8-letter words containing f, d, n
- reinfund — to pour in again, to flow in again
- reoffend — to irritate, annoy, or anger; cause resentful displeasure in: Even the hint of prejudice offends me.
- sand fly — any of several small, bloodsucking, dipterous insects of the family Psychodidae that are vectors of several diseases of humans.
- sand-fly — any of several small, bloodsucking, dipterous insects of the family Psychodidae that are vectors of several diseases of humans.
- sandfish — either of two scaleless fishes of the family Trichodontidae, of the North Pacific, that live in sand or mud.
- scan-edf — (storage, algorithm) A variation of the Scan disk aceess algorithm for use in a real-time environment where, in general, requests are served according to Earliest Deadline First. If two requests share the same deadline, they may be reorganised according to Scan. A typical example is a video server that retrieves video data from a hard disk. The playback of a video impose tight real-time constraints but if the server retrieves data once every second for each video channel, Scan-EDF can be applied, reducing the seek overhead.
- send for — to cause, permit, or enable to go: to send a messenger; They sent their son to college.
- send off — a demonstration of good wishes for a person setting out on a trip, career, or other venture: They gave him a rousing send-off at the pier.
- send-off — a demonstration of good wishes for a person setting out on a trip, career, or other venture: They gave him a rousing send-off at the pier.
- sinified — to Sinicize.
- skid fin — an upright projection or fin, positioned from leading edge to trailing edge in the center of the upper wing of some early airplanes and used to retard skidding.
- skinfood — cosmetic cream for the skin
- standoff — a standing off or apart; aloofness.
- stanford — (Amasa) Leland, 1824–93, U.S. railroad developer, politician, and philanthropist: governor of California 1861–63; senator 1885–93.
- ten-fold — comprising ten parts or members.
- trendify — to render fashionable; remodel in line with current trends
- unafraid — feeling fear; filled with apprehension: afraid to go.
- undefied — to challenge the power of; resist boldly or openly: to defy parental authority.
- underfed — to feed insufficiently.
- underfur — the fine, soft, thick, hairy coat under the longer and coarser outer hair in certain animals, as seals, otters, and beavers.
- unfabled — not fictitious
- unfading — not liable to fade in colour
- unfailed — to fall short of success or achievement in something expected, attempted, desired, or approved: The experiment failed because of poor planning.
- unfanned — not fanned
- unfeared — not feared
- unfelled — (of trees) not felled; not cut down
- unfelted — not felted
- unfenced — not enclosed by a fence
- unfeudal — not feudal
- unfilled — to make full; put as much as can be held into: to fill a jar with water.
- unfilmed — not filmed
- unfished — not used for fishing
- unfitted — made so as to follow closely the contours of a form or shape: fitted clothes; fitted sheets.
- unflared — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.
- unflawed — perfect
- unflexed — unbent
- unfluted — fine, clear, and mellow; flutelike: fluted notes.
- unfoiled — ornamented with foils, as a gable, spandrel, or balustrade.
- unfooted — not traversed; untrodden
- unforbid — unforbidden
- unforced — enforced or compulsory: forced labor.
- unforged — genuine
- unforked — not forked
- unformed — not definitely shaped; shapeless or formless.
- unframed — picture: without a frame
- unfriend — to remove (a person) from one's list of friends, or contacts, on a social media website.
- unfunded — not provided with a fund or money; not financed.
- unfurled — to spread or shake out from a furled state, as a sail or a flag; unfold.
- unfurred — not adorned with fur
- ungifted — not talented