0%

7-letter words containing a, d, r

  • adorers — Plural form of adorer.
  • adoring — An adoring person is someone who loves and admires another person very much.
  • adorned — to decorate or add beauty to, as by ornaments: garlands of flowers adorning their hair.
  • adorner — someone who adorns
  • adpress — to press together
  • adrenal — on or near the kidneys
  • adreno- — adrenal glands
  • adsorbs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of adsorb.
  • adulter — (obsolete) To commit adultery.
  • adultry — Misspelling of adultery.
  • adverbs — any member of a class of words that function as modifiers of verbs or clauses, and in some languages, as Latin and English, as modifiers of adjectives, other adverbs, or adverbial phrases, as very in very nice, much in much more impressive, and tomorrow in She'll write to you tomorrow. They relate to what they modify by indicating place (I promise to be there), time (Do your homework now!), manner (She sings beautifully), circumstance (He accidentally dropped the glass when the bell rang), degree (I'm very happy to see you), or cause (I draw, although badly). See also sentence adverb.
  • adverse — Adverse decisions, conditions, or effects are unfavourable to you.
  • adverts — Plural form of advert.
  • adviser — An adviser is an expert whose job is to give advice to another person or to a group of people.
  • advisor — one who gives advice.
  • aerated — angry or agitated
  • afeared — afraid.
  • affoord — Obsolete spelling of afford.
  • affords — to be able to do, manage, or bear without serious consequence or adverse effect: The country can't afford another drought.
  • affraid — Obsolete spelling of afraid.
  • agender — noting or relating to a person who does not have a specific gender identity or recognizable gender expression.
  • aggrade — to build up the level of (any land surface) by the deposition of sediment
  • aground — If a ship runs aground, it touches the ground in a shallow part of a river, lake, or the sea, and gets stuck.
  • air bed — an inflatable mattress
  • air dam — any device, such as a spoiler, that reduces air resistance and increases the stability of a car, aircraft, etc
  • air-dry — to dry by exposure to the air
  • 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)
  • airdrop — a delivery of supplies, troops, etc, from an aircraft by parachute
  • 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.
  • airmada — a large fleet or flight of airplanes assigned to a specific mission: shipping lanes guarded by a giant airmada overhead.
  • 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.
  • airward — upwards; towards the air
  • 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.
  • aldabra — an island group in the Indian Ocean: part of the British Indian Ocean Territory (1965–76); now administratively part of the Seychelles
  • aldaric — Of or pertaining to an aldaric acid or its derivative.
  • aldrich — Thomas Bailey1836-1907; U.S. poet & novelist
  • 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.
  • alphard — (language)   (Named after the brightest star in Hydra) A Pascal-like language developed by Wulf, Shaw and London of CMU in 1974. Alphard supports data abstraction using the 'form', which combines a specification and an implementation.
  • 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.
  • altdorf — a town in central Switzerland, capital of Uri canton: setting of the William Tell legend. Pop: 8541 (2000)
  • 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.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?