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8-letter words containing f, o, r, s

  • fourness — The property of being four in number.
  • foursome — a company or set of four; two couples; a quartet: to make up a foursome for bridge.
  • frabjous — wonderful, elegant, superb, or delicious.
  • fractons — Plural form of fracton.
  • freedoms — Plural form of freedom.
  • freepost — Freepost is a system in Britain which allows you to send mail to certain organizations without paying for the postage. 'Freepost' is written on the envelope as part of the address.
  • frescoed — Also called buon fresco, true fresco. the art or technique of painting on a moist, plaster surface with colors ground up in water or a limewater mixture. Compare fresco secco.
  • frescoer — a person who paints in fresco
  • frescoes — Also called buon fresco, true fresco. the art or technique of painting on a moist, plaster surface with colors ground up in water or a limewater mixture. Compare fresco secco.
  • fretsome — Fretful, fidgety, restless.
  • frijoles — any bean of the genus Phaseolus, especially the kidney bean, the seeds of which are used for food in Mexico, in the southwestern U.S., etc.
  • frissons — Plural form of frisson.
  • frogfish — any tropical marine fish of the family Antennariidae, having a wide, froglike mouth and broad, limblike pectoral fins.
  • froggies — Plural form of froggy.
  • frondose — bearing fronds.
  • frontals — Plural form of frontal.
  • fronters — Plural form of fronter.
  • frontons — Plural form of fronton.
  • froshing — Present participle of frosh.
  • frostbit — injury to any part of the body after excessive exposure to extreme cold, sometimes progressing from initial redness and tingling to gangrene.
  • frostier — Comparative form of frosty.
  • frostily — characterized by or producing frost; freezing; very cold: frosty weather.
  • frosting — a degree or state of coldness sufficient to cause the freezing of water.
  • frostnip — The first stage of frostbite.
  • frowsted — Simple past tense and past participle of frowst.
  • frowster — a person who enjoys being in a hot and stale atmosphere
  • fructose — Chemistry, Pharmacology. a yellowish to white, crystalline, water-soluble, levorotatory ketose sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , sweeter than sucrose, occurring in invert sugar, honey, and a great many fruits: used in foodstuffs and in medicine chiefly in solution as an intravenous nutrient.
  • functors — Plural form of functor.
  • furanose — (chemistry) any cyclic hemiacetal form of a monosaccharide having a five-membered ring (the tetrahydrofuran skeleton).
  • furlongs — Plural form of furlong.
  • fusarole — a type of architectural moulding often found below the echinus or quarter round of a column
  • fusiform — spindle-shaped; rounded and tapering from the middle toward each end, as some roots.
  • gasiform — having the form of gas; gaseous.
  • griffons — Plural form of griffon.
  • hayforks — Plural form of hayfork.
  • hornfels — a dark, fine-grained metamorphic rock, the result of recrystallization of siliceous or argillaceous sediments by contact metamorphism.
  • horsefly — any bloodsucking, usually large fly of the family Tabanidae, especially of the genus Tabanus, a serious pest of horses, cattle, etc.
  • infernos — Plural form of inferno.
  • isograft — syngraft.
  • merfolks — Plural form of merfolk.
  • mortsafe — a heavy iron cage or grille placed over the grave of a newly deceased person in order to deter body snatchers
  • of sorts — a particular kind, species, variety, class, or group, distinguished by a common character or nature: to develop a new sort of painting; nice people, of course, but not really our sort.
  • of yours — belonging to or associated with you
  • offerers — Plural form of offerer.
  • officers — Plural form of officer.
  • offshore — off or away from the shore: They pushed the boat offshore.
  • offsider — an assistant or helper.
  • orifices — an opening or aperture, as of a tube or pipe; a mouthlike opening or hole; mouth; vent.
  • outfires — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outfire.
  • overfast — too fast
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