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6-letter words containing e, n, d, s

  • fiends — Plural form of fiend.
  • indies — an independently or privately owned business, especially a film or music company that is not affiliated with a larger and more commercial company: to work for an indie.
  • indues — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of indue.
  • inside — on the inner side or part of; within: inside the circle; inside the envelope.
  • kindes — Plural form of kinde.
  • kneads — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of knead.
  • landes — a department in SW France. 3615 sq. mi. (9365 sq. km). Capital: Mont-de-Marsan.
  • lensed — a piece of transparent substance, usually glass, having two opposite surfaces either both curved or one curved and one plane, used in an optical device in changing the convergence of light rays, as for magnification, or in correcting defects of vision.
  • mendes — a member of a people living in Sierra Leone and Liberia.
  • nested — (of an ordered collection of sets or intervals) having the property that each set is contained in the preceding set and the length or diameter of the sets approaches zero as the number of sets tends to infinity.
  • netbsd — (operating system)   An open source Unix clone that aims for platform independance by a clean separation between the hardware and the the kernel. It has been ported to many platforms from embedded systems to 64-bit computers.
  • nodose — having nodes.
  • noised — Simple past tense and past participle of noise.
  • noosed — Simple past tense and past participle of noose.
  • noshed — Simple past tense and past participle of nosh.
  • nosode — (in homeopathy) a preparation of substances secreted in the course of a disease, used in the treatment of that disease.
  • nudest — naked or unclothed, as a person or the body.
  • nudges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nudge.
  • nudies — a film, performance, or magazine featuring nude performers or photographs.
  • nursed — Simple past tense and past participle of nurse.
  • odense — a seaport on Fyn island, in S Denmark.
  • onside — (of a player, especially in soccer or hockey) occupying a position on the field where playing the ball or puck is allowed; not offside.
  • ostend — a seaport in NW Belgium.
  • resend — to send again.
  • sadden — make sad
  • sained — to make the sign of the cross on, as for protection against evil influences.
  • sandek — the man who holds the child during the Jewish rite of circumcision.
  • sander — a male given name, form of Alexander.
  • sandie — a male given name, form of Sandro.
  • sdaine — to disdain
  • second — next after the first; being the ordinal number for two.
  • secund — arranged on one side only; unilateral.
  • seddonRichard John, 1845–1906, New Zealand statesman, born in England: prime minister 1893–1906.
  • sedent — seated or inactive
  • seined — a fishing net that hangs vertically in the water, having floats at the upper edge and sinkers at the lower.
  • seldenGeorge Baldwin, 1846–1922, U.S. inventor of a gasoline-powered car.
  • send's — to heave in a swell.
  • sendai — a city on NE Honshu, in central Japan.
  • sendak — Maurice (Bernard) 1928–2012, U.S. author and illustrator of children's books.
  • sendal — a silk fabric in use during the Middle Ages.
  • sendee — the person to whom something is sent.
  • sender — a person or thing that sends.
  • sendit — Systems Engineering for Network Debugging, Integration and Test. A two-year European Commission funded project to produce software tools for distributed applications running on networks of microcontrollers.
  • sendup — a mocking parody, esp. when done with seeming gravity; takeoff; spoof
  • sidneySir Philip, 1554–86, English poet, writer, statesman, and soldier.
  • signed — a token; indication.
  • singed — to burn superficially or slightly; scorch.
  • snared — a device, often consisting of a noose, for capturing small game.
  • snider — derogatory in a nasty, insinuating manner: snide remarks about his boss.
  • sniped — any of several long-billed game birds of the genera Gallinago (Capella) and Limnocryptes, inhabiting marshy areas, as G. gallinago (common snipe) of Eurasia and North America, having barred and striped white, brown, and black plumage.
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