5-letter words containing ad
- readd — to unite or join so as to increase the number, quantity, size, or importance: to add two cups of sugar; to add a postscript to her letter; to add insult to injury.
- reade — Charles, 1814–84, English novelist.
- ready — completely prepared or in fit condition for immediate action or use: troops ready for battle; Dinner is ready.
- roads — Subsystem of ICES. Sammet 1969, p.616.
- saadi — (Muslih ud-Din) 1184?–1291? Persian poet.
- sadat — Anwar el- [ahn-wahr el] /ˈɑn wɑr ɛl/ (Show IPA), 1918–81, Egyptian political leader: president 1970–81; Nobel Peace Prize 1978.
- saddo — If you say that someone is a saddo, you do not have any respect for them and think their behaviour or ideas are ridiculous.
- sadhe — the 18th letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
- sadhu — an ascetic holy man, especially a monk.
- sadie — a female given name, form of Sara or Sarah.
- sadis — (Muslih ud-Din) 1184?–1291? Persian poet.
- sadly — affected by unhappiness or grief; sorrowful or mournful: to feel sad because a close friend has moved away.
- sadoc — Zadok.
- sadtu — South African Democratic Teachers Union
- sadza — a southern African porridge
- salad — a usually cold dish consisting of vegetables, as lettuce, tomatoes, and cucumbers, covered with a dressing and sometimes containing seafood, meat, or eggs.
- scada — Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition
- scads — any carangid fish of the genus Decapterus, inhabiting tropical and subtropical shore waters.
- sepad — to suppose
- shade — the comparative darkness caused by the interception or screening of rays of light from an object, place, or area.
- shady — abounding in shade; shaded: shady paths.
- shoad — float (def 43).
- slade — a sledge
- snead — Samuel Jackson ("Slamming Sammy") 1912–2002, U.S. golfer.
- spade — a black figure shaped like an inverted heart and with a short stem at the cusp opposite the point, used on playing cards.
- spado — Civil Law. an impotent person; someone unable to procreate.
- splad — splat1 (def 1).
- squad — a small number of soldiers, commonly 10 privates, a staff sergeant, and a corporal; the smallest military unit.
- ssadm — A software engineering method and toolset required by some UK government agencies.
- stade — a period of time represented by a glacial deposit.
- stead — the place of a person or thing as occupied by a successor or substitute: The nephew of the queen came in her stead.
- strad — Stradivarius
- tchad — Chad.
- toady — an obsequious flatterer; sycophant.
- trade — the act or process of buying, selling, or exchanging commodities, at either wholesale or retail, within a country or between countries: domestic trade; foreign trade.
- tread — to set down the foot or feet in walking; step; walk.
- triad — a group of three, especially of three closely related persons or things.
- troad — The, a region in NW Asia Minor surrounding ancient Troy.
- tsade — sadhe.
- tsadi — sadhe.
- ulnad — towards the ulna
- vadso — a seaport in NE Norway.
- vaduz — a small principality in central Europe between Austria and Switzerland: economically linked with Switzerland. 65 sq. mi. (168 sq. km). Capital: Vaduz.
- waadt — German name of Vaud.
- wadai — a former independent sultanate of the Sudan, in N central Africa: now part of the Republic of Chad.
- wadds — Plural form of wadd.
- waddy — a heavy wooden war club of the Australian Aborigines.
- waded — to walk in water, when partially immersed: He wasn't swimming, he was wading.
- wader — a person or thing that wades.
- wades — Plural form of wade.