0%

10-letter words containing p, e, d

  • expediment — Obsolete form of expedient.
  • expeditate — (UK, obsolete, transitive, legal, forest law) To deprive of the claws or the balls of the forefeet.
  • expeditely — in an expedite manner
  • expediting — Present participle of expedite.
  • expedition — A journey or voyage undertaken by a group of people with a particular purpose, especially that of exploration, scientific research, or war.
  • expeditive — (obsolete) Performing with speed.
  • expeditors — Plural form of expeditor.
  • expendable — (of an object) Designed to be used only once and then abandoned or destroyed.
  • expiditing — Present participle of expidite, a misspelling of expedite.
  • explananda — Plural form of explanandum.
  • explicated — Simple past tense and past participle of explicate.
  • exposed to — If you are exposed to a particular risk or hazard, you are in danger from it.
  • expounding — Present participle of expound.
  • expurgated — Remove matter thought to be objectionable or unsuitable from (a book or account).
  • extirpated — Simple past tense and past participle of extirpate.
  • eyedropper — A dropper for administering eye-drops.
  • false pond — a mirage.
  • fan-shaped — shaped like a fan
  • fepped out — (jargon)   /fept owt/ The Symbolics 3600 LISP Machine has a Front-End Processor (FEP). When the main processor gets wedged, the FEP takes control of the keyboard and screen. Such a machine is said to have "fepped out" or "dropped into the fep".
  • field crop — any of the herbaceous plants grown on a large scale in cultivated fields: primarily a grain, forage, sugar, oil, or fiber crop.
  • field stop — the aperture that limits the field of view of a lens or system of lenses.
  • field trip — a trip by students to gain firsthand knowledge away from the classroom, as to a museum, factory, geological area, or environment of certain plants and animals.
  • fieldpiece — A mobile artillery piece, i.e. gun or howitzer, for use in the field.
  • fieldstrip — To disassemble a weapon for cleaning, oiling or repair.
  • film speed — speed (def 5a).
  • fissipedal — (zoology) Being or relating to a fissiped.
  • five-speed — (in an automotive vehicle or bicycle) a transmission or system of gears having five forward gear ratios.
  • flapdoodle — nonsense; bosh.
  • flop-eared — having long, drooping ears, as a hound.
  • flyspecked — Covered with flyspecks.
  • foodophile — (informal) A food lover.
  • forcipated — Like a pair of forceps.
  • forepassed — already in the past; bygone.
  • found poem — a composition made by combining fragments of such printed material as newspapers, signs, or menus, and rearranging them into the form of a poem.
  • french dip — a hot sandwich of roast beef, pork, or lamb, served on a crusty roll over which seasoned pan juices are poured.
  • friendship — the state of being a friend; association as friends: to value a person's friendship.
  • full speed — the maximum speed.
  • gallopades — Plural form of gallopade.
  • gaptoothed — having a gap between two teeth, as because of a missing tooth
  • garden pea — pea1 (defs 1–3).
  • gasteropod — Gastropod.
  • gender gap — the differences between women and men, especially as reflected in social, political, intellectual, cultural, or economic attainments or attitudes.
  • glammed up — made to look more glamorous
  • glen plaid — a plaid pattern of muted colors or of black or gray and white, especially one in which two dark and two light stripes alternate with four dark and four light stripes, both vertically and horizontally, forming a crossing pattern of irregular checks.
  • goa powder — a brownish-yellow, odorless, crystalline powder obtained from the wood or the trunk of the Brazilian tree Andira araroba, used as a source of chrysarobin.
  • godparents — Plural form of godparent.
  • gold plate — a thin coating of gold, usually produced by electroplating
  • gold-plate — to coat (base metal) with gold, especially by electroplating.
  • goldplated — to coat (base metal) with gold, especially by electroplating.
  • good speed — good luck; success: to wish someone good speed.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?