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5-letter words containing d, l

  • redly — with a red color or glow: a bonfire blazing redly in the dark.
  • riled — to irritate or vex.
  • ruled — paper: lined
  • rydal — a village in NW England, in Cumbria on Rydal Water (a small lake). Rydal Mount, home of Wordsworth from 1813 to 1850, is situated here
  • sadly — affected by unhappiness or grief; sorrowful or mournful: to feel sad because a close friend has moved away.
  • salad — a usually cold dish consisting of vegetables, as lettuce, tomatoes, and cucumbers, covered with a dressing and sometimes containing seafood, meat, or eggs.
  • salud — to your health: used as a toast
  • scald — to burn or affect painfully with or as if with hot liquid or steam.
  • scold — to find fault with angrily; chide; reprimand: The teacher scolded me for being late.
  • sidle — to move sideways or obliquely.
  • sield — provided with a ceiling
  • skald — one of the ancient Scandinavian poets.
  • skuld — any of three goddesses of fate, the goddess of the past (Urd) the goddess of the present (Verdandi) and the goddess of the future (Skuld)
  • slade — a sledge
  • slide — to move along in continuous contact with a smooth or slippery surface: to slide down a snow-covered hill.
  • sloid — a system of manual training based on experience gained in woodworking, originally developed in Sweden.
  • slojd — a system of manual training based on experience gained in woodworking, originally developed in Sweden.
  • sloyd — a system of manual training based on experience gained in woodworking, originally developed in Sweden.
  • slued — to turn (a mast or other spar) around on its own axis, or without removing it from its place.
  • solde — wages
  • soldo — a former copper coin of Italy, the twentieth part of a lira, equal to five centesimi.
  • soled — the bottom or under surface of the foot.
  • solid — having three dimensions (length, breadth, and thickness), as a geometrical body or figure.
  • speld — a spark or splinter
  • splad — splat1 (def 1).
  • sydel — A system language, fully typed, with inline assembly code, by Jan Garwick, ca 1974.
  • szoldHenrietta, 1860–1945, U.S. Zionist: founded Hadassah in 1912.
  • tidal — of, pertaining to, characterized by, or subject to tides: a tidal current.
  • tilde — a diacritic (~) placed over an n, as in Spanish mañana, to indicate a palatal nasal sound or over a vowel, as in Portuquese são, to indicate nasalization.
  • tildy — Zoltán [zawl-tahn] /ˈzɔl tɑn/ (Show IPA), 1889–1961, Hungarian statesman: premier 1945–46; president 1946–48.
  • tiled — covered or furnished with tiles.
  • tl;dr — too long didn't read: an expression of the opinion that a post, story, article, etc, esp on the internet, is overly long and uninteresting
  • toled — toll2 (defs 5, 6).
  • udall — Also called Uvedale. Nicholas, 1505–56, English translator and playwright, especially of comedy.
  • ulnad — towards the ulna
  • unled — (of a person, group, organization, etc) not led
  • unlid — to remove lid from (something)
  • valdoPeter, Pierre Waldo.
  • valid — sound; just; well-founded: a valid reason.
  • veldt — the open country, bearing grass, bushes, or shrubs, or thinly forested, characteristic of parts of southern Africa.
  • vidal — (Eugene Luther) Gore, 1925–2012, U.S. novelist, essayist, and playwright.
  • waldoPierre or Peter, died c1217, French merchant and religious reformer, declared a heretic: founder of the Waldenses.
  • waled — something that is selected as the best; choice.
  • wealdThe, a region in SE England, in Kent, Surrey, and Essex counties: once a forest area; now an agricultural region.
  • wedel — to engage in wedeln.
  • welds — Plural form of weld.
  • wield — to exercise (power, authority, influence, etc.), as in ruling or dominating.
  • wilde — Oscar (Fingal O'Flahertie Wills) [fing-guh l oh-fla-her-tee wilz,, oh-flair-tee] /ˈfɪŋ gəl oʊˈflæ hər ti ˈwɪlz,, oʊˈflɛər ti/ (Show IPA), ("Sebastian Melmoth") 1854–1900, Irish poet, dramatist, novelist, essayist, and critic.
  • wilds — Plural form of wild.
  • wiled — Simple past tense and past participle of wile.
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