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9-letter words containing s, t, e, d

  • fantasied — noting or relating to any of various games or leagues in which fans assemble players of a professional sport into imaginary teams, and points are scored based on the performance of these players in real games: fantasy football; fantasy sports.
  • farmstead — a farm together with its buildings.
  • fasciated — Showing abnormal fusion of parts or organs, resulting in a flattened, ribbonlike structure.
  • fastpaced — Alternative spelling of fast-paced.
  • fatedness — The quality of being fated; destiny.
  • feast day — a day, especially a church holiday, for feasting and rejoicing.
  • federates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of federate.
  • feedstock — raw material for processing or manufacturing industry.
  • feedstuff — feed (def 13).
  • feldspath — Alternative form of feldspar.
  • felt side — the top side of a sheet of paper, the side against the felt rollers during manufacture, normally preferred for printing.
  • festooned — a string or chain of flowers, foliage, ribbon, etc., suspended in a curve between two points.
  • feticides — Plural form of feticide.
  • fetidness — The quality of being fetid.
  • feudalist — the feudal system, or its principles and practices.
  • fideistic — Pertaining to fideism.
  • fidelista — Fidelist.
  • flamsteedJohn, 1646–1719, English astronomer.
  • flatheads — Plural form of flathead.
  • flustered — to put into a state of agitated confusion: His constant criticism flustered me.
  • fraudster — A person who practices fraud; a swindler.
  • frontside — Denoting a maneuver in surfing and other board sports that is done counterclockwise for a regular rider and clockwise for a goofy rider.
  • frostweed — a plant, Helianthemum canadense, of the rockrose family, native to eastern North America, having narrow leaves and a solitary yellow flower.
  • gatefolds — Plural form of gatefold.
  • gateshead — a metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear, in NE England: seaport on the Tyne River opposite Newcastle.
  • geodesist — the branch of applied mathematics that deals with the measurement of the shape and area of large tracts of country, the exact position of geographical points, and the curvature, shape, and dimensions of the earth.
  • geodetics — The scientific discipline that deals with the measurement and representation of the earth, its gravitational field and geodynamic phenomena (polar motion, earth tides, and tectonic motion) in three-dimensional, time-varying space.
  • get ideas — to become ambitious, restless, etc
  • giltheads — Plural form of gilthead.
  • gladstone — William Ewart [yoo-ert] /ˈyu ərt/ (Show IPA), 1809–98, British statesman: prime minister four times between 1868 and 1894.
  • glistened — Simple past tense and past participle of glisten.
  • glistered — Simple past tense and past participle of glister.
  • go steady — firmly placed or fixed; stable in position or equilibrium: a steady ladder.
  • goatherds — Plural form of goatherd.
  • godsister — The daughter of one's godparent.
  • goldcrest — a Eurasian kinglet, Regulus regulus, having a bright yellow patch on the top of the head.
  • goldstone — aventurine.
  • gottsched — Johann Christoph. 1700–66, German critic, dramatist, and translator
  • gradients — Plural form of gradient.
  • graduates — Plural form of graduate.
  • greediest — Superlative form of greedy.
  • guidepost — a post, usually mounted on the roadside or at the intersection of two or more roads, bearing a sign for the guidance of travelers.
  • hamfisted — clumsy, inept, or heavy-handed: a ham-handed approach to dealing with people that hurts a lot of feelings.
  • hampstead — a former borough of London, England, now part of Camden.
  • hardstone — (arts) precious stone or semi-precious stone used to make intaglio, mosaics etc.
  • harvested — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
  • hastilude — A medieval martial game.
  • head smut — a disease of cereals and other grasses, characterized by a dark-brown, powdery mass of spores replacing the affected seed heads, caused by any of several smut fungi of the genera Sorosporium, Sphacelotheca, and Ustilago.
  • headfirst — with the head in front or bent forward; headforemost: He dived headfirst into the sea.
  • headnotes — Plural form of headnote.
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