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English 4 letter words - Containing letters ydr - page 1

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adry

adry

adj

  1. (archaic) Dry.

ardy

byrd

dory

dory

adj

  1. (obsolete) Of a bright yellow or golden color.

noun

  1. (nautical) A small flat-bottomed boat with pointed or somewhat pointed ends, used for fishing both offshore and on rivers.
  2. A wooden pike or spear about three metres (ten feet) in length with a flat, leaf-shaped iron spearhead and a bronze butt-spike (called a sauroter), which was the main weapon of hoplites in Ancient Greece. It was usually not thrown but rather thrust at opponents with one hand.
  3. Any of several different families of large-eyed, silvery, deep-bodied, laterally compressed, and roughly discoid marine fish.

dray

dray

noun

  1. A kind of sledge or sled.
  2. A low horse-drawn cart, often without sides, and used especially for heavy loads.
  3. Alternative spelling of drey, the nest of a squirrel.

drey

drey

noun

  1. (Australia) A possum’s nest, built of twigs and leaves in a tree.
  2. (Britain) A squirrel’s nest, built of twigs in a tree.

drye

drys

dyer

dyer

noun

  1. One who dyes, especially one who dyes cloth etc. as an occupation.

fryd

fyrd

fyrd

noun

  1. (historical) In early Anglo-Saxon times, an army that was mobilized from freemen to defend their shire, or from select representatives to join a royal expedition.

royd

rudy

rudy

noun

  1. (sports, aerial freestyle skiing) An acrobatic maneuver involving two and a half twists.

ryde

rynd

rynd

noun

  1. A piece of iron crossing the hole in the upper millstone, by which the stone is supported on the spindle.

urdy

urdy

adj

  1. (heraldry) Alternative form of urdé

wyrd

wyrd

noun

  1. Fate, destiny, particularly in an Anglo-Saxon or Old Norse context.

yard

yard

noun

  1. (Jamaica, MLE) One’s house or home.
  2. (US, Canada, Australia) The property surrounding one's house, typically dominated by one's lawn.
  3. (US, slang, uncommon) 100 dollars.
  4. (finance) 10⁹, A short scale billion; a long scale thousand millions or milliard.
  5. (nautical) A long tapered timber hung on a mast to which is bent a sail, and may be further qualified as a square, lateen, or lug yard. The first is hung at right angles to the mast, the latter two hang obliquely.
  6. (nautical) Any spar carried aloft.
  7. (obsolete) A branch, twig, or shoot.
  8. (obsolete) A staff, rod, or stick.
  9. (obsolete) The rod, a surveying unit of (once) 15 or (now) 16+¹⁄₂ feet.
  10. (obsolete) The rood, area bound by a square rod, ¹⁄₄ acre.
  11. (obsolete) The yardland, an obsolete English unit of land roughly understood as 30 acres.
  12. (obsolete, medicine) A penis.
  13. A place where moose or deer herd together in winter for pasture, protection, etc.
  14. A small, usually uncultivated area adjoining or (now especially) within the precincts of a house or other building.
  15. A unit of length equal to 3 feet in the US customary and British imperial systems of measurement, equal to precisely 0.9144 m since 1959 (US) or 1963 (UK).
  16. An enclosed area designated for a specific purpose, e.g. on farms, railways etc.
  17. Units of similar composition or length in other systems.

verb

  1. (intransitive, humorous) To move a yard at a time, as opposed to inching along.
  2. (transitive) To confine to a yard.

yerd

yerd

noun

  1. (obsolete) A yard (unit of measurement); three feet.
  2. (obsolete) A yard, plot of ground around a building or fenced paddock.

verb

  1. (obsolete) To bury or be buried.
  2. Heard.

yird