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5-letter words containing e, d

  • bused — a large motor vehicle, having a long body, equipped with seats or benches for passengers, usually operating as part of a scheduled service; omnibus.
  • cadel — An ornate capital letter used in calligraphy consisting of interlacing pen strokes.
  • cader — Eastern New England and British. (of the young of animals) abandoned or left by the mother and raised by humans: a cade lamb.
  • cades — Plural form of cade.
  • cadet — A cadet is a young man or woman who is being trained in the armed services or the police.
  • cadge — If someone cadges food, money, or help from you, they ask you for it and succeed in getting it.
  • cadie — a person in a large town or city in the 18th century who was on the lookout for chance employment, for example, as a messenger
  • cadre — A cadre is a small group of people who have been specially chosen, trained, and organized for a particular purpose.
  • caged — A caged bird or animal is inside a cage.
  • caked — If something is caked with mud, blood, or dirt, it is covered with a thick dry layer of it.
  • caned — a stick or short staff used to assist one in walking; walking stick.
  • caped — wearing a cape
  • cared — a state of mind in which one is troubled; worry, anxiety, or concern: He was never free from care.
  • cased — an often small or portable container for enclosing something, as for carrying or safekeeping; receptacle: a jewel case.
  • caved — Past participle of cave.
  • cawed — Simple past tense and past participle of caw.
  • cc'ed — to send a duplicate of a document, email, or the like to: I always cc my boss when I write a memo to my staff.
  • cebid — any member of the Cebidae, a family of New World monkeys
  • cedar — A cedar or a cedar tree is a large evergreen tree with wide branches and small thin leaves called needles.
  • ceded — to yield or formally surrender to another: to cede territory.
  • ceder — to yield or formally surrender to another: to cede territory.
  • cedes — to yield or formally surrender to another: to cede territory.
  • cered — Archaic. to wrap in or as if in a cerecloth, especially a corpse.
  • chedi — A Thai Buddhist monument similar to a stupa.
  • chide — If you chide someone, you speak to them angrily because they have done something wicked or foolish.
  • chode — (archaic) Simple past form of chide.
  • cider — Cider is a drink made from apples which in Britain usually contains alcohol. In the United States, cider does not usually contain alcohol, and if it does contain alcohol, it is usually called hard cider.
  • cited — to quote (a passage, book, author, etc.), especially as an authority: He cited the Constitution in his defense.
  • clade — a group of organisms considered as having evolved from a common ancestor
  • clued — Simple past tense and past participle of clue.
  • clyde — a river in S Scotland, rising in South Lanarkshire and flowing northwest to the Firth of Clyde: formerly extensive shipyards. Length: 170 km (106 miles)
  • co-ed — A co-ed school or college is the same as a co-educational school or college.
  • codec — a set of equipment that encodes an analogue speech or video signal into digital form for transmission purposes and at the receiving end decodes the digital signal into a form close to its original
  • coded — Coded messages have words or symbols which represent other words, so that the message is secret unless you know the system behind the code.
  • codel — Abbreviation of congressional delegation, government-paid trips abroad, designed to give lawmakers first-hand knowledge of matters relevant to their legislation.
  • coden — a unique six-character code assigned to a publication for identification purposes
  • coder — a person or thing that codes
  • codes — Plural form of code.
  • codex — A codex is an ancient type of book which was written by hand, not printed.
  • codge — (transitive) To patch or cobble together; to make hastily and carelessly.
  • codle — Obsolete form of coddle.
  • coeds — Plural form of coed.
  • coked — cocaine.
  • conde — Prince de (prɛ̃s də), title of Louis II de Bourbon, Duc d'Enghien, called the Great Condé. 1621–86, French general, who led Louis XIV's armies against the Fronde (1649) but joined the Fronde in a new revolt (1650–52). He later fought for both France and Spain
  • coned — Geometry. a solid whose surface is generated by a line passing through a fixed point and a fixed plane curve not containing the point, consisting of two equal sections joined at a vertex. a plane surface resembling the cross section of a solid cone.
  • cooed — to utter or imitate the soft, murmuring sound characteristic of doves.
  • coped — to struggle or deal, especially on fairly even terms or with some degree of success (usually followed by with): I will try to cope with his rudeness.
  • cored — the central part of a fleshy fruit, containing the seeds.
  • coted — to pass by; outstrip; surpass.
  • coudé — relating to the construction of a reflecting telescope
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