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10-letter words containing ood

  • dogfooding — eating one's own dogfood
  • doodle-bug — any of various small, squat vehicles.
  • doodlebugs — Plural form of doodlebug.
  • doodlesack — bagpipe (def 1).
  • drearihood — (obsolete) affliction; dreariness.
  • early wood — springwood.
  • falsehoods — Plural form of falsehood.
  • fatherhood — the state of being a father.
  • fiddlewood — the heavy, hard, durable wood of various West Indian and other trees.
  • flapdoodle — nonsense; bosh.
  • flashflood — Alternative spelling of flash flood.
  • flood lamp — a floodlight.
  • flood tide — the inflow of the tide; rising tide.
  • flood wall — Civil Engineering. a wall built along a shore or bank to prevent floods by giving a raised, uniform freeboard and by allowing unimpeded flow to water in a channel.
  • floodgates — Plural form of floodgate.
  • floodlamps — Plural form of floodlamp.
  • floodlight — an artificial light so directed or diffused as to give a comparatively uniform illumination over a rather large given area.
  • floodmarks — Plural form of floodmark.
  • floodplain — a nearly flat plain along the course of a stream or river that is naturally subject to flooding.
  • floodwalls — Plural form of floodwall.
  • floodwater — the water that overflows as the result of a flood.
  • food chain — hierarchy of organisms
  • food court — a space, as in a shopping mall, with a concentration of fast-food stalls and usually a common eating area.
  • food cycle — food web
  • food grain — any cereal grain produced for human consumption.
  • food group — any of the categories into which different foods may be placed according to the type of nourishment they supply, such as carbohydrates or proteins
  • food mixer — A food mixer is a piece of electrical equipment that is used to mix food such as cake mixture.
  • food stamp — any of the coupons sold or given under a federal program to eligible needy persons and redeemable for food at designated grocery stores or markets.
  • food truck — a truck or van from which food is sold, as to people on the street.
  • food value — The food value of a particular food is a measure of how good it is for you, based on its level of vitamins, minerals, or calories.
  • food-borne — transmitted by contaminated food
  • foodaholic — a person having an excessive, often uncontrollable craving for food.
  • foodgrains — Plural form of foodgrain.
  • foodophile — (informal) A food lover.
  • foodstuffs — a substance used or capable of being used as nutriment.
  • friendhood — The state, quality, or condition of being a friend or friends.
  • full blood — a person or animal of unmixed ancestry; one descended of a pure breed. Compare purebred.
  • gardenhood — The state of being a garden; the status, respect, or appearance befitting a proper garden.
  • gentlehood — a position attached to gentle birth
  • good buddy — Citizens Band Radio Slang. the operator of a CB radio; fellow operator (often used as a form of direct address while broadcasting).
  • good cheer — cheerful spirits; courage: to be of good cheer.
  • good faith — accordance with standards of honesty, trust, sincerity, etc. (usually preceded by in): If you act in good faith, he'll have no reason to question your motives.
  • good grief — keen mental suffering or distress over affliction or loss; sharp sorrow; painful regret.
  • good humor — a cheerful or amiable mood.
  • good looks — personal attractiveness or beauty
  • good night — enjoyable evening, night
  • good show! — an exclamation of appreciation and congratulations on another's accomplishment
  • good speed — good luck; success: to wish someone good speed.
  • good sport — sb good-humoured
  • good thing — (convention)   (From the 1930 Sellar and Yeatman parody "1066 And All That") Often capitalised; always pronounced as if capitalised. 1. Self-evidently wonderful to anyone in a position to notice: "The Trailblazer's 19.2 Kbaud PEP mode with on-the-fly Lempel-Ziv compression is a Good Thing for sites relaying netnews". 2. Something that can't possibly have any ill side-effects and may save considerable grief later: "Removing the self-modifying code from that shared library would be a Good Thing". 3. When said of software tools or libraries, as in "Yacc is a Good Thing", specifically connotes that the thing has drastically reduced a programmer's work load. Opposite: Bad Thing, compare big win.
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