0%

9-letter words containing s, d, a

  • antidotes — Plural form of antidote.
  • antinodes — Plural form of antinode.
  • antipodes — People sometimes refer to Australia and New Zealand as the Antipodes.
  • anybodies — a person of some importance: If you're anybody, you'll receive an invitation.
  • appleseed — Johnny(name for John Chapman) 1774-1845; U.S. frontiersman who planted apple trees throughout the Midwest
  • appraised — Simple past tense and past participle of appraise.
  • appressed — pressed closely against, but not joined to, a surface
  • apsidiole — a secondary, or small, apse
  • aptitudes — Plural form of aptitude.
  • aqueducts — Plural form of aqueduct.
  • aquitards — Plural form of aquitard.
  • arachnids — Plural form of arachnid.
  • archdukes — Plural form of archduke.
  • arcsecond — unit used in astronomy
  • arduously — requiring great exertion; laborious; difficult: an arduous undertaking.
  • aridities — being without moisture; extremely dry; parched: arid land; an arid climate.
  • aristides — known as Aristides the Just. ?530–?468 bc, Athenian general and statesman, who played a prominent part in the Greek victories over the Persians at Marathon (490), Salamis (480), and Plataea (479)
  • arnoldson — Klas Pontus [klahs pawn-tuh s] /klɑs ˈpɔn təs/ (Show IPA), 1844–1916, Swedish author and politician: Nobel Peace Prize 1908.
  • arseholed — very drunk
  • arsenides — Plural form of arsenide.
  • asafetida — a bad-smelling gum resin obtained from various Asiatic plants (genus Ferula) of the umbel family: it was formerly used to treat some illnesses or, in folk medicine, to repel disease
  • asbestoid — Mineralogy. a fibrous mineral, either amphibole or chrysotile, formerly used for making incombustible or fireproof articles.
  • ascarides — any parasitic roundworm of the genus Ascaris, found in the human small intestine and causing colic and diarrhea.
  • ascendant — proceeding upwards; rising
  • ascendent — a position of dominance or controlling influence: possession of power, superiority, or preeminence: With his rivals in the ascendant, he soon lost his position.
  • ascenders — Plural form of ascender.
  • ascendeur — a metal grip that is threaded on a rope and can be alternately tightened and slackened as an aid to climbing the rope: used attached to slings for the feet and waist
  • ascending — If a group of things is arranged in ascending order, each thing is bigger, greater, or more important than the thing before it.
  • ascidians — Plural form of ascidian.
  • ascidiate — of or relating to the tunicate molluscs of the genus Ascidium
  • asclepiad — a plant that belongs to the class Asclepiadaceae
  • asdfghjkl — Common filler text.
  • ash blond — a very light blond colour
  • ash-blond — pale, grayish blond: ash-blond hair.
  • ashamedly — feeling shame; distressed or embarrassed by feelings of guilt, foolishness, or disgrace: He felt ashamed for having spoken so cruelly.
  • ashkhabad — the capital of Turkmenistan. Pop: 598 000 (2005 est)
  • asiderite — an iron-free meteorite consisting of friable material.
  • asmoulder — in a smouldering or slowly burning manner
  • asphalted — Simple past tense and past participle of asphalt.
  • asphodels — Plural form of asphodel.
  • aspidioid — relating to an aspidium
  • aspirated — (of a stop) articulated with some force, so that breath escapes with audible friction as the stop is released
  • assaulted — a sudden, violent attack; onslaught: an assault on tradition.
  • assembled — noting an artificial gem formed of two or more parts, as a doublet or triplet, at least one of which is a true gemstone.
  • assidious — Misspelling of assiduous.
  • assiduity — constant and close application
  • assiduous — Someone who is assiduous works hard or does things very thoroughly.
  • assonated — Simple past tense and past participle of assonate.
  • assuetude — the state of being familiar with or used to something
  • assumedly — in a presumed manner
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?