5-letter words containing e, d
- pared — to cut off the outer coating, layer, or part of.
- paved — (of a road, path, etc) covered with a firm surface suitable for travel, as with paving stones or concrete
- pawed — the foot of an animal having claws.
- payed — to coat or cover (seams, a ship's bottom, etc.) with pitch, tar, or the like.
- pedal — a foot-operated lever used to control certain mechanisms, as automobiles, or to play or modify the sounds of certain musical instruments, as pianos, organs, or harps.
- pedes — a foot or footlike part.
- pedi- — indicating the foot
- pedia — a crystal form having only a single face, without a symmetrical equivalent: unique to the triclinic system.
- pedo- — indicating soil
- pedon — a three-dimensional sample of a soil just large enough to show the characteristics of all its horizons.
- pedro — any of several varieties of all fours in which the five of trumps counts at its face value.
- penda — died 655 ad, king of Mercia (?634–55)
- pends — to remain undecided or unsettled.
- pendu — culturally backward
- perdu — hidden; concealed; obscured.
- piend — arris.
- piked — a shafted weapon having a pointed head, formerly used by infantry.
- piled — having a pile, as velvet and other fabrics.
- pined — to yearn deeply; suffer with longing; long painfully (often followed by for): to pine for one's home and family.
- piped — a hollow cylinder of metal, wood, or other material, used for the conveyance of water, gas, steam, petroleum, etc.
- plead — to appeal or entreat earnestly: to plead for time.
- plied — British Dialect. to bend, fold, or mold.
- po'ed — very angry.
- podex — the posterior of an animal
- podge — a short chubby person
- poled — a long, cylindrical, often slender piece of wood, metal, etc.: a telephone pole; a fishing pole.
- pooed — excrement.
- pored — to read or study with steady attention or application: a scholar poring over a rare old manuscript.
- posed — to assume a particular attitude or stance, especially with the hope of impressing others: He likes to pose as an authority on literature.
- 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.
- pseud — a person of fatuously earnest intellectual, artistic, or social pretensions.
- pudge — William Walter ("Pudge") 1867–1954, U.S. football player.
- pwned — Slang. to totally defeat or dominate, especially in a video or computer game: You just got pwned! I pwned those guys in the end.
- quade — Alternative form of quede.
- quede — (obsolete) Evil, wickedness. (13th-16th c.).
- queed — Alternative form of qued.
- 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.