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8-letter words containing p, e, d, i

  • klaipeda — a seaport in NW Lithuania, on the Baltic.
  • lapidate — to pelt with stones.
  • leopardi — Count Giacomo [jah-kuh-moh;; Italian jah-kaw-maw] /ˈdʒɑ kəˌmoʊ;; Italian ˈdʒɑ kɔ mɔ/ (Show IPA), 1798–1837, Italian poet.
  • lepidote — covered with scurfy scales or scaly spots.
  • leporide — a Belgian hare formerly believed to be a hybrid of the European rabbit and hare.
  • lip-read — to understand spoken words by interpreting the movements of a speaker's lips without hearing the sounds made.
  • lopsided — heavier, larger, or more developed on one side than on the other; unevenly balanced; unsymmetrical.
  • midspace — an area between two celestial objects
  • mindwipe — (transitive, science fiction) To erase the memories and personality, while still leaving an intact, living brain and body. This is frequently portrayed as a form of capital punishment, which leaves an viable body into which a different personality or mind can be uploaded.
  • misplead — To plead amiss or in a wrong manner; err in pleading.
  • misspend — to spend wrongly or unwisely; squander; waste.
  • mistyped — Simple past tense and past participle of mistype.
  • mixed up — completely confused or emotionally unstable: a mixed-up teenager.
  • mixed-up — completely confused or emotionally unstable: a mixed-up teenager.
  • multiped — having many feet.
  • nephroid — kidney-shaped
  • occupied — to take or fill up (space, time, etc.): I occupied my evenings reading novels.
  • oedipean — of, relating to, or characteristic of Oedipus or the Oedipus complex.
  • opalized — made into an opal
  • open die — a die of flat, concave, or hollow V shape that only minimally restricts lateral flow.
  • openside — (rugby), the space on the side of the pitch with the larger distance between the breakdown/set piece and the touchline; compare blindside.
  • optioned — the power or right of choosing.
  • opus dei — an international Roman Catholic organization of lay people and priests founded in Spain in 1928 by Josemaria Escrivá de Balaguer (1902–75), with the aim of spreading Christian principles
  • overpaid — to pay more than (an amount due): I received a credit after overpaying the bill.
  • pacified — to bring or restore to a state of peace or tranquillity; quiet; calm: to pacify an angry man.
  • palinode — a poem in which the poet retracts something said in an earlier poem.
  • palisade — a fence of pales or stakes set firmly in the ground, as for enclosure or defense.
  • palmiped — a web-footed bird
  • paludine — marshy
  • pandemia — (of a disease) prevalent throughout an entire country, continent, or the whole world; epidemic over a large area.
  • pandemic — (of a disease) prevalent throughout an entire country, continent, or the whole world; epidemic over a large area.
  • panicked — a sudden overwhelming fear, with or without cause, that produces hysterical or irrational behavior, and that often spreads quickly through a group of persons or animals.
  • paradise — a town in N California.
  • parodied — a humorous or satirical imitation of a serious piece of literature or writing: his hilarious parody of Hamlet's soliloquy.
  • patinaed — having or covered with a patina.
  • pedalier — the pedal-board of an organ, piano, etc
  • pedaling — a foot-operated lever used to control certain mechanisms, as automobiles, or to play or modify the sounds of certain musical instruments, as pianos, organs, or harps.
  • pedantic — ostentatious in one's learning.
  • peddling — trifling; paltry; piddling.
  • pedicure — professional care and treatment of the feet, as removal of corns and trimming of toenails.
  • pediform — in the form of a foot; footlike.
  • pedigree — an ancestral line; line of descent; lineage; ancestry.
  • pediment — (in classical architecture) a low gable, typically triangular with a horizontal cornice and raking cornices, surmounting a colonnade, an end wall, or a major division of a façade.
  • pedipalp — (in arachnids) one member of the usually longer pair of appendages immediately behind the chelicerae.
  • pedro ii — (Dom Pedro II) 1825–91, emperor of Brazil 1831–89.
  • pellucid — allowing the maximum passage of light, as glass; translucent.
  • pendicle — a piece of land or property forming a subsidiary to an estate
  • penfield — Wilder. 1891–1976, Canadian scientist, neurosurgeon, and writer born in the US; he developed a surgical treatment for epilepsy
  • pentadic — of, pertaining to, or of the nature of a pentad
  • peptidic — of or pertaining to peptides; of the nature of peptides
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