5-letter words containing d, e, s
- she'd — She'd is the usual spoken form of 'she had', especially when 'had' is an auxiliary verb.
- shend — to put to shame.
- sherd — shard.
- shied — simple past tense and past participle of shy2 .
- shoed — an external covering for the human foot, usually of leather and consisting of a more or less stiff or heavy sole and a lighter upper part ending a short distance above, at, or below the ankle.
- shred — a piece cut or torn off, especially in a narrow strip.
- sided — being at or on one side: the side aisles of a theater.
- sider — one of the surfaces forming the outside of or bounding a thing, or one of the lines bounding a geometric figure.
- sidhe — a mound or hill in which fairies live.
- sidle — to move sideways or obliquely.
- sield — provided with a ceiling
- siped — (of liquid) to drip, ooze, or soak through.
- sired — the male parent of a quadruped.
- sited — the position or location of a town, building, etc., especially as to its environment: the site of our summer cabin.
- sized — having size as specified (often used in combination): middle-sized.
- skeed — one of a pair of long, slender runners made of wood, plastic, or metal used in gliding over snow.
- skied — a simple past tense of sky.
- slade — a sledge
- slide — to move along in continuous contact with a smooth or slippery surface: to slide down a snow-covered hill.
- slued — to turn (a mast or other spar) around on its own axis, or without removing it from its place.
- snead — Samuel Jackson ("Slamming Sammy") 1912–2002, U.S. golfer.
- snide — derogatory in a nasty, insinuating manner: snide remarks about his boss.
- solde — wages
- soled — the bottom or under surface of the foot.
- sonde — a rocket, balloon, or rockoon used as a probe for observing phenomena in the atmosphere.
- sowed — to scatter (seed) over land, earth, etc., for growth; plant.
- spade — a black figure shaped like an inverted heart and with a short stem at the cusp opposite the point, used on playing cards.
- spaed — to prophesy; foretell; predict.
- specd — Usually, specs. specification (def 2).
- speed — rapidity in moving, going, traveling, proceeding, or performing; swiftness; celerity: the speed of light; the speed of sound.
- speld — a spark or splinter
- spend — to pay out, disburse, or expend; dispose of (money, wealth, resources, etc.): resisting the temptation to spend one's money.
- spide — a young working-class man who dresses in casual sports clothes
- spied — a person employed by a government to obtain secret information or intelligence about another, usually hostile, country, especially with reference to military or naval affairs.
- spode — Josiah, 1733–97, and his son, Josiah, 1754–1827, English potters.
- stade — a period of time represented by a glacial deposit.
- stead — the place of a person or thing as occupied by a successor or substitute: The nephew of the queen came in her stead.
- steed — a horse, especially a high-spirited one.
- stend — a butcher's tool used to hold open a carcass
- suede — kid or other leather finished with a soft, napped surface, on the flesh side or on the outer side after removal of a thin outer layer.
- swede — a native or inhabitant of Sweden.
- sydel — A system language, fully typed, with inline assembly code, by Jan Garwick, ca 1974.
- tides — the periodic rise and fall of the waters of the ocean and its inlets, produced by the attraction of the moon and sun, and occurring about every 12 hours.
- tsade — sadhe.
- tsked — an exclamation of “tsk.”.
- vides — see (used especially to refer a reader to parts of a text).
- vised — any of various devices, usually having two jaws that may be brought together or separated by means of a screw, lever, or the like, used to hold an object firmly while work is being done on it.
- wades — Plural form of wade.
- weds. — Wednesday
- weeds — a valueless plant growing wild, especially one that grows on cultivated ground to the exclusion or injury of the desired crop.