5-letter words containing e, d, r
- durex — A Durex is a condom.
- dyers — Plural form of dyer.
- eared — having ears or earlike appendages.
- ecard — A computerized greeting card, typically hosted on a Web site to which the recipient is directed by an e-mail message.
- edder — Flexible wood worked into the top of hedge stakes, to bind them together.
- edgar — a male given name: from Old English words meaning “rich, happy” and “spear.”.
- edger — a person who puts an edge, especially a finishing edge, on a garment, surface, lens, etc.
- edram — Enhanced Dynamic Random Access Memory
- eider — A northern sea duck, of which the male has mainly black and white plumage with a colored head, and the brown female has soft down feathers that are used to line the nest.
- elder — (of one or more out of a group of related or otherwise associated people) of a greater age.
- emdir — The CERN Electronic Mail DIRectory utility.
- ender — Something which ends another thing.
- erode — (of wind, water, or other natural agents) Gradually wear away (soil, rock, or land).
- erred — Simple past tense and past participle of err.
- fader — a person or thing that fades.
- fared — the price of conveyance or passage in a bus, train, airplane, or other vehicle.
- feard — (archaic) Simple past tense and past participle of fear.
- fired — a state, process, or instance of combustion in which fuel or other material is ignited and combined with oxygen, giving off light, heat, and flame.
- forde — Frank, full name Francis Michael Forde. 1890–1983, Australian politician; prime minister of Australia for eight days (1945)
- freda — a female given name.
- freed — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
- fremd — (rare, or, chiefly dialectal) Strange; foreign; alien; outlandish; far off or away; distant.
- freud — Anna, 1895–1982, British psychoanalyst, born in Austria (daughter of Sigmund Freud).
- fried — cooked in a pan or on a griddle over direct heat, usually in fat or oil.
- garde — Obsolete form of guard.
- gored — to make or furnish with a gore or gores.
- grade — a degree or step in a scale, as of rank, advancement, quality, value, or intensity: the best grade of paper.
- greed — excessive or rapacious desire, especially for wealth or possessions.
- gride — to make a grating sound; scrape harshly; grate; grind.
- hared — any rodentlike mammal of the genus Lepus, of the family Leporidae, having long ears, a divided upper lip, and long hind limbs adapted for leaping.
- heard — to perceive by the ear: Didn't you hear the doorbell?
- heder — (especially in Europe) a private Jewish elementary school for teaching children Hebrew, Bible, and the fundamentals of Judaism.
- heerd — Dialectical form of heard.
- herds — Plural form of herd.
- herod — ("the Great") 73?–4 b.c, king of Judea 37–4.
- hider — to conceal from sight; prevent from being seen or discovered: Where did she hide her jewels?
- hired — Simple past tense and past participle of hire.
- horde — a large group, multitude, number, etc.; a mass or crowd: a horde of tourists.
- idear — (Appalachian) eye dialect of idea.
- idler — the state or quality of being idle.
- indre — a department in central France. 2667 sq. mi. (6910 sq. km). Capital: Châteauroux.
- irade — a decree of a Muslim ruler.
- irked — to irritate, annoy, or exasperate: It irked him to wait in line.
- jared — (in the Book of Mormon) the eponymous ancestor of the Jaredites.
- jerid — a blunt wooden javelin used in games played on horseback in certain Muslim countries in the Middle East.
- kedar — the second son of Ishmael. Gen. 25:13.
- lader — to put (something) on or in, as a burden, load, or cargo; load.
- lorde — real name Ella Yelich-O'Connor. born 1996, New Zealand singer and songwriter, noted for her song Royals (2013)
- lured — anything that attracts, entices, or allures.
- madre — mother1 .