10-letter words containing n, o, a, d
- offloading — Present participle of offload.
- ogden nash — John, 1752–1835, English architect and city planner.
- oil-harden — to quench (steel) in a bath of oil.
- old danish — the Danish language as spoken and written from the 9th to the 14th centuries.
- oldfangled — old-fashioned; of an older or former kind.
- on a cloud — a visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth's surface.
- on and off — so as to be no longer supported or attached: This button is about to come off.
- on day one — on the first day; from the very beginning
- on draught — Beer that is on draught is kept in and served from a barrel rather than a bottle.
- on standby — a staunch supporter or adherent; one who can be relied upon.
- on the pad — a cushionlike mass of soft material used for comfort, protection, or stuffing.
- onboarding — (business) The process of bringing a new employee on board, incorporating training and orientation.
- one-handed — having or using only one hand: The left fielder made a one-handed catch of the fly ball.
- one-tailed — (of a significance test) concerned with the hypothesis that an observed value of a sampling statistic either significantly exceeds or falls significantly below a given value, where the error is relevant only in one direction: for instance, in testing whether scales are fair a customer does not regard overweight goods as a relevant error
- open-faced — having a frank or ingenuous face.
- openhanded — generous; liberal: openhanded hospitality.
- orangewood — the hard, fine-grained, yellowish wood of the orange tree, used in inlaid work and fine turnery.
- orcharding — the cultivation of orchards
- orchardman — A man who owns or tends an orchard.
- ordainable — able to be ordained
- ordainment — to invest with ministerial or sacerdotal functions; confer holy orders upon.
- ordinances — Plural form of ordinance.
- ordinaries — Plural form of ordinary.
- ordinarily — most of the time; generally; usually: Ordinarily he wakes at seven.
- ordinately — in an ordered manner
- ordinating — Present participle of ordinate.
- ordination — Ecclesiastical. the act or ceremony of ordaining.
- ordinative — Tending to ordain; directing; giving orders.
- ordonnance — the arrangement or disposition of parts, as of a building, picture, or literary work.
- ordovician — noting or pertaining to a geologic period of the Paleozoic Era, from 500 million to 425 million years ago, notable for the advent of fish.
- orientated — Having a specific orientation.
- originated — Simple past tense and past participle of originate.
- ornamented — (of a character) highly embellished or ornate; altered by embellishment.
- oropendola — any of several birds of the genus Gymnostinops, related to crows and feeding primarily on fruit and nectar, noted especially for their hanging nests.
- orphanhood — a child who has lost both parents through death, or, less commonly, one parent.
- outflanked — Simple past tense and past participle of outflank.
- outlanders — Plural form of outlander.
- outlandish — freakishly or grotesquely strange or odd, as appearance, dress, objects, ideas, or practices; bizarre: outlandish clothes; outlandish questions.
- ouvirandra — former name for the lattice-leaf plant Aponogeton madagascariensis, an aquatic plant from Madagascar, with leaves like a lattice spreading under the surface of the water
- oven-ready — (of various foods) bought already prepared so that they are ready to be cooked in the oven
- overabound — (intransitive) To be too abundant or plentiful.
- overbanked — Furnished with too many banks (financial institutions).
- overexpand — to expand excessively
- overhandle — to handle, or mention, too much
- overmanned — overstaffed
- oxygenated — to treat, combine, or enrich with oxygen: to oxygenate the blood.
- paddington — a former residential borough of Greater London, England, now part of Westminster.
- paddymelon — any of several small Australian wallabies, especially of the genus Thylogale.
- palindrome — a word, line, verse, number, sentence, etc., reading the same backward as forward, as Madam, I'm Adam or Poor Dan is in a droop.
- pandemonic — wild uproar or unrestrained disorder; tumult or chaos.