(law, transitive) To revoke (a legacy, grant, etc.) or to satisfy it by some other gift.
adham
admah
adman
adman
noun
A person in the business of devising, writing, illustrating or selling advertisements.
admen
admen
noun
plural of adman
admin
admin
noun
(countable, informal) An administration (a body that administers; the executive part of government).
(countable, informal) An administrator (one who administers affairs).
(countable, informal, Internet) A user of a discussion forum, website, etc. with privileges allowing them to control or restrict the activity of other users.
(countable, informal, computing) A systems administrator (one who maintains a computer system or network).
(uncountable, informal) Administration, or administrative work.
verb
(transitive, computing, informal) To serve as an administrator for or of.
admit
admit
verb
(intransitive) To give warrant or allowance, to grant opportunity or permission (+ of).
(transitive or intransitive) To concede as true; to acknowledge or assent to, as an allegation which it is impossible to deny (+ to).
(transitive) To allow (someone) to enter a profession or to enjoy a privilege; to recognize as qualified for a franchise.
(transitive) To allow to enter a hospital or similar facility for treatment.
(transitive) To allow to enter; to grant entrance (to), whether into a place, into the mind, or into consideration
(transitive) To be capable of; to permit. In this sense, "of" may be used after the verb, or may be omitted.
admix
admix
noun
The act of admixing.
The mixture that results from admixing, especially an alloy.
verb
(transitive) To mingle with something else; to mix.
admov
admrx
adpcm
adsum
ahmad
ahmad
Proper noun
name, variant of Ahmed.
of Arabic origin.
ahmed
ahmed
Proper noun
name, variant of Ahmad.
of Arabic origin.
aimed
aimed
adj
Directed towards a target.
verb
simple past tense and past participle of aim
aldim
almad
almud
almud
noun
(historical) A low wide box once used for measuring almuds.
(historical) A traditional Spanish unit of dry measure, highly variable depending on the location and the substance measured but generally between 3–20 L.
(historical) A traditional Spanish unit of land area, highly variable depending on the location and the substance measured.
(historical) Alternative form of almude, Portuguese forms of the same measure.
(historical) Synonym of celemin, a traditional Spanish unit of dry measure equivalent to about 4.6 L
amadi
amado
amand
amand
noun
(law, Scotland) A fine or penalty.
verb
(obsolete) To send away; dismiss.
ameds
ameed
amend
amend
noun
(informal, of a document, usually in the plural) Clipping of amendment (“alteration or change for the better”).
(usually in the plural) An act of righting a wrong; compensation.
verb
(obsolete, intransitive) To be healed, to be cured, to recover (from an illness).
(obsolete, transitive) To heal (someone sick); to cure (a disease etc.).
(transitive) To make a formal alteration (in legislation, a report, etc.) by adding, deleting, or rephrasing.
(transitive) To make better; improve.
amida
amide
amide
noun
(inorganic chemistry) Any ionic derivative of ammonia in which a hydrogen atom has been replaced with a metal cation (R-NH⁻ or R₂N⁻)
(organic chemistry) Any derivative of an oxoacid in which the hydroxyl group has been replaced with an amino or substituted amino group; especially such derivatives of a carboxylic acid, the carboxamides or acid amides
amido
amido
noun
(organic chemistry) The univalent radical -NH₂ when attached via a carboxyl group
amids
amids
noun
plural of amid
amund
ardme
armed
armed
adj
(botany) Having prickles or thorns.
(chiefly in combination) Having an arm or arms, often of a specified number or type.
(heraldry, of animals) Having horns, claws, teeth, a beak, etc. in a particular tincture, as contrasted with that of the animal as a whole.
(obsolete) Furnished with whatever serves to add strength, force, or efficiency.
(of a creature) Possessing arms of a specified number or type.
(of a weapon) Prepared for use; loaded.
(sometimes in combination) Equipped, especially with a weapon.
verb
simple past tense and past participle of arm
atmid
bedim
bedim
verb
(transitive) To make dim; to obscure or darken.
bemad
bemad
verb
(transitive, obsolete) To make mad.
bemud
bemud
verb
(transitive) To cover, bespatter, or befoul with mud.
(transitive, figuratively) To confuse; muddle.
cdrom
comdg
comdr
comdt
comid
compd
dahms
damal
daman
daman
noun
The rock hyrax.
damar
damar
noun
A clear to yellow resin, obtained in Malaya from trees of the genera Shorea (family Dipterocarpaceae) and Symplocos (family Symplocaceae), used in varnishes and inks
A large tree of the order Coniferae, indigenous to the East Indies and Australasia, now genus Agathis.
Any of various hard resins, obtained especially from evergreen trees, notably of the genera Agathis (family Araucariaceae) and Hopea (family Dipterocarpaceae), native to southeast Asia, also used in varnishes and lacquers.
damas
damek
dames
dames
noun
plural of dame
damia
damie
damle
damme
damme
intj
(archaic) Expressing anger or vehemence.
damns
damns
noun
plural of damn
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of damn
damon
damps
damps
noun
plural of damp
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of damp
dampy
dampy
adj
(obsolete) Dejected; gloomy; sorrowful.
(obsolete) Somewhat damp.
datum
datum
noun
(cartography, surveying, engineering) A fixed reference point or set of reference points which precisely define a system of measurement or a coordinate system.
(dated) Singular of data; a single recorded observation.
(nautical) A floating reference point, or SLDMB, used to evaluate surface currents in a body of water. Often employed by coastal search and rescue.
(philosophy) A fact known from direct observation.
(philosophy) A premise from which conclusions are drawn.
verb
To provide missing data points by using a mathematical model to extrapolate values that are outside the range of a measuring device.
ddcmp
decem
deems
deems
noun
plural of deem
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deem
degum
degum
verb
(transitive) To remove gum from.
deism
deism
noun
A philosophical belief in the existence of a god (or goddess) knowable through human reason; especially, a belief in a creator god unaccompanied by any belief in supernatural phenomena or specific religious doctrines.
Belief in a god who ceased to intervene with existence after acting as the cause of the cosmos.
delim
delma
demal
demes
demes
noun
plural of deme
demit
demit
noun
A document certifying that a person has (honourably) demitted, as from a Masonic lodge.
The act of demitting.
verb
(transitive) To let fall; to depress; to yield.
To relinquish an office, membership, authority, etc.; to resign, as from a Masonic lodge.
demmy
demob
demob
noun
(UK) Demobilization; release from military service.
verb
(Britain) To demobilize; to release someone from military service.
demon
demon
noun
(Greek mythology) A tutelary deity or spirit intermediate between the major Olympian gods and mankind, especially a deified hero or the entity which supposedly guided Socrates, telling him what not to do.
(card games) A type of patience or solitaire (card game) played in the UK and/or US.
(in the plural) A person's fears or anxieties.
(now chiefly historical) A false god or idol; a Satanic divinity.
A hypothetical entity with special abilities postulated for the sake of a thought experiment in philosophy or physics.
A person's inner spirit or genius; a guiding or creative impulse.
A source (especially personified) of great evil or wickedness; a destructive feeling or character flaw.
A spirit not considered to be inherently evil; a (non-Christian) deity or supernatural being.
A very wicked or malevolent person; also (in weakened sense) a mischievous person, especially a child.
An evil spirit resident in or working for Hell; a devil.
Any of various hesperiid butterflies of the genera Notocrypta and Udaspes.
Someone with great strength, passion or skill for a particular activity, pursuit etc.; an enthusiast.
demos
demos
noun
(originally Ancient Greece) An ancient subdivision of Attica; (now also) a Greek municipality, an administrative area covering a city or several villages together.
(political science, singular or plural) The ordinary citizens of an ancient Greek city-state; hence, the common populace of a state or district (especially a democratic one); the people.
plural of demo
demot
dempr
demur
demur
noun
An act of hesitation as to proceeding; a scruple; also, a suspension of action or decision; a pause, a stop.
verb
(intransitive) To delay; to pause; to suspend proceedings or judgment in view of a doubt or difficulty; to hesitate; to put off the determination or conclusion of an affair.
(intransitive) To scruple or object; to take exception; to oppose; to balk
(intransitive, law) To interpose a demurrer.
(intransitive, obsolete) To linger; to stay; to tarry
(transitive, obsolete) To cause delay to; to put off
(transitive, obsolete) To suspend judgment concerning; to doubt of or hesitate about
demus
denim
denim
noun
A textile often made of cotton with a distinct diagonal pattern.
denom
derma
derma
noun
A Jewish dish of roast or boiled seasoned meat and flour etc. in a casing, especially kishke.
The inner layer of the skin.
derms
derms
noun
plural of derm
desma
desma
noun
(zoology) An axial filament.
diamb
diamb
noun
(poetry) Alternative form of diiamb
didym
didym
noun
Obsolete form of didymium.
dimer
dimer
noun
(chemistry) A molecule consisting of two identical halves, formed by joining two identical molecules, sometimes with a single atom acting as a bridge.
dimes
dimes
noun
plural of dime
dimin
dimit
dimit
verb
(obsolete) To dismiss, let go, or release.
dimly
dimly
adv
In a dim manner; not clearly.
dimmy
dimmy
adj
(dated) somewhat dim; dimmish
dimna
dimps
dimps
noun
plural of dimp
disme
disme
noun
(US, dated, 18th century) A dime minted in 1792.
(obsolete) A tenth; a tenth part; a tithe.
dogma
dogma
noun
A doctrine (or set of doctrines) relating to matters such as morality and faith, set forth authoritatively by a religious organization or leader.
An authoritative principle, belief or statement of opinion, especially one considered to be absolutely true and indisputable, regardless of evidence or without evidence to support it.
dolma
dolma
noun
Any of a family of stuffed vegetable dishes. The filling generally consists of rice, minced meat or grains, together with onion, herbs and spices.
domal
domal
adj
(dated, astrology) Of or relating to an astrological house.
In the shape of a dome.
Of or relating to a dome.
domba
domed
domed
adj
In the form of a dome.
domel
domer
domes
domes
noun
plural of dome
domic
domph
dompt
dompt
verb
(transitive, rare) To bring (something) under control; to overcome, to subdue.
domus
domus
noun
(anthropology, archaeology) A farmstead with its people, plants and animals, considered as a unit.
(dated) In the UK a college (or collectively its fellows) in Cambridge or Oxford.
donum
donum
noun
Alternative form of dunam
dooms
dooms
noun
plural of doom
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of doom
dorms
dorms
noun
plural of dorm
dormy
dormy
adj
(golf) Alternative form of dormie
douma
douma
noun
Archaic form of duma (“Russian legislative assembly”).
doums
doums
noun
plural of doum
drama
drama
noun
(slang) Rumor, lying or exaggerated reaction to life or online events; melodrama; an angry dispute or scene; a situation made more complicated or worse than it should be; intrigue or spiteful interpersonal maneuvering.
A composition, normally in prose, telling a story and intended to be represented by actors impersonating the characters and speaking the dialogue
A situation in real life that has the characteristics of such a theatrical play
Such a work for television, radio or the cinema (usually one that is not a comedy)
Theatrical plays in general
drame
dramm
drams
drams
noun
plural of dram
dream
dream
adj
Ideal; perfect.
noun
(figurative) A hope or wish.
A visionary scheme; a wild conceit; an idle fancy.
Imaginary events seen in the mind while sleeping.
verb
(intransitive) To consider the possibility (of).
(intransitive) To daydream.
(intransitive) To hope, to wish.
(intransitive) To see imaginary events in one's mind while sleeping.
(transitive) To envision as an imaginary experience (usually when asleep).
drome
drome
noun
(obsolete) The crab plover, Dromas ardeola, of North Africa.
drums
drums
noun
plural of drum
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of drum
dsbam
dumah
dumas
dumas
noun
plural of duma
dumba
dumba
noun
(India) The fat-tailed sheep.
dumbs
dumbs
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dumb
dumby
dumby
noun
(card games) Archaic form of dummy (“hand shown to be played from by another player”).
(rare) Alternative form of dummy (“stupid person”)
dumka
dumka
noun
(countable) An individual composition in this genre.
(uncountable) A genre of instrumental folk music from Ukraine.
dumky
dumky
noun
plural of dumka
dummy
dummy
adv
(slang) Extremely.
noun
(Australia, UK, New Zealand) A "dummy teat"; a plastic or rubber teat used to soothe or comfort a baby; a pacifier.
(attributive) A newborn animal that is indifferent to stimulus and does not voluntarily move.
(card games, chiefly bridge) A player whose hand is shown and is to be played from by another player.
(dated) A silent person; a person who does not talk.
(linguistics) A word serving only to make a construction grammatical.
(programming) An unused parameter or value.
(sports, UK) A bodily gesture meant to fool an opposing player; a feint.
(sports, chiefly rugby, soccer) A feigned pass or kick or play in order to deceive an opponent.
A deliberately nonfunctional device or tool used in place of a functional one.
A figure of a person or animal used by a ventriloquist; a puppet.
A person who is the mere tool of another; a man of straw.
A stupid person.
Something constructed with the size and form of a human, to be used in place of a person.
verb
(sports) To feint.
To make a mock-up or prototype version of something, without some or all off its intended functionality.
dumps
dumps
noun
plural of dump
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dump
dumpy
dumpy
adj
Of or relating to a garbage dump; rubbishy.
Short and thick; stout or stocky.
noun
(South Africa) A small bottle of beer.
(slang, vulgar) Synonym of dump truck (“prominent buttocks”).
(surveying) Ellipsis of dumpy level.
A short, stout person or animal, especially one of a breed of very short-legged chickens.
dunam
dunam
noun
(historical) An Ottoman Turkish unit of surface area nominally equal to 1,600 square (Turkish) paces but actually varied at a provincial and local level according to land quality to accommodate its colloquial sense of the amount of land able to be plowed in a day, roughly equivalent to the Byzantine stremma or English acre.
A modern Turkish unit of surface area equal to a decare (1000 m²), equivalent to the modern Greek stremma.
Various other units in other areas of the former Ottoman Empire, usually equated to the decare but sometimes varying (as in Iraq, where it is 2500 m²).
duomi
duomi
noun
plural of duomo
duomo
duomo
noun
A cathedral, especially one in Italy.
durum
durum
noun
(often used attributively) Ellipsis of durum wheat.
dvmrp
dwalm
dwalm
noun
(Scotland) A swoon; a sudden sickness.
verb
(Scotland, intransitive) To fail in health.
dymas
dynam
dynam
noun
A foot-pound.
edema
edema
noun
(American spelling, botany) A similar swelling in plants caused by excessive accumulation of water.
(American spelling, pathology) An excessive accumulation of serum in tissue spaces or a body cavity.
edman
edmea
edmee
edmon
embed
embed
noun
(computing) An item embedded in another document.
(journalism) An embedded reporter or journalist, such as a war reporter assigned to and travelling with a military unit, or a political reporter assigned to follow and report on the campaign of a candidate.
An element of an advertisement, etc. serving as a subliminal message.
verb
(mathematics, transitive) To define a one-to-one function from one set to another so that certain properties of the domain are preserved when considering the image as a subset of the codomain.
(transitive) To lay (something) as in a bed; to lay in surrounding matter; to bed.
(transitive, by extension) To include (something) in surrounding matter.
(transitive, computing) To encapsulate within another document or data file.
emden
emend
emend
verb
(transitive) To correct and revise (text or a document).
emyde
emyds
emyds
noun
plural of emyd
fadme
famed
famed
adj
Having fame; famous or noted.
fremd
fremd
adj
(obsolete) Wild; untamed.
(rare, chiefly dialectal) Not kin, unrelated; foreign.
(rare, chiefly dialectal) Strange, unusual, out of the ordinary; unfamiliar.
noun
(archaic or obsolete) An enmity.
(rare or dialectal) A stranger; someone who is not a relative; a guest.