0%

7-letter words containing f, o, r, d

  • forward — toward or at a place, point, or time in advance; onward; ahead: to move forward; from this day forward; to look forward.
  • foudrie — a foud's district or office
  • foulard — a soft, lightweight silk, rayon, or cotton of plain or twill weave with printed design, for neckties, scarves, trimmings, etc.
  • foulder — to thunder or flash like lightning
  • founder — a person who founds or casts metal, glass, etc.
  • foundry — an establishment for producing castings in molten metal.
  • freedom — the state of being free or at liberty rather than in confinement or under physical restraint: He won his freedom after a retrial.
  • frocked — Simple past tense and past participle of frock.
  • fröding — Gustaf (ˈɡʊstav). 1860–1911, Swedish poet. His popular lyric verse includes the collections Guitar and Concertina (1891), New Poems (1894), and Splashes and Rags (1896)
  • frogged — any tailless, stout-bodied amphibian of the order Anura, including the smooth, moist-skinned frog species that live in a damp or semiaquatic habitat and the warty, drier-skinned toad species that are mostly terrestrial as adults.
  • fronded — an often large, finely divided leaf, especially as applied to the ferns and certain palms.
  • frontad — toward the front.
  • fronted — Simple past tense and past participle of front.
  • frosted — covered with or having frost.
  • frothed — Simple past tense and past participle of froth.
  • frotzed — (jargon)   /frotst/ down because of hardware problems. Compare fried. A machine that is merely frotzed may be fixable without replacing parts, but a fried machine is more seriously damaged.
  • froward — willfully contrary; not easily managed: to be worried about one's froward, intractable child.
  • frowned — to contract the brow, as in displeasure or deep thought; scowl.
  • godfrey — a male given name: from Germanic words meaning “god” and “peace.”.
  • hanford — a city in central California.
  • lifford — the county town of Donegal, Republic of Ireland; market town. Pop: 1395 (2002)
  • medford — a city in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • milford — a city in S Connecticut, on Long Island Sound.
  • mitfordMary Russell, 1787–1855, English novelist, poet, playwright, and essayist.
  • mumfordLewis, 1895–1990, U.S. author and social scientist.
  • nordoffCharles Bernard, 1887–1947, U.S. novelist.
  • offered — to present for acceptance or rejection; proffer: He offered me a cigarette.
  • oxfords — a pair of stout laced shoes with low heels
  • radfordArthur William, 1896–1973, U.S. admiral: chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff 1953–57.
  • red fox — a fox, Vulpes vulpes, usually having orangish-red to reddish-brown fur.
  • redfoot — a fatal disease of newborn lambs of unknown cause in which the horny layers of the feet become separated, exposing the red laminae below
  • redford — Robert. born 1936, US film actor and director. His films include (as actor) Barefoot in the Park (1966), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), The Sting (1973), All the President's Men (1976), Up Close and Personal (1996), and (as director) Ordinary People (1980), A River Runs Through It (1992), and The Horse Whisperer (1998)
  • reflood — to flood again
  • refound — to come upon by chance; meet with: He found a nickel in the street.
  • romford — former municipal borough in Essex, SE England: now part of Havering, near London
  • rumfordCount, Benjamin Thompson.
  • salford — a city in Greater Manchester, in N England.
  • sanfordMount, a mountain in SE Alaska. 16,208 feet (4,940 meters).
  • seaford — a city on SW Long Island, in SE New York.
  • serfdom — a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferred with it from one owner to another.
  • telford — noting a form of road pavement composed of compacted and rolled stones of various sizes.
  • trifold — triple; threefold.
  • watford — a city in Hertfordshire, SE England, N of London.
  • wexford — a county in Leinster province, in the SE Republic of Ireland. 908 sq. mi. (2350 sq. km).
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?