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10-letter words containing nd

  • ritardando — becoming gradually slower
  • rock candy — sugar in large, hard, cohering crystals.
  • rock hound — a geologist.
  • rock-bound — hemmed in, enclosed, or covered by rocks; rocky: the rock-bound coast of Maine.
  • rock-candy — sugar in large, hard, cohering crystals.
  • rock-hound — a geologist.
  • roll round — to recur, as in a cycle
  • rondoletto — a name given to the third movement of a symphony
  • rope's end — a short piece of rope, esp as formerly used for flogging sailors
  • round arch — an arch formed in a continuous curve, especially in a semicircle.
  • round clam — quahog.
  • round down — express as previous whole number
  • round file — circular file.
  • round hand — a style of handwriting in which the letters are round, full, and clearly separated.
  • round rock — a town in central Texas.
  • round tape — (storage, jargon)   Industry-standard 1/2-inch magnetic tape (7- or 9-track) on traditional circular reels. See macrotape, opposite: square tape.
  • round trip — a trip to a given place and back again: Fares for round trips often have a discount.
  • round turn — a complete turn of a rope or the like around an object.
  • roundabout — circuitous or indirect, as a road, journey, method, statement or person.
  • roundheels — a prostitute.
  • roundhouse — a building for the servicing and repair of locomotives, built around a turntable in the form of some part of a circle.
  • roundtable — a number of persons gathered together for conference, discussion of some subject, etc., and often seated at a round table.
  • rowlandsonThomas, 1756–1827, English caricaturist.
  • run around — to go quickly by moving the legs more rapidly than at a walk and in such a manner that for an instant in each step all or both feet are off the ground.
  • salamander — any tailed amphibian of the order Caudata, having a soft, moist, scaleless skin, typically aquatic as a larva and semiterrestrial as an adult: several species are endangered.
  • sallenders — an eruption on the hind leg of a horse, on the inside of a hock.
  • salmagundi — a mixed dish consisting usually of cubed poultry or fish, chopped meat, anchovies, eggs, onions, oil, etc., often served as a salad.
  • salt gland — a gland, located in the head of seabirds and various marine mammals and reptiles, that secretes into the nasal passages the excess salt imbibed or ingested.
  • sand blind — not completely blind; partially able to see
  • sand chair — a low folding beach chair with a frame, usually of tubular metal, that slants outward below the seat, forming a base designed to be rested in the sand.
  • sand colic — a form of colic caused by the ingestion of sand or eating sand-contaminated feeds and subsequent collection of sand in the gastrointestinal tract
  • sand crack — a crack or fissure in the hoof of a horse, extending from the coronet downward toward the sole, caused by a dryness of horn.
  • sand lance — any slender marine fish of the family Ammodytidae that burrows into the sand.
  • sand perch — squirrelfish.
  • sand shark — sand tiger.
  • sand smelt — variety of saltwater fish
  • sand table — a table with raised edges holding sand for children to play with.
  • sand tiger — any of several sharks of the family Odontaspididae, especially Odontaspis taurus, inhabiting shallow waters on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, having sharp, jagged teeth and sometimes dangerous to humans.
  • sand viper — hognose snake.
  • sand wedge — a club with a flanged sole and a face angle of more than 50°, used in bunker shots to cut through sand, get under the ball, and lift it clear
  • sand yacht — land yacht.
  • sand-blind — partially blind; dim-sighted.
  • sandalfoot — (of women's hosiery) having no darker or thicker reinforced areas at the toe or heel, so as to be suitable for wear with sandal-type shoes.
  • sandalwood — the fragrant heartwood of any of certain Asian trees of the genus Santalum, used for ornamental carving and burned as incense.
  • sandbagged — a bag filled with sand, used in fortification, as ballast, etc.
  • sandbagger — a bag filled with sand, used in fortification, as ballast, etc.
  • sandbender — [IBM] A person involved with silicon lithography and the physical design of integrated circuits. Compare ironmonger, polygon pusher.
  • sandcastle — a small castlelike structure made of wet sand, as by children at a beach.
  • sanderling — a common, small sandpiper, Calidris alba, inhabiting sandy beaches.
  • sandgroper — a nickname for a Western Australian
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