5-letter words containing ed
- cured — (of food) treated by salting, smoking, or drying in order to preserve it
- dared — an act of daring or defiance; challenge.
- dated — Dated things seem old-fashioned, although they may once have been fashionable or modern.
- dawed — Simple past tense and past participle of daw.
- dazed — If someone is dazed, they are confused and unable to think clearly, often because of shock or a blow to the head.
- dedal — daedal.
- deede — Obsolete spelling of deed.
- deeds — formal legal documents signed, witnessed, and delivered to effect a conveyance or transfer of property or to create a legal obligation or contract
- deedy — hard-working, busy, eager, and tireless
- deked — Simple past tense and past participle of deke.
- deled — to delete.
- dered — Simple past tense and past participle of dere.
- dewed — moisture condensed from the atmosphere, especially at night, and deposited in the form of small drops upon any cool surface.
- diced — cut into small cubes
- diked — Simple past tense and past participle of dike.
- dimed — (slang) (of an electric guitar or its amplifier) At volume setting 10 (the loudest).
- dined — to eat the principal meal of the day; have dinner.
- diped — Diploma in Education
- dived — to plunge into water, especially headfirst.
- doled — a portion or allotment of money, food, etc., especially as given at regular intervals by a charity or for maintenance.
- domed — shaped like a dome: a domed forehead.
- doped — Drugged.
- dosed — Simple past tense and past participle of dose.
- doted — to bestow or express excessive love or fondness habitually (usually followed by on or upon): They dote on their youngest daughter.
- dowed — to be able.
- dozed — to sleep lightly or fitfully.
- dreed — tedious; dreary.
- dried — simple past tense and past participle of dry.
- duked — (in Continental Europe) the male ruler of a duchy; the sovereign of a small state.
- duned — (geology) Featuring or formed into dunes.
- duped — duplicate.
- dured — Simple past tense and past participle of dure.
- dyfed — a county in Wales. 2227 sq. mi. (5767 sq. km).
- eared — having ears or earlike appendages.
- eased — freedom from labor, pain, or physical annoyance; tranquil rest; comfort: to enjoy one's ease.
- eated — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of eat.
- eaved — having eaves
- ebbed — the flowing back of the tide as the water returns to the sea (opposed to flood, flow).
- edder — Flexible wood worked into the top of hedge stakes, to bind them together.
- eddie — Mary (Morse) Baker (Mrs. Glover; Mrs. Patterson) 1821–1910, U.S. founder of the Christian Science Church.
- edema — effusion of serous fluid into the interstices of cells in tissue spaces or into body cavities.
- edgar — a male given name: from Old English words meaning “rich, happy” and “spear.”.
- edged — having an edge or edges (often used in combination): dull-edged; a two-edged sword.
- edger — a person who puts an edge, especially a finishing edge, on a garment, surface, lens, etc.
- edges — Plural form of edge.
- edict — a decree issued by a sovereign or other authority. Synonyms: dictum, pronouncement.
- edify — to instruct or benefit, especially morally or spiritually; uplift: religious paintings that edify the viewer.
- edile — one of a board of magistrates in charge of public buildings, streets, markets, games, etc.
- edina — a city in SE Minnesota, near Minneapolis.
- edith — a female given name: from Old English words meaning “rich, happy” and “war.”.