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5-letter words containing d, e, s

  • leads — Plural form of lead.
  • leeds — a city in West Yorkshire, in N England.
  • lends — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lend.
  • lodes — a veinlike deposit, usually metalliferous.
  • losed — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of lose.
  • ludes — Quaalude.
  • lysed — to cause dissolution or destruction of cells by lysins.
  • meadsGeorge Herbert, 1863–1931, U.S. philosopher and author.
  • medes — a native or inhabitant of Media.
  • meeds — Plural form of meed.
  • melds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of meld.
  • mends — to make (something broken, worn, torn, or otherwise damaged) whole, sound, or usable by repairing: to mend old clothes; to mend a broken toy.
  • modes — Plural form of mode.
  • mused — to think or meditate in silence, as on some subject.
  • needs — of necessity; necessarily (usually preceded or followed by must): It must needs be so. It needs must be.
  • nerds — Plural form of nerd.
  • nodes — Plural form of node.
  • nosed — the part of the face or facial region in humans and certain animals that contains the nostrils and the organs of smell and functions as the usual passageway for air in respiration: in humans it is a prominence in the center of the face formed of bone and cartilage, serving also to modify or modulate the voice.
  • nudes — Plural form of nude.
  • odetsClifford, 1906–63, U.S. dramatist.
  • oused — Simple past tense and past participle of ouse.
  • pedes — a foot or footlike part.
  • pends — to remain undecided or unsettled.
  • posed — to assume a particular attitude or stance, especially with the hope of impressing others: He likes to pose as an authority on literature.
  • pseud — a person of fatuously earnest intellectual, artistic, or social pretensions.
  • rased — to tear down; demolish; level to the ground: to raze a row of old buildings.
  • redos — to do again; repeat.
  • resid — the residual oil left over from the petroleum distillation process
  • resod — to returf (a lawn)
  • sadhe — the 18th letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
  • sadie — a female given name, form of Sara or Sarah.
  • sandeEarl, 1898–1968, U.S. jockey and racehorse trainer.
  • sated — to satisfy (any appetite or desire) fully.
  • saved — to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning.
  • sawed — a tool or device for cutting, typically a thin blade of metal with a series of sharp teeth.
  • sayed — (in Islamic countries) a supposed descendant of Muhammad through his grandson Hussein, the second son of his daughter Fatima.
  • scend — to heave in a swell.
  • scode — The internal representation used by the Liar compiler for MIT Scheme.
  • sedan — a city in NE France, on the Meuse River: defeat and capture of Napoleon III 1870.
  • seder — a ceremonial dinner that commemorates the Exodus from Egypt and includes the reading of the Haggadah and the eating of symbolic foods, generally held on the first night of Passover by Reform Jews and Jews in Israel and on both the first and second nights by Orthodox and Conservative Jews outside of Israel.
  • sedge — any rushlike or grasslike plant of the genus Carex, growing in wet places. Compare sedge family.
  • sedgy — abounding, covered, or bordered with sedge.
  • sedna — a red planet-like object, roughly half the size of the Earth's moon, orbiting the sun but considerably beyond Pluto; discovered in 2003
  • sedum — any fleshy plant belonging to the genus Sedum, of the stonecrop family, usually having small, overlapping leaves and yellow, white, or pink flowers.
  • seedy — abounding in seed.
  • sends — to cause, permit, or enable to go: to send a messenger; They sent their son to college.
  • sepad — to suppose
  • sewed — to ground (a vessel) at low tide (sometimes fol by up).
  • sexed — being of a particular sex or having sexual characteristics.
  • shade — the comparative darkness caused by the interception or screening of rays of light from an object, place, or area.
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