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7-letter words that end in rd

  • lifford — the county town of Donegal, Republic of Ireland; market town. Pop: 1395 (2002)
  • lizzard — Obsolete form of lizard.
  • lollard — an English or Scottish follower of the religious teachings of John Wycliffe from the 14th to the 16th centuries.
  • lombardCarole (Jane Alice Peters) 1909?–42, U.S. film actress.
  • mallard — a common, almost cosmopolitan, wild duck, Anas platyrhynchos, from which the domestic ducks are descended.
  • mansard — Jules Hardouin [zhyl ar-dwan] /ʒül arˈdwɛ̃/ (Show IPA), (Jules Hardouin) 1646–1708, French architect: chief architectural director for Louis XIV.
  • manward — Also, manwards. toward humankind: The church directed its attention manward as well as heavenward.
  • maybird — the bobolink.
  • maynard — a male given name.
  • mazzard — a wild sweet cherry, Prunus avium, used as a rootstock for cultivated varieties of cherries.
  • medford — a city in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • midgard — the middle earth, home of men, lying between Niflheim and Muspelheim, formed from the body of Ymir.
  • midword — Within a word.
  • milford — a city in S Connecticut, on Long Island Sound.
  • millard — a male given name.
  • misword — to word incorrectly.
  • mitfordMary Russell, 1787–1855, English novelist, poet, playwright, and essayist.
  • ms word — Microsoft Word
  • muggard — (obsolete) sullen; displeased.
  • mumfordLewis, 1895–1990, U.S. author and social scientist.
  • mustard — a pungent powder or paste prepared from the seed of the mustard plant, used as a food seasoning or condiment, and medicinally in plasters, poultices, etc.
  • my lord — a respectful form of address used to a judge, bishop, or nobleman
  • nayward — the negative view
  • nayword — a proverb or byword
  • niggard — an excessively parsimonious, miserly, or stingy person.
  • nonword — a word that is not recognized or accepted as legitimate, as one produced by a spelling or typographical error.
  • norward — Archaic form of northward.
  • np-hard — (complexity)   A set or property of computational search problems. A problem is NP-hard if solving it in polynomial time would make it possible to solve all problems in class NP in polynomial time. Some NP-hard problems are also in NP (these are called "NP-complete"), some are not. If you could reduce an NP problem to an NP-hard problem and then solve it in polynomial time, you could solve all NP problems. See also computational complexity.
  • oh lord — Lord is used in exclamations such as 'good Lord!' and 'oh Lord!' to express surprise, shock, frustration, or annoyance about something.
  • oilbird — guacharo.
  • onboard — provided, occurring, etc., on a vehicle: among the ship's many onboard services.
  • orchard — an area of land devoted to the cultivation of fruit or nut trees.
  • outward — proceeding or directed toward the outside or exterior, or away from a central point: the outward flow of gold; the outward part of a voyage.
  • pc card — Personal Computer Memory Card International Association
  • piccard — Auguste [French oh-gyst] /French oʊˈgüst/ (Show IPA), 1884–1962, Swiss physicist, aeronaut, inventor, and deep-sea explorer: designer of bathyscaphes.
  • placard — a paperboard sign or notice, as one posted in a public place or carried by a demonstrator or picketer.
  • pochard — an Old World diving duck, Aythya ferina, having a chestnut-red head.
  • pollard — a tree cut back nearly to the trunk, so as to produce a dense mass of branches.
  • pommard — a dry, red wine from the Pommard parish in Burgundy.
  • poniard — a small, slender dagger.
  • poulard — a hen spayed to improve the flesh for use as food.
  • radfordArthur William, 1896–1973, U.S. admiral: chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff 1953–57.
  • re-word — to put into other words: to reword a contract.
  • reboard — a piece of wood sawed thin, and of considerable length and breadth compared with the thickness.
  • redbird — the cardinal, Cardinalis cardinalis.
  • redford — Robert. born 1936, US film actor and director. His films include (as actor) Barefoot in the Park (1966), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), The Sting (1973), All the President's Men (1976), Up Close and Personal (1996), and (as director) Ordinary People (1980), A River Runs Through It (1992), and The Horse Whisperer (1998)
  • reynard — a name given to the fox, originally in the medieval beast epic Reynard the Fox.
  • richard — (Duke of Gloucester) 1452–85, king of England 1483–85.
  • ripcord — a cord on a parachute that, when pulled, opens the parachute for descent.
  • romford — former municipal borough in Essex, SE England: now part of Havering, near London
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