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10-letter words containing ood

  • good title — a title to real property that is free from encumbrances, litigation, and other defects and that can readily be sold or mortgaged to a reasonable buyer or mortgagee.
  • good usage — (in a language) standard, prescribed, or acceptable usage of words or phrases: Your sentence violates the rules of good usage.
  • good-night — a farewell or leave-taking: He said his good-nights before leaving the party.
  • good-sized — of ample or large size; rather large for its kind: a good-sized pumpkin.
  • goodfellow — a cheerful companion
  • goodlihead — goodness; good appearance
  • goodliness — of good or substantial size, amount, etc.: a goodly sum.
  • goodnights — Plural form of goodnight.
  • goods yard — a railway freight yard.
  • goodwilled — possessing goodwill
  • gopherwood — yellowwood.
  • greasewood — a shrub, Sarcobatus vermiculatus, of the amaranth family, growing in alkaline regions of the western U.S., containing a small amount of oil.
  • greenwoods — Plural form of greenwood.
  • groundwood — wood that has been ground for making into pulp.
  • half-blood — the relation between persons having only one common parent.
  • hard goods — durable goods
  • healthfood — Alternative spelling of health food.
  • hooded top — a top to a secretary, chest, etc., following in outline a single- or double-curved pediment on the front of the piece.
  • hoodedness — the state of being hooded
  • hoodiecrow — A hooded crow, Corvus cornix.
  • hoodlumish — like a hoodlum
  • hoodlumism — Behavior characteristic of a hoodlum.
  • hoodwinked — to deceive or trick.
  • hoodwinker — One who hoodwinks.
  • hotblooded — Spirited, rash, reckless.
  • hoydenhood — the condition of a rude, ill-bred or boisterous and noisy girl or woman, or a tomboy
  • hyperoodon — (zoology) A whale in the genus Hyperoodon of the order Cetacea, comprising both species of bottlenose whale.
  • infanthood — Infancy.
  • kinglihood — the condition of being kingly
  • knighthood — the rank or dignity of a knight: to confer knighthood upon him.
  • letterwood — snakewood.
  • likelihood — the state of being likely or probable; probability.
  • littlewood — (Maud) Joan. 1914–2002, British theatre director, who founded the Theatre Workshop Company (1945) with the aim of bringing theatre to the working classes: noted esp for her production of Oh, What a Lovely War! (1963)
  • livelihood — a means of supporting one's existence, especially financially or vocationally; living: to earn a livelihood as a tenant farmer.
  • livelyhood — Misspelling of livelihood.
  • maidenhood — the state or time of being a maiden or virgin.
  • marblewood — any of several trees having wood somewhat resembling marble in graining or texture, as Diospyros marmorata, of southern Asia, or Olea paniculata, of Australia.
  • metal wood — a structural material consisting of a sheet of metal glued between two veneers or of a veneer glued between two sheets of metal.
  • mood board — a board used by designers on which samples of various colours and textures are mounted to help in deciding which elements complement each other
  • mood music — music comprised chiefly of popular songs in lush orchestral arrangements, intended to provide a relaxing, soothing atmosphere.
  • mood swing — dramatic changes in emotion
  • motherhood — the state of being a mother; maternity.
  • nationhood — the state or quality of having status as a separate and independent nation: an African colony that achieved nationhood.
  • no-goodnik — a no-good person.
  • noodlehead — a fool or simpleton; dolt; blockhead.
  • novicehood — the condition of a novice
  • olive wood — olive (def 3).
  • orangewood — the hard, fine-grained, yellowish wood of the orange tree, used in inlaid work and fine turnery.
  • orphanhood — a child who has lost both parents through death, or, less commonly, one parent.
  • over-flood — a great flowing or overflowing of water, especially over land not usually submerged.
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