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7-letter words containing i, d, e

  • skydive — to engage in skydiving.
  • sleided — (of threads) separated; frayed
  • slidden — to move along in continuous contact with a smooth or slippery surface: to slide down a snow-covered hill.
  • slidder — a furrow down a hillside
  • slidell — a town in SE Louisiana.
  • slinked — to move or go in a furtive, abject manner, as from fear, cowardice, or shame.
  • slipped — to move, flow, pass, or go smoothly or easily; glide; slide: Water slips off a smooth surface.
  • smidgen — a very small amount: a smidgen of jam for your toast.
  • smirked — to smile in an affected, smug, or offensively familiar way.
  • smithed — a worker in metal.
  • snidely — derogatory in a nasty, insinuating manner: snide remarks about his boss.
  • sniffed — an act of sniffing; a single, short, audible inhalation.
  • snipped — to cut with a small, quick stroke, or a succession of such strokes, with scissors or the like.
  • soldier — a person who serves in an army; a person engaged in military service.
  • solider — having three dimensions (length, breadth, and thickness), as a geometrical body or figure.
  • soliped — solidungulate.
  • sondeli — an Indian musk shrew
  • soredia — a group of algal cells surrounded by hyphal tissue, occurring on the surface of the thallus and functioning in vegetative reproduction.
  • speldin — a fish that has been split and dried
  • sphecid — belonging or pertaining to the Sphecidae, a family of solitary wasps, including the mud daubers, sand wasps, etc.
  • spidery — like a spider or a spider's web.
  • spiffed — to reward (a salesperson) with a spiff.
  • spindle — a rounded rod, usually of wood, tapering toward each end, used in hand-spinning to twist into thread the fibers drawn from the mass on the distaff, and on which the thread is wound as it is spun.
  • spinode — cusp (def 3).
  • spitted — to eject saliva from the mouth; expectorate.
  • splined — a long, narrow, thin strip of wood, metal, etc.; slat.
  • spoiled — to damage severely or harm (something), especially with reference to its excellence, value, usefulness, etc.: The water stain spoiled the painting. Drought spoiled the corn crop.
  • squidge — to squash or squeeze (something soft) or (of something soft) to become squashed
  • squired — (in England) a country gentleman, especially the chief landed proprietor in a district.
  • staider — of settled or sedate character; not flighty or capricious.
  • staired — having or consisting of stairs
  • steroid — any of a large group of fat-soluble organic compounds, as the sterols, bile acids, and sex hormones, most of which have specific physiological action.
  • stifled — to quell, crush, or end by force: to stifle a revolt; to stifle free expression.
  • stilled — remaining in place or at rest; motionless; stationary: to stand still.
  • stilted — stiffly dignified or formal, as speech or literary style; pompous.
  • stinted — to be frugal; get along on a scanty allowance: Don't stint on the food. They stinted for years in order to save money.
  • stipend — a periodic payment, especially a scholarship or fellowship allowance granted to a student.
  • stirred — to move one's hand or an implement continuously or repeatedly through (a liquid or other substance) in order to cool, mix, agitate, dissolve, etc., any or all of the component parts: to stir one's coffee with a spoon.
  • storied — having stories or floors (often used in combination): a two-storied house.
  • strider — to walk with long steps, as with vigor, haste, impatience, or arrogance.
  • strides — men's trousers
  • striped — having stripes or bands.
  • strived — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
  • studdie — stithy.
  • studied — marked by or suggestive of conscious effort; not spontaneous or natural; affected: studied simplicity.
  • studier — application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or reflection: long hours of study.
  • studies — work relating to a particular discipline
  • stymied — Golf. (on a putting green) an instance of a ball's lying on a direct line between the cup and the ball of an opponent about to putt.
  • subedit — to edit and correct (written or printed material)
  • subidea — a secondary idea
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