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4-letter words containing o, d

  • oked — all right; proceeding normally; satisfactory or under control: Things are OK at the moment.
  • olde — (archaic) old.
  • olds — (used with a plural verb) old persons collectively (usually preceded by the): appropriations to care for the old.
  • oldy — oldie.
  • oled — organic light-emitting diode: a light-emitting diode (LED) composed of one or more layers of organic material between two electrodes.
  • olid — (rare) evil-smelling; fetid.
  • onde — (obsolete) Envy; hatred; malice.
  • ondo — a state of SW Nigeria, on the Bight of Benin. Capital: Akure. Pop: 3 441 024 (2004). Area: 15 500 sq km (5985 sq miles)
  • oodb — object-oriented database
  • ooid — (geology) A small calcium carbonate or iron coated grain found on the seafloor.
  • oosd — Object-oriented structured design: a design method elaborated from structured design and incorporating the essential features of the object-oriented approach.
  • oped — a newspaper page devoted to signed articles by commentators, essayists, humorists, etc., of varying viewpoints: the Op-Ed of today's New York Times.
  • orad — toward the mouth or the oral region.
  • orde — Alternative form of ord.
  • ordo — Roman Catholic Church. a booklet containing short and abbreviated directions for the contents of the office and Mass of each day in the year.
  • oudh — a former part of the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh in N India: now part of Uttar Pradesh.
  • ouds — Plural form of oud.
  • ould — (slang, Ireland) old, aged, long-established.
  • ovid — (Publius Ovidius Naso) 43 b.c.–a.d. 17? Roman poet.
  • owed — to be under obligation to pay or repay: to owe money to the bank; to owe the bank interest on a mortgage.
  • oxid — a compound in which oxygen is bonded to one or more electropositive atoms.
  • plod — to walk heavily or move laboriously; trudge: to plod under the weight of a burden.
  • po'd — pissed off.
  • pod- — podo-
  • poed — very angry.
  • pond — a body of water smaller than a lake, sometimes artificially formed, as by damming a stream.
  • pood — a Russian weight equal to about 36 pounds avoirdupois (16 kg).
  • prod — to poke or jab with or as if with something pointed: I prodded him with my elbow.
  • qdos — (operating system)   The Sinclair QL's proprietary operating system. The origin of the name is uncertain (a weak pun on kudos, perhaps, as Unix was on Multics). There was another OS around from the birth of personal computers called Q.D.O.S. - Quick And Dirty Operating System. QDOS might also stand for QL Data/Disk/Drive/Device Operating System. QDOS did the usual OS sorts of things, as well as multitasking. It was unusual in several ways. It treated all devices (serial ports, mouse ports, screen, microdrive, disk drive, keyboard, etc.) uniformly, so you could print a text file direct to disk or save a binary to the screen for example. Also logical channels could be assigned to particular physical devices. Output directed to a channel would go to the appropriate in/output. This also meant you could have many windows on screen (the QL booted up from internal ROMs with 3 windows - command line, output and program listing) all independent to some extent. Channels could be redirected without affecting the way the process sent or received the data.
  • quod — jail.
  • rdos — Realtime Disk Operating System
  • redo — to do again; repeat.
  • road — a long, narrow stretch with a smoothed or paved surface, made for traveling by motor vehicle, carriage, etc., between two or more points; street or highway.
  • rode — a simple past tense of ride.
  • rodi — Italian name of Rhodes.
  • roed — with roe inside, containing roe
  • rood — a crucifix, especially a large one at the entrance to the choir or chancel of a medieval church, often supported on a rood beam or rood screen.
  • shod — a simple past tense and past participle of shoe.
  • snod — smooth; sleek.
  • soda — Symbolic Optimum DEUCE Assembly Program
  • sold — simple past tense and past participle of sell1 .
  • sord — a flight or flock of mallards.
  • spod — a person seen as being boring, unattractive, or excessively studious
  • toad — any of various tailless amphibians that are close relatives of the frogs in the order Anura and that typically have dry, warty skin and are terrestrial or semiterrestrial in habit. Compare frog1 (def 1).
  • todd — Alexander Robertus [roh-bur-tuh s] /roʊˈbɜr təs/ (Show IPA), (Baron of Trumpington) 1907–97, Scottish chemist: Nobel prize 1957.
  • todo — bustle; fuss: They made a great to-do over the dinner.
  • todtFritz [frits] /frɪts/ (Show IPA), 1891–1942, German military engineer.
  • tody — any of several small West Indian birds of the family Todidae, related to the motmots and kingfishers, having brightly colored green and red plumage.
  • toed — having a toe: a toed clog; toed stockings.
  • told — simple past tense and past participle of tell1 .
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