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4-letter words that end in d

  • goldHerbert, born 1924, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • gond — a member of an aboriginal people of Dravidian stock, in central India and the Deccan.
  • good — Graph-Oriented Object Database
  • gord — (obsolete) An instrument of gaming; a sort of dice.
  • goud — (obsolete) woad.
  • gowd — gold.
  • grad — one hundredth of a right angle.
  • grid — a grating of crossed bars; gridiron.
  • haed — have.
  • haid — of or relating to a member of a seafaring group of North American Indian peoples inhabiting the coast of British Columbia and SW Alaska
  • hand — Learned [lur-nid] /ˈlɜr nɪd/ (Show IPA), 1872–1961, U.S. jurist.
  • hard — not soft; solid and firm to the touch; unyielding to pressure and impenetrable or almost impenetrable.
  • he'd — he would
  • headEdith, 1897–1981, U.S. costume designer.
  • heed — to give careful attention to: He did not heed the warning.
  • held — simple past tense and a past participle of hold1 .
  • hend — (obsolete) To take hold of; to grasp, hold.
  • herd — a herdsman (usually used in combination): a cowherd; a goatherd; a shepherd.
  • hfmd — hand, foot, and mouth disease
  • hied — to hasten; speed; go in haste.
  • hind — situated in the rear or at the back; posterior: the hind legs of an animal.
  • hird — (historical) In Norwegian history, an informal retinue of personal armed companions, hirdmen or housecarls.
  • hoad — Lew(is Alan) 1934–94, Australian tennis player.
  • hoed — a long-handled implement having a thin, flat blade usually set transversely, used to break up the surface of the ground, destroy weeds, etc.
  • hoid — Eye dialect of heard, representing NYC.
  • hold — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
  • hood — Hierarchical Object Oriented Design
  • hued — having the hue or color as specified (usually used in combination): many-hued; golden-hued.
  • hurd — (operating system)   The GNU project's replacement for the Unix kernel. The Hurd is a collection of servers that run on the Mach microkernel to implement file systems, network protocols, file access control, and other features that are implemented by the Unix kernel or similar kernels such as Linux. The GNU C Library provides the Unix system call interface, and calls the Hurd for services it can't provide itself. The Hurd aims to establish a framework for shared development and maintenance, allowing a broad range of users to share projects without knowing much about the internal workings of the system - projects that might never have been attempted without freely available source, a well-designed interface, and a multi-server-based design. Currently there are free ports of the Mach kernel to the Intel 80386 IBM PC, the DEC PMAX workstation, the Luna 88k, with more in progress, including the Amiga and DEC Alpha-3000 machines. According to Thomas Bushnell, BSG, the primary architect of the Hurd: 'Hurd' stands for 'Hird of Unix-Replacing Daemons' and 'Hird' stands for 'Hurd of Interfaces Representing Depth'. Possibly the first software to be named by a pair of mutually recursive acronyms.
  • ibid — Alternative form of ibid. (\"in the same place\").
  • ibrd — International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank)
  • iced — of or made of ice: ice shavings; an ice sculpture.
  • id'd — a means of identification, as a card or bracelet containing official or approved identification information.
  • ided — a means of identification, as a card or bracelet containing official or approved identification information.
  • ifad — International Fund for Agricultural Development
  • im'd — instant message.
  • imid — an immunomodulatory drug
  • inbd — inboard (on an aircraft, a boat, etc)
  • ipad — (computer)   A tablet computer announced by Apple Computer, Inc. on 2010-01-27 to be released in March 2010. The iPad runs iPhone OS 3.2, providing multi-touch interaction and multimedia processing. Like Apple's iPhone and iPod, it uses a virtual keyboard for text input and runs most iPhone apps. It adds the iBooks application for reading text in ePub format. It has a 1GHz Apple A4 SoC processor, up to 64GB of flash memory, a 250mm LED-backlit colour LCD display (resolution 1024x768 pixels) and a 25 Wh lithium-polymer battery. Internet access will be Wi-Fi in early models with HSDPA 3G available soon after using a micro-SIM. It weighs 730g. Features it lacks include a camera, the ability to multitask and an open developement environment. The iPad is the culmination of a series of attempts by Apple to produce a tablet device, starting with the Newton MessagePad 100 in 1993 and including collaboration with Acorn Computers in developing the ARM6 processor.
  • ipod — Alternative capitalization of iPod.
  • ired — Simple past tense and past participle of ire.
  • irid — any plant belonging to the Iridaceae, the iris family.
  • it'd — it would
  • jbod — Just a Bunch Of Disks
  • jird — any of several species of small, burrowing rodents of the genus Meriones, subfamily Gerbillinae, inhabiting dry regions of Asia and northern Africa.
  • judd — a male given name.
  • jurd — Doctor of Law
  • kaid — A local governor or leader, especially in North Africa or Moorish Spain; an alcaide.
  • kand — (mining, UK, dialect, Cornwall) fluorspar.
  • khud — (India) A ravine; a steep cleft in a hillside.
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