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5-letter words containing e, d

  • lobed — having a lobe or lobes; lobate.
  • loden — a thick, heavily fulled, waterproof fabric, used in coats and jackets for cold climates.
  • lodes — a veinlike deposit, usually metalliferous.
  • lodgeHenry Cabot, 1850–1924, U.S. public servant and author: senator 1893–1924.
  • looed — a card game in which forfeits are paid into a pool.
  • loped — to move or run with bounding steps, as a quadruped, or with a long, easy stride, as a person.
  • lorde — real name Ella Yelich-O'Connor. born 1996, New Zealand singer and songwriter, noted for her song Royals (2013)
  • losed — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of lose.
  • loude — (obsolete) Sound.
  • loved — held in deep affection; cherished: loved companions; much-loved friends.
  • lowed — to burn; blaze.
  • lubed — Simple past tense and past participle of lube.
  • ludes — Quaalude.
  • luged — Simple past tense and past participle of luge.
  • lured — anything that attracts, entices, or allures.
  • luted — Simple past tense and past participle of lute.
  • lysed — to cause dissolution or destruction of cells by lysins.
  • maced — Simple past tense and past participle of mace.
  • madge — a female given name, form of Margaret.
  • madre — mother1 .
  • maide — Obsolete spelling of maid.
  • maked — (nonstandard, colloquial) Simple past tense and past participle of make.
  • mande — a branch of the Niger-Congo subfamily of languages, spoken in western Africa and including Mende, Malinke, Bambara, and Kpelle.
  • maned — the long hair growing on the back of or around the neck and neighboring parts of some animals, as the horse or lion.
  • mated — a partner in marriage; spouse.
  • maude — Matilda (def 1).
  • mawed — Having a maw (of a specified kind).
  • maxed — Reach or cause to reach the limit of capacity or ability.
  • mayed — the fifth month of the year, containing 31 days.
  • mazed — Simple past tense and past participle of maze.
  • mdlle — Mademoiselle
  • mdme. — Madame.
  • meadeGeorge Gordon, 1815–72, Union general in the American Civil War.
  • meadsGeorge Herbert, 1863–1931, U.S. philosopher and author.
  • medal — a flat piece of metal, often a disk but sometimes a cross, star, or other form, usually bearing an inscription or design, issued to commemorate a person, action, or event, or given as a reward for bravery, merit, or the like: a gold medal for the best swimmer.
  • medan — a city in NE Sumatra, in W Indonesia.
  • medar — Alternative form of mether.
  • medea — Classical Mythology. a sorceress, daughter of Aeëtes and wife of Jason, whom she assisted in obtaining the Golden Fleece: when Jason deserted her, she killed their children.
  • medes — a native or inhabitant of Media.
  • medi- — medio-
  • media — an ancient country in W Asia, S of the Caspian Sea, corresponding generally to NW Iran. Capital: Ecbatana.
  • medic — any plant belonging to the genus Medicago, of the legume family, having trifoliate leaves and grown as a forage crop.
  • medii — the middle finger.
  • medit — Mediterranean
  • medly — Obsolete form of medley.
  • medoc — a wine-growing region in Gironde, in SW France.
  • medon — (in the Odyssey) a herald who warned Penelope that her suitors were conspiring against Telemachus.
  • meeds — Plural form of meed.
  • meldc — A reflective object-oriented concurrent programming language developed in 1990 by the MELD Project of the Programming Systems Laboratory at Columbia University. MELDC is a redesign of MELD based on C. The core of the architecture is a micro-kernel (the MELDC kernel), which encapsulates a minimum set of entities that cannot be modelled as objects. All components outside of the kernel are implemented as objects in MELDC itself and are modularised in the MELDC libraries. MELDC is reflective in three dimensions: structural, computational and architectural. The structural reflection indicates that classes and meta-classes are objects, which are written in MELDC. The computational reflection means that object behaviours can be computed and extended at run time. The architectural reflection indicates that new features/properties (e.g. persistency and remoteness) can be constructed in MELDC. Version 2.0 runs on Sun-4/SunOS 4.1 and DECstation and MIPS/Ultrix 4.2. E-mail: Gail Kaiser <[email protected]>. MELDC is available under licence from <[email protected]> and may not be used for commercial purposes.
  • melds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of meld.
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