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7-letter words containing a, d, r, e

  • air bed — an inflatable mattress
  • airdate — the scheduled date for the broadcast of a television or radio programme
  • airdrie — a town in W central Scotland, in North Lanarkshire, E of Glasgow: manufacturing and pharmaceutical industries. Pop: 36 326 (2001)
  • airhead — If you describe someone, especially a young woman, as an airhead, you are critical of them because you think they are not at all clever and are interested only in unimportant things.
  • airshed — a region sharing a common flow of air, which may become uniformly polluted and stagnant
  • airside — the part of an airport nearest the aircraft, the boundary of which is the security check, customs, passport control, etc
  • airthed — a direction.
  • ajarred — (rare, perhaps nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of ajar.
  • alarmed — If someone is alarmed, they feel afraid or anxious that something unpleasant or dangerous might happen.
  • aleardi — Count Aleardo [ah-le-ahr-daw] /ˌɑ lɛˈɑr dɔ/ (Show IPA), 1812–78, Italian poet and patriot.
  • alerted — fully aware and attentive; wide-awake; keen: an alert mind.
  • aleyard — yard-of-ale.
  • alfreda — a feminine name
  • alfredo — (of food) cooked with a sauce made of cheese, cream, and eggs
  • allured — to attract or tempt by something flattering or desirable.
  • already — You use already to show that something has happened, or that something had happened before the moment you are referring to. Speakers of British English use already with a verb in a perfect tense, putting it after 'have', 'has', or 'had', or at the end of a clause. Some speakers of American English use already with the simple past tense of the verb instead of a perfect tense.
  • altered — to make different in some particular, as size, style, course, or the like; modify: to alter a coat; to alter a will; to alter course.
  • ambered — fixed in amber
  • amender — to alter, modify, rephrase, or add to or subtract from (a motion, bill, constitution, etc.) by formal procedure: Congress may amend the proposed tax bill.
  • amerced — to punish by imposing a fine not fixed by statute.
  • amerind — Indian (def 1).
  • andover — a city in NE Massachusetts.
  • andreevLeonid Nikolaevich [lee-uh-nid nik-uh lah-yuh-vich;; Russian llyee-uh-nyeet nyik-uh-lah-yuh-vich] /ˈli ə nɪd ˌnɪkˈəlɑ yə vɪtʃ;; Russian ˌllyi əˈnyit ˌnyɪk əˈlɑ yə vɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1871–1919, Russian writer.
  • andrews — Thomas. 1813–85, Irish physical chemist, noted for his work on the liquefaction of gases
  • aneroid — not containing a liquid
  • angered — a strong feeling of displeasure and belligerence aroused by a wrong; wrath; ire.
  • antired — the opposite of red as applied to an antiquark
  • appeard — Obsolete spelling of appeared.
  • aproned — Wearing an apron.
  • araised — Simple past tense and past participle of araise.
  • araneid — any of numerous arachnids constituting the order Araneae (or Araneida), which comprises the spiders
  • arbored — having an arbor, or bower
  • arcaded — decorated with an arcade: an arcaded entryway.
  • arcades — Plural form of arcade.
  • ardebil — a town in NW Iran, near the Caspian Sea.
  • ardeche — a department of S France, in Rhône-Alpes region. Capital: Privas. Pop: 294 933 (2003 est). Area: 5556 sq km (2167 sq miles)
  • ardella — a female given name.
  • ardency — having, expressive of, or characterized by intense feeling; passionate; fervent: an ardent vow; ardent love.
  • ardmore — a city in S Oklahoma.
  • ariadne — daughter of Minos and Pasiphaë: she gave Theseus the thread with which he found his way out of the Minotaur's labyrinth
  • armored — covered with armor or armor plate
  • aroused — in a state of sexual arousal
  • arrased — having an arras
  • arrayed — If things are arrayed in a particular way, they are arranged or displayed in that way.
  • arrived — to come to a certain point in the course of travel; reach one's destination: He finally arrived in Rome.
  • arrowed — having an arrow pattern or wearing clothing with an arrow pattern
  • arundel — a town in S England, in West Sussex: 11th-century castle. Pop: 3297 (2001)
  • ascared — frightened
  • aspired — to long, aim, or seek ambitiously; be eagerly desirous, especially for something great or of high value (usually followed by to, after, or an infinitive): to aspire after literary immortality; to aspire to be a doctor.
  • aspread — in an extended or stretched out manner
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