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10-letter words containing p, a, n, d, e

  • openhanded — generous; liberal: openhanded hospitality.
  • 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.
  • overexpand — to expand excessively
  • 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.
  • palisander — Brazilian rosewood.
  • pandectist — a German law student who followed the Pandects of Justinian
  • pandemonic — wild uproar or unrestrained disorder; tumult or chaos.
  • pandermite — a white, marble-like mineral
  • pandurated — fiddle-shaped
  • panelboard — a compact pressboard for use in constructing sides of cabinets, paneling for walls, and in other nonstructural applications.
  • panellized — made in sections for quick assembly
  • panhandler — to accost passers-by on the street and beg from them.
  • pantomimed — the art or technique of conveying emotions, actions, feelings, etc., by gestures without speech.
  • pantsuited — wearing a pantsuit
  • papandreou — Andreas [ahn-drey-uh s] /ɑnˈdreɪ əs/ (Show IPA), (George) 1919–1996, Greek political leader: premier 1981–89 (son of George Papandreou).
  • paperbound — a book bound in a flexible paper cover, often a lower-priced edition of a hardcover book.
  • paradisean — of the genus Paradisaea (birds of paradise)
  • pardonable — kind indulgence, as in forgiveness of an offense or discourtesy or in tolerance of a distraction or inconvenience: I beg your pardon, but which way is Spruce Street?
  • pared-down — If you describe something as pared-down, you mean that it has no unnecessary features, and has been reduced to a very simple form.
  • parenthood — the state, position, or relation of a parent.
  • parmenides — flourished c450 b.c, Greek Eleatic philosopher.
  • pasquinade — a satire or lampoon, especially one posted in a public place.
  • pat. pend. — patent pending
  • pathfinder — a historical novel (1840) by James Fenimore Cooper.
  • patronised — to give (a store, restaurant, hotel, etc.) one's regular patronage; trade with.
  • peakedness — pale and drawn in appearance so as to suggest illness or stress; wan and sickly.
  • peary land — a peninsula in N Greenland, extending into the Arctic Ocean: Cape Morris Jesup is at its N end. 200 miles (320 km) long.
  • pedantical — ostentatious in one's learning.
  • pedernales — a river in central Texas, flowing E to the Colorado river. About 105 miles (169 km) long.
  • pedestrian — a person who goes or travels on foot; walker.
  • pedodontia — the branch of dentistry dealing with the care and treatment of children's teeth.
  • peduncular — Botany. a flower stalk, supporting either a cluster or a solitary flower. the stalk bearing the fruiting body in fungi.
  • penal code — the aggregate of statutory enactments dealing with crimes and their punishment.
  • pentachord — a series of five consecutive notes of a scale
  • pentaploid — having a chromosome number that is five times the haploid number.
  • pentapodic — (of a poetic line or verse) having five metrical feet
  • perdurance — permanence; the quality of lasting or enduring forever
  • peridental — periodontal.
  • peridinian — a member of the genus Peridinium
  • person-day — a unit of measurement, especially in accountancy, based on an ideal amount of work done by one person in one working day.
  • phagedaena — a severe, destructive, eroding ulcer.
  • phagedenic — a severe, destructive, eroding ulcer.
  • phenolated — containing phenol; carbolated.
  • phone card — calling card (def 3).
  • piano duet — a musical composition for two pianists playing two pianos or together at one piano.
  • pin-tailed — having a tapered tail with long, pointed central feathers.
  • pinnatiped — having lobate feet.
  • pinnigrade — moving by means of finlike parts or flippers, as the seals and walruses.
  • pirandello — Luigi [loo-ee-jee] /luˈi dʒi/ (Show IPA), 1867–1936, Italian dramatist, novelist, and poet: Nobel prize 1934.
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