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5-letter words containing e, d

  • fried — cooked in a pan or on a griddle over direct heat, usually in fat or oil.
  • fudge — a small stereotype or a few lines of specially prepared type, bearing a newspaper bulletin, for replacing a detachable part of a page plate without the need to replate the entire page.
  • fumed — darkened or colored by exposure to ammonia fumes, as oak and other wood.
  • fused — Electricity. a protective device, used in an electric circuit, containing a conductor that melts under heat produced by an excess current, thereby opening the circuit. Compare circuit breaker.
  • fuzed — Simple past tense and past participle of fuze.
  • fylde — a region in NW England in Lancashire between the Wyre and Ribble estuaries
  • fynde — Obsolete spelling of find.
  • gaged — a standard of measure or measurement.
  • galed — Simple past tense and past participle of gale.
  • gamed — an amusement or pastime: children's games.
  • gaped — to stare with open mouth, as in wonder.
  • garde — Obsolete form of guard.
  • gated — (of patterns in a foundry mold) linked by gates.
  • gawed — Simple past tense and past participle of gaw.
  • gazed — to look steadily and intently, as with great curiosity, interest, pleasure, or wonder.
  • gelds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of geld.
  • gelid — very cold; icy.
  • geod. — geodesy
  • geode — a hollow concretionary or nodular stone often lined with crystals.
  • geoid — an imaginary surface that coincides with mean sea level in the ocean and its extension through the continents.
  • gibed — Simple past tense and past participle of gibe.
  • gived — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of give.
  • glade — an open space in a forest.
  • glead — (archaic) A live coal.
  • glede — A live coal, an ember.
  • gleed — a squint.
  • glide — to move smoothly and continuously along, as if without effort or resistance, as a flying bird, a boat, or a skater.
  • glode — (archaic) Simple past tense and past participle of glide.
  • glued — Simple past tense and past participle of glue.
  • glyde — Obsolete spelling of glide.
  • godelKurt [kurt] /kɜrt/ (Show IPA), 1906–78, U.S. mathematician and logician, born in Austria-Hungary.
  • godet — a triangular piece of fabric, often rounded at the top, inserted in a garment to give fullness. Compare gore3 (def 1), gusset (def 1).
  • godey — Louis Antoine [an-twahn] /ˈæn twɑn/ (Show IPA), 1804–78, U.S. publisher: founded the first women's magazine in the U.S. 1830.
  • golde — Archaic spelling of gold.
  • goode — Obsolete spelling of good.
  • 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.
  • gudea — flourished c2250 b.c, Sumerian ruler.
  • gudes — God.
  • guide — to assist (a person) to travel through, or reach a destination in, an unfamiliar area, as by accompanying or giving directions to the person: He guided us through the forest.
  • guyed — a rope, cable, or appliance used to guide and steady an object being hoisted or lowered, or to secure anything likely to shift its position.
  • gyved — Usually, gyves. a shackle, especially for the leg; fetter.
  • haded — Geology. the angle between a fault plane and the vertical, measured perpendicular to the strike of the fault; complement of the dip.
  • haden — Charles (Edward). born 1937, US jazz bassist, esp. noted for his collaborations with Ornette Coleman and Keith Jarrett
  • hades — Geology. the angle between a fault plane and the vertical, measured perpendicular to the strike of the fault; complement of the dip.
  • hadje — Archaic form of hajji.
  • haled — to compel (someone) to go: to hale a man into court.
  • hande — Archaic spelling of hand.
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