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8-letter words containing s, e, o, d

  • postlude — a concluding piece or movement.
  • potsherd — a broken pottery fragment, especially one of archaeological value.
  • presidio — a garrisoned fort; military post.
  • proceeds — to move or go forward or onward, especially after stopping.
  • prodnose — an inquisitive person
  • promised — a declaration that something will or will not be done, given, etc., by one: unkept political promises.
  • proposed — to offer or suggest (a matter, subject, case, etc.) for consideration, acceptance, or action: to propose a new method.
  • proudest — feeling pleasure or satisfaction over something regarded as highly honorable or creditable to oneself (often followed by of, an infinitive, or a clause).
  • purposed — the reason for which something exists or is done, made, used, etc.
  • ransomed — the redemption of a prisoner, slave, or kidnapped person, of captured goods, etc., for a price.
  • re-sound — to sound or cause to sound again
  • reasoned — based on reason: a carefully reasoned decision.
  • red rose — the emblem of the royal house of Lancaster.
  • red snow — snow that has acquired a red color either from airborne particles of red dust or from a type of alga that contains a red pigment.
  • redhorse — any of several suckers of the genus Moxostoma, found in the fresh waters of North America, often having reddish fins.
  • redshort — (of metal, iron, steel, etc) to become brittle at red-hot temperatures
  • redstone — a U.S. surface-to-surface ballistic missile powered by a single rocket engine.
  • reedstop — an organ stop that is made up of or that controls a rank of reed pipes
  • resinoid — resinlike.
  • resolder — any of various alloys fused and applied to the joint between metal objects to unite them without heating the objects to the melting point.
  • resolved — firm in purpose or intent; determined.
  • resorted — to sort or arrange (cards, papers, etc.) again.
  • reynolds — a male given name, form of Reginald.
  • rhapsode — in ancient Greece, a person who recited rhapsodies, esp. one who recited epic poems as a profession
  • rhodesia — (as Southern Rhodesia, ) a former British colony in S Africa: declared independence 1965; name changed to Zimbabwe, 1979.
  • roadside — the side or border of the road; wayside.
  • roadster — an early automobile having an open body, a single seat for two or three persons, and a large trunk or a rumble seat.
  • rose-red — of a pure purplish-red colour
  • rosedale — a city in N Maryland, near Baltimore.
  • rosemead — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • rosewood — any of various reddish cabinet woods, sometimes with a roselike odor, yielded by certain tropical trees, especially belonging to the genus Dalbergia, of the legume family.
  • roskilde — a city on the island of Zealand, in E Denmark: a suburb of Copenhagen.
  • rounders — a person or thing that rounds something.
  • s-a node — sinoatrial node
  • sandshoe — a light tennis shoe; sneaker.
  • sarpedon — a Lycian prince, son of Zeus, killed by Patroclus in the Trojan War.
  • schooled — a large number of fish, porpoises, whales, or the like, feeding or migrating together.
  • schröder — Gerhard (ˈɡerhɑt). born 1944, German Social Democrat politician; chancellor of Germany from 1998–2005
  • scleroid — hard or indurated.
  • scofield — (David) Paul. (1922–2008), English stage and film actor
  • scolecid — a variety of worm
  • scorched — slightly burned
  • scorepad — a pad whose sheets are printed with headings, vertical or horizontal lines, symbols, or the like, to facilitate the recording of scores in a game, as bowling or bridge.
  • scotched — scutch (defs 2, 4).
  • scrolled — sawn into scrolls
  • sea lord — (in Britain) either of the two serving naval officers (First and Second Sea Lords) who sit on the admiralty board of the Ministry of Defence
  • seaboard — the line where land and sea meet.
  • seadrome — a floating airdrome serving as an intermediate or emergency landing place for aircraft flying over water.
  • seahound — a dogfish
  • seal dog — an iron hook used for dragging seal carcasses over the ice.
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