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8-letter words containing fo

  • fodderer — a person who feeds cattle
  • foetuses — Plural form of foetus.
  • fog bank — a stratum of fog as seen from a distance.
  • fog drip — water falling to the ground from trees, especially conifers, that have collected the moisture from fog.
  • fog lamp — a powerful light for use in foggy conditions, usually positioned low down on the front or rear of a road vehicle
  • fogbound — unable to sail or navigate because of heavy fog.
  • fogeydom — the state or disposition of a fogey
  • fogeyish — Characteristic of or resembling an old fogey: outdated or out of touch.
  • fogfruit — a wildflower of the Verbena family
  • foggiest — thick with or having much fog; misty: a foggy valley; a foggy spring day.
  • foghorns — Plural form of foghorn.
  • foilable — to prevent the success of; frustrate; balk: Loyal troops foiled his attempt to overthrow the government.
  • foilsman — a person who fences with a foil.
  • foist on — If you say that someone foists something on you, or foists it upon you, you dislike the way that they force you to listen to it or experience it.
  • foisting — Present participle of foist.
  • fold out — a page larger than the trim size of a magazine or book, folded one or more times so as not to extend beyond the pages; gatefold.
  • fold-out — a page larger than the trim size of a magazine or book, folded one or more times so as not to extend beyond the pages; gatefold.
  • foldable — to bend (cloth, paper, etc.) over upon itself.
  • foldaway — designed to be folded out of the way when not in use: a foldaway bed.
  • foldback — (in multitrack recording) a process for returning a signal to a performer instantly
  • foldboat — faltboat.
  • folderal — Alternative spelling of folderol.
  • folderol — falderal.
  • foldings — Plural form of folding.
  • foldouts — Plural form of foldout.
  • foliaged — Having foliage.
  • foliages — Plural form of foliage.
  • foliated — covered with or having leaves.
  • folivore — any chiefly leaf-eating animal or other organism, as the koala of Australia that subsists on eucalyptus.
  • folk art — artistic works, as paintings, sculpture, basketry, and utensils, produced typically in cultural isolation by untrained often anonymous artists or by artisans of varying degrees of skill and marked by such attributes as highly decorative design, bright bold colors, flattened perspective, strong forms in simple arrangements, and immediacy of meaning.
  • folkland — a former type of land tenure
  • folklife — the everyday life of the common people, especially of a particular region, country, or period: 18th-century New England folklife.
  • folklike — of the nature of folk
  • folklore — the traditional beliefs, legends, customs, etc., of a people; lore of a people.
  • folkmoot — (formerly, in England) a general assembly of the people of a shire, town, etc.
  • folksier — Comparative form of folksy.
  • folksily — in a folksy manner
  • folksong — Alternative spelling of folk song.
  • folktale — a tale or legend originating and traditional among a people or folk, especially one forming part of the oral tradition of the common people.
  • folkways — The traditional behavior or way of life of a particular community or group of people.
  • follered — Simple past tense and past participle of foller.
  • follicle — Anatomy. a small cavity, sac, or gland. one of the small ovarian sacs containing an immature ovum; Graafian follicle.
  • follicly — (jocular) With respect to hair.
  • followed — to come after in sequence, order of time, etc.: The speech follows the dinner.
  • follower — a person or thing that follows.
  • followup — the act of following.
  • fomented — Simple past tense and past participle of foment.
  • fomenter — One who incites or promotes.
  • fomorian — one of a race of pirates or sea demons who raided and pillaged Ireland but were finally defeated: sometimes associated with the hostile powers of nature.
  • fondants — Plural form of fondant.
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