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10-letter words containing a, d, l, e, s

  • pilastrade — a row of pilasters.
  • placidness — pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled; tranquil; serenely quiet or undisturbed: placid waters.
  • plastidule — a small particle of protoplasm
  • please god — You say please God to emphasize a strong hope, wish, or desire that you have.
  • pre-leased — to sign or grant a lease on (a building, apartment, etc.) in advance of construction: Agents have preleased more than 60 percent of the new building.
  • psalmodize — to sing psalms
  • pseudoalum — any of a class of alums in which the usual monovalent metal of a true alum is replaced by a bivalent metal
  • pseudosalt — a compound whose formula is that of a salt, but that does not ionize in solution
  • quadrilles — Plural form of quadrille.
  • quadruples — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of quadruple.
  • queensland — a state in NE Australia. 670,500 sq. mi. (1,736,595 sq. km). Capital: Brisbane.
  • quesadilla — a tortilla folded over a filling of shredded cheese, onions, and chilies and broiled or fried.
  • racialised — to impose a racial interpretation on; place in a racial context.
  • radicalise — to make radical or more radical, as in politics: young people who are being radicalized by extremist philosophies.
  • radiculose — having small roots or rhizoids
  • red salmon — sockeye salmon.
  • regardless — having or showing no regard; heedless; unmindful (often followed by of).
  • residually — in a residual manner.
  • ritualised — to practice ritualism.
  • sacerdotal — of priests; priestly.
  • sacralized — to make sacred; imbue with sacred character, especially through ritualized devotion: a society that sacralized science.
  • saddleback — any of various animals having markings on the back that resemble a saddle, as a male harp seal.
  • saddlebill — a large stork, Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis, of West Africa, having a white and black body and a long, red and black bill.
  • saddlebred — an American breed of riding horse
  • saddleroom — a room for storing saddlery
  • saddlesore — feeling sore or stiff from horseback riding.
  • saddletree — the frame of a saddle.
  • salamander — any tailed amphibian of the order Caudata, having a soft, moist, scaleless skin, typically aquatic as a larva and semiterrestrial as an adult: several species are endangered.
  • sallenders — an eruption on the hind leg of a horse, on the inside of a hock.
  • saltigrade — moving by leaping.
  • sand lance — any slender marine fish of the family Ammodytidae that burrows into the sand.
  • sand smelt — variety of saltwater fish
  • sand table — a table with raised edges holding sand for children to play with.
  • sandcastle — a small castlelike structure made of wet sand, as by children at a beach.
  • sanderling — a common, small sandpiper, Calidris alba, inhabiting sandy beaches.
  • sandlotter — a youngster who plays baseball in a sandlot.
  • sandroller — a North American fresh-water fish, Percopsis transmontana, related to the troutperch but having a deeper, more compressed body.
  • scaffolded — a temporary structure for holding workers and materials during the erection, repair, or decoration of a building.
  • scaldberry — the bramble or blackberry, Rubus fruticosus
  • scale down — a succession or progression of steps or degrees; graduated series: the scale of taxation; the social scale.
  • scaleboard — a very thin board, as for the back of a picture.
  • scandalise — to shock or horrify by something considered immoral or improper.
  • scandalize — to shock or horrify by something considered immoral or improper.
  • scapulated — (of a raven) with white feathers across the scapular region
  • scottsdale — a city in central Arizona, near Phoenix.
  • screenland — filmdom.
  • scrollhead — billethead.
  • sea cradle — chiton (def 1).
  • sea dahlia — a garden plant, Coreopsis maritima, of the southwestern coast of North America, having long-stalked, solitary, yellow flower heads nearly 3 inches (7.6 cm) wide.
  • sea ladder — a set of rungs fixed to the side of a vessel, forming a ladder from the weather deck to the water line.
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