessing it. | [verb] To collect or store (information) in a compartmentalized manner, so that some parties who might be interested in its use or be able to utilize it are restricted from accessing it. STOWAWAYS (18) [noun] A person who hides on board a ship, train, etc. so as to get a free passage. 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. STRADDLER (11) STRADDLES (11) [noun] A posture in which one straddles something. | [noun] An investment strategy involving simultaneous trade with put and call options on same security with positions that offset one another. | [noun] A voluntary raise made prior to receiving cards by the first player after the blinds. STRAGGLED (12) [verb] To stray from the road, course or line of march. | [verb] To wander about; ramble. | [verb] To spread at irregular intervals. STRAGGLER (11) [noun] A person who straggles, or departs from the direct or proper course, or from the company to which they belong. | [noun] One who falls behind the rest, for example in a race. | [noun] One who roams without any settled direction. STRAGGLES (11) [verb] To stray from the road, course or line of march. | [verb] To wander about; ramble. | [verb] To spread at irregular intervals. STRAIGHTS (13) [noun] Something that is not crooked or bent such as a part of a road or track. | [noun] Five cards in sequence. | [noun] A heterosexual. STRAINERS (9) [noun] A device through which a liquid is passed for purification, filtering or separation from solid matter; anything (including a screen or a cloth) used to strain a liquid. | [noun] A perforated screen or openwork (usually at the end of a suction pipe of a pump), used to prevent solid bodies from mixing in a liquid stream or flowline. | [noun] One who strains. STRAINING (10) [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. STRAITENS (9) [verb] To make strait; to narrow or confine to a smaller space. | [verb] To restrict or diminish, especially financially. STRAITEST (9) STRANDERS (10) STRANDING (11) [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. STRANGELY (13) [adverb] In a strange or coincidental manner. | [adverb] Surprisingly, wonderfully. STRANGERS (10) [noun] A person whom one does not know; a person who is neither a friend nor an acquaintance. | [noun] An outsider or foreigner. | [noun] One not admitted to communion or fellowship. STRANGEST (10) [adjective] Not normal; odd, unusual, surprising, out of the ordinary. | [adjective] Unfamiliar, not yet part of one's experience. | [adjective] Having the quantum mechanical property of strangeness. 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. STRANGLER (10) STRANGLES (10) [noun] A disease of horses caused by an infection by the bacterium Streptococcus equi. | [noun] A trading strategy using options, constructed through taking equal positions in a put and a call with different strike prices, such that there is a payoff if the underlying asset's value moves beyond the range of the two strike prices. | [verb] To kill someone by squeezing the throat so as to cut off the oxygen supply; to choke, suffocate or throttle. STRANGURY (13) [noun] A painful, frequent need to urinate, when the bladder is largely empty or with little urine production. STRAPHANG (15) [verb] To ride public transport while standing and holding onto a strap. STRAPHUNG (15) [verb] To ride public transport while standing and holding onto a strap. STRAPLESS (11) [adjective] Without a strap or straps; usually describing women's clothing without shoulder straps. STRAPPADO (14) [noun] A form of torture in which the victim is hung from the ceiling by a rope attached to the hands, which are tied together behind the victim's back. | [verb] To torture by means of this device. STRAPPERS (13) [noun] A large, strong, robust person (usually a man). | [noun] A person who works with straps, as on leather goods. | [noun] One who straps horses. STRAPPING (14) [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 STRATAGEM (12) [noun] A tactic or artifice designed to gain the upper hand, especially one involving underhanded dealings or deception. STRATEGIC (12) [adjective] Of or pertaining to strategy STRAVAGED (14) STRAVAGES (13) STRAVAIGS (13) [verb] To stroll, meander STRAWIEST (12) STREAKERS (13) [noun] One who runs naked through a public place as a prank. | [noun] The dolphin Stenella coeruleoalba. STREAKIER (13) [adjective] Having streaks. | [adjective] Used to describe a shot where the ball deflects off the edge of the bat, but is not caught by the slips or wicket-keeper and instead results in runs for the batsman. | [adjective] (chiefly of a person, usually North America) Having alternating periods of good and bad performances; inconsistent. STREAKING (14) [verb] To have or obtain streaks. | [verb] To run naked in public. (Contrast flash) | [verb] To create streaks. STREAMBED (14) STREAMERS (11) [noun] A long, narrow flag, or piece of material used or seen as a decoration. | [noun] Strips of paper or other material used as confetti. | [noun] A newspaper headline that runs along the top of a page. STREAMIER (11) STREAMING (12) [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. | [noun] Movement as a stream. STREAMLET (11) [noun] A small stream. STREEKERS (13) STREEKING (14) STREELING (10) [verb] To trail along; to saunter or be drawn along, carelessly, swaying in a kind of zigzag motion. STREETCAR (11) [noun] (US, Canada) A tram or light rail vehicle, usually a single car, but also attached together, operating on city streets. A trolley car. STRENGTHS (13) [noun] The quality or degree of being strong. | [noun] The intensity of a force or power; potency. | [noun] The strongest part of something; that on which confidence or reliance is based. STRENUOUS (9) [adjective] Having great vigour or energy | [adjective] (of a task) Requiring great exertion; very laborious STRESSFUL (12) [adjective] Irritating; causing stress. STRESSING (10) [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. STRESSORS (9) [noun] An environmental condition or influence that stresses (i.e. causes stress for) an organism. STRETCHED (15) [verb] To lengthen by pulling. | [verb] To lengthen when pulled. | [verb] To pull tight. STRETCHER (14) [noun] One who, or that which, stretches. | [noun] A simple litter designed to carry a sick, injured, or dead person. | [noun] A frame on which a canvas is stretched for painting. STRETCHES (14) [noun] An act of stretching. | [noun] The ability to lengthen when pulled. | [noun] A course of thought which diverts from straightforward logic, or requires extraordinary belief or exaggeration. STREUSELS (9) [noun] A crumbly topping for cakes and quick breads. It is made of sugar, flour, butter, cinnamon, and often chopped nuts. STREWMENT (14) STRIATING (10) [verb] To mark something with striations. STRIATION (9) STRICKLED (16) STRICKLES (15) [noun] A rod used to level grain etc. when being measured, or concrete after pouring. | [noun] A tool for sharpening scythes. | [noun] An instrument used for smoothing the surface of a core. STRICTEST (11) [adjective] Strained; drawn close; tight. | [adjective] Tense; not relaxed. | [adjective] Exact; accurate; precise; rigorously particular. STRICTURE (11) [noun] (usually in plural) a rule restricting behaviour or action | [noun] A general state of restrictiveness on behavior, action, or ideology | [noun] A sternly critical remark or review STRIDENCE (12) STRIDENCY (15) STRIKEOUT (13) [noun] An instance or the act of yielding nothing | [noun] An instance or the act of striking out | [noun] (wordprocessing) Cancellation of a portion of text by crossing it out without deleting it; strikethrough. STRINGENT (10) [adjective] Strict; binding strongly; making strict requirements; restrictive; rigid; severe STRINGERS (10) [noun] Someone who threads something; one who makes or provides strings, especially for bows. | [noun] Someone who strings someone along. | [noun] A horizontal timber that supports upright posts, or supports the hull of a vessel. STRINGIER (10) [adjective] Composed of, or resembling, string or strings. | [adjective] (of food) Tough to the bite, as containing too much sinew or string tissue. | [adjective] (of a person) Wiry, lean, scrawny. STRINGING (11) [verb] To put (items) on a string. | [verb] To put strings on (something). | [verb] To form into a string or strings, as a substance which is stretched, or people who are moving along, etc. STRIPIEST (11) [adjective] Having stripes; striped. STRIPINGS (12) STRIPLING (12) [noun] (sometimes humorous) A youth in the state of adolescence, or just passing from boyhood to manhood; a lad. . | [noun] A seedling with most of the leaves stripped off. STRIPPERS (13) [noun] Someone who removes their clothing in a sexually provocative manner, especially as a form of paid entertainment. | [noun] A chemical or tool used to remove paint, sheathing, etc. from something. | [noun] A tool used to strip tubing: to empty it by applying pressure to the outside of the tubing and moving that pressure along the tubing. STRIPPING (14) [verb] To remove or take away, often in strips or stripes. | [verb] (usually intransitive) To take off clothing. | [verb] To perform a striptease. STROBILAE (11) [noun] The jointed series of segments of the body of a tapeworm, posterior to the unjointed collum. STROBILES (11) STROBILUS (11) [noun] A cone-shaped fruiting body in general | [noun] More particularly a more-or-less cone-shaped fruiting body of any of various gymnosperms and vascular sporophytes. According to source and context it might refer to a structure bearing either seeds or spores, that might or might not be seen as an infructescence; usage has varied arbitrarily among authors during the last two centuries. | [noun] A layered reproductive stage in jellyfish, in which the swimming medusa form is produced. STROLLERS (9) [noun] A seat or chair on wheels, pushed by somebody walking behind it, typically used for transporting babies and young children. | [noun] One who strolls. | [noun] A vagrant. STROLLING (10) [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. STRONGBOX (19) [noun] A sturdy box with a lock for storing valuables. STRONGEST (10) [adjective] Capable of producing great physical force. | [adjective] Capable of withstanding great physical force. | [adjective] (of water, wind, etc.) Having a lot of power. STRONGISH (13) STRONGMAN (12) [noun] Someone who performs feats of strength, sometimes in competitions or in a circus. | [noun] A forceful or brutal person, usually a ruler or tyrant. STRONGMEN (12) [noun] Someone who performs feats of strength, sometimes in competitions or in a circus. | [noun] A forceful or brutal person, usually a ruler or tyrant. STRONGYLE (13) [noun] A nematode worm of the family Strongylidae, often parasitic in the gastrointestinal tract of mammals, especially horses | [noun] A monoaxon with a rounded end STRONGYLS (13) STRONTIAS (9) STRONTIUM (11) [noun] The metallic chemical element (symbol Sr) with an atomic number of 38. It is a soft, reactive, silvery alkaline earth metal. | [noun] A single atom of this element. STROPPERS (13) STROPPIER (13) [adjective] Ornery, fractious, belligerent, or obstreperous, and hence difficult to deal with. STROPPING (14) [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. STROUDING (11) STRUCTURE (11) [noun] A cohesive whole built up of distinct parts. | [noun] The underlying shape of a solid. | [noun] The overall form or organization of something. 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. STRUGGLER (11) STRUGGLES (11) [noun] A contortion of the body in an attempt to escape or to perform a difficult task. | [noun] Strife, contention, great effort. | [verb] To strive, to labour in difficulty, to fight (for or against), to contend. STRUMMERS (13) STRUMMING (14) [verb] To play (a guitar or other stringed instrument) using various strings simultaneously. | [noun] The action of the verb to strum STRUMPETS (13) [noun] A female prostitute | [noun] A woman who is very sexually active. | [noun] A female adulterer. STRUNTING (10) STRUTTERS (9) STRUTTING (10) [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. STUBBIEST (13) [adjective] Abounding with stubs. | [adjective] Like a stub; short, especially cut short, thick and stiff; stunted; stubbed. STUBBLIER (13) [adjective] Having stubble. STUCCOERS (13) STUCCOING (14) [verb] To coat or decorate with stucco. STUDBOOKS (16) [noun] In livestock breeding, a written record of the genealogy of animals. STUDDINGS (12) STUDHORSE (13) STUDIEDLY (14) STUDLIEST (10) [adjective] Like a stud; being or relating to a sexually attractive male. STUDWORKS (17) STUFFIEST (15) [adjective] Poorly ventilated; partially plugged. | [adjective] Stout; mettlesome; resolute. | [adjective] Angry and obstinate; sulky. STUFFINGS (16) [noun] The matter used to stuff hollow objects such as pillows and saddles. | [noun] Any of many food items used to stuff another. | [noun] A mixture of oil and tallow used in softening and dressing leather. STUFFLESS (15) STUMBLERS (13) STUMBLING (14) [verb] To trip or fall; to walk clumsily. | [verb] To make a mistake or have trouble. | [verb] To cause to stumble or trip. STUMPAGES (14) STUMPIEST (13) [adjective] Like or resembling a stump; short and cut off. | [adjective] Full of stumps. STUNSAILS (9) [noun] Studding sail 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. STUPEFIES (14) [verb] To dull the senses or capacity to think thereby reducing responsiveness; to dazzle or stun. STUPIDEST (12) [adjective] Lacking in intelligence or exhibiting the quality of having been done by someone lacking in intelligence. | [adjective] To the point of stupor. | [adjective] Characterized by or in a state of stupor; paralysed. STUPIDITY (15) [noun] The property of being stupid. | [noun] An act that is stupid. STUPOROUS (11) STURDIEST (10) [adjective] Of firm build; stiff; stout; strong. | [adjective] Solid in structure or person. | [adjective] Foolishly obstinate or resolute; stubborn. STURGEONS (10) [noun] Any marine or freshwater fish of the family Acipenseridae that are prized for their roe and are endemic to temperate seas and rivers of the northern hemisphere, especially central Eurasia. STUTTERED (10) [verb] To speak with a spasmodic repetition of vocal sounds. | [verb] To exhaust a gas with difficulty STUTTERER (9) STYLEBOOK (18) STYLELESS (12) [adjective] Lacking good style or any style at all. | [adjective] Lacking a style (stalk structure). STYLIFORM (17) STYLISERS (12) STYLISHLY (18) [adverb] In a stylish manner. STYLISING (13) [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. STYLISTIC (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to style, especially to linguistic or literary style. STYLIZERS (21) STYLIZING (22) [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. STYLOBATE (14) [noun] The top step of the crepidoma, i.e. the platform upon which the superstructure of the building is erected. STYMIEING (15) [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. STYPSISES (14) SUABILITY (14) SUASIVELY (15) SUAVENESS (12) SUAVITIES (12) [noun] The quality of being sweet or pleasing to the mind; agreeableness; pleasantness | [noun] Sweetness to the taste. SUBABBOTS (15) SUBACIDLY (17) SUBADULTS (12) [noun] A person who, or animal that, is not yet an adult. SUBAERIAL (11) [adjective] Formed, located or occurring on the Earth's land surface; contrasted with subaqueous SUBAGENCY (17) [noun] An agency that is subordinate to, or part of, another. SUBAGENTS (12) [noun] A person employed by an agent to transact the whole, or a part, of the business entrusted to the latter. SUBAHDARS (15) SUBALPINE (13) [adjective] At the foot of the Alps | [adjective] At or just below the tree-line SUBALTERN (11) [noun] A subordinate. | [noun] A commissioned officer having a rank below that of captain; a lieutenant or second lieutenant. | [noun] A subaltern proposition; a proposition implied by a universal proposition. For example, some crows are black is a subaltern of all crows are black. SUBAPICAL (15) SUBARCTIC (15) [noun] Region immediately outside of the Arctic Circle or regions similar to these in climate or conditions of life. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or characteristic of the subarctic. SUBATOMIC (15) [adjective] Relating to particles that are constituents of the atom, or are smaller than an atom; such as proton, neutron, electron, etc. | [adjective] Relating to any length or mass that is smaller in scale than a the diameter of a hydrogen atom. SUBBASINS (13) SUBBASSES (13) SUBBLOCKS (19) SUBBRANCH (18) [noun] A branch that is itself an offshoot of a branch of something. | [noun] Part of a branch. SUBBREEDS (14) SUBCASTES (13) SUBCAUSES (13) SUBCELLAR (13) SUBCENTER (13) SUBCHASER (16) SUBCHIEFS (19) SUBCLERKS (17) SUBCLIMAX (22) SUBCOLONY (16) SUBCOOLED (14) SUBCOUNTY (16) SUBDEACON (14) [noun] (chiefly historical) A Catholic clerical rank in the major orders below that of a deacon. | [noun] (chiefly historical) A Catholic cleric who assists the deacon at High Mass and normally reads the Epistle at the Eucharist. | [noun] The highest of the minor orders below that of a deacon SUBDEPOTS (14) SUBDERMAL (14) SUBDIVIDE (16) [verb] To divide into smaller sections. | [verb] To divide divisions into smaller divisions. SUBDUCING (15) SUBDUCTED (15) SUBDUEDLY (16) SUBECHOES (16) SUBEDITED (13) [verb] To perform the work of a subeditor or copy editor. SUBEDITOR (12) SUBEPOCHS (18) SUBERISED (12) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBERISES (11) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBERIZED (21) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBERIZES (20) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBFAMILY (19) [noun] A taxonomic category ranking between a family and a genus; formerly called a tribe SUBFIELDS (15) SUBFLOORS (14) [noun] The floor structure supporting and underlying the visible flooring or other finishing surface such as a carpet SUBFOSSIL (14) SUBFRAMES (16) [noun] A subsidiary frame (chunk of data). | [noun] A structural component of a vehicle, such as an automobile or aircraft, that uses a discrete, separate structure within a larger body-on-frame or unit body to carry certain components, such as the engine, drivetrain, or suspension. | [noun] One of the HTML frames that make up a frameset. SUBGENERA (12) [noun] A subdivision of a genus. SUBGENRES (12) [noun] One of several categories within a particular genre. SUBGRADES (13) SUBGRAPHS (17) SUBGROUPS (14) [noun] A group within a larger group; a group whose members are some, but not all, of the members of a larger group. | [noun] A subset H of a group G that is itself a group and has the same binary operation as G. SUBHUMANS (16) [noun] Anything which is less than human. SUBJACENT (20) [adjective] Lying beneath or at a lower level; underlying. 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 SUBJUGATE (19) [verb] To forcibly impose obedience or servitude upon. SUBLATING (12) [verb] To negate, deny or contradict. | [verb] To take or carry away; to remove. SUBLATION (11) SUBLEASED (12) [verb] To lease something that is already leased; to sublet. SUBLEASES (11) [noun] A lease on something made by someone who already leases it. | [verb] To lease something that is already leased; to sublet. SUBLETHAL (14) [adjective] Less than lethal. SUBLEVELS (14) SUBLIMATE (13) [noun] A product obtained by sublimation. | [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. SUBLIMELY (16) SUBLIMERS (13) SUBLIMEST (13) [adjective] Noble and majestic. | [adjective] Impressive and awe-inspiring, yet simple. | [adjective] Lifted up; high in place; exalted aloft; uplifted; lofty. SUBLIMING (14) [verb] To sublimate. | [verb] To raise on high. | [verb] To exalt; to heighten; to improve; to purify. SUBLIMITY (16) SUBLUNARY (14) [noun] Any worldly thing. | [adjective] Situated between the earth and the moon; sublunar or cislunar. | [adjective] Of this world (as opposed to heaven etc.); earthly, terrestrial. SUBMARINE (13) [noun] A boat that can go underwater. | [noun] A kind of sandwich made in a long loaf of bread. | [noun] Pitch delivered with an underhand motion. SUBMARKET (17) 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. SUBMERGES (14) [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. SUBMERSES (13) [verb] To submerge. SUBMICRON (15) SUBMITTAL (13) 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. SUBMUCOSA (15) [noun] A layer of connective tissue beneath a mucous membrane SUBNICHES (16) SUBNORMAL (13) [noun] A person whose abilities are less than normal. | [noun] That part of the axis of a curved line which is intercepted between the ordinate and the normal. | [adjective] Less than normal. SUBORDERS (12) [noun] A taxonomic category below order and above infraorder. SUBORNERS (11) SUBORNING (12) [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. | [noun] The act of one who suborns. SUBOXIDES (19) [noun] Any oxide containing a small proportion of oxygen SUBPANELS (13) SUBPENAED (14) SUBPERIOD (14) SUBPHASES (16) SUBPHYLUM (21) [noun] A taxonomic category below phylum and above class SUBPOENAS (13) [noun] A writ requiring a defendant to appear in court to answer a plaintiff's claim. | [noun] A writ requiring someone to appear in court to give testimony. | [verb] To summon with a subpoena. SUBPOTENT (13) SUBREGION (12) [noun] A region that is part of a larger region. SUBROGATE (12) SUBSAMPLE (15) [noun] A smaller portion of an original sample, created by trimming, subdividing, splitting or discrete collection of the original sample. | [noun] A portion of the original sample that is representative in nature to that of the original sample, thereby assuring equivalency in results from tests and analysis either upon the subsample or the original material, independent of their size. | [verb] To take subsamples from. SUBSCALES (13) [noun] A subdivision of a scale. SUBSCRIBE (15) [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). SUBSCRIPT (15) [noun] A type of lettering form written lower than the things around it. | [noun] A numerical index into an array. | [verb] (of a variable) To provide with a subscript. SUBSECTOR (13) SUBSENSES (11) [noun] A sense of a word that reflects a part or aspect of a more general sense SUBSERIES (11) SUBSERVED (15) [verb] To serve to promote (an end); to be useful to. | [verb] To assist in carrying out. SUBSERVES (14) [verb] To serve to promote (an end); to be useful to. | [verb] To assist in carrying out. SUBSHAFTS (17) SUBSHELLS (14) SUBSHRUBS (16) [noun] A low-growing woody shrub or perennial with woody base. SUBSIDERS (12) SUBSIDIES (12) [noun] Financial support or assistance, such as a grant. | [noun] Money granted by parliament to the British Crown. SUBSIDING (13) [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. SUBSIDISE (12) [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. SUBSIDIZE (21) [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. 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. SUBSKILLS (15) SUBSOCIAL (13) SUBSOILED (12) [verb] To turn up the subsoil of. SUBSOILER (11) [noun] A type of plough that loosens the subsoil. SUBSPACES (15) [noun] A subset of a space which is a space in its own right. | [noun] Any (often unspecified) method of communicating faster than light speed. SUBSTAGES (12) [noun] The stage, below the main stage of a microscope, to which attachments are fixed. | [noun] A stage making up part of a larger stage. SUBSTANCE (13) [noun] Physical matter; material. | [noun] The essential part of anything; the most vital part. | [noun] Substantiality; solidity; firmness. SUBSTATES (11) SUBSTRATA (11) [noun] A layer that lies underneath another. | [noun] The underlying cause or basis of something. | [noun] A substrate. SUBSTRATE (11) [noun] What an enzyme acts upon. | [noun] A surface on which an organism grows, or to which an organism or an item is attached. | [noun] An underlying layer; a substratum. SUBSUMING (14) [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 SUBSYSTEM (16) [noun] A group of related components that are part of a larger system. SUBTAXONS (18) SUBTENANT (11) [noun] Someone who sublets, a person who rents from a tenant. | [verb] To sublet. 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 SUBTHEMES (16) SUBTILELY (14) SUBTILEST (11) SUBTILINS (11) SUBTILIZE (20) [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. 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. SUBTITLES (11) [noun] (authorship) A heading below or after a title. | [noun] Textual versions of the dialog in films, usually displayed at the bottom of the screen. SUBTONICS (13) [noun] The note immediately below the upper note of a musical scale. | [noun] An imperfectly articulated sound or utterance, as characterized by Dr. James Rush (Guide to Pronunciation, 1833). SUBTOPIAS (13) [noun] Sprawling suburbs, collectively. SUBTOPICS (15) SUBTOTALS (11) [noun] The total for a part of a list of numbers being summed. | [verb] To calculate a subtotal. SUBTRACTS (13) [verb] To remove or reduce; especially to reduce a quantity or number SUBTRENDS (12) SUBTRIBES (13) SUBTROPIC (15) SUBTUNICS (13) SUBURBANS (13) SUBURBIAS (13) SUBVASSAL (14) SUBVENING (15) 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). SUBVERTER (14) SUBVICARS (16) SUBVISUAL (14) SUBWAYING (18) SUBWORLDS (15) SUBWRITER (14) SUCCEDENT (14) 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. SUCCEEDER (14) [noun] One who succeeds (follows after); a successor. | [noun] One who succeeds (achieves a positive outcome); a winner. SUCCESSES (13) [noun] The achievement of one's aim or goal. | [noun] Financial profitability. | [noun] One who, or that which, achieves assumed goals. SUCCESSOR (13) [noun] A person or thing that immediately follows another in holding an office or title. | [noun] The next heir in order or succession. | [noun] A person who inherits a title or office. SUCCINATE (13) [noun] Any salt or ester of succinic acid. SUCCINYLS (16) SUCCORERS (13) SUCCORIES (13) [noun] Chicory (Cichorium intybus) SUCCORING (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. SUCCOTASH (16) [noun] A stew made from kernels of corn, lima beans, tomatoes and sometimes peppers. 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. SUCCULENT (13) [noun] A succulent plant. | [adjective] Juicy or lush. | [adjective] Luscious or delectable. 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. SUCCUSSES (13) [verb] To shake with vigor. SUCKERING (16) [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. SUCKLINGS (16) [noun] An infant that is still being breastfed (being suckled) by its mother. | [noun] A young mammal not yet weaned and still being fed milk by its mother. SUCTIONAL (11) 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. SUCTORIAL (11) [adjective] Adapted for sucking; living by sucking. | [adjective] Capable of adhering by suction. SUCTORIAN (11) SUDATIONS (10) SUDATORIA (10) [noun] A hot room used to induce sweating, steam room, steam bath, sauna. SUDORIFIC (15) [noun] A medicine that produces sweating. | [adjective] In a state of perspiration; covered in sweat; sudoriferous, sweaty. | [adjective] (chiefly pharmaceutical effect) That produces sweating. SUFFERERS (15) [noun] One who suffers. | [noun] One who is afflicted. SUFFERING (16) [verb] To undergo hardship. | [verb] To feel pain. | [verb] To become worse. SUFFICERS (17) SUFFICING (18) [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. SUFFIXING (23) [verb] To append (something) to the end of something else. SUFFLATED (16) SUFFLATES (15) SUFFOCATE (17) [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. SUFFRAGAN (16) [noun] A bishop seen in relation to his archbishop or metropolitan province (which may summon him for support, to attend synods etc.). | [noun] An auxiliary bishop. SUFFRAGES (16) [noun] The right or chance to vote, express an opinion, or participate in a decision. | [noun] The right to vote for elected officials in a representative democracy. | [noun] A vote in deciding a particular question. SUFFUSING (16) [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. SUFFUSION (15) SUFFUSIVE (18) SUGARCANE (12) [noun] A tropical grass of the genus Saccharum (especially the species Saccharum officinarum) having stout, fibrous, jointed stalks, the sap of which is a source of sugar. | [noun] An edible candy in the shape of a cane. SUGARCOAT (12) [verb] To make superficially more attractive; to give a falsely pleasant appearance to. SUGARIEST (10) SUGARLESS (10) SUGARLOAF (13) [noun] A block of refined sugar, usually in the form of a truncated cone, in which form it was traditionally exported from the Caribbean and Brazil from the 17th century to the 19th century. | [noun] A hat shaped like a sugar-loaf. SUGARPLUM (14) [noun] A round or oval sweet/piece of candy made of boiled sugar. | [noun] A piece of flattery. | [noun] Term of endearment: sweetheart, darling. 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 SUGGESTER (11) SUICIDING (13) [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. SUITCASES (11) [noun] A large (usually rectangular) piece of luggage used for carrying clothes, and sometimes suits, when travelling. SUKIYAKIS (20) [noun] A Japanese dish of thinly-sliced beef and tofu with dashi, mirin and soy sauce cooked quickly at the table. SULFATASE (12) SULFATING (13) SULFINYLS (15) SULFONATE (12) [noun] Any salt or ester of a sulfonic acid. | [verb] To treat or react with a sulfonic acid, or to introduce such a group into a compound. SULFONIUM (14) SULFONYLS (15) SULFOXIDE (20) SULFURETS (12) SULFURING (13) [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. | [noun] Treatment with sulfur or sulfur compounds SULFURIZE (21) SULFUROUS (12) [adjective] Containing sulfur. | [adjective] Of, or relating to sulfur, especially in its lower oxidation state. SULFURYLS (15) SULKINESS (13) SULLENEST (9) SULPHATED (15) SULPHATES (14) [noun] Any ester of sulfuric acid. | [noun] Any salt of sulfuric acid. | [verb] To treat something with sulfuric acid, a sulfate, or with sulfur dioxide. SULPHIDES (15) [noun] Any compound of sulfur and a metal or other electropositive element or group. | [noun] A kind of clear marble with a small statuette or figure inside. SULPHITES (14) [noun] Any salt of sulfurous acid. | [noun] A person who is spontaneous and original in thought and conversation. SULPHONES (14) [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds that have a sulfonyl functional group attached to two carbon atoms; drugs of this structure have been used to treat leprosy. SULPHURED (15) [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. SULTANATE (9) SULTANESS (9) SULTRIEST (9) [adjective] Hot and humid. | [adjective] Very hot and dry; torrid. | [adjective] Sexually enthralling. SUMMARIES (13) [noun] An abstract or a condensed presentation of the substance of a body of material. SUMMARILY (16) [adverb] (manner) In a summary manner. | [adverb] (duration) Over a short period of time, briefly. SUMMARISE (13) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARIZE (22) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMATING (14) SUMMATION (13) [noun] A summarization. | [noun] An adding up of a series of items. SUMMATIVE (16) SUMMERIER (13) SUMMERING (14) [verb] To spend the summer, as in a particular place on holiday. | [noun] An instance of spending the summer, as for a vacation or for cooler weather. SUMMITEER (13) [noun] Someone who reaches a summit. | [noun] A mountain climber. | [noun] Someone who attends a conference denoted as a summit. SUMMITING (14) [verb] (hiking) To reach the summit of a mountain. SUMMONERS (13) SUMMONING (14) [verb] To call people together; to convene. | [verb] To ask someone to come; to send for. | [verb] To order (goods) and have delivered SUMMONSED (14) [verb] To serve someone with a summons. SUMMONSES (13) [noun] A call to do something, especially to come. | [noun] A notice summoning someone to appear in court, as a defendant, juror or witness. | [noun] A demand for surrender. SUMPTUARY (16) [adjective] Relating to expense; regulating expense or expenditure. | [adjective] (of a law, regulation, etc.) Intended to restrain or limit the expenditure of citizens in apparel, food, furniture, etc.; to regulate the prices of commodities and the wages of labor; or to forbid or restrict the use of certain articles, as of luxurious apparel. SUMPTUOUS (13) [adjective] Magnificent, luxurious, splendid. SUMPWEEDS (17) SUNBATHED (15) [verb] To expose one's body to the sun in order to relax or to obtain a suntan. SUNBATHER (14) SUNBATHES (14) [verb] To expose one's body to the sun in order to relax or to obtain a suntan. SUNBLOCKS (17) [noun] A sunscreen with high sun protection factor (SPF). SUNBONNET (11) [noun] A hat (bonnet) worn for protection from bright sunlight. 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. SUNBURSTS (11) [noun] A figure or shape showing rays radiating from a central point. | [noun] A strong outburst of sunlight. SUNCHOKES (18) [noun] A variety of sunflower, Helianthus tuberosus, native to North America, having yellow flower heads and edible tubers. | [noun] The tuber of this plant, eaten as a vegetable. SUNDERERS (10) SUNDERING (11) [verb] To break or separate or to break apart, especially with force. | [verb] To part, separate. | [verb] To expose to the sun and wind. SUNDOWNER (13) [noun] An itinerant worker, such as a swagman, who arrives at a farm too late in the day to do any work, but readily accepts food and lodging. | [noun] An itinerant worker, a swagman. | [noun] A sea captain who shows harsh discipline by requiring all hands to be on board by sundown. SUNFISHES (15) [noun] Any of various small freshwater fishes of the family Centrarchidae, often with iridescent colours and having a laterally compressed body. | [noun] Any of various large marine fishes of the family Molidae that have an oval compressed body. SUNFLOWER (15) [noun] Any plant of the genus Helianthus, so called probably from the form and color of its floral head, having the form of a large disk surrounded by yellow ray flowers. | [noun] A bright yellow, like that of the flower petals. | [noun] Any flat, radially symmetric organic compound such as coronene SUNLIGHTS (13) SUNNINESS (9) SUNSCALDS (12) SUNSCREEN (11) [noun] A cream, to be spread on the skin, containing organic compounds that absorb, and/or titanium dioxide that reflects the sun’s ultraviolet radiation. SUNSEEKER (13) [noun] A person who enjoys exposure to sunlight; an avid sunbather. SUNSHADES (13) [noun] Something to keep the sun off, or create shade from the sun; a parasol or awning. SUNSHINES (12) SUNSTONES (9) [noun] A translucent form of feldspar having flakes of hematite, used as an ornamental stone. SUNSTROKE (13) [noun] Heat stroke caused by an excessive exposure to the sun's rays. SUNSTRUCK (15) SUNTANNED (10) [verb] To obtain a suntan by exposure to ultraviolet light. | [verb] To attempt to obtain a suntan. | [adjective] Having a suntan. SUPERABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being overcome or surmounted; surmountable or conquerable SUPERABLY (16) SUPERADDS (13) [verb] To add on top of a previous addition. SUPERBANK (17) SUPERBEST (13) SUPERBOMB (17) SUPERCARS (13) [noun] Any high-performance sports car SUPERCEDE (14) SUPERCHIC (18) SUPERCITY (16) SUPERCLUB (15) SUPERCOIL (13) [noun] A coil of the DNA helix upon itself, such as a figure eight. | [verb] To twist circular DNA into a supercoil SUPERCOOL (13) [verb] To cool a material below its transition temperature without that transition occurring | [adjective] Very cool; thoroughly excellent, relaxed, or fashionable. SUPERCOPS (15) SUPERCUTE (13) SUPEREGOS (12) [noun] The part of the mind that acts as a self-critical conscience, reflecting social standards that have been learnt. SUPERFANS (14) [noun] An extremely dedicated fan SUPERFARM (16) SUPERFAST (14) [adjective] Extremely fast. | [adverb] At extremely high speed. SUPERFINE (14) [adjective] Extremely subtle or refined; extremely sensitive to slight impressions or perceptions. | [adjective] Extremely refined or sophisticated; very elegant. | [adjective] Having an especially fine size or texture; made of very small particles or threads. SUPERFIRM (16) SUPERFUND (15) SUPERGENE (12) [noun] A group of neighbouring genes on a chromosome that are inherited together because of close genetic linkage and are functionally related in an evolutionary sense. | [adjective] (of a mineral) leached and then deposited by descending waters SUPERGLUE (12) [noun] A very strong and instant glue, generally cyanoacrylate. | [verb] To affix with superglue. SUPERGOOD (13) SUPERHEAT (14) [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. SUPERHERO (14) [noun] Any kind of fantasy/science fiction crime-fighting character, often with supernatural powers or equipment, in popular children's and fantasy literature. SUPERHITS (14) [noun] A very successful hit. SUPERHYPE (19) SUPERIORS (11) [noun] A person of higher rank or quality. | [noun] The senior person in a monastic community. | [noun] The head of certain churches and colleges. SUPERJETS (18) SUPERJOCK (24) SUPERLAIN (11) SUPERLIES (11) SUPERMALE (13) SUPERMIND (14) SUPERMINI (13) [noun] A small motor car, especially a hatchback, which is powerful for its size or class | [noun] A superminicomputer SUPERMOMS (15) [noun] A mother who looks after her home and children whilst being in full-time employment SUPERNOVA (14) [noun] The explosion of a star, which increases its brightness to typically a billion times that of our sun, though attenuated by the great distance from our sun. Some leave only debris (Type I); others fade to invisibility as neutron stars (Type II). SUPERPIMP (17) SUPERPORT (13) SUPERPOSE (13) [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. SUPERPROS (13) SUPERRACE (13) SUPERREAL (11) SUPERRICH (16) SUPERROAD (12) SUPERSAFE (14) SUPERSALE (11) SUPERSEDE (12) [noun] An updated newsgroup post that supersedes an earlier version. | [verb] To take the place of. | [verb] To displace in favour of itself. SUPERSELL (11) SUPERSHOW (17) SUPERSIZE (20) [verb] To increase the size of something, especially to unusual proportions. SUPERSOFT (14) SUPERSTAR (11) [noun] Someone who has accumulated a vast amount of fame; a high-level celebrity. SUPERSTUD (12) SUPERTHIN (14) SUPERVENE (14) [verb] To follow (something) closely, either as a consequence or in contrast. | [verb] To supersede. | [verb] To be dependent on an earlier event. SUPERVISE (14) [verb] To oversee or direct a task or organization. | [verb] To look over so as to read; to peruse. SUPERWAVE (17) SUPERWIDE (15) SUPERWIFE (17) 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. SUPINATES (11) [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. SUPINATOR (11) [noun] Any muscle that aids supination SUPPLANTS (13) [verb] To take the place of; to replace, to supersede. | [verb] To uproot, to remove violently. SUPPLIANT (13) [noun] One who pleads or requests earnestly. | [adjective] Entreating with humility. | [adjective] Supplying; auxiliary. SUPPLIERS (13) [noun] One who supplies; a provider. | [noun] Someone who assists (sets up) a goal. SUPPLYING (17) [verb] To provide (something), to make (something) available for use. | [verb] To furnish or equip with. | [verb] To fill up, or keep full. 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. SUPPORTER (13) [noun] A person who gives support to someone or something. | [noun] Something that supports another thing. SUPPOSALS (13) SUPPOSERS (13) SUPPOSING (14) [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. SUPPURATE (13) [verb] To form or discharge pus. | [verb] To cause to generate pus. SUPREMACY (18) [noun] The quality of being supreme. | [noun] Power over all others. | [noun] (in combination) The ideology that a specified group is superior to others or should have supreme power over them. SUPREMELY (16) [adverb] To the greatest, highest, or utmost degree. SUPREMEST (13) SURCEASED (12) [verb] To come to an end; to desist. | [verb] To bring to an end. SURCEASES (11) [noun] Cessation; stop; end. | [verb] To come to an end; to desist. | [verb] To bring to an end. SURCHARGE (15) [noun] An addition of extra charge on the agreed or stated price. | [noun] An excessive price charged e.g. to an unsuspecting customer. | [noun] An overprint on a stamp that alters (usually raises) the original nominal value of the stamp; used especially in times of hyperinflation. SURCINGLE (12) [noun] A long unpadded strap to pass over and keep in place a blanket, pack or saddle on an animal. | [noun] A piece of tack wrapped around the belly of a horse, to use when longeing. | [noun] A girdle to fasten a garment, especially a cassock. SURFACERS (14) SURFACING (15) [verb] To provide something with a surface. | [verb] To apply a surface to something. | [verb] To rise to the surface. SURFBIRDS (15) [noun] A small sandpiper, Aphriza virgata, endemic to the northwestern parts of North America. 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. SURFBOATS (14) 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. SURFEITER (12) SURFICIAL (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the surface of something, particularly the surface of the Earth. SURFPERCH (19) [noun] Any of the family Embiotocidae of viviparous perciform fishes, found mainly in the northeast Pacific Ocean. SURGERIES (10) [noun] A procedure involving major incisions to remove, repair, or replace a part of a body. | [noun] The medical specialty related to the performance of surgical procedures. | [noun] A room or department where surgery is performed. SURICATES (11) [noun] The meerkat, a member of the mongoose family. SURLINESS (9) SURMISERS (11) SURMISING (12) [verb] To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises. | [noun] The act of making surmises. SURMOUNTS (11) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. SURNAMERS (11) SURNAMING (12) [verb] To give a surname to. | [verb] To call by a surname. SURPASSED (12) [verb] To go beyond, especially in a metaphoric or technical manner; to exceed. SURPASSES (11) [verb] To go beyond, especially in a metaphoric or technical manner; to exceed. SURPLICES (13) [noun] A liturgical vestment of the Christian Church. It has the form of a tunic of white linen or cotton material, with wide or moderately wide sleeves, reaching to the hips or knees. It usually features lace decoration and may have embroidered bordures. SURPLUSES (11) [noun] That which remains when use or need is satisfied, or when a limit is reached; excess; overplus. | [noun] Specifically, an amount in the public treasury at any time greater than is required for the ordinary purposes of the government. | [noun] The remainder of a fund appropriated for a particular purpose. SURPRINTS (11) SURPRISAL (11) 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. SURPRISER (11) SURPRISES (11) [noun] Something unexpected. | [noun] The feeling that something unexpected has happened. | [noun] A dish covered with a crust of raised pastry, but with no other contents. SURPRIZED (21) SURPRIZES (20) SURREALLY (12) SURRENDER (10) [noun] An act of surrendering, submission into the possession of another; abandonment, resignation. | [noun] The yielding or delivery of a possession in response to a demand. | [noun] The yielding of the leasehold estate by the lessee to the landlord, so that the tenancy for years merges in the reversion and no longer exists. SURROGACY (15) [noun] The state or condition of being a surrogate. | [noun] The practice of being a surrogate mother. SURROGATE (10) [noun] A substitute (usually of a person, position or role). | [noun] A person or animal that acts as a substitute for the social or pastoral role of another, such as a surrogate parent. | [noun] A deputy for a bishop in granting licences for marriage. SURROUNDS (10) [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. SURROYALS (12) SURTAXING (17) SURVEYING (16) [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 SURVEYORS (15) [noun] A person occupied with surveying -- the process of determining positions on the earth's surface. | [noun] A person charged with inspecting something for the purpose of determining its condition, value, etc. SURVIVALS (15) [noun] The fact or act of surviving; continued existence or life. | [noun] (as a modifier) Of, relating to or aiding survival. | [noun] The avoidance of relegation or demotion to a lower league or division. SURVIVERS (15) SURVIVING (16) [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. SURVIVORS (15) [noun] One who survives, especially one who survives a traumatic experience. | [noun] A person who is able to endure hardship. | [noun] One who knew a specific decedent. 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. SUSPENDER (12) [noun] Something or someone who suspends. | [noun] An item of apparel consisting of a strap worn over the shoulder and used to hold up trousers. Called braces in other parts of the world. | [noun] An item of apparel used to hold up a sock or (now especially) a stocking, such as a garter, or each of the fastening-straps attached to a corset or suspender belt. SUSPENSER (11) SUSPENSES (11) SUSPENSOR (11) SUSPICION (13) [noun] The act of suspecting something or someone, especially of something wrong. | [noun] The condition of being suspected. | [noun] Uncertainty, doubt. SUSPIRING (12) [verb] To breathe. | [verb] To exhale. | [verb] To sigh. SUSTAINED (10) [verb] To maintain, or keep in existence. | [verb] To provide for or nourish. | [verb] To encourage or sanction (something). SUSTAINER (9) SUSURRANT (9) SUSURROUS (9) SUTURALLY (12) SUZERAINS (18) [noun] A dominant nation or state that has control over the international affairs of a subservient state which otherwise has domestic autonomy. | [noun] A feudal landowner to whom vassals were forced to pledge allegiance. SVEDBERGS (16) [noun] A non-SI unit of sedimentation rate (symbol S or Sv), the rate at which particles of a given size and shape travel to the bottom of a tube under centrifugal force. SWADDLING (15) [verb] To bind (a baby) with long narrow strips of cloth. | [verb] To beat; cudgel. | [noun] The practice of wrapping infants in clothing that restricts movement. 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. SWAGGERER (14) 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. SWALLOWER (15) [noun] Agent noun of swallow; one who swallows. SWAMPIEST (16) [adjective] Soggy and marshy; wet like a swamp. | [adjective] Flowing smoothly with no harsh tones but possibly including muddy tones. 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. SWANHERDS (16) SWANKIEST (16) [adjective] Rather posh, elegant, ritzy. SWANSDOWN (16) [noun] The down of a swan | [noun] A soft woolen fabric; flannelette SWANSKINS (16) SWARAJIST (19) SWARTHIER (15) [adjective] Tawny, dusky, dark. | [adjective] Dark-skinned. | [adjective] Darker-skinned than white, but lighter-skinned than tawny. SWARTNESS (12) SWASTICAS (14) SWASTIKAS (16) [noun] A cross with arms of equal length all bent halfway along at a 90° angle to the right or to the left, used as a religious symbol by various ancient and modern civilizations, and adopted more recently (with arms angled to the right) as a symbol of National Socialism and fascism. | [noun] (fascism, history, metonym) Nazi rule. SWAYBACKS (23) 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. SWEATIEST (12) [adjective] Covered in sweat. | [adjective] Having a tendency to sweat. | [adjective] Likely to cause one to sweat. SWEATSHOP (17) [noun] A factory or other place of work where pay is low and conditions are poor or even illegal. SWEEPBACK (22) [noun] The rearward angle of the leading edge of a wing, or airfoil. SWEEPIEST (14) SWEEPINGS (15) [noun] An instance of sweeping. | [noun] The activity of sweeping. | [noun] Material that is swept up. 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. SWEETENER (12) [noun] Something added to food to sweeten its taste, especially an artificial substitute for sugar. | [noun] Something given or added to added to a deal to sweeten another's attitude, especially a bribe or kickback. SWEETINGS (13) [noun] A sweet apple. | [noun] A darling; term of endearment. SWEETMEAT (14) [noun] A sweet delicacy; a confection SWEETNESS (12) [noun] The condition of being sweet or sugary. | [noun] A pleasant disposition; kindness. | [noun] Term of address for one's sweetheart. SWEETSHOP (17) SWEETSOPS (14) [noun] The sugar apple, Annona squamosa. | [noun] The tropical American evergreen tree on which it grows. SWELLFISH (18) SWELLHEAD (16) SWELLINGS (13) [noun] The state of being swollen. | [noun] Anything swollen, especially any abnormally swollen part of the body. | [noun] A rising, as of passion or anger. 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. SWELTRIER (12) SWIFTLETS (15) [noun] Any of the various tropical and subtropical birds of the four genera Aerodramus, Hydrochous, Schoutedenapus, and Collocalia in the swift family, many of which can navigate in darkness using echolocation. SWIFTNESS (15) [noun] The state of being swift. SWIMMABLE (18) SWIMMERET (16) [noun] In decapods such as lobsters, one of the legs primarily used for swimming but also used for brooding the eggs (except in prawns) and catching food. SWIMMIEST (16) SWIMMINGS (17) SWIMSUITS (14) [noun] A garment worn for swimming. | [noun] A tight-fitting one-piece garment worn by women and girls. SWINDLERS (13) [noun] A person who swindles, cheats or defrauds. SWINDLING (14) [verb] To defraud. | [verb] To obtain (money or property) by fraudulent or deceitful methods. | [noun] The act by which somebody is swindled. SWINEHERD (16) [noun] A person who herds and tends swine, a keeper of swine (pigs). SWINGEING (14) [verb] To singe. | [verb] To move like a lash; to lash. | [verb] To strike hard. SWINGIEST (13) [adjective] Having a swinging motion. | [adjective] Characteristic of swing music. | [adjective] Having many swing voters. SWINGINGS (14) SWINGLING (14) [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. SWINISHLY (18) SWIRLIEST (12) [adjective] Having swirls; swirling. SWISHIEST (15) [adjective] Producing a swishing sound. | [adjective] Swish; fancy, posh, impressive. | [adjective] (of a man) Effeminate; gay SWITCHERS (17) [noun] One who or that which switches. | [noun] A switchmode power supply. | [noun] A railway locomotive used for shunting; a shunter. SWITCHING (18) [verb] To exchange. | [verb] To change (something) to the specified state using a switch. | [verb] To whip or hit with a switch. SWITCHMAN (19) [noun] A person who operates railway switches which route trains onto rail tracks. | [noun] A person whose job is to help in the switching of railcars in a railway yard. SWITCHMEN (19) [noun] A person who operates railway switches which route trains onto rail tracks. | [noun] A person whose job is to help in the switching of railcars in a railway yard. SWITHERED (16) [verb] To be indecisive or in a state of confusion; to dither. SWIVELING (16) [verb] To swing or turn, as on a pin or pivot. | [noun] The motion of something that swivels. SWIVELLED (16) [verb] To swing or turn, as on a pin or pivot. SWIZZLERS (30) SWIZZLING (31) [verb] To stir or mix. | [verb] To permute bits. | [verb] To convert portable symbols or positions to memory-dependent pointers during deserialization. SWOOSHING (16) [verb] To move with a rushing or swirling sound SWORDFISH (19) [noun] A large marine fish with a long, pointed bill, Xiphias gladius. | [verb] To fish for swordfish. SWORDLIKE (17) SWORDPLAY (18) [noun] Fighting with a sword SWORDSMAN (15) [noun] A person skilled at using swords in sport or combat; a fencer. | [noun] A person who fights with a sword. | [noun] A man who is a skillful or enthusiastic practitioner of sexual intercourse. SWORDSMEN (15) [noun] A person skilled at using swords in sport or combat; a fencer. | [noun] A person who fights with a sword. | [noun] A man who is a skillful or enthusiastic practitioner of sexual intercourse. SWORDTAIL (13) [noun] One of many species of freshwater fish, in genus Xiphophorus, others of which are called platyfish. | [noun] Any of various papilionid butterflies that have a long sword-like projection from the tornal section of each hindwing. SWOUNDING (14) SYBARITES (14) [noun] A person devoted to pleasure and luxury. SYBARITIC (16) [adjective] Of or having the qualities of a sybarite; self-indulgent or decadent. | [adjective] Having the character of or dedicated to excessive luxury. SYCAMINES (16) [noun] A tree, mentioned in Luke's Gospel, and thought to be the black mulberry. SYCAMORES (16) [noun] Any of several North American plane trees, of the genus Platanus, especially Platanus occidentalis (American sycamore). | [noun] A large British and European species of maple, Acer pseudoplatanus, known in North America as the sycamore maple. | [noun] A large tree bearing edible fruit, Ficus sycomorus, allied to the common fig and found in Egypt and Syria; also called the sycamore fig or the fig-mulberry; the Biblical sycomore. SYCOMORES (16) [noun] A type of fig, Ficus sycomorus, native to the Middle East; the sycamore tree of the Bible. SYCOPHANT (19) [noun] One who uses obsequious compliments to gain self-serving favor or advantage from another; a servile flatterer. | [noun] One who seeks to gain through the powerful and influential. | [noun] An informer; a talebearer. SYLLABARY (17) [noun] A table or list of syllabic letters or syllables | [noun] A writing system where each character represents a complete syllable SYLLABICS (16) [noun] A syllabic sound. SYLLABIFY (20) SYLLABLED (15) [verb] To utter in syllables. | [adjective] Having a specified number of syllables. SYLLABLES (14) [noun] A unit of human speech that is interpreted by the listener as a single sound, although syllables usually consist of one or more vowel sounds, either alone or combined with the sound of one or more consonants; a word consists of one or more syllables. | [noun] The written representation of a given pronounced syllable. | [noun] A small part of a sentence or discourse; anything concise or short; a particle. SYLLABUBS (16) [noun] A drink dating back to the 16th century consisting primarily of milk curdled with an alcoholic beverage or some acid such as lemon juice, which is usually then sweetened and spiced. | [noun] Also everlasting syllabub or solid syllabub: a dessert pudding derived from the drink. | [noun] Something lacking substance; something frothy, insubstantial, or lightweight. SYLLEPSES (14) [noun] A figure of speech in which one word simultaneously modifies two or more other words such that the modification must be understood differently with respect to each modified word; often causing humorous incongruity. | [noun] Growth in which lateral branches develop from a lateral meristem, without the formation of a bud or period of dormancy, when the lateral meristem is split from a terminal meristem. SYLLEPSIS (14) [noun] A figure of speech in which one word simultaneously modifies two or more other words such that the modification must be understood differently with respect to each modified word; often causing humorous incongruity. | [noun] Growth in which lateral branches develop from a lateral meristem, without the formation of a bud or period of dormancy, when the lateral meristem is split from a terminal meristem. SYLLEPTIC (16) SYLLOGISM (15) [noun] An argument whose conclusion is supported by two premises, of which one contains the term that is the predicate of the conclusion, and the other contains the term that is the subject of the conclusion; common to both premises is a term that is excluded from the conclusion. | [noun] A trick, artifice; an extremely subtle, sophisticated, or deceptive argument; a sophism. SYLLOGIST (13) SYLLOGIZE (22) [verb] To reason by means of syllogisms. | [verb] To deduce consequences from. SYLPHLIKE (21) [adjective] Resembling (that of) a sylph; slender and graceful. SYLVANITE (15) SYMBIONTS (16) [noun] An organism that lives in a symbiotic relationship; a symbiote. SYMBIOSES (16) [verb] To take part in symbiosis. | [noun] A relationship of mutual benefit, especially among different species. | [noun] A close, prolonged association between two or more organisms of different species, regardless of benefit to the members. SYMBIOSIS (16) [noun] A relationship of mutual benefit, especially among different species. | [noun] A close, prolonged association between two or more organisms of different species, regardless of benefit to the members. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) The state of people living together in a community. SYMBIOTES (16) [noun] An organism in a partnership with another such that each profits from their being together; a symbiont SYMBIOTIC (18) [noun] Symbiotic star | [adjective] Of, or relating to symbiosis; living together. | [adjective] Of a relationship with mutual benefit between two individuals or organisms. SYMBOLING (17) [verb] To symbolize. SYMBOLISE (16) [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. SYMBOLISM (18) [noun] Representation of a concept through symbols or underlying meanings of objects or qualities. | [noun] A combining together of parts or ingredients. SYMBOLIST (16) SYMBOLIZE (25) [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. SYMBOLLED (17) [verb] To symbolize. SYMBOLOGY (20) [noun] The study or use of symbols. | [noun] An encoding scheme, particularly for barcodes. SYMMETRIC (18) [adjective] Symmetrical. | [adjective] Of a relation R on a set S, such that xRy if and only if yRx for all members x and y of S (that is, if the relation holds between any element and a second, it also holds between the second and the first). | [adjective] Using the same key (or keys that are trivially related) for both encryption and decryption. SYMPATHIN (19) SYMPATRIC (18) [adjective] Occurring in the same, or in overlapping, territory, especially of species that do not interbreed. SYMPETALY (19) SYMPHONIC (21) [adjective] Characteristic of a symphony SYMPHYSES (22) [noun] The process of two originally separate bones growing together as the subject matures, as with the pubic bones or lower jawbones in humans. | [noun] A line, discernable on an X-ray, showing such fusion. | [noun] The cartilaginous material that adjoins and facilitates the junction of such bones, with or without synovia. SYMPHYSIS (22) [noun] The process of two originally separate bones growing together as the subject matures, as with the pubic bones or lower jawbones in humans. | [noun] A line, discernable on an X-ray, showing such fusion. | [noun] The cartilaginous material that adjoins and facilitates the junction of such bones, with or without synovia. SYMPODIAL (17) SYMPODIUM (19) [noun] A pattern of branching, similar to dichotomous branching, where the axis or stem is morphologically made up of a series of superposed branches imitating a simple stem. SYMPOSIUM (18) [noun] A conference or other meeting for discussion of a topic, especially one in which the participants make presentations. | [noun] A drinking party in Ancient Greece, especially one with intellectual discussion. SYNAGOGAL (14) SYNAGOGUE (14) [noun] A place of worship for Jews. | [noun] A congregation of Jews for the purpose of worship or religious study. SYNALEPHA (17) SYNAPSIDS (15) [noun] Any animal (including all mammals) of the class Synapsida. SYNAPSING (15) SYNCHRONY (20) [noun] Synchronicity, the state of two or more events occurring at the same time. SYNCLINAL (14) SYNCLINES (14) [noun] A concave-upward fold in rock strata SYNCOPATE (16) [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 SYNCRETIC (16) SYNCYTIAL (17) SYNCYTIUM (19) [noun] A mass of cytoplasm containing many nuclei SYNDICATE (15) [noun] A group of individuals or companies formed to transact some specific business, or to promote a common interest; a self-coordinating group. | [noun] The office or jurisdiction of a syndic; a body or council of syndics. | [verb] To become a syndicate. SYNDROMES (15) [noun] A recognizable pattern of signs, symptoms and/or behaviours, especially of a disease or medical or psychological condition. | [noun] Any set of characteristics regarded as identifying a certain type, condition, etc., usually adverse. SYNERESES (12) [noun] The contraction of two vowels into a diphthong or a long vowel. | [noun] The separating out of the liquid from a gel. SYNERESIS (12) [noun] The contraction of two vowels into a diphthong or a long vowel. | [noun] The separating out of the liquid from a gel. SYNERGIAS (13) SYNERGIDS (14) SYNERGIES (13) [noun] (systems theory) A synonym of binding energy. | [noun] The cooperation of two or more nerves, muscles, organs, etc. | [noun] The combined action of two or more drugs where the effects are stronger than their mere sum. SYNERGISM (15) [noun] Synergy | [noun] The theological doctrine that salvation is brought about by a combination of human will and divine grace SYNERGIST (13) [noun] Any synergistic agent. | [noun] (by extension) A chemical compound that increases the chemical activity of another compound when used with it. | [noun] One who holds the religious doctrine of synergism. SYNESISES (12) SYNGAMIES (15) SYNGASSES (13) SYNGENEIC (15) [adjective] Genetically identical, or sufficiently identical and immunologically compatible as to allow for transplantation SYNIZESES (21) SYNIZESIS (21) SYNKARYON (19) SYNODICAL (15) [adjective] Synodic SYNONYMES (17) SYNONYMIC (19) SYNOPSIZE (23) SYNOVITIS (15) [noun] Inflammation of the synovium. SYNTACTIC (16) [adjective] Of, related to or connected with syntax. | [adjective] Containing morphemes that are combined in the same order as they would be if they were separate words e.g. greenfinch SYNTAGMAS (15) [noun] A constituent segment within a text, such as a word or a phrase that forms a syntactic unit. | [noun] An arrangement of units that together bears a meaning. | [noun] (history) A Macedonian phalanx fighting formation consisting of 256 men with long spears (sarissae). SYNTHESES (15) [noun] The formation of something complex or coherent by combining simpler things. | [noun] The reaction of elements or compounds to form more complex compounds. | [noun] A deduction from the general to the particular. SYNTHESIS (15) [noun] The formation of something complex or coherent by combining simpler things. | [noun] The reaction of elements or compounds to form more complex compounds. | [noun] A deduction from the general to the particular. SYNTHETIC (17) [noun] A synthetic compound. | [adjective] Of, or relating to synthesis. | [adjective] Produced by synthesis instead of being isolated from a natural source (but may be identical to a product so obtained). SYNTONIES (12) SYPHERING (18) SYPHONING (18) [verb] To transfer (liquid) by means of a siphon. | [verb] To steal or skim off in small amounts; to embezzle. SYRINGING (14) [verb] To clean, or inject fluid, by means of a syringe. SYRPHIANS (17) SYSTALTIC (14) SYSTEMICS (16) SYSTEMIZE (23) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems.

10-Letter Words (2235)

SABADILLAS (13) [noun] A Mexican and Central American plant of the lily family (Schoenocaulon officinale). | [noun] The seeds of this plant, used in medicine and insecticides. SABBATICAL (16) [noun] An extended period of leave from a person's usual pursuits. | [adjective] Relating to the Sabbath / sabbath. | [adjective] Relating to a sabbatical. SABOTAGING (14) [verb] To deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful. SACAHUISTA (15) SACAHUISTE (15) SACCHARASE (17) SACCHARIDE (18) [noun] The unit structure of carbohydrates, of general formula CnH2nOn. Either the simple sugars or polymers such as starch and cellulose. The saccharides exist in either a ring or short chain conformation, and typically contain five or six carbon atoms. SACCHARIFY (23) SACCHARINE (17) [noun] Sentimentalism | [adjective] Of or relating to sugar. | [adjective] Excessively sweet in action or disposition; syrupy. | [adjective] Of or relating to saccharin. SACCHARINS (17) SACCULATED (15) SACERDOTAL (13) [adjective] Of or relating to priests or a high religious order; priestly. SACKCLOTHS (21) SACRAMENTS (14) [noun] A sacred act or ceremony in Christianity. In Catholic theology, a sacrament is defined as "an outward sign instituted by Christ to give grace." | [noun] (in particular) The Eucharist. | [noun] The consecrated Eucharist (especially the bread). SACREDNESS (13) 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. SACRIFICER (17) SACRIFICES (17) [noun] The offering of anything to a god; a consecratory rite. | [noun] The destruction or surrender of anything for the sake of something else; the devotion of something desirable to something higher, or to a calling deemed more pressing. | [noun] Something sacrificed. SACRILEGES (13) [noun] Desecration, profanation, misuse or violation of something regarded as sacred. SACRISTANS (12) [noun] The person who maintains the sacristy and the sacred objects it contains. SACRISTIES (12) [noun] A room in a church where sacred vessels, books, vestments, etc. are kept. Sometimes also used by clergy to prepare for worship or for meetings. SACROILIAC (14) [noun] The region of the sacrum and the ilium in the lower back. | [adjective] Relating to the sacrum and ilium, or to the region of the lower back where they are located. SACROSANCT (14) [adjective] Beyond alteration, criticism, or interference, especially due to religious sanction; inviolable. | [adjective] Sacred, very holy. SADDLEBAGS (15) [noun] A covered pouch, usually one of a pair, laid across the back of a horse, donkey, or mule behind its saddle, or hanging over the rear wheel of a bicycle or motorcycle; often made of leather or (on a bicycle or motorcycle) a rigid material. | [noun] (in the plural) Loose fatty flesh on a person's upper thighs or buttocks, that hangs like saddlebags. | [noun] A style of house with two rooms separated by a small hall and open space. SADDLEBOWS (17) SADDLEBRED (15) [noun] A horse of the American Saddlebred breed. SADDLELESS (12) SADDLERIES (12) [noun] The trade or craft of a saddler. | [noun] A place of business of a saddler. | [noun] The inventory and equipment of a saddler; saddles and other horse-riding equipment, or the materials for making them. SADDLETREE (12) SAFEGUARDS (15) [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. SAFELIGHTS (17) [noun] The lamp in a photographic darkroom. SAFENESSES (13) SAFFLOWERS (19) [noun] A cultivated thistle-like plant, Carthamus tinctorius, family Asteraceae, now grown mainly for its oil. SAFRANINES (13) [noun] Any of a class of red to blue azine dyes SAGACITIES (13) SAGANASHES (14) SAGENESSES (11) SAGITTALLY (14) SAILBOARDS (13) [verb] To practice the sport of using a sailboard. SAILBOATER (12) SAILCLOTHS (15) SAILFISHES (16) [noun] A fish of the genus Istiophorus, having a characteristic sail-like fin on its back. | [noun] The basking shark. | [noun] The quillback. SAILPLANED (13) SAILPLANER (12) SAILPLANES (12) [noun] A glider that is optimised for soaring and is equipped with fixed wings and fuselage. SAINTHOODS (14) [noun] The state of being a saint | [noun] Saints collectively SAINTLIEST (10) [adjective] Like or characteristic of a saint; befitting a holy person; saintlike. SAINTSHIPS (15) SALABILITY (15) SALACITIES (12) SALAMANDER (13) [noun] A long, slender, chiefly terrestrial amphibian of the order Caudata, superficially resembling a lizard. | [noun] A creature much like a lizard that is resistant to and lives in fire (in which it is often depicted in heraldry), hence the elemental being of fire. | [noun] A metal utensil with a flat head which is heated and put over a dish to brown the top. SALESCLERK (16) [noun] A salesperson, a person employed by a store to sell merchandise, assist customers in finding merchandise, and accept payment. SALESGIRLS (11) [noun] A young woman employed as a salesclerk. SALESROOMS (12) [noun] The room where sales are made SALESWOMAN (15) [noun] A woman whose occupation it is to sell things. SALESWOMEN (15) [noun] A woman whose occupation it is to sell things. SALICYLATE (15) [noun] Any salt or ester of salicylic acid | [verb] To combine or treat with salicylic acid. SALIENCIES (12) [noun] The quality of being salient; salience SALINITIES (10) [noun] The quality of being saline. | [noun] The concentration of salt in a solution. SALINIZING (20) SALIVATING (14) [verb] To produce saliva. | [verb] To show eager anticipation at the expectation of something. SALIVATION (13) SALIVATORS (13) SALLOWNESS (13) SALMAGUNDI (14) [noun] A food consisting of chopped meat and pickled herring, with oil, vinegar, pepper, and onions. | [noun] Hence, any mixture of various ingredients; an olio or medley; a potpourri; a miscellany. SALMONELLA (12) [noun] Any of several rod-shaped bacteria, of the genus Salmonella, that cause food poisoning and other diseases SALMONOIDS (13) [noun] Any of these fish. SALOMETERS (12) SALTARELLO (10) [noun] A lively medieval Italian dance with a leaping step. | [noun] The music for such a dance. SALTATIONS (10) [noun] A leap, jump or dance. | [noun] Beating or palpitation. | [noun] A sudden change from one generation to the next; a mutation. SALTBUSHES (15) [noun] Any of the genus Atriplex of plants, especially Atriplex hortensis or Atriplex patula, found in dry habitats, that have edible leaves resembling spinach, including many desert and seashore plants and halophytes. SALTCELLAR (12) [noun] A small open container holding salt for use in the kitchen or on a dining table | [noun] A salt shaker, a closed container with perforated lid for sprinkling salt SALTNESSES (10) SALTPETERS (12) SALTSHAKER (17) SALUBRIOUS (12) [adjective] Promoting health or well-being; wholesome, especially as related to air. SALUTARILY (13) SALUTATION (10) [noun] A greeting, salute, or address; a hello. | [noun] The act of greeting. | [noun] Quickening; excitement. SALUTATORY (13) [noun] A greeting; an address, speech or article of greeting; the first editorial by the new editor of a newspaper or periodical; an introduction or preface. | [noun] A place for saluting or greeting; a vestibule; a porch. | [adjective] Characteristic of or relating to a salutation or greeting. SALVARSANS (13) SALVATIONS (13) SALVERFORM (18) SAMARITANS (12) [noun] A Good Samaritan SAMARSKITE (16) SAMENESSES (12) SANATORIUM (12) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANBENITOS (12) 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. SANCTIFIER (15) SANCTIFIES (15) [verb] To make holy; to consecrate; to set aside for sacred or ceremonial use. | [verb] To free from sin; to purify. | [verb] To make acceptable or useful under religious law or practice. SANCTIMONY (17) [noun] A hypocritical form of excessive piety, considered to be an affectation merely for public show. 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. SANCTITIES (12) [noun] Holiness of life or disposition; saintliness | [noun] The condition of being considered sacred; inviolability | [noun] Something considered sacred. SANDALLING (12) 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. SANDBAGGER (15) SANDBLASTS (13) [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. SANDERLING (12) [noun] A small wading bird, Calidris alba, that breeds in the Arctic and winters on sandy shores and estuaries around the world. A type of stint. SANDFISHES (17) [noun] Genus Gonorynchus spp. (also called beaked sandfish), long, thin ray-finned fishes (family Gonorychidae) | [noun] Any of several marine fishes that burrow into sandy seabeds | [noun] Other animals that notably burrow in sand: SANDGROUSE (12) [noun] Any of several species of birds in the family Pteroclididae. SANDLOTTER (11) SANDPAPERS (15) [noun] A strong paper coated with sand, ground glass, or other abrasive material for smoothing and polishing. | [noun] A sheet of such paper. | [verb] To polish or grind (a surface) with or as if with sandpaper. SANDPAPERY (18) SANDPIPERS (15) [noun] Any of various small wading birds of the family Scolopacidae. SANDSTONES (11) [noun] A sedimentary rock produced by the consolidation and compaction of sand, cemented with clay etc. SANDSTORMS (13) [noun] A strong wind carrying clouds of sand and dust through the air. SANDWICHED (20) [verb] To place one item between two other, usually flat, items | [verb] To put or set something between two others, in time. SANDWICHES (19) [noun] A dish or foodstuff where two or more slices of bread serve as the wrapper or container of some other food. | [noun] (by extension) Any combination formed by layering one type of material between two layers of some other material. | [noun] A layer cake or sandwich cake. SANENESSES (10) SANGFROIDS (15) SANGUINARY (14) [noun] A bloodthirsty person. | [noun] The plant common yarrow, or herba sanguinaria (Achillea millefolium). | [adjective] (of an event) Involving bloodshed. SANGUINELY (14) SANGUINITY (14) SANITARIAN (10) [noun] A public health or sanitation worker. | [noun] A person who promoted sanitary reforms. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to health, or the laws of health; sanitary. SANITARIES (10) SANITARILY (13) SANITARIUM (12) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANITATING (11) SANITATION (10) [noun] The hygienic disposal or recycling of waste. | [noun] The policy and practice of protecting health through hygienic measures. SANITISING (11) [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. SANITIZING (20) [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. SANITORIUM (12) SANNYASINS (13) SANTOLINAS (10) [noun] Any of the genus Santolina of evergreen shrubs in the sunflower family. SAPIDITIES (13) SAPIENCIES (14) SAPODILLAS (13) [noun] Manilkara zapota, a long-lived evergreen tree native to the New World tropics. | [noun] The fruit from the sapodilla tree. The fruit is 4-8 cm in diameter, has a fuzzy brown skin with earthy brown flesh. SAPOGENINS (13) SAPONIFIED (16) [adjective] Treated by saponification | [verb] To convert (a fat or oil) into soap. | [verb] To be converted into soap. SAPONIFIER (15) SAPONIFIES (15) [verb] To convert (a fat or oil) into soap. | [verb] To be converted into soap. | [verb] To hydrolyze (an ester) using an alkali. SAPPHIRINE (17) [noun] A rare silicate of magnesium and aluminium (with iron as a major impurity), named for its sapphirelike colour. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling sapphire SAPROGENIC (15) [adjective] Causing or resulting from putrefaction SAPROLITES (12) SAPROPHYTE (20) [noun] Any organism that lives on dead organic matter, as certain fungi and bacteria SAPSUCKERS (18) [noun] A woodpecker of the eastern United States (of the genus Sphyrapicus) that feeds mainly on the sap of trees | [noun] Any woodpecker that punctures the bark of trees and feeds upon the sap. SARABANDES (13) [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. SARCOLEMMA (16) [noun] A thin cell membrane that surrounds a striated muscle fibre SARCOMERES (14) [noun] The contractile unit of the myofibril of a striated muscle. SARCOPHAGI (18) [noun] A stone coffin, often inscribed or decorated with sculpture. | [noun] The cement and steel structure that encases the destroyed reactor at the power station in Chernobyl, Ukraine. | [noun] A kind of limestone used by the Greeks for coffins, so called because it was thought to consume the flesh of corpses. SARCOPLASM (16) [noun] The interfibrillar cytoplasm of striated muscle SARCOSOMAL (14) SARCOSOMES (14) SARDONYXES (21) SARGASSUMS (13) SARRACENIA (12) [noun] Any of various pitcher plants of genus Sarracenia. SASKATOONS (14) SATCHELFUL (18) SATELLITES (10) [noun] A moon or other smaller body orbiting a larger one. | [noun] A man-made apparatus designed to be placed in orbit around a celestial body, generally to relay information, data etc. to Earth. | [noun] A country, state, office, building etc. which is under the jurisdiction, influence, or domination of another body. SATIATIONS (10) SATINWOODS (14) [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. SATIRISING (11) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATIRIZING (20) [verb] To make a satire of; to mock. SATISFYING (17) [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. SATURATING (11) [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. SATURATION (10) [noun] The act of saturating or the process of being saturated | [noun] The condition in which, after a sufficient increase in a causal force, no further increase in the resultant effect is possible; e.g. the state of a ferromagnetic material that cannot be further magnetized | [noun] The state of a saturated solution SATURATORS (10) SATURNALIA (10) [noun] A period or occasion of general license, in which the passions or vices have riotous indulgence; a period of unrestrained revelry. SATURNIIDS (11) [noun] Any moth of the family Saturniidae SATURNISMS (12) SATYAGRAHA (17) [noun] The policy of nonviolent resistance as used by Mahatma Gandhi during the struggle for Indian independence. SATYRIASES (13) SATYRIASIS (13) [noun] Excessive sexual desire, found in a man. | [noun] The quality of excessive sexual passion in a male. SAUCEBOATS (14) [noun] A dish used to serve gravy. | [noun] A source of easily obtained money or benefits. SAUCEBOXES (21) SAUCERLIKE (16) SAUERKRAUT (14) [noun] A dish made by fermenting finely chopped cabbage. | [noun] A German person. SAUNTERERS (10) SAUNTERING (11) [verb] To stroll, or walk at a leisurely pace. | [noun] A casual stroll. SAVAGENESS (14) SAVAGERIES (14) [noun] Savage or brutal behaviour; barbarity. | [noun] A violent act of cruelty. | [noun] Savages collectively; the world of savages. SAVORINESS (13) SAVOURIEST (13) SAWBONESES (15) SAWTIMBERS (17) SAXICOLOUS (19) [adjective] Growing on, or living among rocks or stones SAXIFRAGES (21) [noun] Any plant in the genus Saxifraga. SAXITOXINS (24) SAXOPHONES (22) [noun] A single-reed instrument musical instrument of the woodwind family, usually made of brass and with a distinctive loop bringing the bell upwards. SAXOPHONIC (24) SCABBARDED (18) SCABIOUSES (14) [noun] Any of various herbaceous plants of the genus Scabiosa. SCABROUSLY (17) 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. SCAGLIOLAS (13) SCALLOPERS (14) SCALLOPING (15) [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 SCALLOPINI (14) [noun] Pattypan squash. SCALLYWAGS (19) [noun] A disreputable fellow, a good-for-nothing, a scapegrace, a blackguard | [noun] A badly behaved person, especially a child; a mischief-maker; a rascal SCALOGRAMS (15) SCALOPPINE (16) [noun] A thin scallop of veal (sometimes other meat) dredged in flour and then sautéed. SCAMMONIES (16) [noun] Convolvulus scammonia, a twining perennial bindweed native to the eastern part of the Mediterranean basin, whose juice has been used in medicine as scammonium. | [noun] The cathartic gum resin obtained from this plant. SCAMPERING (17) [verb] To run quickly and lightly, especially in a playful or undignified manner. | [noun] A quick, light running motion. SCANDALING (14) SCANDALISE (13) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. SCANDALIZE (22) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. | [verb] To reduce the area and efficiency of a sail by expedient means (e.g. slacking the peak and tricing up the tack) without properly reefing, thus slowing boat speed. SCANDALLED (14) SCANDALOUS (13) [adjective] Wrong, immoral, causing a scandal | [adjective] Malicious, defamatory. | [adjective] Outrageous; exceeding reasonable limits. SCANTINESS (12) [noun] The quality of being scanty. | [noun] The result or product of being scanty. SCANTLINGS (13) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The set size or dimension of a piece of timber, stone etc., or materials used to build ships or aircraft. | [noun] A small portion, a scant amount. | [noun] A small, upright beam of timber used in construction, especially less than five inches square. SCAPEGOATS (15) [noun] In the Mosaic Day of Atonement ritual, a goat symbolically imbued with the sins of the people, and sent out alive into the wilderness while another was sacrificed. | [noun] Someone punished for the error or errors of someone else. | [verb] To punish someone for the error or errors of someone else; to make a scapegoat of. SCAPEGRACE (17) [noun] A wild and reckless person (especially a boy); a scoundrel. SCAPOLITES (14) SCARABAEUS (14) SCARAMOUCH (19) SCARCENESS (14) SCARCITIES (14) [noun] The condition of something being scarce or deficient | [noun] An inadequate amount of something; a shortage SCARECROWS (17) [noun] An effigy, typically made of straw and dressed in old clothes, fixed to a pole in a field to deter birds from eating seeds or crops planted there. | [noun] A tall, thin, awkward person. | [noun] Anything that appears terrifying but presents no danger. SCAREHEADS (16) SCARFSKINS (19) SCARIFIERS (15) [noun] One who scarifies. | [noun] The instrument used for scarifying. | [noun] An implement for stripping and loosening the soil, without bringing up a fresh surface. SCARIFYING (19) [verb] To remove thatch (build-up of organic matter on the soil) from a lawn, to dethatch. | [verb] To make scratches or cuts on. | [verb] To harrow the feelings. SCARLATINA (12) [noun] Scarlet fever SCARPERING (15) [verb] To run away; to flee; to escape. SCATHELESS (15) SCATHINGLY (19) SCATTERERS (12) SCATTERGUN (13) [noun] A shotgun. | [adjective] Unfocused in approach or topic SCATTERING (13) [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). SCAVENGERS (16) [noun] Someone who scavenges, especially one who searches through rubbish for food or useful things. | [noun] An animal that feeds on decaying matter such as carrion. | [noun] A street sweeper. SCAVENGING (17) [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 SCENARISTS (12) [noun] A writer of screenplays; a screenwriter SCENICALLY (17) SCEPTERING (15) SCEPTICISM (18) [noun] The practice or philosophy of being a skeptic. | [noun] A studied attitude of questioning and doubt | [noun] The doctrine that absolute knowledge is not possible SCHEDULERS (16) [noun] A person or device that determines a schedule, that determines the order that tasks are to be done. | [noun] An operating system component responsible for allocating several resources, most commonly the use of processors by different concurrent processes or threads. SCHEDULING (17) [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. SCHEELITES (15) [noun] A mineral composed of calcium tungstate, with the chemical formula CaWO4; an important tungsten ore. SCHEMATICS (19) [noun] A simplified line drawing used by scientists, engineers, technologists and others to illustrate a system at an abstract level. Schematic drawings often use standard symbols for clarity. SCHEMATISM (19) [noun] A schematic representation; a schema. | [noun] The combination of the heavenly bodies. SCHEMATIZE (26) [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. SCHERZANDO (25) [noun] A piece of music to be played in a playful or sportive manner. | [adverb] In a playful or sportive manner. SCHILLINGS (16) [noun] The old currency of Austria, divided into 100 groschen SCHIPPERKE (23) [noun] A small breed of dog developed in Belgium, sometimes used as a watchdog on boats. SCHISMATIC (19) [noun] A person involved in a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schisma SCHIZOCARP (28) [noun] A dry fruit that develops from multiple carpels and splits into multiple, one-seeded mericarps at maturity SCHIZOGONY (28) [noun] Asexual reproduction of protozoans etc characterized by multiple divisions of the nucleus and cell. SCHIZZIEST (33) SCHLEMIELS (17) [noun] A loser or a fool. | [noun] A person who is clumsy or who hurts others emotionally. SCHLEPPING (20) [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. SCHLUMPING (20) SCHMALTZES (26) SCHMALZIER (26) SCHMEERING (18) [verb] To spread something, often a bagel spread. | [verb] To bribe. SCHMOOSING (18) SCHMOOZING (27) [verb] To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection. SCHNAUZERS (24) [noun] A dog of a particular breed originating in Germany. SCHNITZELS (24) [noun] A dish consisting of fried veal cutlet. | [noun] (by extension) A Germanic dish of breaded and deep-fried meat cutlet. SCHNORKELS (19) SCHNORRERS (15) [noun] Beggar | [noun] Sponger (person who takes advantage of the generosity of others) SCHNOZZLES (33) SCHOLASTIC (17) [noun] A member of the medieval philosophical school of scholasticism; a medieval Christian Aristotelian. | [adjective] Of or relating to school; academic | [adjective] Of or relating to the philosophical tradition of scholasticism SCHOLIASTS (15) [noun] A scholar who writes commentary on the works of an author, especially one of the ancient commentators on classical authors. SCHOOLBAGS (18) SCHOOLBOOK (21) [noun] A textbook, a book used, or prepared for use, in school. SCHOOLBOYS (20) [noun] A boy attending school. SCHOOLGIRL (16) [noun] A girl attending school. | [verb] To restrain in a schoolgirl pin. SCHOOLINGS (16) SCHOOLKIDS (20) [noun] A schoolchild, a kid who attends school; a schoolboy or schoolgirl. SCHOOLMARM (19) [noun] A woman who is a teacher, especially a teacher in a schoolhouse; may carry the connotation she is severe and/or a spinster. | [noun] A person, male or female, who exhibits characteristics attributed to schoolteachers of the old times, such as strict enforcement of arbitrary rules. | [noun] A tree with two or more trunks; a forked tree. SCHOOLMATE (17) [noun] A person who was a fellow attendee at one's school. SCHOOLROOM (17) [noun] A classroom, a room in a school used for instruction. SCHOOLTIME (17) [noun] Time spent in school; classtime | [noun] Time spent at school; schooldays SCHOOLWORK (22) [noun] Work done for school, including both in class and homework. SCIENTIFIC (17) [adjective] Of, or having to do with science. | [adjective] Having the quality of being derived from, or consistent with, the scientific method. | [adjective] In accord with procedures, methods, conduct and accepted conventions of modern science. SCIENTISMS (14) SCIENTISTS (12) [noun] One whose activities make use of the scientific method to answer questions regarding the measurable universe. A scientist may be involved in original research, or make use of the results of the research of others. SCIENTIZED (22) SCIENTIZES (21) SCINTILLAE (12) [noun] A small spark or flash. | [noun] A small or trace amount. SCINTILLAS (12) [noun] A small spark or flash. | [noun] A small or trace amount. SCIOLISTIC (14) SCIRRHUSES (15) SCISSORING (13) [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. SCLEROMATA (14) [noun] Induration of the tissues | [noun] Rhinoscleroma SCLEROSING (13) SCLEROTIAL (12) SCLEROTICS (14) [noun] The sclerotic coat of the eye, cornea. SCLEROTINS (12) SCLEROTIUM (14) [noun] A compact mass of hardened mycelium stored with reserve food material that, in some higher fungi such as ergot, becomes detached and remains dormant until a favourable opportunity for growth occurs. SCOLECITES (14) SCOLLOPING (15) [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 SCOMBROIDS (17) [noun] Any fish of the family Scombridae, of which the mackerel (Scomber) is the type. 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. SCORECARDS (15) [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. SCORIFYING (19) SCORNFULLY (18) SCORPAENID (15) SCOUNDRELS (13) [noun] A mean, worthless fellow; a rascal; a villain; a person without honour or virtue. SCOUTCRAFT (17) SCOUTHERED (16) SCOWDERING (17) SCOWLINGLY (19) SCRABBLERS (16) SCRABBLIER (16) SCRABBLING (17) [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. SCRAGGIEST (14) [adjective] Rough and irregular; jagged. | [adjective] Lean or thin, scrawny. SCRAGGLIER (14) [adjective] Rough, scruffy, or unkempt. | [adjective] Jagged or uneven; scraggy. SCRAICHING (18) SCRAIGHING (17) SCRAMBLERS (16) [noun] Someone or something that scrambles (in various senses). | [noun] A vine that does not attach itself to its supports. | [noun] A device that makes messages intentionally, but reversibly, unintelligible for reasons of privacy or security. SCRAMBLING (17) [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. SCRAPBOOKS (20) [noun] A book, similar to a notebook or journal, in which personal or family memorabilia and photos are collected and arranged | [verb] To create scrapbooks. SCRAPPAGES (17) SCRAPPIEST (16) [adjective] Consisting of scraps; fragmentary; lacking unity or consistency. | [adjective] Having an aggressive spirit; inclined to fight or strive. | [adjective] (Of a fight) characterised by lots of ungainly or wild punches, grabs, wrestling, etc. SCRATCHERS (17) SCRATCHIER (17) [adjective] Characterized by scratches. | [adjective] (chiefly of a sore throat) Annoying, irritating, itchy. | [adjective] (of an analogue radio transmission) Noisy, lossy; marred by white noise or static as a result of poor or low signal, interference or unfavourable atmospheric conditions. SCRATCHILY (20) SCRATCHING (18) [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). SCRAWLIEST (15) SCRAWNIEST (15) [adjective] Thin, malnourished and weak. SCREECHERS (17) SCREECHIER (17) SCREECHING (18) [verb] To make such a sound. | [verb] To travel very fast, as if making the sounds of brakes being released | [noun] The act of producing a screech. SCREENABLE (14) SCREENINGS (13) [noun] Mesh material that is used to screen (as in a "screen door"). | [noun] The process of checking or filtering. | [noun] The showing of a film SCREENLAND (13) SCREENPLAY (17) [noun] (authorship) A script for a movie or a television show. SCREWBALLS (17) [noun] A pitch thrown with added pressure by the index finger and a twisting wrist motion resulting in a motion to the right when thrown by a right-handed pitcher. | [noun] One who behaves in a crazy manner. SCREWBEANS (17) SCREWINESS (15) SCREWWORMS (20) [noun] The larva of the fly Cochliomyia hominivorax (New World screwworm) or Chrysomya bezziana (Old World screwworm). The larvae are parasitic in humans and animals and are distinctive in eating living flesh of mammals, unlike most maggots, which eat only dead flesh. SCRIBBLERS (16) [noun] One who scribbles; a hasty or untalented writer or artist. | [noun] A machine for coarse carding or teasing of wool. | [noun] A ruled notebook or exercise book, especially in grade school. SCRIBBLING (17) [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. SCRIMMAGED (18) [verb] To have, or be involved in, a scrimmage. SCRIMMAGER (17) SCRIMMAGES (17) [noun] A rough fight. | [noun] In some team sports, especially soccer, a practice game which does not count on a team's record. | [noun] In American football or Canadian football, a play that begins with a snap from the center while opposing teams are on either side of a line of scrimmage. SCRIMPIEST (16) SCRIMSHAWS (20) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRIPTORIA (14) [noun] A room set aside for the copying, writing, or illuminating of manuscripts and records, especially such a room in a monastery. SCRIPTURAL (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to scripture. SCRIPTURES (14) [noun] A sacred writing or holy book. | [noun] (by extension) An authoritative statement. SCRIVENERS (15) [noun] A professional writer; one whose occupation is to draw contracts or prepare writings. | [noun] One whose business is to place money at interest; a broker. | [noun] A writing master. SCROFULOUS (15) SCROGGIEST (14) SCROLLWORK (19) [noun] Ornamentation in a scroll pattern, especially in woodwork. SCROOCHING (18) [verb] To crouch, or hunker down. SCROOTCHED (18) SCROOTCHES (17) SCROUNGERS (13) [noun] One who scrounges. SCROUNGIER (13) SCROUNGING (14) [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. | [noun] The act of one who scrounges. SCRUBBABLE (18) SCRUBBIEST (16) SCRUBLANDS (15) [noun] A plant community characterized by scrub vegetation, consisting of low shrubs, mixed with grasses, herbs, and geophytes. SCRUBWOMAN (19) SCRUBWOMEN (19) SCRUFFIEST (18) [adjective] Untidy in appearance. | [adjective] Scurfy. 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. SCRUMMAGES (17) [noun] An ordered formation of forwards, typically bending down, binding to one another with their arms, and pushing opponents shoulder to shoulder, in which each side aims to gain control of the ball; a scrum. | [noun] A scrimmage. | [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SCRUNCHING (18) [verb] To grind with the teeth, and with a crackling sound; to craunch. | [verb] To crumple and squeeze to make more compact. | [noun] The act of something being scrunched. SCRUPULOUS (14) [adjective] Exactly and carefully conducted. | [adjective] Having scruples or compunctions. | [adjective] Precise; exact or strict SCRUTINEER (12) [noun] A person who scrutinises; a person responsible for scrutineering. | [verb] To scrutinise; to thoroughly check that an election is being run fairly, or that a vehicle meets the rules of a competition, etc. SCRUTINIES (12) [noun] Intense study of someone or something. | [noun] Thorough inspection of a situation or a case. | [noun] An examination of catechumens, in the last week of Lent, who were to receive baptism on Easter Day. SCRUTINISE (12) [verb] To examine something with great care. | [verb] To audit accounts etc in order to verify them. SCRUTINIZE (21) [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. SCULLERIES (12) [noun] A small room, next to a kitchen, where washing up and other domestic chores are done. SCULPTRESS (14) [noun] A female sculptor. SCULPTURAL (14) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or having characteristics of sculpture. SCULPTURED (15) [adjective] Made like a sculpture. | [adjective] Attractively formed. SCULPTURES (14) [noun] A three dimensional work of art created by shaping malleable objects and letting them harden or by chipping away pieces from a rock (sculpting). | [noun] Works of art created by sculpting, as a group. | [noun] The three-dimensional ornamentation on the outer surface of a shell SCUNGILLIS (13) SCUNNERING (13) [verb] To be sick of. | [verb] To dislike. | [verb] To cause to loathe, or feel disgust at. SCUPPERING (17) [verb] Thwart or destroy, especially something belonging or pertaining to another; compare scuttle. SCURRILITY (15) [noun] Something that is scurrilous. SCURRILOUS (12) [adjective] (of a person) Given to vulgar verbal abuse; foul-mouthed. | [adjective] (of language) Coarse, vulgar, abusive, or slanderous. | [adjective] Gross, vulgar and evil. SCURVINESS (15) SCUTCHEONS (17) [noun] An escutcheon; an emblazoned shield. | [noun] An escutcheon; a small plate of metal, such as the shield around a keyhole. SCUTELLATE (12) SCUTTERING (13) [verb] To void thin excrement. | [verb] To run with a light pattering noise; to skitter. | [noun] The act of running with a light pattering noise; a skittering. SCYPHOZOAN (29) SEABEACHES (17) SEABORGIUM (15) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Sg) with atomic number 106 SEAFARINGS (14) SEAMANLIKE (16) SEAMANSHIP (17) [noun] Skill in, and knowledge of, the work of navigating, maintaining, and operating a vessel. SEAMLESSLY (15) [adverb] In a seamless manner. SEAMSTRESS (12) [noun] A woman who sews clothes professionally. SEARCHABLE (17) [adjective] Capable of being searched, especially something that has an automated search function included. | [adjective] Capable of being searched for. SEARCHLESS (15) SEASONABLE (12) [adjective] Opportune; occurring at an appropriate or suitable time. | [adjective] Appropriate to the current season of the year. | [adjective] Ephemeral; lasting for just one season. SEASONABLY (15) SEASONALLY (13) [adverb] Occurring every season. | [adverb] Occurring only in season. SEASONINGS (11) [noun] Something used to add taste or flavour to food, such as salt and pepper or other condiment, herb or spice. | [noun] (by extension) Anything added to increase enjoyment. | [noun] A coat of polymerized oil inside a cooking vessel which renders the surface non-stick. SEASONLESS (10) SEASTRANDS (11) SEBORRHEAS (15) SEBORRHEIC (17) SECESSIONS (12) [noun] The act of seceding. SECLUDEDLY (17) SECLUSIONS (12) [noun] The act of secluding, shutting out or keeping apart. | [noun] The state of being secluded or shut out, as from company, society, the world, etc.; solitude. | [noun] A secluded, isolated or private place. 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. SECRETIONS (12) [noun] Any substance that is secreted by an organism | [noun] The act of secreting a substance, especially from a gland | [noun] The act of hiding something SECTARIANS (12) [noun] A member of a sect. | [noun] A bigot. SECTIONALS (12) [noun] An item of furniture composed of modular sections; usually specifically a sectional sofa | [noun] A tournament or match held at the section level, typically between the regionals and the championships | [noun] A band sectional, in which one section of a band or orchestra practices separately SECTIONING (13) [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. SECULARISE (12) [verb] To make secular. SECULARISM (14) [noun] Neutrality towards all religions. | [noun] The political belief in the separation of church and state, i.e. the position that religious belief should not influence public and governmental decisions. SECULARIST (12) [noun] A person who believes in or supports secularism. SECULARITY (15) SECULARIZE (21) [verb] To make secular. SECUREMENT (14) SECURENESS (12) SECURITIES (12) [noun] The condition of not being threatened, especially physically, psychologically, emotionally, or financially. | [noun] Something that secures. | [noun] An organization or department responsible for providing security by enforcing laws, rules, and regulations as well as maintaining order. SECURITIZE (21) [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. SEDATENESS (11) SEDIMENTED (14) [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. | [adjective] (of a strata) Deposited from sediment SEDUCEMENT (15) SEDUCTIONS (13) [noun] The act of seducing. | [noun] (in English common law) The felony of, as a man, inducing a previously chaste unmarried female to engage in sexual intercourse on a promise of marriage. SEDUCTRESS (13) [noun] A woman skilled in and practiced at seduction. | [noun] A woman who seduces. SEDULITIES (11) SEDULOUSLY (14) SEECATCHIE (17) SEEDEATERS (11) [noun] An individual or species which eats seeds. | [noun] A bird species which feeds mainly on seeds. | [noun] Any bird in the genus Sporophila of the tanager family, Thraupidae SEEMLINESS (12) SEERSUCKER (16) [noun] A thin, all-cotton fabric, commonly striped, used to make clothing for summer wear. | [noun] An article made from such fabric. SEGMENTARY (16) SEGMENTING (14) [verb] To divide into segments or sections. SEGREGANTS (12) 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. SEGREGATES (12) [verb] To separate, especially by social policies that directly or indirectly keep races or ethnic groups apart. SEGUIDILLA (12) [noun] A lively Spanish dance in triple time. | [noun] The music for this dance. SEIGNORAGE (12) [noun] All the revenue obtained by a feudal lord from his vassals. | [noun] The revenue obtained directly by minting coin (difference between face value and cost of metal). | [noun] The revenue obtained by the difference between interest earned on securities acquired in exchange for bank notes and the costs of producing and distributing those notes. SEIGNORIAL (11) SEIGNORIES (11) SEISMICITY (17) [noun] A measure or a degree of how seismic a region is, how prone it is to earthquakes. SEISMOGRAM (15) [noun] The graphical output from an accelerograph or seismograph. SEISMOLOGY (16) [noun] The study of the vibration of the Earth's interior caused by natural and unnatural sources, such as earthquakes. SELACHIANS (15) [noun] Any organism of the superorder Selachimorpha or subclass Elasmobranchii; an extant shark (or related species). SELECTABLE (14) SELECTIONS (12) [noun] A process by which heritable traits conferring survival and reproductive advantage to individuals, or related individuals, tend to be passed on to succeeding generations and become more frequent in a population, whereas other less favourable traits tend to become eliminated; the differential survival and reproduction of phenotypes. | [noun] The process or act of selecting. | [noun] Something selected. SELECTNESS (12) SELENOLOGY (14) [noun] The scientific study of the Moon. SELFLESSLY (16) [adverb] In a selfless manner; done in a way that disregards concerns for the self and places other first. SELFNESSES (13) SEMANTICAL (14) SEMAPHORED (18) [verb] To signal using, or as if using, a semaphore, with the implication that it is done nonverbally. SEMAPHORES (17) [noun] Any equipment used for visual signalling by means of flags, lights, or mechanically moving arms, which are used to represent letters of the alphabet, or words. | [noun] A visual system for transmitting information using the above equipment; especially, by means of two flags held one in each hand, using an alphabetic and numeric code based on the position of the signaller's arms; flag semaphore. | [noun] A bit, token, fragment of code, or some other mechanism which is used to restrict access to a shared function or device to a single process at a time, or to synchronize and coordinate events in different processes. SEMBLABLES (16) [noun] Something similar; likeness; representation SEMBLANCES (16) [noun] Likeness, similarity; the quality of being similar. | [noun] The way something looks; appearance; form SEMEIOLOGY (16) [noun] Semiotics, the study of signs. | [noun] The science of the signs or symptoms of disease; symptomatology. | [noun] The art of using signs in signalling. SEMEIOTICS (14) [noun] The study of signs and symbols, especially as means of language or communication. | [noun] The study of medical signs and symptoms; symptomatology. SEMESTRIAL (12) SEMIANNUAL (12) [noun] Something occurring twice each year. | [adjective] Biannual: occurring twice a year SEMIBREVES (17) [noun] A musical note four beats long in 4/4 time; a whole note (US) SEMICIRCLE (16) [noun] Half of a circle. | [noun] An instrument for measuring angles. SEMICOLONS (14) [noun] The punctuation mark ;. SEMICOLONY (17) SEMIDESERT (13) SEMIDIVINE (16) SEMIDRYING (17) SEMIDWARFS (19) SEMIFEUDAL (16) SEMIFINALS (15) [noun] A playoff in the round with only four players or teams left, the stage before the final. | [noun] (general) A competition that narrows a field of contestants (semifinalists) to a set of finalists, for a subsequent final. SEMIFITTED (16) [adjective] Partially fitted (with appliances etc) | [adjective] That partially conforms to the outlines of the body SEMIFLUIDS (16) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. SEMIFORMAL (17) [adjective] Somewhat formal. SEMIGROUPS (15) SEMIHOBOES (17) SEMILETHAL (15) [adjective] (of a trait) lethal to at least half of all affected organisms 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. SEMIMETALS (14) [noun] A metalloid. SEMINARIAN (12) SEMINARIES (12) [noun] A theological school for the training of rabbis, priests, or ministers. | [noun] A private residential school for girls. | [noun] A class of religious education for youths ages 14–18 that accompanies normal secular education. SEMINARIST (12) SEMINOMADS (15) SEMINUDITY (16) SEMIOPAQUE (23) [adjective] Partially opaque. SEMIPOSTAL (14) SEMIPUBLIC (18) SEMIQUAVER (24) [noun] A sixteenth note, drawn as a crotchet with two tails. SEMISACRED (15) SEMISECRET (14) SEMISOLIDS (13) SEMITROPIC (16) SEMIVOWELS (18) [noun] A sound in speech which has some qualities of a consonant and some qualities of a vowel. | [noun] A letter which represents a semivowel sound, such as w or y in English. SEMIWEEKLY (22) [adjective] Occurring twice a week; occurring once every one-half a week | [noun] A periodical published twice a week. SEMIYEARLY (18) SEMPSTRESS (14) [noun] A seamstress, a woman employed to sew. SENATORIAL (10) [adjective] Relating to a senator. | [adjective] Relating to a senate. | [adjective] Entitled to elect a senator, or by senators. SENATORIAN (10) SENESCENCE (14) [noun] The state or process of ageing, especially in humans; old age. | [noun] Ceasing to divide by mitosis because of shortening of telomeres or excessive DNA damage. | [noun] Old age; accumulated damage to macromolecules, cells, tissues and organs with the passage of time. SENESCHALS (15) [noun] A steward, particularly one in charge of a medieval nobleman's estate. | [noun] An officer of the crown in late medieval and early modern France who served as a kind of governor and chief justice of the royal court in Normandy and Languedoc. SENHORITAS (13) [noun] A young woman in or from a Lusophone community. SENILITIES (10) SENSATIONS (10) [noun] A physical feeling or perception from something that comes into contact with the body; something sensed. | [noun] A widespread reaction of interest or excitement. SENSIBILIA (12) SENSIBLEST (12) 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. SENSITISES (10) [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. SENSITIVES (13) [noun] A person with a paranormal sensitivity to something that most cannot perceive. 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. SENSITIZER (19) SENSITIZES (19) [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. SENSORIUMS (12) [noun] The entire sensory apparatus of an organism. | [noun] The central part of a nervous system that receives and coordinates all stimuli. | [noun] The brain or mind in relation to the senses. SENSUALISM (12) SENSUALIST (10) [noun] A person who believes in enjoying sensuality and the experience of pleasant sensations. | [noun] One who holds to the doctrine of sensualism. SENSUALITY (13) [noun] The state of being sensual, sensuous or sexy. | [noun] A preoccupation with sensual pleasure. SENSUALIZE (19) [verb] To make sensual; to subject to the love of sensual pleasure; to debase by carnal gratifications. SENSUOSITY (13) SENSUOUSLY (13) SENTENCING (13) [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. SENTENTIAE (10) SENTENTIAL (10) [adjective] Relating to a sentence. SENTIENCES (12) SENTIENTLY (13) SENTIMENTS (12) [noun] A general thought, feeling, or sense. | [noun] Feelings, especially tender feelings, as apart from reason or judgment, or of a weak or foolish kind. SENTINELED (11) [verb] To watch over as a guard. | [verb] To post as guard. | [verb] To post a guard for. SEPARATELY (15) [adverb] In a separate manner; not together; apart. SEPARATING (13) [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. SEPARATION (12) [noun] The act of disuniting two or more things, or the condition of being separated. | [noun] The act or condition of two or more people being separated from one another. | [noun] The act or condition of a married couple living in separate homes while remaining legally married. SEPARATISM (14) [noun] A theory or doctrine which supports a state of separation between organizations, institutions, or other societal groups (e.g. between church and state) or between different political jurisdictions (e.g. a country and its former colony). | [noun] The practice of treating members of different societal groups in a politically, legally, or economically different manner. SEPARATIST (12) [noun] Someone who advocates separation from the established Church; a member of any of various sects or schismatics. | [noun] A person who advocates or seeks the splitting of one country or territory into two politically independent countries or territories. | [adjective] Advocating ecclesiastical separation. SEPARATIVE (15) [noun] Something that serves to separate. | [adjective] Serving to separate. | [adjective] Tending to keep oneself separate from others. SEPARATORS (12) [noun] An object located between two or more things and hence separating them. | [noun] A device for removing one substance from another, such as cream from milk. | [noun] One who separates; an agent performing the action of separating. SEPIOLITES (12) SEPTENARII (12) [noun] A verse having seven metrical feet. SEPTENNIAL (12) [adjective] Lasting or continuing seven years. | [adjective] Happening or returning once in every seven years. SEPTICEMIA (16) [noun] A disease caused by the presence of pathogenic organisms, especially bacteria, or their toxins, in the bloodstream, characterised by chills and fever. SEPTICEMIC (18) SEPTICIDAL (15) SEPTILLION (12) [numeral] (US, modern British & Australian, short scale) A trillion trillion: 1 followed by 24 zeros, 1024. | [numeral] (dated British & Australian, long scale) A billion quintillion: 1 followed by 42 zeros, 1042. SEPTUPLING (15) [verb] To multiply by seven. | [verb] To increase by a factor of seven. SEPULCHERS (17) [verb] To bury the dead. SEPULCHRAL (17) [adjective] Relating to a grave or to death; funereal. | [adjective] Suggestive of a grave or of death; having a hollow and deep sound. SEPULCHRED (18) [verb] To place in a sepulchre. SEPULCHRES (17) [noun] A burial chamber. | [noun] A recess in some early churches in which the reserved sacrament, etc. were kept from Good Friday till Easter. SEPULTURES (12) [noun] A burial chamber. | [noun] A recess in some early churches in which the reserved sacrament, etc. were kept from Good Friday till Easter. | [noun] The act of sepulchring, committing the remains of a deceased person to the grave or sepulchre. SEQUACIOUS (21) [adjective] (Of objects) Likely to follow or yield to physical pressure; easily shaped or molded. | [adjective] (Of people) Likely to follow or yield to others, especially showing unthinking adherence to others' ideas; easily led. | [adjective] Following neatly or smoothly. SEQUENCERS (21) [noun] Any device that activates or deactivates the components of a machine or system according to a preplanned sequence (as in a washing machine, or central heating system). | [noun] A device or system that orders and/or modifies digitally stored music and sound for playback. | [noun] A device for determining the sequence of monomers in a polymer, especially amino acids in protein, or bases in DNA; A sequenator. SEQUENCIES (21) SEQUENCING (22) [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 SEQUENTIAL (19) [adjective] Succeeding or following in order SEQUESTERS (19) [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. SEQUESTRUM (21) [noun] A fragment of bone or other dead tissue that has separated during necrosis SERENADERS (11) SERENADING (12) [verb] To sing or play a serenade for (someone). | [noun] The act of one who serenades. SERENENESS (10) SERENITIES (10) [noun] The state of being serene; calmness; peacefulness. | [noun] A lack of agitation or disturbance. | [noun] A title given to a reigning prince or similar dignitary. 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. SERIALISES (10) [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. SERIALISMS (12) SERIALISTS (10) 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). SERIALIZES (19) [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. SERIGRAPHS (16) [noun] A silkscreen print made by serigraphy | [noun] An autographic device to test the strength of raw silk SERIGRAPHY (19) SERIOCOMIC (16) [adjective] Having both serious and comedic qualities or tendencies. SERMONETTE (12) [noun] A short sermon. 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. SERMONIZER (21) SERMONIZES (21) [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. SEROLOGIES (11) SEROLOGIST (11) SEROSITIES (10) SEROTINOUS (10) SEROTONINS (10) [noun] An indoleamine neurotransmitter, 5-hydroxytryptamine, that is involved in depression, appetite, etc., and is crucial in maintaining a sense of well-being, security, etc. SERPENTINE (12) [noun] Any of several plants believed to cure snakebites. | [noun] An early form of cannon, used in the 16th century. | [noun] A kind of firework. | [noun] Any of several green/brown minerals consisting of a magnesium and iron silicates that have similar layered crystal structure. SERPIGINES (13) SERRATIONS (10) [noun] The state of being serrated. | [noun] A set of teeth or notches. | [noun] One of the teeth in a serrated or serrate edge. SERVICEMAN (17) [noun] A man who serves in the armed forces. | [noun] A person, especially a man, employed in service and maintenance of equipment. SERVICEMEN (17) [noun] A man who serves in the armed forces. | [noun] A person, especially a man, employed in service and maintenance of equipment. SERVIETTES (13) [noun] A table napkin, now especially a paper one. | [noun] A lazy Susan SERVITUDES (14) SERVOMOTOR (15) [noun] An electric motor in a servomechanism, especially one which incorporates feedback so it accurately positions the device. SESTERTIUM (12) SETTLEABLE (12) SETTLEMENT (12) [noun] The act of settling. | [noun] The state of being settled. | [noun] A colony that is newly established; a place or region newly settled. SEVENTEENS (13) SEVENTIETH (16) [noun] The person or thing in the seventieth position. | [noun] One of seventy equal parts of a whole. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number seventy. SEVERANCES (15) [noun] The act of severing or the state of being severed. | [noun] A separation. | [noun] A severance payment. SEVERENESS (13) SEVERITIES (13) [noun] The state of being severe. | [noun] The degree of something undesirable; badness or seriousness. SEWABILITY (18) SEXINESSES (17) SEXOLOGIES (18) SEXOLOGIST (18) SEXTILLION (17) [numeral] (US; modern British & Australian, short scale) A trillion billion: 1 followed by 21 zeros, 1021. | [numeral] (dated British & Australian, long scale) A million quintillion: 1 followed by 36 zeros, 1036. SEXTUPLETS (19) [noun] A group of six objects. | [noun] One of a group of six persons or animals born from the same mother during the same birth. | [noun] A group of six notes played in the time of four. SEXTUPLING (20) [verb] To make, or to become, six times as much (or as many). SEXUALIZED (27) [verb] To make sexual, or give sex appeal to. | [verb] To distinguish as belonging to separate sexes. SEXUALIZES (26) [verb] To make sexual, or give sex appeal to. | [verb] To distinguish as belonging to separate sexes. SFORZANDOS (23) [noun] A mark that indicates that a note is to be played with a strong initial attack. | [noun] A passage having this mark. SHABBINESS (17) SHADBUSHES (19) [noun] Any plant in the genus Amelanchier. SHADCHANIM (21) [noun] (Jewish) marriage broker, matchmaker SHADOWIEST (17) [adjective] In shadow; darkened by shadows. | [adjective] (of character) Dark, obscure. | [adjective] Indulging in fancies; daydreaming. SHADOWLESS (17) SHADOWLIKE (21) SHAGGINESS (15) SHAGGYMANE (20) SHAKEDOWNS (21) [noun] Extortion, especially through blackmail | [noun] A thorough search; a frisk | [noun] A trial or test period, especially of a ship or aircraft SHALLOWEST (16) [adjective] Having little depth; significantly less deep than wide. | [adjective] Extending not far downward. | [adjective] Concerned mainly with superficial matters. SHALLOWING (17) [verb] To make or become less deep. | [noun] The act of becoming shallower. SHAMANISMS (17) SHAMANISTS (15) SHAMEFACED (21) [adjective] Bashful, showing modesty or embarrassment. | [adjective] Ashamed, displaying shame, especially by blushing in the face. SHAMEFULLY (21) [adverb] In a shameful manner. | [adverb] Used to express discontent with a situation or occurrence. SHAMMASHIM (22) SHAMPOOERS (17) SHAMPOOING (18) [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. SHANDYGAFF (24) 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. SHANGHAIER (17) SHANKPIECE (21) SHANTYTOWN (19) [noun] An area containing a collection of shacks, shanties or makeshift dwellings. SHAPELIEST (15) [adjective] Having a pleasing shape, pleasant to look at. SHARECROPS (17) [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. SHAREWARES (16) SHARKSKINS (21) SHARPENERS (15) [noun] A device for making things sharp. | [noun] That which makes something sharp. | [noun] An alcoholic drink taken at the start of the day, or just before a meal. SHARPENING (16) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To make sharp. | [verb] To become sharp. | [noun] The act by which something is sharpened. SHASHLICKS (22) SHATTERING (14) [verb] To violently break something into pieces. | [verb] To destroy or disable something. | [verb] To smash, or break into tiny pieces. SHAVELINGS (17) [noun] Someone with all or part of their head shaved, notably a tonsured clergyman; a priest or monk. | [noun] A shaver, stripling, young man physically mature enough to shave. SHAVETAILS (16) [noun] An inexperienced person, especially a newly-commissioned military officer. SHEARLINGS (14) [noun] A sheep that has been shorn for the first time | [noun] A sheepskin or lambskin that has gone through a limited shearing process so that the fibers are of uniform depth SHEARWATER (16) [noun] Any of the long-winged pelagic seabirds of the family Procellariidae in genera Puffinus, Ardenna, and Calonectris, that breed on islands and coastal cliffs. | [noun] (by extension) Any of the entire family Procellariidae, including certain of the petrels. SHEATHBILL (18) [noun] Either of two species of scavenging birds in the family Chionididae which breed only on the Antarctic Peninsula and subantarctic islands. SHEATHINGS (17) [noun] Something that wraps around or surrounds something, as a sheath encases its blade. SHEEPBERRY (20) SHEEPCOTES (17) SHEEPFOLDS (19) [noun] An enclosure for keeping sheep. | [noun] A flock of sheep. SHEEPISHLY (21) [adverb] In a sheepish way; meekly; self-consciously; with embarrassment. SHEEPSHANK (22) [noun] A type of knot which is useful for shortening a rope or taking up slack without cutting it. | [verb] To shorten (a rope) using a sheepshank knot. SHEEPSHEAD (19) [noun] A fish of the species Archosargus probatocephalus. | [noun] A trick-taking card game. SHEEPSKINS (19) [noun] The skin of a sheep, especially when used to make parchment or in bookbinding. | [noun] A diploma. | [noun] The tanned skin of a sheep with the fleece left on, especially when used for clothing, rugs, etc. SHEIKHDOMS (23) SHELDRAKES (18) [noun] An Old World duck of the genus Tadorna. | [noun] A merganser. | [noun] A male shelduck. SHELLACKED (20) [adjective] Coated in shellac. SHELLBACKS (21) [noun] A worldly sailor. | [noun] A sailor who has crossed the equator. SHELLPROOF (18) [adjective] Resistant to shelling. SHELLWORKS (20) SHELTERERS (13) SHELTERING (14) [verb] To provide cover from damage or harassment; to shield; to protect. | [verb] To take cover. | [noun] A shelter; a structure beneath which one shelters. SHENANIGAN (14) [noun] A deceitful confidence trick, or mischief causing discomfort or annoyance. 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. SHERIFFDOM (22) SHEWBREADS (19) [noun] Twelve loaves of bread placed on the alter in Jewish Temples and renewed periodically. See showbread. SHIBBOLETH (20) [noun] A word, especially seen as a test, to distinguish someone as belonging to a particular nation, class, profession etc. | [noun] A common or longstanding belief, custom, or catchphrase associated with a particular group, especially one with little current meaning or truth. SHIFTINESS (16) SHIKARRING (18) SHILLALAHS (16) SHILLELAGH (17) [noun] A wooden (traditionally blackthorn (sloe) wood) club ending with a large knob. | [noun] Any cudgel, whether or not of Irish origin. SHIMMERING (18) [verb] To shine with a veiled, tremulous, or intermittent light; to gleam faintly. | [noun] A gleam or glimmer. SHINLEAVES (16) SHINNERIES (13) SHINNEYING (17) SHIPBOARDS (18) SHIPFITTER (18) SHIPMASTER (17) [noun] The master of a ship; a captain; a commander. SHIPOWNERS (18) [noun] Someone who owns a ship. SHIPWRECKS (24) [noun] A ship that has sunk or run aground so that it is no longer seaworthy. | [noun] An event where a ship sinks or runs aground. | [noun] Destruction; ruin; irretrievable loss SHIPWRIGHT (22) [noun] A person who designs, builds and repairs ships, especially wooden ones. SHIRTDRESS (14) [noun] A type of dress, borrowing details, such as a collar or button front, from a man's shirt. SHIRTFRONT (16) [noun] The front part of a shirt. | [noun] A detachable insert that simulates the front of a shirt. | [noun] A pitch that is easy to bat on. SHIRTMAKER (19) SHIRTTAILS (13) [noun] The single or split (then rather plural) bottom part of a shirt, below the waist, especially in the back, which, when not tucked into trousers or other vestment, hangs over the wearer's tail-end, like a tail. | [noun] (by extension) The tail-end or periphery of something. | [noun] A tenuous connection. SHIRTWAIST (16) [noun] A woman's tailored blouse, buttoned down the front. SHLEMIEHLS (18) SHMALTZIER (24) SHOCKINGLY (23) [adverb] In a shocking manner. | [adverb] To a shocking degree. SHOCKPROOF (24) [verb] To protect from imparting electric shocks. | [adjective] Made sturdily enough to withstand knocks and shocks without being damaged. | [adjective] Protected from imparting electric shocks. SHODDINESS (15) SHOEBLACKS (21) [noun] One who cleans and polishes shoes (and boots) as an occupation. 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. SHOEMAKERS (19) [noun] A person who makes shoes | [noun] The threadfish. | [noun] A fish, Elagatis pinnulatis, the runner. SHOESTRING (14) [noun] The string or lace used to secure the shoe to the foot; a shoelace. | [noun] A tight budget; very little money. | [noun] A long narrow cut of a food; a julienne. SHOGUNATES (14) SHOPKEEPER (21) [noun] A trader who sells goods in a shop, or by retail, in distinction from one who sells by wholesale, or sells door to door. SHOPLIFTED (19) [verb] To steal something from a shop / store during trading hours. | [verb] To steal from shops / stores during trading hours. SHOPLIFTER (18) [noun] A person who shoplifts, one who steals from shops. SHOPWINDOW (22) [noun] A large window at the front of a shop, behind which items for sale are displayed. SHOREBIRDS (16) [noun] A bird, or species of birds, that is found near the edge of bodies of water. SHOREFRONT (16) SHORELINES (13) [noun] The divide between land and a body of water. | [noun] The line on a map that illustrates this. SHOREWARDS (17) [adverb] Towards the shore SHORTBREAD (16) [noun] A type of biscuit (cookie), popular in Britain, traditionally made from one part sugar, two parts butter and three parts flour. SHORTCAKES (19) [noun] A sweet cake or biscuit (crumbly leavened bread) typically made with flour, sugar, salt, butter, milk or cream, and sometimes eggs, and leavened with baking powder or baking soda. | [noun] A dessert made with such a cake, typically having layers of cream and fruit. SHORTENERS (13) SHORTENING (14) [verb] To make shorter; to abbreviate. | [verb] To become shorter. | [verb] To make deficient (as to); to deprive (of). SHORTFALLS (16) [noun] An instance of not meeting a quota, debt, or monthly payment on a debt or other obligation, or of having an insufficient amount to cover such obligations. | [noun] The amount by which a quota, debt, or monthly payment on a debt or other obligation is missed; the difference between the actual quota or debt and the lesser amount available to pay such obligations. SHORTHAIRS (16) [noun] Any of several breeds of domestic cat with relatively short hair, slender body and large head. SHORTHANDS (17) [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. SHORTHORNS (16) [noun] One of a breed of cattle, originating in England, with distinctively short horns (in contrast to longhorn cattle). SHORTLISTS (13) [verb] To place something on a short list SHORTSTOPS (15) [noun] The infield defensive player that stands between the second baseman and the third baseman. | [noun] A nimble defender. | [noun] A player who is short of money. SHORTWAVES (19) 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. SHOTGUNNER (14) 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. SHOVELFULS (19) SHOVELLERS (16) [noun] One who, or that which, shovels. | [noun] Any of four species of dabbling duck, in the genus Anas, with distinctive spatulate bills. SHOVELLING (17) [verb] To move materials with a shovel. | [verb] To move with a shoveling motion. | [noun] The act by which something is shovelled. SHOVELNOSE (16) SHOVELSFUL (19) SHOWBIZZES (36) SHOWBOATED (19) [verb] To show off. SHOWBREADS (19) [noun] The twelve loaves of bread placed daily by the Jewish priests in the Holy Place on the table. SHOWCASING (19) [verb] To display, demonstrate, show, or present. | [noun] An instance of something being showcased or exhibited. | [noun] (retailing) The activity of going to bricks-and-mortar stores to examine goods before buying them online, frequently from a different retailer. SHOWERHEAD (20) SHOWERLESS (16) SHOWPIECES (20) [noun] Something that exhibits exceptional quality, something worth being shown. | [noun] Something made specifically to be displayed. SHOWPLACES (20) [noun] A building or estate shown for its beauty or noteworthiness. | [noun] A location kept for display only. SHREWDNESS (17) [noun] The quality of being shrewd. | [noun] An invented collective name for a group of apes. SHREWISHLY (22) SHRIEKIEST (17) SHRIEVALTY (19) [noun] The office, jurisdiction, or tenure of a sheriff SHRILLNESS (13) SHRIMPIEST (17) SHRIMPLIKE (21) SHRINKABLE (19) SHRINKAGES (18) [noun] The act of shrinking, or the proportion by which something shrinks. | [noun] The loss of merchandise through theft, spoilage, and obsolescence. | [noun] The reduction in size of the male genitalia when cold, such as from immersion in cold water. SHRIVELING (17) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SHRIVELLED (17) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SHRUBBIEST (17) SHUDDERING (16) [verb] To shake nervously, often from fear or horror. | [verb] To vibrate jerkily. | [noun] An extended or continuous shudder. SHUNPIKERS (19) SHUNPIKING (20) SHUTTERBUG (16) [noun] A person who makes a hobby of photography. SHUTTERING (14) [verb] To close shutters covering. | [verb] To close up (a building) for a prolonged period of inoccupancy. | [verb] To cancel or terminate. SHYLOCKING (23) SIALAGOGUE (12) [noun] Any drug that increases the flow of saliva. SIBILANCES (14) SIBILANTLY (15) SIBILATING (13) [verb] To hiss. | [verb] To speak with a hissing sound. | [noun] A hissing sound SIBILATION (12) SICKLEMIAS (18) SICKLINESS (16) SICKNESSES (16) [noun] The quality or state of being sick or diseased; illness. | [noun] Nausea; qualmishness; as, sickness of stomach. | [noun] The analogical misuse of a rarer or marked grammatical case in the place of a more common or unmarked case. SIDEBOARDS (14) [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. SIDEBURNED (14) SIDELIGHTS (15) [noun] A light found at the side of something; especially of a vehicle. | [noun] A window found at one or both sides of a door. SIDELINERS (11) SIDELINING (12) [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. SIDEPIECES (15) SIDEROLITE (11) SIDESADDLE (13) [noun] A saddle, usually for a woman, in which the rider sits with both legs on the same side of the horse. | [adverb] On, or as if on, such a saddle. SIDESTREAM (13) [noun] A stream of fluid taken from an intermediate point in a process such as distillation SIDESTROKE (15) [noun] A swimming stroke swum on the swimmer's side. SIDESWIPED (17) [verb] To give a blow with the side, as to strike with the side of a car when turning. SIDESWIPES (16) [noun] A blow with the side of something, such as the side of car that is changing lanes incautiously. | [noun] A catty or sarcastic remark. | [verb] To give a blow with the side, as to strike with the side of a car when turning. SIDETRACKS (17) [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. SIDEWINDER (15) [noun] A North American rattlesnake, Crotalus cerastes, that inhabits lowland deserts. | [noun] A person who is untrustworthy and dangerous. | [noun] A heavy swinging blow from the side which disables an adversary. SIGHTLIEST (14) SIGHTSEERS (14) [noun] One who goes sightseeing; one who goes around to look at sights or see things of interest; a tourist. 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. SIGNALISES (11) [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. SIGNALIZES (20) [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. SIGNALLERS (11) SIGNALLING (12) [verb] To indicate; to convey or communicate by a signal. | [verb] To communicate with (a person or system) by a signal. | [noun] The use of signals in communications, especially the sending of signals in telecommunications SIGNALMENT (13) SIGNATURES (11) [noun] A person's name, written by that person, used as identification or to signify approval of accompanying material, such as a legal contract. | [noun] An act of signing one's name; an act of producing a signature. | [noun] The part of a doctor’s prescription containing directions for the patient. SIGNBOARDS (14) [noun] A board carrying a sign, or on which signs may be posted. SIGNIFIEDS (15) [noun] (structuralism) The concept or idea evoked by a sign. SIGNIFIERS (14) [noun] Something or someone that signifies, makes something more significant or important. | [noun] The sound of spoken word or string of letters on a page that a person recognizes as a sign. SIGNIFYING (18) [verb] To create a sign out of something. | [verb] To give (something) a meaning or an importance. | [verb] To show one’s intentions with a sign etc.; to indicate, announce. SIGNIORIES (11) SIGNORINAS (11) [noun] A courtesy title for an unmarried woman of Italian origin. | [noun] Maitake, hen of the woods (mushroom) 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. SILENTNESS (10) SILHOUETTE (13) [noun] An illustrated outline filled in with a solid color(s), usually only black, and intended to represent the shape of an object without revealing any other visual details; a similar appearance produced when the object being viewed is situated in relative darkness with brighter lighting behind it; a profile portrait in black, such as a shadow appears to be. | [verb] To represent by a silhouette; to project upon a background, so as to be like a silhouette. SILICIFIED (16) [adjective] Combined with silicon | [adjective] Impregnated with silica; petrified | [verb] To impregnate something with silica. SILICIFIES (15) [verb] To impregnate something with silica. | [verb] To be impregnated with, or converted into silica. SILICOTICS (14) SILKALINES (14) SILKOLINES (14) SILTATIONS (10) SILTSTONES (10) [noun] A sedimentary rock whose composition is intermediate in grain size between the coarser sandstone and the finer mudstone. SILVERBACK (21) [noun] A mature male of the several species of chimpanzees and gorillas, so named from the silver streaking on its back. | [noun] (by extension) A dominant older human male. | [noun] Any of various ferns of the genus Pityrogramma. SILVERFISH (19) [noun] Certain insects | [noun] Certain fish SILVERSIDE (14) [noun] Any of several small fish, mostly in families Atherinidae and Atherinopsidae, both in order Atheriniformes, that are characterized by bright, silvery scales. | [noun] The upper side of a round of beef. | [noun] Corned beef made with this type of meat. SILVERWARE (16) [noun] Anything made from silver. | [noun] Anything with a silvery colour. | [noun] Knives, forks and spoons. 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. SIMILARITY (15) [noun] Closeness of appearance to something else. | [noun] The relation of sharing properties. | [noun] A transformation that preserves angles and the ratios of distances SIMILITUDE (13) [noun] Similarity or resemblance to something else. | [noun] A way in which two people or things share similitude. | [noun] Someone or something that closely resembles another; a duplicate or twin. SIMONIACAL (14) SIMONIZING (22) [verb] To polish with a wax-like substance. | [verb] To commit simony SIMPLENESS (14) SIMPLETONS (14) [noun] A simple-minded person lacking common sense. SIMPLICIAL (16) SIMPLICITY (19) [noun] The state or quality of being simple | [noun] An act or instance of foolishness. SIMPLIFIED (18) [noun] Short for simplified Chinese. | [adjective] Made more simple; having its complexity reduced. | [adjective] Relating to simplified Chinese. SIMPLIFIER (17) SIMPLIFIES (17) [verb] To make simpler, either by reducing in complexity, reducing to component parts, or making easier to understand. | [verb] To become simpler. SIMPLISTIC (16) [adjective] Overly simple. | [adjective] In a manner that simplifies a concept or issue so that its nuance and complexity are lost or important details are overlooked. | [adjective] Of or relating to simples, or medicinal herbs. SIMULACRES (14) SIMULACRUM (16) [noun] An image or representation. | [noun] A faint trace or semblance. SIMULATING (13) [verb] To model, replicate, duplicate the behavior, appearance or properties of. SIMULATION (12) [noun] Something that simulates a system or environment in order to predict actual behaviour. | [noun] The process of simulating. | [noun] A video game designed to convey a more or less realistic experience, as of a sport or warfare. SIMULATIVE (15) SIMULATORS (12) [noun] One who simulates or feigns. | [noun] A machine or system that simulates an environment (such as an aircraft cockpit), often for training purposes. SIMULCASTS (14) [noun] A program or event that is broadcast across more than one medium or service at the same time. | [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SINCIPITAL (14) SINFULNESS (13) SINGLENESS (11) SINGLETONS (11) [noun] A playing card that is the only one of its suit in a hand, especially at bridge. | [noun] A hand containing only one card of a certain suit. | [noun] A single object, especially one of a group. SINGLETREE (11) [noun] A bar behind draft animals and in front of a load, such as a wagon, that balances the load. Generally the animals are attached at the ends and the wagon or other load to a pivot in the middle of the singletree. SINGSPIELS (13) [noun] An early German form of opera consisting of spoken dialogue interspersed with song. | [noun] An opera in this style. SINGULARLY (14) [adverb] Strangely; oddly. | [adverb] Extremely; remarkably. | [adverb] In the singular number; in terms of a single thing. SINICIZING (22) [verb] To make something Chinese in form or character. | [verb] To convert to Chinese characters or to enable to work with the Chinese script. SINISTERLY (13) SINISTROUS (10) [adjective] On the left side; inclined to the left; sinistral. | [adjective] Wrong; absurd; perverse SINOATRIAL (10) [adjective] Relating to the venous sinus and the right atrium of the heart. SINOLOGIES (11) SINOLOGIST (11) SINOLOGUES (11) SINSEMILLA (12) [noun] A form of cannabis where only the female is allowed to blossom. Without pollen from the male plant, the female blossoms produce no seeds, forming large panicled flowers. SINUSOIDAL (11) [noun] A sine wave (or combination of such waves) | [adjective] Having the shape or characteristics of a sine wave. | [adjective] Relating to any of several channels (the sinusoids) through which venous blood passes in various organs. 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 SITOLOGIES (11) SITOSTEROL (10) SITUATIONS (10) [noun] The combination of circumstances at a given moment; a state of affairs. | [noun] The way in which something is positioned vis-à-vis its surroundings. | [noun] The place in which something is situated; a location. SIXTEENMOS (19) [noun] Sextodecimo (as a paper size in printing). SIXTEENTHS (20) [noun] One of sixteen equal parts of a whole. SIZINESSES (19) SJAMBOKING (26) 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. SKEDADDLER (17) SKEDADDLES (17) [noun] The act of running away; a scurrying off. | [verb] To move or run away quickly. | [verb] To spill; to scatter. SKELETALLY (17) SKELETONIC (16) SKELTERING (15) SKEPTICISM (20) [noun] The practice or philosophy of being a skeptic. | [noun] A studied attitude of questioning and doubt | [noun] The doctrine that absolute knowledge is not possible SKETCHBOOK (25) [noun] A book or pad with blank pages for sketching; a sketch pad. | [noun] A book of printed sketches. | [noun] A printed book of literary sketches or skits. SKETCHIEST (19) [adjective] Roughly or hastily laid out; intended for later refinement. | [adjective] Resembling a comedy sketch, of sketch quality. | [adjective] Of questionable or doubtful quality. SKEWNESSES (17) SKIBOBBERS (20) SKIBOBBING (21) SKIDDOOING (17) [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. SKIJORINGS (22) SKILLFULLY (20) [adverb] In a skillful manner; with skill. SKIMOBILES (18) [noun] Snowmobile SKIMPINESS (18) SKINFLINTS (17) [noun] One who is excessively stingy or cautious with money; a tightwad; a miser. SKINNINESS (14) SKIPPERING (19) [verb] To captain a ship or a sports team. | [verb] To take shelter in a barn or shed. SKIRMISHED (20) [verb] To engage in a minor battle or dispute SKIRMISHER (19) SKIRMISHES (19) [noun] A brief battle between small groups, usually part of a longer or larger battle or war. | [noun] (by extension) Any minor dispute. | [noun] A type of outdoor military style game using paintball or similar weapons. SKITTERIER (14) SKITTERING (15) [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. SKITTISHLY (20) SKREEGHING (19) SKREIGHING (19) SKYDIVINGS (22) SKYJACKERS (30) SKYJACKING (31) [verb] To steal or commandeer (hijack) an airplane, usually by threat of violence to the passengers. | [noun] The kidnapping of the passengers of an airplane by threat of force. The hijacking of an airplane, especially in flight. SKYLARKERS (21) SKYLARKING (22) [verb] (originally nautical) To jump about joyfully, frolic; to play around, play tricks. | [noun] (originally nautical) Playing around; frolicking; originally, running about the rigging of a vessel for fun; horseplay. SKYLIGHTED (22) [adjective] Furnished with one or more skylights SKYROCKETS (23) [verb] To increase suddenly and extremely; to shoot up; to surge or spike. SKYSCRAPER (21) [noun] A very tall building with a large number of floors. | [noun] A small sail atop a mast of a ship; a triangular skysail. | [noun] Anything very tall or high. SKYWRITERS (20) SKYWRITING (21) [noun] Messages, left by leaving a trail of smoke from an airplane, that are visible from the ground. SKYWRITTEN (20) SLABBERING (15) [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. SLACKENING (17) [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. SLANDERERS (11) SLANDERING (12) [verb] To utter a slanderous statement about; baselessly speak ill of. | [noun] The act of committing slander. SLANDEROUS (11) [adjective] (of something said) Both untrue and harmful to a reputation. SLANGINESS (11) SLANGUAGES (12) SLANTINGLY (14) SLAPDASHES (16) SLAPSTICKS (18) [noun] A style of humor focusing on physical comedy, such as slipping on a banana peel, and with foolish characters who get into humiliating situations. | [noun] A pair of sticks attached at one end and used to create a slapping sound effect, used especially in slapstick comedy; a type of clapper. SLASHINGLY (17) SLATHERING (14) [verb] To spread something thickly on something else; to coat well. | [verb] (often followed by with) To apply generously upon. | [verb] To squander. SLATTERNLY (13) [adjective] Appropriate to or characteristic of a slattern. | [adverb] In a slatternly manner. SLAUGHTERS (14) [verb] To butcher animals, generally for food | [verb] To massacre people in large numbers | [verb] To kill in a particularly brutal manner SLAVOCRACY (20) SLEAZEBAGS (22) [noun] A morally reprehensible, disreputable, or sleazy person. SLEAZEBALL (21) [noun] A morally reprehensible, disreputable, or sleazy person; a cad. SLEAZINESS (19) SLEEKENING (15) SLEEPINESS (12) [noun] The property of being sleepy. SLEEPOVERS (15) [noun] The act of spending the night as a guest in another's house, especially when the participants are children. | [noun] An overnight guest. SLEEPWALKS (19) [verb] To walk and/or perform other actions while sleeping; to somnambulate. SLEEPYHEAD (19) [noun] A sleepy person. | [noun] The ruddy duck. SLEEVELESS (13) [adjective] Of a garment, having no sleeves. | [adjective] Wanting a cover, pretext, or palliation; unreasonable; profitless; useless. SLEEVELETS (13) SLENDEREST (11) [adjective] Thin; slim. | [adjective] Meagre; deficient | [adjective] (Gaelic languages) Palatalized. SLENDERIZE (20) [verb] To make more slender. SLICKROCKS (22) SLIGHTNESS (14) SLIMEBALLS (14) [noun] A round lump made up of or coated with slime or a slime-like substance such as mucus. | [noun] (originally United States) A person who is regarded as slimy (that is, sneaky or underhanded) or otherwise undesirable. SLIMNESSES (12) SLIMPSIEST (14) SLINGSHOTS (14) [noun] A Y-shaped stick with an elastic sling between the arms used for shooting small projectiles. | [noun] A stationary, often triangular object that launches any ball that hits its longest side back at a high force, now usually located above the flipper and between it and the inlane, with one each for both lower flippers. | [verb] To move or cause to move in a manner resembling a projectile shot from a slingshot. SLINKINESS (14) SLIPCOVERS (17) [noun] A fitted protective or decorative cover that may be slipped off and on a piece of upholstered furniture, usually made of cloth. SLIPFORMED (18) SLIPPERIER (14) [adjective] Of a surface, having low friction, often due to being covered in a non-viscous liquid, and therefore hard to grip, hard to stand on without falling, etc. | [adjective] (by extension) Evasive; difficult to pin down. | [adjective] Liable to slip; not standing firm. SLIPSTREAM (14) [noun] The low-pressure zone immediately following a rapidly moving object, caused by turbulence. | [noun] A genre of fantastic or non-realistic fiction that crosses conventional genre boundaries. | [verb] To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator. SLITHERING (14) [verb] To move about smoothly and from side to side. | [verb] To slide | [noun] The act of one who slithers. SLIVOVICES (18) SLOBBERERS (14) SLOBBERING (15) [verb] To allow saliva or liquid to run from one's mouth; to drool. | [noun] The act of one who slobbers. SLOGANEERS (11) [noun] Someone who makes and spreads slogans | [verb] To make and disseminate slogans; often contrasted with substantive debate SLOGANIZED (21) SLOGANIZES (20) SLOPPINESS (14) [noun] The property of being sloppy. | [noun] The result or product of being sloppy. SLOTHFULLY (19) SLOUCHIEST (15) [adjective] Given to slouching. SLOUGHIEST (14) SLOVENLIER (13) SLOWNESSES (13) SLUBBERING (15) SLUGGARDLY (16) [adjective] Like a sluggard. SLUGGISHLY (18) SLUICEWAYS (18) [noun] A man-made channel designed to redirect excess water SLUMBERERS (14) SLUMBERING (15) [verb] To be in a very light state of sleep, almost awake. | [verb] To be inactive or negligent. | [verb] To lay to sleep. SLUMBEROUS (14) SLUNGSHOTS (14) SLUSHINESS (13) SLUTTISHLY (16) SMALLMOUTH (17) [noun] A variety of bass (fish) having a small mouth SMALLPOXES (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. SMARAGDINE (14) SMARAGDITE (14) SMARMINESS (14) SMARTASSES (12) [noun] One who is particularly insolent, who tends to make snide remarks or jokes. | [verb] To talk like a smartass, with a lot of snide remarks. SMARTENING (13) [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. SMARTWEEDS (16) SMASHINGLY (19) SMATTERERS (12) [noun] One who smatters; one who dabbles in or experiments with a little bit of everything, especially knowledge. SMATTERING (13) [noun] A superficial or shallow knowledge of a subject. | [noun] A small number or amount of something. | [verb] To talk superficially; to babble, chatter. SMEARCASES (14) SMELTERIES (12) SMIERCASES (14) SMITHERIES (15) SMOKEHOUSE (19) [noun] A structure used to smoke food to preserve it and to add flavor. | [noun] A structure in which freshly harvested tobacco is cured or preserved by smoking. SMOKEJACKS (29) SMOKESTACK (22) [noun] A conduit or group of conduits atop a structure allowing smoke to flow out. SMOLDERING (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. SMOOTHBORE (17) [noun] A cannon, gun or other firearm that has an unrifled barrel. | [adjective] Having a bore with a smooth interior, ie. one that has not been rifled SMOOTHENED (16) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. SMOOTHNESS (15) [noun] The condition of being smooth; the degree or measure of said condition. | [noun] (of a function) The highest order of derivative (the differentiability class) over a given domain. | [noun] (approximation theory, numerical analysis, of a function) The quantity measured by the modulus of smoothness. SMOTHERING (16) [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 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. SMUDGINESS (14) SMUGNESSES (13) SMUTCHIEST (17) SMUTTINESS (12) SNAKEBIRDS (17) [noun] A darter: any bird of the genus Anhinga. | [noun] A wryneck SNAKEBITES (16) [noun] The bite of a snake. | [noun] A mixture of cider and lager. | [noun] One of a pair of lip piercings below the lower lip, supposed to resemble the fangs of a snake. SNAKEROOTS (14) [noun] Any member of the genus Ageratina of perennials and rounded shrubs from the sunflower family, growing mainly in the warmer regions of the Americas. | [noun] Any of various plants of other genera, including Eupatorium, Asarum canadense (Canadian snakeroot), Aristolochia serpentaria (Virginia snakeroot), Eryngium cuneifolium, Plantago major, Polygala senega (Seneca snakeroot) and Rauvolfia serpentina (Indian snakeroot). SNAKESKINS (18) SNAKEWEEDS (18) SNAPDRAGON (14) [noun] Any plant of the genus Antirrhinum, with showy yellow, white or red flowers. | [noun] A game in which raisins are snatched from a vessel containing burning brandy, and eaten; the substance snatched and eaten during the playing of the game; the vessel used for the game. SNAPPINESS (14) SNAPPISHLY (20) SNATCHIEST (15) SNEAKINESS (14) SNEAKINGLY (18) 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. SNICKERERS (16) SNICKERING (17) [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. SNIFFINESS (16) SNIFFISHLY (22) SNIGGERERS (12) SNIGGERING (13) [verb] To emit a snigger. | [noun] The act of one who sniggers. SNIPPETIER (14) SNIVELLING (14) [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. SNOBBERIES (14) [noun] The property or trait of being a snob. SNOBBISHLY (20) SNOOKERING (15) [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. SNOOTINESS (10) SNORKELERS (14) SNORKELING (15) [verb] To use a snorkel. | [noun] The act of swimming using a snorkel. SNOTTINESS (10) 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. SNOWBLOWER (18) [noun] A device that picks up snow off the ground and blows it to one side in order to clear a path or road. SNOWBOARDS (16) [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. SNOWBUSHES (18) SNOWCAPPED (20) [adjective] Covered with snow at the top, especially of a hill or mountain. SNOWDRIFTS (17) [noun] A bank of snow accumulated by the wind. SNOWFIELDS (17) [noun] A large permanent expanse of snow on a mountain or at the head of a glacier. SNOWFLAKES (20) [noun] A crystal of snow, having approximate hexagonal symmetry. | [noun] Any of several bulbous European plants, of the genus Leucojum, having white flowers. | [noun] The snow bunting, Plectrophenax nivalis. SNOWMAKERS (19) SNOWMAKING (20) SNOWMOBILE (17) [noun] A vehicle with skis at the front and a caterpillar track at the rear, used for travelling over snow, sometimes as sport | [verb] To ride or race in a snowmobile. SNOWPLOWED (19) [verb] To clear (roads, etc) using a snow plow. | [verb] To perform a snow plow in skiing. SNOWSCAPES (17) [noun] A landscape dominated by snow. SNOWSHOERS (16) SNOWSLIDES (14) [noun] An avalanche of snow SNOWSTORMS (15) [noun] Bad weather involving blowing winds and snow, or blowing winds and heavy snowfall amount. | [noun] A snow globe. SNUBBINESS (14) SNUBNESSES (12) SNUFFBOXES (25) [noun] A small box or container to hold snuff or loose tobacco. SNUFFLIEST (16) SNUGGERIES (12) [noun] A comfortable room or dwelling. SNUGNESSES (11) SOAPSTONES (12) SOBERIZING (22) SOBERSIDED (14) [adjective] Serious and sedate SOBERSIDES (13) [noun] A serious and sedate person SOBRIETIES (12) SOBRIQUETS (21) [noun] A familiar name for a person (typically a shortened version of a person’s given name). 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 SOCIALISES (12) [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 SOCIALISMS (14) SOCIALISTS (12) [noun] One who practices or advocates socialism. SOCIALITES (12) [noun] A person (often a woman) of social prominence, considered to be an influential figure. | [noun] A person who goes to fashionable parties and is often written about in the newspapers, etc. 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 SOCIALIZER (21) [noun] One who socializes. SOCIALIZES (21) [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 SOCIETALLY (15) SOCIOGRAMS (15) SOCIOLOGIC (15) SOCIOMETRY (17) [noun] The quantitative study of social interactions, and the measurement of preferences etc. SOCIOPATHS (17) [noun] A person with an antisocial personality disorder, exhibiting antisocial behavior that usually is the result of social and environmental factors in the person's early life. SODALITIES (11) [noun] A fraternity, a society or association. | [noun] Companionship. | [noun] Spiritual communion with a divine being, a fellowship SODBUSTERS (13) [noun] An agricultural labourer or farmer. SODDENNESS (12) SODOMIZING (23) [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. SOFTBALLER (15) SOFTCOVERS (18) [noun] A book having such covers. SOFTHEADED (18) [adjective] Lacking sound judgment or resolve; stupid; weak-minded. SOFTNESSES (13) SOFTSHELLS (16) [noun] A softshell turtle (Trionychidae). SOJOURNERS (17) SOJOURNING (18) [verb] To reside somewhere temporarily, especially as a guest or lodger. | [noun] The act of one who sojourns; a short stay or residence. SOLACEMENT (14) SOLARISING (11) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLARIZING (20) [verb] To subject to solarization. | [verb] To overexpose. | [verb] To become overexposed. SOLDIERIES (11) [noun] Soldiers considered as a group. | [noun] The profession or skill of being a soldier. SOLDIERING (12) [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. SOLECISING (13) SOLECISTIC (14) SOLECIZING (22) SOLEMNIZED (22) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLEMNIZES (21) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLEMNNESS (12) SOLENESSES (10) SOLENOIDAL (11) SOLEPLATES (12) [noun] The flat metal plate forming the underside of an iron (for ironing laundry). | [noun] A solepiece (timber). SOLFATARAS (13) [noun] An area of volcanic activity that gives off sulfurous steam. SOLFEGGIOS (15) SOLICITANT (12) SOLICITING (13) [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. SOLICITORS (12) [noun] One who solicits. | [noun] In many common law jurisdictions, a type of lawyer whose traditional role is to offer legal services to clients apart from acting as their advocate in court. A solicitor instructs a barrister to act as an advocate for their client in court, although rights of audience for solicitors vary according to jurisdiction. | [noun] In English Canada and in parts of Australia, a type of lawyer who historically held the same role as above, but whose role has in modern times been merged with that of a barrister. SOLICITOUS (12) [adjective] Disposed to solicit; eager to obtain something desirable, or to avoid anything evil. | [adjective] (Usually followed by about, for, etc., or a clause) Showing care, concern, or attention, in any of several ways; thus: SOLICITUDE (13) [noun] The state of being solicitous; uneasiness of mind occasioned by fear of evil or desire for good; anxiety. | [noun] Special or pronounced concern or attention. | [noun] A cause of anxiety or concern. SOLIDARISM (13) SOLIDARIST (11) SOLIDARITY (14) [noun] A bond of unity or agreement between individuals, united around a common goal or against a common enemy, such as the unifying principle that defines the labor movement; mutual support within a group. | [noun] Willingness to give psychological and/or material support when another person is in a difficult position or needs affection. SOLIDIFIED (15) [verb] To make solid; convert into a solid body. | [verb] To concentrate; consolidate. | [verb] To become solid; to freeze, set. SOLIDIFIES (14) [verb] To make solid; convert into a solid body. | [verb] To concentrate; consolidate. | [verb] To become solid; to freeze, set. SOLIDITIES (11) SOLIPSISMS (14) SOLIPSISTS (12) SOLITAIRES (10) [noun] A person who lives alone; a recluse or hermit. | [noun] A game for one person, played on a board with pegs or balls, in which the object is, beginning with all the places filled except one, to remove all but one of the pieces by "jumping", as in draughts. | [noun] Any of various card games that can be played by one person. Called patience in the rest of the world. SOLITARIES (10) [noun] One who lives alone, or in solitude; an anchoret, hermit or recluse. | [noun] Solitary confinement. SOLITARILY (13) SOLONCHAKS (19) SOLONETSES (10) SOLONETZES (19) SOLONETZIC (21) SOLSTITIAL (10) SOLUBILISE (12) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOLUBILITY (15) [noun] The condition of being soluble. | [noun] The amount of a substance that will dissolve in a given amount of a solvent, to give a saturated solution, under specified conditions. SOLUBILIZE (21) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOLVATIONS (13) SOLVENCIES (15) SOLVOLYSES (16) SOLVOLYSIS (16) SOLVOLYTIC (18) SOMATOLOGY (16) SOMATOTYPE (17) [noun] A body build. | [noun] A type of physique, especially one of the types defined by Sheldon: ectomorphic, endomorphic, mesomorphic. | [verb] To classify (a person) by physical build. SOMBERNESS (14) SOMEBODIES (15) [noun] A recognised or important person, a celebrity. SOMERSAULT (12) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. | [verb] To perform a somersault. SOMERSETED (13) SOMEWHERES (18) SOMMELIERS (14) [noun] The member of staff at a restaurant who keeps the wine cellar and advises the guests on a choice of wines; a wine steward / stewardess, a wine waiter / waitress / server. SOMNOLENCE (14) SONGLESSLY (14) SONGSMITHS (16) [noun] A writer of songs. SONGSTRESS (11) [noun] A female singer. | [noun] A female songbird. SONGWRITER (14) [noun] A musician who composes songs; including writing the song's lyrics and creating a melody or tune for the song. SONICATING (13) [verb] To disrupt with ultrasonic sound waves. SONICATION (12) SONNETEERS (10) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A writer of sonnets or small poems. SONNETTING (11) SONOGRAPHY (19) [noun] Ultrasonography | [noun] Night writing SONORITIES (10) SONOROUSLY (13) SOOTHINGLY (17) SOOTHSAYER (16) [noun] One who tells the truth; a truthful person | [noun] One who predicts the future, using magic, intuition or intelligence; a diviner | [noun] A mantis or rearhorse SOPAIPILLA (14) [noun] A small, crisp, puffy, deep-fried pastry often served with honey. SOPAPILLAS (14) [noun] A small, crisp, puffy, deep-fried pastry often served with honey. SOPHOMORES (17) [noun] A second-year undergraduate student in a college or university, or a second-year student in a four-year secondary school or high school. | [noun] A three-year-old horse. SOPHOMORIC (19) [adjective] Of, relating to, or characteristic of a sophomore | [adjective] Conceited and overconfident of knowledge but poorly informed and immature | [adjective] Pretentious; inflated in style or manner SOPORIFICS (17) [noun] Something inducing sleep, especially a drug. | [noun] Something boring or dull. SOPRANINOS (12) [noun] A musical instrument, especially a saxophone or recorder, that is a pitch higher than the soprano instrument of its class SORDIDNESS (12) SOREHEADED (15) SORENESSES (10) SORORITIES (10) [noun] A group of girls or women associated for a common purpose; a sisterhood. | [noun] A social organization of female students at a college or university; usually identified by Greek letters. SORTILEGES (11) SORTITIONS (10) SOSTENUTOS (10) [noun] A note or passage marked to be sustained SOUBRETTES (12) [noun] A female attendant or servant, especially one who is cheeky or mischievous, often featuring in theatrical comedies. SOUBRIQUET (21) [noun] A familiar name for a person (typically a shortened version of a person’s given name). SOULLESSLY (13) SOUNDALIKE (15) [noun] A sound, music recording, etc. that audibly resembles another. 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. SOUNDBOXES (20) [noun] The open chamber (resonator) of a stringed musical instrument, which intensifies its tone. SOUNDINGLY (15) SOUNDPROOF (16) [verb] To make resistant to transmitting sound. | [adjective] Not allowing sound through. SOUNDSTAGE (12) [noun] A soundproof room or building used for the production of movies or of television programmes. SOUPSPOONS (14) [noun] A spoon for eating soup, characterised by having a round bowl rather than the usual oval bowl of other types of spoon. | [noun] A soupspoonful. SOURCEBOOK (18) [noun] A book consisting of a collection of writings on a particular subject. | [noun] A publication intended to supplement the core materials of a roleplaying game. SOURCELESS (12) SOURDOUGHS (15) [noun] A type of bread dough leavened with yeast and lactobacilli that produce acids giving a sour taste. | [noun] An old-timer, especially in Alaska. | [noun] A permanent resident of the territory. Someone who has lived in the Yukon during all four seasons. SOURNESSES (10) SOURPUSSES (12) [noun] A person who is habitually gloomy, sullen or miserable; a grouch. SOUSAPHONE (15) [noun] A valved brass instrument with the same length as a tuba, but shaped differently so that the bell is above the head, that the valves are situated directly in front of the musical instruments and a few inches above the waist, and that most of the weight rests on one shoulder. SOUTHBOUND (16) [adjective] Which is (or will be) travelling south. | [adverb] Toward the south. SOUTHEASTS (13) SOUTHLANDS (14) SOUTHWARDS (17) [adverb] In a southerly direction; towards the south. SOUTHWESTS (16) SOUVLAKIAS (17) SOVEREIGNS (14) [noun] A monarch; the ruler of a country. | [noun] One who is not a subject to a ruler or nation. | [noun] A gold coin of the United Kingdom, with a nominal value of one pound sterling but in practice used as a bullion coin. SOVIETISMS (15) SOVIETIZED (23) SOVIETIZES (22) SOVRANTIES (13) SOWBELLIES (15) SPACEBANDS (17) SPACECRAFT (19) [noun] A vehicle that travels through space. SPACEPORTS (16) [noun] A site for launching spacecraft. SPACESHIPS (19) [noun] A vehicle that flies through space. | [noun] A finite pattern that reappears after a certain number of generations in the same orientation but in a different position. | [noun] The operator <=> in the Perl, PHP and Ruby programming languages, which compares two values and indicates whether the first is lesser than, greater than, or equal to the second. SPACEWALKS (21) [noun] Any activity by an astronaut outside of a spacecraft or space station in space; extravehicular activity. | [verb] To perform a spacewalk. SPACIOUSLY (17) SPADEWORKS (20) SPAGHETTIS (16) SPALLATION (12) [noun] A nuclear reaction in which a nucleus fragments into many nucleons. | [noun] Fragmentation due to stress or impact. SPANCELING (15) SPANCELLED (15) SPANGLIEST (13) SPARKLIEST (16) [adjective] Giving off sparks, or small flashes of light; glittery | [adjective] Lively and high-spirited | [adjective] Bubbly or effervescent SPARKPLUGS (19) [noun] The part of an internal combustion engine which forms a high-voltage electric spark which ignites the fuel-air mixture to begin the power stroke. | [noun] Someone who is a driving force in new endeavours. SPARSENESS (12) SPARSITIES (12) SPARTEINES (12) SPASTICITY (17) SPATHULATE (15) [adjective] Shaped like a spatula; having a rounded, flattened extremity. | [adjective] Of a leaf: having a broad, flat end and tapering into a narrower base. SPATIALITY (15) SPATTERING (13) [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. SPEARHEADS (16) [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. SPEARMINTS (14) SPEARWORTS (15) [noun] Any of various perennial herbaceous plants in the Ranunculus (buttercup) genus. SPECIALEST (14) SPECIALISE (14) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: SPECIALISM (16) [noun] Speciality. | [noun] The concentration of one's efforts upon a particular field of study. SPECIALIST (14) [noun] Someone who is an expert in, or devoted to, some specific branch of study or research. | [noun] A physician whose practice is limited to a particular branch of medicine or surgery. | [noun] Any of several non-commissioned ranks corresponding to that of corporal. SPECIALITY (17) [noun] That in which one specializes; a chosen expertise or talent. | [noun] Particularity. | [noun] A particular or peculiar case. SPECIALIZE (23) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: SPECIATING (15) [verb] To form new biological species by the division of an existing one SPECIATION (14) [noun] The process by which new distinct species evolve. | [noun] The formation of different (inorganic) species (especially of ions) as the environment changes. | [noun] The determination of which species is/are present in a fluid or tissue specimen, bacterial culture, or viral culture. SPECIESISM (16) [noun] An ethical stance that assigns different worth or rights to beings on the basis of their species membership, such as assigning greater rights to human beings than to other animals. SPECIFIERS (17) SPECIFYING (21) [noun] The act or process of stating or describing something clearly and exactly. | [verb] To state explicitly, or in detail, or as a condition. | [verb] To include in a specification. SPECIOSITY (17) SPECIOUSLY (17) SPECTACLED (17) [adjective] Wearing spectacles. | [adjective] Having the appearance of wearing spectacles, especially of animals. SPECTACLES (16) [noun] Two similar or identical things taken together; often followed by of. | [noun] Two people in a relationship, partnership or friendship. | [noun] Used with binary nouns (often in the plural to indicate multiple instances, since such nouns are plural only, except in some technical contexts) SPECTATING (15) [verb] To attend an event as a spectator; to observe. SPECTATORS (14) [noun] One who watches an event; especially, one held outdoors. SPECTRALLY (17) SPECULARLY (17) 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. SPECULATES (14) [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. SPECULATOR (14) [noun] When the ball is kicked through the uprights and over the crossbar (not after a touchdown) for 3 points. | [noun] A made shot that was not a free throw. | [noun] A goal scored where a ball that is in play but on the ground is kicked through the uprights and over the crossbar. SPEECHLESS (17) [adjective] Not speaking; not knowing what to say; silent, especially due to surprise, amazement, etc. | [adjective] Incapable of being spoken or uttered | [adjective] Unfit or not permitted to be spoken or described. SPEEDBALLS (15) [noun] A mix of heroin and cocaine. | [noun] Coffee with espresso. | [noun] A fastball. SPEEDBOATS (15) [noun] A fast boat, usually small (for 1-8 people). | [noun] A boat designed and built for racing. | [noun] A boat used for waterskiing. SPEEDINESS (13) SPEEDSTERS (13) [noun] One who is noted for being very fast. | [noun] A person who speeds (drives fast). | [noun] A vehicle or other device used for racing. SPEEDWELLS (16) [noun] A plant of the genus Veronica SPELEOLOGY (16) [noun] The scientific study of caves. | [noun] The recreational activity of exploring caves. SPELLBINDS (15) [verb] To captivate, or hold the attention of, as if by a magic spell; to entrance. SPELLBOUND (15) [adjective] Fascinated by something; entranced as if by a spell. SPELUNKERS (16) SPELUNKING (17) [verb] To explore caves. | [verb] To explore a system in depth. | [noun] The practice or hobby of exploring underground caverns. SPERMACETI (16) [noun] A wax obtained from the head of sperm whales and used to make cosmetics etc. SPERMARIES (14) SPERMATIAL (14) SPERMATIDS (15) [noun] A haploid cell, produced by meiosis of a spermatocyte, that develops into a spermatozoon SPERMATIUM (16) SPERMICIDE (17) [noun] A substance used for killing sperm. SPERRYLITE (15) SPHALERITE (15) [noun] A yellow, brown or black, sometimes red, green white or colorless mineral with cubic crystals, of a chemical formula (Zn,Fe)S, often containing also minor metals, such as cadmium, gallium, germanium and indium. SPHENODONS (16) SPHENODONT (16) SPHENOIDAL (16) SPHENOPSID (18) SPHERICITY (20) SPHEROIDAL (16) SPHERULITE (15) [noun] A minute spherical crystalline body having a radiated structure, observed in some vitreous volcanic rocks, as obsidian and pearlstone. SPHINCTERS (17) [noun] A ringlike band of muscle that surrounds a bodily opening, constricting and relaxing as required for normal physiological functioning. SPHINXLIKE (26) [adjective] Like a sphinx, or like that of a sphinx. Especially, not showing emotion | [adjective] Mysterious; scheming; having a deceptive outward appearance SPHYGMUSES (21) SPIDERIEST (13) SPIDERLIKE (17) SPIDERWEBS (18) [noun] The net-like construct of a spider containing sticky strands to catch prey. | [noun] Something that resembles a spider's web in being mesh-like, entrapping, or fragile. SPIDERWORT (16) [noun] A perennial plant of the Tradescantia genus, found in clumps in woodland and meadow. SPIFFINESS (18) SPIKENARDS (17) [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. SPILLIKINS (16) [noun] One of the straws (or small pieces of wood, ivory, etc.) used in the game of jackstraws or spillikins. | [noun] A game in which players attempt to remove flat, carved sticks of ivory or wood (the individual spillikins of meaning 1.) from a scattered pile without disturbing any stick other than the one currently being removed. SPILLOVERS (15) [noun] That which overflows; the excess or side effect. | [noun] The spread of infectious disease between different species of animal and particularly to humans. SPINDLIEST (13) [adjective] Characteristic of a spindle; slender and of weak appearance. SPINDRIFTS (16) SPINIFEXES (22) [noun] An Australian coastal grass, in genus Spinifex | [noun] A coastal grass, either in genera Trioidia or Spinifex. SPINNAKERS (16) [noun] A supplemental sail to the mainsail, especially a triangular one, used on yachts for running before the wind. SPINNERETS (12) [noun] The organ a spider uses to spin its web. | [noun] A multipored device through which a plastic polymer melt is extruded into fibers. SPINNERIES (12) SPINSTERLY (15) SPIRACULAR (14) SPIRALLING (13) [verb] To move along the path of a spiral or helix. | [verb] To cause something to spiral. | [verb] To increase continually. SPIRITEDLY (16) SPIRITISMS (14) SPIRITISTS (12) SPIRITLESS (12) [adjective] Lacking energy, drive, motivation or emotion. Enervated. SPIRITUALS (12) [noun] A Christian religious song, especially one in an African-American style, or a similar non-religious song. | [noun] Any spiritual function, office, or affair. SPIRITUOUS (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, containing, or made using alcohol | [adjective] (of an alcoholic drink) Distilled SPIROCHETE (17) [noun] Any of several coiled bacteria of the order Spirochaetales, most of which are pathogenic to both humans and animals. SPIROGYRAS (16) [noun] Any of a group of freshwater, filamentous green algae, of the genus Spirogyra, having chloroplasts arranged in spirals. SPIROMETER (14) [noun] An instrument for measuring the air capacity of the lungs. SPIROMETRY (17) SPITEFULLY (18) SPITTLEBUG (15) [noun] Any of various small insects of the superfamily Cercopoidea that feed on plant sap and whose larvae produce cuckoo spit. SPLANCHNIC (19) [adjective] Of, in, near or pertaining to the viscera or intestines SPLASHDOWN (19) [noun] The act of landing in water, as by a space capsule or rollercoaster. SPLASHIEST (15) [adjective] Relating to making splashes or the sound of splashing. | [adjective] Showy, ostentatious. | [adjective] Splashed with color. 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). SPLEENIEST (12) SPLEENWORT (15) [noun] Any of a number of types of ferns in the genus Asplenium. SPLENDIDER (14) SPLENDIDLY (17) [adverb] In a splendid manner. SPLENDOURS (13) [noun] Great light, luster or brilliance. | [noun] Magnificent appearance, display or grandeur. | [noun] Great fame or glory. SPLENDROUS (13) SPLENETICS (14) SPLEUCHANS (17) 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. SPLOTCHIER (17) SPLOTCHING (18) [verb] To mark with splotches. | [noun] A splotch mark. SPLURGIEST (13) SPLUTTERED (13) [verb] To sputter. | [verb] To spray droplets of saliva from the mouth while speaking. | [verb] To speak hurriedly and confusedly. SPLUTTERER (12) SPODUMENES (15) SPOILSPORT (14) [noun] Someone who puts an end to others' fun, especially harmless fun. | [adjective] Like a spoilsport. SPOKESHAVE (22) [noun] A woodworking tool used to shape and smooth rods and shafts - often for use as wheel spokes, chair legs or arrows. | [verb] To shape or smooth with a spokeshave. SPOLIATING (13) [verb] To plunder | [verb] To engage in robbery; to plunder. SPOLIATION (12) [noun] The act of plundering or spoiling; robbery | [noun] Robbery or plunder in times of war; especially, the authorized act or practice of plundering neutrals at sea. | [noun] The intentional destruction of or tampering with (a document) in such way as to impair evidentiary effect. SPOLIATORS (12) SPONGEWARE (16) SPONGINESS (13) SPONSORIAL (12) SPONSORING (13) [verb] To be a sponsor for. SPOOFERIES (15) SPOOKERIES (16) SPOOKINESS (16) SPOONBILLS (14) [noun] Any of various large, long-legged wading birds in the family Threskiornithidae, which also includes the ibises, that have a large, flat, spatulate bill. | [noun] A species of fish, Polyodon spathula, native to the Mississippi/Ohio/Missouri river basin, or extinct close relatives. SPOONERISM (14) [noun] A play on words on a phrase in which the initial (usually consonantal) sounds of two or more of the main words are transposed. SPORANGIAL (13) SPORANGIUM (15) [noun] A case, capsule, or container in which spores are produced by an organism. SPORICIDAL (15) SPORICIDES (15) SPOROCARPS (16) SPOROCYSTS (17) [noun] A cyst that develops from a sporoblast and from which sporozoites develop | [noun] A larval stage in many trematode worms | [noun] A structure in Ascosphaera fungi within which the asci form SPOROGENIC (15) SPOROGONIA (13) SPOROGONIC (15) SPOROPHORE (17) [noun] A spore-producing organ, especially a fungus hypha specialized to carry spores. | [noun] A sporophyte, or spore-producing plant. SPOROPHYLL (20) SPOROPHYTE (20) [noun] A plant (or the diploid phase in its life cycle) which produces spores by meiosis in order to produce gametophytes. SPOROZOANS (21) [noun] Any of many parasitic protozoans, of the class Sporozoa, that reproduce alternately sexually and asexually via spores; they are responsible for diseases such as malaria SPOROZOITE (21) [noun] Any of the minute active bodies into which a sporozoan divides just before it infects a new host cell. SPORTFULLY (18) SPORTINESS (12) SPORTINGLY (16) [adverb] In a sporting manner, demonstrating good sportsmanship. SPORTIVELY (18) SPORTSCAST (14) [noun] The part of a news program reporting on sports and athletics. SPORTSWEAR (15) [noun] Casual clothing that is comfortable to wear when exercising or partaking in sport; activewear. SPORULATED (13) [verb] To produce spores SPORULATES (12) [verb] To produce spores SPOTLESSLY (15) SPOTLIGHTS (16) [noun] A bright, directional light or lamp, especially one used to illuminate the focus or center of attention on a stage. | [noun] The circle of light shed by a spotlight. | [noun] The center of attention; the highlight or most important part. SPOTTINESS (12) SPRADDLING (15) [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. SPRATTLING (13) SPRAWLIEST (15) SPREADABLE (15) SPRIGGIEST (14) SPRIGHTFUL (19) SPRINGALDS (14) SPRINGBOKS (19) [noun] A small, fast antelope native to southern Africa, Antidorcas marsupialis. SPRINGEING (14) SPRINGHEAD (17) SPRINGIEST (13) [adjective] That returns rapidly to its original form (as a spring does) after being bent, compressed, stretched, etc. | [adjective] Lively; bouncy. | [adjective] Characteristic of the spring season. SPRINGINGS (14) SPRINGLIKE (17) SPRINGTAIL (13) [noun] Any of various wingless hexapods, of the subclass Collembola, with spring-like legs. SPRINGTIDE (14) [noun] The tide which occurs when the moon is new or full; the effects of the Sun and moon being reinforced so that this tide is of maximum range. | [noun] (by extension) A high level of any characteristic. SPRINGTIME (15) [noun] The season of spring, between winter and summer. SPRINGWOOD (17) SPRINKLERS (16) [noun] Anything that sprinkles. | [noun] An irrigation device that sprays water into the air whilst moving back and forth. | [noun] A heat-activated device that sprays water in the event of a fire, usually mounted on a ceiling. SPRINKLING (17) [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. SPRITSAILS (12) [noun] A form of three- or four-sided fore-and-aft sail and its rig, supporting the leech of the sail by means of a sprit. SPRUCENESS (14) SPRYNESSES (15) SPUNBONDED (16) SPUNKINESS (16) SPURGALLED (14) SPURIOUSLY (15) SPUTTERERS (12) SPUTTERING (13) [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. SPYGLASSES (16) [noun] A small portable telescope. | [noun] A pair of binoculars. SPYMASTERS (17) [noun] The leader of a group of spies. SQUABBIEST (23) SQUABBLERS (23) SQUABBLING (24) [verb] To participate in a minor fight or argument. | [verb] To disarrange, so that the letters or lines stand awry and require readjustment. | [noun] A petty argument or conflict. SQUADRONED (21) SQUALIDEST (20) SQUALLIEST (19) [adjective] Characterized by squalls, or sudden violent bursts of wind; gusty. | [adjective] Producing or characteristic of loud wails. | [adjective] Interrupted by unproductive spots, as a field of turnips or grain. SQUAMATION (21) SQUAMOSALS (21) [noun] The platelike part of the temporal bone SQUAMULOSE (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. SQUANDERER (20) SQUARENESS (19) SQUARISHLY (25) SQUASHIEST (22) [adjective] Easily squashed when pressed. | [adjective] Resembling a bog or marsh underfoot. SQUATTERED (20) SQUATTIEST (19) SQUAWROOTS (22) [noun] Either of two unrelated plants from eastern North America: SQUEAKIEST (23) [adjective] Tending to produce a high-pitched sound or squeak. SQUEEZABLE (30) SQUELCHERS (24) SQUELCHIER (24) SQUELCHING (25) [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 SQUETEAGUE (20) SQUIFFIEST (25) [adjective] Slightly drunk or intoxicated; tipsy | [adjective] Crooked, askew; awry SQUIGGLIER (21) SQUIGGLING (22) [verb] To wriggle or squirm | [verb] To make a squiggle | [verb] To write (something) illegibly SQUINCHING (25) [verb] To scrunch up (one's face, etc.). SQUINNIEST (19) SQUINNYING (23) [verb] To squint. SQUINTIEST (19) SQUIRARCHY (27) SQUIRMIEST (21) SQUIRRELED (20) [verb] To store in a secretive manner, to hide something for future use SQUIRRELLY (22) [adjective] Resembling a squirrel | [adjective] Unpredictable or jumpy | [adjective] Eccentric SQUISHIEST (22) [adjective] (of an object or substance) Yielding easily to pressure; very soft; especially, soft and wet, as mud. | [adjective] (of a person) Used as a term of endearment. | [adjective] Subjective or vague. SQUOOSHIER (22) SQUOOSHING (23) STABILIZED (22) [verb] To make stable. | [verb] To become stable. STABILIZER (21) [noun] Any person or thing that brings stability. | [noun] Any substance added to something in order to stabilize it. | [noun] A gyroscopically controlled fin or similar device that prevents the excess rolling of a ship in rough seas. STABILIZES (21) [verb] To make stable. | [verb] To become stable. STABLEMATE (14) [noun] One (such as a racehorse) from the same stable. | [noun] One from the same organization or background. STABLENESS (12) STABLISHED (16) [verb] To establish. STABLISHES (15) [verb] To establish. STAGECOACH (18) [noun] A horse-drawn coach that runs routinely between two destinations to transport passengers and mail. | [verb] To travel by stage-coach. STAGECRAFT (16) [noun] The skills of the theater. | [noun] A specific skill of the theater. STAGEHANDS (15) [noun] A person who works behind the scenes at a theatre or in other theatrical media. STAGGERERS (12) STAGGERING (13) [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). STAGHOUNDS (15) [noun] Any of several large dogs once bred to hunt stags. STAGNANTLY (14) STAGNATING (12) [verb] To cease motion, activity, or progress: STAGNATION (11) [noun] Inactivity | [noun] Being stagnant; being without circulation STAINPROOF (15) STAIRCASES (12) [noun] A flight of stairs; a stairway. | [noun] A connected set of flights of stairs; a stairwell. | [noun] A set of locks (enclosed sections of waterway) mounted one above the next. STAIRWELLS (13) [noun] A shaft in a multi-story building enclosing a stairway or staircase. STALACTITE (12) [noun] A secondary mineral deposit of calcium carbonate or another mineral, in shapes similar to icicles, that hangs from the roof of a cave. STALAGMITE (13) [noun] A secondary mineral deposit of calcium carbonate or other mineral, in shapes similar to icicles, that lie on the ground of a cave. 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. STALEMATES (12) [noun] The state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves, resulting in a draw. | [noun] Any situation that has no obvious possible movement, but does not involve any personal loss. | [verb] To bring about a state in which the player to move is not in check but has no legal moves. STALWARTLY (16) STALWORTHS (16) STAMINODIA (13) STAMMERERS (14) STAMMERING (15) [verb] To keep repeating a particular sound involuntarily during speech. | [verb] To utter with a stammer, or with timid hesitancy. | [noun] The act of one who stammers. STAMPEDERS (15) STAMPEDING (16) [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. STANCHIONS (15) [noun] A vertical pole, post, or support. | [noun] A framework of such posts, used to secure or confine cattle. | [verb] To erect stanchions, or equip something with stanchions. STANDARDLY (15) STANDISHES (14) [noun] A stand to hold ink, pens, and other writing accessories; an inkstand. STANDPIPES (15) [noun] A vertical pipe into which water is pumped so that a desired pressure is available at the bottom. | [noun] The water supply of a building for the use of firefighters. STANDPOINT (13) [noun] Point of view; perspective STANDSTILL (11) [noun] Complete immobility; halt STANNARIES (10) [noun] A tin mine or tin works. STARBOARDS (13) [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. STARCHIEST (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to starch. | [adjective] Containing starch. | [adjective] Having the quality of fabric starch as applied to fabric; stiff, hard; starched. STARFISHES (16) [noun] Any of various asteroids or other echinoderms (not in fact fish) with usually five arms, many of which eat bivalves or corals by everting their stomach. | [noun] Any many-armed or tentacled sea invertebrate, whether cnidarian, echinoderm, or cephalopod. | [noun] A woman who reluctantly takes part in sexual intercourse, and lays on her back while spreading her limbs. STARFLOWER (16) [noun] Borage (Borago officinalis), an annual herb, and its product, starflower oil (family Boraginaceae). | [noun] Calytrix, a shrub native to Australia (family Myrtaceae). | [noun] Erinus alpinus, an alpine plant (family Plantaginaceae). STARFRUITS (13) [noun] The fruit of the carambola tree, Averrhoa carambola. STARGAZERS (20) [noun] One who stargazes. | [noun] A perciform fish in the family Uranoscopidae. STARGAZING (21) [verb] To look at the stars at night. | [noun] The act of gazing at the stars; astronomy. STARLIGHTS (14) STARSTRUCK (16) [adjective] Star-struck STARVATION (13) [noun] A condition of severe suffering due to a lack of nutrition. | [noun] Severe shortage of resources. STARVELING (14) [noun] One who is thin from lack of food. | [adjective] Starving; suffering from starvation. | [adjective] Meagre; scanty. STATECRAFT (15) [noun] The skills of being a statesman, of leading a country well; statesmanship. STATEHOODS (14) [noun] The property of being a state. | [noun] The condition of being a country. STATEHOUSE (13) [noun] The building where a legislature meets to deal with matters of state. STATELIEST (10) [adjective] Of people: worthy of respect; dignified, regal. | [adjective] Of movement: deliberate, unhurried; dignified. | [adjective] Grand, impressive, imposing. STATEMENTS (12) [noun] A declaration or remark. | [noun] A presentation of opinion or position. | [noun] A document that summarizes financial activity. STATEROOMS (12) [noun] An apartment in a palace or great house for use on ceremonial occasions. | [noun] A superior cabin for a ship's officer or captain. | [noun] A private cabin in a ship or train. STATICALLY (15) STATIONARY (13) [noun] One who, or that which, is stationary, such as a planet when apparently it has neither progressive nor retrograde motion. | [adjective] Not moving. | [adjective] Incapable of being moved STATIONERS (10) [noun] A person or business that sells stationery. STATIONERY (13) [noun] Writing materials, envelopes, office materials STATIONING (11) [verb] (usually passive) To put in place to perform a task. | [verb] To put in place to perform military duty. | [noun] The putting in a place to perform military duty STATISTICS (12) [noun] A mathematical science concerned with data collection, presentation, analysis, and interpretation. | [noun] A systematic collection of data on measurements or observations, often related to demographic information such as population counts, incomes, population counts at different ages, etc. | [noun] A single item in a statistical study. STATOBLAST (12) [noun] One of a peculiar kind of internal buds, or germs, produced in the interior of certain Bryozoa and sponges. They are protected by a firm covering, and are usually destined to perpetuate the species during the winter season. They burst open and develop in the spring. In some freshwater sponges they serve to preserve the species during the dry season. STATOCYSTS (15) [noun] An organ of balance found in some aquatic invertebrates, consisting of a sac-like structure containing a statolith and numerous innervated setae. STATOLITHS (13) [noun] A specialized form of amyloplast involved in graviperception by plant roots and most invertebrates. STATOSCOPE (14) [noun] An instrument used for indicating or recording small changes in barometric pressure or in the altitude of an aircraft. STATUARIES (10) [noun] The craft of making statues. | [noun] A person who makes or deals in statues. | [noun] Statues considered collectively. STATUESQUE (19) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a statue. | [adjective] (of a woman) Elegantly tall, graceful, and attractive. STATUETTES (10) [noun] A small statue, usually a figure much less than life size, especially when of marble or bronze, or of plaster or clay as a preparation for the marble or bronze, as distinguished from a figure in terra cotta etc. STATUTABLE (12) STAUNCHEST (15) [adjective] Loyal, trustworthy, reliable. | [adjective] Dependable, persistent. STAUNCHING (16) [verb] To stop the flow of (blood). | [verb] To stop, check, or deter an action. | [noun] The act by which something is staunched or stopped. STAUROLITE (10) [noun] A dark brown nesosilicate mineral that has crystals that cross and intergrow STAVESACRE (15) [noun] A highly toxic, perennial plant with purple flowers, Delphinium staphisagria. STEADINESS (11) [noun] The state of being steady | [noun] The degree of stability STEALTHIER (13) [adjective] Characterized by or resembling stealth or secrecy. STEALTHILY (16) [adverb] In a stealthy manner, furtively. STEAMBOATS (14) [noun] A boat or vessel propelled by steam power. | [noun] Hot pot (Chinese dish). STEAMERING (13) STEAMINESS (12) STEAMROLLS (12) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEAMSHIPS (17) [noun] A ship or vessel propelled by steam power. STEELHEADS (14) [noun] The anadromous form of the rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss. | [noun] The ruddy duck. STEELINESS (10) STEELMAKER (16) STEELWORKS (17) [noun] A place where steel is manufactured and/or shaped. STEELYARDS (14) [noun] A transportable balance with unequal arm lengths. | [noun] A place where steel (and possibly other metals as well) is stored and sold. STEEPENING (13) [verb] To make steeper. | [verb] To become steeper. | [noun] The process of becoming steeper. STEGOSAURS (11) [noun] Any of several extinct herbivorous dinosaurs, of the suborder Stegosauria, having two rows of bony plates along the back. STELLIFIED (14) STELLIFIES (13) STEMMERIES (14) STENCHIEST (15) STENCILERS (12) STENCILING (13) [verb] To print with a stencil. | [noun] A work produced using a stencil. STENCILLED (13) [verb] To print with a stencil. STENCILLER (12) STENOTHERM (15) STENOTOPIC (14) [adjective] Able to tolerate or adapt to only a small range of environmental conditions STENOTYPED (16) STENOTYPES (15) [noun] A keyboard machine used to record a version of shorthand using a series of phonetic symbols. | [noun] Any of the characters used in this shorthand system. STENTORIAN (10) [adjective] (of a voice) Loud, powerful, booming, suitable for giving speeches to large crowds. | [adjective] (by extension) Stern, authoritarian; demanding of respect. STEPFAMILY (20) [noun] Any family having one or more stepchildren or stepparents. | [noun] The family of one's stepfather or stepmother; those immediate family members not related by blood. STEPFATHER (18) [noun] The husband of one's biological mother, other than one's biological father, especially following the divorce or death of the father. STEPLADDER (14) [noun] A ladder with steps or treads instead of rungs that is hinged in the middle to form an inverted V, with stays to keep the two halves at a fixed angle. | [noun] The player over whom another player marks to take a spectacular mark. STEPMOTHER (17) [noun] The wife of one's biological father, other than one's biological mother. | [noun] A viola, especially Viola tricolor, heartsease. STEPPARENT (14) [noun] One's parent's spouse who is not one's biological parent STEPSISTER (12) [noun] The daughter of one's stepparent who is not the daughter of either of one's parents. | [noun] The stepdaughter of one's parent which is not one's half-sister. STEREOGRAM (13) [noun] An early stereophonic music centre containing a gramophone and radio, and often storage space for records | [noun] A stereoscopic image; a stereograph STEREOLOGY (14) STEREOPSES (12) STEREOPSIS (12) [noun] Stereoscopic vision STEREOTYPE (15) [noun] A conventional, formulaic, and often oversimplified or exaggerated conception, opinion, or image of (a person). | [noun] A person who is regarded as embodying or conforming to a set image or type. | [noun] A metal printing plate cast from a matrix moulded from a raised printing surface. STEREOTYPY (18) [noun] Excessive repetition, especially of meaningless gestures. | [noun] The process of making stereotype plates and printing from them. STERICALLY (15) STERIGMATA (13) [noun] A thin projection of the basidium in those fungi that bear a basidiospore STERILANTS (10) [noun] Any substance used to sterilize something 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. STERILIZER (19) STERILIZES (19) [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. STERLINGLY (14) STERNPOSTS (12) [noun] A timber or steel bar extending from the keel to the main deck at the stern of a vessel. STERNWARDS (14) STERTOROUS (10) [adjective] Sounding like snoring or snorting. STEVEDORED (15) STEVEDORES (14) [noun] A dockworker involved in loading and unloading cargo, or in supervising such work. | [verb] To load or unload a ship's cargo. STEWARDESS (14) [noun] A female flight attendant (a member of the crew of an airplane who is responsible for the comfort and safety of its passengers). STEWARDING (15) [verb] To act as the steward or caretaker of (something) STICKBALLS (18) STICKINESS (16) STICKSEEDS (17) [noun] Any of several plants with fruits that stick to hair, fur or clothes STICKTIGHT (20) STICKWEEDS (20) [noun] Any of various unrelated plants that have seeds that stick to clothing STICKWORKS (23) STIFFENERS (16) STIFFENING (17) [verb] To make stiff. | [verb] To become stiff. | [noun] An item, material or feature that makes something stiffer. STIFLINGLY (17) STIGMATICS (15) [noun] One who has been branded as punishment. | [noun] One who has been marked or deformed by nature. | [noun] One who displays stigmata, the five wounds of Christ. STIGMATIST (13) [noun] A person whose body is marked by stigmata; a stigmatic STIGMATIZE (22) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. STILETTOED (11) STILETTOES (10) STILLBIRTH (15) [noun] The birth of a dead fetus; the delivery of an infant which is dead at birth. | [noun] (modern medicine) The birth of a dead fetus after 20 weeks of gestation. STILLBORNS (12) STILLROOMS (12) [noun] A room containing a still (for distillation). | [noun] A pantry adjoining a kitchen where drinks etc were stored or prepared. STIMULANTS (12) [noun] A substance that acts to increase physiological or nervous activity in the body. | [noun] Something that promotes activity, interest, or enthusiasm. STIMULATED (13) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. | [adjective] In a condition or state of stimulation. STIMULATES (12) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. STIMULATOR (12) [noun] A person, device or substance that stimulates. STINGAREES (11) [noun] A stingray. STINGINESS (11) STINGINGLY (15) STINKHORNS (17) [noun] Any fungus of the order Phallales, which produce a foul-scented, rod-shaped mushroom. STINKINGLY (18) STINKWEEDS (18) [noun] Tree of heaven (Ailanthus altissima). | [noun] Jimson weed (Datura stramonium). | [noun] Any other noxious plant. STINKWOODS (18) [noun] Any of several unrelated trees whose wood has an unpleasant smell, but especially Ocotea bullata, a south African tree yielding hard, heavy wood 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." STIPULATES (12) [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." STIPULATOR (12) STIRABOUTS (12) STITCHWORT (18) [noun] A kind of chickweed, Stellaria holostea. STOCHASTIC (17) [adjective] Random, randomly determined. STOCKADING (18) [verb] To enclose in a stockade. STOCKINESS (16) STOCKINETS (16) [noun] An elastic textile fabric imitating knitting, of which stockings, undergarments, etc., are made. STOCKINGED (18) STOCKPILED (19) [verb] To accumulate a stockpile. STOCKPILER (18) STOCKPILES (18) [noun] A supply, especially a large one, of something kept for future use. STOCKROOMS (18) [noun] A room where a store keeps its stock of merchandise. STOCKYARDS (20) [noun] An enclosed yard, with pens, sheds etc. or stables, where livestock is kept temporarily before being slaughtered, treated, sold, or shipped etc. STODGINESS (12) STOKEHOLDS (18) [noun] A chamber where a ship's furnaces are stoked. STOMACHERS (17) [noun] A type of men's waistcoat. | [noun] An ornamental cloth, often embellished with embroidery or jewelry, worn over the chest by women beneath their bodices or by men and women as the central part of an open shirt, blouse, or jacket. | [noun] A blow to the stomach. STOMACHICS (19) [noun] A medicine for the stomach. STOMACHING (18) [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. STOMATITIS (12) [noun] An inflammation of parts of the mucous membrane that lines the mouth. STOMATOPOD (15) STOMODAEAL (13) STOMODAEUM (15) STOMODEUMS (15) STONEBOATS (12) STONECHATS (15) [noun] Any of various small Old World passerine birds of the genus Saxicola that feed on insects. STONECROPS (14) [noun] Any of various succulent plants of the Crassulaceae family, native to temperate zones, especially in genus Sedum | [noun] Certain plants of genus Lithospermum, in family Boraginaceae. STONEFLIES (13) [noun] Any of the freshwater aquatic insects in the order Plecoptera. STONEMASON (12) [noun] One who works in stone STONEWALLS (13) [noun] A wall made from stone. | [noun] An obstruction. | [noun] A refusal to cooperate. STONEWARES (13) STONEWORKS (17) STONEWORTS (13) [noun] Any of various complex algae of the family Characeae, known for being branched and having enclosed egg cells. STONISHING (14) STOOPBALLS (14) STOPLIGHTS (16) [noun] A traffic control signal, traditionally consisting of three lights, colored green, yellow/amber and red, meaning proceed, prepare to stop and stop, respectively. | [noun] A light on the rear of a vehicle that is activated when braking; a brake light. STOPPERING (15) [verb] To close a container by using a stopper. STOREFRONT (13) [noun] The side of a store (or other shop) which faces the street; usually contains display windows. | [noun] (by extension) An e-commerce website offering goods or services to the public. STOREHOUSE (13) [noun] A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions | [noun] (by extension) A single location or resource where a large quantity of something can be found. | [noun] A mass or quantity laid up. STOREROOMS (12) [noun] A room used for storage. STORESHIPS (15) STORKSBILL (16) [noun] Any of various Eurasian erodiums. STORMBOUND (15) [adjective] (of a ship) Caught in a storm, so that proper navigation is impossible. STORMINESS (12) 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. STORYBOOKS (19) [noun] A book containing stories, especially children's stories. STOUTENING (11) STOVEPIPES (17) [noun] Sheet-metal tubing used as a chimney for a stove or furnace. | [noun] A channel for information which is compartmentalized in such a manner that some parties who might be interested in its use or be able to utilize it are restricted from accessing it. STRABISMIC (16) STRABISMUS (14) [noun] A defect of vision in which one eye cannot focus with the other on an object because of imbalance of the eye muscles; a squint. STRADDLERS (12) STRADDLING (13) [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. STRAGGLERS (12) [noun] A person who straggles, or departs from the direct or proper course, or from the company to which they belong. | [noun] One who falls behind the rest, for example in a race. | [noun] One who roams without any settled direction. STRAGGLIER (12) [adjective] Spread around in a chaotic and disorganized manner. | [adjective] Not arranged in a line. STRAGGLING (13) [verb] To stray from the road, course or line of march. | [verb] To wander about; ramble. | [verb] To spread at irregular intervals. STRAIGHTED (15) STRAIGHTEN (14) [verb] To cause to become straight. | [verb] To become straight. | [verb] To put in order; to sort; to tidy up. STRAIGHTER (14) [adjective] Not crooked or bent; having a constant direction throughout its length. | [adjective] (of a path, trajectory, etc.) Direct, undeviating. | [adjective] Perfectly horizontal or vertical; not diagonal or oblique. STRAIGHTLY (17) 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 STRAITNESS (10) STRAMASHES (15) [verb] A noise, an uproar, a disturbance | [verb] To strike, beat, or bang; to break; to destroy. STRAMONIES (12) STRAMONIUM (14) [noun] The jimsonweed plant | [noun] A narcotic drug obtained from the dried leaves of this plant. STRANDLINE (11) STRANGERED (12) STRANGLERS (11) STRANGLING (12) [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. STRAPHANGS (16) [verb] To ride public transport while standing and holding onto a strap. STRAPPADOS (15) [noun] A form of torture in which the victim is hung from the ceiling by a rope attached to the hands, which are tied together behind the victim's back. STRAPPINGS (15) STRATAGEMS (13) [noun] A tactic or artifice designed to gain the upper hand, especially one involving underhanded dealings or deception. STRATEGIES (11) [noun] The science and art of military command as applied to the overall planning and conduct of warfare. | [noun] A plan of action intended to accomplish a specific goal. | [noun] The use of advance planning to succeed in politics or business. STRATEGIST (11) [noun] Someone who devises strategies. STRATEGIZE (20) [verb] To formulate a strategy. STRATHSPEY (18) [noun] A Scottish dance with gliding steps, slower than a reel. | [noun] A piece of music composed for or in the rhythm of this dance. STRATIFIED (14) [adjective] Arranged in a sequence of layers or strata | [adjective] (of society) having a class structure STRATIFIES (13) [verb] To become separated out into distinct layers or strata. | [verb] To separate out into distinct layers or strata. STRATIFORM (15) [adjective] Occurring in layers | [adjective] Descriptive of rocks with extensive horizontal development | [adjective] Descriptive of clouds with extensive horizontal development STRAVAGING (15) STRAVAIGED (15) [verb] To stroll, meander STRAWBERRY (18) [noun] The sweet, usually red, edible fruit of certain plants of the genus Fragaria. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Fragaria (that bears such fruit). | [noun] A dark pinkish red colour, like that of the fruit; strawberry red. STREAKIEST (14) [adjective] Having streaks. | [adjective] Used to describe a shot where the ball deflects off the edge of the bat, but is not caught by the slips or wicket-keeper and instead results in runs for the batsman. | [adjective] (chiefly of a person, usually North America) Having alternating periods of good and bad performances; inconsistent. STREAKINGS (15) STREAMBEDS (15) STREAMIEST (12) STREAMINGS (13) [noun] Movement as a stream. | [noun] The transmission of digital audio or video, or the reception or playback of such data without first storing it. | [noun] Division of classes into academic streams. STREAMLETS (12) [noun] A small stream. STREAMLINE (12) [noun] A line that is tangent to the velocity of flow of a fluid; equivalent to the path of a specific particle in that flow. | [noun] On a weather chart, a line that is tangent to the flow of the wind. | [verb] To design and construct the contours of a vehicle etc. so as to offer the least resistance to its flow through a fluid. STREAMSIDE (13) STREETCARS (12) [noun] (US, Canada) A tram or light rail vehicle, usually a single car, but also attached together, operating on city streets. A trolley car. STREETLAMP (14) [noun] A lamp that illuminates a street or sidewalk. STREETWISE (13) [adjective] Having the necessary knack, personality and instinct for survival in rough, urban environments. | [adjective] Possessing a style that embodies the life and microculture located within urban settings, typically in the States. STRENGTHEN (14) [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. STRESSLESS (10) STRETCHERS (15) [noun] One who, or that which, stretches. | [noun] A simple litter designed to carry a sick, injured, or dead person. | [noun] A frame on which a canvas is stretched for painting. STRETCHIER (15) [adjective] Capable of stretching; elastic. | [adjective] Inclined to stretch, as from weariness. STRETCHING (16) [noun] The act by which something is stretched. | [noun] A form of physical exercise in which a specific skeletal muscle (or muscle group) is deliberately elongated to its fullest length in order to improve the muscle's felt elasticity and reaffirm comfortable muscle tone. | [verb] To lengthen by pulling. STREWMENTS (15) STRIATIONS (10) STRICKLING (17) STRICTNESS (12) [noun] The state or quality of being strict. | [noun] The result or product of being strict. STRICTURES (12) [noun] (usually in plural) a rule restricting behaviour or action | [noun] A general state of restrictiveness on behavior, action, or ideology | [noun] A sternly critical remark or review STRIDENCES (13) STRIDENTLY (14) [adverb] In a strident manner. STRIDULATE (11) [verb] To make a high-pitched chirping, grating, hissing, or squeaking sound, as male crickets and grasshoppers do, by rubbing certain body parts together. STRIDULOUS (11) [adjective] Emitting a particularly harsh or shrill sound. | [adjective] Relating to stridor. STRIFELESS (13) STRIKEOUTS (14) [noun] An instance or the act of yielding nothing | [noun] An instance or the act of striking out | [noun] (wordprocessing) Cancellation of a portion of text by crossing it out without deleting it; strikethrough. STRIKEOVER (17) STRIKINGLY (18) [adverb] (manner) In a striking way. | [adverb] (degree) To a remarkable degree or extent. | [adverb] (evaluative) Remarkably, surprisingly. STRINGENCY (16) STRINGENDO (12) [noun] A passage in music to be played gradually faster; a section of music with in which the tempo slowly increases. | [adverb] Played with gradually increasing tempo. STRINGHALT (14) [noun] A kind of lameness in horses, causing the animal to twitch its leg up suddenly. STRINGIEST (11) [adjective] Composed of, or resembling, string or strings. | [adjective] (of food) Tough to the bite, as containing too much sinew or string tissue. | [adjective] (of a person) Wiry, lean, scrawny. STRINGINGS (12) STRINGLESS (11) STRIPELESS (12) STRIPLINGS (13) [noun] (sometimes humorous) A youth in the state of adolescence, or just passing from boyhood to manhood; a lad. . | [noun] A seedling with most of the leaves stripped off. STRIPPABLE (16) STRIPTEASE (12) [noun] The act of slowly taking off one's clothes to sexually arouse the viewer, often accompanied by music and in exchange for money. | [verb] To perform a striptease. STROBOTRON (12) 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. STRONGYLES (14) [noun] A nematode worm of the family Strongylidae, often parasitic in the gastrointestinal tract of mammals, especially horses | [noun] A monoaxon with a rounded end STRONTIUMS (12) STROPPIEST (14) [adjective] Ornery, fractious, belligerent, or obstreperous, and hence difficult to deal with. STROUDINGS (12) STRUCTURAL (12) [noun] Structural steel, used in construction. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or having structure. | [adjective] Involving the mechanics of construction. STRUCTURED (13) [verb] To give structure to; to arrange. | [adjective] Having structure; organized STRUCTURES (12) [noun] A cohesive whole built up of distinct parts. | [noun] The underlying shape of a solid. | [noun] The overall form or organization of something. STRUGGLERS (12) STRUGGLING (13) [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. | [noun] The act of one who struggles. STRUTHIOUS (13) STRYCHNINE (18) [noun] A very toxic, colourless crystalline alkaloid, derived from nux vomica, used as a pesticide STUBBLIEST (14) [adjective] Having stubble. STUBBORNLY (17) [adverb] In a stubborn manner. STUCCOWORK (21) STUDFISHES (17) STUDHORSES (14) STUDIOUSLY (14) [adverb] In a studious manner. STUFFINESS (16) 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. STULTIFIES (13) [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. STUMBLEBUM (18) [noun] A blundering or awkward person. | [noun] An inept prizefighter. | [noun] A homeless person. STUNNINGLY (14) [adverb] So as to stun or amaze. STUNTWOMAN (15) [noun] A woman who performs stunts. STUNTWOMEN (15) [noun] A woman who performs stunts. STUPEFYING (19) [verb] To dull the senses or capacity to think thereby reducing responsiveness; to dazzle or stun. STUPENDOUS (13) [adjective] Astonishingly great or large; huge; enormous. | [adjective] Of stunning excellence or degree; marvelous. STUPIDNESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being stupid. | [noun] The result or product of being stupid. STURDINESS (11) STUTTERERS (10) STUTTERING (11) [verb] To speak with a spasmodic repetition of vocal sounds. | [verb] To exhaust a gas with difficulty | [noun] A speech disorder in which the flow of speech is disrupted by involuntary repetitions and prolongations of sounds, syllables, words or phrases, and by involuntary silent pauses or blocks in which the stutterer is unable to produce sounds. STYLEBOOKS (19) STYLISTICS (15) [noun] The study of literary style, and how it changes within different contexts. STYLOBATES (15) [noun] The top step of the crepidoma, i.e. the platform upon which the superstructure of the building is erected. STYLOPODIA (16) SUBACUTELY (17) SUBALTERNS (12) [noun] A subordinate. | [noun] A commissioned officer having a rank below that of captain; a lieutenant or second lieutenant. | [noun] A subaltern proposition; a proposition implied by a universal proposition. For example, some crows are black is a subaltern of all crows are black. SUBAQUATIC (23) [adjective] Located or living under water; submarine. SUBAQUEOUS (21) [adjective] Existing below the water surface. | [adjective] Designed for underwater use. | [adjective] Weak and filtered SUBARCTICS (16) SUBAUDIBLE (15) SUBAVERAGE (16) SUBCABINET (16) SUBCEILING (15) SUBCELLARS (14) SUBCENTERS (14) SUBCENTRAL (14) SUBCHAPTER (19) SUBCHASERS (17) SUBCLASSED (15) SUBCLASSES (14) [noun] An object class derived from another class (its superclass) from which it inherits a base set of properties and methods. | [noun] A rank directly below class | [noun] A secondary class within a main class. SUBCLAVIAN (17) [noun] A subclavian part (such as an artery, vein, or nerve). | [adjective] Relating to or denoting an artery or vein which serves the neck and arm on the left or right side of the body. SUBCLUSTER (14) SUBCOLLEGE (15) SUBCOMPACT (20) [noun] Something that is smaller than the compact version, especially a very small car. SUBCOOLING (15) SUBCORDATE (15) SUBCRUSTAL (14) SUBCULTURE (14) [noun] A portion of a culture distinguished by its customs or other features. | [noun] A culture made by transferring microorganisms from a previous culture to a fresh growth medium | [verb] To transfer (microorganisms) to a fresh growth medium in order to start a new culture SUBCUTISES (14) SUBDEACONS (15) [noun] (chiefly historical) A Catholic clerical rank in the major orders below that of a deacon. | [noun] (chiefly historical) A Catholic cleric who assists the deacon at High Mass and normally reads the Epistle at the Eucharist. | [noun] The highest of the minor orders below that of a deacon SUBDIALECT (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 SUBDIVIDER (17) SUBDIVIDES (17) [verb] To divide into smaller sections. | [verb] To divide divisions into smaller divisions. SUBDUCTING (16) SUBDUCTION (15) [noun] The action of being pushed or drawn beneath another object. | [noun] The process of one tectonic plate moving beneath another and sinking into the mantle at a convergent plate boundary. | [noun] The act of subducting or taking away. SUBECONOMY (19) SUBEDITING (14) [verb] To perform the work of a subeditor or copy editor. SUBEDITORS (13) SUBENTRIES (12) SUBERISING (13) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBERIZING (22) [verb] To effect suberization of. SUBFOSSILS (15) SUBGENUSES (13) SUBGLACIAL (15) [adjective] Formed, or occurring beneath a glacier or other body of ice | [adjective] Moving at a rate allegedly slower than a glacier. SUBHEADING (17) [noun] Any of the headings under which each of the main divisions of a subject may be subdivided | [noun] A heading or caption subordinate to a main headline, heading, or title especially when inserted as a divider between sections (as of a newspaper or periodical article or story or text of a book) SUBINDEXES (20) SUBINDICES (15) SUBJACENCY (26) SUBJECTING (22) [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. SUBJECTION (21) [noun] The act of bringing something under the control of something else. | [noun] The state of being subjected. SUBJECTIVE (24) [adjective] Formed, as in opinions, based upon a person's feelings or intuition, not upon observation or reasoning; coming more from within the observer than from observations of the external environment. | [adjective] Pertaining to subjects as opposed to objects (A subject is one who perceives or is aware; an object is the thing perceived or the thing that the subject is aware of.) | [adjective] Resulting from or pertaining to personal mindsets or experience, arising from perceptive mental conditions within the brain and not necessarily or directly from external stimuli. SUBJOINING (20) [verb] To add something to the end; to append or annex SUBJUGATED (21) [verb] To forcibly impose obedience or servitude upon. SUBJUGATES (20) [verb] To forcibly impose obedience or servitude upon. SUBJUGATOR (20) SUBKINGDOM (20) [noun] A taxonomic category below kingdom and above superphylum. | [noun] A kingdom that is part of another kingdom, ruled by a subking. SUBLATIONS (12) SUBLEASING (13) [verb] To lease something that is already leased; to sublet. SUBLETTING (13) [verb] To lease or rent all or part of (a property) (to another person). | [noun] The act of one who sublets. SUBLICENSE (14) SUBLIMABLE (16) 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. SUBLIMATES (14) [noun] A product obtained by sublimation. | [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. SUBLIMINAL (14) [adjective] (of a stimulus) Below the threshold of conscious perception, especially if still able to produce a response. SUBLINGUAL (13) [adjective] Administered through placement under the tongue. | [adjective] Situated beneath the tongue. SUBMANAGER (15) SUBMARINED (15) SUBMARINER (14) SUBMARINES (14) [noun] A boat that can go underwater. | [noun] A kind of sandwich made in a long loaf of bread. | [noun] Pitch delivered with an underhand motion. SUBMARKETS (18) SUBMAXIMAL (23) SUBMEDIANT (15) [noun] The sixth note of a scale, shown as VI. SUBMERGING (16) [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. SUBMERSING (15) [verb] To submerge. SUBMERSION (14) [noun] The act of submerging, or the state of being submerged; immersion | [noun] A differentiable map whose differential is everywhere surjective. SUBMINIMAL (16) SUBMISSION (14) [noun] The act of submitting or yielding; surrender. | [noun] The act of submitting or giving e.g. a completed piece of work. | [noun] The thing which has been submitted. | [noun] A subset or component of a mission. SUBMISSIVE (17) [noun] (BDSM) One who submits to a dominant partner in sexual practices. | [noun] One who submits. | [adjective] Meekly obedient or passive. SUBMITTALS (14) SUBMITTING (15) [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. SUBMUCOSAE (16) [noun] A layer of connective tissue beneath a mucous membrane SUBMUCOSAL (16) SUBMUCOSAS (16) SUBNETWORK (19) [noun] A subsection of a network. SUBNUCLEAR (14) [adjective] Smaller than a nucleus of an atom SUBOCEANIC (16) SUBOPTIMAL (16) [adjective] Worse than optimal. SUBOPTIMUM (18) SUBORBITAL (14) [noun] A suborbital bone | [adjective] Not reaching orbit; having a trajectory that does not reach orbital velocity and so must return to ground eventually | [adjective] Below the orbit of the eye SUBPENAING (15) SUBPERIODS (15) SUBPOENAED (15) [verb] To summon with a subpoena. SUBPOTENCY (19) SUBPRIMATE (16) SUBPROBLEM (18) SUBPROCESS (16) SUBPRODUCT (17) SUBPROGRAM (17) [noun] A program contained within a larger program SUBPROJECT (23) SUBREGIONS (13) [noun] A region that is part of a larger region. SUBREPTION (14) SUBROGATED (14) SUBROGATES (13) SUBROUTINE (12) [noun] A section of code, called by the main body of a program, that implements a task. SUBSAMPLED (17) [adjective] Divided into subsamples SUBSAMPLES (16) [noun] A smaller portion of an original sample, created by trimming, subdividing, splitting or discrete collection of the original sample. | [noun] A portion of the original sample that is representative in nature to that of the original sample, thereby assuring equivalency in results from tests and analysis either upon the subsample or the original material, independent of their size. SUBSCIENCE (16) 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). SUBSCRIBER (16) [noun] A person who subscribes to a publication or a service SUBSCRIBES (16) [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). SUBSCRIPTS (16) [noun] A type of lettering form written lower than the things around it. | [noun] A numerical index into an array. | [verb] (of a variable) To provide with a subscript. SUBSECTION (14) [noun] A defined part of a section. | [noun] A subpart of a legal document such as law. | [noun] (taxonomy, zoology) An informal taxonomic category below section and above family. SUBSECTORS (14) SUBSEGMENT (15) SUBSEIZURE (21) SUBSEQUENT (21) [adjective] Following in time; coming or being after something else at any time, indefinitely. | [adjective] Following in order of place; succeeding. SUBSERVING (16) [verb] To serve to promote (an end); to be useful to. | [verb] To assist in carrying out. SUBSIDENCE (15) [noun] The process of becoming less active or severe. | [noun] A sinking of something to a lower level, especially of part of the surface of the Earth due to underground excavation or seismic activity or groundwater depletion SUBSIDIARY (16) [noun] A company owned by a parent company or a holding company, also called daughter company or sister company. | [noun] A subordinate theme. | [noun] One who aids or supplies; an assistant. SUBSIDISED (14) [adjective] That receives subsidy. | [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. SUBSIDISES (13) [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 SUBSIDIZER (22) SUBSIDIZES (22) [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. SUBSISTENT (12) SUBSISTING (13) [verb] To survive on a minimum of resources. | [verb] To have ontological reality; to exist. | [verb] To retain a certain state; to continue. SUBSOCIETY (17) SUBSOILERS (12) [noun] A type of plough that loosens the subsoil. SUBSOILING (13) [noun] Ploughing to the depth of the subsoil SUBSPECIES (16) [noun] A rank in the classification of organisms, below species. | [noun] A taxon at that rank, often indicated with trinomial nomenclature (such as Felis silvestris silvestris in zoology and Pinus nigra subsp. salzmannii in botany). | [noun] A subdivision of a species in other scientific disciplines. SUBSTANCES (14) [noun] Physical matter; material. | [noun] The essential part of anything; the most vital part. | [noun] Substantiality; solidity; firmness. SUBSTATION (12) [noun] A site where electricity supplied by long-distance (high-voltage) transmission lines is transformed and/or regulated for local (low-voltage) distribution. | [noun] A satellite police station serving one neighborhood or part of a larger jurisdiction. SUBSTITUTE (12) [noun] A replacement or stand-in for something that achieves a similar result or purpose. | [noun] A player who is available to replace another if the need arises, and who may or may not actually do so. | [noun] One who enlists for military service in the place of a conscript. SUBSTRATES (12) [noun] What an enzyme acts upon. | [noun] A surface on which an organism grows, or to which an organism or an item is attached. | [noun] An underlying layer; a substratum. SUBSTRATUM (14) [noun] A layer that lies underneath another. | [noun] The underlying cause or basis of something. | [noun] A substrate. SUBSUMABLE (16) SUBSURFACE (17) [noun] Something that is below the layer that is on the surface. | [noun] A surface which is a submanifold of another surface. | [adjective] Below the surface SUBSYSTEMS (17) [noun] A group of related components that are part of a larger system. SUBTENANCY (17) SUBTENANTS (12) [noun] Someone who sublets, a person who rents from a tenant. | [verb] To sublet. SUBTENDING (14) [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 SUBTERFUGE (16) [noun] An indirect or deceptive device or stratagem; a blind. Refers especially to war and diplomatics. | [noun] Deception; misrepresentation of the true nature of an activity. SUBTEXTUAL (19) SUBTILISIN (12) 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. SUBTILIZES (21) [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. SUBTILTIES (12) SUBTITLING (13) [verb] To create subtitles for the dialog in a film. | [noun] The addition of subtitles to a work. SUBTLENESS (12) SUBTLETIES (12) [noun] The quality of being subtle. | [noun] An instance of being subtle, a subtle thing, especially a subtle argument or distinction. | [noun] An ornate medieval illusion dish or table decoration, especially when made from one thing but crafted to look like another. SUBTOTALED (13) [verb] To calculate a subtotal. SUBTOTALLY (15) SUBTRACTED (15) [verb] To remove or reduce; especially to reduce a quantity or number SUBTRACTER (14) SUBTRAHEND (16) [noun] A number or quantity to be subtracted from another. SUBTROPICS (16) [noun] The region between the tropics and the temperate latitudes of the world. SUBVARIETY (18) SUBVASSALS (15) SUBVENTION (15) [noun] A subsidy; provision of financial or other support. | [noun] The act of coming under. | [noun] The act of relieving, as of a burden; support; aid; assistance; help. SUBVERSION (15) [noun] The act of subverting or the condition of being subverted. | [noun] A systematic attempt to overthrow a government by working from within; undermining. | [noun] A revision considered more similar to preceding subversions than a revision deemed a new "version" is to preceding versions. SUBVERSIVE (18) [noun] A radical supporter of political or social revolution. | [adjective] Intending to subvert, overturn or undermine a government or authority. SUBVERTERS (15) SUBVERTING (16) [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). SUBVISIBLE (17) SUBVOCALLY (20) SUBWRITERS (15) SUCCEDANEA (15) [noun] A substitute, replacement for something else, particularly of a medicine used in place of another. SUCCEEDERS (15) [noun] One who succeeds (follows after); a successor. | [noun] One who succeeds (achieves a positive outcome); a winner. SUCCEEDING (16) [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. SUCCESSFUL (17) [adjective] Resulting in success; assuring, or promoting, success; accomplishing what was proposed; having the desired effect SUCCESSION (14) [noun] An act of following in sequence. | [noun] A sequence of things in order. | [noun] A passing of royal powers. SUCCESSIVE (17) [adjective] Coming one after the other in a series. | [adjective] Of, or relating to a succession; hereditary. SUCCESSORS (14) [noun] A person or thing that immediately follows another in holding an office or title. | [noun] The next heir in order or succession. | [noun] A person who inherits a title or office. SUCCINATES (14) [noun] Any salt or ester of succinic acid. SUCCINCTER (16) SUCCINCTLY (19) [adverb] In a succinct manner, concisely. SUCCOURING (15) [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. SUCCUBUSES (16) SUCCULENCE (16) SUCCULENTS (14) [noun] A succulent plant. SUCCUMBING (19) [verb] To yield to an overpowering force or overwhelming desire. | [verb] To give up, or give in. | [verb] To die. SUCCUSSING (15) [verb] To shake with vigor. SUCHNESSES (15) SUCKFISHES (22) SUCTIONING (13) [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. SUCTORIANS (12) SUDATORIES (11) SUDATORIUM (13) [noun] A hot room used to induce sweating, steam room, steam bath, sauna. SUDDENNESS (12) SUDORIFICS (16) [noun] A medicine that produces sweating. SUFFERABLE (18) SUFFERABLY (21) SUFFERANCE (18) [noun] Endurance, especially patiently, of pain or adversity. | [noun] Acquiescence or tacit compliance with some circumstance, behavior, or instruction. | [noun] Suffering; pain, misery. SUFFERINGS (17) [noun] The condition of someone who suffers; a state of pain or distress. SUFFICIENT (18) [adjective] Equal to the end proposed; adequate to what is needed; enough | [adjective] Possessing adequate talents or accomplishments; of competent power or ability; qualified; fit. | [adjective] Capable of meeting obligations; responsible. SUFFLATING (17) 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. SUFFOCATES (18) [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. SUFFRAGANS (17) [noun] A bishop seen in relation to his archbishop or metropolitan province (which may summon him for support, to attend synods etc.). | [noun] An auxiliary bishop. SUFFRAGIST (17) [noun] A person who promotes suffrage. | [noun] One who votes. SUFFUSIONS (16) SUGARBERRY (16) SUGARCANES (13) SUGARCOATS (13) [verb] To make superficially more attractive; to give a falsely pleasant appearance to. SUGARHOUSE (14) SUGARPLUMS (15) [noun] A round or oval sweet/piece of candy made of boiled sugar. | [noun] A piece of flattery. | [noun] Term of endearment: sweetheart, darling. SUGGESTERS (12) SUGGESTING (13) [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 SUGGESTION (12) [noun] Something suggested (with subsequent adposition being for) | [noun] The act of suggesting. | [noun] Something implied, which the mind is liable to take as fact. SUGGESTIVE (15) [adjective] Tending to suggest or imply. | [adjective] Suggesting romance, sex, etc.; risqué. | [adjective] Relating to hypnotic suggestion. SUICIDALLY (16) SULFATASES (13) SULFHYDRYL (23) 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 SULFONATES (13) [noun] Any salt or ester of a sulfonic acid. | [verb] To treat or react with a sulfonic acid, or to introduce such a group into a compound. SULFONIUMS (15) SULFOXIDES (21) SULFURETED (14) SULFURIZED (23) [verb] To treat or react with sulfur or sulfur dioxide. | [adjective] Reacted or treated with sulfur or sulfur dioxide SULFURIZES (22) SULLENNESS (10) SULPHATING (16) SULPHURING (16) [verb] To treat with sulfur, or a sulfur compound, especially to preserve or to counter agricultural pests. SULPHURISE (15) SULPHUROUS (15) [adjective] Containing sulfur. | [adjective] Of, or relating to sulfur, especially in its lower oxidation state. SULTANATES (10) SULTRINESS (10) SUMMARISED (15) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARISES (14) [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. SUMMARIZER (23) SUMMARIZES (23) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMATIONS (14) [noun] A summarization. | [noun] An adding up of a series of items. SUMMERIEST (14) SUMMERLIKE (18) SUMMERLONG (15) SUMMERTIME (16) [noun] The period or season of summer. SUMMERWOOD (18) SUMMITEERS (14) [noun] Someone who reaches a summit. | [noun] A mountain climber. | [noun] Someone who attends a conference denoted as a summit. SUMMITRIES (14) SUMMONABLE (16) SUMMONSING (15) [verb] To serve someone with a summons. SUNBATHERS (15) SUNBATHING (16) [verb] To expose one's body to the sun in order to relax or to obtain a suntan. | [noun] The act of lying outdoors exposed to the sun, usually wearing little or no clothing. SUNBONNETS (12) [noun] A hat (bonnet) worn for protection from bright sunlight. SUNBURNING (13) [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. SUNDOWNERS (14) [noun] An itinerant worker, such as a swagman, who arrives at a farm too late in the day to do any work, but readily accepts food and lodging. | [noun] An itinerant worker, a swagman. | [noun] A sea captain who shows harsh discipline by requiring all hands to be on board by sundown. SUNDRESSES (11) [noun] A typically sleeveless dress, usually a minidress, made of light, loose-fitting material for spring and summer wear. SUNFLOWERS (16) [noun] Any plant of the genus Helianthus, so called probably from the form and color of its floral head, having the form of a large disk surrounded by yellow ray flowers. | [noun] A bright yellow, like that of the flower petals. | [noun] Any flat, radially symmetric organic compound such as coronene SUNGLASSES (11) [noun] Tinted glasses worn to protect the eyes from the sun. | [noun] A person wearing sunglasses SUNPORCHES (17) SUNSCREENS (12) [noun] A cream, to be spread on the skin, containing organic compounds that absorb, and/or titanium dioxide that reflects the sun’s ultraviolet radiation. SUNSEEKERS (14) [noun] A person who enjoys exposure to sunlight; an avid sunbather. SUNSTROKES (14) SUPERADDED (15) [verb] To add on top of a previous addition. SUPERAGENT (13) SUPERALLOY (15) [noun] Any of several high-performance alloys that are resistant to high temperatures SUPERBANKS (18) SUPERBITCH (19) SUPERBLOCK (20) SUPERBNESS (14) SUPERBOARD (15) SUPERBOMBS (18) SUPERCARGO (15) [noun] An officer on board a merchant ship who has charge of the cargo and its turnover (or the senior of two if one has two, the other being the subcargo; usually historical, since nowadays a person with such a job would remain on shore). SUPERCEDED (16) SUPERCEDES (15) SUPERCLASS (14) [noun] A high-level class that passes attributes and methods down the hierarchy to subclasses. | [noun] A taxon ranking below a phylum and above a class. | [verb] To create a superclass of. SUPERCLEAN (14) SUPERCLUBS (16) SUPERCOILS (14) [noun] A coil of the DNA helix upon itself, such as a figure eight. SUPERCOOLS (14) [verb] To cool a material below its transition temperature without that transition occurring SUPERELITE (12) SUPERFARMS (17) SUPERFIRMS (17) SUPERFIXES (22) SUPERFLACK (21) SUPERFLUID (16) SUPERFUNDS (16) SUPERGENES (13) [noun] A group of neighbouring genes on a chromosome that are inherited together because of close genetic linkage and are functionally related in an evolutionary sense. SUPERGIANT (13) [noun] A very large star having a mass between 10 and 70 solar masses. SUPERGLUES (13) [noun] A very strong and instant glue, generally cyanoacrylate. | [verb] To affix with superglue. SUPERGROUP (15) [noun] Any group composed of other groups. SUPERHEATS (15) [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. SUPERHEAVY (21) [noun] Any superheavy element. | [adjective] Having far greater weight than usual. | [adjective] Describing a transuranic element having an atomic number greater than 110 SUPERHELIX (22) [noun] The shape formed by a helix which in turn is twisted into a larger helix SUPERHUMAN (17) [noun] A human being with remarkable abilities or superpowers. | [adjective] Beyond what is possible for a human being. SUPERHYPED (21) SUPERHYPES (20) SUPERIORLY (15) SUPERJOCKS (25) SUPERJUMBO (23) SUPERLARGE (13) SUPERLIGHT (16) SUPERLINER (12) SUPERLUNAR (12) SUPERLYING (16) SUPERMACHO (19) SUPERMALES (14) SUPERMICRO (16) SUPERMINDS (15) SUPERMINIS (14) [noun] A small motor car, especially a hatchback, which is powerful for its size or class | [noun] A superminicomputer SUPERMODEL (15) [noun] A highly paid, famous fashion model. SUPERNALLY (15) SUPERNOVAE (15) [noun] The explosion of a star, which increases its brightness to typically a billion times that of our sun, though attenuated by the great distance from our sun. Some leave only debris (Type I); others fade to invisibility as neutron stars (Type II). SUPERNOVAS (15) [noun] The explosion of a star, which increases its brightness to typically a billion times that of our sun, though attenuated by the great distance from our sun. Some leave only debris (Type I); others fade to invisibility as neutron stars (Type II). SUPERORDER (13) [noun] A taxonomic category below subclass and above order. SUPEROXIDE (20) [noun] A peroxide | [noun] The univalent anion, O2-, obtained from molecular oxygen by adding an electron; any compound containing this anion SUPERPIMPS (18) SUPERPLANE (14) SUPERPORTS (14) 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 SUPERPOSES (14) [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. SUPERPOWER (17) [noun] Excessive or superior power. | [noun] A sovereign state with dominant status on the globe and a very advanced military, especially the Soviet Union or United States. | [noun] A fictional extraordinary physical or mental ability, especially possessed by a superhero or supervillain. SUPERRACES (14) SUPERROADS (13) SUPERSALES (12) SUPERSCALE (14) SUPERSCOUT (14) SUPERSEDED (14) [verb] To take the place of. | [verb] To displace in favour of itself. SUPERSEDER (13) SUPERSEDES (13) [noun] An updated newsgroup post that supersedes an earlier version. | [verb] To take the place of. | [verb] To displace in favour of itself. SUPERSELLS (12) SUPERSEXES (19) SUPERSHARP (17) SUPERSHOWS (18) SUPERSIZED (22) [verb] To increase the size of something, especially to unusual proportions. SUPERSLICK (18) SUPERSMART (14) SUPERSONIC (14) [noun] An aircraft that can travel at the speed of sound. | [adjective] (of a speed) greater than the speed of sound (in the same medium, and at the same temperature and pressure) | [adjective] (of a sound) ultrasonic, having a frequency too high to be audible SUPERSPIES (14) SUPERSTARS (12) [noun] Someone who has accumulated a vast amount of fame; a high-level celebrity. SUPERSTATE (12) [noun] A state formed by the union of multiple lesser states. SUPERSTOCK (18) SUPERSTORE (12) [noun] An extremely large store; a hypermarket. SUPERSTUDS (13) SUPERSWEET (15) SUPERTAXES (19) [noun] An additional tax on something that has already been taxed | [noun] A higher rate of an existing tax SUPERTHICK (21) SUPERTIGHT (16) SUPERTONIC (14) [noun] The second note in a diatonic scale. 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. SUPERVENES (15) [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. SUPERVISES (15) [verb] To oversee or direct a task or organization. | [verb] To look over so as to read; to peruse. SUPERVISOR (15) [noun] A person with the official task of overseeing the work of a person or group, or of other operations and activities. | [noun] A person who monitors someone to make sure they comply with rules or other requirements set for them. | [noun] In certain states, an elected member of the governing body for a county which is called the board of supervisors. SUPERWAVES (18) SUPERWIVES (18) SUPERWOMAN (17) [noun] A woman who looks after a home and children as well as being employed in a full-time job. | [noun] A woman with superhuman powers. SUPERWOMEN (17) [noun] A woman who looks after a home and children as well as being employed in a full-time job. | [noun] A woman with superhuman powers. SUPINATING (13) [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. SUPINATION (12) SUPINATORS (12) [noun] Any muscle that aids supination SUPINENESS (12) SUPPLANTED (15) [verb] To take the place of; to replace, to supersede. | [verb] To uproot, to remove violently. SUPPLANTER (14) SUPPLEJACK (27) [noun] Any of various North American vines that have supple stems. | [noun] Any of several vines belonging to the genus Ripogonum, native to New Zealand. SUPPLEMENT (16) [noun] Something added, especially to make up for a deficiency. | [noun] An extension to a document or publication that adds information, corrects errors or brings up to date. | [noun] An additional section of a newspaper devoted to a specific subject. SUPPLENESS (14) SUPPLETION (14) [noun] The supplying of something lacking. | [noun] (grammar) The use of an unrelated word or phrase to supply inflected forms otherwise lacking, e.g. using “to be able” as the infinitive of “can”, or “better” as the comparative of “good”, or “went” as the simple past of “go”. | [noun] (grammar) More loosely, the use of unrelated (or distantly related) words for semantically related words which may not share the same lexical category, such as father/paternal or cow/bovine. SUPPLETIVE (17) SUPPLETORY (17) SUPPLIANCE (16) SUPPLIANTS (14) [noun] One who pleads or requests earnestly. SUPPLICANT (16) SUPPLICATE (16) [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. SUPPORTERS (14) [noun] A person who gives support to someone or something. | [noun] Something that supports another thing. SUPPORTING (15) [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. SUPPORTIVE (17) [adjective] Providing support. SUPPOSABLE (16) SUPPOSABLY (19) SUPPOSEDLY (18) [adverb] As a matter of supposition; in the beliefs or according to the claims of some people. 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. SUPPRESSES (14) [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. SUPPRESSOR (14) [noun] A device which suppresses something, especially an electronic or mechanical device. | [noun] A person who suppresses others, a tyrant. | [noun] A gene that suppresses the effect of another through epistasis. SUPPURATED (15) [verb] To form or discharge pus. | [verb] To cause to generate pus. SUPPURATES (14) [verb] To form or discharge pus. | [verb] To cause to generate pus. SUPRAOPTIC (16) [adjective] Above the optic tract or chiasma SUPRARENAL (12) [noun] A suprarenal capsule. | [adjective] Located on, or above the kidney SUPRAVITAL (15) SURCEASING (13) [verb] To come to an end; to desist. | [verb] To bring to an end. 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. SURCHARGES (16) [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. SURCINGLES (13) [noun] A long unpadded strap to pass over and keep in place a blanket, pack or saddle on an animal. | [noun] A piece of tack wrapped around the belly of a horse, to use when longeing. | [noun] A girdle to fasten a garment, especially a cassock. SUREFOOTED (14) [adjective] Walking steadily, without stumbling; capable of finding good footing. | [adjective] Confident and capable. SURENESSES (10) SURETYSHIP (18) SURFACINGS (16) SURFACTANT (15) [noun] A surface active agent, or wetting agent, capable of reducing the surface tension of a liquid; typically organic compounds having a hydrophilic "head" and a hydrophobic "tail". | [noun] A lipoprotein in the tissues of the lung that reduces surface tension and permits more efficient gas transport. SURFBOARDS (16) [noun] A shaped waterproof plank, usually made of wood or foam and reinforced plastic, used to surf on waves. SURFEITERS (13) SURFEITING (14) [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. SURFFISHES (19) SURGICALLY (16) [adverb] Relating to surgery; by means of surgery. SURJECTION (19) [noun] A function that is a many-to-one mapping; (formally) Any function f: X\rightarrow Y for which for every y \in Y, there is at least one x \in X such that f(x) = y. SURJECTIVE (22) 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. SURPASSING (13) [verb] To go beyond, especially in a metaphoric or technical manner; to exceed. | [noun] The act or process by which something is surpassed; a bettering. | [adjective] Becoming superior to others; becoming excellent; exceptional; exceeding. SURPLUSAGE (13) SURPRINTED (13) SURPRISALS (12) SURPRISERS (12) SURPRISING (13) [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. SURPRIZING (22) SURREALISM (12) [noun] An artistic movement and an aesthetic philosophy that aims for the liberation of the mind by emphasizing the critical and imaginative powers of the subconscious. SURREALIST (10) [noun] A surrealist artist | [adjective] Of, or relating to surrealism SURRENDERS (11) [noun] An act of surrendering, submission into the possession of another; abandonment, resignation. | [noun] The yielding or delivery of a possession in response to a demand. | [noun] The yielding of the leasehold estate by the lessee to the landlord, so that the tenancy for years merges in the reversion and no longer exists. SURROGATED (12) SURROGATES (11) [noun] A substitute (usually of a person, position or role). | [noun] A person or animal that acts as a substitute for the social or pastoral role of another, such as a surrogate parent. | [noun] A deputy for a bishop in granting licences for marriage. 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. SURVEYINGS (17) SURVIVABLE (18) [adjective] Able to be survived. | [adjective] Capable of surviving a nuclear strike. SURVIVANCE (18) SUSCEPTIVE (17) [adjective] Susceptible | [adjective] Receptive SUSPECTING (15) [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. SUSPENDERS (13) [noun] A pair of straps crossing one's shoulders and extending down to one's trousers, where a clip or button arrangement allows them to affix to the trousers, ensuring that they will not fall off. Braces. | [noun] Small straps, attached to a suspender belt, that hold up a woman's stockings. Garters. SUSPENDING (14) [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. SUSPENSERS (12) SUSPENSION (12) [noun] The act of suspending, or the state of being suspended. | [noun] A temporary or conditional delay, interruption or discontinuation. | [noun] The state of a solid or substance produced when its particles are mixed with, but not dissolved in, a fluid, and are capable of separation by straining. SUSPENSIVE (15) [adjective] That suspends (temporarily stops) | [adjective] Characterized by suspense; suspenseful SUSPENSORS (12) SUSPENSORY (15) [noun] Something that suspends. | [adjective] Held in suspension. | [adjective] Holding in suspension. SUSPICIONS (14) [noun] The act of suspecting something or someone, especially of something wrong. | [noun] The condition of being suspected. | [noun] Uncertainty, doubt. SUSPICIOUS (14) [adjective] Arousing suspicion. | [adjective] Distrustful or tending to suspect. | [adjective] Expressing suspicion SUSTAINERS (10) SUSTAINING (11) [verb] To maintain, or keep in existence. | [verb] To provide for or nourish. | [verb] To encourage or sanction (something). SUSTENANCE (12) [noun] Something that provides support or nourishment. SUSURRUSES (10) SUZERAINTY (22) SVELTENESS (13) SWAGGERERS (15) SWAGGERING (16) [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. | [noun] Boastful, blustering behaviour. SWALLOWERS (16) [noun] Agent noun of swallow; one who swallows. SWALLOWING (17) [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. SWAMPINESS (17) SWAMPLANDS (18) [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. SWANKINESS (17) SWANNERIES (13) [noun] A place where swans are bred. SWANSDOWNS (17) SWARAJISTS (20) SWARTHIEST (16) [adjective] Tawny, dusky, dark. | [adjective] Dark-skinned. | [adjective] Darker-skinned than white, but lighter-skinned than tawny. SWAYBACKED (25) SWEARWORDS (17) [noun] A word considered taboo and impolite or offensive. SWEATBANDS (16) [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. SWEATBOXES (22) [noun] Any box or boxlike structure used to induce sweating, such as of hides or tobacco | [noun] A jail cell. | [noun] A small overheated cell or room used for solitary confinement or torture. SWEATINESS (13) SWEATPANTS (15) [noun] Informal cotton trousers, with an elasticated or drawstring waist, used for exercise etc. SWEATSHIRT (16) [noun] A loose shirt, usually made of a knit fleece, for athletic wear and now often used as casual apparel. | [noun] A shirt worn against the skin, usually under other clothing, to absorb sweat. SWEATSHOPS (18) [noun] A factory or other place of work where pay is low and conditions are poor or even illegal. SWEEPBACKS (23) SWEEPINGLY (19) SWEETBREAD (16) [noun] The pancreas or thymus gland of an animal, especially a lamb or calf, as food. SWEETBRIAR (15) [noun] A Eurasian rose, Rosa eglanteria, having prickly stems, fragrant leaves, pink flowers and red hips SWEETBRIER (15) SWEETENERS (13) [noun] Something added to food to sweeten its taste, especially an artificial substitute for sugar. | [noun] Something given or added to added to a deal to sweeten another's attitude, especially a bribe or kickback. SWEETENING (14) [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. SWEETHEART (16) [noun] A person who is always very kind. | [noun] A person very much liked or loved by someone, especially when both partners are young. | [noun] A female member of a college or university fraternity. SWEETISHLY (19) SWEETMEATS (15) [noun] A sweet delicacy; a confection SWEETSHOPS (18) SWELLHEADS (17) SWELTERING (14) [verb] To suffer terribly from intense heat. | [verb] To perspire greatly from heat. | [verb] To cause to faint, to overpower, as with heat. SWELTRIEST (13) SWIMMERETS (17) [noun] In decapods such as lobsters, one of the legs primarily used for swimming but also used for brooding the eggs (except in prawns) and catching food. SWIMMINGLY (21) [adverb] With a gliding motion suggesting swimming. | [adverb] In a very favourable manner; without difficulty; agreeably, successfully. SWINEHERDS (17) [noun] A person who herds and tends swine, a keeper of swine (pigs). SWINEPOXES (22) SWINGINGLY (18) SWIRLINGLY (17) SWISHINGLY (20) SWITCHABLE (20) SWITCHBACK (26) [noun] A zigzag path, road or railway track; especially a railway track in which the train travels in a reverse direction at each switch | [noun] A hairpin bend. | [noun] A roller coaster. SWITCHEROO (18) [noun] A sneaky, unexpected, or clever swap or exchange. | [verb] To swap or exchange surreptitiously. SWITCHYARD (22) [noun] Part of a railway with an arrangement of switches (or points) allowing trains to be diverted and reassembled. SWITHERING (17) [verb] To be indecisive or in a state of confusion; to dither. SWIVELLING (17) [verb] To swing or turn, as on a pin or pivot. | [noun] The motion of something that swivels. SWOONINGLY (17) SWOOPSTAKE (19) SWORDPLAYS (19) SWORDTAILS (14) [noun] One of many species of freshwater fish, in genus Xiphophorus, others of which are called platyfish. | [noun] Any of various papilionid butterflies that have a long sword-like projection from the tornal section of each hindwing. SYBARITISM (17) SYCOPHANCY (25) [noun] The fawning behavior of a sycophant; servile flattery; fawningness. SYCOPHANTS (20) [noun] One who uses obsequious compliments to gain self-serving favor or advantage from another; a servile flatterer. | [noun] One who seeks to gain through the powerful and influential. | [noun] An informer; a talebearer. SYLLABLING (16) [verb] To utter in syllables. SYLLABUSES (15) [noun] A summary of topics which will be covered during an academic course, or a text or lecture. | [noun] The headnote of a reported case; the brief statement of the points of law determined prefixed to a reported case. SYLLOGISMS (16) [noun] An argument whose conclusion is supported by two premises, of which one contains the term that is the predicate of the conclusion, and the other contains the term that is the subject of the conclusion; common to both premises is a term that is excluded from the conclusion. | [noun] A trick, artifice; an extremely subtle, sophisticated, or deceptive argument; a sophism. SYLLOGISTS (14) SYLLOGIZED (24) [verb] To reason by means of syllogisms. | [verb] To deduce consequences from. SYLLOGIZES (23) [verb] To reason by means of syllogisms. | [verb] To deduce consequences from. SYLVANITES (16) SYMBOLICAL (19) 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. SYMBOLISES (17) [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. SYMBOLISMS (19) SYMBOLISTS (17) 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. SYMBOLIZER (26) SYMBOLIZES (26) [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. SYMBOLLING (18) [verb] To symbolize. SYMMETRIES (17) [noun] Exact correspondence on either side of a dividing line, plane, center or axis. | [noun] The satisfying arrangement of a balanced distribution of the elements of a whole. SYMMETRIZE (26) SYMPATHIES (20) [noun] A feeling of pity or sorrow for the suffering or distress of another; compassion. | [noun] The ability to share the feelings of another. | [noun] A mutual relationship between people or things such that they are correspondingly affected by any condition. SYMPATHINS (20) SYMPATHISE (20) [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. SYMPATHIZE (29) [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. SYMPATRIES (17) SYMPHONIES (20) [noun] An extended piece of music of sophisticated structure, usually for orchestra. | [noun] An instrumental introduction or termination to a vocal composition. | [noun] Harmony in music or colour, or a harmonious combination of elements. SYMPHONIST (20) [noun] A composer of symphonies SYMPHYSEAL (23) SYMPHYSIAL (23) SYMPOSIAST (17) [noun] One engaged with others at a banquet or merrymaking. | [noun] A participant in a symposium. SYMPOSIUMS (19) [noun] A conference or other meeting for discussion of a topic, especially one in which the participants make presentations. | [noun] A drinking party in Ancient Greece, especially one with intellectual discussion. SYNAERESES (13) [noun] The contraction of two vowels into a diphthong or a long vowel. | [noun] The separating out of the liquid from a gel. SYNAERESIS (13) [noun] The contraction of two vowels into a diphthong or a long vowel. | [noun] The separating out of the liquid from a gel. SYNAGOGUES (15) [noun] A place of worship for Jews. | [noun] A congregation of Jews for the purpose of worship or religious study. SYNALEPHAS (18) SYNALOEPHA (18) SYNCARPIES (17) SYNCARPOUS (17) [adjective] (of a pistil) Having carpels joined together SYNCHRONAL (18) SYNCHRONIC (20) [adjective] Occurring at a specific point in time. | [adjective] Relating to the study of a language at only one point in its history. 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 SYNCOPATES (17) [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 SYNCOPATOR (17) SYNCRETISE (15) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNCRETISM (17) [noun] The (attempted) reconciliation or fusion of different systems or beliefs. | [noun] The fusion of different inflexional forms. SYNCRETIST (15) SYNCRETIZE (24) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNDACTYLY (22) [noun] The normal condition, in some animals and birds, of having fused digits. | [noun] The anomalous condition, in humans, of having some fingers or toes fused with a web. SYNDESISES (14) 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. SYNDICATES (16) [noun] A group of individuals or companies formed to transact some specific business, or to promote a common interest; a self-coordinating group. | [noun] The office or jurisdiction of a syndic; a body or council of syndics. SYNDICATOR (16) SYNECDOCHE (21) [noun] A figure of speech that uses the name of a part of something to represent the whole, or the whole to represent a part. | [noun] The use of this figure of speech. SYNECOLOGY (19) [noun] One of two broad subdivisions of ecology (the other being autecology), meaning the study of groups of organisms associated as a unit (essentially a biological community). SYNERGETIC (16) SYNERGISMS (16) [noun] Synergy | [noun] The theological doctrine that salvation is brought about by a combination of human will and divine grace SYNERGISTS (14) [noun] Any synergistic agent. | [noun] (by extension) A chemical compound that increases the chemical activity of another compound when used with it. | [noun] One who holds the religious doctrine of synergism. SYNKARYONS (20) SYNONYMIES (18) [noun] The quality of being synonymous; sameness of meaning. | [noun] A list or collection of synonyms, often compared and contrasted. | [noun] The study of synonyms. SYNONYMIST (18) SYNONYMITY (21) SYNONYMIZE (27) SYNONYMOUS (18) [adjective] (construed with with, narrower sense) having an identical meaning | [adjective] (construed with with, broader sense) having a similar meaning | [adjective] (construed with with) of, or being a synonym SYNOPSIZED (25) SYNOPSIZES (24) SYNOPTICAL (17) SYNOSTOSES (13) [noun] The fusion of adjacent bones by the growth of a bony material | [noun] The abnormal development of a joint. SYNOSTOSIS (13) [noun] The fusion of adjacent bones by the growth of a bony material | [noun] The abnormal development of a joint. SYNTACTICS (17) SYNTAGMATA (16) [noun] A constituent segment within a text, such as a word or a phrase that forms a syntactic unit. | [noun] An arrangement of units that together bears a meaning. | [noun] (history) A Macedonian phalanx fighting formation consisting of 256 men with long spears (sarissae). SYNTHESIST (16) SYNTHESIZE (25) [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. SYNTHETASE (16) SYNTHETICS (18) [noun] A synthetic compound. SYPHILISES (18) SYPHILITIC (20) SYSTEMATIC (17) [adjective] Carried out using a planned, ordered procedure. | [adjective] Methodical, regular and orderly. | [adjective] Of, or relating to taxonomic classification. 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. SYSTEMIZES (24) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems. SYSTEMLESS (15)

11-Letter Words (1551)

SABBATICALS (17) [noun] An extended period of leave from a person's usual pursuits. SABLEFISHES (19) [noun] A dark-coloured marine fish, Anoplopoma fimbria, of North American Pacific waters. SACAHUISTAS (16) SACAHUISTES (16) SACCHARASES (18) SACCHARIDES (19) [noun] The unit structure of carbohydrates, of general formula CnH2nOn. Either the simple sugars or polymers such as starch and cellulose. The saccharides exist in either a ring or short chain conformation, and typically contain five or six carbon atoms. SACCULATION (15) SACRAMENTAL (15) [noun] An object (such as holy water or a crucifix) or an action (such as making the sign of the cross) which is regarded as encouraging devotion and thus spiritually aiding the person who uses it. | [adjective] Used in, or relating to, a sacrament. SACRIFICERS (18) SACRIFICIAL (18) [adjective] Relating to sacrifice | [adjective] Used as a sacrifice. SACRIFICING (19) [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. SACROILIACS (15) SADDLEBREDS (16) [noun] A horse of the American Saddlebred breed. SADDLECLOTH (18) [noun] A blanket placed under a saddle, a saddle blanket. | [noun] A cloth displaying a racehorse's number. SADDLETREES (13) SAFECRACKER (22) [noun] One who breaks into safes. SAFEGUARDED (17) [verb] To protect, to keep safe. | [verb] To escort safely. SAFEKEEPING (21) [noun] The act of keeping something safe; protection from harm, damage, loss, or theft | [noun] The storage of assets in a protected area | [noun] The responsibility of a guardian SAGACIOUSLY (17) SAGEBRUSHES (17) SAILBOATERS (13) SAILBOATING (14) SAILPLANERS (13) SAILPLANING (14) SAINTLINESS (11) [noun] The property of being saintly. SALACIOUSLY (16) SALAMANDERS (14) [noun] A long, slender, chiefly terrestrial amphibian of the order Caudata, superficially resembling a lizard. | [noun] A creature much like a lizard that is resistant to and lives in fire (in which it is often depicted in heraldry), hence the elemental being of fire. | [noun] A metal utensil with a flat head which is heated and put over a dish to brown the top. SALERATUSES (11) SALESCLERKS (17) [noun] A salesperson, a person employed by a store to sell merchandise, assist customers in finding merchandise, and accept payment. SALESLADIES (12) [noun] A woman who is employed as a salesclerk. SALESPEOPLE (15) [noun] A person whose job is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere. SALESPERSON (13) [noun] A person whose job is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere. SALICYLATES (16) [noun] Any salt or ester of salicylic acid SALINOMETER (13) [noun] A salimeter. SALIVATIONS (14) SALMAGUNDIS (15) [noun] A food consisting of chopped meat and pickled herring, with oil, vinegar, pepper, and onions. | [noun] Hence, any mixture of various ingredients; an olio or medley; a potpourri; a miscellany. SALMONBERRY (18) [noun] A bush, Rubus spectabilis, found on the Pacific coast of North America. | [noun] The fruit from this bush, similar in appearance and texture to the blackberry and raspberry. SALMONELLAE (13) [noun] Any of several rod-shaped bacteria, of the genus Salmonella, that cause food poisoning and other diseases SALMONELLAS (13) [noun] Any of several rod-shaped bacteria, of the genus Salmonella, that cause food poisoning and other diseases SALPINGITIS (14) [noun] Inflammation of the Fallopian tube or the Eustachian tube as a result of infection SALTARELLOS (11) [noun] A lively medieval Italian dance with a leaping step. | [noun] The music for such a dance. SALTATORIAL (11) [adjective] Relating to leaping; moving by leaps; saltatory. | [adjective] Of or relating to the Saltatoria. SALTCELLARS (13) [noun] A small open container holding salt for use in the kitchen or on a dining table | [noun] A salt shaker, a closed container with perforated lid for sprinkling salt SALTIMBOCCA (19) [noun] An Italian dish of veal, thinly sliced and rolled in prosciutto ham and sage leaves. SALTINESSES (11) SALTSHAKERS (18) SALUBRITIES (13) SALUTATIONS (11) [noun] A greeting, salute, or address; a hello. | [noun] The act of greeting. | [noun] Quickening; excitement. SALVAGEABLE (17) SALVATIONAL (14) SAMARSKITES (17) SANATORIUMS (13) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANCTIFIERS (16) SANCTIFYING (20) [verb] To make holy; to consecrate; to set aside for sacred or ceremonial use. | [verb] To free from sin; to purify. | [verb] To make acceptable or useful under religious law or practice. SANCTIONING (14) [verb] To ratify; to make valid. | [verb] To give official authorization or approval to; to countenance. | [verb] To penalize (a State etc.) with sanctions. SANCTUARIES (13) [noun] A place of safety, refuge or protection. | [noun] An area set aside for protection. | [noun] A state of being protected, asylum. SANDALWOODS (16) [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. SANDBAGGERS (16) SANDBAGGING (17) [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. 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. SANDBLASTER (14) SANDERLINGS (13) [noun] A small wading bird, Calidris alba, that breeds in the Arctic and winters on sandy shores and estuaries around the world. A type of stint. SANDGLASSES (13) [noun] An instrument for measuring the passage of time by the passage of sand through a narrow opening. SANDGROUSES (13) SANDINESSES (12) SANDLOTTERS (12) SANDPAPERED (17) [verb] To polish or grind (a surface) with or as if with sandpaper. | [adjective] Treated with sandpaper. SANDWICHING (21) [verb] To place one item between two other, usually flat, items | [verb] To put or set something between two others, in time. SANGUINARIA (12) SANGUINEOUS (12) [adjective] Accompanied by bloodshed; bloody. | [adjective] Eager for bloody violence; bloodthirsty. | [adjective] Resembling or constituting blood. SANITARIANS (11) [noun] A public health or sanitation worker. | [noun] A person who promoted sanitary reforms. SANITARIUMS (13) [noun] An institution that treats chronic diseases, and provides supervised recuperation and convalescence. SANITATIONS (11) SANITORIUMS (13) SANSCULOTTE (13) [noun] A plebeian Parisian, especially a lower-class republican during the French Revolution. SANSEVIERIA (14) [noun] Any of the genus Sansevieria of flowering plants native to Africa, Madagascar and southern Asia. SAPLESSNESS (13) SAPONACEOUS (15) [adjective] Resembling soap; having the qualities of soap; soapy. | [adjective] Slippery; evasive. SAPONIFIERS (16) SAPONIFYING (20) [verb] To convert (a fat or oil) into soap. | [verb] To be converted into soap. | [verb] To hydrolyze (an ester) using an alkali. SAPPINESSES (15) SAPROPHYTES (21) [noun] Any organism that lives on dead organic matter, as certain fungi and bacteria SAPROPHYTIC (23) SARCOIDOSES (14) SARCOIDOSIS (14) [noun] A multisystem disorder characterized by granulomas. SARCOLEMMAL (17) SARCOLEMMAS (17) [noun] A thin cell membrane that surrounds a striated muscle fibre SARCOMATOUS (15) SARCOPHAGUS (19) [noun] A stone coffin, often inscribed or decorated with sculpture. | [noun] The cement and steel structure that encases the destroyed reactor at the power station in Chernobyl, Ukraine. | [noun] A kind of limestone used by the Greeks for coffins, so called because it was thought to consume the flesh of corpses. SARCOPLASMS (17) SARDONICISM (16) SARRACENIAS (13) [noun] Any of various pitcher plants of genus Sarracenia. SARTORIALLY (14) SASSAFRASES (14) [noun] A tree of species Sassafras albidum of the eastern United States and Asia having mitten-shaped leaves and red, aromatic heartwood. | [noun] A tree of any species in the genus Sassafras. | [noun] The bark of the root of this plant, used for medicinal and (mostly historically) culinary purposes and formerly a main ingredient in root beer. SATANICALLY (16) SATCHELFULS (19) SATCHELSFUL (19) SATIRICALLY (16) SATIRIZABLE (22) SATISFIABLE (16) SATURATIONS (11) [noun] The act of saturating or the process of being saturated | [noun] The condition in which, after a sufficient increase in a causal force, no further increase in the resultant effect is possible; e.g. the state of a ferromagnetic material that cannot be further magnetized | [noun] The state of a saturated solution SATURNALIAN (11) SATURNALIAS (11) [noun] A period or occasion of general license, in which the passions or vices have riotous indulgence; a period of unrestrained revelry. SATYAGRAHAS (18) SAUCINESSES (13) SAUERBRATEN (13) [noun] A German dish of roasted marinated horsemeat or (now more frequently) beef or pork. SAUERKRAUTS (15) [noun] A dish made by fermenting finely chopped cabbage. | [noun] A German person. SAURISCHIAN (16) [noun] Any dinosaur of the order Saurischia. | [adjective] Characteristic of the dinosaurs of the order Saurischia. SAXOPHONIST (23) [noun] A person who owns, plays or practices with the saxophone. SCABBARDING (19) SCAFFOLDING (21) [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. SCALARIFORM (18) [adjective] Having the form of a ladder SCALINESSES (13) SCALLOPINIS (15) SCALOPPINES (17) SCANDALISED (15) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. SCANDALISES (14) [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. SCANDALIZES (23) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. SCANDALLING (15) SCANTNESSES (13) 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. SCAPEGRACES (18) [noun] A wild and reckless person (especially a boy); a scoundrel. SCARAMOUCHE (20) SCAREMONGER (16) [noun] Someone who spreads worrying rumours or needlessly alarms people. | [verb] To spread worrying rumours. SCARLATINAL (13) SCARLATINAS (13) SCATOLOGIES (14) SCATTERGOOD (15) SCATTERGRAM (16) [noun] Scatter plot SCATTERGUNS (14) [noun] A shotgun. SCATTERINGS (14) [noun] A small quantity of something occurring at irregular intervals and dispersed at random points, | [noun] (elections) The total number of votes awarded to nonmajor or unlisted candidates. | [noun] The process whereby a beam of waves or particles is dispersed by collisions or similar interactions. SCATTERSHOT (16) [adjective] Covering a broad range in a random and unsystematic way. SCENOGRAPHY (22) [noun] The design of theatrical sets. | [noun] The art or act of representing a body on a perspective plane. | [noun] A representation or description of a body, in all its dimensions, as it appears to the eye. SCEPTICISMS (19) SCHEMATISMS (20) 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. SCHEMATIZES (27) [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. SCHERZANDOS (26) SCHIPPERKES (24) [noun] A small breed of dog developed in Belgium, sometimes used as a watchdog on boats. SCHISMATICS (20) [noun] A person involved in a schism SCHISMATIZE (27) SCHISTOSITY (19) SCHISTOSOME (18) [noun] A parasitic flatworm which needs two hosts to complete its life cycle. The immature form infests freshwater snails and the adult lives in the blood vessels of birds and mammals, causing bilharzia in humans. SCHIZOCARPS (29) [noun] A dry fruit that develops from multiple carpels and splits into multiple, one-seeded mericarps at maturity SCHIZOGONIC (28) SCHMALTZIER (27) [adjective] Overly sentimental, emotional, maudlin or bathetic. SCHMALZIEST (27) SCHNORKELED (21) SCHOLARSHIP (21) [noun] A grant-in-aid to a student. | [noun] The character or qualities of a scholar. | [noun] The activity, methods or attainments of a scholar. SCHOLASTICS (18) [noun] A member of the medieval philosophical school of scholasticism; a medieval Christian Aristotelian. | [noun] Studies; curriculum SCHOLIASTIC (18) SCHOOLBOOKS (22) [noun] A textbook, a book used, or prepared for use, in school. SCHOOLCHILD (22) [noun] A young person attending school or of an age to attend school. SCHOOLGIRLS (17) [noun] A girl attending school. SCHOOLHOUSE (19) [noun] A building housing a school, especially a small or single-room one. SCHOOLMARMS (20) [noun] A woman who is a teacher, especially a teacher in a schoolhouse; may carry the connotation she is severe and/or a spinster. | [noun] A person, male or female, who exhibits characteristics attributed to schoolteachers of the old times, such as strict enforcement of arbitrary rules. | [noun] A tree with two or more trunks; a forked tree. SCHOOLMATES (18) [noun] A person who was a fellow attendee at one's school. SCHOOLROOMS (18) [noun] A classroom, a room in a school used for instruction. SCHOOLTIMES (18) [noun] Time spent in school; classtime | [noun] Time spent at school; schooldays SCHOOLWORKS (23) SCHOTTISCHE (21) [noun] A partnered country dance of Bohemian origin. | [noun] A piece of music accompanying this dance. SCHWARMEREI (21) SCIENTIZING (23) SCINTILLANT (13) SCINTILLATE (13) [verb] To give off sparks; to shine as if emanating sparks; to twinkle or glow. | [verb] To throw off like sparks. SCISSORTAIL (13) [noun] A bird, the scissor-tailed flycatcher. SCLERODERMA (16) [noun] A chronic systemic autoimmune disease characterized by hardening the skin or other organs through excessive deposits of collagen. SCLEROMETER (15) SCLEROTIZED (23) [verb] To harden. SCOLOPENDRA (16) SCOPOLAMINE (17) [noun] A poisonous alkaloid C17H21NO4 similar to atropine that is found in various solanaceous plants and is used for its anticholinergic effects (such as preventing nausea in motion sickness and inducing mydriasis). SCORCHINGLY (22) SCOREBOARDS (16) [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. SCOREKEEPER (19) [noun] Someone who keeps track of the score at a sporting event or other contest. SCORIACEOUS (15) SCORPAENIDS (16) SCOUNDRELLY (17) SCOUTCRAFTS (18) SCOUTHERING (17) SCOUTMASTER (15) [noun] An adult leader of a group of Scouts. SCRABBLIEST (17) SCRAGGLIEST (15) [adjective] Rough, scruffy, or unkempt. | [adjective] Jagged or uneven; scraggy. SCRAPPINESS (17) SCRATCHIEST (18) [adjective] Characterized by scratches. | [adjective] (chiefly of a sore throat) Annoying, irritating, itchy. | [adjective] (of an analogue radio transmission) Noisy, lossy; marred by white noise or static as a result of poor or low signal, interference or unfavourable atmospheric conditions. SCRAWNINESS (16) SCREAMINGLY (19) [adverb] While screaming, or as if screaming SCREECHIEST (18) SCREENLANDS (14) SCREENPLAYS (18) [noun] (authorship) A script for a movie or a television show. SCREWDRIVER (20) [noun] A hand or machine tool which engages with the head of a screw and allows torque to be applied to turn the screw, thus driving it in or loosening it. | [noun] A drink made of vodka and orange juice. SCRIMMAGERS (18) SCRIMMAGING (19) [verb] To have, or be involved in, a scrimmage. | [noun] A scrimmage. SCRIMSHAWED (22) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRIPTORIUM (17) [noun] A room set aside for the copying, writing, or illuminating of manuscripts and records, especially such a room in a monastery. SCROLLWORKS (20) SCROOTCHING (19) SCROUNGIEST (14) SCRUFFINESS (19) SCRUMMAGING (19) [verb] To engage in an ordered formation of forwards in which each side aims to gain control of the ball, as described above. SCRUMPTIOUS (17) [adjective] Delicious; delectable. | [adjective] Picky; fastidious. SCRUTINEERS (13) [noun] A person who scrutinises; a person responsible for scrutineering. | [verb] To scrutinise; to thoroughly check that an election is being run fairly, or that a vehicle meets the rules of a competition, etc. SCRUTINISED (14) [verb] To examine something with great care. | [verb] To audit accounts etc in order to verify them. SCRUTINISES (13) [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. SCRUTINIZER (22) SCRUTINIZES (22) [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. SCULPTURING (16) [verb] To fashion something into a three-dimensional figure. | [verb] To represent something in sculpture. | [verb] To change the shape of a land feature by erosion etc. SCUPPERNONG (18) [noun] A large greenish-bronze grape native to the Southeastern United States, a variety of the muscadine grape (Vitis rotundifolia). | [noun] A sweet, golden or amber-colored US wine made from this variety of grape. SCUTELLATED (14) SCUTTLEBUTT (15) [noun] A butt with a scuttle, a keg of drinking water with a hole cut in it, on board ship. | [noun] Gossip, rumour, idle chatter. SCYPHISTOMA (23) [noun] The young attached larva of Discophora in the stage when it resembles a hydroid, or actinian. SCYPHOZOANS (30) SEABORGIUMS (16) SEAMANSHIPS (18) SEAMINESSES (13) SEARCHINGLY (20) SEARCHLIGHT (20) [noun] A light source that projects a bright beam of light in any direction, generally for military use. | [noun] The light from the above source. | [verb] To scan or sweep across like a searchlight. SEASICKNESS (17) SEASONALITY (14) SECLUSIVELY (19) SECONDARIES (14) [noun] Any flight feather attached to the ulna (forearm) of a bird. | [noun] An act of issuing more stock by an already publicly traded corporation. | [noun] The defensive backs. SECONDARILY (17) [adverb] With lesser importance. | [adverb] In a secondary manner or degree. | [adverb] Secondly; in the second place. SECRETARIAL (13) [adjective] Pertaining to a secretary. | [adjective] Connected with a secretary's work. SECRETARIAT (13) [noun] The office or department of a government secretary. SECRETARIES (13) [noun] Someone entrusted with a secret; a confidant. | [noun] A person who keeps records, takes notes and handles general clerical work. | [noun] (often capitalized) The head of a department of government. SECRETIVELY (19) SECTILITIES (13) SECTIONALLY (16) SECULARISED (14) [verb] To make secular. SECULARISES (13) [verb] To make secular. SECULARISMS (15) SECULARISTS (13) [noun] A person who believes in or supports secularism. SECULARIZED (23) [verb] To make secular. SECULARIZER (22) SECULARIZES (22) [verb] To make secular. SECUREMENTS (15) 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. SECURITIZES (22) [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. SEDIMENTARY (17) [noun] A rock of this kind. | [adjective] (of a rock) Made by the deposition and compression of small particles. SEDIMENTING (15) [verb] To deposit material as a sediment. | [verb] To be deposited as a sediment. SEDITIOUSLY (15) SEDUCEMENTS (16) SEDUCTIVELY (20) [adverb] In a seductive manner. SEEDINESSES (12) SEERSUCKERS (17) SEGMENTALLY (17) SEGREGATING (14) [verb] To separate, especially by social policies that directly or indirectly keep races or ethnic groups apart. SEGREGATION (13) [noun] The setting apart or separation of things or people, as a natural process, a manner of organizing people that may be voluntary or enforced by law. | [noun] The setting apart in Mendelian inheritance of alleles, such that each parent passes only one allele to its offspring. | [noun] Separation from a mass, and gathering about centers or into cavities at hand through cohesive or adhesive attraction or the crystallizing process. SEGREGATIVE (16) SEGUIDILLAS (13) [noun] A lively Spanish dance in triple time. | [noun] The music for this dance. SEIGNEURIAL (12) SEIGNEURIES (12) [noun] (history) An area governed by a seigneur (French noble). | [noun] The estate of a seigneur. | [noun] (Channel Islands) The official residence of a Seigneur. SEIGNIORAGE (13) [noun] All the revenue obtained by a feudal lord from his vassals. | [noun] The revenue obtained directly by minting coin (difference between face value and cost of metal). | [noun] The revenue obtained by the difference between interest earned on securities acquired in exchange for bank notes and the costs of producing and distributing those notes. SEIGNIORIES (12) [noun] The estate of a feudal lord. | [noun] The power or authority of a lord; dominion. | [noun] The lordship (authority) remaining to a grantor after the grant of an estate in fee simple. SEIGNORAGES (13) [noun] All the revenue obtained by a feudal lord from his vassals. | [noun] The revenue obtained directly by minting coin (difference between face value and cost of metal). | [noun] The revenue obtained by the difference between interest earned on securities acquired in exchange for bank notes and the costs of producing and distributing those notes. SEISMICALLY (18) SEISMOGRAMS (16) [noun] The graphical output from an accelerograph or seismograph. SEISMOGRAPH (19) [noun] An instrument that automatically detects and records the intensity, direction and duration of earthquakes and similar events. SEISMOMETER (15) [noun] A device used by seismologists to detect and measure seismic waves and therefore locate earthquakes etc; a seismograph. SEISMOMETRY (18) SELAGINELLA (12) [noun] Any of a group of ferny plants of the genus Selaginella, spike moss. SELECTIVELY (19) [adverb] In a selective manner, only affecting or applying to some selected cases. SELECTIVITY (19) [noun] The quality of being selective; usually the extent to which something is selective. | [noun] The ability of a radio receiver to separate a desired signal frequency from others. | [noun] Discrimination of a reactant towards a choice of other reactants; the ratio of rate constants for different reactants. SELFISHNESS (17) [noun] The quality of being selfish; the condition of putting one's own interests before those of others. SEMANTICIST (15) SEMAPHORING (19) [verb] To signal using, or as if using, a semaphore, with the implication that it is done nonverbally. SEMASIOLOGY (17) [noun] Semantics; a discipline within linguistics concerned with the meaning of a word independent of its phonetic expression. SEMIAQUATIC (24) [adjective] (of animals) Spending part of the life cycle underwater. Also, spending a significant proportion of its time in both terrestrial and aquatic environments. | [adjective] (of plants) Having the roots partially or entirely underwater. SEMIARIDITY (17) SEMICIRCLES (17) [noun] Half of a circle. | [noun] An instrument for measuring angles. SEMICLASSIC (17) SEMIDEIFIED (18) SEMIDEIFIES (17) SEMIDESERTS (14) SEMIDIURNAL (14) SEMIDWARVES (20) SEMILETHALS (16) SEMILIQUIDS (23) [noun] Any substance with properties intermediate between those of a solid and a liquid. SEMIMONTHLY (21) [noun] Something done or made every half month, especially a periodical. | [adjective] Occurring twice a month or at half month intervals. | [adverb] In a manner occurring twice a month or at half month intervals. SEMINARIANS (13) SEMINARISTS (13) SEMINATURAL (13) SEMINOMADIC (18) SEMIOLOGIES (14) SEMIOLOGIST (14) SEMIOTICIAN (15) [noun] One who studies semiotics or semantics SEMIOTICIST (15) SEMIPOPULAR (17) SEMIPOSTALS (15) SEMIPRIVATE (18) SEMIQUAVERS (25) [noun] A sixteenth note, drawn as a crotchet with two tails. SEMIRETIRED (14) [adjective] Partially retired; working part time, and/or not yet receiving pension benefits nor drawing down retirement savings. SEMISHRUBBY (23) SEMISKILLED (18) [adjective] Requiring only minimal levels of training. SEMITONALLY (16) SEMITRAILER (13) [noun] A trailer without a front axle and with wheels only at the trailing end, designed to be pulled via a pivoting arrangement which also partially supports its weight. | [noun] A tractor-trailer or big rig: a semi-trailer plus the truck or tractor pulling it. SEMITROPICS (17) SEMPERVIVUM (23) [noun] Any of the genus Sempervivum of succulent plants, the houseleeks or liveforevers. SEMPITERNAL (15) [adjective] Everlasting, eternal. | [adjective] Everlasting, that is, having infinite temporal duration (as opposed to eternal: outside time and thus lacking temporal duration altogether). SENATORSHIP (16) SENECTITUDE (14) SENESCENCES (15) SENIORITIES (11) SENSATIONAL (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to sensation. | [adjective] Piquing or arousing the senses. | [adjective] Provocative. SENSELESSLY (14) SENSIBILITY (16) [noun] The ability to sense, feel or perceive; responsiveness to sensory stimuli; sensitivity. | [noun] Emotional or artistic awareness; keen sensitivity to matters of feeling or creative expression. | [noun] Excessive emotional awareness; the fact or quality of being overemotional. SENSITISING (12) [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. SENSITIVELY (17) [adverb] In a sensitive manner; with sensitivity. SENSITIVITY (17) [noun] The quality or state of being sensitive; sensitiveness. | [noun] The ability of an organism or organ to respond to external stimuli. | [noun] The proportion of individuals in a population that will be correctly identified in a binary classification test. SENSITIZERS (20) SENSITIZING (21) [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. SENSORIALLY (14) SENSUALISMS (13) SENSUALISTS (11) [noun] A person who believes in enjoying sensuality and the experience of pleasant sensations. | [noun] One who holds to the doctrine of sensualism. SENSUALIZED (21) [verb] To make sensual; to subject to the love of sensual pleasure; to debase by carnal gratifications. SENSUALIZES (20) [verb] To make sensual; to subject to the love of sensual pleasure; to debase by carnal gratifications. SENTENTIOUS (11) [adjective] Full of meaning. | [adjective] Using as few words as possible; pithy and concise. | [adjective] Tending to use aphorisms or maxims, especially given to trite moralizing. SENTIMENTAL (13) [adjective] Characterized by sentiment, sentimentality or excess emotion. | [adjective] Derived from emotion rather than reason; of or caused by sentiment. | [adjective] Romantic. SENTINELING (12) [verb] To watch over as a guard. | [verb] To post as guard. | [verb] To post a guard for. SENTINELLED (12) [verb] To watch over as a guard. | [verb] To post as guard. | [verb] To post a guard for. SEPARATIONS (13) [noun] The act of disuniting two or more things, or the condition of being separated. | [noun] The act or condition of two or more people being separated from one another. | [noun] The act or condition of a married couple living in separate homes while remaining legally married. SEPARATISMS (15) SEPARATISTS (13) [noun] Someone who advocates separation from the established Church; a member of any of various sects or schismatics. | [noun] A person who advocates or seeks the splitting of one country or territory into two politically independent countries or territories. SEPTENARIUS (13) [noun] A verse having seven metrical feet. SEPTENTRION (13) SEPTICEMIAS (17) SEPTILLIONS (13) SEPULCHERED (19) [verb] To bury the dead. SEPULCHRING (19) [verb] To place in a sepulchre. SEQUACITIES (22) 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. SEQUESTRATE (20) [verb] To sequester. | [adjective] Having enclosed underground or partially buried fruiting bodies, like a truffle. SEQUESTRUMS (22) SERENDIPITY (17) [noun] A combination of events which have come together by chance to make a surprisingly good or wonderful outcome. | [noun] An unsought, unintended, and/or unexpected, but fortunate, discovery and/or learning experience that happens by accident. SERGEANCIES (14) SERGEANTIES (12) SERIALISING (12) [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. SERIALIZING (21) [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. SERICULTURE (13) [noun] The rearing of silkworms for the production of silk. SERIGRAPHER (17) SERIOUSNESS (11) [noun] The state or quality of being serious. SERJEANTIES (18) [noun] A form of land ownership under the feudal system, where a family held an estate in exchange for rendering a service to their liege lord. SERMONETTES (13) [noun] A short sermon. SERMONIZERS (22) SERMONIZING (23) [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. SEROLOGICAL (14) SEROLOGISTS (12) SERPENTINES (13) [noun] Any of several plants believed to cure snakebites. | [noun] An early form of cannon, used in the 16th century. | [noun] A kind of firework. SERPIGINOUS (14) [adjective] Creeping, advancing SERRIEDNESS (12) SERVANTHOOD (18) SERVANTLESS (14) SERVICEABLE (18) [adjective] Easy to service. | [adjective] Repairable instead of disposable. | [adjective] In condition for use. SERVICEABLY (21) SERVILENESS (14) SERVILITIES (14) SERVOMOTORS (16) [noun] An electric motor in a servomechanism, especially one which incorporates feedback so it accurately positions the device. SETTLEMENTS (13) [noun] The act of settling. | [noun] The state of being settled. | [noun] A colony that is newly established; a place or region newly settled. SEVENTEENTH (17) [noun] One of seventeen equal parts of a whole. | [noun] An interval of two octaves and a third. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number seventeen. SEVENTIETHS (17) [noun] The person or thing in the seventieth position. | [noun] One of seventy equal parts of a whole. SEVERALFOLD (18) SEVERALTIES (14) SEXAGESIMAL (21) [noun] A sexagesimal fraction. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, proceeding by, or based on the number sixty. SEXLESSNESS (18) SEXOLOGISTS (19) SEXTILLIONS (18) SEXTODECIMO (23) [noun] A size of a sheet of paper resulting from folding and cutting a sheet of paper into sixteenths (3.25"-5" x 5"-6.25"). | [noun] A book consisting of pages of that size. SEXUALITIES (18) [noun] The quality of being sexual; that which is characterized or distinguished by sex. | [noun] Sexual activity; concern with, or interest in, sexual activity. | [noun] Sexual potency. SEXUALIZING (28) [verb] To make sexual, or give sex appeal to. | [verb] To distinguish as belonging to separate sexes. SHACKLEBONE (22) SHADBERRIES (17) SHADINESSES (15) SHADOWBOXED (28) [verb] To practice moves without an actual opponent, often in front of a mirror. SHADOWBOXES (27) [noun] A diorama | [verb] To practice moves without an actual opponent, often in front of a mirror. SHADOWGRAPH (24) [noun] A shadow-picture; a radiograph or X-ray photograph; a sciagram. | [noun] An optical technique of visualizing patterns of fluid flow by using differences in refractive index | [verb] To outline in a shadow-picture on a screen. SHADOWINESS (18) SHAGGYMANES (21) SHAKINESSES (18) SHALLOWNESS (17) [noun] The property of being shallow SHAMANISTIC (18) SHAMELESSLY (19) [adverb] In a shameless manner; without shame; impudently. SHANDYGAFFS (25) SHANGHAIERS (18) SHANGHAIING (19) [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. SHANKPIECES (22) SHANTYTOWNS (20) [noun] An area containing a collection of shacks, shanties or makeshift dwellings. SHAPELESSLY (19) SHAPELINESS (16) SHAREHOLDER (18) [noun] One who owns shares of stock in a corporation. SHARPNESSES (16) SHEARWATERS (17) [noun] Any of the long-winged pelagic seabirds of the family Procellariidae in genera Puffinus, Ardenna, and Calonectris, that breed on islands and coastal cliffs. | [noun] (by extension) Any of the entire family Procellariidae, including certain of the petrels. SHEATHBILLS (19) [noun] Either of two species of scavenging birds in the family Chionididae which breed only on the Antarctic Peninsula and subantarctic islands. SHEEPHERDER (20) SHEEPSHANKS (23) [noun] A type of knot which is useful for shortening a rope or taking up slack without cutting it. SHEEPSHEADS (20) SHEERNESSES (14) SHELLACKING (21) [verb] To coat with shellac. | [verb] To beat; to thrash. | [verb] To inflict a heavy defeat upon. SHELLFISHES (20) SHELTERBELT (16) [noun] A row of trees that acts as a windbreak SHELTERLESS (14) SHENANIGANS (15) [noun] A deceitful confidence trick, or mischief causing discomfort or annoyance. | [noun] Mischievous play, especially by children. | [noun] Deceitful tricks; trickery, games. SHEPHERDESS (20) [noun] A female shepherd. | [noun] A large and deep armchair with a cushion. SHEPHERDING (21) [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. SHERGOTTITE (15) SHERIFFDOMS (23) SHIBBOLETHS (21) [noun] A word, especially seen as a test, to distinguish someone as belonging to a particular nation, class, profession etc. | [noun] A common or longstanding belief, custom, or catchphrase associated with a particular group, especially one with little current meaning or truth. SHIFTLESSLY (20) SHIGELLOSES (15) SHIGELLOSIS (15) SHILLELAGHS (18) [noun] A wooden (traditionally blackthorn (sloe) wood) club ending with a large knob. | [noun] Any cudgel, whether or not of Irish origin. SHININESSES (14) SHINPLASTER (16) [noun] An essentially worthless note of paper money. | [noun] A 25¢ banknote. SHINSPLINTS (16) [noun] A painful inflammation of the muscles in the shins; especially frequent in runners, or a general term for a painful condition in the shins. SHIPBUILDER (19) [noun] A person who builds vessels such as ships and boats. | [noun] A firm that specializes in building ships. SHIPFITTERS (19) SHIPMASTERS (18) [noun] The master of a ship; a captain; a commander. SHIPWRECKED (26) [verb] To wreck a boat through a collision or mishap. | [adjective] Stranded as a result of a shipwreck. SHIPWRIGHTS (23) [noun] A person who designs, builds and repairs ships, especially wooden ones. SHIRTFRONTS (17) [noun] The front part of a shirt. | [noun] A detachable insert that simulates the front of a shirt. | [noun] A pitch that is easy to bat on. SHIRTMAKERS (20) SHIRTSLEEVE (17) [noun] The part of a shirt that covers an arm. SHIRTWAISTS (17) [noun] A woman's tailored blouse, buttoned down the front. SHITTIMWOOD (20) SHIVAREEING (18) SHMALTZIEST (25) SHOEHORNING (18) [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. SHOESTRINGS (15) [noun] The string or lace used to secure the shoe to the foot; a shoelace. | [noun] A tight budget; very little money. | [noun] A long narrow cut of a food; a julienne. SHOPKEEPERS (22) [noun] A trader who sells goods in a shop, or by retail, in distinction from one who sells by wholesale, or sells door to door. SHOPLIFTERS (19) [noun] A person who shoplifts, one who steals from shops. SHOPLIFTING (20) [verb] To steal something from a shop / store during trading hours. | [verb] To steal from shops / stores during trading hours. | [noun] The action of stealing goods from a shop; the action of the verb shoplift. SHOPWINDOWS (23) [noun] A large window at the front of a shop, behind which items for sale are displayed. SHOREFRONTS (17) SHORTBREADS (17) [noun] A type of biscuit (cookie), popular in Britain, traditionally made from one part sugar, two parts butter and three parts flour. SHORTCHANGE (20) [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. SHORTCOMING (19) [noun] Deficiency SHORTENINGS (15) 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. SHORTNESSES (14) SHOTGUNNERS (15) SHOTGUNNING (16) [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. SHOULDERING (16) [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. SHOVELNOSES (17) SHOWBOATING (20) [verb] To show off. SHOWERHEADS (21) SHOWINESSES (17) SHOWMANSHIP (24) [noun] The quality or skill of giving an engaging or compelling performance; a stage presence. SHOWSTOPPER (21) [noun] A performance or segment of a theatrical production that induces a positive audience reaction strong enough to pause the production. | [noun] Any impediment that prevents all further progress; especially a software bug that must be fixed before any further development is possible. SHRIVELLING (18) [verb] To collapse inward; to crumble. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To draw into wrinkles. SHRUBBERIES (18) [noun] A planting of shrubs; a wide border to a garden where shrubs are thickly planted; or a similar larger area with a path winding through it. | [noun] Shrubs collectively. SHUNPIKINGS (21) SHUTTERBUGS (17) [noun] A person who makes a hobby of photography. SHUTTERLESS (14) SHUTTLECOCK (22) [noun] A lightweight object that is conical in shape with a cork or rubber-covered nose, used in badminton the way a ball is used in other racquet games. | [noun] The game of badminton. | [verb] To move rapidly back and forth SHUTTLELESS (14) SIALAGOGUES (13) [noun] Any drug that increases the flow of saliva. SIBILATIONS (13) SICKENINGLY (21) SICKISHNESS (20) SIDEDNESSES (13) SIDEDRESSES (13) SIDEROLITES (12) SIDESADDLES (14) [noun] A saddle, usually for a woman, in which the rider sits with both legs on the same side of the horse. 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. SIDESTEPPER (16) SIDESTROKES (16) SIDESWIPING (18) [verb] To give a blow with the side, as to strike with the side of a car when turning. 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. SIDEWINDERS (16) [noun] A North American rattlesnake, Crotalus cerastes, that inhabits lowland deserts. | [noun] A person who is untrustworthy and dangerous. | [noun] A heavy swinging blow from the side which disables an adversary. SIGHTLESSLY (18) SIGHTLINESS (15) SIGHTSEEING (16) [verb] To go sightseeing; to visit places of interest in a city, town or geographical area. | [noun] The activity of going out looking at things; tourism. SIGMOIDALLY (18) SIGNALISING (13) [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. SIGNALIZING (22) [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. SIGNALMENTS (14) SIGNATORIES (12) [noun] One who signs or has signed something. SIGNIFICANT (17) [noun] That which has significance; a sign; a token; a symbol. | [adjective] Signifying something; carrying meaning. | [adjective] Having a covert or hidden meaning. SIGNIFYINGS (19) SIGNPOSTING (15) [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. SILHOUETTED (15) [verb] To represent by a silhouette; to project upon a background, so as to be like a silhouette. SILHOUETTES (14) [noun] An illustrated outline filled in with a solid color(s), usually only black, and intended to represent the shape of an object without revealing any other visual details; a similar appearance produced when the object being viewed is situated in relative darkness with brighter lighting behind it; a profile portrait in black, such as a shadow appears to be. | [verb] To represent by a silhouette; to project upon a background, so as to be like a silhouette. SILICIFYING (20) [verb] To impregnate something with silica. | [verb] To be impregnated with, or converted into silica. SILICONIZED (23) [adjective] Treated or coated with silicone. SILKINESSES (15) SILLIMANITE (13) [noun] A fibrous neosilicate mineral, polymorphic with andalusite and kyanite, with the chemical formula Al2SiO5. SILLINESSES (11) [noun] That which is perceived as silly or frivolous. | [noun] An act that is silly; a result of being silly. SILVERBACKS (22) [noun] A mature male of the several species of chimpanzees and gorillas, so named from the silver streaking on its back. | [noun] (by extension) A dominant older human male. | [noun] Any of various ferns of the genus Pityrogramma. SILVERBERRY (19) [noun] A plant in the genus Elaeagnus, of about 50-70 species of deciduous or evergreen shrubs or small trees with alternate leaves, primarily native to temperate and subtropical regions of Asia. | [noun] The fruit of such a plant. SILVERINESS (14) SILVERPOINT (16) [noun] A traditional technique for drawing by dragging a silver rod or wire across a surface, often prepared with gesso or primer. SILVERSIDES (15) [noun] Any of several small fish, mostly in families Atherinidae and Atherinopsidae, both in order Atheriniformes, that are characterized by bright, silvery scales. | [noun] The upper side of a round of beef. | [noun] Corned beef made with this type of meat. SILVERSMITH (19) [noun] A person who makes articles out of silver usually larger than jewellery. SILVERWARES (17) SILVERWEEDS (18) SIMILITUDES (14) [noun] Similarity or resemblance to something else. | [noun] A way in which two people or things share similitude. | [noun] Someone or something that closely resembles another; a duplicate or twin. SIMPLIFIERS (18) SIMPLIFYING (22) [verb] To make simpler, either by reducing in complexity, reducing to component parts, or making easier to understand. | [verb] To become simpler. SIMULACRUMS (17) [noun] An image or representation. | [noun] A faint trace or semblance. SIMULATIONS (13) [noun] Something that simulates a system or environment in order to predict actual behaviour. | [noun] The process of simulating. | [noun] A video game designed to convey a more or less realistic experience, as of a sport or warfare. SIMULCASTED (16) [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SINCERENESS (13) SINCERITIES (13) SINFONIETTA (14) [noun] A small-scale symphony (either in length or size of orchestra needed). | [noun] A small orchestra. SINGLESTICK (18) [noun] A one-handed wooden stick used for fencing in place of a sword. | [noun] A martial art, sport or exercise using a cudgel or backsword. SINGLETREES (12) [noun] A bar behind draft animals and in front of a load, such as a wagon, that balances the load. Generally the animals are attached at the ends and the wagon or other load to a pivot in the middle of the singletree. SINGULARITY (15) [noun] The state of being singular, distinct, peculiar, uncommon or unusual | [noun] A point where all parallel lines meet | [noun] A point where a measured variable reaches unmeasurable or infinite value SINGULARIZE (21) [verb] To make singular. SINLESSNESS (11) SINOLOGICAL (14) SINOLOGISTS (12) SINSEMILLAS (13) SINUOSITIES (11) [noun] The property of being sinuous. SINUOUSNESS (11) SINUSITISES (11) SISTERHOODS (15) [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 SITOSTEROLS (11) SITUATIONAL (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a particular situation. SIZABLENESS (22) SKATEBOARDS (18) [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. SKEDADDLERS (18) SKEDADDLING (19) [verb] To move or run away quickly. | [verb] To spill; to scatter. SKELETONISE (15) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKELETONIZE (24) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKEPTICALLY (22) [adverb] In a skeptical manner, with skepticism. SKEPTICISMS (21) SKETCHBOOKS (26) [noun] A book or pad with blank pages for sketching; a sketch pad. | [noun] A book of printed sketches. | [noun] A printed book of literary sketches or skits. SKETCHINESS (20) SKIBOBBINGS (22) SKIRMISHERS (20) SKIRMISHING (21) [verb] To engage in a minor battle or dispute | [noun] A brief battle; a skirmish. SKITTERIEST (15) SKULDUGGERY (21) [noun] A devious device or trick. | [noun] Dishonest, underhanded, or unscrupulous activities or behaviour. SKYJACKINGS (32) SKYROCKETED (25) [verb] To increase suddenly and extremely; to shoot up; to surge or spike. | [adjective] Suddenly and rapidly increased SKYSCRAPERS (22) [noun] A very tall building with a large number of floors. | [noun] A small sail atop a mast of a ship; a triangular skysail. | [noun] Anything very tall or high. SKYWRITINGS (22) SLACKNESSES (17) SLAPHAPPIER (20) SLAUGHTERED (16) [verb] To butcher animals, generally for food | [verb] To massacre people in large numbers | [verb] To kill in a particularly brutal manner SLAUGHTERER (15) SLAVEHOLDER (18) [noun] Someone who owns slaves. SLAVISHNESS (17) SLEAZEBALLS (22) [noun] A morally reprehensible, disreputable, or sleazy person; a cad. SLEEKNESSES (15) SLEEPLESSLY (16) SLEEPWALKED (21) [verb] To walk and/or perform other actions while sleeping; to somnambulate. SLEEPWALKER (20) SLEEPYHEADS (20) [noun] A sleepy person. | [noun] The ruddy duck. SLENDERIZED (22) [verb] To make more slender. SLENDERIZES (21) [verb] To make more slender. SLENDERNESS (12) SLEUTHHOUND (18) SLICKENSIDE (18) [noun] A smooth, striated rock surface caused by the friction of one mass sliding over another SLICKNESSES (17) SLIGHTINGLY (19) SLIMINESSES (13) SLIMNASTICS (15) SLIPFORMING (19) SLIPPERIEST (15) [adjective] Of a surface, having low friction, often due to being covered in a non-viscous liquid, and therefore hard to grip, hard to stand on without falling, etc. | [adjective] (by extension) Evasive; difficult to pin down. | [adjective] Liable to slip; not standing firm. SLIPSTREAMS (15) [noun] The low-pressure zone immediately following a rapidly moving object, caused by turbulence. | [noun] A genre of fantastic or non-realistic fiction that crosses conventional genre boundaries. | [verb] To take advantage of the suction produced by a slipstream by travelling immediately behind the slipstream generator. SLIVOVITZES (26) SLOGANEERED (13) [verb] To make and disseminate slogans; often contrasted with substantive debate SLOGANIZING (22) SLOUCHINESS (16) SLOVENLIEST (14) SLUMGULLION (14) [noun] A stew of meat and vegetables. | [noun] A beverage made watery, such as weak coffee or tea. | [noun] A reddish muddy deposit in mining sluices. SMALLHOLDER (17) [noun] A person who owns or runs a smallholding. | [noun] A small slaveholder, a person who owns a smallholding. SMALLMOUTHS (18) [noun] A variety of bass (fish) having a small mouth SMALLNESSES (13) SMALLSWORDS (17) [noun] A light one-handed sword, designed for thrusting, which evolved out of the longer and heavier rapier of the late Renaissance. SMARAGDITES (15) SMARTNESSES (13) SMATTERINGS (14) [noun] A superficial or shallow knowledge of a subject. | [noun] A small number or amount of something. SMITHEREENS (16) [noun] (originally Ireland) Fragments or splintered pieces; numerous tiny disconnected items. SMITHSONITE (16) [noun] A mineral form of zinc carbonate, ZnCO3, mined as an ore of zinc or as an ornamental stone. SMOKEHOUSES (20) [noun] A structure used to smoke food to preserve it and to add flavor. | [noun] A structure in which freshly harvested tobacco is cured or preserved by smoking. SMOKESTACKS (23) [noun] A conduit or group of conduits atop a structure allowing smoke to flow out. SMOKINESSES (17) SMOOTHBORES (18) [noun] A cannon, gun or other firearm that has an unrifled barrel. SMOOTHENING (17) [verb] To make smooth. | [verb] To become smooth. 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. SMOULDERING (15) [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. SNAKEBITTEN (17) [adjective] Bitten by a snake. | [adjective] Experiencing a period of bad luck; unlucky. | [adjective] Jumpy, as if expecting to struck by sudden misfortune. SNAPDRAGONS (15) [noun] Any plant of the genus Antirrhinum, with showy yellow, white or red flowers. | [noun] A game in which raisins are snatched from a vessel containing burning brandy, and eaten; the substance snatched and eaten during the playing of the game; the vessel used for the game. SNAPSHOOTER (16) SNAPSHOTTED (17) SNEEZEWEEDS (24) SNICKERSNEE (17) SNIDENESSES (12) SNIPERSCOPE (17) SNIPPETIEST (15) SNOWBALLING (17) [verb] To rapidly grow out of proportion or control. | [verb] To play at throwing snowballs. | [verb] To pelt with snowballs; to throw snowballs at. SNOWBERRIES (16) [noun] A shrub bearing white berries: | [noun] The fruit of shrubs of these genera. SNOWBLOWERS (19) [noun] A device that picks up snow off the ground and blows it to one side in order to clear a path or road. SNOWBOARDER (17) SNOWBRUSHES (19) SNOWINESSES (14) SNOWMOBILER (18) SNOWMOBILES (18) [noun] A vehicle with skis at the front and a caterpillar track at the rear, used for travelling over snow, sometimes as sport SNOWPLOWING (20) [verb] To clear (roads, etc) using a snow plow. | [verb] To perform a snow plow in skiing. SNOWSHOEING (18) [verb] To travel using snowshoes. | [noun] The act or sport of travelling on snowshoes. SOAPBERRIES (15) [noun] Any woody plant of the genus Sapindus, which is eponymous of the Sapindaceae family | [noun] The fruit of such a plant, especially of the tree Sapindus saponaria. SOAPINESSES (13) SOBERNESSES (13) SOCIABILITY (18) [noun] The skill, tendency or property of being sociable or social, of interacting well with others SOCIALISING (14) [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 SOCIALISTIC (15) SOCIALITIES (13) SOCIALIZERS (22) [noun] One who socializes. SOCIALIZING (23) [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 SOCIOLOGESE (14) SOCIOLOGIES (14) SOCIOLOGIST (14) [noun] A scientist studying the field of sociology; a social scientist. SOCIOMETRIC (17) SOCIOPATHIC (20) SOCIOSEXUAL (20) SOCKDOLAGER (19) [noun] A hard hit, a knockout or finishing blow, or conclusive argument. | [noun] Something large or otherwise exceptional; a whopper. | [noun] A combination of two hooks which close upon each other, by means of a spring, as soon as the fish bites. SOCKDOLOGER (19) SODOMITICAL (16) SOFTBALLERS (16) SOFTHEARTED (18) [adjective] Gentle; kind; sympathetic. | [adjective] Easily moved to sorrow or pity. | [adjective] Willing to accept criticism. SOGGINESSES (13) SOLACEMENTS (15) SOLANACEOUS (13) [adjective] Pertaining to the family Solanaceae, which includes the nightshades. SOLDIERINGS (13) SOLDIERSHIP (17) [noun] The state of being a soldier. | [noun] The qualities of a soldier, or those becoming a soldier. SOLEMNIFIED (17) SOLEMNIFIES (16) SOLEMNITIES (13) [noun] The quality of being deeply serious and sober or solemn. | [noun] An instance or example of solemn behavior; a rite or ceremony performed with reverence. | [noun] A feast day of the highest rank celebrating a mystery of faith such as the Trinity, an event in the life of Jesus, the Virgin Mary, or another important saint. SOLEMNIZING (23) [verb] To make solemn, or official, through ceremony or legal act. | [verb] To make grave, serious, and reverential. SOLICITANTS (13) SOLICITUDES (14) SOLIDARISMS (14) SOLIDARISTS (12) SOLIDIFYING (19) [verb] To make solid; convert into a solid body. | [verb] To concentrate; consolidate. | [verb] To become solid; to freeze, set. SOLIDNESSES (12) SOLILOQUIES (20) [noun] The act of a character speaking to themselves so as to reveal their thoughts to the audience. | [noun] (authorship) A speech or written discourse in this form. SOLILOQUISE (20) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLILOQUIST (20) SOLILOQUIZE (29) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLIPSISTIC (15) SOLMIZATION (22) [noun] The sol-fa system of singing. SOLUBILISED (14) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOLUBILISES (13) [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. SOLUBILIZES (22) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOLVABILITY (19) SOLVENTLESS (14) SOMATICALLY (18) SOMATOMEDIN (16) [noun] Any of a group of peptides which mediate the action of somatotropin on cartilage SOMATOTYPES (18) [noun] A body build. | [noun] A type of physique, especially one of the types defined by Sheldon: ectomorphic, endomorphic, mesomorphic. SOMERSAULTS (13) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. | [verb] To perform a somersault. SOMERSETING (14) SOMERSETTED (14) SOMEWHITHER (22) SOMNIFEROUS (16) [adjective] (pharmaceutical effect) causing or inducing sleep, normally with harmful overtones. SOMNOLENCES (15) SOMNOLENTLY (16) SONGFULNESS (15) SONGWRITERS (15) [noun] A musician who composes songs; including writing the song's lyrics and creating a melody or tune for the song. SONGWRITING (16) [noun] (authorship) The work of a songwriter. SONICATIONS (13) SOOTHSAYERS (17) [noun] One who tells the truth; a truthful person | [noun] One who predicts the future, using magic, intuition or intelligence; a diviner | [noun] A mantis or rearhorse SOOTHSAYING (18) SOOTINESSES (11) SOPAIPILLAS (15) [noun] A small, crisp, puffy, deep-fried pastry often served with honey. SOPHISTICAL (18) SOPHISTRIES (16) [noun] Cunning, sometimes manifested as trickery. | [noun] The art of using deceptive speech or writing. | [noun] An argument that seems plausible, but is fallacious or misleading, especially one devised deliberately to be so. SOPPINESSES (15) SORBABILITY (18) SORCERESSES (13) [noun] A female sorcerer, especially one who is elegant; compare witch. SORRINESSES (11) SORROWFULLY (20) SOTERIOLOGY (15) [noun] The study or doctrine of salvation. SOTTISHNESS (14) SOUBRIQUETS (22) [noun] A familiar name for a person (typically a shortened version of a person’s given name). SOULFULNESS (14) SOUNDALIKES (16) [noun] A sound, music recording, etc. that audibly resembles another. SOUNDBOARDS (15) [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. SOUNDLESSLY (15) SOUNDNESSES (12) SOUNDPROOFS (17) [verb] To make resistant to transmitting sound. SOUNDSTAGES (13) [noun] A soundproof room or building used for the production of movies or of television programmes. SOURCEBOOKS (19) [noun] A book consisting of a collection of writings on a particular subject. | [noun] A publication intended to supplement the core materials of a roleplaying game. SOUSAPHONES (16) [noun] A valved brass instrument with the same length as a tuba, but shaped differently so that the bell is above the head, that the valves are situated directly in front of the musical instruments and a few inches above the waist, and that most of the weight rests on one shoulder. SOUTHEASTER (14) [noun] A strong wind blowing from the southeast SOUTHERLIES (14) [noun] A wind blowing from the south. SOUTHWESTER (17) [noun] A strong wind blowing from the southwest. | [noun] (more often sou'wester) A waterproof hat, often of oilskin, designed to repel wind and rain. | [noun] (more often sou'wester) A long raincoat, often worn at sea. SOVEREIGNLY (18) SOVEREIGNTY (18) [noun] (of a polity) The state of making laws and controlling resources without the coercion of other nations. | [noun] (of a ruler) Supreme authority over all things. | [noun] (of a person) The liberty to decide one's thoughts and actions. SOVIETIZING (24) SPACECRAFTS (20) [noun] A vehicle that travels through space. SPACEFLIGHT (22) [noun] Flight into, from or through space. | [noun] A voyage in space. SPACEWALKED (23) [verb] To perform a spacewalk. SPACEWALKER (22) SPADEFISHES (20) [noun] Any of several marine fish of the family Ephippidae | [noun] Polyodon spathula, the paddlefish. SPAGHETTINI (17) [noun] A form of thin spaghetti SPALLATIONS (13) SPANAKOPITA (19) [noun] A Greek dish made with pre-cooked spinach, butter, olive oil, feta cheese, green onions, egg and seasoning in phyllo pastry. SPANCELLING (16) SPANOKOPITA (19) SPARENESSES (13) SPARROWLIKE (20) SPASMOLYTIC (20) [noun] Any antispastic drug. | [adjective] Antispastic, antispasmodic SPASTICALLY (18) SPATTERDOCK (20) [noun] A species of water lily, Nuphar advena SPEAKEASIES (17) [noun] An illegal saloon or tavern, especially one operated during the American Prohibition period in the 1920s. SPEAKERSHIP (22) [noun] The role or status of speaker. SPEARFISHED (20) [verb] To try to catch a fish using a spear or spear gun. | [verb] To fish for spearfish by any method. SPEARFISHES (19) [noun] Any of the marlins in the genus Tetrapturus, a type of fish with the upper jaw elongated into a spearlike bill. | [noun] A striped marlin (Kajikia audax) | [noun] A quillback (Carpioides cyprinus 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. SPECIALISES (15) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: SPECIALISMS (17) [noun] Speciality. | [noun] The concentration of one's efforts upon a particular field of study. SPECIALISTS (15) [noun] Someone who is an expert in, or devoted to, some specific branch of study or research. | [noun] A physician whose practice is limited to a particular branch of medicine or surgery. | [noun] Any of several non-commissioned ranks corresponding to that of corporal. SPECIALIZED (25) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: | [adjective] Highly skilled in a specific field. SPECIALIZES (24) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: SPECIALNESS (15) SPECIALTIES (15) [noun] That in which one specializes; a chosen expertise or talent. | [noun] Particularity. | [noun] A particular or peculiar case. SPECIATIONS (15) [noun] The process by which new distinct species evolve. | [noun] The formation of different (inorganic) species (especially of ions) as the environment changes. | [noun] The determination of which species is/are present in a fluid or tissue specimen, bacterial culture, or viral culture. SPECIESISMS (17) SPECIFIABLE (20) SPECIFICITY (23) [noun] The state of being specific rather than general. | [noun] The extent to which a characteristic is specific to a given person, place, or thing; thus: SPECTACULAR (17) [noun] A spectacular display. | [noun] A pop-up (folded paper element) in material sent by postal mail. | [adjective] Amazing or worthy of special notice. SPECTROGRAM (18) [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a sound changing through time. | [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a celestial body's radiation. SPECULARITY (18) SPECULATING (16) [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. SPECULATION (15) [noun] The process of thinking or meditating on a subject. | [noun] The act or process of reasoning a priori from premises given or assumed. | [noun] A conclusion to which the mind comes by speculating; mere theory; notion; conjecture. SPECULATIVE (18) [adjective] Characterized by speculation; based on guessing, unfounded opinions, or extrapolation. | [adjective] Pursued as a gamble, with possible large profits or losses; risky. | [adjective] Pertaining to financial speculation; Involving or resulting from high-risk investments or trade. SPECULATORS (15) [noun] When the ball is kicked through the uprights and over the crossbar (not after a touchdown) for 3 points. | [noun] A made shot that was not a free throw. | [noun] A goal scored where a ball that is in play but on the ground is kicked through the uprights and over the crossbar. 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. SPEECHIFIES (21) [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) SPEEDOMETER (16) [noun] A device that measures, and indicates the current speed of a vehicle. | [noun] Such a device incorporating an odometer. SPELLBINDER (16) SPELUNKINGS (18) SPENDTHRIFT (20) [noun] Someone who spends money improvidently or wastefully. | [adjective] Improvident, profligate, or wasteful. | [adjective] Extravagant or lavish. SPERMACETIS (17) SPERMAGONIA (16) SPERMATHECA (20) [noun] A small sac within the reproductive tract of some female invertebrates, such as insects, which stores sperm until it is used to fertilize the ova. SPERMATOZOA (24) [noun] A reproductive cell or gamete of a male, carried in semen, that fertilizes an ovum to produce a zygote. SPERMICIDAL (18) [adjective] Having the ability to kill sperm. SPERMICIDES (18) [noun] A substance used for killing sperm. SPERMOPHILE (20) SPERRYLITES (16) SPESSARTINE (13) [noun] A type of garnet, a neosilicate of manganese and aluminium with the chemical formula Mn32+Al2(SiO4)3. SPESSARTITE (13) SPHALERITES (16) SPHENOPSIDS (19) SPHERICALLY (21) SPHEROMETER (18) SPHEROPLAST (18) [noun] A cell from which the cell wall has been removed SPHERULITES (16) [noun] A minute spherical crystalline body having a radiated structure, observed in some vitreous volcanic rocks, as obsidian and pearlstone. SPHERULITIC (18) SPHINCTERIC (20) SPHINGOSINE (17) [noun] An unsaturated aliphatic amino alcohol associated with the lipids of brain tissue SPICEBUSHES (20) [noun] The common spicebush, Lindera benzoin, whose leaves have a distinctive strong citrusy aroma. | [noun] Any plant in the genus Calycanthus SPICINESSES (15) SPICULATION (15) SPIDERWORTS (17) [noun] A perennial plant of the Tradescantia genus, found in clumps in woodland and meadow. SPIKINESSES (17) SPINACHLIKE (22) SPINELESSLY (16) SPININESSES (13) SPINNERETTE (13) SPINOSITIES (13) SPINSTERISH (16) SPIRITISTIC (15) SPIRITUALLY (16) [adverb] In a manner affecting or pertaining to the spirit or soul. SPIRITUALTY (16) SPIRITUELLE (13) SPIROCHAETE (18) [noun] Any of several coiled bacteria of the order Spirochaetales, most of which are pathogenic to both humans and animals. SPIROCHETAL (18) SPIROCHETES (18) [noun] Any of several coiled bacteria of the order Spirochaetales, most of which are pathogenic to both humans and animals. SPIROMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument for measuring the air capacity of the lungs. SPIROMETRIC (17) SPITEFULLER (16) SPITTLEBUGS (16) [noun] Any of various small insects of the superfamily Cercopoidea that feed on plant sap and whose larvae produce cuckoo spit. SPLASHBOARD (19) [noun] A guard towards the front of a vehicle, to prevent splashing by mud or water from the road. SPLASHDOWNS (20) [noun] The act of landing in water, as by a space capsule or rollercoaster. SPLASHINESS (16) SPLATTERING (14) [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). SPLAYFOOTED (20) SPLEENWORTS (16) [noun] Any of a number of types of ferns in the genus Asplenium. SPLENDIDEST (15) SPLENDOROUS (14) [adjective] Splendid, having splendor. SPLENECTOMY (20) [noun] The surgical removal of the spleen. SPLINTERING (14) [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. SPLOTCHIEST (18) SPLUTTERERS (13) SPLUTTERING (14) [verb] To sputter. | [verb] To spray droplets of saliva from the mouth while speaking. | [verb] To speak hurriedly and confusedly. SPOILSPORTS (15) [noun] Someone who puts an end to others' fun, especially harmless fun. SPOKESHAVES (23) [noun] A woodworking tool used to shape and smooth rods and shafts - often for use as wheel spokes, chair legs or arrows. SPOKESWOMAN (22) [noun] A woman who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPOKESWOMEN (22) [noun] A woman who speaks as the voice of a group of people. SPOLIATIONS (13) SPONDYLITIS (17) [noun] Inflammation of the spine. SPONGEWARES (17) SPONSORSHIP (18) [noun] The state or practice of being a sponsor. | [noun] The aid or support provided by a sponsor; backing or patronage. SPONTANEITY (16) [noun] The quality of being spontaneous. | [noun] Spontaneous behaviour. | [noun] The tendency to undergo change, characteristic of both animal and vegetable organisms, and not restrained or checked by the environment. SPONTANEOUS (13) [adjective] Self-generated; happening without any apparent external cause. | [adjective] Done by one's own free choice, or without planning. | [adjective] Proceeding from natural feeling or native tendency without external or conscious constraint SPOONERISMS (15) [noun] A play on words on a phrase in which the initial (usually consonantal) sounds of two or more of the main words are transposed. SPOROGENOUS (14) [adjective] Relating to sporogenesis. SPOROGONIES (14) SPOROGONIUM (16) SPOROPHORES (18) [noun] A spore-producing organ, especially a fungus hypha specialized to carry spores. | [noun] A sporophyte, or spore-producing plant. SPOROPHYLLS (21) SPOROPHYTES (21) [noun] A plant (or the diploid phase in its life cycle) which produces spores by meiosis in order to produce gametophytes. SPOROPHYTIC (23) SPOROZOITES (22) [noun] Any of the minute active bodies into which a sporozoan divides just before it infects a new host cell. SPORTSCASTS (15) [noun] The part of a news program reporting on sports and athletics. SPORTSMANLY (18) SPORTSWEARS (16) SPORTSWOMAN (18) [noun] A woman who engages in sports; a female athlete. SPORTSWOMEN (18) [noun] A woman who engages in sports; a female athlete. SPORULATING (14) [verb] To produce spores | [adjective] Producing spores SPORULATION (13) SPORULATIVE (16) SPOTLIGHTED (18) [verb] To illuminate with a spotlight. | [verb] To draw attention to. SPREADSHEET (17) [noun] A sheet of paper, marked with a grid, in which financial data is recorded and totals calculated manually. | [noun] A computer simulation of such a system of recording tabular data, with totals and other formulas calculated automatically. | [verb] To model or compute by means of a spreadsheet. SPRIGHTLIER (17) [adjective] Animated, gay or vivacious; lively, spirited. | [adjective] Of a person: full of life and vigour, especially with a light and springy step. | [adjective] Of or relating to a sprite; ghostly, spectral. 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. SPRINGHEADS (18) SPRINGHOUSE (17) SPRINGINESS (14) SPRINGTAILS (14) [noun] Any of various wingless hexapods, of the subclass Collembola, with spring-like legs. SPRINGTIDES (15) SPRINGTIMES (16) [noun] The season of spring, between winter and summer. SPRINGWATER (17) [noun] Water originating from a spring. | [noun] Water that is purportedly, and marketed as, originating from a spring, but is mostly or entirely filtered or tap water. SPRINGWOODS (18) SPRINKLERED (18) SPRINKLINGS (18) [noun] The action of the verb to sprinkle. | [noun] A small amount of (some liquid, powder or other fine substance) that is sprinkled on to something. | [noun] A light shower of rain. SPURGALLING (15) SQUADRONING (22) SQUALIDNESS (21) SQUAMATIONS (22) SQUANDERERS (21) SQUANDERING (22) [verb] To waste, lavish, splurge; to spend lavishly or profusely; to dissipate. | [verb] To scatter; to disperse. | [verb] To wander at random; to scatter. SQUASHINESS (23) SQUATNESSES (20) SQUATTERING (21) SQUAWFISHES (29) [noun] A cyprinid fish of the genus Ptychocheilus, a voracious predator on small trout and salmon. SQUEAMISHLY (28) SQUEEGEEING (22) [verb] To use a squeegee. SQUELCHIEST (25) SQUIGGLIEST (22) SQUILGEEING (22) SQUINTINGLY (24) SQUIREARCHY (28) [noun] The landowning gentry. SQUIRRELING (21) [verb] To store in a secretive manner, to hide something for future use | [noun] The storing of something when in abundance against a time when it will be scarce (after the manner of a squirrel) | [noun] The application of L. Ron Hubbard's technology in a heterodox manner. SQUIRRELLED (21) [verb] To store in a secretive manner, to hide something for future use SQUISHINESS (23) SQUOOSHIEST (23) STABILITIES (13) STABILIZERS (22) [noun] Any person or thing that brings stability. | [noun] Any substance added to something in order to stabilize it. | [noun] A gyroscopically controlled fin or similar device that prevents the excess rolling of a ship in rough seas. STABILIZING (23) [verb] To make stable. | [verb] To become stable. STABLEMATES (15) [noun] One (such as a racehorse) from the same stable. | [noun] One from the same organization or background. STABLISHING (17) [verb] To establish. STADTHOLDER (16) [noun] The chief magistrate, then later, hereditary chief of state of the Dutch Republic. | [noun] An office formerly held by Danish and Swedish officials, best translated as governor-general. STAGECRAFTS (17) STAGESTRUCK (18) [adjective] Enamored of the theatre, the craft of acting or of actors/actresses. STAGFLATION (15) [noun] Inflation accompanied by stagnant growth, unemployment or recession. STAGGERBUSH (18) STAGINESSES (12) STAGNANCIES (14) STAGNATIONS (12) STAIDNESSES (12) STAINLESSES (11) STAINLESSLY (14) STAKEHOLDER (19) [noun] A person holding the stakes of bettors, with the responsibility of delivering the pot to the winner of the bet. | [noun] An escrow agent or custodian. | [noun] A person filing an interpleader action, such as a garnishee or trustee, who acknowledges possession of property that is owed to one or more of several other claimants. STALACTITES (13) [noun] A secondary mineral deposit of calcium carbonate or another mineral, in shapes similar to icicles, that hangs from the roof of a cave. STALACTITIC (15) STALAGMITES (14) [noun] A secondary mineral deposit of calcium carbonate or other mineral, in shapes similar to icicles, that lie on the ground of a cave. STALAGMITIC (16) STALEMATING (14) [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. STALENESSES (11) STALLHOLDER (15) [noun] A person who operates a market stall. STAMINODIUM (16) STANCHIONED (17) STANDARDISE (13) [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. STANDARDIZE (22) [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. STANDOFFISH (21) [adjective] Aloof; reserved; unsociable and unfriendly. STANDPATTER (14) STANDPOINTS (14) [noun] Point of view; perspective STANDSTILLS (12) 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. STARCHINESS (16) STARFLOWERS (17) [noun] Borage (Borago officinalis), an annual herb, and its product, starflower oil (family Boraginaceae). | [noun] Calytrix, a shrub native to Australia (family Myrtaceae). | [noun] Erinus alpinus, an alpine plant (family Plantaginaceae). STARGAZINGS (22) STARKNESSES (15) STARTLEMENT (13) STARTLINGLY (15) [adverb] In a startling manner; surprisingly; shockingly. STARVATIONS (14) [noun] A condition of severe suffering due to a lack of nutrition. | [noun] Severe shortage of resources. STARVELINGS (15) [noun] One who is thin from lack of food. STATECRAFTS (16) STATEHOUSES (14) [noun] The building where a legislature meets to deal with matters of state. STATELINESS (11) STATESMANLY (16) STATISTICAL (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to statistics. STATOBLASTS (13) [noun] One of a peculiar kind of internal buds, or germs, produced in the interior of certain Bryozoa and sponges. They are protected by a firm covering, and are usually destined to perpetuate the species during the winter season. They burst open and develop in the spring. In some freshwater sponges they serve to preserve the species during the dry season. STATOSCOPES (15) [noun] An instrument used for indicating or recording small changes in barometric pressure or in the altitude of an aircraft. STATUTORILY (14) STAUNCHNESS (16) STAUROLITES (11) STAUROLITIC (13) STAVESACRES (16) [noun] A highly toxic, perennial plant with purple flowers, Delphinium staphisagria. STEADFASTLY (18) [adverb] In a steadfast manner; firmly; with conviction STEALTHIEST (14) [adjective] Characterized by or resembling stealth or secrecy. STEAMFITTER (16) STEAMROLLED (14) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEAMROLLER (13) [noun] A steam-powered heavy road roller | [noun] Any heavy road roller | [noun] (by extension) any seemingly irresistible force STEATOPYGIA (17) [noun] An excessive accumulation of fat on the buttocks. STEATOPYGIC (19) STEATORRHEA (14) [noun] The presence of an excessive amount of fat in the feces STEELMAKERS (17) STEELMAKING (18) STEELWORKER (18) [noun] A person who manufactures or shapes steel. | [noun] A person employed to build steel structures, an ironworker. STEEPLEBUSH (18) STEEPLEJACK (26) [noun] A person whose job involves climbing tall structures like steeples in order to make repairs. STEEPNESSES (13) STEERAGEWAY (18) [noun] The minimum speed of a ship, below which it does not answer the helm and cannot be steered. STEGOSAURUS (12) [noun] A stegosaur, a member of the suborder Stegosauria, of the order Ornithischia of the middle Jurassic to early Cretaceous period. | [noun] A member of the genus Stegosaurus within this suborder. STELLIFYING (18) STENCILLERS (13) STENCILLING (14) [verb] To print with a stencil. | [noun] A work produced using a stencil. STENOBATHIC (18) STENOGRAPHY (20) [noun] The practice of transcribing speech (primarily for later dictation or testimony), usually using shorthand. STENOHALINE (14) [adjective] Tolerant of only a narrow range of saltwater concentrations. Used of aquatic organisms STENOTHERMS (16) STENOTYPIES (16) STENOTYPING (17) STENOTYPIST (16) STEPBROTHER (18) [noun] The son of one's stepparent who is not the son of either of one's biological parents. | [noun] The stepson of one's parent who is not one's half-brother. STEPFATHERS (19) [noun] The husband of one's biological mother, other than one's biological father, especially following the divorce or death of the father. STEPHANOTIS (16) [noun] Any of the genus Stephanotis of climbing asclepiadaceous shrubs with large white waxy flowers in cymes. | [noun] A perfume said to be prepared from the flowers of Stephanotis floribunda. STEPLADDERS (15) [noun] A ladder with steps or treads instead of rungs that is hinged in the middle to form an inverted V, with stays to keep the two halves at a fixed angle. | [noun] The player over whom another player marks to take a spectacular mark. STEPMOTHERS (18) [noun] The wife of one's biological father, other than one's biological mother. | [noun] A viola, especially Viola tricolor, heartsease. STEPPARENTS (15) [noun] One's parent's spouse who is not one's biological parent STEPSISTERS (13) [noun] The daughter of one's stepparent who is not the daughter of either of one's parents. | [noun] The stepdaughter of one's parent which is not one's half-sister. STEREOGRAMS (14) [noun] An early stereophonic music centre containing a gramophone and radio, and often storage space for records | [noun] A stereoscopic image; a stereograph STEREOGRAPH (17) STEREOPHONY (19) STEREOSCOPE (15) [noun] An instrument used for viewing pairs of stereoscopic photographs STEREOSCOPY (18) STEREOTAXIC (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to stereotaxis 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. STEREOTYPER (16) STEREOTYPES (16) [noun] A conventional, formulaic, and often oversimplified or exaggerated conception, opinion, or image of (a person). | [noun] A person who is regarded as embodying or conforming to a set image or type. | [noun] A metal printing plate cast from a matrix moulded from a raised printing surface. STEREOTYPIC (18) STERILITIES (11) STERILIZERS (20) STERILIZING (21) [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. STERNNESSES (11) STERNUTATOR (11) [noun] Any chemical agent that causes sneezing. STETHOSCOPE (18) [noun] A medical instrument used for listening to sounds produced within the body, often combined with a sphygmomanometer | [verb] To auscultate, or examine, with a stethoscope. STEVEDORING (16) STEWARDSHIP (20) [noun] The rank or office of a steward. | [noun] The act of caring for or improving with time. STICHOMYTHY (27) STICKHANDLE (21) [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. STICKLEBACK (25) [noun] Any one of numerous species of small fish of the family Gasterosteidae. The back is armed with two or more sharp spines. They inhabit both salt and brackish water, and construct nests from weeds. STICKTIGHTS (21) STIFFNESSES (17) STIGMATISTS (14) [noun] A person whose body is marked by stigmata; a stigmatic 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. STIGMATIZES (23) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. STILBESTROL (13) [noun] A synthetic estrogen used to treat infertility in animals STILETTOING (12) STILLBIRTHS (16) [noun] The birth of a dead fetus; the delivery of an infant which is dead at birth. | [noun] (modern medicine) The birth of a dead fetus after 20 weeks of gestation. STILLNESSES (11) STILTEDNESS (12) STIMULATING (14) [verb] To encourage into action. | [verb] To arouse an organism to functional activity. | [adjective] Having a manner that stimulates. STIMULATION (13) [noun] A pushing or goading toward action. | [noun] An activity causing excitement or pleasure; the act of stimulating. | [noun] Any action or condition that creates a response; sensory input. STIMULATIVE (16) STIMULATORS (13) [noun] A person, device or substance that stimulates. STIMULATORY (16) STIPENDIARY (17) [noun] One who receives a stipend. | [adjective] Receiving a stipend STIPULATING (14) [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." STIPULATION (13) [noun] The act of stipulating; a contracting or bargaining; an agreement. | [noun] Something that is stated or stipulated as a condition of an agreement. | [noun] The situation, arrangement, and structure of the stipules. STIPULATORS (13) STIPULATORY (16) STITCHERIES (16) STITCHWORTS (19) [noun] A kind of chickweed, Stellaria holostea. STOCKBROKER (23) [noun] A person who buys and sells shares (stock) on a stock exchange on behalf of clients. May also provide investment advice and/or company information, depending on the level of service offered (or chosen by the client). STOCKFISHES (23) [noun] A cod (or similar fish) having been cut open and cured in the open air without salt. | [noun] The shallow-water Cape hake (Merluccius capensis) STOCKHOLDER (21) [noun] One who owns stock. | [noun] A company that maintains a stock of certain products. STOCKINETTE (17) [noun] An elastic textile fabric imitating knitting, of which stockings, undergarments, etc., are made. STOCKJOBBER (28) [noun] A stock exchange worker who deals only with brokers. | [noun] An unscrupulous stockbroker. STOCKKEEPER (23) [noun] A keeper of stock or cattle; a herdsman. STOCKPILERS (19) STOCKPILING (20) [verb] To accumulate a stockpile. | [noun] The process of building up a stockpile. STOCKTAKING (22) [noun] The act of taking an inventory of merchandise etc. | [noun] The reappraisal of a situation or of one's prospects STOLIDITIES (12) STOMACHACHE (23) [noun] A pain in the abdomen, often caused by indigestion. (The pain is usually lower than the stomach and related to the intestines.) STOMATOPODS (16) STOMODAEUMS (16) STONECUTTER (13) [noun] Somebody who cuts, carves or dresses stone. | [noun] A machine that is used to cut stone or concrete. STONEFISHES (17) [noun] A venomous tropical marine fish resembling a piece of rock, of the genus Synanceia, found in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Ocean STONEMASONS (13) [noun] One who works in stone 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. STONEWALLER (14) STONEWASHED (18) [adjective] Of cloth or clothing, having been tumbled with stones in order to soften the fabric. STONINESSES (11) STOPWATCHES (21) [noun] A timepiece designed to measure the amount of time elapsed from a particular time when activated and when the piece is deactivated. STOREFRONTS (14) [noun] The side of a store (or other shop) which faces the street; usually contains display windows. | [noun] (by extension) An e-commerce website offering goods or services to the public. STOREHOUSES (14) [noun] A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions | [noun] (by extension) A single location or resource where a large quantity of something can be found. | [noun] A mass or quantity laid up. STOREKEEPER (17) [noun] One who runs a shop, either the owner or manager. | [noun] One who is in charge of stores or goods of any kind. | [noun] Any unsaleable item. STORKSBILLS (17) [noun] Any of various Eurasian erodiums. STORYBOARDS (17) [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. STORYTELLER (14) [noun] A person who relates stories through one medium or another to an audience | [noun] A liar | [noun] A game master, particularly in games focused on collaborative storytelling. STOUTNESSES (11) STRAGGLIEST (13) [adjective] Spread around in a chaotic and disorganized manner. | [adjective] Not arranged in a line. STRAIGHTENS (15) [verb] To cause to become straight. | [verb] To become straight. | [verb] To put in order; to sort; to tidy up. STRAIGHTEST (15) [adjective] Not crooked or bent; having a constant direction throughout its length. | [adjective] (of a path, trajectory, etc.) Direct, undeviating. | [adjective] Perfectly horizontal or vertical; not diagonal or oblique. STRAIGHTING (16) STRAIGHTISH (18) STRAIGHTWAY (21) [noun] A straight section of a racetrack. | [adverb] Very soon; quickly; immediately. | [adverb] Directly. STRAITENING (12) [verb] To make strait; to narrow or confine to a smaller space. | [verb] To restrict or diminish, especially financially. STRAITLACED (14) [adjective] Having narrow views on moral matters; prudish. STRAMONIUMS (15) STRANDLINES (12) STRANGENESS (12) [noun] The state or quality of being strange, odd or weird. | [noun] The product or result of being strange. | [noun] One of the quantum numbers of subatomic particles, depending upon the relative number of strange quarks and anti-strange quarks. STRANGERING (13) STRANGULATE (12) [verb] To stop flow through a vessel. | [verb] To strangle. STRANGURIES (12) STRAPHANGER (17) [noun] A person who travels using public transportation (often standing up and holding on to a strap). STRAPLESSES (13) STRATEGICAL (14) STRATEGISTS (12) [noun] Someone who devises strategies. STRATEGIZED (22) [verb] To formulate a strategy. STRATEGIZES (21) [verb] To formulate a strategy. STRATHSPEYS (19) [noun] A Scottish dance with gliding steps, slower than a reel. | [noun] A piece of music composed for or in the rhythm of this dance. STRATIFYING (18) [verb] To become separated out into distinct layers or strata. | [verb] To separate out into distinct layers or strata. STRATOCRACY (18) [noun] A military government. STRAVAIGING (16) [verb] To stroll, meander STRAWFLOWER (20) [noun] Any of many Australian plants of the genus Xerochrysum, especially Xerochrysum bracteatum, having deep yellow flowers than can be readily dried. STREAKINESS (15) 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. STREAMLINER (13) STREAMLINES (13) [noun] A line that is tangent to the velocity of flow of a fluid; equivalent to the path of a specific particle in that flow. | [noun] On a weather chart, a line that is tangent to the flow of the wind. STREAMSIDES (14) STREETLAMPS (15) [noun] A lamp that illuminates a street or sidewalk. STREETLIGHT (15) [noun] Any large outdoor light used to illuminate a public area, usually urban. | [noun] The light produced by these lights. STREETSCAPE (15) [noun] The visual elements of a street, including the road, adjoining buildings, sidewalks, street furniture, trees and open spaces, etc, that combine to form the street's character. STRENGTHENS (15) [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. STRENUOSITY (14) STRENUOUSLY (14) [adverb] In a strenuous manner. STRESSFULLY (17) STRETCHABLE (18) STRETCHIEST (16) [adjective] Capable of stretching; elastic. | [adjective] Inclined to stretch, as from weariness. STRIDENCIES (14) 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. STRIDULATES (12) [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) STRIKEOVERS (18) STRINGENTLY (15) STRINGHALTS (15) STRINGINESS (12) STRINGPIECE (16) [noun] A long piece of timber, forming a margin or edge of any piece of construction; especially one of the longitudinal pieces supporting a flight or run of stairs. STRINGYBARK (21) [noun] Any of a number of Australian eucalyptus trees with fibrous bark, or the wood or bark of such trees. STRIPTEASER (13) STRIPTEASES (13) [noun] The act of slowly taking off one's clothes to sexually arouse the viewer, often accompanied by music and in exchange for money. STROBOSCOPE (17) [noun] Instrument for studying or observing periodic movement by rendering a moving body visible only at regular intervals. | [noun] A lamp that produces short bursts of light that synchronizes with a camera shutter for photographing fast-moving objects. | [noun] A photograph produced by such a machine. STROBOTRONS (13) STRONGBOXES (21) [noun] A sturdy box with a lock for storing valuables. STRONGHOLDS (16) [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. STRUCTURING (14) [verb] To give structure to; to arrange. | [noun] Structure; organization STRYCHNINES (19) STUCCOWORKS (22) STUDENTSHIP (17) [noun] The position or role of a student. | [noun] An endowment or scholarship for a student. STUDIEDNESS (13) STULTIFYING (18) [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. STUMBLEBUMS (19) [noun] A blundering or awkward person. | [noun] An inept prizefighter. | [noun] A homeless person. STUMBLINGLY (19) STUNTEDNESS (12) STUPIDITIES (14) [noun] The property of being stupid. | [noun] An act that is stupid. STYLISHNESS (17) STYLIZATION (23) STYLOGRAPHY (23) STYLOPODIUM (19) SUABILITIES (13) SUASIVENESS (14) SUAVENESSES (14) SUBACIDNESS (16) SUBAERIALLY (16) SUBAGENCIES (16) [noun] An agency that is subordinate to, or part of, another. SUBASSEMBLY (20) [noun] An assembly that is assembled with others to form a larger assembly SUBAUDITION (14) [noun] The act of understanding, or supplying, something not expressed. | [noun] That which is understood or supplied from that which is expressed. SUBBASEMENT (17) [noun] A basement located beneath another basement SUBBRANCHES (20) [noun] A branch that is itself an offshoot of a branch of something. | [noun] Part of a branch. SUBCAPSULAR (17) SUBCATEGORY (19) [noun] With respect to a given category, a more narrow category. | [noun] A subclass of a category which is itself a category, whose arrows are a restriction of the arrows of the parent category, and whose composition rule is a restriction of the parent category's SUBCEILINGS (16) SUBCELLULAR (15) SUBCHAPTERS (20) SUBCLASSIFY (21) SUBCLASSING (16) SUBCLAVIANS (18) SUBCLIMAXES (24) SUBCLINICAL (17) [adjective] Of a disease or injury, without signs and symptoms that are detectable by physical examination or laboratory test; not clinically manifest. | [adjective] In diagnosis, where some criteria are met but not enough to achieve clinical status | [adjective] (of a dosage) Less than is needed for clinical reasons SUBCLUSTERS (15) SUBCOLONIES (15) SUBCOMPACTS (21) [noun] Something that is smaller than the compact version, especially a very small car. SUBCONTRACT (17) [noun] A portion of a contracted project that is contracted out in turn. | [verb] To contract out portions of a larger contracted project. SUBCONTRARY (18) [noun] Either of a pair of propositions at least one of which must be true | [adjective] Contrary in an inferior degree. SUBCORTICAL (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the subcortex, the portion of the brain located below the cerebral cortex SUBCOUNTIES (15) SUBCRITICAL (17) [adjective] Of less than critical importance | [adjective] Having a numerical value less than some critical value | [adjective] Having insufficient mass to sustain a chain reaction SUBCULTURAL (15) SUBCULTURED (16) SUBCULTURES (15) [noun] A portion of a culture distinguished by its customs or other features. | [noun] A culture made by transferring microorganisms from a previous culture to a fresh growth medium | [verb] To transfer (microorganisms) to a fresh growth medium in order to start a new culture SUBCURATIVE (18) SUBDECISION (16) SUBDERMALLY (19) SUBDIALECTS (16) SUBDIRECTOR (16) SUBDISTRICT (16) [noun] A district forming part of a larger district. | [verb] To divide (a district) into subdistricts. SUBDIVIDERS (18) SUBDIVIDING (19) [verb] To divide into smaller sections. | [verb] To divide divisions into smaller divisions. | [noun] An act or process of subdivision. SUBDIVISION (17) [noun] A division into smaller pieces of something that has already been divided. | [noun] Such a piece that has been divided. | [noun] A parcel of land that has been divided into lots. SUBDOMINANT (16) [noun] The fourth tone of a scale. | [noun] The triad built on the subdominant tone. SUBDUCTIONS (16) SUBEMPLOYED (21) SUBFAMILIES (18) [noun] A taxonomic category ranking between a family and a genus; formerly called a tribe SUBFREEZING (26) SUBHEADINGS (18) [noun] Any of the headings under which each of the main divisions of a subject may be subdivided | [noun] A heading or caption subordinate to a main headline, heading, or title especially when inserted as a divider between sections (as of a newspaper or periodical article or story or text of a book) SUBINDUSTRY (17) SUBINTERVAL (16) SUBIRRIGATE (14) SUBJACENTLY (25) SUBJECTIONS (22) [noun] The act of bringing something under the control of something else. | [noun] The state of being subjected. SUBJECTIVES (25) SUBJECTLESS (22) SUBJUGATING (22) [verb] To forcibly impose obedience or servitude upon. SUBJUGATION (21) [noun] The act of subjugating. | [noun] The state of being subjugated; forced control by others. SUBJUGATORS (21) SUBJUNCTION (22) SUBJUNCTIVE (25) [noun] A form in the subjunctive mood. | [adjective] (grammar, of a verb) Inflected to indicate that an act or state of being is possible, contingent or hypothetical, and not a fact. | [noun] (grammar) Mood expressing an action or state which is hypothetical or anticipated rather than actual, including wishes and commands. SUBKINGDOMS (21) [noun] A taxonomic category below kingdom and above superphylum. | [noun] A kingdom that is part of another kingdom, ruled by a subking. SUBLANGUAGE (15) [noun] A subset of a language SUBLETHALLY (19) SUBLICENSED (16) SUBLICENSES (15) SUBLIMATING (16) [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. SUBLIMATION (15) SUBLIMENESS (15) SUBLIMITIES (15) SUBLITERACY (18) SUBLITERARY (16) SUBLITERATE (13) SUBLITTORAL (13) [adjective] Under the shore. SUBLUXATION (20) [noun] The partial dislocation of one of the bones of a joint. SUBMANAGERS (16) SUBMARGINAL (16) [adjective] Less than, or worse than, marginal. Not meeting even the minimum standard of quality. | [adjective] Below a margin. SUBMARINERS (15) SUBMARINING (16) SUBMEDIANTS (16) [noun] The sixth note of a scale, shown as VI. SUBMERGENCE (18) SUBMERGIBLE (18) SUBMERSIBLE (17) [noun] A small nonmilitary, non-nuclear submarine for exploration. | [noun] A retroactive term used for non-nuclear submarines; nuclear submarines are termed "true submarines". | [noun] A term used primarily by some navies for nuclear submarines, termed "true submersibles", because they cannot retroactively declare that their non-nuclear submarines should be called by a different name. SUBMERSIONS (15) [noun] The act of submerging, or the state of being submerged; immersion | [noun] A differentiable map whose differential is everywhere surjective. SUBMINISTER (15) SUBMISSIONS (15) [noun] The act of submitting or yielding; surrender. | [noun] The act of submitting or giving e.g. a completed piece of work. | [noun] The thing which has been submitted. SUBMULTIPLE (17) [noun] A quantity that gives another quantity when multiplied by an integer SUBMUNITION (15) [noun] Any part of a weapon (typically a bomb or missile) that separates from a parent munition before or during employment SUBNATIONAL (13) SUBNETWORKS (20) [noun] A subsection of a network. SUBNORMALLY (18) SUBOPTIMIZE (26) SUBORDINATE (14) [noun] One who is subordinate. | [verb] To make subservient. | [verb] To treat as of less value or importance. SUBORNATION (13) SUBPARALLEL (15) [adjective] Almost parallel, but diverging or converging slightly SUBPOENAING (16) [verb] To summon with a subpoena. SUBPRIMATES (17) SUBPROBLEMS (19) SUBPRODUCTS (18) SUBPROGRAMS (18) [noun] A program contained within a larger program SUBPROJECTS (24) SUBRATIONAL (13) SUBREGIONAL (14) SUBREPTIONS (15) SUBROGATING (15) SUBROGATION (14) [noun] Substitution of a different person in place of a creditor or claimant with respect to certain rights and duties. SUBROUTINES (13) [noun] A section of code, called by the main body of a program, that implements a task. SUBSAMPLING (18) [noun] The creation of subsamples | [noun] A subordinate sampling SUBSCIENCES (17) SUBSCRIBERS (17) [noun] A person who subscribes to a publication or a service SUBSCRIBING (18) [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). SUBSECTIONS (15) [noun] A defined part of a section. | [noun] A subpart of a legal document such as law. | [noun] (taxonomy, zoology) An informal taxonomic category below section and above family. SUBSEGMENTS (16) SUBSEIZURES (22) SUBSENTENCE (15) SUBSEQUENCE (24) [noun] A subsequent act or thing; a sequel. | [noun] The state of being subsequent. | [noun] A sequence that is contained within a larger one. SUBSEQUENTS (22) SUBSERVIENT (16) [adjective] Useful in an inferior capacity. | [adjective] Obsequiously submissive. SUBSIDENCES (16) SUBSIDISING (15) [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. SUBSIDIZERS (23) SUBSIDIZING (24) [verb] To assist (someone or something) by granting a subsidy. SUBSISTENCE (15) [noun] Real being; existence. | [noun] The act of maintaining oneself at a minimum level. | [noun] Inherency. SUBSPECIFIC (22) SUBSTANDARD (15) [adjective] Of inferior quality; not meeting the minimum quality requirements. | [adjective] Not conforming to the standard variety; nonstandard. SUBSTANTIAL (13) [noun] Anything having substance; an essential part. | [adjective] Having a substance; actually existing. | [adjective] Not imaginary; real; actual; true; veritable. SUBSTANTIVE (16) [noun] (grammar) a word that names a person, place, thing or idea; a noun (sensu stricto) | [noun] Part of a text that carries the meaning, such as words and their ordering. | [verb] (grammar) to make a word belonging to another part of speech into a substantive (that is, a noun) or use it as a noun SUBSTATIONS (13) [noun] A site where electricity supplied by long-distance (high-voltage) transmission lines is transformed and/or regulated for local (low-voltage) distribution. | [noun] A satellite police station serving one neighborhood or part of a larger jurisdiction. SUBSTITUENT (13) [noun] Any atom, group, or radical substituted for another, or entering a molecule in place of some other part which is removed | [noun] (grammar) pro-form 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. SUBSTITUTES (13) [noun] A replacement or stand-in for something that achieves a similar result or purpose. | [noun] A player who is available to replace another if the need arises, and who may or may not actually do so. | [noun] One who enlists for military service in the place of a conscript. SUBSUMPTION (17) SUBSURFACES (18) [noun] Something that is below the layer that is on the surface. | [noun] A surface which is a submanifold of another surface. SUBTERFUGES (17) [noun] An indirect or deceptive device or stratagem; a blind. Refers especially to war and diplomatics. | [noun] Deception; misrepresentation of the true nature of an activity. SUBTERMINAL (15) [adjective] Positioned near an end | [adjective] Less than terminal SUBTILENESS (13) SUBTILISINS (13) SUBTILIZING (23) [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. SUBTOTALING (14) [verb] To calculate a subtotal. SUBTOTALLED (14) [verb] To calculate a subtotal. SUBTRACTERS (15) SUBTRACTING (16) [verb] To remove or reduce; especially to reduce a quantity or number SUBTRACTION (15) [noun] The process of subtracting a number from another. | [noun] A calculation involving subtracting. | [noun] The removal of something. SUBTRACTIVE (18) SUBTRAHENDS (17) [noun] A number or quantity to be subtracted from another. SUBTREASURY (16) SUBTROPICAL (17) [noun] A subtropical plant. | [adjective] Pertaining to the regions of the Earth further from the equator than the tropical regions. SUBUMBRELLA (17) [noun] The integument of the undersurface of the bell, or disk-shaped body, of a jellyfish. SUBURBANISE (15) SUBURBANITE (15) SUBURBANIZE (24) SUBVENTIONS (16) [noun] A subsidy; provision of financial or other support. | [noun] The act of coming under. | [noun] The act of relieving, as of a burden; support; aid; assistance; help. SUBVERSIONS (16) [noun] The act of subverting or the condition of being subverted. | [noun] A systematic attempt to overthrow a government by working from within; undermining. | [noun] A revision considered more similar to preceding subversions than a revision deemed a new "version" is to preceding versions. SUBVERSIVES (19) [noun] A radical supporter of political or social revolution. SUBVOCALIZE (27) [verb] To form (words or statements) in thought and express them inwardly without uttering them aloud. SUCCEDANEUM (18) [noun] A substitute, replacement for something else, particularly of a medicine used in place of another. SUCCESSIONS (15) [noun] An act of following in sequence. | [noun] A sequence of things in order. | [noun] A passing of royal powers. SUCCINCTEST (17) SUCCOTASHES (18) SUCCULENCES (17) SUCCULENTLY (18) SUDATORIUMS (14) SUFFERANCES (19) SUFFICIENCY (24) [noun] The quality or condition of being sufficient. | [noun] An adequate amount. SUFFIXATION (24) SUFFOCATING (20) [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. SUFFOCATION (19) [noun] Asphyxia—a condition in which an extreme decrease in the concentration of oxygen in the body accompanied by an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide leads to loss of consciousness or death. | [noun] A particular act of death or killing by means of asphyxia. SUFFOCATIVE (22) SUFFRAGETTE (18) [noun] A female supporter, often militant, of women's right to vote in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. SUFFRAGISTS (18) [noun] A person who promotes suffrage. | [noun] One who votes. SUGARCOATED (15) [adjective] Coated with sugar. | [adjective] Made superficially more attractive, possibly to cover up faults. SUGARHOUSES (15) SUGARLOAVES (15) [noun] A block of refined sugar, usually in the form of a truncated cone, in which form it was traditionally exported from the Caribbean and Brazil from the 17th century to the 19th century. | [noun] A hat shaped like a sugar-loaf. SUGGESTIBLE (15) [adjective] Susceptible to influence by suggestion. SUGGESTIONS (13) [noun] Something suggested (with subsequent adposition being for) | [noun] The act of suggesting. | [noun] Something implied, which the mind is liable to take as fact. SUITABILITY (16) [noun] The quality of being suitable. SULFHYDRYLS (24) SULFONAMIDE (17) [noun] Any amide of a sulfonic acid RS(=O)2NR'2 | [noun] Any of a group of antibiotics; a sulfa drug SULFONATING (15) [verb] To treat or react with a sulfonic acid, or to introduce such a group into a compound. SULFONATION (14) SULFURETING (15) SULFURETTED (15) [adjective] Treated, impregnated or reacted with sulfur | [adjective] Reacted with sulfur in the absence of oxygen SULFURIZING (24) SULFUROUSLY (17) SULKINESSES (15) SULPHUREOUS (16) [adjective] Sulphurous. SULPHURISED (17) [verb] To treat or react with sulfur or sulfur dioxide. SULPHURISES (16) SULTANESSES (11) SUMMABILITY (20) SUMMARISING (16) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMARIZERS (24) SUMMARIZING (25) [verb] To prepare a summary of (something). | [verb] To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review. SUMMATIONAL (15) SUMMERHOUSE (18) [noun] A house owned not as a primary residence and used as vacation home during warm weather months of the year. | [noun] An outbuilding in a garden where the owners can relax in warm weather. SUMMERSAULT (15) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. | [verb] To perform a somersault. SUMMERTIMES (17) SUMMERWOODS (19) SUMPTUOUSLY (18) SUNNINESSES (11) SUPERABOUND (16) [verb] To abound very much; to be superabundant. SUPERADDING (16) [verb] To add on top of a previous addition. SUPERAGENCY (19) SUPERAGENTS (14) SUPERALLOYS (16) [noun] Any of several high-performance alloys that are resistant to high temperatures SUPERALTERN (13) SUPERBLOCKS (21) SUPERBOARDS (16) SUPERBOMBER (19) SUPERBRIGHT (19) SUPERCARGOS (16) [noun] An officer on board a merchant ship who has charge of the cargo and its turnover (or the senior of two if one has two, the other being the subcargo; usually historical, since nowadays a person with such a job would remain on shore). SUPERCEDING (17) SUPERCENTER (15) SUPERCHARGE (19) [noun] A charge borne upon an ordinary or other charge. | [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. SUPERCHURCH (23) SUPERCITIES (15) 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 SUPERDELUXE (21) SUPEREGOIST (14) SUPERFAMILY (21) [noun] A taxonomic category above family and below order (and its subdivisions). | [noun] A large group of related proteins or other molecules. SUPERFATTED (17) [adjective] Having been subjected to a superfatting treatment. SUPERFICIAL (18) [noun] (chiefly in plural) A surface detail. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the surface. | [adjective] Being near the surface. SUPERFICIES (18) [noun] A two-dimensional magnitude that has length and breadth; especially such a surface that forms the boundary of a solid. | [noun] The area of a two-dimensional surface. | [noun] The visible, external surface of a body. SUPERFLACKS (22) SUPERFLUIDS (17) SUPERFLUITY (19) [noun] The quality or state of being superfluous; overflowingness. | [noun] Something superfluous, as a luxury. | [noun] Collective noun for a group of nuns. SUPERFLUOUS (16) [adjective] In excess of what is required or sufficient. SUPERGIANTS (14) [noun] A very large star having a mass between 10 and 70 solar masses. SUPERGROUPS (16) [noun] Any group composed of other groups. SUPERGROWTH (20) SUPERHARDEN (17) 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. SUPERHEATER (16) SUPERHEROES (16) [noun] Any kind of fantasy/science fiction crime-fighting character, often with supernatural powers or equipment, in popular children's and fantasy literature. SUPERHYPING (22) SUPERIMPOSE (17) [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. SUPERINDUCE (16) [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). SUPERINFECT (18) SUPERINTEND (14) [verb] To oversee the work of others; to supervise. | [verb] To administer the affairs of something or someone. SUPERIORITY (16) [noun] The state of being superior. | [noun] The right which the superior enjoys in the land held by the vassal. SUPERJACENT (22) [adjective] Positioned immediately above or on top of something else; overlying. SUPERJUMBOS (24) SUPERLATIVE (16) [noun] The highest extent or degree of something. | [noun] (grammar) The form of an adjective that expresses which of several items has the highest degree of the quality expressed by the adjective; in English, formed by appending "-est" to the end of the adjective (for some short adjectives only) or putting "most" before it. | [noun] An adjective used to praise something exceptional. SUPERLAWYER (19) SUPERLINERS (13) SUPERLUNARY (16) [adjective] Translunary. SUPERLUXURY (23) SUPERMARKET (19) [noun] A large self-service store that sells groceries and, usually, medications, household goods and/or clothing. | [noun] A chain of such stores. | [noun] A one-stop shop; a place offering a range of products or services. SUPERMICROS (17) SUPERMODELS (16) [noun] A highly paid, famous fashion model. SUPERMODERN (16) SUPERNATANT (13) [noun] The liquid that lies above a sediment or precipitate; supernate | [noun] Material that floats on the surface of a liquid | [adjective] (of a liquid) Lying above a sediment or precipitate SUPERNATION (13) SUPERNATURE (13) SUPERNORMAL (15) [adjective] Beyond what is normal; exceeding the average or the point of reference. | [adjective] Paranormal, supernatural. | [adjective] (default logic, of a default) Both categorical and normal. SUPERORDERS (14) [noun] A taxonomic category below subclass and above order. SUPERORGASM (16) SUPEROXIDES (21) [noun] A peroxide | [noun] The univalent anion, O2-, obtained from molecular oxygen by adding an electron; any compound containing this anion SUPERPERSON (15) SUPERPLANES (15) SUPERPLAYER (18) SUPERPOLITE (15) SUPERPOSING (16) [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. SUPERPOWERS (18) [noun] Excessive or superior power. | [noun] A sovereign state with dominant status on the globe and a very advanced military, especially the Soviet Union or United States. | [noun] A fictional extraordinary physical or mental ability, especially possessed by a superhero or supervillain. SUPERPROFIT (18) SUPERSCHOOL (18) SUPERSCOUTS (15) SUPERSCRIBE (17) [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.). SUPERSCRIPT (17) [noun] A type of lettering form that appears as a number, figure, or symbol above the normal line of type, located at the right or left of another symbol or text. | [verb] (of a variable) To provide with a superscript. | [verb] (of a text) To convert to a superscript form. SUPERSECRET (15) SUPERSEDEAS (14) SUPERSEDERS (14) SUPERSEDING (15) [verb] To take the place of. | [verb] To displace in favour of itself. | [noun] The process by which something is superseded. SUPERSEDURE (14) SUPERSELLER (13) SUPERSINGER (14) SUPERSLEUTH (16) SUPERSMOOTH (18) SUPERSONICS (15) [noun] An aircraft that can travel at the speed of sound. | [noun] The study of supersonic motion | [noun] Ultrasonics SUPERSTATES (13) [noun] A state formed by the union of multiple lesser states. SUPERSTOCKS (19) SUPERSTORES (13) [noun] An extremely large store; a hypermarket. SUPERSTRATA (13) [noun] A stratum that is on top of another | [noun] A language imposed upon a population that previously spoke another language SUPERSTRIKE (17) SUPERSTRING (14) [noun] A hypothetical object consisting of a very small one-dimensional string that vibrates in ten (or more) dimensions | [noun] The string (sequence of text characters) that contains a substring. SUPERSTRONG (14) SUPERSUBTLE (15) SUPERSYSTEM (18) SUPERTANKER (17) [noun] An extremely large tanker ship. SUPERTONICS (15) [noun] The second note in a diatonic scale. SUPERVENING (17) [verb] To follow (something) closely, either as a consequence or in contrast. | [verb] To supersede. | [verb] To be dependent on an earlier event. SUPERVIRILE (16) SUPERVISING (17) [verb] To oversee or direct a task or organization. | [verb] To look over so as to read; to peruse. SUPERVISION (16) [noun] The act or instance of supervising. | [noun] Responsible oversight. | [noun] (Cambridge University) A tutorial session for an individual student or a small group. SUPERVISORS (16) [noun] A person with the official task of overseeing the work of a person or group, or of other operations and activities. | [noun] A person who monitors someone to make sure they comply with rules or other requirements set for them. | [noun] In certain states, an elected member of the governing body for a county which is called the board of supervisors. SUPERVISORY (19) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or in the capacity of a supervisor SUPERWEAPON (18) SUPINATIONS (13) SUPPLANTERS (15) SUPPLANTING (16) [verb] To take the place of; to replace, to supersede. | [verb] To uproot, to remove violently. SUPPLEJACKS (28) [noun] Any of various North American vines that have supple stems. | [noun] Any of several vines belonging to the genus Ripogonum, native to New Zealand. SUPPLEMENTS (17) [noun] Something added, especially to make up for a deficiency. | [noun] An extension to a document or publication that adds information, corrects errors or brings up to date. | [noun] An additional section of a newspaper devoted to a specific subject. SUPPLETIONS (15) SUPPLIANCES (17) SUPPLIANTLY (18) SUPPLICANTS (17) 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. SUPPLICATES (17) [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. SUPPORTABLE (17) SUPPOSITION (15) [noun] Something that is supposed; an assumption made to account for known facts, conjecture. | [noun] The act or an instance of supposing. SUPPOSITORY (18) [noun] A medicine in the form of a small plug that is inserted into a bodily cavity, especially the rectum, vagina or urethra, where it melts at body temperature. SUPPRESSANT (15) [noun] A substance that suppresses. SUPPRESSING (16) [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. SUPPRESSION (15) [noun] The act or instance of suppressing. | [noun] The state of being suppressed. | [noun] A process in which a person consciously excludes anxiety-producing thoughts, feelings, or memories. SUPPRESSIVE (18) SUPPRESSORS (15) [noun] A device which suppresses something, especially an electronic or mechanical device. | [noun] A person who suppresses others, a tyrant. | [noun] A gene that suppresses the effect of another through epistasis. SUPPURATING (16) [verb] To form or discharge pus. | [verb] To cause to generate pus. SUPPURATION (15) SUPPURATIVE (18) SUPRARENALS (13) SUPREMACIES (17) SUPREMACIST (17) [noun] A person who advocates the supremacy of one particular group over all others. SUPREMATISM (17) [noun] A genre of abstract art based on simple geometric forms. SUPREMATIST (15) SUPREMENESS (15) SURCHARGING (18) [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. SURETYSHIPS (19) SURFACTANTS (16) [noun] A surface active agent, or wetting agent, capable of reducing the surface tension of a liquid; typically organic compounds having a hydrophilic "head" and a hydrophobic "tail". | [noun] A lipoprotein in the tissues of the lung that reduces surface tension and permits more efficient gas transport. SURFBOARDED (18) SURFBOARDER (17) SURFPERCHES (21) [noun] Any of the family Embiotocidae of viviparous perciform fishes, found mainly in the northeast Pacific Ocean. SURGEONFISH (18) [noun] Any of many species of reef-dwelling fishes, most of them brightly coloured, of the family Acanthuridae. They are named "surgeonfish" because they bear erectile, scalpel-like, dangerously sharp spines on either side of the caudal peduncle. SURJECTIONS (20) [noun] A function that is a many-to-one mapping; (formally) Any function f: X\rightarrow Y for which for every y \in Y, there is at least one x \in X such that f(x) = y. SURLINESSES (11) SURMOUNTING (14) [verb] To get over; to overcome. | [verb] To cap; to sit on top off. | [noun] The act by which something is surmounted, or overcome. SURPASSABLE (15) SURPLUSAGES (14) SURPRINTING (14) SURREALISMS (13) SURREALISTS (11) [noun] A surrealist artist SURREBUTTER (13) [noun] The plaintiff's reply in pleading to a defendant's rebuttal. 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. SURROGACIES (14) SURROGATING (13) SURROUNDING (13) [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. SURVEILLANT (14) SURVEILLING (15) [verb] To keep someone or something under surveillance. SURVIVALIST (17) [noun] A person who believes in being prepared to survive and is actively preparing for possible future emergencies and disruptions in local, regional, national, or international social or political order. SURVIVANCES (19) SUSCEPTIBLE (17) [noun] A person who is vulnerable to being infected by a certain disease | [adjective] Likely to be affected by something | [adjective] Easily influenced or tricked; credulous SUSCEPTIBLY (20) SUSPENDERED (15) SUSPENSEFUL (16) [adjective] Inducing suspense. SUSPENSIONS (13) [noun] The act of suspending, or the state of being suspended. | [noun] A temporary or conditional delay, interruption or discontinuation. | [noun] The state of a solid or substance produced when its particles are mixed with, but not dissolved in, a fluid, and are capable of separation by straining. SUSPICIONED (16) SUSPIRATION (13) SUSTAINABLE (13) [adjective] Able to be sustained. | [adjective] Able to be produced or sustained for an indefinite period without damaging the environment, or without depleting a resource; renewable. SUSTAINEDLY (15) SUSTENANCES (13) SUSURRATION (11) [noun] A low, indistinct continuous whispering sound; a murmur. SWALLOWABLE (19) SWALLOWTAIL (17) [noun] The forked tail of a swallow. | [noun] Anything, such as a burgee, of a similar forked shape. | [noun] A type of tailcoat with two long tapering tails.Wp SWARTHINESS (17) SWARTNESSES (14) SWASHBUCKLE (25) [verb] To take part in exciting romantic adventures. SWEATSHIRTS (17) [noun] A loose shirt, usually made of a knit fleece, for athletic wear and now often used as casual apparel. | [noun] A shirt worn against the skin, usually under other clothing, to absorb sweat. SWEEPSTAKES (20) [noun] A lottery in which the prize or prizes constitute all the money paid by the participants. | [noun] A prize draw. SWEETBREADS (17) [noun] The pancreas or thymus gland of an animal, especially a lamb or calf, as food. SWEETBRIARS (16) [noun] A Eurasian rose, Rosa eglanteria, having prickly stems, fragrant leaves, pink flowers and red hips SWEETBRIERS (16) SWEETENINGS (15) SWEETHEARTS (17) [noun] A person who is always very kind. | [noun] A person very much liked or loved by someone, especially when both partners are young. | [noun] A female member of a college or university fraternity. SWEETNESSES (14) SWELLFISHES (20) SWELLHEADED (19) SWIFTNESSES (17) SWINGINGEST (16) SWINGLETREE (15) [noun] A bar behind draft animals and in front of a load, such as a wagon, that balances the load. Generally the animals are attached at the ends and the wagon or other load to a pivot in the middle of the singletree. SWINISHNESS (17) SWITCHBACKS (27) [noun] A zigzag path, road or railway track; especially a railway track in which the train travels in a reverse direction at each switch | [noun] A hairpin bend. | [noun] A roller coaster. SWITCHBLADE (22) [noun] A folding knife with a blade which opens automatically (under spring pressure) when a button is pressed. | [verb] To attack or cut with a switchblade. | [verb] To spring open or up. 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. SWITCHEROOS (19) [noun] A sneaky, unexpected, or clever swap or exchange. | [verb] To swap or exchange surreptitiously. SWITCHGRASS (20) [noun] A tall North American perennial grass, Panicum virgatum, used as forage and to make hay. SWITCHYARDS (23) [noun] Part of a railway with an arrangement of switches (or points) allowing trains to be diverted and reassembled. SWORDFISHES (21) [noun] A large marine fish with a long, pointed bill, Xiphias gladius. | [verb] To fish for swordfish. SWORDPLAYER (20) SYBARITISMS (18) SYCOPHANTIC (23) [adjective] Obsequious, flattering, toadying. SYCOPHANTLY (24) SYLLABARIES (16) [noun] A table or list of syllabic letters or syllables | [noun] A writing system where each character represents a complete syllable SYLLABICATE (18) SYLLABICITY (21) SYLLABIFIED (20) SYLLABIFIES (19) SYLLOGISTIC (17) SYLLOGIZING (25) [verb] To reason by means of syllogisms. | [verb] To deduce consequences from. SYMBOLISING (19) [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. SYMBOLISTIC (20) SYMBOLIZERS (27) SYMBOLIZING (28) [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. SYMBOLOGIES (19) SYMMETRICAL (20) [adjective] Exhibiting symmetry; having harmonious or proportionate arrangement of parts; having corresponding parts or relations. SYMMETRIZED (28) SYMMETRIZES (27) SYMPATHETIC (23) [adjective] Of, related to, showing, or characterized by sympathy | [adjective] Relating to similarity | [adjective] Relating to the sympathetic nervous system 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. SYMPATHISES (21) [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. SYMPATHIZER (30) [noun] A person who sympathizes (with a political cause, a side in a conflict, etc.); a supporter. | [noun] A person who has, shows or expresses sympathy (with another person or people); a person who enters into the feelings of another. SYMPATHIZES (30) [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. SYMPETALIES (18) SYMPETALOUS (18) [adjective] Gamopetalous SYMPHONIOUS (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to simultaneous sounds that are harmonious together. SYMPHONISTS (21) [noun] A composer of symphonies SYMPOSIARCH (23) SYMPOSIASTS (18) [noun] One engaged with others at a banquet or merrymaking. | [noun] A participant in a symposium. SYMPTOMATIC (22) [adjective] Showing symptoms. | [adjective] Relating to, based on, or constituting a symptom. | [adjective] Relating to symptomatics SYMPTOMLESS (20) SYNALOEPHAS (19) SYNAPTOSOME (18) SYNCHROMESH (24) [noun] A system of synchronized transmission found in modern gearboxes to make gear changing easier and smoother. | [noun] (by extension) A device which functions like a synchronized transmission. | [adjective] Having the quality or smoothly exchanging interlocking forces. SYNCHRONIES (19) SYNCHRONISE (19) [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. SYNCHRONISM (21) [noun] The state of being synchronous. | [noun] A temporal relationship between events. | [noun] The tabular arrangement of contemporary events etc. in history. SYNCHRONIZE (28) [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. SYNCHRONOUS (19) [adjective] At the same time, at the same frequency. | [adjective] (of communication) Single-threaded; blocking; occurring in the same thread as other computations, thereby preventing those computations from resuming until the communication is complete. SYNCHROTRON (19) [noun] A form of cyclotron in which charged particles are accelerated by an electric field that is synchronized with a magnetic field that keeps them in a circular path. SYNCOPATING (19) [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 SYNCOPATION (18) SYNCOPATIVE (21) SYNCOPATORS (18) SYNCRETISED (17) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNCRETISES (16) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNCRETISMS (18) SYNCRETISTS (16) SYNCRETIZED (26) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNCRETIZES (25) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNDESMOSES (17) [noun] A slightly movable articulation or joint where the contiguous bony surfaces are united by an interosseous ligament. SYNDESMOSIS (17) [noun] A slightly movable articulation or joint where the contiguous bony surfaces are united by an interosseous ligament. SYNDICALISM (19) [noun] Control of government and industry by labor unions, usually achieved through revolutionary direct action. SYNDICALIST (17) SYNDICATING (18) [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. SYNDICATION (17) [noun] The act of syndicating a news feature by publishing it in multiple newspapers etc, simultaneously SYNDICATORS (17) SYNECDOCHES (22) [noun] A figure of speech that uses the name of a part of something to represent the whole, or the whole to represent a part. | [noun] The use of this figure of speech. SYNECDOCHIC (24) SYNERGISTIC (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to synergy or synergism; synergic; co-operative, working together, interacting, mutually stimulating. SYNESTHESIA (17) [noun] A neurological or psychological phenomenon whereby a particular sensory stimulus triggers a second kind of sensation. | [noun] (by extension) The association of one sensory perception with, or description of it in terms of, a different perception that is not experienced at the same time. | [noun] A literary or artistic device whereby one kind of sensation is described in the terms of another. SYNESTHETIC (19) [adjective] (of a person) experiencing synaesthesia; describing a synaesthete. | [adjective] Pertaining to synaesthesia. SYNONYMICAL (21) SYNONYMISTS (19) SYNONYMIZED (29) SYNONYMIZES (28) SYNOPSIZING (26) SYNOVITISES (17) SYNTACTICAL (18) SYNTAGMATIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a syntagma. SYNTHESISTS (17) 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. SYNTHESIZER (26) [noun] An electronic instrument that creates its sounds with electronics and has a keyboard. | [noun] An electronic instrument module that creates its sounds with electronics and does not have any keyboard. | [noun] An electronic circuit that generates an electronic signal oscillation with accurate timing from a reference oscillator. SYNTHESIZES (26) [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. SYNTHETASES (17) SYPHILITICS (21) SYSTEMATICS (18) [noun] The study of classification systems and nomenclature. | [noun] The systematic classification of a branch of science, especially the classification of organisms. | [noun] A branch of Christian theology that formulates an orderly, rational, and coherent account of Christian beliefs. It comprises dogmatics, ethics and philosophy of religion. SYSTEMATISE (16) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATISM (18) SYSTEMATIST (16) SYSTEMATIZE (25) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMIZING (26) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [verb] To engage in a cognitive process described as the drive to analyze and construct systems.

12-Letter Words (1130)

SABERMETRICS (18) [noun] The analysis of baseball, especially via its statistics. SACCHARIFIED (23) SACCHARIFIES (22) SACCHARINITY (22) SACCHAROIDAL (20) SACCULATIONS (16) SACERDOTALLY (18) SACRAMENTALS (16) [noun] An object (such as holy water or a crucifix) or an action (such as making the sign of the cross) which is regarded as encouraging devotion and thus spiritually aiding the person who uses it. SACREDNESSES (15) SACRILEGIOUS (15) [adjective] Committing sacrilege; acting or speaking very disrespectfully toward what is held to be sacred. SADDLECLOTHS (19) [noun] A blanket placed under a saddle, a saddle blanket. | [noun] A cloth displaying a racehorse's number. SADISTICALLY (18) SAFECRACKERS (23) [noun] One who breaks into safes. SAFECRACKING (24) SAFEGUARDING (18) [verb] To protect, to keep safe. | [verb] To escort safely. | [noun] Protection SAFEKEEPINGS (22) SAILBOARDING (16) SAILBOATINGS (15) SALABILITIES (14) SALAMANDRINE (15) SALESMANSHIP (19) [noun] The skills and knowledge of how to sell. | [noun] A position as salesman. SALESPERSONS (14) [noun] A person whose job is to sell things, either in a shop/store or elsewhere. SALINIZATION (21) SALINOMETERS (14) [noun] A salimeter. SALLOWNESSES (15) SALPIGLOSSES (15) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Salpiglossis, that have variegated, funnel-shaped blossoms in a variety of colors SALPIGLOSSIS (15) [noun] Any of several plants, of the genus Salpiglossis, that have variegated, funnel-shaped blossoms in a variety of colors SALTIMBOCCAS (20) SALUBRIOUSLY (17) SALUTARINESS (12) SALUTATIONAL (12) SALUTATORIAN (12) [noun] The person who graduates high school with the second-highest GPA and thus gets to give a salutatorian's address during the graduation ceremony. SALUTATORIES (12) [noun] A greeting; an address, speech or article of greeting; the first editorial by the new editor of a newspaper or periodical; an introduction or preface. | [noun] A place for saluting or greeting; a vestibule; a porch. SALUTIFEROUS (15) SALVATIONISM (17) SALVATIONIST (15) [noun] A person who adheres to the doctrine of salvation. | [adjective] Relating to the doctrine of salvation. SANCTIMONIES (16) [noun] A hypocritical form of excessive piety, considered to be an affectation merely for public show. SANCTIONABLE (16) SANDBLASTERS (15) SANDBLASTING (16) [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. | [noun] The process by which something is sandblasted. SANDPAINTING (16) [noun] The art of pouring coloured sands and pigments onto a surface to make a temporary or permanent picture. | [noun] A picture of this kind. SANDPAPERING (18) [verb] To polish or grind (a surface) with or as if with sandpaper. | [noun] An application of sandpaper. SANGUINARIAS (13) SANGUINARILY (16) SANGUINENESS (13) SANGUINITIES (13) SANITIZATION (21) SANSCULOTTES (14) [noun] A plebeian Parisian, especially a lower-class republican during the French Revolution. SANSCULOTTIC (16) SANSEVIERIAS (15) [noun] Any of the genus Sansevieria of flowering plants native to Africa, Madagascar and southern Asia. SAPONIFIABLE (19) SAPROPHAGOUS (20) [adjective] Feeding on dead or decaying organic matter SARCOMATOSES (16) SARCOMATOSIS (16) SARCOPLASMIC (20) SARDONICALLY (18) SARDONICISMS (17) SARSAPARILLA (14) [noun] Any of various tropical (Central and South) American vines of the genus Smilax, such as Smilax regelii, which have fragrant roots. | [noun] The dried roots of these plants, or a flavoring material extracted from these roots. | [noun] A beverage (soft drink) flavored with this root, such as root beer. SATISFACTION (17) [noun] A fulfilment of a need or desire. | [noun] The pleasure obtained by such fulfillment. | [noun] The source of such gratification. SATISFACTORY (20) [adjective] Done to satisfaction; adequate or sufficient. | [adjective] Causing satisfaction; agreeable or pleasant; satisfying. | [adjective] Making atonement for a sin; expiatory. SATISFYINGLY (22) [adverb] In a satisfying manner. SAUERBRATENS (14) [noun] A German dish of roasted marinated horsemeat or (now more frequently) beef or pork. SAURISCHIANS (17) [noun] Any dinosaur of the order Saurischia. SAVAGENESSES (16) SAVORINESSES (15) SAXOPHONISTS (24) [noun] A person who owns, plays or practices with the saxophone. SCABROUSNESS (16) SCAFFOLDINGS (22) [noun] A temporary modular system of tubes (or formerly wood) forming a framework used to support people and material in the construction or repair of buildings and other large structures. | [noun] Source code etc. that is incomplete and serves as a basis for further development. | [noun] Any framework or support. SCANDALISING (16) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. SCANDALIZING (25) [verb] To cause great offense to (someone). | [verb] To reproach. | [verb] To disgrace. SCANDALOUSLY (18) SCANTINESSES (14) SCAPEGOATING (18) [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. | [noun] The act of making somebody a scapegoat. SCAPEGOATISM (19) SCARABAEUSES (16) SCARAMOUCHES (21) SCARCENESSES (16) SCAREMONGERS (17) [noun] Someone who spreads worrying rumours or needlessly alarms people. SCARIFYINGLY (24) SCATOLOGICAL (17) [adjective] Relating to the research area of scatology, the particulate study of biological excrement, feces or dung. | [adjective] Relating to scatology, the use of obscenities. SCATTERATION (14) SCATTERBRAIN (16) [noun] A flighty, disorganized or forgetful person. SCATTERGOODS (16) SCATTERGRAMS (17) [noun] Scatter plot SCATTERINGLY (18) SCENESHIFTER (20) SCENOGRAPHER (20) SCENOGRAPHIC (22) SCHEMATIZING (29) [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. SCHISMATICAL (21) [noun] A person involved in a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a schisma SCHISMATIZED (29) SCHISMATIZES (28) SCHISTOSOMAL (19) SCHISTOSOMES (19) [noun] A parasitic flatworm which needs two hosts to complete its life cycle. The immature form infests freshwater snails and the adult lives in the blood vessels of birds and mammals, causing bilharzia in humans. SCHIZOGONIES (27) [noun] Asexual reproduction of protozoans etc characterized by multiple divisions of the nucleus and cell. SCHIZOGONOUS (27) SCHIZOPHRENE (31) SCHMALTZIEST (28) [adjective] Overly sentimental, emotional, maudlin or bathetic. SCHNORKELING (22) SCHOLARSHIPS (22) [noun] A grant-in-aid to a student. | [noun] The character or qualities of a scholar. | [noun] The activity, methods or attainments of a scholar. SCHOOLBOYISH (25) SCHOOLFELLOW (23) [noun] A person who was a fellow attendee at one's school. SCHOOLHOUSES (20) [noun] A building housing a school, especially a small or single-room one. SCHOOLMASTER (19) [noun] A male teacher. | [noun] Male teacher in charge of a school, usually a small one. | [noun] Anything that teaches. SCHOTTISCHES (22) [noun] A partnered country dance of Bohemian origin. | [noun] A piece of music accompanying this dance. SCHUSSBOOMER (21) SCHWARMEREIS (22) SCINTIGRAPHY (23) [noun] A radiographic technique, using radioactive tracers, for the diagnosis of injuries to bones SCINTILLATED (15) [verb] To give off sparks; to shine as if emanating sparks; to twinkle or glow. | [verb] To throw off like sparks. SCINTILLATES (14) [verb] To give off sparks; to shine as if emanating sparks; to twinkle or glow. | [verb] To throw off like sparks. SCINTILLATOR (14) [noun] Any substance that glows under the action of photons or other high-energy particles SCISSORTAILS (14) [noun] A bird, the scissor-tailed flycatcher. SCLERENCHYMA (24) [noun] A mechanical ground tissue, impermeable to water, which consists of cells having narrow lumen and thick, mineralized walls of lignin; present in stems, vascular bundles (of monocots), seed coverings, and vein and tips of leaves. | [noun] The hard calcareous deposit in the tissues of the stony corals (Anthozoa). SCLERODERMAS (17) SCLEROMETERS (16) SCOLOPENDRAS (17) SCOPOLAMINES (18) SCOREKEEPERS (20) [noun] Someone who keeps track of the score at a sporting event or other contest. SCORNFULNESS (17) SCOUTMASTERS (16) [noun] An adult leader of a group of Scouts. 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. SCRATCHINESS (19) SCREENWRITER (17) [noun] One who writes for the screen, who writes drama for film or television; especially a professional who knows the conventions appropriate to such work. SCREWDRIVERS (21) [noun] A hand or machine tool which engages with the head of a screw and allows torque to be applied to turn the screw, thus driving it in or loosening it. | [noun] A drink made of vodka and orange juice. SCREWINESSES (17) SCRIMSHANDER (20) [noun] Someone who scrimshaws. | [noun] The manufacture of handicrafts by sailors on long voyages, especially as whittled from wood or bone. | [noun] An item produced by scrimshaw. SCRIMSHAWING (23) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRIPTURALLY (19) SCRIPTWRITER (19) [noun] A person who writes scripts. SCRUPULOSITY (19) SCRUPULOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a careful manner, with scruple; done with careful attention to detail. SCRUTINISING (15) [verb] To examine something with great care. | [verb] To audit accounts etc in order to verify them. SCRUTINIZERS (23) SCRUTINIZING (24) [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. SCULPTRESSES (16) [noun] A female sculptor. SCULPTURALLY (19) SCUPPERNONGS (19) SCURRILITIES (14) [noun] Something that is scurrilous. SCURRILOUSLY (17) SCURVINESSES (17) SCUTTLEBUTTS (16) SCYPHISTOMAE (24) [noun] The young attached larva of Discophora in the stage when it resembles a hydroid, or actinian. SCYPHISTOMAS (24) [noun] The young attached larva of Discophora in the stage when it resembles a hydroid, or actinian. SEAMLESSNESS (14) SEAMSTRESSES (14) [noun] A woman who sews clothes professionally. SEARCHLIGHTS (21) [noun] A light source that projects a bright beam of light in any direction, generally for military use. | [noun] The light from the above source. SECESSIONISM (16) SECESSIONIST (14) [noun] A person who secedes or supports secession from a political union or an alliance or organisation. | [adjective] Seceding or supporting secession. SECLUDEDNESS (16) SECOBARBITAL (18) SECRETAGOGUE (16) [noun] A substance which promotes secretion. SECRETARIATS (14) [noun] The office or department of a government secretary. SECRETIONARY (17) SECTARIANISM (16) [noun] Rigid adherence to a particular sect, denomination, ideology, or party. | [noun] A political system in which power is shared among religious sects based on a constitutional formula distributing public offices among these sects SECTARIANIZE (23) [verb] To imbue with sectarian feelings; to subject to the control of a sect. SECTIONALISM (16) [noun] Promoting the good of one division, department or subgroup over that of the whole. | [noun] Promoting the good of one region over that of the nation. SECULARISING (15) [verb] To make secular. SECULARISTIC (16) SECULARITIES (14) SECULARIZERS (23) SECULARIZING (24) [verb] To make secular. SECURENESSES (14) SECURITIZING (24) [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. SEDATENESSES (13) SEDIMENTABLE (17) SEDUCTRESSES (15) [noun] A woman skilled in and practiced at seduction. | [noun] A woman who seduces. SEDULOUSNESS (13) SEEMLINESSES (14) SEGMENTATION (15) [noun] The act or an instance of dividing into segments | [noun] The state of being divided into segments | [noun] The partitioning of an image into groups of pixels SEGREGATIONS (14) [noun] The setting apart or separation of things or people, as a natural process, a manner of organizing people that may be voluntary or enforced by law. | [noun] The setting apart in Mendelian inheritance of alleles, such that each parent passes only one allele to its offspring. | [noun] Separation from a mass, and gathering about centers or into cavities at hand through cohesive or adhesive attraction or the crystallizing process. SEIGNIORAGES (14) [noun] All the revenue obtained by a feudal lord from his vassals. | [noun] The revenue obtained directly by minting coin (difference between face value and cost of metal). | [noun] The revenue obtained by the difference between interest earned on securities acquired in exchange for bank notes and the costs of producing and distributing those notes. SEISMICITIES (16) SEISMOGRAPHS (20) [noun] An instrument that automatically detects and records the intensity, direction and duration of earthquakes and similar events. SEISMOGRAPHY (23) SEISMOLOGIES (15) SEISMOLOGIST (15) SEISMOMETERS (16) [noun] A device used by seismologists to detect and measure seismic waves and therefore locate earthquakes etc; a seismograph. SEISMOMETRIC (18) SELAGINELLAS (13) [noun] Any of a group of ferny plants of the genus Selaginella, spike moss. SELECTIONIST (14) SELECTNESSES (14) SELENIFEROUS (15) SELENOLOGIES (13) SELENOLOGIST (13) SELFLESSNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being selfless. SELFSAMENESS (17) SEMANTICALLY (19) SEMANTICISTS (16) SEMEIOLOGIES (15) SEMIABSTRACT (18) SEMIANNUALLY (17) SEMIARBOREAL (16) SEMICIRCULAR (18) [adjective] In the shape of half of a circle or a semicircle. SEMICLASSICS (18) SEMICOLONIAL (16) SEMICOLONIES (16) SEMIDARKNESS (19) [noun] Partial or near darkness, dimness, twilight. SEMIDEIFYING (22) SEMIDETACHED (21) [noun] Such a house. | [adjective] Of a house: joined to another one on one side, having one shared wall. SEMIDIAMETER (17) [noun] The apparent radius of a star etc, when viewed from Earth. | [noun] A radius: half of a diameter. SEMIDOMINANT (17) SEMIFINALIST (17) SEMIFINISHED (21) [adjective] Partially finished SEMIFLEXIBLE (26) SEMILITERATE (14) [noun] A person who is semiliterate. | [adjective] Not entirely literate; having a limited grasp of the written language SEMILUSTROUS (14) SEMIMETALLIC (18) SEMIMONASTIC (18) SEMIMYSTICAL (21) SEMINIFEROUS (17) [adjective] Producing seed | [adjective] Conveying, containing, bearing, or producing semen or seminal fluid SEMINUDITIES (15) SEMIOFFICIAL (22) [adjective] Having some degree of official authority. SEMIOLOGICAL (17) SEMIOLOGISTS (15) SEMIOTICIANS (16) [noun] One who studies semiotics or semantics SEMIOTICISTS (16) SEMIPALMATED (19) [adjective] Having webs between some, but not all, of the toes SEMIPARASITE (16) SEMIPRECIOUS (18) [adjective] Sort of or somewhat precious or valuable. Usually used as part of the phrase semi-precious stones or semi-precious gems. SEMITRAILERS (14) [noun] A trailer without a front axle and with wheels only at the trailing end, designed to be pulled via a pivoting arrangement which also partially supports its weight. | [noun] A tractor-trailer or big rig: a semi-trailer plus the truck or tractor pulling it. SEMITROPICAL (18) SEMIWEEKLIES (21) SEMPERVIVUMS (24) [noun] Any of the genus Sempervivum of succulent plants, the houseleeks or liveforevers. SEMPITERNITY (19) SEMPSTRESSES (16) [noun] A seamstress, a woman employed to sew. SENATORSHIPS (17) SENECTITUDES (15) SENSIBLENESS (14) SENSITOMETER (14) [noun] An instrument used to measure the sensitivity of photographic film to light. SENSITOMETRY (17) SENSORIMOTOR (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to both sensory and motor activity SENSUALISTIC (14) SENSUALITIES (12) SENSUALIZING (22) [verb] To make sensual; to subject to the love of sensual pleasure; to debase by carnal gratifications. SENSUOSITIES (12) SENSUOUSNESS (12) SENTINELLING (13) [verb] To watch over as a guard. | [verb] To post as guard. | [verb] To post a guard for. SEPARABILITY (19) SEPARATENESS (14) SEPARATISTIC (16) SEPTENNIALLY (17) SEPTENTRIONS (14) SEPULCHERING (20) [verb] To bury the dead. SEPULCHRALLY (22) SEQUACIOUSLY (26) SEQUENTIALLY (24) [adverb] In sequence, in order. SEQUESTERING (22) [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. SEQUESTRATED (22) [verb] To sequester. SEQUESTRATES (21) [verb] To sequester. SERAPHICALLY (22) SERENENESSES (12) SERICULTURAL (14) SERICULTURES (14) SERIGRAPHERS (18) SERIGRAPHIES (18) SERONEGATIVE (16) [noun] Such a serum of person | [adjective] Of blood serum Testing negative for a given pathogen, especially HIV. | [adjective] Of a person or animal Having seronegative blood serum. SEROPOSITIVE (17) [noun] A person with that blood | [adjective] Of blood serum Testing positive for a given pathogen, especially HIV (HIV positive). | [adjective] Of a person or animal Having seropositive blood serum. SEROPURULENT (14) SEROTONERGIC (15) [adjective] Containing or releasing serotonin SERPENTINELY (17) SERVANTHOODS (19) SERVICEBERRY (22) [noun] (Europe) Several species of trees in the genus Sorbus, especially Sorbus domestica and Sorbus torminalis. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Amelanchier of small deciduous trees and large shrubs in the family Rosaceae. SERVICEWOMAN (22) [noun] A woman who serves in the armed forces. SERVICEWOMEN (22) [noun] A woman who serves in the armed forces. SEVENTEENTHS (18) [noun] One of seventeen equal parts of a whole. | [noun] An interval of two octaves and a third. SEVERABILITY (20) SEVERENESSES (15) SEWABILITIES (17) SEXAGENARIAN (20) [noun] A person who is 60 years old or between the ages of 60 and 69. | [adjective] Being between the age of 60 and 69, inclusive. In one's seventh decade. SEXAGESIMALS (22) [noun] A sexagesimal fraction. SEXDECILLION (22) SEXTODECIMOS (24) [noun] A size of a sheet of paper resulting from folding and cutting a sheet of paper into sixteenths (3.25"-5" x 5"-6.25"). | [noun] A book consisting of pages of that size. SEXTUPLICATE (23) SHABBINESSES (19) SHACKLEBONES (23) SHADOWBOXING (29) [verb] To practice moves without an actual opponent, often in front of a mirror. | [noun] A form of solo exercise, involving throwing punches at the air, and not at an opponent. SHADOWGRAPHS (25) [noun] A shadow-picture; a radiograph or X-ray photograph; a sciagram. | [noun] An optical technique of visualizing patterns of fluid flow by using differences in refractive index SHADOWGRAPHY (28) SHAGGINESSES (17) SHAMEFACEDLY (26) SHAMEFULNESS (20) SHAREABILITY (20) [noun] The quality or state of being shareable. 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. SHARECROPPER (21) [noun] A person who enters an agreement with a land owner to farm the land and then pay a portion (share) of the produce as rent; one who sharecrops. SHAREHOLDERS (19) [noun] One who owns shares of stock in a corporation. SHARPSHOOTER (20) [noun] A person trained to shoot precisely with a rifle; a marksman. SHATTERINGLY (19) SHATTERPROOF (20) [adjective] Resistant to shattering; difficult to break. SHEEPBERRIES (19) SHEEPHERDERS (21) SHEEPHERDING (22) SHEEPISHNESS (20) SHEEPSHEARER (20) SHELLACKINGS (22) SHELLCRACKER (23) SHELLFISHERY (24) SHELTERBELTS (17) [noun] A row of trees that acts as a windbreak SHERGOTTITES (16) SHIFTINESSES (18) SHINPLASTERS (17) [noun] An essentially worthless note of paper money. | [noun] A 25¢ banknote. SHIPBUILDERS (20) [noun] A person who builds vessels such as ships and boats. | [noun] A firm that specializes in building ships. SHIPBUILDING (21) [noun] The construction of ships. | [noun] A construction of a ship. SHIPWRECKING (27) [verb] To wreck a boat through a collision or mishap. SHIRTDRESSES (16) [noun] A type of dress, borrowing details, such as a collar or button front, from a man's shirt. SHIRTSLEEVED (19) SHIRTSLEEVES (18) [noun] The part of a shirt that covers an arm. | [noun] Preceded by in: wearing only a shirt without a coat, jacket, or comparable protective covering over it. | [noun] (by extension) A working-class socioeconomic status (not requiring a professional business jacket). SHITTIMWOODS (21) SHODDINESSES (17) 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. SHORTCHANGER (21) SHORTCHANGES (21) [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. SHORTCOMINGS (20) [noun] Deficiency SHORTCUTTING (18) SHORTSIGHTED (20) [adjective] Near-sighted; myopic; unable to focus on distant objects. | [adjective] Unable to see long-term objectives; lacking foresight. SHOWMANSHIPS (25) SHOWSTOPPERS (22) [noun] A performance or segment of a theatrical production that induces a positive audience reaction strong enough to pause the production. | [noun] Any impediment that prevents all further progress; especially a software bug that must be fixed before any further development is possible. SHOWSTOPPING (23) SHREWDNESSES (19) [noun] The quality of being shrewd. | [noun] An invented collective name for a group of apes. SHREWISHNESS (21) SHRIEVALTIES (18) [noun] The office, jurisdiction, or tenure of a sheriff SHRILLNESSES (15) 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. SHUTTLECOCKS (23) [noun] A lightweight object that is conical in shape with a cork or rubber-covered nose, used in badminton the way a ball is used in other racquet games. | [noun] The game of badminton. | [verb] To move rapidly back and forth SICKLINESSES (18) SIDESLIPPING (18) [verb] To perform a flight manoeuvre that moves the aircraft sideways without turning it. SIDESTEPPERS (17) SIDESTEPPING (18) [verb] To step to the side. | [verb] To avoid or dodge. SIDETRACKING (20) [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. SIGNIFICANCE (20) [noun] The extent to which something matters; importance | [noun] Meaning. SIGNIFICANCY (23) SILENTNESSES (12) SILHOUETTING (16) [verb] To represent by a silhouette; to project upon a background, so as to be like a silhouette. SILHOUETTIST (15) SILLIMANITES (14) SILVERFISHES (21) [noun] Certain insects | [noun] Certain fish SILVERPOINTS (17) SILVERSMITHS (20) [noun] A person who makes articles out of silver usually larger than jewellery. SILVICULTURE (17) [noun] The care and development of forests in order to obtain a product or provide a benefit; forestry. SIMILARITIES (14) [noun] Closeness of appearance to something else. | [noun] The relation of sharing properties. | [noun] A transformation that preserves angles and the ratios of distances SIMONIACALLY (19) SIMPLEMINDED (20) [adjective] Stupid. | [adjective] Unsophisticated; lacking subtlety. SIMPLENESSES (16) SIMPLICIALLY (21) SIMPLICITIES (18) [noun] The state or quality of being simple | [noun] An act or instance of foolishness. SIMULCASTING (17) [verb] To broadcast a program or event across more than one medium or service at the same time. SIMULTANEITY (17) SIMULTANEOUS (14) [adjective] Happening at the same moment. | [adjective] (of a set of equations) To be solved for the same values of variables. SINFONIETTAS (15) [noun] A small-scale symphony (either in length or size of orchestra needed). | [noun] A small orchestra. SINFULNESSES (15) SINGLENESSES (13) SINGLESTICKS (19) [noun] A one-handed wooden stick used for fencing in place of a sword. | [noun] A martial art, sport or exercise using a cudgel or backsword. SINGULARIZED (23) [verb] To make singular. SINGULARIZES (22) [verb] To make singular. SINISTERNESS (12) SINUSOIDALLY (16) SIPHONOPHORE (22) [noun] Any of various transparent marine hydrozoans, of the order Siphonophorae, that float or swim as colonies of polyps. SIPHONOSTELE (17) [noun] A type of stele in which the vascular tissue in the stem forms a cylinder surrounding a central pith and possessing leaf gaps. SKATEBOARDER (19) [noun] A person who rides a skateboard. SKELETONISED (17) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKELETONISES (16) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKELETONIZED (26) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. | [adjective] Reduced to a skeleton. SKELETONIZER (25) SKELETONIZES (25) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKILLESSNESS (16) SKILLFULNESS (19) SKIMPINESSES (20) SKINNINESSES (16) SKITTISHNESS (19) SKULLDUGGERY (22) [noun] A devious device or trick. | [noun] Dishonest, underhanded, or unscrupulous activities or behaviour. SKYROCKETING (26) [verb] To increase suddenly and extremely; to shoot up; to surge or spike. SLANDEROUSLY (16) SLANGINESSES (13) SLAPHAPPIEST (21) SLAUGHTERERS (16) SLAUGHTERING (17) [verb] To butcher animals, generally for food | [verb] To massacre people in large numbers | [verb] To kill in a particularly brutal manner SLAUGHTEROUS (16) SLAVEHOLDERS (19) [noun] Someone who owns slaves. SLAVEHOLDING (20) SLAVOCRACIES (19) SLEAZINESSES (21) SLEDGEHAMMER (21) [noun] A hammer that consists of a large, heavy, broad and flat block of metal (the head) attached to a handle typically 0.5 meter to 1 meter long. The sledgehammer's design is meant to allow it to be swung powerfully, and to distribute force over a wide area upon impact. | [verb] To strike with a sledgehammer. SLEEPINESSES (14) SLEEPWALKERS (21) SLEEPWALKING (22) [verb] To walk and/or perform other actions while sleeping; to somnambulate. | [noun] The act of walking while not conscious or aware of it, during one's sleep. SLENDERIZING (23) [verb] To make more slender. SLEUTHHOUNDS (19) SLICKENSIDES (19) [noun] A smooth, striated rock surface caused by the friction of one mass sliding over another SLIGHTNESSES (16) SLINKINESSES (16) SLIPPERINESS (16) [noun] The property of being slippery. | [noun] The result or product of being slippery. 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. SLOGANEERING (14) [verb] To make and disseminate slogans; often contrasted with substantive debate | [noun] The act of one who sloganeers. SLOPPINESSES (16) SLOTHFULNESS (18) SLOVENLINESS (15) SLUGGARDNESS (15) SLUGGISHNESS (17) SLUMGULLIONS (15) SLUMPFLATION (19) SLUSHINESSES (15) SLUTTISHNESS (15) SMALLCLOTHES (19) SMALLHOLDERS (18) [noun] A person who owns or runs a smallholding. | [noun] A small slaveholder, a person who owns a smallholding. SMALLHOLDING (19) [noun] A piece of land, smaller than a farm, used for the cultivation of vegetables or the breeding of animals. | [noun] A small plantation or land with a small number of slaves (generally 19 or less). Contrasted with middling plantation (20-49 slaves) and large plantation (50+ and owned by planters). SMARMINESSES (16) SMITHSONITES (17) SMOOTHNESSES (17) SMORGASBORDS (18) [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. SMUDGINESSES (16) SMUTTINESSES (14) SNAGGLETEETH (17) [noun] (plural: snaggleteeth) A tooth inside the mouth that is unaligned or broken | [noun] (plural: snaggletooths) A predatory fish of the Astronesthes genus, so-called because of its teeth. SNAGGLETOOTH (17) [noun] (plural: snaggleteeth) A tooth inside the mouth that is unaligned or broken | [noun] (plural: snaggletooths) A predatory fish of the Astronesthes genus, so-called because of its teeth. SNAPPINESSES (16) SNAPPISHNESS (19) SNAPSHOOTERS (17) SNAPSHOTTING (18) SNEAKINESSES (16) SNICKERSNEES (18) SNIFFINESSES (18) SNIFFISHNESS (21) SNIPERSCOPES (18) SNOBBISHNESS (19) SNOLLYGOSTER (16) [noun] A shrewd person not guided by principles, especially a politician SNOOTINESSES (12) SNOTTINESSES (12) SNOWBOARDERS (18) SNOWBOARDING (19) [verb] To ride a snowboard. | [noun] The sport of sliding downhill on a snowboard. SNOWMOBILERS (19) SNOWMOBILING (20) [noun] The use of a snowmobile for amusement. SNOWMOBILIST (19) SNUBBINESSES (16) SOCIABLENESS (16) SOCIOBIOLOGY (20) [noun] The science that applies the principles of evolutionary biology to the study of social behaviour in both humans and animals. SOCIOLOGESES (15) SOCIOLOGICAL (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to sociology. SOCIOLOGISTS (15) [noun] A scientist studying the field of sociology; a social scientist. SOCIOMETRIES (16) SOCKDOLAGERS (20) [noun] A hard hit, a knockout or finishing blow, or conclusive argument. | [noun] Something large or otherwise exceptional; a whopper. | [noun] A combination of two hooks which close upon each other, by means of a spring, as soon as the fish bites. SOCKDOLOGERS (20) SODDENNESSES (14) SOFTHEADEDLY (23) SOLARIZATION (21) SOLDIERSHIPS (18) [noun] The state of being a soldier. | [noun] The qualities of a soldier, or those becoming a soldier. SOLEMNIFYING (21) SOLEMNNESSES (14) SOLICITATION (14) [noun] The action or instance of soliciting; petition; proposal | [noun] An inchoate offense that consists of a person offering money or inducing another to commit a crime with the specific intent that the person solicited commit the crime SOLICITOUSLY (17) SOLIDARISTIC (15) SOLIDARITIES (13) SOLIFLUCTION (17) [noun] Soil creep caused by waterlogged soil slowly moving downhill on top of an impermeable layer. SOLILOQUISED (22) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLILOQUISES (21) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLILOQUISTS (21) SOLILOQUIZED (31) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLILOQUIZER (30) SOLILOQUIZES (30) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLITARINESS (12) SOLMIZATIONS (23) SOLUBILISING (15) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOLUBILITIES (14) SOLUBILIZING (24) [verb] To make (something) soluble or dispersible, especially by adding a detergent. SOMATOLOGIES (15) SOMATOMEDINS (17) SOMATOPLEURE (16) [noun] A fold of tissue, in the embryo of a vertebrate, from which the walls of the body and the amnion develop. SOMATOSTATIN (14) [noun] A cyclopeptide hormone, secreted by the pancreas, that inhibits the production of certain other hormones SOMATOTROPIN (16) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMBERNESSES (16) SOMERSAULTED (15) [verb] To perform a somersault. SOMERSETTING (15) SOMNAMBULANT (18) [noun] A sleepwalker. | [adjective] Walking as if, or while, asleep; sleepwalking. SOMNAMBULATE (18) SOMNAMBULISM (20) [noun] Sleepwalking SOMNAMBULIST (18) SOMNIFACIENT (19) SONGSTRESSES (13) [noun] A female singer. | [noun] A female songbird. SONGWRITINGS (17) SONNETEERING (13) SONOGRAPHIES (18) SONOROUSNESS (12) SOOTHINGNESS (16) SOOTHSAYINGS (19) SOPHISTICATE (19) [noun] A worldly-wise person. | [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. SOPORIFEROUS (17) SORDIDNESSES (14) SOULLESSNESS (12) SOUNDPROOFED (19) [verb] To make resistant to transmitting sound. SOUTHEASTERN (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the southeast. SOUTHEASTERS (15) [noun] A strong wind blowing from the southeast SOUTHERNMOST (17) [adjective] Farthest south. SOUTHERNNESS (15) SOUTHERNWOOD (19) [noun] An aromatic shrub, Artemisia abrotanum, related to wormwood. SOUTHWESTERN (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the southwest. SOUTHWESTERS (18) [noun] A strong wind blowing from the southwest. | [noun] (more often sou'wester) A waterproof hat, often of oilskin, designed to repel wind and rain. | [noun] (more often sou'wester) A long raincoat, often worn at sea. SPACEFLIGHTS (23) [noun] Flight into, from or through space. | [noun] A voyage in space. SPACEWALKERS (23) SPACEWALKING (24) [verb] To perform a spacewalk. SPACIOUSNESS (16) SPAGHETTINIS (18) SPANAKOPITAS (20) [noun] A Greek dish made with pre-cooked spinach, butter, olive oil, feta cheese, green onions, egg and seasoning in phyllo pastry. SPANOKOPITAS (20) SPARKPLUGGED (23) SPARSENESSES (14) SPASMOLYTICS (21) [noun] Any antispastic drug. SPASTICITIES (16) SPATIALITIES (14) SPATTERDOCKS (21) [noun] A species of water lily, Nuphar advena SPEAKERPHONE (23) [noun] A telephone with a microphone and loudspeaker separate from those in the handset. | [noun] A loudspeaker on a telephone that broadcasts the sound, to use handsfree. SPEAKERSHIPS (23) [noun] The role or status of speaker. SPEARFISHING (21) [noun] A form of fishing in which the fisherman attempts to impale the fish upon a spear, which may be thrust or thrown by hand or with a spear gun. SPEARHEADING (19) [verb] To drive or campaign ardently for, as an effort, project, etc. SPECIALISING (17) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: SPECIALISTIC (18) SPECIALITIES (16) [noun] That in which one specializes; a chosen expertise or talent. | [noun] Particularity. | [noun] A particular or peculiar case. SPECIALIZING (26) [verb] To make distinct or separate, particularly: | [verb] To become distinct or separate, particularly: SPECIATIONAL (16) SPECIFICALLY (24) [adverb] In a specific manner, applying to or naming a particular thing or things, expressly, explicitly | [adverb] For a specific purpose or reason SPECIOSITIES (16) SPECIOUSNESS (16) SPECTACULARS (18) [noun] A spectacular display. | [noun] A pop-up (folded paper element) in material sent by postal mail. SPECTATORIAL (16) SPECTROGRAMS (19) [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a sound changing through time. | [noun] A visual representation of the spectrum of a celestial body's radiation. SPECTROGRAPH (22) [noun] A machine for recording spectra, producing spectrograms. SPECTROMETER (18) [noun] An optical instrument for measuring the absorption of light by chemical substances; typically it will plot a graph of absorption versus wavelength or frequency, and the patterns produced are used to identify the substances present, and their internal structure. SPECTROMETRY (21) SPECTROSCOPE (20) [noun] An optical instrument used for spectrographic analysis . SPECTROSCOPY (23) [noun] The scientific study of spectra. | [noun] The use of spectrometers in chemical analysis. SPECULATIONS (16) [noun] The process of thinking or meditating on a subject. | [noun] The act or process of reasoning a priori from premises given or assumed. | [noun] A conclusion to which the mind comes by speculating; mere theory; notion; conjecture. SPEECHIFYING (26) [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. | [noun] The art of making speeches; rhetoric or oratory. SPEECHLESSLY (22) SPEECHWRITER (22) [noun] Someone who writes speeches for others, especially as a profession SPEEDBALLING (18) SPEEDBOATING (18) SPEEDINESSES (15) SPEEDOMETERS (17) [noun] A device that measures, and indicates the current speed of a vehicle. | [noun] Such a device incorporating an odometer. SPELEOLOGIES (15) SPELEOLOGIST (15) SPELLBINDERS (17) SPELLBINDING (18) [adjective] Engrossing; fascinating; gaining rapt attention; captivating. | [adjective] Having the power to bind magically through the agency of a spell. SPENDTHRIFTS (21) [noun] Someone who spends money improvidently or wastefully. SPERMAGONIUM (19) SPERMATHECAE (21) [noun] A small sac within the reproductive tract of some female invertebrates, such as insects, which stores sperm until it is used to fertilize the ova. SPERMATOCYTE (21) [noun] A male gametocyte, from which a spermatozoon develops. SPERMATOZOAL (25) SPERMATOZOAN (25) SPERMATOZOID (26) [noun] A motile, ciliated male gamete produced in the antheridium of an alga, fern or gymnosperm. SPERMATOZOON (25) [noun] A reproductive cell or gamete of a male, carried in semen, that fertilizes an ovum to produce a zygote. SPERMOPHILES (21) SPESSARTINES (14) [noun] A type of garnet, a neosilicate of manganese and aluminium with the chemical formula Mn32+Al2(SiO4)3. SPESSARTITES (14) SPHERICITIES (19) SPHEROIDALLY (21) SPHEROMETERS (19) SPHEROPLASTS (19) [noun] A cell from which the cell wall has been removed SPHINGOSINES (18) SPHYGMOGRAPH (29) [noun] A mechanical device used to measure blood pressure and pulse. SPICULATIONS (16) SPIEGELEISEN (15) [noun] A ferromanganese alloy containing approximately 15% manganese and small quantities of carbon and silicon. SPIFFINESSES (20) SPINNERETTES (14) SPINSTERHOOD (18) SPIRITEDNESS (15) SPIRITLESSLY (17) SPIRITUALISM (16) [noun] A doctrine, opposing materialism, that claims transcendency of the divine being, the altogether spiritual character of reality and the value of inwardness of consciousness. | [noun] A belief that the dead communicate with the living, especially through a medium. Used in a broader sense than spiritism/Kardecism. | [noun] The quality or state of being spiritual. SPIRITUALIST (14) [noun] One who professes a regard for spiritual things only; one whose employment is of a spiritual character; an ecclesiastic. | [noun] One who maintains the philosophic doctrine of spiritualism. | [noun] (spiritism) One who practises spiritism (a.k.a. spiritualism); a believer in the possibility of communication with the dead; one who attempts to communicate with the dead. SPIRITUALITY (17) [noun] The quality or state of being spiritual. | [noun] Concern for that which is unseen and intangible, as opposed to physical or mundane. | [noun] Appreciation for religious values. SPIRITUALIZE (23) [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. SPIROCHAETES (19) [noun] Any of several coiled bacteria of the order Spirochaetales, most of which are pathogenic to both humans and animals. SPIROMETRIES (16) SPITEFULLEST (17) SPITEFULNESS (17) SPLASHBOARDS (20) [noun] A guard towards the front of a vehicle, to prevent splashing by mud or water from the road. SPLENDIDNESS (16) SPLENOMEGALY (20) [noun] An enlargement of the spleen. SPOKESPEOPLE (22) [noun] A person who acts as the voice of a group of people. SPOKESPERSON (20) [noun] A person who acts as the voice of a group of people. SPONGINESSES (15) SPONSORSHIPS (19) [noun] The state or practice of being a sponsor. | [noun] The aid or support provided by a sponsor; backing or patronage. SPOOKINESSES (18) SPORADICALLY (20) [adverb] At an occasional, infrequent, or irregular frequency SPOROGENESES (15) SPOROGENESIS (15) [noun] The process by which spores are produced. SPORTFISHING (21) SPORTFULNESS (17) SPORTINESSES (14) SPORTIVENESS (17) SPORTSCASTER (16) SPORTSWRITER (17) [noun] Someone who writes about sports-related topics professionally. SPORULATIONS (14) SPOTLESSNESS (14) SPOTLIGHTING (19) [verb] To illuminate with a spotlight. | [verb] To draw attention to. SPOTTINESSES (14) SPRACHGEFUHL (26) [noun] The instinctive or intuitive grasp of the natural idiom of a language. SPREADSHEETS (18) [noun] A sheet of paper, marked with a grid, in which financial data is recorded and totals calculated manually. | [noun] A computer simulation of such a system of recording tabular data, with totals and other formulas calculated automatically. SPRIGHTFULLY (24) SPRIGHTLIEST (18) [adjective] Animated, gay or vivacious; lively, spirited. | [adjective] Of a person: full of life and vigour, especially with a light and springy step. | [adjective] Of or relating to a sprite; ghostly, spectral. SPRINGBOARDS (18) [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. SPRINGHOUSES (18) SPRINGWATERS (18) SPRUCENESSES (16) SPUNKINESSES (18) SPURIOUSNESS (14) SQUARENESSES (21) SQUARISHNESS (24) SQUIRARCHIES (26) SQUIRRELLING (22) [verb] To store in a secretive manner, to hide something for future use | [noun] Storing up, hoarding. | [noun] The sport of hunting squirrels. STABLENESSES (14) STABLISHMENT (19) STADTHOLDERS (17) [noun] The chief magistrate, then later, hereditary chief of state of the Dutch Republic. | [noun] An office formerly held by Danish and Swedish officials, best translated as governor-general. STAGECOACHES (20) [noun] A horse-drawn coach that runs routinely between two destinations to transport passengers and mail. STAGFLATIONS (16) STAGGERINGLY (18) [adverb] (degree) To a breathtaking degree. | [adverb] (manner) Moving with a stagger. STAINABILITY (17) STAKEHOLDERS (20) [noun] A person holding the stakes of bettors, with the responsibility of delivering the pot to the winner of the bet. | [noun] An escrow agent or custodian. | [noun] A person filing an interpleader action, such as a garnishee or trustee, who acknowledges possession of property that is owed to one or more of several other claimants. STALLHOLDERS (16) [noun] A person who operates a market stall. STALWARTNESS (15) 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. STANDARDISES (14) [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. STANDARDIZES (23) [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. STANDARDLESS (14) STANDPATTERS (15) STANDPATTISM (17) STAPEDECTOMY (22) STAPHYLINIDS (21) [noun] Any of the beetle family Staphylinidae, the rove beetles. STARBOARDING (16) [verb] To put to the right, or starboard, side of a vessel. STARTLEMENTS (14) STATIONERIES (12) STATISTICIAN (14) [noun] A person who compiles, interprets, or studies statistics. | [noun] A mathematician with a specialty of statistics. STATUESQUELY (24) STEADINESSES (13) STEALTHINESS (15) STEAMFITTERS (17) STEAMINESSES (14) STEAMROLLERS (14) [noun] A steam-powered heavy road roller | [noun] Any heavy road roller | [noun] (by extension) any seemingly irresistible force STEAMROLLING (15) [verb] To flatten, as if with a steamroller. | [verb] To ruthlessly crush or overwhelm. STEATOPYGIAS (18) STEATOPYGOUS (18) STEATORRHEAS (15) STEELINESSES (12) STEELMAKINGS (19) STEELWORKERS (19) [noun] A person who manufactures or shapes steel. | [noun] A person employed to build steel structures, an ironworker. STEEPLECHASE (19) [noun] A horse race, either across open country, or over an obstacle course | [noun] An athletics event in which the runners have to run 3000 metres round a track, jumping hurdles and a water obstacle along the way | [verb] To take part in a steeplechase event. STEEPLEJACKS (27) [noun] A person whose job involves climbing tall structures like steeples in order to make repairs. STEERAGEWAYS (19) STENOGRAPHER (18) [noun] Someone skilled in the transcription of speech (for example, a secretary who takes dictation) STENOGRAPHIC (20) STENOTHERMAL (17) [adjective] Able to tolerate only a narrow range of temperatures STENOTYPISTS (17) STEPBROTHERS (19) [noun] The son of one's stepparent who is not the son of either of one's biological parents. | [noun] The stepson of one's parent who is not one's half-brother. STEPCHILDREN (20) [noun] The child of one's spouse but not one's own. | [noun] A bereaved child; one who has lost father or mother. STEPDAUGHTER (19) [noun] The daughter of one's spouse and not of oneself. STEPFAMILIES (19) [noun] Any family having one or more stepchildren or stepparents. | [noun] The family of one's stepfather or stepmother; those immediate family members not related by blood. STEREOGRAPHS (18) STEREOGRAPHY (21) [noun] Any technique for representing solid objects in two dimensions | [noun] Stereoscopic photography, and the production of stereographs STEREOISOMER (14) [noun] One of a set of the isomers of a compound that exhibits stereoisomerism STEREOLOGIES (13) STEREOPHONIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to sound reproduction using two channels to give a more natural two-dimensional sound distribution STEREOPTICON (16) [noun] A magic lantern, especially one with two projectors arranged so as to produce dissolving views or combinations of images. STEREOSCOPES (16) [noun] An instrument used for viewing pairs of stereoscopic photographs STEREOSCOPIC (18) [adjective] Of or relating to stereoscopy; three-dimensional. | [adjective] Of or relating to the stereoscope. | [adjective] Designed to be used by both eyes simultaneously, or obtained by imaging from two viewpoints simultaneously. STEREOTACTIC (16) [adjective] Stereotaxic STEREOTYPERS (17) STEREOTYPIES (17) STEREOTYPING (18) [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. STERLINGNESS (13) STERNOCOSTAL (14) STERNUTATION (12) [noun] A sneeze; sneezing, especially as a symptom. STERNUTATORS (12) [noun] Any chemical agent that causes sneezing. STERTOROUSLY (15) STETHOSCOPES (19) [noun] A medical instrument used for listening to sounds produced within the body, often combined with a sphygmomanometer STETHOSCOPIC (21) STEWARDESSES (16) [noun] A female flight attendant (a member of the crew of an airplane who is responsible for the comfort and safety of its passengers). STEWARDSHIPS (21) [noun] The rank or office of a steward. | [noun] The act of caring for or improving with time. STICHOMYTHIA (25) [noun] A technique in drama or poetry, in which alternating lines, or half-lines, are given to alternating characters, voices, or entities. STICHOMYTHIC (27) 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. STICKHANDLER (22) STICKHANDLES (22) [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. STICKINESSES (18) STICKLEBACKS (26) [noun] Any one of numerous species of small fish of the family Gasterosteidae. The back is armed with two or more sharp spines. They inhabit both salt and brackish water, and construct nests from weeds. STIGMASTEROL (15) STIGMATIZING (25) [verb] To characterize as disgraceful or ignominious; to mark with a stigma or stigmata. STILBESTROLS (14) STIMULATIONS (14) [noun] A pushing or goading toward action. | [noun] An activity causing excitement or pleasure; the act of stimulating. | [noun] Any action or condition that creates a response; sensory input. STINGINESSES (13) STIPULATIONS (14) [noun] The act of stipulating; a contracting or bargaining; an agreement. | [noun] Something that is stated or stipulated as a condition of an agreement. | [noun] The situation, arrangement, and structure of the stipules. STOCKBREEDER (21) [noun] A person who breeds and raises livestock. STOCKBROKERS (24) [noun] A person who buys and sells shares (stock) on a stock exchange on behalf of clients. May also provide investment advice and/or company information, depending on the level of service offered (or chosen by the client). STOCKBROKING (25) STOCKHOLDERS (22) [noun] One who owns stock. | [noun] A company that maintains a stock of certain products. STOCKINESSES (18) STOCKINETTES (18) [noun] An elastic textile fabric imitating knitting, of which stockings, undergarments, etc., are made. STOCKJOBBERS (29) [noun] A stock exchange worker who deals only with brokers. | [noun] An unscrupulous stockbroker. STOCKJOBBING (30) STOCKKEEPERS (24) [noun] A keeper of stock or cattle; a herdsman. STOCKTAKINGS (23) STODGINESSES (14) STOMACHACHES (24) STOMATITIDES (15) STOMATITISES (14) STONECUTTERS (14) [noun] Somebody who cuts, carves or dresses stone. | [noun] A machine that is used to cut stone or concrete. STONECUTTING (15) STONEMASONRY (17) STONEWALLERS (15) STONEWALLING (16) [verb] To obstruct. | [verb] To refuse to answer or cooperate, especially in supplying information. | [noun] A refusal to answer or to cooperate. STONYHEARTED (19) STOREKEEPERS (18) [noun] One who runs a shop, either the owner or manager. | [noun] One who is in charge of stores or goods of any kind. | [noun] Any unsaleable item. STORMINESSES (14) STORYBOARDED (19) STORYTELLERS (15) [noun] A person who relates stories through one medium or another to an audience | [noun] A liar | [noun] A game master, particularly in games focused on collaborative storytelling. STORYTELLING (16) [noun] The act and skills of presenting stories and tales. STOUTHEARTED (16) [adjective] Brave, courageous and plucky. | [adjective] Stubborn, resolute. STRABISMUSES (16) STRAIGHTAWAY (22) [adverb] Very soon; quickly; immediately. | [noun] A straight section of a racetrack. | [adjective] Extendinf into the distance in a straight line. STRAIGHTBRED (19) STRAIGHTEDGE (18) [noun] A flat, rectangular tool used to draw, cut or check the straightness of straight lines. | [adjective] Living one's life opposing or eschewing the use of drugs such as alcohol and tobacco. STRAIGHTENED (17) [verb] To cause to become straight. | [verb] To become straight. | [verb] To put in order; to sort; to tidy up. STRAIGHTENER (16) STRAIGHTNESS (16) STRAITJACKET (25) [noun] A jacket-like garment with very long sleeves which can be secured in place, thus preventing the wearer from moving his or her arms. Often used in psychiatric hospitals to prevent patients from injuring themselves or others. | [noun] Any situation seen as confining or restricting. | [verb] To put someone into a straitjacket. STRAITNESSES (12) STRANDEDNESS (14) 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. STRANGULATES (13) [verb] To stop flow through a vessel. | [verb] To strangle. STRAPHANGERS (18) [noun] A person who travels using public transportation (often standing up and holding on to a strap). STRAPHANGING (19) [verb] To ride public transport while standing and holding onto a strap. STRATEGIZING (23) [verb] To formulate a strategy. | [noun] The formulation of a strategy. STRATIGRAPHY (21) [noun] The study of rock layers and the layering process (stratification). | [noun] The layering of deposits, with newer remains overlaying older ones, forming a chronology of the site. STRATOCUMULI (16) [noun] A principal low-level cloud type, predominantly stratiform, in the form of a gray and/or whitish layer or patch, which nearly always has dark parts and is nonfibrous. STRATOSPHERE (17) [noun] Collectively, those layers of the Earth’s crust which primarily comprise stratified deposits. | [noun] The region of the uppermost atmosphere where temperature increases along with the altitude due to the absorption of solar ultraviolet radiation by ozone. The stratosphere extends from the tropopause (10–15 kilometers) to approximately 50 kilometers, where it is succeeded by the mesosphere. STRAWBERRIES (17) [noun] The sweet, usually red, edible fruit of certain plants of the genus Fragaria. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Fragaria (that bears such fruit). | [noun] A dark pinkish red colour, like that of the fruit; strawberry red. STRAWFLOWERS (21) [noun] Any of many Australian plants of the genus Xerochrysum, especially Xerochrysum bracteatum, having deep yellow flowers than can be readily dried. STREAMLINERS (14) STREAMLINING (15) [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. STREETLIGHTS (16) [noun] Any large outdoor light used to illuminate a public area, usually urban. | [noun] The light produced by these lights. STREETSCAPES (16) [noun] The visual elements of a street, including the road, adjoining buildings, sidewalks, street furniture, trees and open spaces, etc, that combine to form the street's character. STREETWALKER (19) [noun] Someone walking in the street; an average citizen. | [noun] A prostitute who looks for customers on the streets and in other public places. 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. STRENGTHENER (16) STREPTOCOCCI (20) [noun] A spherical, gram-positive bacterium of the genus Streptococcus. Although commonly found benignly in the human mouth and gut, and though many species are non-pathogenic, other species can cause diseases including strep throat and more serious conditions. STREPTOLYSIN (17) STREPTOMYCES (21) STREPTOMYCIN (21) [noun] An aminoglycoside and bactericidal antibiotic administered via intramuscular injection. STRICTNESSES (14) STRIDULATING (14) [verb] To make a high-pitched chirping, grating, hissing, or squeaking sound, as male crickets and grasshoppers do, by rubbing certain body parts together. STRIDULATION (13) STRIDULATORY (16) STRIDULOUSLY (16) STRINGCOURSE (15) [noun] A thin projecting course of brickwork or stone that runs horizontally around a building, typically to emphasize the junction between floors. STRINGENCIES (15) STRINGHALTED (17) STRINGPIECES (17) [noun] A long piece of timber, forming a margin or edge of any piece of construction; especially one of the longitudinal pieces supporting a flight or run of stairs. STRINGYBARKS (22) [noun] Any of a number of Australian eucalyptus trees with fibrous bark, or the wood or bark of such trees. STRIPTEASERS (14) STROBILATION (14) STROBOSCOPES (18) [noun] Instrument for studying or observing periodic movement by rendering a moving body visible only at regular intervals. | [noun] A lamp that produces short bursts of light that synchronizes with a camera shutter for photographing fast-moving objects. | [noun] A photograph produced by such a machine. STROBOSCOPIC (20) STROMATOLITE (14) [noun] A laminated, columnar, rock-like structure constituting a large share of all fossils from 3.5 to 0.5 billion years ago, with some still being formed at present, some or all of which result from the deposit of minerals by microorganisms such as cyanobacteria. STRONTIANITE (12) [noun] A grey or yellowish mineral, SrCO3, strontium carbonate, that is an ore of strontium. STROPHANTHIN (20) [noun] Any of several poisonous cardiac glycosides obtained from various African plants STRUCTURALLY (17) [adverb] In terms of structure. STUBBORNNESS (16) [noun] The state of being stubborn. STUDENTSHIPS (18) [noun] The position or role of a student. | [noun] An endowment or scholarship for a student. STUDIOUSNESS (13) STUFFINESSES (18) STUPEFACTION (19) [noun] The state of extreme shock or astonishment. | [noun] A state of insensibility; stupor. STUPEFYINGLY (24) STUPENDOUSLY (18) STUPIDNESSES (15) STURDINESSES (13) STYLIZATIONS (24) SUBANTARCTIC (18) [adjective] Pertaining to a region in the Southern Hemisphere immediately north of Antarctica and covering the many islands of the southern parts of the Indian Ocean, Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean, which are north of the Antarctic Convergence. SUBARACHNOID (20) [adjective] Located or occurring below the arachnoid mater, often specifically between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater SUBAUDITIONS (15) [noun] The act of understanding, or supplying, something not expressed. | [noun] That which is understood or supplied from that which is expressed. SUBBASEMENTS (18) [noun] A basement located beneath another basement SUBCENTRALLY (19) SUBCLUSTERED (17) SUBCOMMITTEE (20) [noun] A committee formed by an existing committee, comprising a subset of its members. SUBCOMMUNITY (23) SUBCOMPONENT (20) SUBCONSCIOUS (18) [noun] That part of the mind that is not consciously perceived; one's innermost thoughts. | [adjective] Partially conscious. | [adjective] Below the level of consciousness. SUBCONTINENT (16) [noun] A large landmass which is either smaller than a continent (such as Greenland), or part of an even larger continent (such as the Indian subcontinent). | [proper noun] The Indian subcontinent, South Asia. SUBCONTRACTS (18) [verb] To contract out portions of a larger contracted project. SUBCULTURING (17) SUBCUTANEOUS (16) [adjective] Pertaining to the fatty layer under the skin. SUBDEBUTANTE (17) SUBDECISIONS (17) SUBDIRECTORS (17) SUBDISTRICTS (17) [noun] A district forming part of a larger district. SUBDIVIDABLE (21) SUBDIVISIONS (18) [noun] A division into smaller pieces of something that has already been divided. | [noun] Such a piece that has been divided. | [noun] A parcel of land that has been divided into lots. SUBDOMINANTS (17) [noun] The fourth tone of a scale. | [noun] The triad built on the subdominant tone. SUBECONOMIES (18) SUBEDITORIAL (15) SUBEPIDERMAL (19) SUBERIZATION (23) SUBGLACIALLY (20) SUBINFEUDATE (18) SUBINTERVALS (17) SUBIRRIGATED (16) SUBIRRIGATES (15) SUBJACENCIES (25) SUBJECTIVELY (29) [adverb] In a subjective manner. SUBJECTIVISE (26) SUBJECTIVISM (28) [noun] The doctrine that reality is created or shaped by the mind. | [noun] The doctrine that knowledge is based in feelings or intuition | [noun] The doctrine that values and moral principles come from attitudes, convention, whim, or preference. SUBJECTIVIST (26) SUBJECTIVITY (29) [noun] The state of being subjective. | [noun] A subjective thought or idea. SUBJECTIVIZE (35) SUBJUGATIONS (22) [noun] The act of subjugating. | [noun] The state of being subjugated; forced control by others. SUBJUNCTIONS (23) SUBJUNCTIVES (26) [noun] A form in the subjunctive mood. | [noun] (grammar) Mood expressing an action or state which is hypothetical or anticipated rather than actual, including wishes and commands. SUBLANGUAGES (16) [noun] A subset of a language SUBLIBRARIAN (16) SUBLICENSING (17) SUBLIMATIONS (16) SUBLIMINALLY (19) SUBLITERATES (14) SUBLITTORALS (14) SUBLUXATIONS (21) [noun] The partial dislocation of one of the bones of a joint. SUBMAXILLARY (26) SUBMERGENCES (19) SUBMERSIBLES (18) [noun] A small nonmilitary, non-nuclear submarine for exploration. | [noun] A retroactive term used for non-nuclear submarines; nuclear submarines are termed "true submarines". | [noun] A term used primarily by some navies for nuclear submarines, termed "true submersibles", because they cannot retroactively declare that their non-nuclear submarines should be called by a different name. SUBMICROGRAM (21) SUBMINIATURE (16) [adjective] Compact or smaller than miniature. SUBMINISTERS (16) SUBMISSIVELY (22) SUBMULTIPLES (18) [noun] A quantity that gives another quantity when multiplied by an integer SUBMUNITIONS (16) [noun] Any part of a weapon (typically a bomb or missile) that separates from a parent munition before or during employment SUBNETWORKED (22) SUBNORMALITY (19) SUBOPTIMIZED (28) SUBOPTIMIZES (27) SUBORBICULAR (18) 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. SUBORDINATES (15) [noun] One who is subordinate. | [verb] To make subservient. | [verb] To treat as of less value or importance. SUBORDINATOR (15) SUBORNATIONS (14) SUBPARAGRAPH (22) SUBPOTENCIES (18) SUBPRINCIPAL (20) SUBPROCESSES (18) SUBROGATIONS (15) SUBSATELLITE (14) SUBSATURATED (15) SUBSCRIPTION (18) [noun] Access to a resource for a period of time, generally for payment. | [noun] The formal acceptance of something, especially when verified with a signature. | [noun] The signing of one's name. SUBSECRETARY (19) SUBSENTENCES (16) SUBSEQUENCES (25) [noun] A subsequent act or thing; a sequel. | [noun] The state of being subsequent. | [noun] A sequence that is contained within a larger one. SUBSEQUENTLY (26) [adverb] Following, afterwards in either time or place. | [adverb] Accordingly, therefore (implying a logical connection or deduction). SUBSERVIENCE (19) [noun] The state of being subservient. SUBSERVIENCY (22) [noun] The state of being subservient; subservience. SUBSIDIARIES (15) [noun] A company owned by a parent company or a holding company, also called daughter company or sister company. | [noun] A subordinate theme. | [noun] One who aids or supplies; an assistant. SUBSIDIARILY (18) SUBSIDIARITY (18) [noun] The principle that initiative (whether in government, business or religion) ought to reside at the lowest feasible level (i.e. at the local or regional level, instead of the national or supranational level, unless the latter presents clear advantages) SUBSISTENCES (16) [noun] Real being; existence. | [noun] The act of maintaining oneself at a minimum level. | [noun] Inherency. SUBSOCIETIES (16) SUBSONICALLY (19) SUBSPECIALTY (21) SUBSTANTIALS (14) SUBSTANTIATE (14) [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 SUBSTANTIVAL (17) SUBSTANTIVES (17) [noun] (grammar) a word that names a person, place, thing or idea; a noun (sensu stricto) | [noun] Part of a text that carries the meaning, such as words and their ordering. | [verb] (grammar) to make a word belonging to another part of speech into a substantive (that is, a noun) or use it as a noun SUBSTITUENTS (14) [noun] Any atom, group, or radical substituted for another, or entering a molecule in place of some other part which is removed | [noun] (grammar) pro-form SUBSTITUTING (15) [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. SUBSTITUTION (14) [noun] The act of substituting or the state of being substituted. | [noun] A substitute or replacement. | [noun] The replacement of an atom, or group of atoms, in a compound, with another. SUBSTITUTIVE (17) SUBSTRUCTURE (16) [noun] The supporting part of a structure (either physical or organizational; the foundation). | [noun] The earth or gravel that the railway tracks are embedded in. SUBSUMPTIONS (18) SUBTEMPERATE (18) SUBTENANCIES (16) SUBTERRANEAN (14) [adjective] Below ground, under the earth, underground SUBTHRESHOLD (21) SUBTLENESSES (14) SUBTOTALLING (15) [verb] To calculate a subtotal. SUBTRACTIONS (16) [noun] The process of subtracting a number from another. | [noun] A calculation involving subtracting. | [noun] The removal of something. SUBUMBRELLAS (18) [noun] The integument of the undersurface of the bell, or disk-shaped body, of a jellyfish. SUBURBANISED (17) SUBURBANISES (16) SUBURBANITES (16) SUBURBANIZED (26) SUBURBANIZES (25) SUBVARIETIES (17) SUBVERSIVELY (23) SUBVOCALIZED (29) [verb] To form (words or statements) in thought and express them inwardly without uttering them aloud. | [adjective] Expressed by speaking inwardly SUBVOCALIZES (28) [verb] To form (words or statements) in thought and express them inwardly without uttering them aloud. SUCCEDANEOUS (17) SUCCEDANEUMS (19) SUCCESSFULLY (22) [adverb] In a successful manner; with success; without failing. SUCCESSIONAL (16) SUCCESSIVELY (22) [adverb] In a serial or successive manner; one following another. SUCCINCTNESS (18) SUDDENNESSES (14) SUDORIFEROUS (16) [adjective] Sweaty or sweating, bearing sweat. SUFFICIENTLY (23) [adverb] (manner) In a sufficient manner; enough. | [adverb] (degree) To a sufficient extent. SUFFIXATIONS (25) SUFFOCATIONS (20) [noun] Asphyxia—a condition in which an extreme decrease in the concentration of oxygen in the body accompanied by an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide leads to loss of consciousness or death. | [noun] A particular act of death or killing by means of asphyxia. SUFFRAGETTES (19) [noun] A female supporter, often militant, of women's right to vote in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. SUGARBERRIES (15) SUGARCOATING (16) [verb] To make superficially more attractive; to give a falsely pleasant appearance to. SUGGESTIVELY (20) SUITABLENESS (14) SULFADIAZINE (25) [noun] A sulfonamide antibiotic that works by halting the production of folic acid inside the bacterial cell, commonly used to treat urinary tract infections. SULFONAMIDES (18) [noun] Any amide of a sulfonic acid RS(=O)2NR'2 | [noun] Any of a group of antibiotics; a sulfa drug SULFONATIONS (15) SULFONYLUREA (18) SULFURETTING (16) SULLENNESSES (12) SULPHURISING (18) SULTRINESSES (12) SUMMARIZABLE (27) SUMMERHOUSES (19) [noun] A house owned not as a primary residence and used as vacation home during warm weather months of the year. | [noun] An outbuilding in a garden where the owners can relax in warm weather. SUMMERSAULTS (16) [noun] Starting on one's feet, an instance of rotating one's body 360 degree while airborne or on the ground, with one's feet going over one's head. SUNSCREENING (15) SUPERABOUNDS (17) [verb] To abound very much; to be superabundant. SUPERALTERNS (14) SUPERANNUATE (14) [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. SUPERATHLETE (17) SUPERBITCHES (21) SUPERBNESSES (16) SUPERBOMBERS (20) SUPERCABINET (18) SUPERCARGOES (17) [noun] An officer on board a merchant ship who has charge of the cargo and its turnover (or the senior of two if one has two, the other being the subcargo; usually historical, since nowadays a person with such a job would remain on shore). SUPERCARRIER (16) SUPERCENTERS (16) 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. SUPERCHARGER (20) [noun] An inlet air compressor for an internal combustion engine (either Otto or Diesel cycle), normally powered from the crankshaft. SUPERCHARGES (20) [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. SUPERCILIARY (19) [noun] A distinct streak of colour above the eyes, as in some birds. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the supercilium or eyebrow. SUPERCILIOUS (16) [adjective] Arrogantly superior; showing contemptuous indifference; haughty. SUPERCLASSES (16) [noun] A high-level class that passes attributes and methods down the hierarchy to subclasses. | [noun] A taxon ranking below a phylum and above a class. SUPERCLUSTER (16) [noun] An extended group of clusters of galaxies SUPERCOILING (17) [noun] The coiling of the DNA helix upon itself; can cause disruption to transcription and lead to cell death SUPERCONDUCT (19) SUPERCOOLING (17) [verb] To cool a material below its transition temperature without that transition occurring | [noun] The process by which a material is supercooled. SUPERCURRENT (16) SUPEREGOISTS (15) SUPERELEVATE (17) SUPEREMINENT (16) [adjective] Superior to or notable above all others; outstanding; supremely remarkable. SUPEREXPRESS (23) SUPERGRAVITY (21) [noun] A field theory combining supersymmetry and general relativity. SUPERGROWTHS (21) SUPERHARDENS (18) SUPERHEATERS (17) SUPERHEATING (18) [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. SUPERHEAVIES (20) SUPERHELICAL (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a superhelix, the shape formed by a helix twisted into a helix SUPERHELICES (19) [noun] The shape formed by a helix which in turn is twisted into a larger helix SUPERHELIXES (24) [noun] The shape formed by a helix which in turn is twisted into a larger helix SUPERHEROINE (17) SUPERHIGHWAY (27) [noun] An expressway, especially one designed for high speeds. | [noun] (by extension) A major route that carries most of the traffic going in a given direction by a specified mode of transportation. | [noun] (metaphoric) The primary mechanism used in the movement of electronic data or information; information superhighway. SUPERHUMANLY (22) 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 SUPERIMPOSES (18) [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. 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). SUPERINDUCES (17) [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). SUPERINFECTS (19) SUPERINTENDS (15) [verb] To oversee the work of others; to supervise. | [verb] To administer the affairs of something or someone. SUPERLATIVES (17) [noun] The highest extent or degree of something. | [noun] (grammar) The form of an adjective that expresses which of several items has the highest degree of the quality expressed by the adjective; in English, formed by appending "-est" to the end of the adjective (for some short adjectives only) or putting "most" before it. | [noun] An adjective used to praise something exceptional. SUPERLAWYERS (20) SUPERMARKETS (20) [noun] A large self-service store that sells groceries and, usually, medications, household goods and/or clothing. | [noun] A chain of such stores. | [noun] A one-stop shop; a place offering a range of products or services. SUPERMASSIVE (19) [adjective] Very or extremely massive. | [adjective] Much larger than usual. SUPERNATANTS (14) [noun] The liquid that lies above a sediment or precipitate; supernate | [noun] Material that floats on the surface of a liquid SUPERNATIONS (14) SUPERNATURAL (14) [noun] A supernatural being | [noun] Supernatural beings and events collectively (when used with definite article: "the supernatural") | [adjective] Above nature; beyond or added to nature, often so considered because it is given by a deity or some force beyond that which humans are born with. SUPERNATURES (14) SUPERORGANIC (17) SUPERORGASMS (17) SUPEROVULATE (17) SUPERPATRIOT (16) SUPERPERSONS (16) SUPERPLASTIC (18) [noun] A superplastic substance. | [adjective] Exhibiting superplasticity. SUPERPLAYERS (19) SUPERPOSABLE (18) SUPERPOWERED (20) SUPERPREMIUM (20) SUPERPROFITS (19) SUPERQUALITY (26) SUPERREALISM (16) SUPERSCHOOLS (19) 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.). SUPERSCRIBES (18) [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.). SUPERSCRIPTS (18) [noun] A type of lettering form that appears as a number, figure, or symbol above the normal line of type, located at the right or left of another symbol or text. | [verb] (of a variable) To provide with a superscript. | [verb] (of a text) To convert to a superscript form. SUPERSECRECY (21) SUPERSEDURES (15) SUPERSELLERS (14) SUPERSENSORY (17) SUPERSESSION (14) SUPERSINGERS (15) SUPERSLEUTHS (17) SUPERSPECIAL (18) SUPERSTARDOM (17) [noun] The status or position of a superstar. SUPERSTATION (14) [noun] A television station that broadcasts nationwide via a satellite carrier SUPERSTITION (14) [noun] A belief or beliefs, not based on human reason or scientific knowledge, that events may be influenced by one's behaviour in some magical or mystical way. | [noun] Excessive nicety; overscrupulousness. SUPERSTRATUM (16) [noun] A stratum that is on top of another | [noun] A language imposed upon a population that previously spoke another language SUPERSTRIKES (18) SUPERSTRINGS (15) [noun] A hypothetical object consisting of a very small one-dimensional string that vibrates in ten (or more) dimensions | [noun] The string (sequence of text characters) that contains a substring. SUPERSURGEON (15) SUPERSYSTEMS (19) SUPERTANKERS (18) [noun] An extremely large tanker ship. SUPERVENIENT (17) SUPERVENTION (17) SUPERVISIONS (17) [noun] The act or instance of supervising. | [noun] Responsible oversight. | [noun] (Cambridge University) A tutorial session for an individual student or a small group. SUPERWEAPONS (19) SUPINENESSES (14) SUPPLEMENTAL (18) [noun] Something that supplements or adds to. | [noun] A requisition or article of legislation that provides additional funding for a program. | [adjective] Acting to supplement. SUPPLEMENTED (19) [verb] To provide or make a supplement to something. SUPPLEMENTER (18) SUPPLENESSES (16) SUPPLICATING (19) [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. SUPPLICATION (18) [noun] An act of supplicating; a humble request. | [noun] A prayer or entreaty to a god. | [noun] In Ancient Rome, a solemn service or day decreed for giving formal thanks to the gods for victory, etc. SUPPLICATORY (21) SUPPOSITIONS (16) [noun] Something that is supposed; an assumption made to account for known facts, conjecture. | [noun] The act or an instance of supposing. SUPPOSITIOUS (16) [adjective] Spurious; substituted for the genuine, counterfeit; fake; supposititious. | [adjective] Imaginary; fictitious, pretended to exist. | [adjective] Hypothetical, based on supposition; suppositional. SUPPRESSANTS (16) [noun] A substance that suppresses. SUPPRESSIBLE (18) SUPPRESSIONS (16) SUPPURATIONS (16) SUPRALIMINAL (16) SUPRAORBITAL (16) [noun] An ossification above the eye sockets | [adjective] Located immediately above the eye sockets, where in humans the eyebrows are located. SUPRAVITALLY (20) SUPREMACISTS (18) [noun] A person who advocates the supremacy of one particular group over all others. SUPREMATISMS (18) SUPREMATISTS (16) SUREFOOTEDLY (19) SURFBOARDERS (18) SURFBOARDING (19) [verb] To use a surfboard; to surf. SURMOUNTABLE (16) SURPASSINGLY (18) SURPRISINGLY (18) [adverb] In a way that causes surprise because it is unexpected, or unusual. SURREALISTIC (14) SURREBUTTERS (14) [noun] The plaintiff's reply in pleading to a defendant's rebuttal. SURREJOINDER (20) [noun] A plaintiff's answer to the defendant's rejoinder. SURRENDERING (14) [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. SURROUNDINGS (14) [noun] An outlying area; area in proximity to something | [noun] An environment | [noun] The area surrounding someone or something, together with the objects and circumstances in the vicinity; the environment or ambiance. SURVEILLANCE (17) [noun] Close observation of an individual or group; person or persons under suspicion. | [noun] Continuous monitoring of disease occurrence for example. | [noun] Systematic observation of places and people by visual, aural, electronic, photographic or other means. SURVEILLANTS (15) SURVIVALISTS (18) [noun] A person who believes in being prepared to survive and is actively preparing for possible future emergencies and disruptions in local, regional, national, or international social or political order. SURVIVORSHIP (23) [noun] The state of being a survivor. | [noun] The number or precentage of young that survive to adulthood. | [noun] A right whereby a person becomes entitled to property by reason of his having survived another person who had an interest in it. It is one of the elements of a joint tenancy. SUSCEPTIVITY (22) [noun] Capacity for receiving; susceptibility. SUSPENSELESS (14) SUSPENSIVELY (20) SUSPENSORIES (14) SUSPICIONING (17) SUSPICIOUSLY (19) [adverb] (manner) In a way suggesting suspicion. | [adverb] (manner) In a way that arouses suspicion. | [adverb] (evaluative) Causing suspicion. SUSPIRATIONS (14) SUSTENTATION (12) [noun] The act or the result of sustaining; sustainment. | [noun] The aggregate of the functions by which a living organism is maintained in a normal condition of weight and growth. | [noun] The scheme by which the ministers of the Free Church of Scotland are supported by voluntary contributions not local or congregational, but with a national altruism or solidarity paid into a great central fund, out of which equal stipends are paid to all alike. SUSTENTATIVE (15) SUSURRATIONS (12) SUZERAINTIES (21) SVELTENESSES (15) SWAGGERINGLY (21) SWAINISHNESS (18) SWALLOWTAILS (18) [noun] The forked tail of a swallow. | [noun] Anything, such as a burgee, of a similar forked shape. | [noun] A type of tailcoat with two long tapering tails.Wp SWAMPINESSES (19) SWANKINESSES (19) SWASHBUCKLED (27) [verb] To take part in exciting romantic adventures. SWASHBUCKLER (26) [noun] A swordsman or fencer who engages in showy or extravagant sword play. | [noun] A daring adventurer. | [noun] A kind of period adventure story with flashy action and lighthearted tone. SWASHBUCKLES (26) [verb] To take part in exciting romantic adventures. SWEATERDRESS (16) SWEATINESSES (15) SWEEPINGNESS (18) SWELTERINGLY (19) SWINGLETREES (16) [noun] A bar behind draft animals and in front of a load, such as a wagon, that balances the load. Generally the animals are attached at the ends and the wagon or other load to a pivot in the middle of the singletree. SWITCHBACKED (29) SWITCHBLADES (23) [noun] A folding knife with a blade which opens automatically (under spring pressure) when a button is pressed. | [verb] To attack or cut with a switchblade. | [verb] To spring open or up. SWITCHBOARDS (23) [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. SWORDPLAYERS (21) SYCOPHANCIES (24) SYCOPHANTISH (25) SYCOPHANTISM (24) SYLLABICALLY (22) SYLLABICATED (20) SYLLABICATES (19) SYLLABIFYING (24) SYLVICULTURE (20) [noun] The care and development of forests in order to obtain a product or provide a benefit; forestry. SYMBOLICALLY (24) [adverb] In a symbolic manner. | [adverb] By means of symbols or a symbol. | [adverb] As symbols or a symbol. SYMMETALLISM (21) SYMMETRIZING (29) SYMPATHETICS (24) SYMPATHISING (23) [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. SYMPATHIZERS (31) [noun] A person who sympathizes (with a political cause, a side in a conflict, etc.); a supporter. | [noun] A person who has, shows or expresses sympathy (with another person or people); a person who enters into the feelings of another. SYMPATHIZING (32) [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. SYMPOSIARCHS (24) SYNAESTHESES (18) SYNAESTHESIA (18) [noun] A neurological or psychological phenomenon whereby a particular sensory stimulus triggers a second kind of sensation. | [noun] (by extension) The association of one sensory perception with, or description of it in terms of, a different perception that is not experienced at the same time. | [noun] A literary or artistic device whereby one kind of sensation is described in the terms of another. SYNAESTHESIS (18) SYNAPTICALLY (22) SYNAPTOSOMAL (19) SYNAPTOSOMES (19) SYNARTHROSES (18) [noun] A type of joint in which two bones are connected rigidly by fibrous tissue SYNARTHROSIS (18) [noun] A type of joint in which two bones are connected rigidly by fibrous tissue SYNCHRONEITY (23) SYNCHRONICAL (22) 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. SYNCHRONISES (20) [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. SYNCHRONISMS (22) 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. SYNCHRONIZER (29) SYNCHRONIZES (29) [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. SYNCHROSCOPE (24) SYNCHROTRONS (20) [noun] A form of cyclotron in which charged particles are accelerated by an electric field that is synchronized with a magnetic field that keeps them in a circular path. SYNCOPATIONS (19) SYNCRETISING (18) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNCRETISTIC (19) SYNCRETIZING (27) [verb] To combine different elements, or to unite or reconcile different beliefs. | [verb] To merge different inflexional forms. SYNDACTYLIES (21) SYNDACTYLISM (23) SYNDETICALLY (21) SYNDICALISMS (20) SYNDICALISTS (18) SYNDICATIONS (18) [noun] The act of syndicating a news feature by publishing it in multiple newspapers etc, simultaneously SYNECOLOGIES (18) SYNERGICALLY (21) SYNESTHESIAS (18) SYNONYMITIES (20) SYNONYMIZING (30) SYNONYMOUSLY (23) SYNOPTICALLY (22) SYNTHESIZERS (27) [noun] An electronic instrument that creates its sounds with electronics and has a keyboard. | [noun] An electronic instrument module that creates its sounds with electronics and does not have any keyboard. | [noun] An electronic circuit that generates an electronic signal oscillation with accurate timing from a reference oscillator. SYNTHESIZING (28) [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. SYSTEMATISED (18) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATISES (17) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATISMS (19) SYSTEMATISTS (17) SYSTEMATIZED (27) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATIZER (26) SYSTEMATIZES (26) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMICALLY (22) [adverb] In a systemic manner. | [adverb] In a manner that affects an entire system.

13-Letter Words (709)

SACCHARIFYING (27) SACCHARIMETER (22) SACCHAROMETER (22) [noun] A hydrometer used to measure the sugar content of a liquid. SACCHAROMYCES (27) SACERDOTALISM (18) SACERDOTALIST (16) SACRAMENTALLY (20) SACRIFICIALLY (23) SACROSANCTITY (20) SADOMASOCHISM (23) [noun] The practices of sadism and masochism collectively, usually in reference to consensual practices within the BDSM community. | [noun] Sadism and masochism: the (often sexual) enjoyment by one person of both inflicting and receiving pain. SADOMASOCHIST (21) SAFECRACKINGS (25) SAGACIOUSNESS (16) SAILBOARDINGS (17) SAINTLINESSES (13) SALACIOUSNESS (15) SALESMANSHIPS (20) SALINIZATIONS (22) SALMONBERRIES (17) [noun] A bush, Rubus spectabilis, found on the Pacific coast of North America. | [noun] The fruit from this bush, similar in appearance and texture to the blackberry and raspberry. SALMONELLOSES (15) SALMONELLOSIS (15) [noun] Any of several diseases caused by infection with Salmonella bacteria SALPINGITISES (16) SALUTATORIANS (13) [noun] The person who graduates high school with the second-highest GPA and thus gets to give a salutatorian's address during the graduation ceremony. SALVATIONISMS (18) SALVATIONISTS (16) [noun] A person who adheres to the doctrine of salvation. SANCTIMONIOUS (17) [adjective] Making a show of being morally better than others, especially hypocritically pious. | [adjective] Holy, devout. SANDPAINTINGS (17) SANITIZATIONS (22) SANSCULOTTISH (18) SANSCULOTTISM (17) SAPLESSNESSES (15) SAPROGENICITY (21) SARCASTICALLY (20) [adverb] In a sarcastic manner. SARCOPHAGUSES (21) SARSAPARILLAS (15) [noun] Any of various tropical (Central and South) American vines of the genus Smilax, such as Smilax regelii, which have fragrant roots. | [noun] The dried roots of these plants, or a flavoring material extracted from these roots. | [noun] A beverage (soft drink) flavored with this root, such as root beer. SATISFACTIONS (18) [noun] A fulfilment of a need or desire. | [noun] The pleasure obtained by such fulfillment. | [noun] The source of such gratification. SATURNALIANLY (16) SCALARIFORMLY (23) SCANDALMONGER (19) [noun] A person who trades in gossip; one who collects and disseminates rumors. SCAPEGOATISMS (20) SCARIFICATION (20) SCATTERATIONS (15) SCATTERBRAINS (17) [noun] A flighty, disorganized or forgetful person. | [noun] A flighty, disorganized or forgetful person. SCENESHIFTERS (21) SCENOGRAPHERS (21) SCENOGRAPHIES (21) SCHADENFREUDE (23) [noun] Malicious enjoyment derived from observing someone else's misfortune. SCHEMATICALLY (25) SCHISMATIZING (30) SCHISTOSITIES (18) SCHIZOPHRENES (32) SCHIZOPHRENIA (32) [noun] A psychiatric diagnosis denoting a persistent, often chronic, mental illness characterised by abnormal perception, thinking, behavior and emotion, often marked by delusions. | [noun] Any condition in which disparate or mutually exclusive activities coexist; a lack of decision between options. SCHIZOPHRENIC (34) [noun] A person suffering from schizophrenia. | [adjective] Of or relating to schizophrenia. | [adjective] (of a person) Afflicted with schizophrenia; having difficulty with perception of reality. SCHOLASTICATE (20) SCHOLASTICISM (22) [noun] A tradition or school of philosophy, originating in the Middle Ages, that combines classical philosophy with Catholic theology SCHOOLFELLOWS (24) [noun] A person who was a fellow attendee at one's school. SCHOOLMARMISH (25) SCHOOLMASTERS (20) [noun] A male teacher. | [noun] Male teacher in charge of a school, usually a small one. | [noun] Anything that teaches. SCHOOLTEACHER (23) [noun] A teacher working in a school. SCHUSSBOOMERS (22) SCINTIGRAPHIC (23) SCINTILLANTLY (18) SCINTILLATING (16) [verb] To give off sparks; to shine as if emanating sparks; to twinkle or glow. | [verb] To throw off like sparks. | [adjective] That scintillates with brief flashes of light; sparkling. SCINTILLATION (15) [noun] A flash of light; a spark. | [noun] The twinkling of a star or other celestial body caused by turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere. | [noun] The flash of light produced by something (especially a phosphor) when it absorbs ionizing radiation. SCINTILLATORS (15) [noun] Any substance that glows under the action of photons or other high-energy particles SCLERENCHYMAS (25) SCLERODERMATA (18) SCLEROPROTEIN (17) [noun] Any of many fibrous proteins found in connective tissue etc. SCRAPPINESSES (19) SCRATCHBOARDS (23) SCRAWNINESSES (18) SCREENWRITERS (18) [noun] One who writes for the screen, who writes drama for film or television; especially a professional who knows the conventions appropriate to such work. SCRIMSHANDERS (21) [verb] To make an item of scrimshaw. | [verb] To engrave fanciful designs on (shells, whales' teeth, etc.). SCRIPTWRITERS (20) [noun] A person who writes scripts. SCRUFFINESSES (21) SCRUMPTIOUSLY (22) SCULPTURESQUE (26) [adjective] Like or suggesting sculpture: shapely, statuelike, etc. SEASICKNESSES (19) SEASONALITIES (13) SEAWORTHINESS (19) SECESSIONISMS (17) SECESSIONISTS (15) [noun] A person who secedes or supports secession from a political union or an alliance or organisation. SECLUSIVENESS (18) SECOBARBITALS (19) SECONDARINESS (16) SECRETAGOGUES (17) [noun] A substance which promotes secretion. SECRETARYSHIP (23) SECRETIVENESS (18) SECTARIANISMS (17) SECTARIANIZED (25) [verb] To imbue with sectarian feelings; to subject to the control of a sect. SECTARIANIZES (24) [verb] To imbue with sectarian feelings; to subject to the control of a sect. SECTIONALISMS (17) SEDIMENTATION (16) [noun] The separation of a suspension of solid particles into a concentrated slurry and a supernatant liquid, either to concentrate the solid or to clarify the liquid. SEDIMENTOLOGY (20) SEDITIOUSNESS (14) SEDUCTIVENESS (19) SEGMENTATIONS (16) [noun] The act or an instance of dividing into segments | [noun] The state of being divided into segments | [noun] The partitioning of an image into groups of pixels SEISMOGRAPHER (21) SEISMOGRAPHIC (23) SEISMOLOGICAL (18) SEISMOLOGISTS (16) SEISMOMETRIES (17) SELECTIONISTS (15) SELECTIVENESS (18) [noun] The state of being selective; discernment. SELECTIVITIES (18) SELENOCENTRIC (17) SELENOLOGICAL (16) SELENOLOGISTS (14) SELFISHNESSES (19) SEMASIOLOGIES (16) SEMIARIDITIES (16) SEMIAUTOMATIC (19) [noun] A semi-automatic firearm, especially such a pistol. | [noun] A semi-automatic transmission | [adjective] Partially automatic. SEMICIVILIZED (30) [adjective] Somewhat or partially civilized. SEMICLASSICAL (19) [adjective] Describing classical music of broad, popular appeal | [adjective] Describing any of various approximations to either relativistic or quantum mechanical physics that retains elements of classical physics SEMICONDUCTOR (20) [noun] A substance with electrical properties intermediate between a good conductor and a good insulator. SEMICONSCIOUS (19) [adjective] Neither fully conscious nor unconscious, partially aware but confused or distracted. SEMIDIAMETERS (18) [noun] The apparent radius of a star etc, when viewed from Earth. | [noun] A radius: half of a diameter. SEMIEMPIRICAL (21) SEMIEVERGREEN (19) SEMIFINALISTS (18) SEMILEGENDARY (20) SEMILITERATES (15) [noun] A person who is semiliterate. SEMIMONTHLIES (20) SEMIPARASITES (17) SEMIPARASITIC (19) SEMIPERMANENT (19) [adjective] Neither temporary nor entirely permanent; of indefinite duration. SEMIPERMEABLE (21) [adjective] Permeable to some things and not to others, as a cell membrane which allows some molecules through but blocks other substances. SEMIPOLITICAL (19) SEMIPORCELAIN (19) SEMIRELIGIOUS (16) SEMISEDENTARY (19) SEMISYNTHETIC (23) [noun] Any compound that is synthesized by chemically modifying a natural material. | [adjective] Synthesized by chemically modifying a natural material SEMITONICALLY (20) SEMPITERNALLY (20) SENSATIONALLY (16) [adverb] In a sensational manner. SENSELESSNESS (13) SENSIBILITIES (15) [noun] The ability to sense, feel or perceive; responsiveness to sensory stimuli; sensitivity. | [noun] Emotional or artistic awareness; keen sensitivity to matters of feeling or creative expression. | [noun] Excessive emotional awareness; the fact or quality of being overemotional. SENSITISATION (13) [noun] The process of making something sensitive. SENSITIVENESS (16) SENSITIVITIES (16) [noun] The quality or state of being sensitive; sensitiveness. | [noun] The ability of an organism or organ to respond to external stimuli. | [noun] The proportion of individuals in a population that will be correctly identified in a binary classification test. SENSITIZATION (22) [noun] The process of making something sensitive. SENSITOMETERS (15) [noun] An instrument used to measure the sensitivity of photographic film to light. SENSITOMETRIC (17) SENSORINEURAL (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the sensory nerves SENTENTIOUSLY (16) SENTIMENTALLY (18) SEPARABLENESS (17) SEPARATIONIST (15) SEPTENTRIONAL (15) SEQUESTRATING (23) [verb] To sequester. SEQUESTRATION (22) [noun] The process or act of sequestering; a putting aside or separating. SERENDIPITIES (16) [noun] A combination of events which have come together by chance to make a surprisingly good or wonderful outcome. | [noun] An unsought, unintended, and/or unexpected, but fortunate, discovery and/or learning experience that happens by accident. SERENDIPITOUS (16) [adjective] By serendipity; by unexpected good fortune | [adjective] Good, beneficial, favorable SERIALIZATION (22) SERICULTURIST (15) SERIOUSNESSES (13) SERODIAGNOSES (15) SERODIAGNOSIS (15) [noun] A diagnosis based on a reaction of a patient's blood serum SEROLOGICALLY (19) SERPIGINOUSLY (19) SERRIEDNESSES (14) SERVILENESSES (16) SESQUITERPENE (24) [noun] Any terpene formed from three isoprene units, and having fifteen carbon atoms; includes several plant pigments such as the flavones. SEXAGENARIANS (21) [noun] A person who is 60 years old or between the ages of 60 and 69. SEXDECILLIONS (23) SEXLESSNESSES (20) SEXPLOITATION (22) [noun] Sexual exploitation in the media (especially film). SEXTUPLICATED (25) SEXTUPLICATES (24) SHADOWINESSES (20) SHALLOWNESSES (19) SHAMELESSNESS (18) SHAPELESSNESS (18) SHAPELINESSES (18) SHARECROPPERS (22) [noun] A person who enters an agreement with a land owner to farm the land and then pay a portion (share) of the produce as rent; one who sharecrops. SHARECROPPING (23) [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. | [noun] The system where a tenant farmer, especially in the southern United States, farms the land in exchange for a portion of the crops. SHARPSHOOTERS (21) [noun] A person trained to shoot precisely with a rifle; a marksman. SHARPSHOOTING (22) SHEEPHERDINGS (23) SHEEPSHEARERS (21) SHEEPSHEARING (22) SHELLCRACKERS (24) SHEPHERDESSES (22) [noun] A female shepherd. | [noun] A large and deep armchair with a cushion. SHIFTLESSNESS (19) SHIPBUILDINGS (22) SHORTCHANGERS (22) SHORTCHANGING (23) [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. SHUFFLEBOARDS (25) SHUTTLECOCKED (25) SICKISHNESSES (22) SIDESPLITTING (17) [adjective] (of laughter) Intensely uncontrollable and genuine. | [adjective] Exceptionally funny; hilarious. SIGHTLESSNESS (17) SIGHTLINESSES (17) SIGMOIDOSCOPY (24) [noun] Internal examination of the sigmoid colon SIGNALIZATION (23) SIGNIFICANCES (21) SIGNIFICANTLY (22) [adverb] In a significant manner or to a significant extent. SIGNIFICATION (19) [noun] The act of signifying, or something that is signified; significance. | [noun] Evidence for the existence of something. | [noun] A meaning of a word. SIGNIFICATIVE (22) [adjective] (usually followed by of) That tends to signify or indicate; indicative | [adjective] That has meaning or significance; significant SILHOUETTISTS (16) SILVERBERRIES (18) [noun] A plant in the genus Elaeagnus, of about 50-70 species of deciduous or evergreen shrubs or small trees with alternate leaves, primarily native to temperate and subtropical regions of Asia. | [noun] The fruit of such a plant. SILVERINESSES (16) SILVICULTURAL (18) SILVICULTURES (18) SINCERENESSES (15) SINGULARITIES (14) [noun] The state of being singular, distinct, peculiar, uncommon or unusual | [noun] A point where all parallel lines meet | [noun] A point where a measured variable reaches unmeasurable or infinite value SINGULARIZING (24) [verb] To make singular. SINLESSNESSES (13) SINTERABILITY (18) SINUOUSNESSES (13) SIPHONOPHORES (23) [noun] Any of various transparent marine hydrozoans, of the order Siphonophorae, that float or swim as colonies of polyps. SIPHONOSTELES (18) [noun] A type of stele in which the vascular tissue in the stem forms a cylinder surrounding a central pith and possessing leaf gaps. SITUATIONALLY (16) SIZABLENESSES (24) SKATEBOARDERS (20) [noun] A person who rides a skateboard. SKATEBOARDING (21) [verb] To use a skateboard. | [noun] The act of riding on a skateboard SKELETONISING (18) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKELETONIZERS (26) SKELETONIZING (27) [verb] To reduce to a skeleton. SKETCHINESSES (22) SKULDUGGERIES (20) SLAVEHOLDINGS (21) SLAVISHNESSES (19) SLEDGEHAMMERS (22) [noun] A hammer that consists of a large, heavy, broad and flat block of metal (the head) attached to a handle typically 0.5 meter to 1 meter long. The sledgehammer's design is meant to allow it to be swung powerfully, and to distribute force over a wide area upon impact. SLEEPLESSNESS (15) [noun] Lack of sleep; the property of being sleepless. SLENDERNESSES (14) SLIPSTREAMING (18) [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. SLOUCHINESSES (18) SLUMPFLATIONS (20) SMALLHOLDINGS (20) [noun] A piece of land, smaller than a farm, used for the cultivation of vegetables or the breeding of animals. | [noun] A small plantation or land with a small number of slaves (generally 19 or less). Contrasted with middling plantation (20-49 slaves) and large plantation (50+ and owned by planters). SNOLLYGOSTERS (17) [noun] A shrewd person not guided by principles, especially a politician SNOWBOARDINGS (20) SNOWMOBILINGS (21) SNOWMOBILISTS (20) SOCIABILITIES (17) SOCIALIZATION (24) [noun] The process of learning how to live in a way acceptable to one's own society, said especially about children. | [noun] The act of interacting with others, of being social. | [noun] Taking under government control as implementing socialism. SOCIOCULTURAL (17) [adjective] Of or relating to both society and culture. SOCIOECONOMIC (21) [adjective] Of or pertaining to social and economic factors. SOCIOLINGUIST (16) [noun] A person who studies sociolinguistics. SOFTHEARTEDLY (23) SOLARIZATIONS (22) SOLDERABILITY (19) SOLEMNIZATION (24) SOLICITATIONS (15) [noun] The action or instance of soliciting; petition; proposal | [noun] An inchoate offense that consists of a person offering money or inducing another to commit a crime with the specific intent that the person solicited commit the crime SOLICITORSHIP (20) SOLIFLUCTIONS (18) SOLILOQUISING (23) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. SOLILOQUIZERS (31) SOLILOQUIZING (32) [verb] To perform a soliloquy; (of a character) to talk to oneself. | [noun] Something spoken in soliloquy. SOLVABILITIES (18) SOMATOLOGICAL (18) SOMATOPLEURES (17) [noun] A fold of tissue, in the embryo of a vertebrate, from which the walls of the body and the amnion develop. SOMATOSENSORY (18) [adjective] Of or pertaining to the perception of sensory stimuli produced by the skin or internal organs SOMATOSTATINS (15) SOMATOTROPHIN (20) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMATOTROPINS (17) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMERSAULTING (16) [verb] To perform a somersault. | [noun] An instance of performing a somersault. SOMNAMBULATED (20) SOMNAMBULATES (19) SOMNAMBULISMS (21) SOMNAMBULISTS (19) SOMNIFACIENTS (20) SONGFULNESSES (17) SONNETEERINGS (14) SOPHISTICALLY (23) 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. SOPHISTICATES (20) [noun] A worldly-wise person. SORBABILITIES (17) SORROWFULNESS (19) SOTERIOLOGIES (14) SOTTISHNESSES (16) SOULFULNESSES (16) SOUNDPROOFING (20) [verb] To make resistant to transmitting sound. | [noun] Something that prevents sound from traveling through it, such as is put on walls so adjacent areas are not disturbed by noise. | [noun] The act of installing material to dampen sound. SOUTHEASTERLY (19) [noun] A strong wind or storm from the southeast. | [adjective] Situated in, or pointing to, the southeast | [adjective] (chiefly of a wind) coming from the southeast SOUTHEASTWARD (20) [adjective] In or toward the southeast | [adverb] Toward the southeast SOUTHERNWOODS (20) [noun] An aromatic shrub, Artemisia abrotanum, related to wormwood. SOUTHWESTERLY (22) [noun] A strong wind or storm from the southwest. | [adjective] Situated in, or pointing to, the southwest | [adjective] (chiefly of a wind) coming from the southwest SOUTHWESTWARD (23) [adjective] In or toward the southwest | [adverb] Toward the southwest SOVEREIGNTIES (17) [noun] (of a polity) The state of making laws and controlling resources without the coercion of other nations. | [noun] (of a ruler) Supreme authority over all things. | [noun] (of a person) The liberty to decide one's thoughts and actions. SOVIETIZATION (25) SPAGHETTILIKE (23) SPARKPLUGGING (24) SPASMODICALLY (23) SPEAKERPHONES (24) [noun] A telephone with a microphone and loudspeaker separate from those in the handset. | [noun] A loudspeaker on a telephone that broadcasts the sound, to use handsfree. SPECIALNESSES (17) SPECIFICATION (22) [noun] An explicit set of requirements to be satisfied by a material, product, or service. | [noun] An act of specifying. SPECIFICITIES (22) [noun] The state of being specific rather than general. | [noun] The extent to which a characteristic is specific to a given person, place, or thing; thus: SPECTACULARLY (22) [adverb] In a spectacular manner, extraordinarily, amazingly. SPECTATORSHIP (22) SPECTINOMYCIN (24) [noun] An aminocyclitol antibiotic produced by the bacterium Streptomyces spectabilis. SPECTROGRAPHS (23) [noun] A machine for recording spectra, producing spectrograms. SPECTROGRAPHY (26) SPECTROMETERS (19) [noun] An optical instrument for measuring the absorption of light by chemical substances; typically it will plot a graph of absorption versus wavelength or frequency, and the patterns produced are used to identify the substances present, and their internal structure. SPECTROMETRIC (21) SPECTROSCOPES (21) [noun] An optical instrument used for spectrographic analysis . SPECTROSCOPIC (23) SPECULARITIES (17) SPECULATIVELY (23) SPEECHWRITERS (23) [noun] Someone who writes speeches for others, especially as a profession SPEEDBOATINGS (19) SPELEOLOGICAL (18) SPELEOLOGISTS (16) SPERMATOCYTES (22) [noun] A male gametocyte, from which a spermatozoon develops. SPERMATOGENIC (20) SPERMATOGONIA (18) [noun] Any of the undifferentiated cells in the male gonads that become spermatocytes; a spermatoblast SPERMATOPHORE (22) [noun] A spermospore. | [noun] A capsule or pocket enclosing a number of spermatozoa, found in many annelids, brachiopods, insects, mollusks, and crustaceans. SPERMATOPHYTE (25) [noun] Any plant that bears seeds rather than spores SPERMATOZOANS (26) SPERMATOZOIDS (27) [noun] A motile, ciliated male gamete produced in the antheridium of an alga, fern or gymnosperm. SPHYGMOGRAPHS (30) [noun] A mechanical device used to measure blood pressure and pulse. SPIEGELEISENS (16) SPINELESSNESS (15) SPINSTERHOODS (19) SPIRITUALISMS (17) SPIRITUALISTS (15) [noun] One who professes a regard for spiritual things only; one whose employment is of a spiritual character; an ecclesiastic. | [noun] One who maintains the philosophic doctrine of spiritualism. | [noun] (spiritism) One who practises spiritism (a.k.a. spiritualism); a believer in the possibility of communication with the dead; one who attempts to communicate with the dead. 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. SPIRITUALIZES (24) [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. SPIRITUALNESS (15) SPIRITUALTIES (15) SPIROCHETOSES (20) SPIROCHETOSIS (20) SPLASHINESSES (18) SPLENDIFEROUS (19) [adjective] Beautiful, splendid SPLENECTOMIES (19) [noun] The surgical removal of the spleen. SPLENECTOMIZE (28) SPLENETICALLY (20) [adverb] In a splenetic manner SPOKESMANSHIP (26) SPOKESPERSONS (21) [noun] A person who acts as the voice of a group of people. SPONDYLITISES (19) SPONTANEITIES (15) SPONTANEOUSLY (18) [adverb] In a spontaneous manner; naturally; voluntarily. SPOROPOLLENIN (17) SPORTFISHINGS (22) SPORTSCASTERS (17) SPORTSMANLIKE (21) SPORTSMANSHIP (22) [noun] The behaviour exhibited in playing sports, either good or bad. | [noun] The good attitude/behaviour displayed by players of a game; fairness, determination, winning or losing gracefully. SPORTSWRITERS (18) [noun] Someone who writes about sports-related topics professionally. SPORTSWRITING (19) SPRACHGEFUHLS (27) SPREADABILITY (21) SPRIGHTLINESS (19) SPRINGINESSES (16) SQUALIDNESSES (23) SQUASHINESSES (25) SQUEAMISHNESS (27) SQUEEZABILITY (36) SQUIREARCHIES (27) [noun] The landowning gentry. SQUISHINESSES (25) STABILIZATION (24) [noun] The process of stabilizing. | [noun] The result of being stabilized. | [noun] A preliminary medical process for sick or injured people to attempt to keep their medical condition from deteriorating too much and too quickly before being treated in depth at a medical facility. STABLISHMENTS (20) STAGGERBUSHES (20) STANDARDBREDS (18) [noun] A breed of horse bred specifically for harness racing STANDARDISING (16) [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. STANDARDIZING (25) [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. STANDOFFISHLY (26) STANDPATTISMS (18) STAPHYLOCOCCI (27) [noun] A spherical gram-positive parasitic bacterium of the genus Staphylococcus, causing blisters, septicemia, and other infections STARCHINESSES (18) STATELESSNESS (13) STATELINESSES (13) STATESMANLIKE (19) STATESMANSHIP (20) [noun] The craft or skill of being a statesman, of leading a government well. STATIONMASTER (15) [noun] The person in charge of a railroad station, usually an employee of a particular railroad by which the station is owned, but sometimes an employee of a separate corporation, such as one owning a station used by two or more railroads. STATISTICALLY (18) [adverb] In a statistical way. | [adverb] From a statistical point of view. | [adverb] From statistical evidence. STATISTICIANS (15) [noun] A person who compiles, interprets, or studies statistics. | [noun] A mathematician with a specialty of statistics. STAUNCHNESSES (18) STEADFASTNESS (17) [noun] Loyalty in the face of trouble and difficulty. | [noun] Steadfast resolution. 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 STEEPLEBUSHES (20) STEEPLECHASER (20) STEEPLECHASES (20) [noun] A horse race, either across open country, or over an obstacle course | [noun] An athletics event in which the runners have to run 3000 metres round a track, jumping hurdles and a water obstacle along the way STEGOSAURUSES (14) [noun] A stegosaur, a member of the suborder Stegosauria, of the order Ornithischia of the middle Jurassic to early Cretaceous period. | [noun] A member of the genus Stegosaurus within this suborder. STENOGRAPHERS (19) [noun] Someone skilled in the transcription of speech (for example, a secretary who takes dictation) STENOGRAPHIES (19) STEPDAUGHTERS (20) [noun] The daughter of one's spouse and not of oneself. STEPHANOTISES (18) [noun] Any of the genus Stephanotis of climbing asclepiadaceous shrubs with large white waxy flowers in cymes. | [noun] A perfume said to be prepared from the flowers of Stephanotis floribunda. STEPPARENTING (18) STERCORACEOUS (17) [adjective] Consisting of, resembling or pertaining to feces. STEREOGRAPHED (20) STEREOGRAPHIC (21) STEREOISOMERS (15) [noun] One of a set of the isomers of a compound that exhibits stereoisomerism STEREOLOGICAL (16) STEREOPHONIES (18) STEREOPTICONS (17) [noun] A magic lantern, especially one with two projectors arranged so as to produce dissolving views or combinations of images. STEREOREGULAR (14) STEREOSCOPIES (17) STEREOTYPICAL (20) [adjective] Pertaining to a stereotype; conventional | [adjective] Banal, commonplace and clichéd because of overuse. | [adjective] Relating to stereotypy. STERILIZATION (22) [noun] The process of treating something to kill or inactivate microorganisms. | [noun] A procedure to permanently prevent an organism from reproducing. | [noun] An instance of a sterilization procedure STERNFOREMOST (18) STERNUTATIONS (13) STEROIDOGENIC (17) STICHOMYTHIAS (26) STICHOMYTHIES (26) STICKHANDLERS (23) STICKHANDLING (24) [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. | [noun] Skillful manipulation of the puck or ball with a player's stick, allowing the player to maintain control of the puck or ball. STIGMASTEROLS (16) STIGMATICALLY (21) STILTEDNESSES (14) STIPENDIARIES (16) [noun] One who receives a stipend. STOCKBREEDERS (22) [noun] A person who breeds and raises livestock. STOCKBROKINGS (26) STOCKJOBBINGS (31) STOICHIOMETRY (23) [noun] The study and calculation of quantitative (measurable) relationships of the reactants and products in chemical reactions (chemical equations). | [noun] The quantitative relationship between the reactants and products of a specific reaction or equation. STOLONIFEROUS (16) STONECUTTINGS (16) STORYBOARDING (20) STORYTELLINGS (17) STRAIGHTAWAYS (23) [noun] A straight section of a racetrack. STRAIGHTBREDS (20) STRAIGHTEDGES (19) [noun] A flat, rectangular tool used to draw, cut or check the straightness of straight lines. STRAIGHTENERS (17) STRAIGHTENING (18) [verb] To cause to become straight. | [verb] To become straight. | [verb] To put in order; to sort; to tidy up. STRAIGHTLACED (20) [adjective] Having narrow views on moral matters; prudish. STRAITJACKETS (26) [noun] A jacket-like garment with very long sleeves which can be secured in place, thus preventing the wearer from moving his or her arms. Often used in psychiatric hospitals to prevent patients from injuring themselves or others. | [noun] Any situation seen as confining or restricting. STRAITLACEDLY (19) STRANGENESSES (14) [noun] The state or quality of being strange, odd or weird. | [noun] The product or result of being strange. | [noun] One of the quantum numbers of subatomic particles, depending upon the relative number of strange quarks and anti-strange quarks. STRANGLEHOLDS (18) [noun] A grip or control so strong as to stifle or cut off. | [verb] To hold a tight grip or control STRANGULATING (15) [verb] To stop flow through a vessel. | [verb] To strangle. STRANGULATION (14) [noun] The act of strangling or the state of being strangled. | [noun] The constriction of the air passage or other body part that cuts off the flow of a fluid. STRATEGICALLY (19) [adverb] In a strategic manner. STRATIGRAPHIC (21) STRATOCRACIES (17) [noun] A military government. STRATOCUMULUS (17) [noun] A principal low-level cloud type, predominantly stratiform, in the form of a gray and/or whitish layer or patch, which nearly always has dark parts and is nonfibrous. STRATOSPHERES (18) STRATOSPHERIC (20) [adjective] Of, relating to, or occurring in the stratosphere. | [adjective] Unusually or unreasonably high; astronomical. STRATOVOLCANO (18) [noun] A tall conical volcano, composed of layers (or strata) of hardened lava, tephra and ash. STREAKINESSES (17) STREETWALKERS (20) [noun] Someone walking in the street; an average citizen. | [noun] A prostitute who looks for customers on the streets and in other public places. STREETWALKING (21) STRENGTHENERS (17) STRENGTHENING (18) [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. STRENUOSITIES (13) STRENUOUSNESS (13) STREPTOCOCCAL (21) STREPTOCOCCIC (23) STREPTOCOCCUS (21) [noun] A spherical, gram-positive bacterium of the genus Streptococcus. Although commonly found benignly in the human mouth and gut, and though many species are non-pathogenic, other species can cause diseases including strep throat and more serious conditions. STREPTOKINASE (19) [noun] Any of a class of enzymes that catalyzes the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin and are used to dissolve blood clots STREPTOLYSINS (18) STREPTOMYCETE (22) [noun] Any bacterium of the family Streptomycetaceae STREPTOMYCINS (22) STRIDULATIONS (14) STRIKEBREAKER (23) [noun] A non-unionized worker hired to replace a striking union worker. STRINGCOURSES (16) [noun] A thin projecting course of brickwork or stone that runs horizontally around a building, typically to emphasize the junction between floors. STRINGINESSES (14) STROBILATIONS (15) STROMATOLITES (15) [noun] A laminated, columnar, rock-like structure constituting a large share of all fossils from 3.5 to 0.5 billion years ago, with some still being formed at present, some or all of which result from the deposit of minerals by microorganisms such as cyanobacteria. STROMATOLITIC (17) STRONTIANITES (13) STROPHANTHINS (21) STRUCTURALISM (17) [noun] A theory of sociology that views elements of society as part of a cohesive, self-supporting structure. | [noun] A school of biological thought that deals with the law-like behaviour of the structure of organisms and how it can change, emphasising that organisms are wholes, and therefore that change in one part must necessarily take into account the inter-connected nature of the entire organism. | [noun] The theory that a human language is a self-contained structure related to other elements which make up its existence. STRUCTURALIST (15) STRUCTURALIZE (24) STRUCTURATION (15) [noun] A theory proposed by Anthony Giddens in an attempt to reconcile theoretical dichotomies of social systems such as agency/structure, subjective/objective, and micro/macro perspectives. STRUCTURELESS (15) STUDIEDNESSES (15) STUNTEDNESSES (14) STUPEFACTIONS (20) [noun] The state of extreme shock or astonishment. | [noun] A state of insensibility; stupor. STYLELESSNESS (16) STYLISHNESSES (19) STYLISTICALLY (21) [adverb] In a stylistic manner. | [adverb] With regard to style. STYLOGRAPHIES (22) SUASIVENESSES (16) SUBACIDNESSES (18) SUBADOLESCENT (18) SUBALLOCATION (17) SUBASSEMBLIES (19) [noun] An assembly that is assembled with others to form a larger assembly SUBBITUMINOUS (19) SUBCATEGORIES (18) [noun] With respect to a given category, a more narrow category. | [noun] A subclass of a category which is itself a category, whose arrows are a restriction of the arrows of the parent category, and whose composition rule is a restriction of the parent category's SUBCATEGORIZE (27) [verb] To categorize more specifically by placing in a subcategory. | [verb] (grammar) To practice subcategorization. SUBCLASSIFIED (21) SUBCLASSIFIES (20) SUBCLINICALLY (22) SUBCLUSTERING (18) SUBCOLLECTION (19) SUBCOLLEGIATE (18) SUBCOMMISSION (21) SUBCOMMITTEES (21) [noun] A committee formed by an existing committee, comprising a subset of its members. SUBCOMPONENTS (21) SUBCONTINENTS (17) [noun] A large landmass which is either smaller than a continent (such as Greenland), or part of an even larger continent (such as the Indian subcontinent). SUBCONTRACTED (20) [verb] To contract out portions of a larger contracted project. SUBCONTRACTOR (19) [noun] A contractor hired by a general contractor employed by the contractor rather than directly hired by the customer. SUBCONTRARIES (17) [noun] Either of a pair of propositions at least one of which must be true SUBCORIACEOUS (19) SUBCULTURALLY (20) SUBDEBUTANTES (18) SUBDEPARTMENT (20) SUBDISCIPLINE (20) SUBEMPLOYMENT (24) SUBERIZATIONS (24) SUBGENERATION (16) SUBGOVERNMENT (21) SUBINDUSTRIES (16) SUBINFEUDATED (20) SUBINFEUDATES (19) SUBINHIBITORY (23) SUBIRRIGATING (17) SUBIRRIGATION (16) SUBJECTIVISED (28) SUBJECTIVISES (27) SUBJECTIVISMS (29) SUBJECTIVISTS (27) SUBJECTIVIZED (37) SUBJECTIVIZES (36) SUBLIBRARIANS (17) SUBLIEUTENANT (15) [noun] A commissioned officer of the navy whose rank is immediately below that of a lieutenant. SUBLIMENESSES (17) SUBLITERACIES (17) SUBLITERATURE (15) SUBMANDIBULAR (20) [adjective] Below the mandible; submaxillary SUBMILLIMETER (19) SUBNETWORKING (23) SUBOPTIMIZING (29) SUBORDINATELY (19) SUBORDINATING (17) [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. SUBORDINATION (16) [noun] The process of making something subordinate. | [noun] The process of subordinating. | [noun] The property of being subordinate; inferiority of rank or position. SUBORDINATIVE (19) SUBORDINATORS (16) SUBPARAGRAPHS (23) SUBPOPULATION (19) [noun] A subdivision of a population SUBPRINCIPALS (21) SUBREPTITIOUS (17) SUBSATELLITES (15) SUBSATURATION (15) SUBSCRIPTIONS (19) [noun] Access to a resource for a period of time, generally for payment. | [noun] The formal acceptance of something, especially when verified with a signature. | [noun] The signing of one's name. SUBSERVIENCES (20) SUBSERVIENTLY (21) SUBSIDIZATION (25) SUBSPECIALIST (19) SUBSPECIALIZE (28) SUBSTANCELESS (17) SUBSTANTIALLY (18) [adverb] In a strong substantial manner; considerably. | [adverb] To a great extent; in essence; essentially. | [adverb] Without material qualifications. 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 SUBSTANTIATES (15) [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 SUBSTANTIVELY (21) [adverb] In a substantive manner, or to a substantive extent. | [adverb] (grammar, of a word) Employed as a noun. SUBSTANTIVIZE (27) SUBSTITUTABLE (17) SUBSTITUTIONS (15) [noun] The act of substituting or the state of being substituted. | [noun] A substitute or replacement. | [noun] The replacement of an atom, or group of atoms, in a compound, with another. SUBSTRUCTURAL (17) SUBSTRUCTURES (17) [noun] The supporting part of a structure (either physical or organizational; the foundation). | [noun] The earth or gravel that the railway tracks are embedded in. SUBTERRANEOUS (15) SUBTILENESSES (15) SUBTILIZATION (24) SUBTREASURIES (15) SUBURBANISING (18) SUBURBANIZING (27) SUBVENTIONARY (21) SUBVERSIONARY (21) SUBVOCALIZING (30) [verb] To form (words or statements) in thought and express them inwardly without uttering them aloud. SUFFICIENCIES (23) [noun] The quality or condition of being sufficient. | [noun] An adequate amount. SUFFOCATINGLY (25) SUITABILITIES (15) SULFADIAZINES (26) SULFANILAMIDE (19) [noun] Any of a class of amino substituted aromatic sulfonamides that are used as antifungal antibiotics; but especially the parent compound 4-aminobenzenesulfonamide SULFONYLUREAS (19) SULFUROUSNESS (16) SUMMABILITIES (19) SUMMARIZATION (26) SUMMERSAULTED (18) [verb] To perform a somersault. SUMPTUOUSNESS (17) SUPERABLENESS (17) SUPERABOUNDED (19) [verb] To abound very much; to be superabundant. SUPERABUNDANT (18) [adjective] Extremely or exceedingly abundant. SUPERACHIEVER (23) SUPERACTIVITY (23) SUPERADDITION (17) SUPERAGENCIES (18) 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. SUPERANNUATES (15) [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. SUPERATHLETES (18) SUPERCABINETS (19) SUPERCALENDER (18) [noun] A stack of calenders consisting of alternating steel and fiber-covered rolls through which paper is passed to increase its density, smoothness and gloss. | [verb] To pass (paper) through a supercalender. SUPERCARRIERS (17) SUPERCAUTIOUS (17) SUPERCHARGERS (21) [noun] An inlet air compressor for an internal combustion engine (either Otto or Diesel cycle), normally powered from the crankshaft. SUPERCHARGING (22) [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. SUPERCHURCHES (25) SUPERCLUSTERS (17) [noun] An extended group of clusters of galaxies SUPERCOLLIDER (18) [noun] A high-energy particle accelerator. SUPERCOLOSSAL (17) SUPERCOMPUTER (21) [noun] Any computer that has a far greater processing power than others of its day; typically they use more than one core and are housed in large clean rooms with high air flow to permit cooling. Typical uses are weather forecasting, nuclear simulations and animations. SUPERCONDUCTS (20) SUPERCRIMINAL (19) SUPERCRITICAL (19) [adjective] (of a gas) Above its critical temperature and critical pressure. | [adjective] Having a mass sufficient to sustain a chain reaction. | [adjective] (aerodynamics) Above the speed of sound. SUPERCURRENTS (17) SUPERDIPLOMAT (20) SUPERELEVATED (19) SUPERELEVATES (18) SUPEREMINENCE (19) SUPERFAMILIES (20) [noun] A taxonomic category above family and below order (and its subdivisions). | [noun] A large group of related proteins or other molecules. SUPERFETATION (18) [noun] The formation of a fetus while another fetus is already present in the uterus. | [noun] An excessive accumulation; a superfluous addition. SUPERFICIALLY (23) [adverb] In a superficial manner; shallowly SUPERFLUIDITY (22) [noun] The frictionless flow that is characteristic of a fluid with zero viscosity, especially liquid helium at temperatures near absolute zero. SUPERFLUITIES (18) [noun] The quality or state of being superfluous; overflowingness. | [noun] Something superfluous, as a luxury. | [noun] Collective noun for a group of nuns. SUPERFLUOUSLY (21) SUPERGRAPHICS (23) SUPERHARDENED (20) SUPERHEROINES (18) SUPERHIGHWAYS (28) [noun] An expressway, especially one designed for high speeds. | [noun] (by extension) A major route that carries most of the traffic going in a given direction by a specified mode of transportation. | [noun] (metaphoric) The primary mechanism used in the movement of electronic data or information; information superhighway. SUPERHUMANITY (23) SUPERIMPOSING (20) [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. | [noun] The process, or the result of superimposing SUPERINDUCING (19) [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). SUPERINFECTED (21) SUPERINTENDED (17) [verb] To oversee the work of others; to supervise. | [verb] To administer the affairs of something or someone. SUPERIORITIES (15) SUPERLATIVELY (21) SUPERLOBBYIST (22) SUPERLOYALIST (18) SUPERMAJORITY (27) [noun] Any qualified majority, specified in advance of a vote, required for the vote to be passed SUPERMILITANT (17) SUPERMINISTER (17) SUPERNATIONAL (15) SUPERNATURALS (15) [noun] A supernatural being | [noun] Supernatural beings and events collectively (when used with definite article: "the supernatural") SUPERNORMALLY (20) SUPERNUMERARY (20) [noun] A person who works in a group, association, or public office without forming part of the regular staff (the numerary). | [noun] An extra or walk-on, often non-speaking, in a film or play; a spear carrier. | [noun] Something which is beyond the prescribed or standard amount or number. SUPERORDINATE (16) [noun] That which is superordinate. | [noun] A hypernym. | [verb] To cause to be superordinate. SUPERORGANISM (18) SUPEROVULATED (19) SUPEROVULATES (18) SUPERPATRIOTS (17) SUPERPERSONAL (17) SUPERPHYSICAL (25) SUPERPOSITION (17) [noun] The placing of one thing on top of another. | [noun] The deposition of one stratum over another; the principle that in a series of sedimentary strata, the lower strata are the older. | [noun] The situation in quantum mechanics where two or more quantum states are added together (superposed) to yield another valid quantum state. SUPERPOWERFUL (23) SUPERPREMIUMS (21) SUPERREALISMS (17) SUPERREGIONAL (16) SUPERROMANTIC (19) SUPERSALESMAN (17) SUPERSALESMEN (17) SUPERSATURATE (15) [verb] To cause a solution to have more solute dissolved in it than it can stably contain at current conditions. SUPERSCRIBING (20) [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.). SUPERSENSIBLE (17) SUPERSESSIONS (15) SUPERSPECIALS (19) SUPERSTARDOMS (18) SUPERSTATIONS (15) [noun] A television station that broadcasts nationwide via a satellite carrier SUPERSTITIONS (15) [noun] A belief or beliefs, not based on human reason or scientific knowledge, that events may be influenced by one's behaviour in some magical or mystical way. | [noun] Excessive nicety; overscrupulousness. SUPERSTITIOUS (15) [adjective] Susceptible to superstitions. | [adjective] Arising from or having the character of superstitions. | [adjective] Overexact; unnecessarily scrupulous SUPERSTRENGTH (19) SUPERSUBTLETY (20) SUPERSURGEONS (16) SUPERSYMMETRY (25) [noun] A theory that attempts to unify the fundamental physical forces and which proposes a physical symmetry between bosons and fermions. SUPERTERRIFIC (20) SUPERTHRILLER (18) SUPERVENTIONS (18) SUPERVIRTUOSI (18) SUPERVIRTUOSO (18) SUPPLANTATION (17) SUPPLEMENTALS (19) SUPPLEMENTARY (22) [noun] Something additional; an extra. | [adjective] Additional; added to supply what is wanted. SUPPLEMENTERS (19) SUPPLEMENTING (20) [verb] To provide or make a supplement to something. SUPPLICATIONS (19) [noun] An act of supplicating; a humble request. | [noun] A prayer or entreaty to a god. | [noun] In Ancient Rome, a solemn service or day decreed for giving formal thanks to the gods for victory, etc. SUPPOSITIONAL (17) SUPPOSITORIES (17) [noun] A medicine in the form of a small plug that is inserted into a bodily cavity, especially the rectum, vagina or urethra, where it melts at body temperature. SUPRANATIONAL (15) [noun] Such a person or organization | [adjective] Beyond the borders or scope of any one nation. SUPRARATIONAL (15) SUPREMENESSES (17) SURGEONFISHES (20) [noun] Any of many species of reef-dwelling fishes, most of them brightly coloured, of the family Acanthuridae. They are named "surgeonfish" because they bear erectile, scalpel-like, dangerously sharp spines on either side of the caudal peduncle. SURREJOINDERS (21) [noun] A plaintiff's answer to the defendant's rejoinder. SURREPTITIOUS (15) [adjective] Stealthy, furtive, well hidden, covert (especially movements). SURVEILLANCES (18) SURVIVABILITY (24) SURVIVORSHIPS (24) SUSPENSEFULLY (21) SUSTENTATIONS (13) SWARTHINESSES (19) SWASHBUCKLERS (27) [noun] A swordsman or fencer who engages in showy or extravagant sword play. | [noun] A daring adventurer. | [noun] A kind of period adventure story with flashy action and lighthearted tone. SWASHBUCKLING (28) [adjective] Adventurous, exciting. SWINISHNESSES (19) SWITCHBACKING (30) SWITCHGRASSES (22) SWORDSMANSHIP (24) SYBARITICALLY (23) SYCOPHANTISMS (25) SYLLABICATING (21) SYLLABICATION (20) [noun] The act of syllabifying; syllabification. SYLLABICITIES (20) SYLVICULTURES (21) SYMBIOTICALLY (25) SYMBOLIZATION (29) SYMMETALLISMS (22) SYMMETRICALLY (25) SYMPATHECTOMY (30) [noun] The surgical cutting of a nerve in the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPATHOLYTIC (28) [noun] Any medicine having this effect. | [adjective] That opposes the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPATRICALLY (25) SYMPHONICALLY (28) SYMPHONIOUSLY (26) SYNAESTHESIAS (19) SYNARTHRODIAL (20) SYNCHROMESHES (26) SYNCHRONICITY (26) [noun] The state of being synchronous or simultaneous. | [noun] (Jungian psychology) Coincidences that seem to be meaningfully related; supposedly the result of "universal forces". SYNCHRONISING (22) [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. SYNCHRONISTIC (23) SYNCHRONIZERS (30) SYNCHRONIZING (31) [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. SYNCHRONOUSLY (24) SYNCHROSCOPES (25) SYNDACTYLISMS (24) SYNECDOCHICAL (26) SYNECOLOGICAL (21) SYNTACTICALLY (23) SYNTHETICALLY (24) SYRINGOMYELIA (22) [noun] A disorder in which a cyst or cavity forms within the spinal cord, possibly leading to stiffness or paralysis. SYRINGOMYELIC (24) SYSTEMATISING (19) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. SYSTEMATIZERS (27) SYSTEMATIZING (28) [verb] To arrange into a systematic order. | [noun] The process by which something is systematized; a systematization. SYSTEMIZATION (27)

14-Letter Words (465)

SABERMETRICIAN (20) SACCHARIMETERS (23) SACCHARINITIES (21) SACCHAROMETERS (23) [noun] A hydrometer used to measure the sugar content of a liquid. SACERDOTALISMS (19) SACERDOTALISTS (17) SACRAMENTALISM (20) SACRAMENTALIST (18) SACRILEGIOUSLY (20) SADOMASOCHISMS (24) SADOMASOCHISTS (22) SALUBRIOUSNESS (16) SALUTARINESSES (14) SALVAGEABILITY (23) SANCTIFICATION (21) [noun] The (usually gradual or uncompleted) process by which a Christian believer is made holy through the action of the Holy Spirit. | [noun] The process of making holy; hallowing, consecration. | [noun] Blackmail. SANGUINENESSES (15) SANSCULOTTISMS (18) SAPONIFICATION (21) SATISFACTORILY (22) [adverb] In a satisfactory manner, in a manner adequate to requirements. SCABROUSNESSES (18) SCANDALMONGERS (20) [noun] A person who trades in gossip; one who collects and disseminates rumors. SCANDALOUSNESS (17) SCARIFICATIONS (21) SCATTERBRAINED (19) [adjective] Having the qualities of a scatterbrain: absent-minded, forgetful, easily distracted. SCHADENFREUDES (24) SCHEMATIZATION (30) SCHISMATICALLY (26) SCHIZOPHRENIAS (33) SCHIZOPHRENICS (35) [noun] A person suffering from schizophrenia. SCHOLASTICALLY (24) SCHOLASTICATES (21) SCHOLASTICISMS (23) SCHOOLCHILDREN (25) [noun] A young person attending school or of an age to attend school. SCHOOLMASTERLY (24) SCHOOLMISTRESS (21) [noun] A woman in charge of a school. SCHOOLTEACHERS (24) [noun] A teacher working in a school. SCIENTIFICALLY (24) [adverb] Using science or methods of science. | [adverb] Using the scientific method. | [adverb] Methodically. SCINTIGRAPHIES (22) SCINTILLATIONS (16) [noun] A flash of light; a spark. | [noun] The twinkling of a star or other celestial body caused by turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere. | [noun] The flash of light produced by something (especially a phosphor) when it absorbs ionizing radiation. SCINTILLOMETER (18) SCLEROPROTEINS (18) [noun] Any of many fibrous proteins found in connective tissue etc. SCLEROTIZATION (25) SCORNFULNESSES (19) SCRATCHINESSES (21) SCRUPULOSITIES (18) SCRUPULOUSNESS (18) SCURRILOUSNESS (16) SEAMLESSNESSES (16) SEASONABLENESS (16) SECLUDEDNESSES (18) SECRETARYSHIPS (24) SECTARIANIZING (26) [verb] To imbue with sectarian feelings; to subject to the control of a sect. SECULARIZATION (25) [noun] The transformation of a society from close identification with religious values and institutions toward non-religious (or "irreligious") values and secular institutions. | [noun] The deconsecration of a church. SECURITIZATION (25) [noun] The fact or process of securitizing assets; the conversion of loans into securities, usually in order to sell them on to other investors. | [noun] (counterterrorism) The act of taking visible countermeasures against terrorism. SEDIMENTATIONS (17) SEDIMENTOLOGIC (20) SEDULOUSNESSES (15) SEGREGATIONIST (16) [noun] A person who supports or believes in segregation. SEISMOGRAPHERS (22) SEISMOGRAPHIES (22) SELFLESSNESSES (17) SELFSAMENESSES (19) SEMASIOLOGICAL (19) SEMIAUTOMATICS (20) [noun] A semi-automatic firearm, especially such a pistol. | [noun] A semi-automatic transmission SEMIAUTONOMOUS (18) [adjective] Partially, but not fully, autonomous. SEMICENTENNIAL (18) SEMICOMMERCIAL (24) SEMICONDUCTING (22) [adjective] That has the characteristics of a semiconductor SEMICONDUCTORS (21) [noun] A substance with electrical properties intermediate between a good conductor and a good insulator. SEMIDARKNESSES (21) SEMIOFFICIALLY (27) SEMIOLOGICALLY (22) SEMIPORCELAINS (20) SEMIRETIREMENT (18) [noun] A state of partial retirement, working only part-time or occasionally SEMPITERNITIES (18) SENSATIONALISE (14) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENSATIONALISM (16) [noun] The use of sensational subject matter, style or methods, or the sensational subject matter itself; behavior, published materials, or broadcasts that are intentionally controversial, exaggerated, lurid, loud, or attention-grabbing. Especially applied to news media in a pejorative sense that they are reporting in a manner to gain audience or notoriety but at the expense of accuracy and professionalism. | [noun] A theory of philosophy that all knowledge is ultimately derived from the senses. SENSATIONALIST (14) [noun] One who indulges in sensational behavior or action. | [noun] One who believes or espouses the philosophy of sensationalism. | [adjective] Sensationalistic; tending to sensationalize; characterized by sensationalism (the use of exaggerated or lurid material in order to gain public attention). SENSATIONALIZE (23) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENSIBLENESSES (16) SENSITISATIONS (14) SENSITIZATIONS (23) SENSITOMETRIES (16) SENSUALIZATION (23) SENSUOUSNESSES (14) SENTIMENTALISE (16) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SENTIMENTALISM (18) [noun] A liking for sentimental things | [noun] An overly sentimental thing or condition; bathos or sentimentality | [noun] A view according to which morality is somehow grounded in moral sentiments or emotions. SENTIMENTALIST (16) SENTIMENTALITY (19) [noun] An act or state of being sentimental. SENTIMENTALIZE (25) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SEPARABILITIES (18) SEPARATENESSES (16) SEPARATIONISTS (16) SEPTUAGENARIAN (17) [noun] One who is between the age of 70 and 79, inclusive. | [adjective] Being between the age of 70 and 79, inclusive. In one's eighth decade. | [adjective] Of or relating to a septuagenarian. SEQUESTRATIONS (23) [noun] The process or act of sequestering; a putting aside or separating. SERIALIZATIONS (23) SERICULTURISTS (16) SERIOCOMICALLY (23) SEROCONVERSION (19) [noun] The development of specific antibodies in the blood serum as a result of infection or immunization SERODIAGNOSTIC (18) SERONEGATIVITY (21) SEROPOSITIVITY (22) SEROTONINERGIC (17) SERVICEABILITY (24) SERVICEBERRIES (21) [noun] (Europe) Several species of trees in the genus Sorbus, especially Sorbus domestica and Sorbus torminalis. | [noun] Any plant of the genus Amelanchier of small deciduous trees and large shrubs in the family Rosaceae. SERVOMECHANISM (26) [noun] A mechanical device for controlling large amounts of power by means of smaller amounts of power and correcting the performance of the device using feedback | [noun] Any system which controls motion automatically using feedback SESQUIPEDALIAN (26) [noun] A long word. | [noun] A person who uses long words. | [adjective] (of a word or words) Long; polysyllabic. SESQUITERPENES (25) [noun] Any terpene formed from three isoprene units, and having fifteen carbon atoms; includes several plant pigments such as the flavones. SEVERABILITIES (19) SEXPLOITATIONS (23) SEXTUPLICATING (26) SHADOWGRAPHIES (27) SHAMEFACEDNESS (25) SHAMEFULNESSES (22) SHAREABILITIES (19) SHARPSHOOTINGS (23) SHEEPISHNESSES (22) SHEEPSHEARINGS (23) SHELLFISHERIES (23) SHORTSIGHTEDLY (25) SHREWISHNESSES (23) SHUTTLECOCKING (26) SIGNALIZATIONS (24) SIGNIFICANCIES (22) SIGNIFICATIONS (20) [noun] The act of signifying, or something that is signified; significance. | [noun] Evidence for the existence of something. | [noun] A meaning of a word. SILICIFICATION (21) SILVERSMITHING (23) SILVICULTURIST (19) SIMPLEMINDEDLY (25) SIMPLIFICATION (23) [noun] The act of simplifying or something that has been simplified | [noun] A valid simple argument SIMPLISTICALLY (23) SIMULTANEITIES (16) SIMULTANEOUSLY (19) [adverb] Occurring at the same time. SINISTERNESSES (14) SKATEBOARDINGS (22) SKILLESSNESSES (18) SKILLFULNESSES (21) SKITTISHNESSES (21) SKULLDUGGERIES (21) SLANDEROUSNESS (15) SLATTERNLINESS (14) SLAUGHTERHOUSE (21) [noun] A place where animals are slaughtered. | [noun] The scene of a massacre. SLAUGHTEROUSLY (21) SLEDGEHAMMERED (24) [verb] To strike with a sledgehammer. SLIPPERINESSES (18) SLOTHFULNESSES (20) SLOVENLINESSES (17) SLUGGARDNESSES (17) SLUGGISHNESSES (19) SLUTTISHNESSES (17) SNAGGLETOOTHED (20) SNAPPISHNESSES (21) SNIFFISHNESSES (23) SNIPPERSNAPPER (22) SNOBBISHNESSES (21) SOBERSIDEDNESS (18) SOCIABLENESSES (18) SOCIALIZATIONS (25) SOCIOBIOLOGIES (19) SOCIOBIOLOGIST (19) SOCIOLINGUISTS (17) [noun] A person who studies sociolinguistics. SOCIOLOGICALLY (22) SOCIOPOLITICAL (20) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a combination of social and political factors. SOCIORELIGIOUS (17) SOFTHEADEDNESS (22) SOLEMNIZATIONS (25) SOLICITORSHIPS (21) SOLICITOUSNESS (16) SOLIDIFICATION (20) SOLITARINESSES (14) SOLITUDINARIAN (15) [noun] One who remains solitary. SOLUBILIZATION (25) SOMATOTROPHINS (21) [noun] A polypeptide growth hormone produced by the human pituitary gland SOMNAMBULATING (21) SOMNAMBULATION (20) SOMNAMBULISTIC (22) SONOROUSNESSES (14) SOOTHINGNESSES (18) SOPHISTICATING (22) [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. SOPHISTICATION (21) [noun] Enlightenment or education. | [noun] Cultivated intellectual worldliness; savoir-faire. | [noun] Deceptive logic; sophistry. SOTERIOLOGICAL (17) SOULLESSNESSES (14) SOUTHEASTWARDS (21) [adjective] Southeastward | [adverb] Southeastward SOUTHERNNESSES (17) SOUTHWESTWARDS (24) [adjective] Southwestward | [adverb] Southwestward SOVIETIZATIONS (26) SPACIOUSNESSES (18) SPATIOTEMPORAL (20) [adjective] Of, concerning, or existing in both space and time. | [adjective] Of or concerning spacetime. SPECIALISATION (18) [noun] The act or process of specializing. | [noun] The area in which someone specializes. | [noun] The adaptation of an organism to a specific environment, or adaptation of an organ to a particular function. SPECIALIZATION (27) [noun] The act or process of specializing. | [noun] The area in which someone specializes. | [noun] The adaptation of an organism to a specific environment, or adaptation of an organ to a particular function. SPECIFICATIONS (23) [noun] An explicit set of requirements to be satisfied by a material, product, or service. | [noun] An act of specifying. | [noun] A set of requirements defining an exact description of an object or a process. SPECIOUSNESSES (18) SPECTATORSHIPS (23) SPECTINOMYCINS (25) SPECTROGRAPHIC (26) SPECTROMETRIES (20) SPECTROSCOPIES (22) SPECTROSCOPIST (22) SPEECHLESSNESS (21) SPELLBINDINGLY (23) SPERMATOGONIAL (19) SPERMATOGONIUM (21) [noun] Any of the undifferentiated cells in the male gonads that become spermatocytes; a spermatoblast SPERMATOPHORES (23) [noun] A spermospore. | [noun] A capsule or pocket enclosing a number of spermatozoa, found in many annelids, brachiopods, insects, mollusks, and crustaceans. SPERMATOPHYTES (26) [noun] Any plant that bears seeds rather than spores SPERMATOPHYTIC (28) SPERMIOGENESES (19) SPERMIOGENESIS (19) SPINTHARISCOPE (23) [noun] An early device for observing individual nuclear disintegrations. SPIRITEDNESSES (17) SPIRITLESSNESS (16) SPIRITUALISTIC (18) SPIRITUALITIES (16) [noun] The quality or state of being spiritual. | [noun] Concern for that which is unseen and intangible, as opposed to physical or mundane. | [noun] Appreciation for religious values. SPIRITUALIZING (26) [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. SPITEFULNESSES (19) SPLENDIDNESSES (18) SPLENECTOMIZED (30) SPLENECTOMIZES (29) SPLENOMEGALIES (19) SPOKESMANSHIPS (27) SPORANGIOPHORE (22) [noun] A receptacle in ferns which bears the sporangia, usually a stalk, but sometimes a scale (as in horsetails). | [noun] A special type of hypha that bears sporangia on the tip. SPOROPOLLENINS (18) SPOROTRICHOSES (21) SPOROTRICHOSIS (21) [noun] A disease caused by infection with the fungus Sporothrix schenckii, sometimes acquired from roses. SPORTFISHERMAN (24) SPORTFISHERMEN (24) SPORTFULNESSES (19) SPORTIVENESSES (19) SPORTSMANSHIPS (23) SPORTSWRITINGS (20) SPOTLESSNESSES (16) SPRIGHTFULNESS (23) SPURIOUSNESSES (16) SQUARISHNESSES (26) STABILIZATIONS (25) STADTHOLDERATE (19) STAGFLATIONARY (21) STAINABILITIES (16) STALWARTNESSES (17) STAPEDECTOMIES (21) STAPHYLOCOCCAL (28) STAPHYLOCOCCIC (30) STAPHYLOCOCCUS (28) [noun] A spherical gram-positive parasitic bacterium of the genus Staphylococcus, causing blisters, septicemia, and other infections STATESMANSHIPS (21) STATIONMASTERS (16) [noun] The person in charge of a railroad station, usually an employee of a particular railroad by which the station is owned, but sometimes an employee of a separate corporation, such as one owning a station used by two or more railroads. STEALTHINESSES (17) STEAMROLLERING (17) [verb] To level a road using a steamroller | [verb] To proceed ruthlessly against all opposition as if with an overwhelming force; to overpower STEEPLECHASERS (21) STEEPLECHASING (22) STEPPARENTINGS (19) STEREOCHEMICAL (23) [adjective] Of or pertaining to stereochemistry STEREOGRAPHIES (20) STEREOGRAPHING (21) STEREOISOMERIC (18) STEREOSPECIFIC (23) [adjective] Showing stereospecificity. STERILIZATIONS (23) [noun] The process of treating something to kill or inactivate microorganisms. | [noun] A procedure to permanently prevent an organism from reproducing. | [noun] An instance of a sterilization procedure STERLINGNESSES (15) STIGMATIZATION (26) [noun] The process or act of stigmatizing. | [noun] The production of stigmata upon the body. STOCHASTICALLY (24) STOCKBROKERAGE (27) STOICHIOMETRIC (23) [adjective] Of, or relating to stoichiometry. | [adjective] (of reactants, or of elements in a compound) Existing in a ratio of small integers. STONEMASONRIES (16) STOUTHEARTEDLY (21) STRAIGHTJACKET (31) STRAIGHTNESSES (18) STRAITJACKETED (28) [verb] To put someone into a straitjacket. | [verb] (by extension) To restrict the freedom of, either physically or psychologically. STRANDEDNESSES (16) STRANGULATIONS (15) STRATIFICATION (19) [noun] The process leading to the formation or deposition of layers, especially of sedimentary rocks | [noun] A layering of musical texture | [noun] The vertical layering of vegetation in a forest STRATIGRAPHIES (20) STRATOVOLCANOS (19) STREETWALKINGS (22) STREPTOBACILLI (20) STREPTOKINASES (20) STREPTOMYCETES (23) [noun] Any bacterium of the family Streptomycetaceae STREPTOTHRICIN (21) STRESSLESSNESS (14) STRETCHABILITY (24) STRIKEBREAKERS (24) [noun] A non-unionized worker hired to replace a striking union worker. STRIKEBREAKING (25) [verb] To break a strike; to work for a business where the union members are on strike. | [noun] Activity intended to disrupt or end without an agreement a strike by workers. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to such activity. STRUCTURALISMS (18) STRUCTURALISTS (16) STRUCTURALIZED (26) STRUCTURALIZES (25) STRUCTURATIONS (16) STUBBORNNESSES (18) STUDIOUSNESSES (15) STULTIFICATION (19) STUPENDOUSNESS (17) SUBADOLESCENTS (19) SUBALLOCATIONS (18) SUBARACHNOIDAL (22) SUBATMOSPHERIC (25) SUBCATEGORIZED (29) [verb] To categorize more specifically by placing in a subcategory. | [verb] (grammar) To practice subcategorization. SUBCATEGORIZES (28) [verb] To categorize more specifically by placing in a subcategory. | [verb] (grammar) To practice subcategorization. SUBCLASSIFYING (25) SUBCOLLECTIONS (20) SUBCOMMISSIONS (22) SUBCOMMUNITIES (22) SUBCONSCIOUSES (20) SUBCONSCIOUSLY (23) [adverb] Below the level of conscious awareness. SUBCONTINENTAL (18) SUBCONTRACTING (21) [verb] To contract out portions of a larger contracted project. SUBCONTRACTORS (20) [noun] A contractor hired by a general contractor employed by the contractor rather than directly hired by the customer. SUBCUTANEOUSLY (21) SUBDEPARTMENTS (21) SUBDEVELOPMENT (24) SUBDISCIPLINES (21) SUBEMPLOYMENTS (25) SUBGENERATIONS (17) SUBGOVERNMENTS (22) SUBINFEUDATING (21) SUBINFEUDATION (20) SUBIRRIGATIONS (17) SUBJECTIVENESS (28) SUBJECTIVISING (29) SUBJECTIVISTIC (30) SUBJECTIVITIES (28) [noun] The state of being subjective. | [noun] A subjective thought or idea. SUBJECTIVIZING (38) SUBLIEUTENANTS (16) [noun] A commissioned officer of the navy whose rank is immediately below that of a lieutenant. SUBLITERATURES (16) SUBMANDIBULARS (21) SUBMAXILLARIES (25) SUBMETACENTRIC (22) SUBMICROSCOPIC (26) [adjective] Smaller than microscopic; too small to be seen even with a microscope SUBMISSIVENESS (21) [noun] The state or quality of being submissive. SUBNORMALITIES (18) SUBORDINATIONS (17) [noun] The process of making something subordinate. | [noun] The process of subordinating. | [noun] The property of being subordinate; inferiority of rank or position. SUBPOPULATIONS (20) [noun] A subdivision of a population SUBPROLETARIAT (18) SUBSATURATIONS (16) SUBSECRETARIES (18) SUBSERVIENCIES (21) SUBSIDIARITIES (17) SUBSIDIZATIONS (26) SUBSPECIALISTS (20) SUBSPECIALIZED (30) SUBSPECIALIZES (29) SUBSPECIALTIES (20) SUBSTANTIALITY (19) SUBSTANTIATING (17) [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 SUBSTANTIATION (16) SUBSTANTIATIVE (19) SUBSTANTIVALLY (22) SUBSTANTIVIZED (29) SUBSTANTIVIZES (28) SUBSTITUTIONAL (16) SUBSTITUTIVELY (22) SUBTERRANEANLY (19) SUBTHERAPEUTIC (23) [adjective] Administered at levels lower than would be used in actual treatment of a disease SUBTILIZATIONS (25) SUBVERSIVENESS (22) SUCCESSFULNESS (21) SUCCESSIONALLY (21) SUCCESSIVENESS (21) SUCCINCTNESSES (20) SUFFERABLENESS (22) SUGGESTIBILITY (21) SUGGESTIVENESS (19) SUITABLENESSES (16) SULFANILAMIDES (20) [noun] Any of a class of amino substituted aromatic sulfonamides that are used as antifungal antibiotics; but especially the parent compound 4-aminobenzenesulfonamide SULFINPYRAZONE (31) SUMMARIZATIONS (27) SUMMERSAULTING (19) [verb] To perform a somersault. SUPERABOUNDING (20) [verb] To abound very much; to be superabundant. | [noun] Superabundance SUPERABSORBENT (20) SUPERABUNDANCE (21) SUPERACHIEVERS (24) SUPERADDITIONS (18) SUPERAMBITIOUS (20) SUPERANNUATING (17) [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. SUPERANNUATION (16) [noun] A retirement benefit fund, an accumulation of regular deductions from one′s wage or salary while employed and similar regular contributions from the employer, usually administered by an independent entity; a pension. | [noun] The condition or of being superannuated; old age or obsolescence. SUPERCALENDERS (19) [verb] To pass (paper) through a supercalender. SUPERCILIOUSLY (21) SUPERCIVILIZED (31) SUPERCOLLIDERS (19) [noun] A high-energy particle accelerator. SUPERCOMPUTERS (22) [noun] Any computer that has a far greater processing power than others of its day; typically they use more than one core and are housed in large clean rooms with high air flow to permit cooling. Typical uses are weather forecasting, nuclear simulations and animations. SUPERCONDUCTED (22) SUPERCONDUCTOR (21) [noun] A substance that has no resistance to conducting an electric current SUPERCONFIDENT (22) SUPERCONTINENT (18) [noun] A very large continent that split into smaller ones in the Earth’s geologic past. | [noun] A modern landmass composed of multiple continents, i.e. Afro-Eurasia or the Americas. (Compare subcontinent). SUPERCRIMINALS (20) SUPERDIPLOMATS (21) SUPEREFFECTIVE (27) SUPEREFFICIENT (24) SUPERELEVATING (20) SUPERELEVATION (19) [noun] The angle that a gun must be elevated above the line of its target to allow for the effect of gravity on the projectile. | [noun] The cant of a railway track; the difference in elevation (height) between its two edges, as on a curve. SUPEREMINENCES (20) SUPEREMINENTLY (21) SUPEREROGATION (17) [noun] An act of doing more than is required. | [noun] An action that is neither morally forbidden nor required, but has moral value. SUPEREROGATORY (20) SUPEREXPENSIVE (28) SUPEREXPRESSES (25) SUPERFETATIONS (19) SUPERFICIALITY (24) [noun] The property of being superficial, the tendency to judge by surface appearance. SUPERGRAVITIES (20) SUPERHARDENING (21) SUPERHUMANNESS (21) SUPERIMPOSABLE (22) SUPERINCUMBENT (22) [adjective] Lying or resting on something else; overlying. SUPERINDUCTION (19) SUPERINFECTING (22) SUPERINFECTION (21) [noun] An infection which follows or occurs during another infection or disease process SUPERINSULATED (17) SUPERINTENDENT (17) [noun] A person who is authorized to supervise, direct or administer something. | [noun] A police rank used in Commonwealth countries, ranking above chief inspector, and below chief superintendent. | [noun] The manager of a building, usually a communal residence, who is responsible for keeping the facilities functional and often collecting rent or similar payments, either as also the building's landlord or on behalf of same. Often abbreviated "super". SUPERINTENDING (18) [verb] To oversee the work of others; to supervise. | [verb] To administer the affairs of something or someone. SUPERINTENSITY (19) SUPERLOBBYISTS (23) SUPERLOYALISTS (19) SUPERLUXURIOUS (23) SUPERMASCULINE (20) SUPERMILITANTS (18) SUPERMINISTERS (18) SUPERNATURALLY (19) SUPERNORMALITY (21) SUPERNUTRITION (16) SUPERORGANISMS (19) SUPEROVULATING (20) SUPEROVULATION (19) SUPERPATRIOTIC (20) SUPERPHENOMENA (23) SUPERPHOSPHATE (26) [noun] A fertilizer produced by the action of concentrated sulfuric acid on powdered phosphate rock. | [noun] A phosphate containing the greatest amount of phosphoric acid that can combine with the base. SUPERPOSITIONS (18) [noun] The placing of one thing on top of another. | [noun] The deposition of one stratum over another; the principle that in a series of sedimentary strata, the lower strata are the older. | [noun] The situation in quantum mechanics where two or more quantum states are added together (superposed) to yield another valid quantum state. SUPERREGIONALS (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. SUPERSATURATES (16) [verb] To cause a solution to have more solute dissolved in it than it can stably contain at current conditions. SUPERSCRIPTION (20) SUPERSECRECIES (20) SUPERSENSITIVE (19) [adjective] Extremely sensitive. SUPERSEXUALITY (26) SUPERSONICALLY (21) SUPERSPECTACLE (22) SUPERSTIMULATE (18) SUPERSTRENGTHS (20) SUPERSTRUCTURE (18) [noun] Any structure built above the top full deck (FM 55-501). | [noun] Any material structure or edifice built on something else; that which is raised on a foundation or basis. | [noun] (sometimes figurative) All that part of a building above the basement. SUPERSYMMETRIC (25) SUPERTHRILLERS (19) SUPERVIRTUOSOS (19) SUPPLANTATIONS (18) SUPPORTABILITY (23) SUPPORTIVENESS (21) SUPPOSITITIOUS (18) [adjective] Spurious; substituted for the genuine, counterfeit; fake. | [adjective] Imaginary; fictitious, pretended to exist. | [adjective] Supposed or hypothetical. SUPRAMOLECULAR (20) [adjective] Consisting of many molecules; of scale or complexity greater than that of a molecule. SUPRASEGMENTAL (19) [noun] An effect on speech, such as length, stress, tone, and phonation type, that extends over more than one segment of sounds. | [adjective] Of or relating to a suprasegmental. | [adjective] More than a segment. SUREFOOTEDNESS (18) SUSCEPTIBILITY (23) [noun] The condition of being susceptible; vulnerability | [noun] Emotional sensitivity | [noun] Electric susceptibility, a measure of how easily a dielectric polarizes in response to an external electric field (compare permittivity). SUSCEPTIVENESS (21) SUSCEPTIVITIES (21) SUSPICIOUSNESS (18) SUSTAINABILITY (19) [noun] The ability to sustain something. | [noun] A means of configuring civilization and human activity so that society, its members and its economies are able to meet their needs and express their greatest potential in the present, while preserving biodiversity and natural ecosystems, planning and acting for the ability to maintain these ideals for future generations. SWAINISHNESSES (20) SWEATERDRESSES (18) SWEEPINGNESSES (20) SWORDSMANSHIPS (25) SYCOPHANTISHLY (30) SYLLABICATIONS (21) SYMBOLIZATIONS (30) SYMMETRIZATION (30) SYMPATHOLYTICS (29) [noun] Any medicine having this effect. SYMPTOMATOLOGY (27) [noun] The science that studies the symptoms of diseases. | [noun] All the symptoms of a particular disease. SYNCHRONEITIES (22) SYNCHRONICALLY (27) SYRINGOMYELIAS (23) SYSTEMATICALLY (24) [adverb] In an organized manner; utilising a system. SYSTEMATICNESS (21) SYSTEMIZATIONS (28)

15-Letter Words (254)

SABERMETRICIANS (21) SACCHAROMYCETES (29) SACRAMENTALISMS (21) SACRAMENTALISTS (19) SACROSANCTITIES (19) SADOMASOCHISTIC (25) [adjective] Of or relating to sadomasochism or sadomasochists. SAGACIOUSNESSES (18) SALACIOUSNESSES (17) SANCTIFICATIONS (22) [noun] The (usually gradual or uncompleted) process by which a Christian believer is made holy through the action of the Holy Spirit. | [noun] The process of making holy; hallowing, consecration. | [noun] Blackmail. SANCTIMONIOUSLY (22) SAPONACEOUSNESS (19) SAPONIFICATIONS (22) SAPROGENICITIES (20) SAPROPHYTICALLY (30) SCHEMATIZATIONS (31) SCHISTOSOMIASES (22) SCHISTOSOMIASIS (22) [noun] Any of various diseases of humans caused by parasitic blood flukes of the genus Schistosoma. SCHOOLMASTERISH (25) SCINTILLOMETERS (19) SCLEROTIZATIONS (26) SCULPTURESQUELY (31) SEAWORTHINESSES (21) SECLUSIVENESSES (20) SECONDARINESSES (18) SECRETIVENESSES (20) SECULARIZATIONS (26) SECURITIZATIONS (26) SEDIMENTOLOGIES (19) SEDIMENTOLOGIST (19) SEDITIOUSNESSES (16) SEDUCTIVENESSES (21) SEGREGATIONISTS (17) [noun] A person who supports or believes in segregation. SELECTIVENESSES (20) SEMIABSTRACTION (21) SEMICENTENNIALS (19) SEMICOLONIALISM (21) SEMICRYSTALLINE (22) [adjective] Partially crystalline (and partially amorphous). SEMICYLINDRICAL (25) SEMIDOCUMENTARY (25) [noun] A drama (film, book or TV) that presents a fictional story incorporating many factual details or actual events | [adjective] Of such a drama SEMILOGARITHMIC (25) SEMIPORNOGRAPHY (28) SEMIRETIREMENTS (19) [noun] A state of partial retirement, working only part-time or occasionally SEMISUBMERSIBLE (23) [noun] A specialised marine vessel with good stability and seakeeping characteristics, often used in offshore roles such as oil drilling. SEMITERRESTRIAL (17) SEMITRANSLUCENT (19) SEMITRANSPARENT (19) [adjective] Allowing some visibility but partially clouded or obscured; translucent. SENSATIONALISED (16) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENSATIONALISES (15) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENSATIONALISMS (17) SENSATIONALISTS (15) [noun] One who indulges in sensational behavior or action. | [noun] One who believes or espouses the philosophy of sensationalism. SENSATIONALIZED (25) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENSATIONALIZES (24) [verb] To glorify or inflate the importance of a piece of news; to artificially create a sensation. SENSELESSNESSES (15) SENSITIVENESSES (18) SENSUALIZATIONS (24) SENTENTIOUSNESS (15) 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. SENTIMENTALISES (17) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SENTIMENTALISMS (19) SENTIMENTALISTS (17) 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. SENTIMENTALIZES (26) [verb] To give a sentimental feel to. | [verb] To think or act in a sentimental manner, or like a sentimentalist; to affect exquisite sensibility. SEPARABLENESSES (19) SEPTENDECILLION (20) SEPTUAGENARIANS (18) [noun] One who is between the age of 70 and 79, inclusive. SERENDIPITOUSLY (21) SEROCONVERSIONS (20) [noun] The development of specific antibodies in the blood serum as a result of infection or immunization SERVICEABLENESS (22) SERVOMECHANISMS (27) [noun] A mechanical device for controlling large amounts of power by means of smaller amounts of power and correcting the performance of the device using feedback | [noun] Any system which controls motion automatically using feedback SESQUICARBONATE (28) SESQUICENTENARY (29) [noun] A 150-year anniversary. SHAMELESSNESSES (20) SHAPELESSNESSES (20) SHIFTLESSNESSES (21) SIDESPLITTINGLY (22) SIGHTLESSNESSES (19) SIGMOIDOSCOPIES (23) SILICIFICATIONS (22) SILVERSMITHINGS (24) SILVICULTURALLY (23) SILVICULTURISTS (20) SIMPLIFICATIONS (24) [noun] The act of simplifying or something that has been simplified | [noun] A valid simple argument SINTERABILITIES (17) SLAUGHTERHOUSES (22) [noun] A place where animals are slaughtered. | [noun] The scene of a massacre. SLEDGEHAMMERING (25) [verb] To strike with a sledgehammer. SLEEPLESSNESSES (17) SNIPPERSNAPPERS (23) SOCIALISTICALLY (22) SOCIOBIOLOGICAL (22) SOCIOBIOLOGISTS (20) SOCIOCULTURALLY (22) SOCIOHISTORICAL (22) SOCIOLINGUISTIC (20) SOFTHEARTEDNESS (22) SOLDERABILITIES (18) SOLIDIFICATIONS (21) SOLIPSISTICALLY (22) SOLITUDINARIANS (16) [noun] One who remains solitary. SOLUBILIZATIONS (26) SOMNAMBULATIONS (21) SOPHISTICATEDLY (26) SOPHISTICATIONS (22) [noun] Enlightenment or education. | [noun] Cultivated intellectual worldliness; savoir-faire. | [noun] Deceptive logic; sophistry. SORROWFULNESSES (21) SPECIALISATIONS (19) [noun] The act or process of specializing. | [noun] The area in which someone specializes. | [noun] The adaptation of an organism to a specific environment, or adaptation of an organ to a particular function. SPECIALIZATIONS (28) [noun] The act or process of specializing. | [noun] The area in which someone specializes. | [noun] The adaptation of an organism to a specific environment, or adaptation of an organ to a particular function. SPECTROGRAPHIES (25) SPECTROSCOPISTS (23) SPERMATOGENESES (20) SPERMATOGENESIS (20) [noun] The process of sperm production in the testes. SPINELESSNESSES (17) SPINTHARISCOPES (24) [noun] An early device for observing individual nuclear disintegrations. SPIRITUALNESSES (17) SPLENDIFEROUSLY (24) SPLENECTOMIZING (31) SPONTANEOUSNESS (17) SPORANGIOPHORES (23) [noun] A receptacle in ferns which bears the sporangia, usually a stalk, but sometimes a scale (as in horsetails). | [noun] A special type of hypha that bears sporangia on the tip. SPREADABILITIES (20) SPRIGHTLINESSES (21) SQUEAMISHNESSES (29) SQUEEZABILITIES (35) STADTHOLDERATES (20) STADTHOLDERSHIP (25) STANDARDIZATION (26) [noun] The process of complying (or evaluate by comparing) with a standard. | [noun] The process of establishing a standard. STANDOFFISHNESS (25) STATELESSNESSES (15) STEADFASTNESSES (19) STEEPLECHASINGS (23) STEREOCHEMISTRY (25) [noun] The branch of chemistry that involves the spatial arrangement of the atoms of molecules, and studies how this affects the physical and chemical properties of such species | [noun] The effect of such spatial arrangement on the chemistry of a particular compound STEREOISOMERISM (19) STEREOLOGICALLY (21) STEREOTAXICALLY (27) STEREOTYPICALLY (25) STEROIDOGENESES (17) STEROIDOGENESIS (17) STIGMATIZATIONS (27) STOCKBROKERAGES (28) STOICHIOMETRIES (22) STRAIGHTFORWARD (26) [adjective] Proceeding in a straight course or manner; not deviating. | [adjective] Easy, simple, without difficulty | [adjective] Direct; honest; frank STRAIGHTJACKETS (32) STRAITJACKETING (29) [verb] To put someone into a straitjacket. | [verb] (by extension) To restrict the freedom of, either physically or psychologically. | [noun] Constraints, restrictions. STRAITLACEDNESS (18) STRATIFICATIONS (20) [noun] The process leading to the formation or deposition of layers, especially of sedimentary rocks | [noun] A layering of musical texture | [noun] The vertical layering of vegetation in a forest STRATOVOLCANOES (20) [noun] A tall conical volcano, composed of layers (or strata) of hardened lava, tephra and ash. STRENUOUSNESSES (15) STREPTOBACILLUS (21) STREPTOTHRICINS (22) STRIKEBREAKINGS (26) STRONGYLOIDOSES (20) STRONGYLOIDOSIS (20) STRUCTURALIZING (27) STULTIFICATIONS (20) STYLELESSNESSES (18) SUBCATEGORIZING (30) [verb] To categorize more specifically by placing in a subcategory. | [verb] (grammar) To practice subcategorization. SUBCOMMISSIONED (24) SUBCONTRAOCTAVE (24) SUBDEVELOPMENTS (25) SUBINFEUDATIONS (21) SUBMETACENTRICS (23) SUBOPTIMIZATION (30) SUBORDINATENESS (18) SUBORGANIZATION (27) SUBPROFESSIONAL (22) SUBPROLETARIATS (19) SUBREPTITIOUSLY (22) SUBSPECIALIZING (31) SUBSTANTIALNESS (17) SUBSTANTIATIONS (17) SUBSTANTIVENESS (20) SUBSTANTIVIZING (30) SUBSTITUTIONARY (20) SUBTERRANEOUSLY (20) SUBURBANIZATION (28) SUBVOCALIZATION (31) SUCCINYLCHOLINE (27) [noun] A synthetic compound used as a short-acting muscle relaxant and local anaesthetic. It is an ester of choline with succinic acid. SULFINPYRAZONES (32) SULFUROUSNESSES (18) SUMPTUOUSNESSES (19) SUPERABLENESSES (19) SUPERABSORBENTS (21) SUPERABUNDANCES (22) SUPERABUNDANTLY (23) SUPERACTIVITIES (22) SUPERANNUATIONS (17) SUPERBUREAUCRAT (21) SUPERCALENDERED (21) [verb] To pass (paper) through a supercalender. SUPERCONDUCTING (23) SUPERCONDUCTIVE (25) SUPERCONDUCTORS (22) [noun] A substance that has no resistance to conducting an electric current SUPERCONTINENTS (19) [noun] A very large continent that split into smaller ones in the Earth’s geologic past. | [noun] A modern landmass composed of multiple continents, i.e. Afro-Eurasia or the Americas. (Compare subcontinent). SUPERCONVENIENT (22) SUPEREFFICIENCY (30) SUPERELEVATIONS (20) [noun] The angle that a gun must be elevated above the line of its target to allow for the effect of gravity on the projectile. | [noun] The cant of a railway track; the difference in elevation (height) between its two edges, as on a curve. SUPEREROGATIONS (18) SUPERFLUIDITIES (21) SUPERFLUOUSNESS (20) SUPERGOVERNMENT (23) SUPERHETERODYNE (24) [noun] A receiver of this kind. | [adjective] Pertaining to a technique used in radio and television receivers to tune to a particular frequency, or to receivers using such a technique. SUPERHUMANITIES (22) SUPERIMPOSITION (21) SUPERINDIVIDUAL (22) SUPERINDUCTIONS (20) SUPERINFECTIONS (22) SUPERINTENDENCE (20) [noun] The act of superintending; supervision SUPERINTENDENCY (23) SUPERINTENDENTS (18) [noun] A person who is authorized to supervise, direct or administer something. | [noun] A police rank used in Commonwealth countries, ranking above chief inspector, and below chief superintendent. | [noun] The manager of a building, usually a communal residence, who is responsible for keeping the facilities functional and often collecting rent or similar payments, either as also the building's landlord or on behalf of same. Often abbreviated "super". SUPERLATIVENESS (20) SUPERMAJORITIES (26) [noun] Any qualified majority, specified in advance of a vote, required for the vote to be passed SUPERNATURALISM (19) SUPERNATURALIST (17) SUPERNUMERARIES (19) [noun] A person who works in a group, association, or public office without forming part of the regular staff (the numerary). | [noun] An extra or walk-on, often non-speaking, in a film or play; a spear carrier. | [noun] Something which is beyond the prescribed or standard amount or number. SUPERNUTRITIONS (17) SUPEROVULATIONS (20) SUPERPARASITISM (21) SUPERPATRIOTISM (21) SUPERPHENOMENON (24) SUPERPHOSPHATES (27) SUPERPLASTICITY (24) SUPERSATURATING (18) [verb] To cause a solution to have more solute dissolved in it than it can stably contain at current conditions. SUPERSATURATION (17) SUPERSCRIPTIONS (21) SUPERSPECIALIST (21) SUPERSPECTACLES (23) SUPERSTIMULATED (20) SUPERSTIMULATES (19) SUPERSTITIOUSLY (20) SUPERSTRUCTURAL (19) SUPERSTRUCTURES (19) [noun] Any structure built above the top full deck (FM 55-501). | [noun] Any material structure or edifice built on something else; that which is raised on a foundation or basis. | [noun] (sometimes figurative) All that part of a building above the basement. SUPERSUBTLETIES (19) SUPERSYMMETRIES (24) SUPPLEMENTATION (21) [noun] The act of supplementing | [noun] Something added as a supplement SUPPRESSIBILITY (24) SUPPRESSIVENESS (22) SURREPTITIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a surreptitious manner; stealthily, furtively, secretly. SURVIVABILITIES (23) SUSCEPTIBLENESS (21) SUSPENSEFULNESS (20) SWELLHEADEDNESS (23) SYCOPHANTICALLY (30) SYLLABIFICATION (25) [noun] The division of a word into syllables. SYLLOGISTICALLY (24) SYMMETRICALNESS (24) SYMMETRIZATIONS (31) SYMPATHECTOMIES (29) [noun] The surgical cutting of a nerve in the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPATHETICALLY (30) [adverb] Owing to or showing evidence of "sympathy", or affinity; happening through or demonstrating correspondences, whether occult or physiological. | [adverb] In a manner which demonstrates a sharing in the feelings of others; compassionately. SYMPATHOMIMETIC (31) [noun] Any medicine with this effect. | [adjective] That produces effects similar to those of the sympathetic nervous system. SYMPTOMATICALLY (29) SYMPTOMATOLOGIC (27) SYNCHRONICITIES (25) SYNCHRONISATION (23) [noun] The state or property of being synchronized. | [noun] The arrangement of military actions in time, space, and purpose to produce maximum relative combat power at a decisive place and time. | [noun] In an intelligence context, application of intelligence sources and methods in concert with the operation plan. SYNCHRONIZATION (32) [noun] The state or property of being synchronized. | [noun] The arrangement of military actions in time, space, and purpose to produce maximum relative combat power at a decisive place and time. | [noun] In an intelligence context, application of intelligence sources and methods in concert with the operation plan. SYNCHRONOUSNESS (23) SYNECDOCHICALLY (31) SYNERGISTICALLY (24) SYSTEMATIZATION (29)

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This page lists all wheel of fortune words starting with the letter S. Whether you're playing Wheel of Fortune, 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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