5-letter words containing e, d, r
- medar — Alternative form of mether.
- merde — excrement.
- mered — purified or refined
- mired — a tract or area of wet, swampy ground; bog; marsh.
- moder — (obsolete) To moderate.
- mored — Simple past tense and past participle of more.
- mured — Simple past tense and past participle of mure.
- nader — Ralph, born 1934, U.S. lawyer, author, political reformer, and consumer advocate.
- nerdo — (slang) An extreme, socially-inept nerd.
- nerds — Plural form of nerd.
- nerdy — Slang. of or like a nerd.
- nuder — naked or unclothed, as a person or the body.
- oared — furnished with oars.
- odder — differing in nature from what is ordinary, usual, or expected: an odd choice.
- older — far advanced in the years of one's or its life: an old man; an old horse; an old tree.
- orbed — Having the form of an orb; round; spherical.
- order — an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
- ordre — Obsolete form of order.
- oread — Classical Mythology. any of a group of nymphs who were the companions of Artemis.
- padre — father (used especially in addressing or referring to a priest or member of the clergy).
- pared — to cut off the outer coating, layer, or part of.
- pedro — any of several varieties of all fours in which the five of trumps counts at its face value.
- perdu — hidden; concealed; obscured.
- pored — to read or study with steady attention or application: a scholar poring over a rare old manuscript.
- pred. — predicate
- predy — (of a ship) prepared or ready for sailing or action
- preed — a test, trial, or taste; a test by sampling.
- pride — Thomas, died 1658, English soldier and regicide.
- pried — to try, test, or taste.
- prude — a person who is excessively proper or modest in speech, conduct, dress, etc.
- raced — a contest of speed, as in running, riding, driving, or sailing.
- radde — (obsolete) Past participle of read.
- radek — Karl [kahrl] /kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1885–1939? Russian writer and politician.
- radge — (Geordie, Scottish) Violent or crazy.
- raged — angry fury; violent anger (sometimes used in combination): a speech full of rage; incidents of road rage.
- raked — inclining from the vertical or from the horizontal: raked masts; a raked stage.
- rared — rear2 (def 6).
- rased — to tear down; demolish; level to the ground: to raze a row of old buildings.
- rated — the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans.
- raxed — to stretch oneself, as after sleeping.
- rayed — having or represented as having emanating rays; radiate: The saint was painted with a rayed, beatific face.
- readd — to unite or join so as to increase the number, quantity, size, or importance: to add two cups of sugar; to add a postscript to her letter; to add insult to injury.
- reade — Charles, 1814–84, English novelist.
- ready — completely prepared or in fit condition for immediate action or use: troops ready for battle; Dinner is ready.
- rebid — Bridge. to make a second bid in (a suit that one bid previously): He opened a spade and then rebid spades on the three level.
- recd. — In written English, recd. can be used as an abbreviation for received.
- redan — a V -shaped work, usually projecting from a fortified line.
- reddy — slightly red in colour
- redex — Reducible Expression. An expression matching the left hand side of a reduction rule or definition.
- redia — a cylindrical larval stage of some trematodes, produced by a sporocyst and giving rise to daughter rediae or to cercariae.