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7-letter words that end in d

  • athodyd — ramjet (engine)
  • attalid — any of a line of kings, usually named Attalus orEumenes, that ruled Pergamum, in Asia Minor, 282–133 b.c.
  • attired — If you describe how someone is attired, you are describing how they are dressed.
  • attuned — If you are attuned to something, you can understand and appreciate it.
  • au fond — fundamentally; essentially
  • audited — Simple past tense and past participle of audit.
  • augured — an excessively talkative person.
  • aurated — combined with auric acid
  • autocad — (product, tool)   A CAD software package for mechanical engineering, marketed by Autodesk, Inc.
  • autopod — Autopodium.
  • availed — to be of use or value to; profit; advantage: All our efforts availed us little in trying to effect a change.
  • avenged — Simple past tense and past participle of avenge.
  • averred — to assert or affirm with confidence; declare in a positive or peremptory manner.
  • averted — to turn away or aside: to avert one's eyes.
  • aviated — Simple past tense and past participle of aviate.
  • avoided — to keep away from; keep clear of; shun: to avoid a person; to avoid taxes; to avoid danger.
  • avulsed — Simple past tense and past participle of avulse.
  • awaited — to wait for; expect; look for: He is still awaiting an answer.
  • awarded — to give as due or merited; assign or bestow: to award prizes.
  • awkward — An awkward situation is embarrassing and difficult to deal with.
  • awlbird — the green woodpecker
  • axebird — a nightjar of northern Queensland and New Guinea with a cry that sounds like a chopping axe
  • axehead — Alternative spelling of axe head.
  • axelrod — Julius. 1912–2004, US neuropharmacologist, renowned for his work on catecholamines. Nobel prize for physiology or medicine (with von Euler and Bernard Katz) 1970
  • aykroyd — Dan. born 1952, Canadian film actor and screenwriter, best known for the television show Saturday Night Live (1975–80) and the films The Blues Brothers (1980), Ghostbusters (1984), and Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
  • aylward — Gladys. 1903–70, English missionary in China
  • b and d — bondage and discipline: used in reference to sadomasochistic sexual practices.
  • babbled — Simple past tense and past participle of babble.
  • backend — Alternative form of back end.
  • bacolod — a town in the Philippines, on the NW coast of Negros Island. Pop: 468 000 (2005 est)
  • badland — Alternative form of badlands.
  • baffled — lacking in understanding
  • baghdad — the capital of Iraq, on the River Tigris: capital of the Abbasid Caliphate (762–1258). Pop: 5 910 000 (2005 est)
  • bagnold — Enid (Algerine). 1889–1981, British novelist and playwright; her works include the novel National Velvet (1935) and the play The Chalk Garden (1955)
  • ballard — J(ames) G(raham). 1930–2009, British novelist, born in China; his books include Crash (1973), The Unlimited Dream Company (1979), Empire of the Sun (1984), Cocaine Nights (1996), and Super-Cannes (2000)
  • bandaid — Alternative spelling of band-aid.
  • bandied — to pass from one to another or back and forth; give and take; trade; exchange: to bandy blows; to bandy words.
  • bangled — a rigid, ring-shaped bracelet usually made without a clasp so as to slip over the hand, but sometimes having a hinged opening and a clasp.
  • bantoid — denoting or relating to languages, esp in Cameroon and Nigeria, that possess certain Bantu characteristics
  • barmaid — A barmaid is a woman who serves drinks behind a bar.
  • barnard — Christiaan (Neethling). 1923–2001, South African surgeon, who performed the first human heart transplant (1967)
  • bartend — to work as a bartender
  • barwood — a red wood from a small African tree, Baphia nitida, primarily used to produce dye and in the construction of violin bows
  • basined — Enclosed in a basin.
  • bastard — Bastard is an insulting word which some people use about a person, especially a man, who has behaved very badly.
  • basterd — Misspelling of bastard.
  • batched — a quantity or number coming at one time or taken together: a batch of prisoners.
  • battled — Simple past tense and past participle of battle.
  • baulked — to stop, as at an obstacle, and refuse to proceed or to do something specified (usually followed by at): He balked at making the speech.
  • bausond — (of animals) dappled with white spots on a black or bay background; esp having a white patch on the face
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