7-letter words containing od
- decoded — Simple past tense and past participle of decode.
- decoder — A decoder is a device used to decode messages or signals sent in code, for example the television signals from a satellite.
- decodes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decode.
- demigod — In mythology, a demigod is a less important god, especially one who is half god and half human.
- demoded — out of date; outmoded.
- deodand — (formerly) a thing that had caused a person's death and was forfeited to the crown for a charitable purpose: abolished 1862
- deodars — Plural form of deodar.
- deodate — anything offered to God or given by God
- desnood — to remove the snood of (a turkey poult) to reduce the risk of cannibalism
- dipodal — (organic chemistry) Describing any compound in which two (of the same) functional groups are on two separate chains.
- dipodic — a group of two feet in English poetry, in which one of the two accented syllables bears primary stress and the other bears secondary stress, used as a prosodic measurement in iambic, trochaic, and anapestic verse.
- do good — of or befitting a do-gooder.
- do-good — of or befitting a do-gooder.
- doddard — a tree missing its top branches through rot or decay
- dodders — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dodder.
- doddery — shaky or trembling, as from old age; tottering: a doddering old man.
- dodeca- — indicating twelve
- dodgems — Plural form of dodgem.
- dodgers — a person who dodges.
- dodgery — the use of a dodge or dodges; trickery; duplicity.
- dodgily — In a dodgy manner.
- dodging — Present participle of dodge.
- dodgson — Charles Lutwidge [luht-wij] /ˈlʌt wɪdʒ/ (Show IPA), ("Lewis Carroll") 1832–98, English mathematician and writer of books for children.
- dodoism — any of several clumsy, flightless, extinct birds of the genera Raphus and Pezophaps, related to pigeons but about the size of a turkey, formerly inhabiting the islands of Mauritius, Réunion, and Rodriguez.
- dogfood — eating one's own dogfood
- dogwood — any tree or shrub of the genus Cornus, especially C. sanguinea, of Europe, or C. florida, of America.
- doodads — Plural form of doodad.
- doodahs — Plural form of doodah.
- doodled — Simple past tense and past participle of doodle.
- doodler — a design, figure, or the like, made by idle scribbling.
- doodles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of doodle.
- duodena — Plural form of duodenum.
- dx code — a code on a film cassette that automatically adjusts the film-speed setting on a suitably equipped camera to the correct ISO rating
- dyewood — any wood yielding a coloring matter used for dyeing.
- dysodil — a yellow or green mineral that is a form of bitumen and is present in limestone
- elfhood — the state of being an elf
- elmwood — the wood from an elm tree
- encoded — Convert into a coded form.
- encoder — A device used to encode a signal either for cryptography or compression.
- encodes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of encode.
- endopod — the inner branch of a two-branched crustacean
- enoding — Present participle of enode.
- episode — An event or a group of events occurring as part of a larger sequence; an incident or period considered in isolation.
- ergodic — Relating to or denoting systems or processes with the property that, given sufficient time, they include or impinge on all points in a given space and can be represented statistically by a reasonably large selection of points.
- eroding — Present participle of erode.
- erodium — (botany) Any of the plant genus Erodium, including filarees and storksbills.
- exodist — a person who makes an exodus; an emigrant
- explode — Burst or shatter violently and noisily as a result of rapid combustion, decomposition, excessive internal pressure, or other process, typically scattering fragments widely.
- fantods — Usually, fantods. a state of extreme nervousness or restlessness; the willies; the fidgets (usually preceded by the): We all developed the fantods when the plane was late in arriving.
- fashoda — a village in the SE Sudan, on the White Nile: conflict of British and French colonial interests 1898 (Fashoda Incident)