ABACUS	(n.) A calculating table or frame; an instrument for performing arithmetical calculations by balls sliding on wires, or counters in grooves.
ABAS	(n.) A fabric woven of the hair of camels or goats.
ABASE	(v.) To lower or depress; to throw or cast down.
ABASER	(n.) He who, or that which, abases.
ABASH	(v.) To destroy the self-possession of; to confuse or confound; to put to shame; to disconcert; to discomfit.
ABATE	(v.) To bring down or reduce from a higher to a lower state, number, or degree; to lessen; to diminish; to contract; to moderate; to cut short.
ABATER	(n.) One who, or that which, abates.
ABBAS	(n. plural) Used as a title of honor for bishops and patriarchs in some Christian churches.
ABBE	(n.) The head of an abbey; but commonly a title of respect given in France to every one vested with the ecclesiastical habit or dress.
ABBOT	(n.) The superior or head of an abbey.
ABED	(adv.) In bed, or on the bed.
ABET	(v.) To instigate or encourage by aid or countenance.
ABETS	(v.) To approve, encourage, and support (an action or a plan of action); urge and help on.
ABLATE	(v.) To remove by erosion, melting, evaporation, or vaporization.
ABODE	(n.) Place of continuance, or where one dwells; abiding place; residence; a dwelling; a habitation.
ABRADE	(v.) To rub or wear off; to waste or wear away by friction; as, to abrade rocks.
ABUTS	(v.) To touch, to border upon, to be next to.
ABYSS	(n.) A bottomless or unfathomed depth, gulf, or chasm; hence, any deep, immeasurable void, specifically, hell, or the bottomless pit.
ACETIC	(adj.) Of a pertaining to vinegar; producing vinegar; producing vinegar; as, acetic fermentation.
ACME	(n.) The top or highest point; the culmination.
ACMES	(n. plural) The highest  point.
ACRED	(adj.) Possessing acres or landed property; -- used in composition; as, large-acred men.
ACRID	(adj.) Sharp and harsh, or bitter and not to the taste; pungent; corrosive.
ACUITY	(n.) Sharpness or acuteness, as of a needle, wit, etc.
ADAGE	(n.) An old saying, which has obtained credit by long use; a proverb.
ADAGIO	(adj. & adv.) Slow; slowly, leisurely, and gracefully.
ADDEND	(n.) Any of a set of numbers to be added.
ADDER	(n.) A small venomous serpent of the genus Vipera.
ADDLE	(n.) Liquid filth; mire.
ADEPT	(n.) One fully skilled or well versed in anything; a proficient; as, adepts in philosophy.
ADIEU	(n.) A farewell; commendation to the care of God at parting.
ADIPIC	(adj.) Pertaining to, or derived from, fatty or oily substances; -- applied to certain acids obtained from fats by the action of nitric acid.
ADMIX	(v.) To mingle with something else; to mix.
ADO	(n.) To do; in doing; as, there is nothing ado.
ADOBE	(n.) An unburnt brick dried in the sun; also used as an adjective, as, an adobe house, in Texas or New Mexico.
ADOBES	(n. plural) An unburnt brick dried in the sun; also used as an adjective, as, an adobe house, in Texas or New Mexico.
ADOS	(n.) A bustle or fuss.
ADSORB	(v.) To accumulate of the surface; of liquids or gases, in chemistry.
AEGIS	(n.) A shield or protective armor; -- applied in mythology to the shield of Jupiter which he gave to Minerva. Also fig.: A shield; a protection.
AFFINE	(v.) To refine.
AFIRE	(adj.) On fire.
AFOOT	(adv.) On foot.
AFOUL	(adv. & adj.) In collision; entangled.
AFT	(adv. & a.) Near or towards the stern of a vessel; astern; abaft.
AGATE	(n.) A semipellucid, uncrystallized variety of quartz. Its colors are delicately arranged in stripes or bands, or blended in clouds.
AGAVE	(n.) A genus of plants of which the chief species is the maguey or century plant. Attaining maturity, it produces a gigantic flower stem.
AGAVES	(n. plural) A genus of plants of which the chief species is the maguey or century plant. Attaining maturity, it produces a gigantic flower stem.
AGILE	(adj.) Having the faculty of quick motion in the limbs; apt or ready to move; nimble; active.
AGONE	(adj. & adv.) Ago, past.
AGONES	(n. plural) A conflict or argument between two characters iin a work of literature.
AGUE	(n.) An acute fever.
AGUES	(n. plural) A chill or shivering.
AIL	(v.) To affect with pain or uneasiness, either physical or mental; to trouble; to be the matter with.
AKIN	(a.) Of the same kin; related by blood.
ALA	(n.) A winglike organ, or part.
ALAMO	(n.) A poplar tree of Southwestern U.S.; cottonwood.
ALAMOS	(n. plural) A poplar tree of Southwestern U.S.; cottonwood.
ALAN	(n.) A wolfhound.
ALAND	(adv.) On land; to the land; ashore.
ALAR	(a.) Pertaining to, or having, wings.
ALB	(n.) A long white linen vestment; in the Roman Catholic church, worn by those in holy orders when officiating at mass.
ALBS	(n. plural) A long white linen vestment; in the Roman Catholic church worn by those in holy orders when officiating at mass.
ALDER	(n.) A tree, usually growing in moist land, and belonging to the genus Alnus.
ALDRIN	(n.) An insecticide containing a naphthalene-derived compound.
ALEPH	(n.) The first letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
ALGA	(n.) A kind of seaweed; pl. the class of cellular cryptogamic plants which includes the black, red, and green seaweeds.
ALGAL	(adj.) Pertaining to, or like, algae.
ALIAS	(adv.) Otherwise; otherwise called; -- a term used in legal proceedings to connect the different names of any one who has gone by two or more.
ALIBI	(n.) The plea or mode of defense under which a person on trial for a crime  attempts to prove that he was in another place when the alleged act was committed.
ALKANE	(n.) A saturated hydrocarbon including methane, paraffin,etc.
ALKENE	(n.) An unsaturated, open chain hydrocarbon with one or more carbon-carbon double bonds.
ALLAY	(v.) To make quiet or put at rest; to pacify or appease; to quell; to calm..
ALLELE	(n.) One of a series of genes that occupies a specific position on a chromosome.
ALLOT	(v.) To distribute, or parcel out in parts or portions; to assign as a share or lot; to set apart as one's share; to bestow on; to grant; to appoint.
ALLOY	(n.) Any combination or compound of metals fused together; a mixture of metals; for example, brass, which is an alloy of copper and zinc.
ALLYL	(n.) An organic radical, C3H5, existing especially in oils of garlic and mustard.
ALOE	(n.) A genus of succulent plants, some classed as trees, others as shrubs.
ALOES	(n. pl. ) Any of succulent plants of the genus Aloe having rosettes of  spiny-margined leaves and long stalks bearing yellow, orange, or red tubular flowers.
ALOFT	(adv.) On high; in the air; high above the ground.
ALOHA	(interj.) Traditional Hawaiian greeting or farewell.
ALP	(n.) A very high mountain. Specifically, in the plural, the highest chain of mountains in Europe, containing the lofty mountains of Switzerland, etc.
ALPHA	(n.) The first letter in the Greek alphabet, answering to A, and hence used to denote the beginning.
ALTHEA	(n.) A genus of plants of the Mallow family. It includes the officinal marsh mallow, and the garden hollyhocks.
ALTO	(n.) An alto singer.
ALTOS	(n. plural) A low female singing voice.
ALUM	(n.) A double sulphate formed of aluminium and some other element (esp. an alkali metal) or of aluminium.
ALUMNA	(n.) A female pupil; especially, a graduate of a school or college.
ALUMNI	(n. plural) Graduates or former students of a school, college or university.
ALWAY	(adv.) Always.
AMASS	(v.) To collect into a mass or heap; to gather a great quantity of; to accumulate; as, to amass a treasure or a fortune; to amass words or phrases.
AMBER	(n.) A yellowish translucent resin resembling copal, found as a fossil in alluvial soils, with beds of lignite, or on the seashore in many places.
AMBLE	(n.) A peculiar gait of a horse, in which both legs on the same side are moved at the same time, alternating with the legs on the other side.
AMIDE	(n.) A compound formed by the union of amidogen with an acid element or radical.
AMIDES	(n. plural) A compound formed by the union of amidogen with an acid element or radical.
AMIGO	(n.) A friend.
AMINO	(adj.) Relating to an amine chemical compund.
AMIR	(n.) One of the Mohammedan nobility of Afghanistan and Scinde.
AMIRS	(n. plural) One of the Mohammedan nobility of Afghanistan and Scinde.
AMITY	(n.) Friendship, in a general sense, between individuals, societies, or nations; friendly relations; good understanding.
AMOK	(a.) In a frenzy of violence.
AMORT	(adj.) As if dead; lifeless; spiritless; dejected; depressed.
AMP	(n.) An ampere.
AMPERE	(n.) The unit of electric current.
AMPS	(n. plural) An ampere.
ANA	(adv.) Of each; an equal quantity; as, wine and honey, ana (or, contracted, aa), / ij., that is, of wine and honey, each, two ounces.
ANARCH	(n.) The author of anarchy; one who excites revolt.
ANAS	(n.) A genus of water fowls, of the order Anseres, including certain species of fresh-water ducks.
ANENT	(adj.) About; concerning; in respect; as, he said nothing anent this particular.
ANGST	(n.) A philosophic feeling of anxiety.
ANI	(n.) Black tropical American cuckoo.
ANION	(n.) An electro-negative element, or the element which, in electro-chemical decompositions, is evolved at the anode; -- opposed to cation.
ANIONS	(n. plural) An electro-negative element, or the element which, in electro-chemical decompositions, is evolved at the anode; -- opposed to cation.
ANIS	(n. plural) Any of several chiefly tropical American birds related to the cuckoo having black plumage and a long tail.
ANISE	(n.) An umbelliferous plant (Pimpinella anisum) growing naturally in Egypt, and cultivated in Spain, Malta, etc., for its carminative and aromatic seeds.
ANNA	(n.) An East Indian money of account, the sixteenth of a rupee, or about 2/ cents.
ANNAS	(n. plural) A copper coin formerly used in India and Pakistan.
ANNEAL	(v.) To subject to great heat, and then cool slowly for the purpose of rendering it less brittle; to temper; to toughen.
ANNEX	(v.) To join or attach; usually to subjoin; to affix; to append.
ANNUL	(v.) To reduce to nothing; to obliterate.
ANNULI	(n. plural) A ringlike figure or structure.
ANODE	(n.) The positive pole of an electric battery -- opposed to cathode.
ANODES	(n. plural) The positive pole of an electric battery -- opposed to cathode.
ANOMIE	(n.) Alienation or social instability caused by erosion of standards and values.
ANTED	(v. past tense) To make a stake during a game of poker.
ANTES	(v.) To make a stake during a game of poker.
ANTIC	(adj.) Odd; fantastic; fanciful; grotesque; ludicrous.
AORTA	(n.) The great artery which carries the blood from the heart to all parts of the body except the lungs; the main trunk of the arterial system.
APACE	(adv.) With a quick pace; quick; fast; speedily.
APER	(n.) One who apes.
APEX	(n.) The tip, top, point, or angular summit of anything; as, the apex of a mountain, spire, or cone; the apex, or tip, of a leaf.
APHID	(n.) Sapsucking pest insect of the genus Aphis; an aphidian.
APICES	(n. plural) The tip, top, point, or angular summit of anything.
APOGEE	(n.) That point in the orbit of the moon which is at the greatest distance from the earth.
APSE	(n.) A reliquary, or case in which the relics of saints were kept.
APT	(a.) Fit or fitted; suited; suitable; appropriate.
AQUAS	(n. plural) Water or a watery solution.
ARCED	(v. past tense) To form a curve or arch.
ARGON	(n.) A substance regarded as an element, contained in the atmosphere and remarkable for its chemical inertness.
ARGOT	(n.) A secret language or conventional slang peculiar to thieves, tramps, and vagabonds.
ARGUS	(n.) A fabulous being of antiquity, said to have had a hundred eyes. His eyes were transplanted to the peacock's tail.
ARHAT	(n.) In Buddhism, one who has attained enlightenment.
ARID	(a.) Exhausted of moisture; parched with heat; dry; barren.
ARRACK	(n.) A name in the East Indies and the Indian islands for all ardent spirits often distilled from a fermented mixture of rice, molasses, and palm wine.
ARROYO	(n.) A water course; a rivulet.
ARSINE	(n.) A compound of arsenic and hydrogen, AsH3, a colorless and exceedingly poisonous gas, having an odor like garlic.
ARUM	(n.) A genus of plants found in central Europe and the Mediterranean, such as the cuckoopint, having arrow-shaped leaves.
ARYL	(n.) An organic radical derived from an aromatic compound by removing a hydrogen atom.
ARYLS	(n. plural) An organic radical derived from an aromatic compound by removing a hydrogen atom.
ASKEW	(adv. & adj.) Awry; askance; asquint; oblique or obliquely; -- sometimes indicating scorn, or contempt, or entry.
ASPEN	(n.) A kind of poplar tree.
ASSAI	(adv.) In music, a tempo direction equivalent to "very".
ASSAIS	(n. plural) Any of several feather-leaved South American palms that are important sources of heart of palm.
ASSAY	(n.) Trial; attempt; essay.
ASTER	(n.) A genus of herbs with compound white or bluish flowers; starwort; Michaelmas daisy.
ATONAL	(adj.) Lacking a tonal center or key.
ATONE	(v.) To stand as an equivalent; to make reparation, compensation, or amends, for an offense or a crime.
ATRIUM	(n.) A square hall lighted from above, into which rooms open at one or more levels.
AUDIT	(n.) An examination in general; a judicial examination.
AUGEND	(n.) A quantity to which the addend is added.
AUGER	(n.) A carpenter's tool for boring holes larger than those bored by a gimlet.
AUGITE	(n.) A variety of pyroxene, usually of a black or dark green color, occurring in igneous rocks, such as basalt.
AUGUR	(n.) A diviner who foretells events by the behaviour of birds or other animals, or by signs derived from celestial phenomena, or unusual occurrences.
AUK	(n.) A name given to various species of arctic sea birds of the family Alcidae.
AUKS	(n. plural) A name given to various species of arctic sea birds of the family Alcidae.
AURAL	(adj.) Of or pertaining to the ear.
AURAR	(n. plural) Unit of Icelandic currency.
AURIC	(adj.) Of or pertaining to gold.
AUTOED	(v. past tense) To go by automobile.
AVAIL	(n.) Profit; advantage toward success; benefit; value; as, labor, without economy.
AVE	(n.) A reverential salutation.
AVER	(v.) To assert, or prove, the truth of.
AVERS	(v.) To affirm positively.
AVERT	(n.) To turn aside, or away; as, to avert the eyes from an object; to ward off or prevent the occurrence or effects of.
AVES	(n. pl.) The class of Vertebrata that includes the birds.
AVIATE	(n.) To operate an aircraft.
AVID	(a.) Longing eagerly for; eager; greedy.
AVOCET	(n.) Any of several long-legged shore birds characterized by a long, slender beak.
AWASH	(adj.) Washed by the waves or tide.
AWL	(n.) A pointed instrument for piercing small holes, as in leather or wood; used by shoemakers, saddlers, cabinetmakers, etc.
AWLS	(n. plural) A pointed tool for making holes.
AWN	(n.) The bristle or beard of barley, oats, grasses, etc., or any similar bristlelike appendage.
AWNED	(adj.) Furnished with an awn, or long bristle-shaped tip; bearded.
AWNS	(n. plural) The bristle or beard of barley, oats, grasses, etc., or any similar bristlelike appendage.
AWRY	(a.) Unreasonable, unruly, perverse or perversely.
AXIAL	(adj.) Of or pertaining to an axis; of the nature of, or resembling, an axis; around an axis.
AXIOM	(n.) A self-evident and necessary truth, or an established principle in some art or science.
AXLED	(adj.) Having an axle.
AXON	(n.) The long nerve fiber that generally conducts impulses away from the body of a nerve cell.
AXONS	(n. plural) The long nerve fiber that generally conducts impulses away from the body of a nerve cell.
AZALEA	(n.) A genus of showy flowering shrubs, mostly natives of China or of North America; false honeysuckle.
AZURE	(adj.) Sky-blue; resembling the clear blue color of the unclouded sky; cerulean; also, cloudless.
BABEL	(n.) The city and tower in the land of Shinar, where the confusion of languages took place.
BACHED	(v. past tense) To live as a bachelor.
BADE	(v.) A form of the pat tense of Bid.
BAH	(interj.) An exclamation expressive of extreme contempt.
BALBOA	(n.) A Panamanian unit of currency.
BALDER	(n.) The most beautiful and beloved of the gods; the  god of peace; the son of Odin and Freya.
BALK	(v.) To engage in contradiction; to be in opposition.
BALKS	(v.) To refuse abruptly.
BALKY	(adj.) Apt to refuse to go; as, a balky horse.
BALM	(n.) Any fragrant ointment.
BALMY	(adj.) Mild and pleasant.
BALSA	(n.) A raft or float, used principally on the Pacific coast of South America.
BAM	(n.) An imposition; a cheat; a hoax.
BANAL	(adj.) Commonplace; trivial; hackneyed; trite.
BANDY	(v.) To give and receive reciprocally; to exchange.
BANE	(n.) Any cause of ruin, or lasting injury; harm; woe.
BANES	(n. plural) A cause of harm or death.
BARD	(n.) A professional poet and singer.
BARDED	(adj.) Accoutered with defensive armor; -- said of a horse.
BARDS	(n.plural) A minstrel poet.
BARRE	(n.) A handrail fixed to a wall used for ballet exercises.
BARRES	(n. plural) A handrail fixed to a wall used for ballet exercises.
BASAL	(adj.) Relating to, or forming, the base.
BASH	(v.) To abash; to disconcert or be disconcerted or put out of countenance.
BASHAW	(n.) A Turkish title of honor, now written pasha.
BASIL	(n.) The name given to several aromatic herbs of the Mint family, the leaves of which are used in cookery.
BASK	(v.) To lie in warmth; to be exposed to genial heat.
BASKS	(v.) To expose oneself to warmth or other pleasant atmosphere.
BASSI	(n. plural) An opera singer with a very low vocal range.
BASSO	(n.) An opera singer with a very low vocal range.
BASSOS	(n. plural) An opera singer with a very low vocal range.
BASTE	(v.) To sprinkle flour and salt and drip butter or fat on, as on meat in roasting.
BATE	(n.) Strife; contention.
BATED	(adj.) Reduced; lowered; restrained; as, to speak with bated breath.
BATES	(v.) In falconry, to flap the wings wildly or frantically.
BATIK	(n.) A wax-resist method of dyeing fabric.
BATIKS	(n. plural) Fabric dyed in a wax-resist method.
BATON	(n.) A staff or truncheon, used for various purposes; as, the baton of a field marshal; the baton of a conductor in musical performances.
BATT	(n.) Pieces of fabric or fibre used for stuffing; batting.
BAUDS	(n. plural) A unit of speed measuring data transmission.
BAWD	(n.) A person who keeps a house of prostitution, or procures women for a lewd purpose; a procurer or procuress; a lewd person.
BAWDS	(n. plural) A prostitute, brothel keeper or madam.
BAWDY	(adj.) Obscene; filthy; unchaste.
BAYOU	(n.) An inlet from the Gulf of Mexico, from a lake, or from a large river, sometimes sluggish, sometimes without perceptible movement except from tide and wind.
BEAU	(n.) A man who escorts, or pays attentions to, a lady; an escort; a lover.
BEAUS	(n. plural) A man who escorts, or pays attentions to, a lady; an escort; a lover.
BEBOP	(n.) A kind of jazz music.
BECK	(n.) A significant nod, or motion of the head or hand, esp. as a call or command.
BEDIM	(v.) To make dim; to obscure or darken.
BEDIMS	(v.) To make dim.
BEFOG	(v.) To involve in a fog; to confuse; to mystify.
BEL	(n.) A logarithmic unit of sound intensity equal to 10 decibels.
BELS	(n. plural) Ten decibels.
BEMA	(n.) A platform from which speakers addressed an assembly.
BEMAS	(n. plural) A platform from which speakers addressed an assembly.
BEN	(n.) A hoglike mammal of New Guinea (Porcula papuensis).
BENS	(n. plural) The inner room or parlor of a house with two rooms.
BERATE	(v.) To rate or chide vehemently; to scold.
BERET	(n.) A soft, brimless hat.
BERG	(n.) A large mass or hill, as of ice.
BERYL	(n.) A mineral of great hardness, and, when transparent, of much beauty, commonly of a green or bluish green color, but also yellow, pink, and white.
BETONY	(n.) A plant of the genus Betonica (Linn.).
BEVY	(n.) A company; an assembly or collection of persons, especially of ladies.
BEY	(n.) A governor of a province or district in the Turkish dominions; also, in some places, a prince or nobleman; a beg; as, the bey of Tunis.
BEYS	(n. pl.) A provincial governor in the Ottoman Empire.
BEZEL	(n.) The rim which encompasses and fastens a jewel or other object, as the crystal of a watch, in the cavity in which it is set.
BIB	(n.) A small piece of cloth worn by children over the breast, to protect the clothes.
BIBB	(n.) A bibcock.
BIBBER	(n.) One given to drinking alcoholic beverages too freely; a tippler; -- chiefly used in composition; as, winebibber.
BIBBS	(n. plural) Pieces of timber bolted to certain parts of a mast to support the trestletrees.
BIDE	(v.) To dwell; to inhabit; to abide; to stay.
BIER	(n.) A handbarrow or portable frame on which a corpse is placed or borne to the grave.
BIERS	(n. plural) A coffin stand.
BILK	(v.) To frustrate or disappoint; to deceive or defraud by nonfulfillment of engagement; to leave in the lurch; to give the slip to; as, to bilk a creditor.
BIOPSY	(n.) The removal and examination of a sample of tissue from a living body for diagnostic purposes.
BIOTA	(n.) The living organisms of a region.
BIOTIC	(adj.) Relating to life; as, the biotic principle.
BISECT	(v.) To cut or divide into two parts.
BISQUE	(n.) Unglazed white porcelain.
BIT	(n.) The part of a bridle, usually of iron, which is inserted in the mouth of a horse, and having appendages to which the reins are fastened.
BITT	(v.) To put round the bitts; as, to bitt the cable, in order to fasten it or to slacken it gradually, which is called veering away.
BITTS	(n. plural) A frame of two strong timbers fixed perpendicularly in the fore part of a ship, on which to fasten the cables as the ship rides at anchor, or in warping.
BLAT	(v.) To cry, as a calf or sheep; to bleat; to make a senseless noise; to talk inconsiderately.
BLATS	(v.) To blurt.
BLEAKS	(n. plural) A small European freshwater fish of the genus Alburnus that is related to the carp and has silvery scales used in the manufacture of artificial pearls.
BLOOP	(v.) In baseball, to make a hit just beyond th infield.
BLUETS	(adj.) A name given to several different species of plants having blue flowers.
BOA	(n.) A genus of large American serpents, including the boa constrictor, the emperor boa of Mexico, and the chevalier boa of Peru.
BOBBIN	(n.) A spool or reel, with a head at one or both ends used to hold yarn or thread, as in spinning or warping machines, looms, sewing machines, etc.
BOBBLE	(v.) To bob up and down.
BOCK	(n.) A strong dark beer brewed in the fall and aged through the winter for spring consumption.
BODE	(v.) To indicate by signs, as future events; to be the omen of; to portend to presage; to foreshow.    (v. i.) To foreshow something; to augur.    (n.) An omen; a foreshadowing.    (n.) A bid; an offer.    (v. t.) A messenger; a herald.    (n.) A stop; a halting; delay.    (imp. & p. p.) Abode.    (p. p.) Bid or bidden.
BOGEY	(n.) A goblin; a bugbear. Also Bogy.
BOGY	(n.) A specter; a hobgoblin; a bugbear.
BOLE	(n.) The trunk or stem of a tree, or that which is like it.
BOLO	(n.) A long, heavy single-edged machete.
BOLOS	(n. plural) A long, heavy single-edged machete.
BONITO	(n.) A large tropical fish (Orcynus pelamys) allied to the tunny.
BONZER	(adj.) Remarkable or wonderful.
BOON	(n.) A prayer or petition.
BOOR	(n.) A rude ill-bred person; one who is clownish in manners.
BORATE	(n.) A salt formed by the combination of boric acid with a base or positive radical.
BORAX	(n.) A white or gray crystalline salt, with a slight alkaline taste, used as a flux, in soldering metals, making enamels, fixing colors on porcelain, and as a soap.
BORIC	(adj.) Of, pertaining to, or containing,the element boron.
BORON	(n.) A nonmetallic element occurring abundantly in borax.
BOSONS	(n. plural)  Boatswain.
BOTFLY	(n.) A dipterous insect of the family Estridae, some of which are particularly troublesome to domestic animals on which they deposit their eggs.
BOURN	(n.) A small stream or brook.
BOURNS	(n. plural) A small stream or brook.
BOWFIN	(n.) A voracious ganoid fish (Amia calva) found in the fresh waters of the United States; the mudfish; -- called also Johnny Grindle, and dogfish.
BOYAR	(n.) A member of the higher Russian nobility.
BOYARD	(n.) A member of a Russian aristocratic order abolished by Peter the Great. Also, one of a privileged class in Roumania.
BOYARS	(n. plural) A member of a Russian aristocratic order abolished by Peter the Great. Also, one of a privileged class in Roumania.
BRACT	(n.) A leaf, usually smaller than the true leaves of a plant, from the axil of which a flower stalk arises.
BRAD	(n.) A thin nail, usually small, with a slight projection at the top on one side instead of a head.
BRADS	(n. plural) A thin nail, usually small, with a slight projection at the top on one side instead of a head.
BRAE	(n.) A hillside; a slope; a bank; a hill.
BRANT	(n.) A species of wild goose (Branta bernicla) .
BRANTS	(n. plural) A species of wild goose (Branta bernicla) .
BRASSY	(adj.) Impudent; impudently bold.
BRAY	(v.) To utter a loud, harsh cry, as an ass.
BRAYER	(n.) An implement for braying and spreading ink in hand printing.
BREAMS	(n. plural) Any of several European freshwater fishes of the genus Abramis.
BRENT	(adj.) Steep, high.
BRIARD	(n.) An ancient French breed of sturdy, rough-coated dogs.
BRUIT	(v.) To spread news of.
BRUITS	(v.) To spread news of.
BUB	(n.) A term of familiar address.
BUBS	(n. plural) A strong malt liquor.
BULGER	(n.) In golf, a driver or a brassy with a convex face.
BULLED	(adj.) Swollen.
BUMBLE	(n.) The bittern.
BUND	(n.) League; confederacy; esp. the confederation of German states.
BUNT	(n.) The middle part, cavity, or belly of a sail; the part of a furled sail which is at the center of the yard.
BUNTER	(n.) A woman who picks up rags in the streets; hence, a low, vulgar woman.
BUNTS	(n. plural) The middle part, cavity, or belly of a sail; the part of a furled sail which is at the center of the yard.
BURET	(n.) A glass tube with fine gradations and a stopcock at the bottom, used  in laboratory procedures for accurate fluid dispensing and measurement
BURETS	(n. plural) A glass tube with fine gradations and a stopcock at the bottom, used  in laboratory procedures for accurate fluid dispensing and measurement
BURKED	(v. past tense) To supress or extinguish quietly.
BURL	(n.) A knot or lump in thread or cloth.
BURLED	(v. past tense) To dress or finish (cloth) by removing knots, lumps, slubs, or loose threads.
BURLEY	(n.) A tobacco grown mainly in Kentucky used in making cigarettes.
BURLS	(n. plural) A knot or lump in thread or cloth.
BURRO	(n.) A donkey.
BUSS	(n.) A kiss; a rude or playful kiss; a smack.
BUTANE	(n.) An inflammable gaseous hydrocarbon, C4H10, of the marsh gas, or paraffin, series.
BUTENE	(n.) Any of several forms of butylene.
BUTEO	(n.) Any of various soaring hawks of the genus Buteo.
BUTEOS	(n. plural) Any of various soaring hawks of the genus Buteo.
BUTYL	(n.) A compound radical, regarded as butane, less one atom of hydrogen.
BYLINE	(n.) A line at the head of a newspaper or magazine article carrying the writer's name.
BYTE	(n.) A sequence of adjacent bits, usually eight, operated on as a unit by a computer.
CABANA	(n.) A shelter on a beach or at a swimming pool.
CABER	(n.) A pole or beam used in Scottish games for tossing as a trial of strength.
CABERS	(n. plural) A pole or beam used in Scottish games for tossing as a trial of strength.
CACAO	(n.) A small evergreen tree (Theobroma Cacao) of South America and the West Indies. Its fruit contains an edible pulp from which cocoa, chocolate, and broma are prepared.
CACHE	(n.) A hiding place for storing valuables.
CACHES	(n. plural) A hiding place for storing valuables.
CADDIS	(n.) The larva of a caddice fly that generally live in cylindrical cases, open at each end, and covered externally with debris.
CADDY	(n.) A small box, can, or chest to keep tea in.
CADENT	(adj.) Falling.
CADRE	(n.) A nucleus of trained personnel.
CADRES	(n. plural) A nucleus of trained personnel.
CAGER	(n.) A basketball player.
CAGEY	(adj.) Wary, careful, shewd.
CAHOOT	(n.) Partnership; as, to go in cahoot with a person.
CAIMAN	(n.) Any of various tropical American crocodilians of the genus Caiman and related genera, resembling and closely related to the alligators.
CALLA	(n.) A genus of plants, of the order Araceae.
CALVE	(v.) To bring forth a calf.
CAM	(n.) A turning or sliding piece which imparts motion to a rod, lever, or block brought into sliding or rolling contact with it.
CAMBER	(n.) An upward convexity of a deck or other surface.
CAMS	(n. plural) A curved wheel mounted on a rotating shaft used to produce variable or reciprocating motion in another engaged or contacted part.
CANNA	(n.) A genus of tropical plants, with large leaves and often with showy flowers.
CANNAS	(n. plural) A genus of tropical plants, with large leaves and often with showy flowers.
CANNEL	(n.) A bituminous coal that burns brightly with much smoke.
CANT	(n.) An affected, singsong mode of speaking.
CANTO	(n.) One of the chief divisions of a long poem; a book.
CANTOR	(n.) A singer; esp. the leader of a church choir; a precentor.
CANTOS	(n. plural) One of the chief divisions of a long poem; a book.
CANTS	(n. plural) Monotonous, hypocritically pious talk filled with platitudes.
CAPO	(n.) A movable bar placed across the fingerboard of a guitar used to raise the pitch of all strings.
CAPOS	(n. plural) A movable bar placed across the fingerboard of a guitar used to raise the pitch of all strings.
CARBOY	(n.) A large, globular glass bottle, esp. one of green glass,encased  in basket work or in a box, used to hold corrosive liquids.
CAREEN	(v.) To cause (a vessel) to lean over so that she floats on one side.
CARET	(n.) A mark [^] used by writers and proof readers to indicate that something is to be inserted in the place marked by the caret.
CARETS	(n. plural) A mark [^] used by writers and proof readers to indicate that something is to be inserted in the place marked by the caret.
CARL	(n.) A rude, rustic man; a churl.
CARLIN	(n.) An old woman.
CARNEY	(n.) A disease of horses, in which the mouth is so furred that the afflicted animal can not eat.
CAROBS	(n. plural) An evergreen leguminous tree (Ceratania Siliqua) found in the countries bordering the Mediterranean which produces sweet, succulent pods.
CASBAH	(n.) The older part of a city in northern Africa or Middle East.
CASEIN	(n.) A proteid substance present in both the animal and the vegetable kingdom found in milk or in the seeds of leguminous plants.
CATKIN	(n.) A species of inflorescence, consisting of a slender axis with many unisexual apetalous flowers along its sides, as in the willow and poplar.
CAVIL	(v.) To raise captious and frivolous objections; to find fault without good reason.
CAVILS	(v.) To raise captious and frivolous objections; to find fault without good reason.
CAW	(n.) The cry made by the crow, rook, or raven.
CAWS	(n. pl.) The hoarse raucous sound that is characteristic of a crow or similar bird.
CEDE	(v.) To yield or surrender; to give up.
CEDES	(v.) To surrender possession of.
CEIL	(v.) To line or finish a surface, as of a wall, with plaster, stucco, thin boards, or the like.
CEILS	(v.) To line or finish a surface, as of a wall, with plaster, stucco, thin boards, or the like.
CENTUM	(adj.) Designating those Indo-European languages, including the Italic, Hellenic, Celtic and Germanic subfamilies.
CEREUS	(n.) A genus of plants of the Cactus family. They are natives of America, from California to Chile.
CERISE	(adj.) Cherry-colored; a light bright red; -- applied to textile fabrics, especially silk.
CERIUM	(n.) A rare metallic element resembling iron in color and luster, but is soft, and both malleable and ductile. It tarnishes readily in the air.
CERVIX	(n.) The neck; also, the necklike portion of any part, as of the womb.
CESIUM	(n.) A soft, silvery-white liquid ductile element.
CHAD	(n.) A bit ofscrap paper punched out from data cards.
CHADS	(n. plural) A bit ofscrap paper punched out from data cards.
CHAP	(v.) To strike; to beat.
CHARD	(n.) The tender leaves or leafstalks of the artichoke, white beet, etc., blanched for table use.
CHARDS	(n.plural) The tender leaves or leafstalks of the artichoke, white beet, etc., blanched for table use.
CHARR	(n.) One of the several species of fishes of the genus Salvelinus or the brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis).
CHARRS	(n. plural) One of the several species of fishes of the genus Salvelinus or the brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis).
CHAW	(v.) To grind with the teeth; to masticate, as food in eating; to chew, as the cud; to champ, as the bit.
CHAWS	(v.) To chew.
CHERT	(n.) An impure, massive, flintlike quartz or hornstone, of a dull color.
CHEVY	(n.) A hunt or pursuit.
CHI	(n.) The vital force believed in Taoism and other Chinese thought to be inherent in all things.
CHIC	(n.) Good form; style.
CHINCH	(n.) The bedbug (Cimex lectularius).
CHINED	(adj.) Pertaining to, or having, a chine, or backbone; -- used in composition.
CHIT	(n.) A child or babe; as, a forward chit; also, a young, small, or insignificant person or animal.
CHITON	(n.) An under garment among the ancient Greeks, nearly representing the modern shirt.
CHITS	(n.plural) A child or babe; as, a forward chit; also, a young, small, or insignificant person or animal.
CHIVE	(n.) A perennial plant (Allium Schoenoprasum), allied to the onion.
CHOCK	(v.) To stop or fasten, as with a wedge, or block; to scotch.
CHOCKS	(n. plural) A block or wedge placed under an object, such as a wheel, to keep it from moving.
CHUB	(n.) A species to fresh-water fish of the Cyprinidae or Carp family.
CHUBS	(n. plural) Any of various fishes related to the carps and minnows.
CHUFF	(n.) A coarse or stupid fellow.
CHUFFS	(n. plural) A coarse or stupid fellow.
CHUG	(n.) A dull explosive sound.
CICADA	(n.) Any species of the genus Cicada. They are large hemipterous insects, with nearly transparent wings. The male makes a characteristic loud, shrill sound.
CITE	(v.) To quote; to repeat, as a passage from a book, or the words of another.
CITIED	(adj.) Containing, or covered with, cities.
CITRIC	(adj.) Of, pertaining to, or derived from, the citron or lemon; as, citric acid.
CIVET	(n.) A carnivorous catlike animal that produces a musky secretion.  It is two to three feet long, with  black bands and spots on the body and tail.
CIVETS	(n. plural) A carnivorous catlike animal that produces a musky secretion.  It is two to three feet long, with  black bands and spots on the body and tail.
CIVICS	(n.) The science of civil government.
CLAD	(v.) To clothe.
CLAN	(n.) A tribe or collection of families.
CLICHE	(n.) A stereotype plate or any similar reproduction of ornament, or lettering, in relief.
CLOG	(n.) A shoe, or sandal, intended to protect the feet from wet, or to increase the apparent stature, and having, therefore, a very thick sole.
CLONIC	(adj.) Having an irregular, convulsive motion.
CLOT	(v.) To form into a slimy mass.
CLOY	(v.) To fill or choke up; to stop up; to clog, to glut, or satisfy, as the appetite; to satiate; to fill to loathing; to surfeit.
COALED	(v. past tense) To burn coal.
COALER	(n.) A vehicle used for carrying or supplying coal.
COBALT	(n.) A tough, lustrous, reddish white metal of the iron group, not easily fusible, and somewhat magnetic.
COBB	(n.) A young herring.
COBBER	(n.) A pal, buddy.
COCA	(n.) The dried leaf of a South American shrub (Erythroxylon Coca).
COCK	(n.) The male of birds, particularly of gallinaceous or domestic fowls.
COCOS	(n.) Coconut plams.
CODA	(n.) A few measures added beyond the natural termination of a composition.
CODAS	(n. plural) A few measures added beyond the natural termination of a composition.
CODDER	(n.) A gatherer of cods or peas.
CODIFY	(v.) To reduce to a code, as laws.
CODON	(n.) A sequence of three adjacent nucleotides constituting the genetic code that determines the insertion of a specific amino acid during protein synthesis.
CODONS	(n. plural) A sequence of three adjacent nucleotides constituting the genetic code that determines the insertion of a specific amino acid during protein synthesis.
COG	(n.) A small fishing boat.
COGGED	(v. past tense) To join with tenons.
COHOSH	(n.) A perennial American herb (Caulophyllum thalictroides), whose rootstock is used in medicine.
COKED	(adj.) Intoxicated with cocaine.
COL	(n.) A short ridge connecting two higher elevations or mountains; the pass over such a ridge.
COLE	(n.) A plant of the Brassica or Cabbage genus; esp. that form of B. oleracea called rape and coleseed.
COLEUS	(n.) A plant of several species of the Mint family, cultivated for its bright-colored or variegated leaves.
COLS	(n. plural) A pass between two mountain peaks or a gap in a ridge.
COLTER	(n.) A knife or cutter, attached to the beam of a plow to cut the sward, in advance of the plowshare and moldboard.
COLZA	(n.) A variety of cabbage (Brassica oleracea), cultivated for its seeds, which yield an oil valued for illuminating and lubricating purposes.
COLZAS	(n. plural) A variety of cabbage (Brassica oleracea), cultivated for its seeds, which yield an oil valued for illuminating and lubricating purposes.
CONCH	(n.) A name applied to various large marine univalve shells.
CONCHS	(n. plural) A name applied to various large marine univalve shells.
CONEY	(n.) A rabbit, especially the European rabbit (Lepus cuniculus).
CONEYS	(n. plural) A rabbit, especially the European rabbit (Lepus cuniculus).
CONICS	(n.) That branch of geometry which treats of the cone and the curves which arise from its sections.
CONING	(v.) To shape (something) like a cone.
CONN	(v.) To direct a ship.
CONNER	(n.) A marine European fish (Crenilabrus melops); also, the related American cunner.
CONNS	(v.) To direct a ship.
CONY	(n.) A rabbit, especially the European rabbit (Lepus cuniculus).
COO	(v. i.) To make a low repeated cry or sound, like the characteristic note of pigeons or doves.
COOT	(n.) A stupid fellow; a simpleton; as, a silly coot.
COOTER	(n.) A fresh-water tortoise (Pseudemus concinna) of Florida.
COPRA	(n.) The dried meat of the cocoanut, from which cocoanut oil is expressed.
COPTER	(n.) A helicopter.
CORONA	(n.) A crown or garland bestowed among the Romans as a reward for distinguished services.
COS	(n.) Lettuce with long dark-green leaves in a loosely packed head.
COSH	(n.) A weapon made of leather-covered metal similar to a blackjack.
COSHED	(v. past tense) To hit with a weapon similar to a blackjack.
COSHER	(v.) To levy certain exactions or tribute upon; to lodge and eat at the expense of.
COSS	(n.) A Hindu measure of distance, varying from one and a half to two English miles.
COTED	(v. past tense) To go around, to skirt.
COTTA	(n. plural) A short surplice.
COTTAS	(n. plural) A short surplice.
COUP	(n.) A sudden stroke; an unexpected device or stratagem; -- a term used in various ways to convey the idea of promptness and force.
COUPED	(adj.) Cut off smoothly, as distinguished from erased; -- used especially for the head or limb of an animal.
COVE	(n.) A retired nook; especially, a small, sheltered inlet, creek, or bay; a recess in the shore.
COVED	(v.) To make in an inward curving form.
COVEN	(n.) An assembly of witches.
COVENS	(n. plural) An assembly of witches.
COWL	(n.) A monk's hood; -- usually attached to the gown.
COWLED	(adj.) Wearing a cowl; hooded; as, a cowled monk.
COWLS	(n. plural) A hooded robe worn by a monk.
COWMAN	(n.) A cattle rancher.
COWMEN	(n. plural) A cattle rancher.
COWPEA	(n.) The seed of one or more leguminous plants of the genus Dolichos; also, the plant itself.
COWPOX	(n.) A pustular eruptive disease of the cow.
COWRY	(n.) A marine shell of the genus Cypraea.
COX	(n.) A coxcomb; a simpleton; a gull.
COXED	(v.) To act as a coxswain.
COXING	(v.) To act as a coxswain.
COY	(a.) Shrinking from approach or familiarity; reserved; bashful; shy; modest; -- usually applied to women, sometimes with an implication of coquetry.
COYED	(v.) To caress, to stroke.
COYING	(v.) To entice.
COYPUS	(n. plural) A South American rodent (Myopotamus coypus) valued for its fur.
COZEN	(v.) To cheat; to defraud; to beguile; to deceive, usually by small arts, or in a pitiful way.
COZENS	(v.) To cheat; to defraud; to beguile; to deceive, usually by small arts, or in a pitiful way.
CRAM	(v. t.) To press, force, or drive, particularly in filling, or in thrusting one thing into another; to stuff; to crowd; to fill to superfluity.
CRAPED	(v.) To form into ringlets; to curl; to crimp.
CRAW	(n.) The stomach of an animal.
CRESS	(n.) A plant of various species, chiefly cruciferous. The leaves have a moderately pungent taste, and are used as a salad and antiscorbutic.
CRETIN	(n.) One afflicted with cretinism.
CREWEL	(n.) Worsted yarn, slackly twisted, used for embroidery.
CRUMP	(adj.) Hard or crusty; dry baked; as, a crump loaf.
CRUX	(n.) The basic, central, or critical point or feature.
CUBING	(v.) To raise to the third power.
CUD	(n.) That portion of food which is brought up into the mouth by ruminating animals from their first stomach, to be chewed a second time.
CUDS	(n. plural) Something held in the mouth and chewed.
CUE	(n.) A straight tapering rod used to impel the balls in playing billiards.
CULL	(v. t.) To separate, select, or pick out; to choose and gather or collect; as, to cull flowers.
CULLER	(n.) One who picks or chooses; esp., an inspector who selects wares suitable for market.
CULLS	(n.) Any refuse stuff.
CULVER	(n.) A dove.
CUPRIC	(adj.) Of, pertaining to, or derived from, copper; containing copper.
CUR	(n.) A mongrel or inferior dog.
CURIA	(n.) One of the thirty parts into which the Roman people were divided by Romulus.
CURIUM	(n.) A silvery metallic synthetic radioactive transuranic element.
CURLEW	(n.) A wading bird of the genus Numenius, remarkable for its long, slender, curved bill.
CURR	(v.) To coo.
CURTER	(adj.) Shorter.
CUSP	(n.) A point or pointed end.
CYANIC	(adj.) Of or pertaining to a blue color.
CYCAD	(n.) Any plant of the natural order Cycadaceae, as the sago palm, etc.
CYST	(n.) A pouch or sac without opening, usually membranous and containing morbid matter, which develops in one of the natural cavities or in the substance of an organ.
CYSTS	(n. plural) A pouch or sac without opening, usually membranous and containing morbid matter, which develops in the natural cavities or in the substance of an organ.
CZAR	(n.) A king; a chief; the title of the emperor of Russia.
DAB	(v.) To strike or touch gently, as with a soft or moist substance; to tap; hence, to besmear with a dabber.
DACTYL	(n.) A poetical foot of three sylables (-- ~ ~), one long followed by two short, or one accented followed by two unaccented.
DADA	(n.) A european artistic movement that produced works marked by nonsense, travesty, and incongruity.
DAHL	(n.) A tropical herb with flat pods producing highly nutritious seeds.
DAIS	(n.) The high or principal table, at the end of a hall, at which the chief guests were seated; also, the chief seat at the high table.
DALE	(n.) A low place between hills; a vale or valley.
DAMMER	(n.) Any of various hard resins obtained from trees of the genera Shorea, Balanocarpus, and Hopea, native to southeast Asia and used in varnishes and lacquers.
DANK	(a.) Damp; moist; humid; wet.
DARKLE	(v.) To grow dark; to show indistinctly.
DARNS	(v.) To mend a garment.
DASHER	(n.) One who makes an ostentatious parade.
DATUM	(n.) Something given or admitted; a fact or principle granted; that upon which an inference or an argument is based; -- used chiefly in the plural.
DAUB	(v. t.) To smear with soft, adhesive matter, as pitch, slime, mud, etc.; to plaster; to bedaub; to besmear.
DAUBER	(n.) One who, or that which, daubs; especially, a coarse, unskillful painter.
DAUNTS	(v.) To discourage.
DAVIT	(n.) A spar formerly used on board of ships, as a crane to hoist the flukes of the anchor to the top of the bow, without injuring the sides of the ship.
DEBARS	(v.) To exclude, to shut out.
DECANT	(v.) To pour off gently, as liquor, so as not to disturb the sediment; or to pour from one vessel into another; as, to decant wine.
DECILE	(n.) An aspect or position of two planets, when they are distant from each other a tenth part of the zodiac, or 36.
DEEDED	(v. past tense) To transfer property by means of a deed.
DEEM	(v.) To pass judgment.
DEES	(n. plural) Dice.
DEFIER	(n.) One who dares and defies; a contemner; as, a defier of the laws.
DEFTER	(adj.) More quick and skilful.
DEGAS	(v.) To remove gas from.
DEGUM	(v.) To remove from gum.
DEGUMS	(v.) To remove from gum.
DEL	(n.) Share; portion; part.
DELED	(v. past tense) To remove, to mark with a sign indicating deletion.
DELFT	(n.) A style of blue and white earthenware.
DELVER	(n.) One who digs, as with a spade.
DEMIT	(v.) To let fall; to depress; to yield.
DEMITS	(v.) To let fall; to depress; to yield.
DEMURS	(v.) To voice opposition.
DENUDE	(v.) To divest of all covering; to make bare or naked; to strip; to divest; as, to denude one of clothing, or lands.
DERATE	(v.) To lower the rated electrical capability of electrical apparatus.
DETENT	(n.) That which locks or unlocks a movement; a catch, pawl, or dog; especially, in clockwork, the catch which locks and unlocks the wheelwork in striking.
DEWAR	(n.) A flask for holding liquid air for scintific experiments.
DEWARS	(n. plural) A flask for holding liquid air for scintific experiments.
DEWING	(v.) To wet as if with dew.
DEY	(n.) A servant who has charge of the dairy; a dairymaid.
DIATOM	(n.) One of the Diatomaceae, a family of minute unicellular Algae having a siliceous covering of great delicacy.
DIBBLE	(n.) A pointed implement used to make holes in the ground in which to set out plants or to plant seeds.
DICKER	(n.) A chaffering, barter, or exchange, of small wares; as, to make a dicker.
DICKEY	(n.) A detachable shirt front, collar or bib.
DIDO	(n.) A shrewd trick; an antic; a caper.
DIDOS	(n. plural) A mischievous prank; a caper.
DIEING	(v.) To cut or stamp with a die.
DIMER	(n.) A molecule consisting of two identical molecules.
DIMERS	(n. plural) A molecule consisting of two identical molecules.
DIN	(n.) Loud, confused, harsh noise; a loud, continuous, rattling or clanging sound; clamor; roar.
DINT	(n.) Force; power; -- esp. in the phrase by dint of.
DIODE	(n.) An electronic device that restricts current flow to one direction.
DIPOLE	(n.) A pair of equal and opposite electric charges or magnetic poles.
DIS	(v.) To show disrespect to.
DISCED	(v.) To work soil with a disc harrow.
DISKED	(v.) To work soil with a disc harrow.
DISTAL	(adj.) Remote from the point of attachment or origin; as, the distal end of a bone or muscle
DOBBIN	(n.) An old jaded horse.
DODO	(n.) A large, extinct bird (Didus ineptus), formerly inhabiting the Island of Mauritius.
DOE	(n.) A female deer or antelope.
DOER	(n.) One who does; one performs or executes; one who is wont and ready to act; an actor; an agent.    (v. t. & i.) An agent or attorney; a factor.
DOFF	(v.) To strip; to divest; to undress.
DOFFS	(v.) To remove.
DOGE	(n.) The chief magistrate in the republics of Venice and Genoa.
DOGES	(n.) The elected magistrate of Venice or Genoa.
DOGGER	(n.) A two-masted fishing vessel, used by the Dutch.
DOGLEG	(n.) A sharp bend or turn.
DOLE	(n.) grief; sorrow; lamentation.
DON	(v.) To put on; to dress in; to invest one's self with.
DONNAS	(n. plural) A lady; madam; mistress; -- the title given a lady in Italy.
DOPANT	(n.) A substance added in small amounts to a pure semiconductor material to alter its conductive properties.
DOR	(n.) A large European scaraboid beetle (Geotrupes stercorarius), which makes a droning noise while flying.
DOS	(n.pl) A statement of what should be done, eg. dos and don'ts.
DOTE	(v.) To love to excess.
DOTER	(n.) One who dotes; a man whose understanding is enfeebled by age; a dotard.
DOUR	(a.) Hard; inflexible; obstinate; sour in aspect.
DOURER	(adj.) More dour; stern, harsh, gloomy.
DOW	(v.) To furnish with a dower; to endow.
DOWELS	(n. plural) A pin or block of wood or metal, fitting into holes to fasten or align two adjacent pieces.
DOWERS	(n. plural) That with which one is gifted or endowed; endowment; gift.
DRAM	(n.) A minute quantity; a mite.
DREG	(n.) Corrupt or defiling matter contained in a liquid, or precipitated from it; refuse; feculence; sediment; hence, the vilest and most worthless part of anything.
DRIB	(n.) A drop.
DRIBS	(n. plural) A drop.
DROVED	(v. past tense)  To drive livestock on a long journey.
DRUB	(v. t.) To beat with a stick; to thrash; to cudgel.
DRUID	(n.) One of an order of priests which in ancient times existed among certain branches of the Celtic race, especially among the Gauls and Britons.
DUBBER	(n.) A globular vessel or bottle of leather, used in India to hold ghee, oil, etc.
DUCKER	(n.) One who, or that which, ducks; a plunger; a diver.
DUD	(n.) A bomb, shell, or explosive round that fails to detonate.
DUFF	(n.) Dough or paste.
DUFFEL	(n.) A kind of coarse woolen cloth, having a thick nap or frieze.
DUGS	(n. plural) An udder or teat.
DULSE	(n.) A seaweed of a reddish brown color which is sometimes eaten, as in Scotland.
DUMA	(n.) A Russian national parliament during czarist times.
DUN	(v.) To ask or beset, as a debtor, for payment.
DUNKER	(n.) One of a religious denomination whose tenets and practices are mainly those of the Baptists, but partly those of the Quakers.
DUNNED	(v. past tense) To importune a debtor for payment.
DUNNER	(n.) One employed in soliciting the payment of debts.
DYAD	(n.) Two units treated as one; a couple; a pair.
DYADIC	(adj.) Pertaining to the number two; of two parts or elements.
DYADS	(n. plural) Two units treated as one; a couple; a pair.
DYER	(n.) One whose occupation is to dye cloth and the like.
DYNAMO	(n.) A dynamo-electric machine.
DYNAST	(n.) A ruler; a governor; a prince.
DYNE	(n.) A unit of force that is equal to the force which generates a velocity of one centimeter per second acting on one gram for one second.
DYNES	(n. plural) A unit of force that is equal to the force which generates a velocity of one centimeter per second acting on one gram for one second.
EARING	(n.) A line used to fasten the upper corners of a sail to the yard or gaff; -- also called head earing.
EARL	(n.) A nobleman of England ranking below a marquis, and above a viscount.
EBB	(n.) The state or time of passing away; decline; decay.
ECLAT	(n.) Brilliancy of success or effort; splendor; brilliant show; striking effect; glory; renown.
ECLATS	(n. plural) Brilliancy of success or effort; splendor; brilliant show; striking effect; glory; renown.
EDDY	(n.) A current of air or water running back, or in a direction contrary to the main current.
EFT	(n.) A salamander, esp. the European smooth newt (Triton punctatus).
EFTS	(n. plural) A salamander, esp. the European smooth newt (Triton punctatus).
EGGER	(n.) One who gathers eggs.
EGGERS	(n. plural) One who gathers eggs.
EGO	(n.) The self, especially as distinct from the world and other selves.
EGRET	(n.) The name of several species of herons which bear plumes on the back. They are generally white.
EGRETS	(n. plural) The name of several species of herons which bear plumes on the back. They are generally white.
EIDER	(n.) Any species of sea duck of the genus Somateria, which  lines its nest with fine down (taken from its own body).
EIDERS	(n. plural) Any species of sea duck of the genus Somateria, which  lines its nest with fine down (taken from its own body).
EKE	(v.) To piece out by a laborious, inferior, or scanty addition; as, to eke out a scanty supply of one kind with some other.
ELAN	(n.) Ardor inspired by passion or enthusiasm.
ELAND	(n.) A species of large South African antelope (Oreas canna). It is valued both for its hide and flesh.
ELATE	(adj.) Lifted up; raised; elevated.
ELD	(a.) Old.
ELEGY	(n.) A mournful or plaintive poem; a funereal song; a poem of lamentation.
ELFIN	(adj.) Relating to elves.
ELIDED	(v. past tense) To break or dash in pieces; to demolish; as, to elide the force of an argument; to cut off, as a vowel or a syllable, usually the final one.
ELIDES	(v.) To break or dash in pieces; to demolish; as, to elide the force of an argument; to cut off, as a vowel or a syllable, usually the final one.
ELL	(n.) A measure for cloth.
ELS	(n. pl.) An elevated railway.
ELUATE	(n.) A liquid solution that results from elution.
ELUTE	(v.) To wash out.
ELUTED	(v. past tense) To extract (one material) from another, usually by means of a solvent.
ELUTES	(v.) To extract (one material) from another, usually by means of a solvent.
EMBANK	(v.) To throw up a bank so as to confine or to defend; to protect by a bank of earth or stone.
EMBOSS	(v.) To raise in relief from a surface, as an ornament, a head on a coin, or the like.
EMMER	(n.) A variety of wheat.
EMS	(n. plural) The width of a square of nearly square piece of type, used as a unit of measure in typesetting.
ENOL	(n.) An organic compound containing a hydroxyl group bonded to a carbon atom, which is doubly bonded to another carbon atom.
ENOLS	(n. plural) An organic compound containing a hydroxyl group bonded to a carbon atom, which is doubly bonded to another carbon atom.
ENS	(n.pl) In printing, a space equal to half the width of an em.
ENZYME	(n.) An unorganized or unformed ferment, in distinction from an organized or living ferment; a soluble, or chemical, ferment.
EPOXY	(n.) A thermosetting resin used chiefly in strong adhesives and coatings and laminates.
ERA	(n.) A period of time in which a new order of things prevails; a signal stage of history; an epoch.
ERBIUM	(n.) A rare metallic element associated with several other rare elements in the mineral gadolinite from Ytterby in Sweden.
ERE	(adv.) Before; sooner than.
ERG	(n.) The unit of work or energy, being the amount of work done by a dyne working through a distance of one centimeter.
ERGS	(n. plural) The unit of work or energy, being the amount of work done by a dyne working through a distance of one centimeter.
ERODE	(v.) To eat into or away; to corrode; as, canker erodes the flesh.
EROS	(n.) Love; the god of love.
ERSATZ	(adj.) Artificial and inferior.
ESCROW	(n.) A deed, bond, or other written engagement, held by a third person until some act is done or some condition is performed.
ESTOP	(v.) To impede or bar by estoppel.
ESTOPS	(v.) To impede or prohibit by estoppel.
ETA	(n.) The seventh letter of the Greek alphabet.
ETHANE	(n.) A gaseous hydrocarbon, C2H6, forming a constituent of ordinary illuminating gas.
ETHER	(n.) A light, volatile, mobile, inflammable liquid, (C2H5)2O, of a characteristic aromatic odor.
ETHERS	(n. plural) A light, volatile, mobile, inflammable liquid, (C2H5)2O, of a characteristic aromatic odor.
ETHYL	(n.) A monatomic, hydrocarbon radical of the paraffin series, forming the essential radical of ethane, and of common alcohol and ether.
ETHYLS	(n. plural) A monatomic, hydrocarbon radical of the paraffin series, forming the essential radical of ethane, and of common alcohol and ether.
EVZONE	(n.) An infantryman of a special corps of the Greek army.
EWE	(n.) The female of the sheep, and of sheeplike animals.
EWER	(n.) A kind of widemouthed pitcher or jug; esp., one used to hold water for the toilet.
EWERS	(n.) A pitcher.
EXHUME	(v.) To dig out of the ground; to take out of a place of burial; to disinter.
EXTOLS	(v.) To praise highly; exalt.
EXUDE	(v.) To discharge through pores or incisions, as moisture or other liquid matter; to give out.
EYELET	(n.) A small hole or perforation to receive a cord or fastener, as in garments, sails, etc.
EYER	(n.) One who eyes another.
FABLER	(n.) A writer of fables; a fabulist; a dealer in untruths or falsehoods.
FACER	(n.) An unexpected and stunning blow or defeat.
FACET	(n.) A little face; a small, plane surface; as, the facets of a diamond.
FAD	(n.) A fashion or craze that is taken up with great enthusiasm for a brief period of time.
FAG	(n.) A cigarette.
FAGS	(n. plural) A cigarette.
FAIN	(a.) Well-pleased; glad; apt; wont; fond; inclined.
FAIRED	(v. past tense) To join pieces so as to be smooth and even.
FAKEER	(n.) An Eastern religious ascetic or monk.
FANTOD	(n.) State of worry or nervous irritability.
FARAD	(n.) The standard unit of electrical capacity.
FARADS	(n. plural) The standard unit of electrical capacity.
FARCED	(v.) To stuff (meat) for roasting.
FARD	(n.) Paint used on the face.
FARINA	(n.) A fine flour or meal made from cereal grains or from the starch or fecula of vegetables, extracted by various processes, and used in cookery.
FARO	(n.) A gambling game at cards, in whiich all the other players play against the dealer or banker.
FAWN	(n.) A young deer; a buck or doe of the first year.
FAWNER	(n.) One who fawns; a sycophant.
FAY	(n.) A fairy; an elf.
FAYED	(v. past tense) To join or fit tightly.
FAYING	(v.) To join or fit closely.
FEAT	(n.) An act; a deed; an exploit.
FEATER	(n.) One who is dextrous, skillful in movement or exploits.
FEDORA	(n.) A felt hat with a fairly low, creased crown with a brim that can be turned up or down.
FEMUR	(n.) The thigh bone.
FEMURS	(n. plural) The thigh bone.
FERMI	(n.) A unit of length equal to one femtometer (10-15 metre).
FERMIS	(n. plural) A unit of length equal to one femtometer (10-15 metre).
FERRIC	(adj.) Pertaining to, derived from, or containing iron.
FESCUE	(n.) A straw, wire, stick, etc., used chiefly to point out letters to children when learning to read.
FETAL	(adj.) Pertaining to, or connected with, a fetus; as, fetal circulation; fetal membranes.
FETE	(n.) A festival.
FIAT	(n.) An authoritative command or order to do something; an effectual decree.
FIB	(n.) A falsehood; a lie.
FIBRIN	(n.) A white, albuminous, fibrous substance, formed in the coagulation of the blood .
FIEF	(n.) An estate held of a superior on condition of military service.
FIFE	(n.) A small shrill pipe, resembling the piccolo flute, used chiefly to accompany the drum in military music.
FIFED	(v. past tense) To perform on a fife.
FIFER	(n.) One who plays on a fife.
FIG	(n.) The fruit of a fig tree, which is of round or oblong shape, and of various colors.
FILET	(n.) A narrow strip of ribbon, material or meat.
FINIAL	(n.) The knot or bunch of foliage, or foliated ornament, that forms the upper extremity of a pinnacle in Gothic architecture.
FJORD	(n.) A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs.
FJORDS	(n. plural) A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs.
FLAM	(n.) A freak or whim; also, a falsehood; a lie; an illusory pretext; deception; delusion.
FLAMS	(n. plural) A lie, hoax; nonsense.
FLANGE	(n.) An external or internal rib, or rim, for strength.
FLATUS	(n.) Wind or gas generated in the stomach or other cavities of the body.
FLAX	(n.) A plant of the genus Linum, esp. the L. usitatissimum, which has a single, slender stalk, about a foot and a half high, with blue flowers.
FLEDGE	(v.) Feathered; furnished with feathers or wings; able to fly.
FLEER	(v.) To make a wry face in contempt, or to grin in scorn; to deride; to sneer; to mock; to gibe.
FLETCH	(v.) To feather, as an arrow.
FLEWS	(n. plural) The pendulous or overhanging lateral parts of the upper lip of dogs, especially prominent in hounds.
FLIT	(v. i.) To move with celerity through the air; to fly away with a rapid motion; to dart along; to fleet.
FLOC	(n.) A fluffy mass of suspended particles formed in a fluid.
FLOCS	(n. plural) A fluffy mass of suspended particles formed in a fluid.
FLOE	(n.) A low, flat mass of floating ice.
FLOURY	(adj.) Of or resembling flour; mealy; covered with flour.
FLUE	(n.) An inclosed passage way for establishing and directing a current of air, gases, etc.; an air passage.
FLUES	(n. plural) A pipe or tube for venting hot air or smoke from a fireplace to a chimney.
FLUTER	(n.) One who plays on the flute; a flutist or flautist.
FLUX	(n.) Flowing; unstable; inconstant; variable.
FLUXED	(v. past tense) To become fluid.
FLYWAY	(n.) A migratory route used by birds between breeding areas.
FOAL	(n.) The young of any animal of the Horse family (Equidae); a colt; a filly.
FOB	(n.) A little pocket for a watch.
FOBS	(v.) To cheat or deceive.
FOCAL	(adj.) Belonging to,or concerning, a focus; as, a focal point.
FOCI	(n. plural )  Focus.
FOGY	(n.) A dull old fellow; a person behind the times, over-conservative, or slow; -- usually preceded by old.
FONT	(n.) A complete assortment of printing type of one size, including a due proportion of all the letters in the alphabet, large and small.
FOP	(n.) One whose ambition it is to gain admiration by showy dress; a coxcomb; an inferior dandy.
FOPS	(n. plural) A man who is preoccupied with clothing and manners; a dandy.
FORCER	(n.) The solid piston of a force pump; the instrument by which water is forced in a pump.
FORMIC	(adj.) Pertaining to, or derived from, ants; as, formic acid.
FOSS	(n.) A ditch or moat.
FOUNT	(n.) A fountain.
FOUNTS	(n. plural) A fountain.
FOVEA	(n.) A slight depression or pit in a bone or organ.
FOWLED	(v. past tense) To hunt wildfowl.
FOXING	(v.) To outwit.
FRAY	(n.) Affray; broil; contest; combat.
FRO	(adv.) From; away; back or backward; -- now used only in opposition to the word to, in the phrase to and fro, that is, to and from.     (prep.) From.
FUGAL	(adj.) In music, a compositional structure using repeated themes.
FUMER	(n.) One who makes or uses perfumes.
FUNGAL	(adj.) Of or pertaining to fungi.
FUNKS	(v.) To be afraid of.
FUNNED	(v. past tense) To play; joke.
FURL	(v.) To draw up or gather into close compass.
GAB	(v.) Chatter or meaningless talk.
GABBRO	(n.) A name originally given to a kind of serpentine, and now generally used for a coarsely crystalline, igneous rock consisting of lamellar pyroxene and labradorite.
GAD	(n.) A sharp-pointed rod; a goad.
GADDER	(n.) One who roves about idly, a rambling gossip.
GADS	(v.) To move about restlessly and with little purpose
GAFF	(n.) A barbed spear or a hook with a handle, used by fishermen in securing heavy fish.
GAFFE	(n.) An embarrassing social mistake; a faux pas.
GAFFS	(n. plural) A large metal hook used to land large fish.
GAGE	(n.) To give or deposit as a pledge or security for some act; to wage or wager; to pawn or pledge.
GAGER	(n.) A measurer.
GAGES	(n. plural) Any of several varieties of plum.
GAGGER	(n.) A piece of iron imbedded in the sand of a mold to keep the sand in place.
GAGGLE	(v.) A flock of geese.
GAIT	(n.) Manner of walking or stepping; bearing or carriage while moving.
GAITER	(n.) A covering of cloth or leather for the ankle and instep, or for the whole leg from the knee to the instep, fitting down upon the shoe.
GALA	(n.) Pomp, show, or festivity.
GALENA	(n.) A remedy or antidose for poison; theriaca.
GALL	(n.) Impudence; brazen assurance.
GAM	(n.) A person's leg.
GAMBIT	(n.) A mode of opening the game, in which a pawn is sacrificed to gain an attacking position.
GAMMED	(v. past tense) To hold a visit, especially while at sea.
GAMS	(n. plural) A person's legs.
GANGER	(n.) One who oversees a gang of workmen.
GANNET	(n.) One of several species of sea birds of the genus Sula, allied to the pelicans.
GAPE	(v.) To open the mouth wide.
GAPER	(n.) A European fish.
GAR	(v.) Any slender marine fish of the genera Belone and Tylosurus.
GARB	(n.) Clothing in general.
GARBLE	(v.) To pick out such parts of as may serve a purpose; to mutilate; to pervert; as, to garble a quotation; to garble an account.
GARTH	(n.) A close; a yard; a croft; a garden; as, a cloister garth.
GARTHS	(n. plural) A close; a yard; a croft; a garden; as, a cloister garth.
GASIFY	(v.) To convert into gas, or an aeriform fluid, as by the application of heat, or by chemical processes.
GASSER	(n.) Something highly entertaining or remarkable.
GASSY	(adj.) Full of gas; like gas. Hence:  Inflated; full of boastful or insincere talk.
GATOR	(n.) An alligator.
GAUGER	(n.) One who gauges; an officer whose business it is to ascertain the contents of casks.
GAUR	(n.) An East Indian species of wild cattle (Bibos gauris), of large size and an untamable disposition.
GAURS	(n. plural) An East Indian species of wild cattle (Bibos gauris), of large size and an untamable disposition.
GAUSS	(n.) The unit of magnetic field strength.
GECKO	(n.) Any lizard of the family Geckonidae. They are small, carnivorous, mostly nocturnal animals with large eyes and adhesive toes.
GECKOS	(n. plural) Any lizard of the family Geckonidae. They are small, carnivorous, mostly nocturnal animals with large eyes and adhesive toes.
GEED	(v. past tense) To turn to the right.
GEEING	(v.) To turn to the right.
GEES	(v.) To turn to the right.
GEISHA	(n.) A Japanese woman trained to entertain men with conversation and singing and dancing.
GEL	(n.) A jellylike substance.
GELD	(v.) To castrate; to emasculate.
GENOA	(n.) A large jib on a racing yacht.
GENOAS	(n. plural) A large jib on a racing yacht.
GENRE	(n.) A style of painting, sculpture, or other imitative art, which illustrates everyday life and manners.
GENRES	(n. plural) A style of painting, sculpture, or other imitative art, which illustrates everyday life and manners.
GERBIL	(n.) A small, stinky ratlike animal kept as a pet by chubby preadolescent boys.
GERUND	(n.) A kind of verbal noun, having only the four oblique cases of the singular number, and governing cases like a participle.
GEYSER	(n.) A boiling spring which throws forth at frequent intervals jets of water, mud, etc., driven up by the expansive power of steam.
GIBE	(v. i.) To cast reproaches and sneering expressions; to rail; to utter taunting, sarcastic words; to flout; to fleer; to scoff.
GIBED	(v.) To taunt or deride.
GILD	(v. t.) To overlay with a thin covering of gold; to cover with a golden color; to cause to look like gold.
GILDER	(n.) A Dutch coin.
GILT	(v.) To cover with or as if with a thin layer of gold.
GIMBAL	(n.) A device for suspending something, such as a ship's compass, so that it will remain level when its support is tipped.
GINGKO	(n.) A tree native to East Asia having fan-shaped leaves and edible, fleshy yellow seeds.
GINS	(n. plural) A machine for moving heavy objects.
GIRD	(v.) To prepare; to make ready; to equip; as, to gird one's self for a contest.
GIRDS	(v.) To fasten or secure with a belt or band.
GIST	(n.) The main point, as of a question; the point on which an action rests; the pith of a matter; as, the gist of a question.
GLAZER	(n.) One who applies glazing, as in pottery, etc.; one who gives a glasslike or glossy surface to anything; a calenderer or smoother of cloth, paper, etc.
GLEN	(n.) A secluded and narrow valley; a dale; a depression between hills.
GLOM	(v.) To steal, to grab, to stare at.
GLYCOL	(n.) A thick, colorless liquid, C2H4(OH)2, of a sweetish taste, produced artificially from certain ethylene compounds.
GLYPH	(n.) A sunken channel or groove, usually vertical.
GLYPHS	(n. plural) A sunken channel or groove, usually vertical.
GNARL	(n.) a knot in wood; a large or hard knot, or a protuberance with twisted grain, on a tree.
GNASH	(v.) To strike together, as in anger or pain; as, to gnash the teeth.
GNOMON	(n.) The style or pin, which by its shadow, shows the hour of the day. It is usually set parallel to the earth's axis.
GNU	(n.) One of two species of large South African antelopes of the genus Catoblephas, having a mane and bushy tail, and curved horns in both sexes.
GNUS	(n. plural) One of two species of large South African antelopes of the genus Catoblephas, having a mane and bushy tail, and curved horns in both sexes.
GOA	(n.) A species of antelope (Procapra picticauda), inhabiting Tibet.
GOAD	(v.) A pointed instrument used to urge on a beast; hence, any necessity that urges or stimulates.
GOAS	(n. plural) A species of antelope (Procapra picticauda), inhabiting Tibet.
GOB	(n.) The mouth.
GODWIT	(n.) One of several species of long-billed, wading birds of the genus Limosa, and family Tringidae.
GOER	(n.) One who, or that which, goes; a runner or walker.
GOOBER	(n.) A peanut.
GOUGE	(n.) A chisel, with a hollow or semicylindrical blade, for scooping or cutting holes, channels, or grooves, in wood, stone, etc.
GOUT	(n.) A constitutional disease, occurring by paroxysms.
GRAVID	(adj.) Being with child; heavy with young; pregnant; fruitful.
GRIDED	(v. past tense) To cut, pierce or penetrate harshly, with a grating sound.
GRIPER	(adj.) One who gripes; an oppressor; an extortioner.
GRIPPE	(n.) The influenza or epidemic catarrh.
GROUT	(n.) Coarse meal; ground malt.
GUANOS	(n. plural) The dung of birds or bats.
GUILED	(v. past tense) To deceive, beguile.
GUILES	(n. plural) Craft; deceitful cunning; artifice; duplicity; wile; deceit; treachery.
GUMBO	(n.) The okra plant or its pods.
GUMBOS	(n. plural) The okra plant or its pods.
GUMMER	(n.) A punch-cutting tool, or machine for deepening and enlarging the spaces between the teeth of a worn saw.
GUNNY	(n.) A coarse heavy fabric made of jute or hemp.
GURU	(n.) A spiritual teacher, guide, or confessor.
GUSSET	(n.) A small piece of cloth inserted in a garment, for the purpose of strengthening some part or giving it a tapering enlargement.
GYP	(n.) A college servant, so called in Cambridge, England.
GYPS	(n. plural) A college servant, so called in Cambridge, England.
GYPSUM	(n.) A mineral consisting of the hydrous sulphate of lime (calcium). When calcined, it forms plaster of Paris.
GYRATE	(v.) To revolve round a central point; to move spirally about an axis, as a tornado; to revolve.
GYRO	(n.) A sandwich made usually of sliced roasted lamb, onion, and tomato on pita bread.
GYROS	(n. plural) A sandwich made usually of sliced roasted lamb, onion, and tomato on pita bread.
HACKLE	(n.) One of the peculiar, long, narrow feathers on the neck of fowls, most noticeable on the cock.
HADRON	(n.) Any of a class of subatomic particles that are composed of quarks and interacts strongly with other particles.
HAIKU	(n.) A three line Japanese poem.
HALE	(a.) Sound; entire; healthy; robust; not impaired; as, a hale body.
HALERS	(n. plural) Unit of Czech currrency.
HALIDE	(n.) A salt of any halogen acid.
HALITE	(n.) Native salt; sodium chloride.
HALMA	(n.) The long jump, with weights in the hands, the most important of the exercises of the Pentathlon.
HALMAS	(n.) The feast of All Saints; Hallowmas.
HALVAH	(n.) A sweet confection made of crushed sesame seeds and honey.
HAMAL	(n.) A Muslim porter.
HAMALS	(n. plural) A Muslim porter.
HANSEL	(n.) A gift or first payment or transaction given as a token of good luck.
HAP	(v.) To happen; to befall; to chance.
HAPPED	(adj.) Wrapped; covered; cloaked.
HAPS	(n. pl.) Fortune; chance.
HARDS	(n. plural) The refuse or coarse part of fiax; tow.
HARED	(v.) To move hurriedly.
HARK	(v. i.) To listen; to hearken.
HARPY	(n.) A fabulous winged monster, ravenous and filthy, having the face of a woman and the body of a vulture.
HART	(n.) A stag; the male of the red deer.
HASP	(n.) A clasp, especially a metal strap fastened by a padlock or a pin; also, a hook for fastening a door.
HASPS	(n. plural) A clasp, especially a metal strap fastened by a padlock or a pin; also, a hook for fastening a door.
HAW	(n.) The third eyelid, or nictitating membrane.
HAWS	(n. pl.) A nictitating membrane.
HEAVER	(n.) One who, or that which, heaves or lifts; a laborer employed on docks in handling freight; as, a coal heaver.
HECK	(n.) The bolt or latch of a door.
HEDGER	(n.) One who makes or mends hedges; also, one who hedges, as, in betting.
HEELER	(n.) A dependent and subservient hanger-on of a political patron.
HELLED	(v. past tense) To carouse, behave riotously.
HETMAN	(n.) A Cossack headman or general. The title of chief hetman is now held by the heir to the throne of Russia.
HEW	(v. t.) To cut with an ax; to fell with a sharp instrument.
HEX	(n.) An evil spell or curse.
HEXANE	(n.) Any of five hydrocarbons, C6H14, of the paraffin series. They are colorless, volatile liquids, and are so called because the molecule has six carbon atoms.
HEXED	(adj.) Cursed; bad luck.
HEY	(interj.) An exclamation of joy, surprise, or encouragement.
HIED	(v. past tense) of Hie; to go quickly.
HILTED	(adj.) Having a hilt; -- used in composition; as, basket-hilted, cross-hilted.
HILUM	(n.) The eye of a bean or other seed; the mark or scar at the point of attachment of an ovule or seed to its base or support.
HIND	(n.) The female of the red deer, of which the male is the stag.
HOAGIE	(n.) A sandwich made on a long bun; submarine sandwich.
HOAGY	(n.) A sandwich made on a long bun; submarine sandwich.
HOAR	(a.) Gray or white with age; hoary.
HOB	(n.) The flat projection or iron shelf at the side of a fire grate, where things are put to be kept warm.
HOBS	(n. plural) A shelf in a fireplace used for keeping food or utensils warm.
HOCK	(n.) A Rhenish wine, of a light yellow color, either sparkling or still.
HOCUS	(v.) To adulterate; to drug.
HOD	(n.) A kind of wooden tray with a handle, borne on the shoulder, for carrying mortar, brick, etc.
HOE	(n.) A tool chiefly for digging up weeds.
HOGAN	(n.) A one-room Navajo dwelling or ceremonial lodge.
HOGANS	(n. plural) A one-room Navajo dwelling or ceremonial lodge.
HOGGER	(n.) A stocking without a foot, worn by coal miners at work.
HOLM	(n.) A common evergreen oak, of Europe (Quercus Ilex); -- called also ilex, and holly.
HOLMS	(n. plural) An island in a river.
HOLT	(n.) A piece of woodland; especially, a woody hill.
HONE	(v.) To sharpen on, or with, a stone of fine grit.
HOOPER	(n.) One who hoops casks or tubs; a cooper.
HOPPLE	(n.) A fetter for horses, or cattle, when turned out to graze; -- chiefly used in the plural.
HOSIER	(n.) One who deals in hose or stocking, or in goods knit or woven like hose.
HOTTED	(v.) To increase in intensity.
HOVE	(v.) Past tense of heave.
HOY	(n.) A small coaster vessel, usually sloop-rigged, used in conveying passengers and goods, or as a tender to larger vessels in port.
HOYS	(n. plural) A small coaster vessel, usually sloop-rigged, used in conveying passengers and goods, or as a tender to larger vessels in port.
HUB	(n.) The central part, usually cylindrical, of a wheel; the nave.
HUBRIS	(n.) Overweening pride or arrogance.
HUCK	(v.) To higgle in trading.
HUE	(n.) Color or shade of color; tint; dye.
HUFF	(v. t.) To swell; to enlarge; to puff up; as, huffed up with air.
HUH	(interj.) Used to express interrogation, surprise, contempt, or indifference.
HULLED	(adj.) Deprived of the hulls.
HULLER	(n.) One who, or that which, hulls; especially, an agricultural machine for removing the hulls from grain; a hulling machine.
HUMUS	(n.) That portion of the soil formed by the decomposition of animal or vegetable matter.
HUN	(n.) One of a warlike nomadic people of Northern Asia who, in the 5th century, under Atilla, invaded and conquered a great part of Europe.
HUNKER	(n.) Originally, a nickname for a member of the conservative section of the Democratic party in New York; hence, one opposed to progress in general; a fogy.
HURST	(n.) A wood or grove.
HURTLE	(v.) To meet with violence or shock; to clash; to jostle.
HUTTED	(v.) To take shelter in a hut.
HYDROS	(n. plural) Hydoelectric power.
HYING	(v.)  of Hie; to go quickly.
HYMEN	(n.) A fold of muscous membrane often found at the orifice of the vagina; the vaginal membrane.
HYMENS	(n. plural) A fold of muscous membrane often found at the orifice of the vagina; the vaginal membrane.
HYMNAL	(n.) A collection of hymns; a hymn book.
IBEX	(n.) One of several species of wild goats having very large, recurved horns, transversely ridged in front; -- called also steinbok.
IBIS	(n.) Any bird of the genus Ibis and several allied genera. They are large, wading birds, having a long, curved beak, and feed largely on reptiles.
ICON	(n.) An image or representation; a portrait or pretended portrait.
ICONIC	(adj.) RElating to, or having the characteristics of, an icon.
IDEATE	(v.) To apprehend in thought so as to fix and hold in the mind; to memorize.
IDOL	(n.) An image or representation of anything.
IDS	(n. pl.) The division of the psyche that is totally unconscious and serves as the source of instinctual impulses and demands for immediate satisfaction.
IDYLL	(n.) A carefree episode or experience.
IDYLLS	(n. plural) A carefree episode or experience.
ILEUM	(n.) The last, and usually the longest, division of the small intestine; the part between the jejunum and large intestine.
ILIAC	(a.) Pertaining to, or in the region of, the ilium, or dorsal bone of the pelvis.    (a.) See Ileac, 1.
ILLUME	(v.) To throw or spread light upon; to make light or bright; to illuminate; to illumine.
IMAGER	(n.) One who images or forms likenesses; a sculptor.
IMBRUE	(v.) To wet or moisten; to soak; to drench, especially in blood.
IMBUE	(v.) To tinge deeply; to dye; to cause to absorb; to cause to become impressed or penetrated.
IMBUES	(v.) To tinge deeply; to dye; to cause to absorb; to cause to become impressed or penetrated.
IMP	(n.) A young or inferior devil; a little, malignant spirit; a puny demon; a contemptible evil worker.
IMPALE	(v.) To pierce with a pale; to put to death by fixing on a sharp stake.
IMPED	(v. past tense) To repair or enhance the wings of a falcon by grafting new feathers.
IMPING	(n.) The act or process of grafting or mending.
INAPT	(adj.) Unapt; not apt; unsuitable; inept.
INCISE	(v.) To cut in or into with a sharp instrument; to carve; to engrave.
INCUBI	(n. plural) A demon; a fiend; a lascivious spirit, supposed to have sexual intercourse with women by night.
INCUBUS	(n.) A demon; a fiend; a lascivious spirit, supposed to have sexual intercourse with women by night.
INDIUM	(n.) A rare element having a characteristic spectrum of two indigo blue lines. In appearance it resembles zinc, but in its chemical relation it resembles aluminium.
INDUCT	(v.) To bring in; to introduce; to usher in.
INEPT	(adj.) Not apt or fit; unfit; unsuitable; improper; unbecoming.
INFIX	(v.) To set; to fasten or fix by piercing or thrusting in.
INFLOW	(v.) To flow in.
INGEST	(v.) To take into, or as into, the stomach or alimentary canal.
INHERE	(v.) To be inherent; to stick (in); to be fixed or permanently incorporated with something; to cleave (to); to belong, as attributes or qualities.
INNED	(v. past tense) To take lodging.
INTERS	(n.) To bury in a grave.
INTONE	(v.) To utter with a musical or prolonged note or tone; to chant; as, to intone the church service.
INTUIT	(v.) To know intuitively.
INURES	(v.) To become accustomed to something unpleasant by prolonged exposure.
IODATE	(n.) A salt of iodic acid.
IODIDE	(n.) A binary compound of iodine, or one which may be regarded as binary; as, potassium iodide.
IODINE	(n.) A nonmetallic element occurring always in combination. When isolated it forms dark gray metallic scales, soft but brittle, with a chlorinelike odor.
ION	(n.) An atom that has acquired a net electric charge by gaining or losing one or more electrons.
IOTA	(n.) A very small quantity or degree; a jot; a particle.
IOTAS	(n. plural) A very small amount.
IRE	(n.) Anger; wrath.
IRIS	(n.) The contractile membrane perforated by the pupil, and forming the colored portion of the eye.
IRISED	(adj.) Having colors like those of the rainbow; iridescent.
IRK	(v. t.) To weary; to give pain; to annoy.
ISOMER	(n.) A body or compound which is isomeric with another body or compound; a member of an isomeric series.
IVIED	(adj.) Overgrown with ivy.
JACKY	(n.) A landsman's nickname for a seaman (pejorative).
JAG	(n.) A notch; a cleft; a barb; a ragged or sharp protuberance.
JAGGER	(n.) One who carries about a small load; a peddler.
JAKES	(n.) A privy.
JALOPY	(n.) An old dilapitaded automibile.
JAPANS	(v.) To decorate with black enamel or lacquer.
JAVA	(n.) Java coffee, a kind of coffee brought from Java.
JAY	(n.) Any one of the numerous species of birds belonging to Garrulus, Cyanocitta, and allied genera. Often handsomely colored, and usually have a crest.
JEJUNE	(adj.) Lacking matter; empty; void of substance.
JERKER	(n.) A North American river chub (Hybopsis biguttatus).
JESS	(n.) A short strap fastened around the leg of a bird used in falconry, to which a leash may be fastened.
JESSED	(adj.) Having jesses on, as a hawk.
JESSES	(n. plural) A short strap fastened around the leg of a bird used in falconry, to which a leash may be fastened.
JIBE	(v.) To shift, as the boom of a fore-and-aft sail, from one side of a vessel to the other when the wind is aft or on the quarter.
JIG	(n.) A light, brisk musical movement.
JIGGER	(n.) A measure of liquor holding 1 1/2 ounces.
JILL	(n.) A young woman; a sweetheart.
JILLS	(n. plural) A young woman; a sweetheart.
JILT	(v.) To cast off capriciously or unfeeling, as a lover; to deceive in love.
JOE	(n.) Brewed coffee.
JOEYS	(n. plural) A baby kangaroo.
JOGGLE	(v.) To shake slightly; to push suddenly but slightly, so as to cause to shake or totter; to jostle; to jog.
JOLTER	(n.) One who, or that which, jolts.
JOSS	(n.) A Chinese household divinity; a Chinese idol.
JOT	(n.) An iota; a point; a tittle; the smallest particle.
JOTTER	(n.) A memorandum book.
JOULE	(n.) A unit of work equivalent to the energy expended in one second by an electric current of one ampere in a resistance of one ohm.
JOULES	(n. plural) A unit of work equivalent to the energy expended in one second by an electric current of one ampere in a resistance of one ohm.
JOUNCE	(v.) To jolt; to shake, especially by rough riding or by driving over obstructions.
JOWL	(n.) The cheek; the jaw.
JUGATE	(v.) Forming a pair.
JUJUBE	(n.) The sweet and edible drupes (fruits) of several Mediterranean and African species of small trees.
JUJUS	(n. plural) An object used as a fetish, a charm, or an amulet in West Africa.
JUKE	(v.) To perch on anything, as birds do.
JULEP	(n.) A refreshing drink flavored with aromatic herbs, especially mint.
JULEPS	(n. plural) A refreshing drink flavored with aromatic herbs, especially mint.
JUNCO	(n.) Any bird of the genus Junco, which includes several species of North American finches; -- called also snowbird, or blue snowbird.
JUNCOS	(n. plural) Any bird of the genus Junco, which includes several species of North American finches; -- called also snowbird, or blue snowbird.
JUNKER	(n.) A young German noble or squire; esp., a member of the aristocratic party in Prussia.
JUNTA	(n.) A council; a convention; a tribunal; an assembly; esp., the grand council of state in Spain.
JUNTAS	(n. plural) A council; a convention; a tribunal; an assembly; esp., the grand council of state in Spain.
JURA	(n.) The Jurassic period.
JUSTED	(v.) To engage in mounted combat; joust.
JUT	(v. i.) To shoot out or forward; to project beyond the main body; as, the jutting part of a building.
JUTE	(n.) The coarse, strong fiber of the East Indian plant, Corchorus olitorius, used to make mats, paper, gunny cloth etc.
JUTES	(n. pl.) Jutlanders; one of the Low German tribes, a portion of which settled in Kent, England, in the 5th century.
KABUKI	(n.) A form of Japanese theatre in which elaborately costumed male performers use stylized movements, dances, and songs in order to enact tragedies and comedies.
KALE	(n.) A variety of cabbage in which the leaves do not form a head, being nearly the original or wild form of the species.
KALMIA	(n.) A genus of North American shrubs with poisonous evergreen foliage and corymbs of showy flowers.
KAOLIN	(n.) A fine clay used in ceramics.
KAPOK	(n.) A silky fibre obtained from the silk-cotton tree used for insulation and stuffing for pillows, mattresses, etc.
KAPPA	(.) The tenth letter of the Greek alphabet.
KAVA	(n.) A species of Polynesian long pepper, from the root of which an intoxicating beverage is made; also, the beverage itself.
KAY	(n.) The letter k.
KEDDAH	(n.) An elephant trap.
KEEL	(n.) A longitudinal timber, or series of timbers scarfed together, extending from stem to stern along the bottom of a vessel.
KEELS	(n. pural) A bowling game using nine wooden pins.
KEENS	(v.) To wail in lamentation.
KELP	(n.) Any large blackish seaweed.
KELPS	(n. plural) Any large blackish seaweed.
KELVIN	(n.) A temperature scale where zero occurs at absolute zero and each degree equals one Kelvin.
KEMP	(n.) Coarse, rough hair wool or fur.
KEMPS	(n. plural) The long flower stems of the ribwort plantain (Plantago Lanceolata).
KEN	(v.) To know; to understand; to take cognizance of.
KENO	(n.) A gambling game, a variety of the game of lotto, played with balls or knobs, numbered, and cards also numbered.
KENS	(n. pl.) Perception, understanding.
KERN	(n.) A light-armed foot soldier of the ancient militia of Ireland and Scotland;  often used as a term of contempt.
KERNED	(adj.) Having part of the face projecting beyond the body or shank; -- said of type.
KERNS	(n. plural) A light-armed foot soldier of the ancient militia of Ireland and Scotland;  often used as a term of contempt.
KETONE	(n.) One of a large class of organic substances resembling the aldehydes,  In general the ketones are colorless volatile liquids having a pungent ethereal odor.
KHAN	(n.) A king; a prince; a chief; a governor; -- so called among the Tartars, Turks, and Persians, and in countries now or formerly governed by them.
KIBITZ	(v.) To chat; commiserate.
KIMONO	(n.) A long, wide-sleeved Japanese robe worn with an obi.
KIN	(n.) One's relatives; family; kinfolk.
KIRK	(n.) A church or the church, in the various senses of the word.
KIRKS	(n. plural) A church.
KITED	(v. past tense) To fly like a kite.
KIVA	(n.) A ceremonial underground chamber in a Pueblo village.
KIVAS	(n.plural)  A ceremonial underground chamber in a Pueblo village.
KLAXON	(n.) A loud electric horn or alarm.
KNELLS	(n. plural) To ring slowly and solemnly, especially for a funeral; toll.
KNURL	(n.) A contorted knot in wood; a crossgrained protuberance; a nodule; a boss or projection.
KNURLS	(n. plural) A knob, knot, or other small protuberance.
KOLA	(n.) A tree bearing large brown nuts containing source of cola extract .
KUDO	(n.) A compliment or praise.
KUDOS	(n.) Glory; fame; renown; praise.
KUDZU	(n.) An Asian vine grown as a root starch.
KUDZUS	(n. plural) An Asian vine grown as a root starch.
KULAK	(n.) A prosperous landed peasant in czarist Russia.
KULAKS	(n. plural) A prosperous landed peasant in czarist Russia.
LABIA	(n. plural) A liplike structure.
LABIAL	(adj.) Of or pertaining to the lips or labia; as, labial veins.
LABILE	(adj.) Liable to slip, err, fall, or apostatize.
LAC	(n.) A resinous substance produced mainly on the banyan tree by the female of Coccus lacca, a scale-shaped insect.
LACUNA	(n.) A small opening; a small pit or depression; a small blank space; a gap or vacancy; a hiatus.
LAD	(n.) A boy; a youth; a stripling.
LAG	(a.) Coming tardily after or behind; slow; tardy.
LAIRED	(adj.) Having a lair.
LAKERS	(n.) A ship used on lakes.
LAM	(v.) To beat soundly; to thrash.
LAMBDA	(n.) The name of the Greek letter /, /, corresponding with the English letter L.
LAMS	(v.) To strike, to beat.
LANDER	(n.) A person who waits at the mouth of the shaft to receive the kibble of ore.
LANK	(a.) Slender and thin.
LAPPET	(n.) A small decorative fold or flap, esp, of lace or muslin, in a garment or headdress.
LAPSER	(n.) One who lapses.
LAR	(n.) A species of gibbon (Hylobates lar), found in Burmah. Called also white-handed gibbon.
LARKED	(v. past tense) To engage in fun or frolic.
LARKER	(n.) One who indulges in a lark or frolic.
LARS	(n. plural) A tutelary deity or spirit of an ancient Roman household.
LARVA	(n.) Any young insect from the time that it hatches from the egg until it becomes a pupa, or chrysalis.
LARVAE	(n. plural) Any young insect from the time that it hatches from the egg until it becomes a pupa, or chrysalis.
LARVAS	(n. plural) Any young insect from the time that it hatches from the egg until it becomes a pupa, or chrysalis.
LASE	(v) To function as a laser.
LASED	(v. past tense) To function as a laser.
LASES	(v.) To function as a laser.
LASHER	(n.) A piece of rope for binding or making fast one thing to another; -- called also lashing.    (n.) A weir in a river.
LASTER	(n.) A workman whose business it is to shape boots or shoes, or place leather smoothly, on lasts; a tool for stretching leather on a last.
LATH	(n.) A thin, narrow strip of wood, nailed to the rafters, studs, or floor beams of a building, for the purpose of supporting the tiles, plastering, etc.
LAUD	(v.) High commendation; praise; honor; exaltation; glory.
LAUDER	(n.) One who lauds.
LAUDS	(v.) High commendation; praise; honor; exaltation; glory.
LAVABO	(n.) A basin for washing the hands.
LAWING	(n.) Going to law; litigation.
LAX	(v. t.) Not tense, firm, or rigid; loose; slack; as, a lax bandage; lax fiber.
LEA	(n.) A measure of yarn; for linen, 300 yards; for cotton, 120 yards; a lay.
LEASER	(n.) One who leases or gleans.
LEAVED	(adj.) Bearing, or having, a leaf or leaves; having folds; -- used in combination; as, a four-leaved clover; a two-leaved gate; long-leaved.
LEE	(a.) Of or pertaining to the part or side opposite to that against which the wind blows; -- opposed to weather; as, the lee side or lee rail of a vessel.
LEEK	(n.) A plant of the genus Allium (A. Porrum), having broadly linear succulent leaves rising from a loose oblong cylindrical bulb.
LEES	(n. pl.) Dregs.
LEGATO	(adj.) Connected; tied; -- a term used when successive tones are to be produced in a closely connected, smoothly gliding manner.
LEGER	(n.) Anything that lies in a place; that which, or one who, remains in a place.
LEGERS	(n. plural) Anything that lies in a place; that which, or one who, remains in a place.
LEGUME	(n.) A pod dehiscent into two pieces or valves, and having the seed attached at one suture, as that of the pea.
LEMMA	(n.) A preliminary or auxiliary proposition demonstrated or accepted for immediate use in the demonstration of some other proposition.
LEMMAS	(n. plural) A preliminary or auxiliary proposition demonstrated or accepted for immediate use in the demonstration of some other proposition.
LENSED	(v. past tense) To take a photograph or film.
LEONES	(n.) A unit of currency of Sierra Leone.
LESSEE	(n.) The person to whom a lease is given, or who takes an estate by lease.
LETTED	(v. past tense) To hinder.
LEVEE	(n.) An embankment to prevent inundation; as, the levees along the Mississippi; sometimes, the steep bank of a river.
LEVEED	(adj.) Having a levee.
LEVIER	(n.) One who levies.
LEVIN	(n.) Lightning.
LEVINS	(n. plural) Lightning.
LEVY	(v.) To gather or exact; as, to levy money.
LIBIDO	(n.) The sex drive.
LIEDER	(n. plural) A German song for voice and piano.
LIEN	(n.) A legal claim; a charge upon real or personal property for the satisfaction of some debt or duty.
LIENS	(n.) The right to hold the property of a debtor as security or payment for a debt.
LIEU	(n.) Place; room; stead; -- used only in the phrase in lieu of, that is, instead of.
LIGAND	(n.) An ion, a molecule, or a molecular group that binds to another chemical entity to form a larger complex.
LILIED	(adj.) Covered with, or having many, lilies.
LILT	(v.) To sing cheerfully.
LIMBIC	(adj.) Relating to the limbic system.
LIN	(v. i.) To yield; to stop; to cease.
LINTER	(n.) The short fibres that cling to cottonseeds after the first ginning.
LIPID	(n.) Any of a group of organic compounds including the fats, oils, waxes, sterols and triglycerides.
LIPIDS	(n. plural) Any of a group of organic compounds including the fats, oils, waxes, sterols and triglycerides.
LISTER	(n.) A spear armed with three or more prongs, for striking fish.
LITHER	(adj.) Bad; wicked; false; worthless; slothful.
LITHIC	(adj.) Of or pertaining to stone; as, lithic architecture.
LITMUS	(n.) A dyestuff extracted from certain lichens.
LOAM	(n.) A kind of soil; an earthy mixture of clay and sand, with organic matter to which its fertility is chiefly due.
LOAMS	(n. plural) Soil composed of clay, sand, silt, and some organic matter.
LOAMY	(adj.) Consisting of loam; partaking of the nature of loam; resembling loam.
LOB	(v.) To let fall heavily or lazily.
LOBAR	(adj.) Of or pertaining to a lobe; characterized by, or like, a lobe or lobes.
LOBBER	(n.) One who throws in  high arc.
LOBE	(n.) Any projection or division, especially one of a somewhat rounded form.
LOBO	(n.) The gray wolf.
LOBOS	(n. plural) The gray wolf.
LOBULE	(n.) A small lobe; a subdivision of a lobe.
LOCI	(n. plural) A locality, a place.
LOESS	(n.) A quaternary deposit, usually consisting of a fine yellowish earth, on the banks of the Rhine and other large rivers.
LOGAN	(n.) A rocking or balanced stone.
LOGANS	(n. plural) A rocking or balanced stone.
LOGE	(n.) A lodge; a habitation.
LOGES	(n. plural) A box in a theatre.
LOGIER	(adj.) More sluggish.
LOIN	(n.) That part of a human being or quadruped, which extends on either side of the spinal column between the hip bone and the false ribs.
LOLL	(v.) To act lazily or indolently; to recline; to lean; to throw one's self down; to lie at ease.
LOLLER	(n.) An idle vagabond.
LOLLY	(n.) A piece of hard candy.
LOOED	(v.) To beat in the card game of loo by winning every trick.
LOOPER	(n.) An instrument, as a bodkin, for forming a loop in yarn, a cord, etc.
LOP	(v.) To cut off as the top or extreme part of anything.
LOPE	(n.) An easy gait, consisting of long running strides or leaps.
LOPPER	(v.) To turn sour and coagulate from too long standing, as milk.
LOQUAT	(n.) The fruit of the Japanese medlar (Photinia Japonica). It is as large as a small plum, but grows in clusters, and contains four or five large seeds.
LOSSY	(adj.) A term describing a data compression algorithm which reduces the amount of information in the data.
LOTTES	(n. plural) Fishes having large mouths with a wormlike filament attached for luring prey.
LOUSED	(v. past tense) To bungle.
LOUSES	(v.) To bungle
LOUVER	(n.) A slatted opening in a wall, door or window.
LOWBOY	(n.) A low chest of drawers.
LUG	(n.) The ear, or its lobe.
LUGE	(n.) A racing sled for one or two people that is ridden with the rider or riders lying on their back.
LUGGER	(n.) A small vessel having two or three masts, and a running bowsprit, and carrying lugsails.
LULL	(v.) To cause to rest by soothing influences; to compose; to calm; to soothe; to quiet.
LULU	(n.) A very attractive or seductive woman.
LULUS	(n. plural) A very attractive or seductive woman.
LUMENS	(n. plural) The open space or cavity of a tubular organ.
LUMMOX	(n.) A fat, ungainly, stupid person; an awkward bungler.
LUMPER	(n.) The European eelpout; -- called also lumpen.
LUNATE	(adj.) Crescent-shaped, like the moon.
LUPINE	(n.) A leguminous plant of the genus Lupinus, especially L. albus, the seeds of which have been used for food from ancient times.
LUSHED	(n. past tense) To drink alcohol to excess.
LUTZ	(n.) A jump in figure skating.
LUX	(n.) The International System unit of illumination, equal to one lumen per square meter.
LUXE	(n.) Luxury.
LUXES	(n. plural) The International System unit of illumination, equal to one lumen per square meter.
LYE	(n.) A strong caustic alkaline solution of potassium salts, obtained by leaching wood ashes. It is much used in making soap.
LYSINE	(n.) An essential amino acid, C6H14N2O2, obtained by the hydrolysis of proteins.
MAC	() A prefix, in names of Scotch origin, signifying son.
MACER	(n.) A mace bearer; an officer of a court.
MACERS	(n.) One who bears a mace.
MACHO	(n.) The striped mullet of California (Mugil cephalus, / Mexicanus).
MACHOS	(n.) Machismo.
MAGI	(n. pl.) A caste of priests, philosophers, and magicians, among the ancient Persians; hence, any holy men or sages of the East.
MAGMA	(n.) The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc.
MAGMAS	(n. plural) The molten matter within the earth, the source of the material of lava flows, dikes of eruptive rocks, etc.
MALLED	(v. past tense) To handle roughly or beat.
MALTED	(adj.) Processed into malt.
MAMBO	(n.) A Latin American dance resembling the rumba.
MANA	(n.) Supernatural force believed to dwell in a person or object.
MANSES	(n. plural) A large stately house.
MAR	(v.) To make defective; to disfigure; to deface.
MARAUD	(v.) To rove in quest of plunder; to make an excursion for booty; to plunder.
MARC	(n.) The refuse matter which remains after the pressure of fruit, particularly of grapes.
MARCEL	(n.) A hairstyle characterized by deep waves made by a curling iron.
MARLIN	(n.) A game fish having a pointed spearlike upper jaw.
MARQUE	(n.) A license to pass the limits of a jurisdiction, or boundary of a country, for the purpose of making reprisals.
MARRER	(n.) One who mars or injures.
MASER	(n.) A device that amplifies or generates microwaves.
MASERS	(n. plural) A device that amplifies or generates microwaves.
MASHER	(n.) A charmer of women.
MASKER	(n.) One who wears a mask; one who appears in disguise at a masquerade.
MASSIF	(n.) A large mountain mass.
MATERS	(n. plural) Mothers.
MAW	(n.) A stomach; the receptacle into which food is taken by swallowing.
MAWS	(n. plural) A stomach; the receptacle into which food is taken by swallowing.
MAYA	(n.) The name for the doctrine of the unreality of matter, called, in English, idealism; hence, nothingness; vanity; illusion.
MAYS	(n. plural) The blossoms of the hawthorn.
MAZER	(n.) A large drinking bowl; -- originally made of maple.
MAZERS	(n. plural) A large drinking bowl; -- originally made of maple.
MAZIER	(adj.) More like a maze.
MEAD	(n.) A fermented drink made of water and honey with malt, yeast, etc.
MEASLE	(n.) A leper.
MEATED	(adj.) Fed; fattened.
MECCAS	(n. plural) A place reagrded as the centre of some activity or interest.
MED	(n.) A dose of medication.
MEDIAD	(adj.) Toward the middle line.
MEDIAL	(adj.) Of or pertaining to a mean or average; mean; as, medial alligation.
MEDICO	(n.) A physician.
MEDICS	(n.) Science of medicine.
MEDLAR	(n.) A tree of the genus Mespilus; also, the fruit of the tree. The fruit is something like a small apple, and it is not eaten until it has begun to decay.
MEED	(n.) Merit or desert; worth.
MEGOHM	(n.) One of the larger measures of electrical resistance, amounting to one million ohms.
MELEE	(n.) A fight in which the combatants are mingled in one confused mass; a hand to hand conflict; an affray.
MELEES	(n. plural) A fight in which the combatants are mingled in one confused mass; a hand to hand conflict; an affray.
MERE	(n.) A pool or lake.
MERLE	(n.) The European blackbird.
MERLES	(n. plural) The European blackbird.
MESA	(n.) A high tableland; a plateau on a hill.
MESAS	(n. plural) A flat-topped hill with steep sides.
MESON	(n.) The mesial plane dividing the body of an animal into similar right and left halves.
MESONS	(n. plural) The mesial plane dividing the body of an animal into similar right and left halves.
METE	(v.) To measure.
METHYL	(n.) A hydrocarbon radical, CH3, not existing alone but regarded as an essential residue of methane, and appearing as a component part of many derivatives.
MEW	(n.) the crying sound of a cat; a meow.
MEWS	(n.) An alley where there are stables; a narrow passage; a confined place.
MEZZO	(adj.) Mean; not extreme.
MEZZOS	(n. plural) A mezzo-soprano.
MICA	(n.) The name of a group of minerals characterized by highly perfect cleavage, so that they readily separate into very thin leaves, more or less elastic.
MICAS	(n. plural) The name of a group of minerals characterized by highly perfect cleavage, so that they readily separate into very thin leaves.
MICRON	(n.) A measure of length; the thousandth part of one millimeter; the millionth part of a meter.
MIEN	(n.) Aspect; air; manner; demeanor; carriage; bearing.
MIENS	(n. plural) Appearance, bearing or manner.
MIG	(n.) Any of a series of Russian fighter aircraft using piston and later jet engines.
MILT	(n.) The spleen or spermatic fluid of fishes.
MILTED	(v. past tense) To fertilize fish roe.
MILTER	(n.) A male fish.
MILTS	(v.) To fertilize fish roe.
MINIMA	(n. plural ) of Minimum
MINTER	(n.) One who mints.
MIR	(n.) A Russian village community.
MIRE	(n.) Deep mud; wet, spongy earth.
MIRIER	(adj.) More full of mire.
MIRS	(n. plural) A village community of peasant farmers in prerevolutionary Russia.
MIS	(a. & adv.) Wrong; amiss.
MITERS	(n. plural) A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries.
MITRAL	(adj.) Pertaining to a miter; resembling a miter; as, the mitral valve between the left auricle and left ventricle of the heart.
MITRE	(n.) A covering for the head, worn on solemn occasions by church dignitaries.
MOBCAP	(n.) A plain cap or headdress for women or girls; especially, one tying under the chin by a very broad band.
MOD	(n.) An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s.
MODULI	(n. plural) A quantity or coefficient which expresses the measure of some specified force, property, or quality, as of elasticity, strength; a parameter.
MODULO	(prep.) Correcting or adjusting for something.
MOIRE	(n.) Originally, a fine textile fabric made of the hair of an Asiatic goat; any textile fabric to which a watered appearance is given.
MOIRES	(n. plural) Originally, a fine textile fabric made of the hair of an Asiatic goat; any textile fabric to which a watered appearance is given.
MOLAL	(n.) Of or designating a solution that contains one mole of solute per 1000g of solvent.
MOLINE	(n.) The crossed iron that supports the upper millstone by resting on the spindle; a millrind.
MOLL	(n.) A woman companion of a gangster.
MOLTED	(v. past tense) To shed or cast off.
MOLTER	(n.) One who molts or sheds.
MONAD	(n.) An ultimate atom, or simple, unextended point; something ultimate and indivisible.
MONADS	(n. plural) An ultimate atom, or simple, unextended point; something ultimate and indivisible.
MOO	(n.) The lowing of a cow.
MOOR	(n.) An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath.
MOOT	(adj.) Subject, or open, to argument or discussion; undecided; debatable; mooted.
MOOTER	(n.) A disputer of a mooted case.
MOREL	(n.) An edible fungus (Morchella esculenta), the upper part of which is covered with a reticulated and pitted hymenium.
MORELS	(n. plural) An edible fungus (Morchella esculenta), the upper part of which is covered with a reticulated and pitted hymenium.
MORT	(n.) A great quantity or number.
MOS	(n.) A custom or habit.
MOT	(n.) A pithy or witty saying; a witticism.
MOTET	(n.) A composition adapted to sacred words in the elaborate polyphonic church style; an anthem.
MOTETS	(n. plural) A composition adapted to sacred words in the elaborate polyphonic church style; an anthem.
MOTIF	(n.) A recurring or dominant theme.
MOTIFS	(n. plural) A recurring or dominant theme.
MOTS	(n. pl.) A witty remark.
MOTTLE	(v.) To mark with spots of different color, or shades of color, as if stained; to spot; to maculate.
MOUSED	(v. past tense) To catch mice.
MOUSER	(n.) A cat that catches mice.
MUCKER	(n.) A term of reproach for a low or vulgar labor person.
MUCOSA	(n.) A mucous membrane.
MUDDED	(adj.) Covered with mud.
MUFF	(n.) A blown cylinder of glass which is afterward flattened out to make a sheet.
MUFFED	(v. past tense) To fail; bungle.
MULCT	(n.) A fine or penalty, esp. a pecuniary punishment or penalty.
MULCTS	(n. plural) A fine or penalty.
MULL	(v.) To work (over) mentally; to cogitate; to ruminate; -- usually with over; as, to mull over a thought or a problem.
MULLAH	(n.) A Muslim religious leader or teacher.
MULLEN	(n.) A tall plant with clustered yellow flowers and woolly leaves.
MUM	(a.) Silent; not speaking.
MUMMED	(v. past tense) To pantomime.
MUON	(n.) An elementary particle in the lepton family, having a mass 209 times that of the electron, a negative electric charge, and a mean lifetime of 2.2  10-6 seconds.
MUONS	(n. plural) An elementary particle in the lepton family having a mass 209 times that of the electron, a negative electric charge and a mean lifetime of 2.2 10-6 seconds.
MURRES	(n. plural) Any one of several species of sea birds of the genus Uria, or Catarractes; a guillemot.
MUS	(n.) A genus of small rodents, including the common mouse and rat.
MUSHER	(n.) One who travels by dogsled.
MYNAH	(n.) A black southeast Asian starling knownfor its ability to mimic sounds.
MYNAHS	(n. plural) A black southeast Asian starling knownfor its ability to mimic sounds.
MYOPIA	(n.) Nearsightedness; shortsightedness.
MYOPIC	(adj.) Pertaining to, or affected with, or characterized by, myopia; nearsighted.
MYOSIN	(n.) An albuminous body present in dead muscle formed in the process of coagulation which takes place in rigor mortis.
NAB	(v.) To catch or seize suddenly or unexpectedly.
NADIR	(n.) The lowest point; the time of greatest depression.
NADIRS	(n. plural) The lowest point; the time of greatest depression.
NAIADS	(n. plural) A water nymph; one of the lower female divinities, fabled to preside over some body of fresh water.
NAN	(n.) A flat, leavened bread of northwest India, made of white flour and baked in a tandoor.
NAPE	(n.) The back part of the neck.
NARY	(a.) Not one.
NAVE	(n.) The middle or body of a church, extending from the transepts to the principal entrances.
NAY	(adv.) No; -- a negative answer to a question asked, or a request made.
NEAP	(n.) The tongue or pole of a cart or other vehicle drawn by two animals.
NEE	(adj.) Born; -- a term sometimes used in introducing the name of the family to which a married woman belongs by birth; as, Madame de Stael, nee Necker.
NEGATE	(v.) To deny, to make invalid, nullify.
NEREID	(n.) One of 50 sea nymphs who were attendants upon Neptune, and were represented as riding on sea horses, sometimes in human form and sometimes with the tail of a fish.
NEURAL	(adj.) relating to the nerves or nervous system.
NEURON	(n.) The brain and spinal cord; the cerebro-spinal axis; myelencephalon.
NEVE	(n.) The upper part of a glacier, above the limit or perpetual snow.
NEVES	(n. plural) The upper part of a glacier, above the limit or perpetual snow.
NEWEL	(n.) A novelty; a new thing.
NEWELS	(n. plural) A novelty; a new thing.
NIACIN	(n.) A component of the B viatmin complex.
NIB	(n.) The bill or beak of a bird; the neb.
NIBBED	(adj.) Having a nib or point.
NIBS	(n. pl.) A sharp point or tip.
NICHED	(adj.) Placed in a niche.
NICKER	(v.) To neigh softly.
NIGGLE	(v.) To trifle with; to deceive; to mock.
NIGHED	(v. past tense) To draw near.
NIL	(n. & a.) Nothing; of no account.
NIT	(n.) The egg of a louse or other small insect.
NITER	(n.) A mineral form o potassium nitrate used in making gunpowder.
NITRIC	(adj.) Of, pertaining to, or containing, nitrogen.
NITS	(n. pl.) A unit of illuminative brightness equal to one candle per square meter.
NITTY	(adj.) Shining; elegant; spruce.
NOB	(n.) The head.
NODAL	(adj.) Of the nature of, or relating to, a node; as, a nodal point.
NODDER	(n.) One who nods; a drowsy person.
NODULE	(n.) A rounded mass or irregular shape; a little knot or lump.
NONCE	(n.) The one or single occasion; the present call or purpose; -- chiefly used in the phrase for the nonce.
NONCES	(n. plural) The one or single occasion; the present call or purpose; -- chiefly used in the phrase for the nonce.
NONES	(n.) The fifth day of the months January, February, April, June, August, September, November, and December, and the seventh day of March, May, July, and October.
NOTATE	(adj.) Marked with spots or lines, which are often colored.
NUANCE	(n.) A shade of difference; a delicate gradation.
NUBIA	(n.) A light fabric of wool, worn on the head by women; a cloud.
NUBILE	(adj.) Of an age suitable for marriage; marriageable.
NULL	(n.) Something that has no force or meaning.
NULLED	(adj.) Turned so as to resemble nulls.
NURSER	(n.) One who nurses; a nurse; one who cherishes or encourages growth.
NUTATE	(v.) To rock or sway involuntarily.
NUTRIA	(n.) The fur of the coypu.
NUTTER	(n.) A gatherer of nuts.
OAF	(n.) Originally, an elf's child; a changeling left by fairies or goblins; hence, a deformed or foolish child; a simpleton; an idiot.
OATER	(n.) A movie about cowboy or frontier life.
OATERS	(n. plural) A movie about cowboy or frontier life.
OBJETS	(n.) An object; a curio.
OBLATE	(adj.) Flattened or depressed at the poles; as, the earth is an oblate spheroid.
OBOE	(n.) One of the higher wind instruments in the modern orchestra,  somewhat like the clarinet in form, but more slender, and sounded by means of a double reed.
OBOIST	(n.) A performer on the oboe.
OCELOT	(n.) An American feline carnivore (Felis pardalis). It is covered with blackish ocellated spots and blotches, which are variously arranged.
OCTANE	(n.) Any one of a group of metametric hydrocarcons (C8H18) of the methane series. The most important is a colorless, volatile, inflammable liquid, found in petroleum.
OCTANT	(n.) The eighth part of a circle; an arc of 45 degrees.
OCTET	(n.) A composition for eight parts, usually for eight solo instruments or voices.
OCTETS	(n. plural) A composition for eight parts, usually for eight solo instruments or voices.
ODE	(n.) A short poetical composition proper to be set to music or sung; a lyric poem.
ODIUM	(n.) Hatred; dislike; as, his conduct brought odium upon him.
OFT	(adv.) Often; frequently; not rarely; many times.
OFTER	(adv.) More often.
OHM	(n.) The standard unit in the measure of electrical resistance.
OHMIC	(adj.) Of or relating to, or measured in, ohms.
OHMS	(n. plural) The standard unit in the measure of electrical resistance.
OILERS	(n.) The best team in the NHL! Whoo!
OLEFIN	(n.) Any of a class of unsaturated open-chain hydrocarbons such as ethylene; an alkene with only one carbon-carbon double bond.
OMENED	(adj.) Attended by, or containing, an omen or omens; as, happy-omened day.
ONUS	(n.) A burden; an obligation.
ONYX	(n.) Chalcedony in parallel layers of different shades of color.
OOCYTE	(n.) A cell that develops into an egg or ovum.
OPAL	(n.) A mineral consisting, like quartz, of silica, but inferior to quartz in hardness and specific gravity.
OPERON	(n.) A unit of genetic material that functions in a coordinated manner by means of an operator, a promoter, and structural genes that are transcribed together.
OPINES	(v.) To state as an opinion.
OPTIMA	(n. plural) The point at which conditions are most favourable or best.
OPUS	(n.) A creative work; specifically a musical composition.
ORATED	(v. past tense) To speak formally; to give a speech.
ORATES	(v.) To speak formally; to give a speech.
ORB	(n.) A spherical body; a globe.
ORBED	(adj.) Having the form of an orb; round.
ORBING	(v.) To shape into a circle or sphere.
ORE	(n.) The native unrefined form of a metal.
ORNERY	(adj.) Cantakerous, stubborn, disagreeable.
OSMIUM	(n.) A rare metallic element of the platinum group. It is a hard, infusible, bluish or grayish white metal, and the heaviest substance known.
OSPREY	(n.) A fish-eating hawk.
OSSIFY	(v.) To form into bone; to change from a soft animal substance into bone, as by the deposition of lime salts.
OTIOSE	(adj.) Being at leisure or ease; unemployed; indolent; idle.
OTTO	(n.) A fragrant essential oil.
OUCH	(n.) A socket or bezel holding a precious stone; hence, a jewel or ornament worn on the person.
OUST	(v.) To take away; to remove.
OUSTER	(n.) A putting out of possession; dispossession; ejection.
OUZEL	(n.) A finch-like diving bird; also called a Dipper.
OUZELS	(n. plural) A finch-like diving bird; also called a Dipper.
OUZO	(n.) A Greek liqeur flavoured with anise.
OUZOS	(n. plural) A Greek liqeur flavoured with anise.
OVA	(n. pl.) The female reproductive cell or gamete of animals; egg.
OVATE	(adj.) Shaped like an egg, with the lower extremity broadest.
OVERED	(v. past tense) To jump over.
OXALIC	(adj.) Pertaining to, derived from, or contained in, sorrel, or oxalis; specifically, an acid found in, and characteristic of, oxalis.
OXEYE	(n.) A daisylike flower with yellow petals and dark centers.
OXEYES	(n. plural) A daisylike flower with yellow petals and dark centers.
OXIDES	(n.) A binary compound with oxygen.
PACT	(v.) An agreement; a league; a compact; a covenant.
PAEAN	(n.) Any loud and joyous song; a song of triumph.
PAEANS	(n. plural) Any loud and joyous song; a song of triumph.
PALIER	(adj.) More pale.
PALL	(v.) To make vapid or insipid; to make lifeless or spiritless; to dull; to weaken.
PALMED	(v. past tense) To conceal in the palm of the hand.
PAM	(n.) The knave of clubs.
PAMPA	(n.) A treeless grassland found in southern South America.
PAMS	(n. plural) The jack of clubs and highest trump in certain variations of loo.
PANG	(n.) A paroxysm of extreme pain or anguish; a sudden and transitory agony; a throe; as, the pangs of death.
PANGED	(v. past tense) To feel distress acutely.
PANIER	(n.) A large basket or pack carried on the shoulders or on a pack animal.
PAP	(n.) A nipple; a mammilla; a teat.
PAPAW	(n.) A tree (Carica Papaya) of tropical America, belonging to the order Passifloreae produing dull orange-colored, melon-shaped fruit.
PAPAWS	(n. plural) A tree (Carica Papaya) of tropical America, belonging to the order Passifloreae produing dull orange-colored, melon-shaped fruit.
PAPYRI	(n. plural) A tall rushlike Egyptian plant (Cyperus Papyrus) of the Sedge family used to make paper; a document written on papyrus.
PAR	(n.) Equality of condition or circumstances.
PARD	(n.) A leopard; a panther.
PARE	(v. t.) To cut off, or shave off, the superficial substance or extremities of; as, to pare an apple; to pare a horse's hoof.
PARR	(n.l) A young freshwater-dwelling salmon.
PARRED	(v. past tense) To score par on in golf.
PARRS	(n. plural) A young freshwater-dwelling salmon.
PARSE	(v.) To resolve into its elements, as a sentence; to analyze and describe grammatically.
PARSED	(v. past tense) To resolve into its elements, as a sentence; to analyze and describe grammatically.
PARSER	(n.) One who parses.
PARSES	(v.) To resolve into its elements, as a sentence; to analyze and describe grammatically.
PAS	(n.) A pace; a step, as in a dance.
PASTER	(n.) A slip of paper, usually bearing a name, intended to be pasted by the voter, as a substitute, over another name on a printed ballot.
PATE	(n.) The head of a person; the top, or crown, of the head.
PATED	(adj.) Having a pate; -- used only in composition; as, long-pated; shallow-pated.
PATERS	(n. plural) Fathers.
PATINA	(n.) The color or incrustation which age gives to works of art; especially, the green rust which covers ancient bronzes, coins, and medals.
PAX	(n.) The kiss of peace; also, the embrace in the sanctuary now substituted for it at High Mass in Roman Catholic churches.
PEAKY	(adj.) Sickly; peaked.
PEAL	(n.) A loud sound, or a succession of loud sounds, as of bells, thunder, cannon, shouts, of a multitude, etc.
PEASES	(n. plural) A pea.
PEAT	(n.) A substance of vegetable origin, consisting of roots and fibers, moss, etc., in various stages of decomposition.
PEE	(n.) Bill of an anchor.
PELTER	(n.) A pinchpenny; a mean, sordid person; a miser; a skinflint.
PELTRY	(n.) Pelts or skins, collectively; skins with the fur on them; furs.
PELVIC	(adj.) Of, pertaining to, or in the region of, the pelvis; as, pelvic cellulitis.
PENNA	(n.) A perfect, or normal, feather.
PENNER	(n.) A case for holding pens.
PEP	(n.) Energy and high spirits.
PER	(prep.) Through; by means of; through the agency of; by; for; for each.
PERT	(a.) Lively; brisk; sprightly; smart.
PEW	(n.) One of the compartments in a church which are separated by low partitions, and have long seats upon which several persons may sit.
PEWEE	(n.) A common American tyrant flycatcher (Sayornis phoebe, or S. fuscus).
PEWEES	(n. plural) A common American tyrant flycatcher (Sayornis phoebe, or S. fuscus).
PHAGE	(n.) A virus parasitic in bacteria.
PHAGES	(n.) A virus parasitic in bacteria.
PHENOL	(n.) A white or pinkish crystalline substance produced by the distillation of many organic bodies, as wood, coal, etc., and obtained from the heavy oil from coal tar.
PHENYL	(n.) A hydrocarbon radical (C6H5) regarded as the essential residue of benzene, and the basis of an immense number of aromatic derivatives.
PHI	(n.) The 21st letter of the Greek alphabet.
PHLOEM	(n.) That portion of fibrovascular bundles which corresponds to the inner bark; the liber tissue.
PHOBIC	(adj.) Relating to a phobia.
PHON	(n.) A unit of apparent loudness, equal in number to the intensity in decibels of a 1,000-hertz tone judged to be as loud as the sound being measured.
PHONIC	(adj.) Of or pertaining to sound; of the nature of sound; acoustic.
PHONON	(n.) The quantum of acoustic or vibrational energy, considered a discrete particle.
PHONS	(n. plural) A unit of apparent loudness, equal in number to the intensity in decibels of a 1,000-hertz tone judged to be as loud as the sound being measured.
PHOTON	(n.) The quantum of electromagnetic energy, regarded as a discrete particle having zero mass, no electric charge, and an indefinitely long lifetime.
PICA	(n.) A vitiated appetite that craves what is unfit for food, as chalk, ashes, coal, etc.; chthonophagia.
PICAS	(n. plural) A printer's unit of type size.
PIDGIN	(n.) A mybridized mix of two or more languages created as a result of contact and used as a lingua franca in trade.
PIEING	(v.) To jumble up.
PIKED	(adj.) Furnished with a pike; ending in a point; peaked; pointed.
PIKER	(n.) A stingy person.
PIKERS	(n. plural) A stingy person
PILFER	(v.) To steal in small quantities, or articles of small value; to practice petty theft.
PINGER	(n.) A device that goes, "ping"!
PINNER	(n.) A headdress like a cap, with long lappets.
PINTOS	(n. plural) A mountain tribe of Mexican Indians living near Acapulco. They are remarkable for having the dark skin of the face irregularly spotted with white.
PION	(n.) A semistable meson either in a neutral form with a mass 264 times that of an electron or in a charged form with a mass 273 times that of an electron.
PIONS	(n. plural) A semistable meson either in a neutral form with a mass 264 times that of an electron or in a charged form with a mass 273 times that of an electron.
PIP	(n.) One of the conventional figures or "spots" on playing cards, dominoes, etc.
PIPS	(n. pl.) A mark indicating the suit or numerical value of a playing card.
PIS	(n.pl.) The 16th letter of the Greek alphabet.
PITH	(n.) The soft spongy substance in the center of the stems of many plants and trees.
PITHED	(v. past tense)  To destroy the spinal cord of an animal by inserting a needle into the vertebra.
PITHS	(v.) To destroy the spinal cord of an animal by inserting a needle into the vertebra.
PITMAN	(n.) One who works in a pit, as in mining, in sawing timber, etc.
PLANAR	(adj) Of, relating to, a plane; flat.
PLASM	(n.) A mold or matrix in which anything is cast or formed to a particular shape.
PLASMA	(n.) The viscous material of an animal or vegetable cell, out of which the various tissues are formed by a process of differentiation; protoplasm.
PLASMS	(n. plural) Plasmas
PLAT	(v.) To form by interlaying interweaving; to braid; to plait.
PLATEN	(n.) The part of a printing press which presses the paper against the type and by which the impression is made.
PLATS	(n. plural) A piece of land.
PLAYA	(n.) In the plains and deserts of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, a  level spot temporarily covered with water which subsequently becomes dry by evaporation.
PLAYAS	(n. plural) In the plains and deserts of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, a  level spot temporarily covered with water which subsequently becomes dry by evaporation.
PLEURA	(n.) The smooth serous membrane which closely covers the lungs and the adjacent surfaces of the thorax; the pleural membrane.
PLUMB	(n.) A little mass or weight of lead, or the like, attached to a line, and used by builders, etc., to indicate a vertical direction; a plummet; a plumb bob.
PLUMBS	(n. plural) A little mass or weight of lead, or the like, attached to a line, and used by builders, etc., to indicate a vertical direction; a plummet; a plumb bob.
PLUSHY	(adj.) Like plush; soft and shaggy.
PLUTON	(n.) A body of igneous rock formed beneath the surface of the earth by consolidation of magma.
PLY	(v.) To bend.
PLYER	(n.) A kind of balance used in raising and letting down a drawbridge. It consists of timbers joined in the form of a St. Andrew's cross.    (n.) See Pliers.
PODDED	(adj.) Having pods.
PODIA	(n. plural) An elevated platform.
POGROM	(n.) An organized massacre or persecution of a minority group; genocide.
POI	(n.) A national food of the Hawaiians, made by baking and pounding the kalo (or taro) root, and reducing it to a thin paste, which is allowed to ferment.
POIS	(n.)  Hawaiian food made from the tuber of the taro that is cooked, pounded to a paste, and fermented.
POISER	(n.) The balancer of dipterous insects.
POL	(n.) A politician.
POLER	(n.) A horse harnessed alongside the shaft or pole of a vehicle
POLING	(n.) The act of supporting or of propelling by means of a pole or poles; as, the poling of beans; the poling of a boat.
POLLER	(n.) One who polls or lops trees or cuts hair; a barber; One who registers voters, or one who enters his name as a voter.
POMADE	(n.) Perfumed ointment; esp., a fragrant unguent for the hair; pomatum; -- originally made from apples.
POMP	(n.) Show of magnificence; parade; display; power.
PONCE	(n.) A pimp.
PONCED	(v. past tense) To act as a pimp.
PONCES	(v.) To act as a pimp.
PONIED	(v. past tense) To study with the aid of a translated or cribbed text.
POPLIN	(n.) A fabric of many varieties, usually made of silk and worsted, -- used especially for women's dresses.
POPPER	(n.) A dagger.
POSIT	(v.) To assume as real or conceded; as, to posit a principle.
POSITS	(v.) To assume as real or conceded; as, to posit a principle.
POSY	(n.) A flower; a bouquet; a nosegay.
PRECIS	(n.) A concise or abridged statement or view; an abstract; a summary.
PREEN	(v.) To groom; to trim or dress with the beak, as the feathers; -- said of birds.
PREENS	(v.) To groom; to trim or dress with the beak, as the feathers; -- said of birds.
PREXY	(n.) A president, esp. of a college or unversity.
PREYER	(n.) One who, or that which, preys; a plunderer; a waster; a devourer.
PRIG	(n.) A pert, conceited, pragmatical fellow.
PRIM	(a.) Formal; precise; affectedly neat or nice; as, prim regularity; a prim person.
PRIMP	(v.) To be formal or affected in dress or manners.
PRIMS	(v.) To make affectedly precise or proper.
PRIZER	(n.) One who contends for a prize; a prize fighter; a challenger.
PROPYL	(n.) The hypothetical radical C3H7, regarded as the essential residue of propane and related compounds.
PROSER	(n.) One who talks or writes tediously.
PROTON	(n.) A stable, positively charged subatomic particle in the baryon family .
PROW	(n.) The fore part of a vessel; the bow; the stem; hence, the vessel itself.
PROWER	(adj.) Braver.
PRY	(v. t.) To raise or move, or attempt to raise or move, with a pry or lever; to prize.
PSI	(n.) Parapsychological phenomena or abilities.
PUDDLY	(adj.) Consisting of, or resembling, puddles; muddy; foul.
PUEBLO	(n.) A communal building erected by certain Indian tribes of Arizona and New Mexico. It is often of large size and is usually built either of stone or adobe.
PUFFIN	(n.) An arctic sea bird Fratercula arctica) allied to the auks, and having a short, thick, swollen beak.
PUG	(n.) A small  dog of an ancient breed originating in China, having a snub nose, wrinkled face, squarish body, short smooth hair, and curled tail.
PUGGED	(v. past tense) To work clay with water.
PULSAR	(n) A celestial body emitting short intense bursts of radio waves, x-rays, or visible electromagnetic radiation at regular intervals.
PUN	(n.) A play on words which have the same sound but different meanings.
PUNNER	(n.) A punster.
PUNTER	(n.) One who punts a football; also, one who propels a punt.
PUPATE	(v.) To become a pupa.
PUPPED	(v. past tense) To give birth to puppies.
PURGER	(n.) One who, or that which, purges or cleanses; especially, a cathartic medicine.
PURINE	(n.) A double-ringed, crystalline organic base  from which is derived the nitrogen bases adenine and guanine, as well as uric acid as a metabolic end product.
PURL	(v.) To decorate with fringe or embroidery.
PURLS	(v.) To decorate with fringe or embroidery.
PURVEY	(v.) To furnish or provide, as with a convenience, provisions, or the like.
PYRITE	(n.) A common mineral of a pale brass-yellow color and brilliant metallic luster, crystallizing in the isometric system; iron pyrites; iron disulphide.
QUA	(conj.) In so far as; in the capacity or character of; as.
QUAFFS	(v.) To drink.
QUAHOG	(n.) An edible clam having a hard rounded shell.
QUARK	(n.) Any of a group of six elementary particles having electric charges of a magnitude one-third or two-thirds that of the electron, regarded as constituents of hadrons.
QUARKS	(n. plural) Any of a group of six elementary particles having electric charges  one-third or two-thirds that of the electron, regarded as constituents of hadrons.
QUASAR	(n.) An extremely distant celestial body with an immense power output.
QUASH	(v.) To abate, annul, overthrow, or make void.
QUAY	(n.) A mole, bank, or wharf, formed toward the sea, or at the side of a harbor, river, or other navigable water, for convenience in loading and unloading vessels.
QUELLS	(v.) To put down,supress.
QUINTS	(n. plural) A set of quintuplets.
QUIP	(n.) A smart, sarcastic turn or jest; a taunt; a severe retort; a gibe.
QUIRT	(n.) A rawhide whip plaited with two thongs of buffalo hide.
QUIRTS	(n. plural) A rawhide whip plaited with two thongs of buffalo hide.
QUOD	(n.) A quadrangle or court, as of a prison; hence, a prison.
RABAT	(n.) A polishing material made of potter's clay that has failed in baking.
RABATS	(n.) A piece of fabric fitted to the collar covering the shirt front worn by the Catholic and Anglican clergy.
RABBET	(n.) A longitudinal channel, groove, or recess cut out of the edge or face of any body; especially, one intended to fit another member to form a joint.
RACKER	(n.) A horse that has a racking gait.
RADIAN	(n.) An arc of a circle which is equal to the radius, or the angle measured by such an arc.
RADIX	(n.) A primitive word, from which spring other words.
RADON	(n.) A colorless, radioactive, inert gaseous element formed by the radioactive decay of radium.
RAFFIA	(n.) A fibrous material used for tying plants, said to come from the leaves of a palm tree of the genus Raphia.
RAILER	(n.) One who rails; one who scoffs, insults, censures, or reproaches with opprobrious language.
RAJ	(n.) Reign; rule.
RALPHS	(v.) To vomit.
RAMIFY	(v.) To divide into branches or subdivisions; as, to ramify an art, subject, scheme.
RAND	(n.) A long, fleshy piece, as of beef, cut from the flank or leg; a sort of steak.
RANDS	(n. plural) A strip of material used to support the shoe at the heel.
RANKLE	(adj.) To become, or be, rank; to grow rank or strong; to be inflamed; to fester; -- used literally and figuratively.
RAREFY	(v.) To make rare, thin, porous, or less dense; to expand or enlarge without adding any new portion of matter to; -- opposed to condense.
RASHER	(n.) A thin slice of bacon.
RASTER	(n.) A scanning pattern of parallel lines that form the display of an image projected on a cathode-ray tube of a television set or display screen.
RATTER	(n.) Anything which catches rats; esp., a dog trained to catch rats; a rat terrier.
RAYING	(v.) To send out rays.
RAZEED	(v. past tense) To cut down, abridge.
REALS	(n. plural) A silver coin formerly used in Spain and Latin America.
REALTY	(n.) Real estate; a piece of real property.
REAM	(n.) A bundle, package, or quantity of paper, usually consisting of twenty quires or 480 sheets.
REAVE	(v.) To take away by violence or by stealth; to snatch away; to rob; to despoil; to bereave.
REAVED	(v. past tense) To take away by violence or by stealth; to snatch away; to rob; to despoil; to bereave.
REAVER	(n.) One who reaves.
REAVES	(v.) To take away by violence or by stealth; to snatch away; to rob; to despoil; to bereave.
REB	(n.) A Confederate soldier.
REBUT	(v.) To drive or beat back; to repulse.
REBUTS	(v.) To drive or beat back; to repulse.
RECK	(v.) To make account of; to care for; to heed; to regard.
RECUSE	(v.) To refuse or reject, as a judge; to challenge that the judge shall not try the cause.
REDACT	(v.) To reduce to form, as literary matter; to digest and put in shape (matter for publication); to edit.
REDD	(v.) To clear away.
REDDED	(v. past tense) To clear away.
REDED	(v. past tense) To give advice to.
REDING	(v.) To give advice.
REDTOP	(n.) A kind of grass (Agrostis vulgaris) highly valued in the United States for pasturage and hay for cattle.
REEDED	(adj.) Covered with reeds; reedy.
REEKER	(n.) Something that emits a very bad smell.
REELER	(n.) The grasshopper warbler; -- so called from its note.
REEVED	(adj.) Of a rope, passed through a hole, ring or pulley.
REMAN	(v.) To supply with new personnel.
REMAND	(v.) To recommit; to send back.
REMANS	(v.) To supply with new personnel.
REMIT	(v.) To transmit or send, as money in payment .
REMITS	(v.) To transmit or send, as money in payment .
RENAL	(adj.) Pertaining to the kidneys.
REP	(n.) A fabric made of silk or wool, or of silk and wool, and having a transversely corded or ribbed surface.
REPS	(n. plural) A ribbed or corded fabric of various materials, such as cotton, wool, or silk.
RES	(n.) A thing; the particular thing; a matter; a point.
RESINY	(adj.) Like resin; resinous.
RET	(v.) To prepare for use, as flax, by separating the fibers from the woody part by process of soaking, macerating, and other treatment.
RETTED	(adj.) Moistened to soften.
REVET	(v.) To face, as an embankment, with masonry, wood, or other material.
REVETS	(v.) To face, as an embankment, with masonry, wood, or other material.
REX	(n.) A king.
RHEA	(n.l) A flightless South American bird resembling an ostrich.
RHEAS	(n. plural) A flightless South American bird resembling an ostrich.
RHESUS	(n.) A monkey; the bhunder.
RHO	(n.) The 17th letter of the Greek alphabet.
RHOMBI	(n. plural) An equilateral parallelogram.
RIBOSE	(n.) A pentose sugar occurring as a component of riboflavin, nucleotides, and nucleic acids.
RICED	(v. past tense) To make food the consistency of rice.
RICER	(n.) A utensil used to extrude soft foods into the consistency of rice.
RICERS	(n. plural) A utensil used to extrude soft foods into the consistency of rice.
RICES	(v.) To make food the consistency of rice.
RICK	(n.) A stack or pile, as of grain, straw, or hay, in the open air, usually protected from wet with thatching.
RICKED	(v. past tense) To pile into ricks.
RIFFLE	(n.) A trough or sluice having cleats, grooves, or steps across the bottom for holding quicksilver and catching particles of gold when auriferous earth is washed.
RIFLER	(n.) One who rifles; a robber.
RIGGER	(n.) One who rigs or dresses; one whose occupation is to fit the rigging of a ship.
RILL	(n.) A very small brook; a streamlet.
RIM	(n.) The border, edge, or margin of a thing, usually of something circular or curving; as, the rim of a kettle or basin.
RIME	(n.) White frost; hoarfrost; congealed dew or vapor.
RIMED	(v.) To cover with frost or ice.
RIMER	(n.) A tool for shaping the rimes of a ladder.
RIMES	(v.) To cover with frost or ice.
RIMMER	(n.) An implement for cutting, trimming, or ornamenting the rim of anything, as the edges of pies, etc.; also, a reamer.
RIMY	(a.) Abounding with rime; frosty.
RITTER	(n.) A knight.
ROBBIN	(n.) A kind of package in which pepper and other dry commodities are sometimes exported from the East Indies.
ROE	(n.) The female of any species of deer.
ROIL	(v.) To render turbid by stirring up the dregs or sediment of; as, to roil wine, cider, etc. , in casks or bottles; to roil a spring.
ROILS	(v.) To make muddy by stirring up sediment; to disturb or vex.
ROMANO	(n.) A hard, sharp cheese served grated as a garnish.
RONDO	(n.) A musical composition, commonly of a lively, cheerful character, in which the first strain recurs after each of the other strains.
RONDOS	(n. plural) A musical composition, commonly of a lively, cheerful character, in which the first strain recurs after each of the other strains.
ROOD	(n.) A measure of five and a half yards in length; a rod; a perch; a pole.
ROODS	(n. plural) A crucifix.
ROOKED	(v. past tense) To swindle, cheat.
ROOKY	(adj.) Misty; gloomy.
ROOTER	(n.) One who, or that which, roots; one that tears up by the roots.
ROTE	(n.) A frequent repetition of forms of speech without attention to the meaning; mere repetition; as, to learn rules by rote.
ROTOR	(n.) A rotating past of a mechanical device.
ROTORS	(n.) A rotating past of a mechanical device.
ROUSER	(n.) Something very exciting or great.
ROUTER	(n.) A plane made like a spokeshave, for working the inside edges of circular sashes.
RUBE	(n.) A sucker.
RUE	(n.) Fig.: Bitterness; disappointment; grief; regret.
RUED	(v. past tense) To feel regret, remorse.
RUFF	(n.) A game similar to whist, and the predecessor of it.
RUFOUS	(adj.) Reddish; of a yellowish red or brownish red color; tawny.
RUGGER	(n.) Rugby.
RULIER	(adj.) More orderly.
RUMEN	(n.) The first stomach of ruminants; the paunch; the fardingbag.
RUMENS	(n. plural) The first stomach of ruminants; the paunch; the fardingbag.
RUMMER	(n.) A large and tall glass, or drinking cup.
RUMPUS	(n.) A disturbance; noise and confusion; a quarrel.
RUNE	(n.) A letter, or character, belonging to the written language of the ancient Norsemen, or Scandinavians.
RUNIC	(adj.) Of or pertaining to a rune, to runes, or to the Norsemen.
RUSE	(n.) An artifice; trick; stratagem; wile; fraud; deceit.
RUSK	(n.) A kind of light, soft bread made with yeast and eggs, often toasted or crisped in an oven; or, a kind of sweetened biscuit.
RUT	(n.) Sexual desire or oestrus of deer, cattle, and various other mammals.
RUTH	(n.) That which causes pity or compassion; misery; distress; a pitiful sight.
RUTILE	(n.) A mineral usually of a reddish brown color, and brilliant metallic adamantine luster, occurring in tetragonal crystals. In composition it is titanium dioxide.
RUTTY	(adj.) Ruttish; lustful.
RYE	(n.) A grain yielded by a hardy cereal grass.
SABRA	(n.) A native-born Israeli.
SABRAS	(n. plural) A native-born Israeli.
SAC	(n.) A cavity, bag, or receptacle, usually containing fluid.
SACHEM	(n.) A chief of a tribe of the American Indians; a sagamore.
SACKER	(n.) One who sacks; one who takes part in the storm and pillage of a town.
SADISM	(n.) The deriving of pleasure from cruelty or pain to others.
SADIST	(n.) One who derives pleasure through cruelty or pain to others.
SAGA	(n.) A Scandinavian legend, or heroic or mythic tradition, among the Norsemen and kindred people.
SAGE	(n.) A wise man; a man of gravity and wisdom; especially, a man venerable for years, and of sound judgment and prudence; a grave philosopher.
SAGGER	(n.) A pot or case of fire clay, in which fine stoneware is inclosed while baking in the kiln; a seggar.
SAGO	(n.) A powdered starch obtained from certain palms used as a food thickener.
SAGOS	(n. plural) A powdered starch obtained from certain palms used as a food thickener.
SAKER	(n.) A falcon (Falco sacer) native of Southern Europe and Asia, also  the peregrine falcon.
SAKERS	(n.) A falcon (Falco sacer) native of Southern Europe and Asia, also  the peregrine falcon.
SAL	(n.) An East Indian timber tree (Shorea robusta), much used for building purposes. It is of a light brown color, close-grained, heavy, and durable.
SALINA	(n.) A salt marsh, or salt pond, inclosed from the sea.
SALVED	(v.) To soothe with an ointment.
SALVOR	(n.) One who assists in saving a ship or goods at sea, without being under special obligation to do so.
SAMBA	(n.) A Brazilian ballroom dance.
SAMBAR	(n.) A southeast Asian deer.
SANS	(prep.) Without; deprived or destitute of. Rarely used as an English word.
SAPPER	(n.) One who saps; specifically, one who is employed in working at saps, building and repairing fortifications, and the like.
SARAN	(n.) A plastic resin used to make packaging films.
SARANS	(n. plural) A plastic resin used to make packaging films.
SAULT	(n.) A waterfall.
SAULTS	(n. plural) A waterall.
SAX	(n.) A saxophone.
SCALAR	(n.) In the quaternion analysis, a quantity that has magnitude, but not direction; -- distinguished from a vector, which has both magnitude and direction.
SCAT	(n.) Improvised jazz singing with nonsense syllables.
SCAUP	(n.) A bed or stratum of shellfish; scalp.
SCAUPS	(n. plural) A bed or stratum of shellfish; scalp.
SCHEMA	(n.) An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind.
SCHIST	(n.) Any crystalline rock having a foliated structure and hence admitting of ready division into slabs or slates.
SCOPS	(n. plural) An Old English poet.
SCORIA	(n.) The recrement of metals in fusion, or the slag rejected after the reduction of metallic ores; dross.
SCOTER	(n.) Any one of several species of northern sea ducks of the genus Oidemia.
SCRIM	(n.) A kind of light cotton or linen fabric, often woven in openwork patterns, -- used for curtains, etc,.
SCUD	(v.) To move swiftly; especially, to move as if driven forward by something.
SCUTUM	(n.) An oblong shield made of boards or wickerwork covered with leather, with sometimes an iron rim; -- carried chiefly by the heavy-armed infantry.
SEC	(adj.) Dry, as applied to wines, especially champagne.
SECANT	(n.) A line that cuts another; especially, a straight line cutting a curve in two or more points.
SEDER	(n.) The first night feast of Passover.
SEDERS	(n. plural) The first night feast of Passover.
SEIDEL	(n.) A beer mug.
SEN	(n.) A Japanese coin, worth about one half of a cent.
SENDED	(v. past tense) To rise upward.
SEPAL	(n.) A leaf or division of the calyx.
SEPIA	(n.) A rich brown pigment prepared from the ink of cuttlefish.
SEPIAS	(n. plural) A rich brown pigment prepared from the ink of cuttlefish.
SEPOY	(n.) A native of India employed as a soldier in the service of the British army.
SEPOYS	(n. plural) A native of India employed as a soldier in the service of the British army.
SEPT	(n.) A clan, tribe, or family, proceeding from a common progenitor; -- used especially of the ancient clans in Ireland.
SEPTA	(n. plural) A thin membrane that divides two cavities in an organism.
SEPTIC	(adj.) A substance that promotes putrefaction.
SEPTS	(n. plural) A clan, tribe, or family, proceeding from a common progenitor; -- used especially of the ancient clans in Ireland.
SEPTUM	(n.) A wall separating two cavities; a partition; as, the nasal septum.
SERA	(n.pl) Plural of serum.
SERF	(v. t.) A servant or slave employed in husbandry, and in some countries attached to the soil and transferred with it, as formerly in Russia.
SERGES	(v.) To sew with an overcast stitch to prevent raveling.
SERIF	(n.) A finishing line on the main strokes of a letter.
SERIFS	(n. plural) A finishing line on the main strokes of a letter.
SERINE	(n.) A white crystalline nitrogenous substance obtained by the action of dilute sulphuric acid on silk gelatin.
SERUM	(n.) The watery portion of certain animal fluids, as blood, milk, etc.
SERUMS	(n. plural) The watery portion of certain animal fluids, as blood, milk, etc.
SERVO	(n.) A self-regulating system or mechanism, as in servomotor.
SERVOS	(n. plural) A servomechanism.
SHAD	(n.) Any one of several species of food fishes of the Herring family.
SHADS	(n. plural) Any one of several species of food fishes of the Herring family.
SHAH	(n. plural) A title for the hereditary monarch of Iran.
SHAHS	(n. plural) A title for the hereditary monarch of Iran.
SHALOM	(n.) A traditional Jewish greeting.
SHAW	(n.) A thicket; a small wood or grove.
SHAY	(n.) A chaise.
SHEAVE	(n.) A wheel having a groove in the rim for a rope to work in, and set in a block, mast, or the like; the wheel of a pulley.
SHILL	(v.) To put under cover; to sheal.
SHILLS	(v.) To put under cover; to sheal.
SHIM	(n.) A kind of shallow plow used in tillage to break the ground, and clear it of weeds.
SHIMS	(n. plural) A kind of shallow plow used in tillage to break the ground, and clear it of weeds.
SHIV	(n.) A knife.
SHOD	(v.) To furnish or fit with shoes.
SHOJI	(n.) A door or partition consisting of a wooden frame covered in rice paper.
SHOJIS	(n.) A door or partition consisting of a wooden frame covered in rice paper.
SHOOK	(n.) A set of staves and headings sufficient in number for one hogshead, cask, barrel, or the like, trimmed, and bound together in compact form.
SHOOKS	(n. plural) A set of staves and headings sufficient in number for one hogshead, cask, barrel, or the like, trimmed, and bound together in compact form.
SHRIKE	(n.) Any one of numerous species of  birds of the family Laniidae, having a strong hooked toothed bill. Some species kill small prey and  impale them on thorns.
SHUNT	(v.) To go aside; to turn off.
SHUNTS	(v.) To go aside; to turn off.
SIAL	(n.) A mineral rich in silicon and aluminum forming the upper layer of the earth's crust beneath all continental landmasses.
SIALS	(n.) A rock consisting of silicon and aluminum forming the upper layer of the earth's crust under al continental land masses.
SIB	(n.) A blood relation.
SIBS	(n. plural) A blood relation.
SIBYL	(n.) A woman supposed to be endowed with a spirit of prophecy.
SIBYLS	(n. plural) A woman supposed to be endowed with a spirit of prophecy.
SIC	(a.) Such.
SIFTER	(n.) Any lamellirostral bird, as a duck or goose; -- so called because it sifts or strains its food from the water and mud by means of the lamellae of the beak.
SIGMA	(n.) The 18th letter of the Greek alphabet.
SILAGE	(n.) Fermented green forage fodder stored in a silo.
SILANE	(n.) Any of a group of silicon hydrides that are analogous to the paraffin hydrocarbons.
SILICA	(n.) Silicon dioxide. It constitutes ordinary quartz (also opal and tridymite), and is artifically prepared as a very fine, white, tasteless, inodorous powder.
SILKED	(v. past tense) Of corn, to develop silk.
SILL	(n.) The timber or stone at the foot of a door; the threshold.
SILT	(n.) Mud or fine earth deposited from running or standing water.
SIMA	(n.) The lower layer of the earth's outer crust that underlies the sial and is rich in silica, iron, and magnesium.
SIMAR	(n.) A woman's long dress or robe; also light covering; a scarf.
SINE	(n.) The length of a perpendicular drawn from one extremity of an arc of a circle to the diameter drawn through the other extremity.
SINTER	(n.) Dross, as of iron; the scale which files from iron when hammered; -- applied as a name to various minerals.
SIRE	(n.) A lord, master, or other person in authority.
SISAL	(n.) A Central American plant cultivated for its sword-shaped leaves that yield fibers used for rope.
SISALS	(n. plural) A Central American plant cultivated for its sword-shaped leaves that yield fibers used for rope.
SISKIN	(n.) A small green and yellow European finch (Spinus spinus, or Carduelis spinus).
SITUS	(n.) The method in which the parts of a plant are arranged; also, the position of the parts.
SKEET	(n.) A form of trapshooting using clay targets to simulate birds in flight.
SKIDDY	(adj.) Likely to skid.
SKULKS	(v.) To move about stealthily.
SKYED	(adj.) Surrounded by sky.
SKYING	(v.) To hit, hang or throw high in the air.
SKYWAY	(n.) An airplane route.
SLAT	(n.) A thin, narrow strip or bar of wood or metal; as, the slats of a window blind.
SLEWED	(adj.) Somewhat drunk.
SLOE	(n.) A small, bitter, wild European plum, the fruit of the blackthorn (Prunus spinosa); also, the tree itself.
SLOG	(v.) To plod slowly.
SLOVEN	(n.) A man or boy habitually negligent of neathess and order; -- the correlative term to slattern, or slut.
SLURRY	(n.)  A thin mixture of liquid and fine substances such as clay or plaster of Paris.
SMALLS	(n. plural) Small things.
SNELL	(n.) A short line of horsehair, gut, etc., by which a fishhook is attached to a longer line.
SNELLS	(n. plural) A short line of horsehair, gut, etc., by which a fishhook is attached to a longer line.
SNICKS	(v.) To make a small cut.
SNIDER	(adj.) More snide.
SNOOKS	(n. plural) A large perchlike marine food fish (Centropomus undecimalis) found on the coasts of tropical America.
SOD	(n.) That stratum of the surface of the soil which is filled with the roots of grass, or any portion of that surface; turf; sward.
SOFAR	(n.) A system for determining the position of survivors lost at sea.
SOFARS	(n. plural) A system for determining the position of survivors lost at sea.
SOFFIT	(n.) The under side of the subordinate parts and members of buildings, such as staircases, entablatures, archways, cornices, or the like.
SOIREE	(n.) An evening party.
SOL	(n.) The sun.
SOLING	(v.) To put soles upon.
SOLUTE	(adj.) Loose; free; liberal; as, a solute interpretation.
SOMA	(n.) The whole axial portion of an animal, including the head, neck, trunk, and tail.
SONANT	(adj.) Of or pertaining to sound; sounding.
SONAR	(n.) A system for detecting submerged objects using reflected sound.
SOP	(v.) To steep or dip in any liquid.
SORA	(n.) A North American rail (Porzana Carolina) common in the Eastern United States.
SORAS	(n. plural) A North American rail (Porzana Carolina) common in the Eastern United States.
SORB	(n.) The wild service tree (Pyrus torminalis) of Europe; also, the rowan tree.
SORBS	(n. plural) Any of several Old World trees of the genus Sorbus in the rose family, as the service tree or the rowan.
SOU	(n.) An old French copper coin.
SOUGHS	(v.) To make a soft murmuring sound.
SOULED	(adj.) Furnished with a soul; possessing soul and feeling.
SOW	(n.) The female of swine, or of the hog kind.
SOY	(n.) A Chinese and Japanese liquid sauce for fish, made by subjecting boiled beans to long fermentation and then long digestion in salt and water.
SPADER	(n.) One who, or that which, spades; specifically, a digging machine.
SPAED	(v. past tense) To foretell, to divine.
SPAR	(n.) A general term any round piece of timber used as a mast, yard, boom, or gaff.
SPARGE	(v.) To sprinkle; to moisten by sprinkling; as, to sparge paper.
SPATES	(n. plural) A sudden flood.
SPATS	(n. plural) A cloth or leather covering for the upper shoe and ankle.
SPAVIN	(n.) A disease of horses characterized by a bony swelling developed on the hock as the result of inflammation of the bones.
SPICA	(n.) A kind of bandage passing, by successive turns and crosses, from an extremity to the trunk.
SPICAS	(n. plural) A kind of bandage passing, by successive turns and crosses, from an extremity to the trunk.
SPIGOT	(n.) A pin or peg used to stop the vent in a cask; also, the plug of a faucet or cock.
SPITZ	(n.) A dog
SPLINE	(n.) A rectangular piece fitting grooves like key seats in a hub and a shaft, so that while the one may slide endwise on the other, both must revolve together.
SPRUE	(n.) Strictly, the hole through which melted metal is poured into the gate, and thence into the mold.
SPRUES	(n. plural) Strictly, the hole through which melted metal is poured into the gate, and thence into the mold.
SPUMED	(v. past tense) To froth.
SPUMES	(v.) To froth.
SQUILL	(n.) A European bulbous liliaceous plant (Urginea), of acrid, expectorant, diuretic, and emetic properties used in medicine.
STADIA	(n. plural) of Stadium
STAPH	(n.) Staphylcoccus bacteria and its infection.
STAPHS	(n. plural) Staphylcoccus bacteria and its infection.
STASIS	(n.) A slackening or arrest of the blood current, due not to a lessening of the heart's beat, but to some abnormal resistance of the capillary walls.
STATER	(n.) The principal gold coin of ancient Grece.
STATOR	(n.) The stationary part of a motor or other machine.
STEEVE	(v.) To project upward, or make an angle with the horizon or with the line of a vessel's keel; -- said of the bowsprit, etc.
STOLED	(adj.) Having or wearing a stole.
STOOGE	(n.) One who allows onself to be used for another's profit.
STOPED	(v. past tense) To extract ore from a mine by means of a stope.
STOVER	(n.) Fodder for cattle, especially straw or coarse hay.
STRAFE	(v.) To attack using a machine gun from a low-flying aircraft.
STROP	(n.) A strap; specifically a piece of leather, or strip of wood covered with a suitable material, for sharpening a razor.
STYLI	(n. plural) A sharp, pointed instrument used for writing or engraving.
STYLUS	(n.) An instrument for writing.
STYMIE	(v.) To thwart.
SULFA	(adj.) Of or containing sufanilamide.
SUMAC	(n.) Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus including the poison ivy and poison oak.
SUMACS	(n. plural) Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus including the poison ivy and poison oak.
SUP	(v.) To eat the evening meal; to take supper.
SUPERS	(n. plural) A thin fabric used to reinforce book bindings.
SURTAX	(n.) An additional or extra tax.
SVELTE	(adj.) Slender and graceful.
SWABBY	(n.) A sailor.
SWAG	(n.) A burglar's or thief's booty; boodle.
SWAGE	(n.) A tool, variously shaped or grooved on the end or face, used by blacksmiths and other workers in metals, for shaping their work.
SWAGED	(v. past tense) To bend or shape with a swage.
SWAGES	(n. plural) A tool used in bending or shaping cold metal.
SWAMI	(n.) A Hindu religious teacher.
SWAMIS	(n. plural) A Hindu religious teacher.
SWANKS	(v.) To swagger.
SWATCH	(n.) A piece, pattern, or sample, generally of cloth.
SWIG	(v.) To drink in long draughts; to gulp; as, to swig cider.
SYNOD	(n.) An ecclesiastic council or meeting to consult on church matters.
SYNODS	(n. plural) An ecclesiastic council or meeting to consult on church matters.
SYZYGY	(n.) The point of an orbit, as of the moon or a planet, at which it is in conjunction or opposition; -- commonly used in the plural.
TABUED	(adj.) Forbidden, prohibited. Also Tabooed.
TABUS	(n. plural) A customary or religious ban or prohibition.
TAD	(n.) A small amount.
TADS	(n. plural) A small boy.
TALC	(n.) A soft mineral of a soapy feel and a greenish, whitish, or grayish color, usually occurring in foliated masses.
TALCED	(v. past tense) To apply talc onto something.
TALER	(n.) Germanic unit of currency used between the 15th and 19th centuries.
TALERS	(n. plural) Germanic unit of currency used between the 15th and 19th centuries.
TALKIE	(n.) A movie with sound.
TALUS	(n.) A sloping heap of fragments of rock lying at the foot of a precipice.
TAM	(n.) A woolen cap of Scottish origin.
TAMALE	(n.) A Mexican dish of meat and peppers cooked in cornhusks.
TAMP	(v.) To drive in or down by frequent gentle strokes; as, to tamp earth so as to make a smooth place.
TAMS	(n. plural) A Scottish hat, similar to a beret.
TANGED	(v.) To furnish with a sharp prong.
TANNIN	(n.) Same as Tannic acid.
TAO	(n.) In Taoism, the basic, eternal principle of the universe that transcends reality and is the source of being, non-being, and change.
TAPA	(n.) A kind of cloth prepared by the Polynesians from the inner bark of the paper mulberry; -- sometimes called also kapa.
TAPAS	(n. plural) Any of various small savoury Spanish dishes served in combination as a meal or snack.
TAPIR	(n.) Any one of several species of large odd-toed ungulates with a long prehensile upper lip.
TAPIRS	(n. plural) Any one of several species of large odd-toed ungulates with a long prehensile upper lip.
TAPIS	(n.) Tapestry; formerly, the cover of a council table.
TAPPET	(n.) A lever or projection moved by some other piece, as a cam, or intended to tap or touch something else, with a view to produce change or regulate motion.
TARED	(adj.) Weighed; determined; reduced to equal or standard weight.
TARING	(n.) The common tern; -- called also tarret, and tarrock.
TARPON	(n.) Any of several fishes of the family Elopidae or Megalopidae, especially a large silvery game fish.
TARTED	(v. past tense) To dress in a garish, tawdry way.
TAS	(n.) A heap.
TASTER	(n.) That in which, or by which, anything is tasted, as, a dram cup, a cheese taster, or the like.
TAT	(n.) A pony.
TAU	(n.) The 19th letter of the Greek alphabet.
TEAL	(n.) Dark blueish/green.
TEARER	(n.) One who tears or rends anything; also, one who rages or raves with violence.
TEASEL	(n.) A plant of the genus Dipsacus, of which one species (D. fullonum) bears a large flower head covered with stiff, prickly, hooked bracts.
TEATED	(adj.) Having protuberances resembling the teat of an animal.
TED	(v.) To strew or spread.
TEDDED	(v. past tense) To spread material, such as grass, for drying.
TEDDER	(n.) A machine for stirring and spreading hay, to expedite its drying.
TEEM	(v.) To be full, or ready to bring forth; to be stocked to overflowing; to be prolific; to abound.
TEEMER	(n.) One who teems, or brings forth.
TEENER	(n.) A teenager.
TEETHE	(v.) To grow teeth.
TELEX	(n.) A communications system consisting of a network of teletypewriters.
TENNER	(n.) A ten dollar bill.
TENON	(n.) A projecting member left by cutting away the wood around it, and made to insert into a mortise, and in this way secure together the parts of a frame.
TENONS	(n. plural) A projecting member left by cutting away the wood around it, and made to insert into a mortise, and in this way secure together the parts of a frame.
TENSOR	(n.) A muscle that stretches a part, or renders it tense.
TENTER	(n.) One who takes care of, or tends, machines in a factory; a kind of assistant foreman.
TERCEL	(n.) A male hawk used in falconry.
TERMER	(n.) One who has an estate for a term of years or for life.
TERN	(n.) Any one of numerous species of long-winged aquatic birds, allied to the gulls, and belonging to Sterna and various allied genera.
TERSER	(adj.) More brief, to the point.
THEIST	(n.) One who believes in the existence of a God; especially, one who believes in a personal God; -- opposed to atheist.
THETA	(n.) The eighth letter of the Greek alphabet.
THORPE	(n.) A group of houses in the country; a small village; a hamlet; a dorp.
THRIPS	(n.) Any one of numerous small species of Thysanoptera, especially those which attack useful plants, as the grain thrips (Thrips cerealium).
THRUM	(n.) One of the ends of weaver's threads; hence, any soft, short threads or tufts resembling these.
THRUMS	(n. plural) One of the ends of weaver's threads; hence, any soft, short threads or tufts resembling these.
THYMUS	(n.) A immune gland consisting mianly of lymphatic tissue that produces lymphocytes.
TIBIA	(n.) The inner and usually the larger of the two bones of the leg or hind limb below the knee.
TIBIAS	(n. plural) The inner and usually the larger of the two bones of the leg or hind limb below the knee.
TIC	(n.) A local and habitual convulsive motion of certain muscles.
TICS	(n. plural) A habitual spasmodic muscular movement, usually of the face or extremities.
TILDE	(n.) The accentual mark placed over n or l, in Spanish words indicating a palatal nasal sound (y).
TILDES	(n. plural) The accentual mark placed over n or l, in Spanish words indicating a palatal nasal sound (y).
TILTER	(n.) One who tilts, or jousts; hence, one who fights.
TILTH	(n.) The state of being tilled, or prepared for a crop; culture.
TINE	(n.) A tooth, or spike, as of a fork; a prong, as of an antler.
TIPPER	(n.) A kind of ale brewed with brackish water obtained from a particular well; -- so called from the first brewer of it, one Thomas Tipper.
TIPPLE	(v. i.) To drink strong liquors habitually; especially, to drink frequently in small quantities, but without absolute drunkeness.
TITER	(n.) Concentrationor strength of a substance in solution determined by titration.
TITERS	(n. plural) Concentrationor strength of a substance in solution determined by titration.
TOBY	(n.) A drinking mug.
TOD	(n.) A bush; a thick shrub; a bushy clump.
TOFUS	(n.) One of the mineral concretions usually about the joints, occurring chiefly in gouty persons.
TOG	(n.) Clothes.
TOGGED	(adj.) Dressed, or clothed.
TOM	(n.) The male of various animals.
TOME	(n.) A book.
TONGED	(v. past tense) Held by tongs.
TONY	(n.) A simpleton.
TOOTER	(n.) One who toots; one who plays upon a pipe or horn.
TOPED	(v. past tense) To drink alcohol habitually and to excess.
TOPING	(v.) To drink liquor habitually and excessively.
TOR	(n.) A tower; a turret.
TORAH	(n.) The first five books of the Hebrew Scriptures.
TORAHS	(n. plural) The first five books of the Hebrew Scriptures.
TORI	(n. plural) A large convex molding, semicircular in cross section, located at the base of a classical column.
TOROID	(n.) A surface generated by a closed curve rotating about, but not intersecting or containing, an axis in its own plane.
TORQUE	(n.) A collar or neck chain, usually twisted, especially as worn by ancient barbaric nations, as the Gauls, Germans, and Britons.
TORR	(n.) A unit of pressure that is equal to approximately 1.316  10-3 atmospheres or 133.3 pascals.
TORS	(n. plural) A rocky peak or hill.
TORT	(n.) Mischief; injury; calamity.
TORUS	(n.) A large molding used in the bases of columns.  Its profile is semicircular.
TORY	(n.) A member of the conservative party, as opposed to the progressive party.
TOT	(n.) Anything small; -- frequently applied as a term of endearment to a little child.
TOTTED	(v. past tense) To total, add up.
TOUSLE	(v.) To put into disorder; to tumble; to touse.
TOUT	(v.) To ply or seek for customers.
TOUTED	(v. past tense) To solicit patronage; to obtain information on racehorses.
TOUTER	(n.) One who seeks customers, as for an inn, a public conveyance, shops, and the like: hence, an obtrusive candidate for office.
TOWHEE	(n.) A bird that has black, white and rust coloured plumage in the male.
TRAWL	(v.) To take fish, or other marine animals, with a long fishing line, having many short lines bearing hooks attached to it.
TRIAD	(n.) A union of three; three objects treated as one; a ternary; a trinity; as, a triad of deities.
TRIG	(v.) To fill; to stuff; to cram.
TRIGS	(v.) To make trim or neat.
TRIMER	(n.) A molecule formed by combining three identical smaller molecules.
TRIODE	(n.) A highly evacuated electron tube containing an anode, a cathode, and a control grid.
TROIKA	(n.) A Russian carriage drawn by a team of three horses abreast.
TROMPE	(n.) A trumpet; a trump.
TRUES	(v.) To balance, square, or level something.
TSAR	(n.) The title of the emperor of Russia. See Czar.
TUBER	(n.) A fleshy, rounded stem or root, usually containing starchy matter, as the potato or arrowroot; a thickened root-stock.
TUBULE	(n.) A small pipe or fistular body; a little tube.
TUFF	(n.) A rock composed of compacted volcanic ash varying in size from fine sand to coarse gravel.
TUFT	(n.) A cluster; a clump; as, a tuft of plants.
TULLE	(n.) A kind of silk lace or light netting, used for veils, etc.
TULLES	(n. plural) A kind of silk lace or light netting, used for veils, etc.
TUN	(n.) A large cask.
TUNDRA	(n.) A rolling, marshy, mossy plain of Northern Siberia.
TUPELO	(n.) A North American tree (Nyssa multiflora) of the Dogwood family, having brilliant, glossy foliage and acid red berries.
TURGID	(adj.) Distended beyond the natural state by some internal agent or expansive force; swelled; swollen; bloated; inflated; tumid.
TUSKED	(adj.) Furnished with tusks.
TUSKER	(n.) An elephant having large tusks.
TUTU	(n.) A skirt made of sheer material worn by ballerinas.
TUTUS	(n. plural) A skirt made of sheer material worn by ballerinas.
TWA	(n.) Two.
TWEEZE	(n.) A surgeon's case of instruments.
TWIER	(n.) A nozzle or fixture through which the blast is delivered to the interior of a blast furnace or a forge.
TWINER	(n.) Any plant which twines about a support.
TYCOON	(n.) The title by which the shogun, or former commander in chief of the Japanese army, was known to foreigners.
TYPIC	(adj.) Typical.
TYPIFY	(v.) To represent by an image, form, model, or resemblance.
UGH	(interj.) An exclamation expressive of disgust, horror, or recoil. Its utterance is usually accompanied by a shudder.
ULAN	(n.) Horse cavalry that formed part of the Polish, German, Austrian, and Russian armies.
ULANS	(n. plural) Horse cavalry that formed part of the Polish, German, Austrian, and Russian armies.
UMBER	(n.) A brown or reddish pigment used in painting, obtained from certain natural clays variously colored by the oxides of iron and manganese.
UMBERS	(n. plural) A brown or reddish pigment used in painting, obtained from certain natural clays variously colored by the oxides of iron and manganese.
UMBRA	(n.) A shadow.
UMBRAS	(n. plural) Shadow.
UMLAUT	(n.) The euphonic modification of a root vowel sound by the influence of a, u, or especially i, in the syllable which formerly followed.
UNARY	(adj.) Consisting of or involving a single element or component.
UPEND	(v.) To end up; to set on end, as a cask.
UPRISE	(n.) The act of rising; appearance above the horizon; rising.
UPWIND	(v.) To wind up.
URACIL	(n.) A pyrimidine base, C4H4N2O2, that is an essential constituent of RNA.
URANYL	(n.) The radical UO2, conveniently regarded as a residue of many uranium compounds.
UREA	(a.) A very soluble crystalline body which is the chief constituent of the urine in mammals and some other animals.
UREMIA	(n.) Blood poisoning resulting from the retention of waste products usually excreted as urine.
VACUA	(n. plural ) of Vacuum
VAIL	(n.) Avails; profit; return; proceeds.
VAILED	(v. past tense) To descend, to lower.
VALINE	(n.) An essential amino acid, C5H11NO2.
VAMP	(n.) The part of a boot or shoe above the sole and welt, and in front of the ankle seam; an upper.
VAMPED	(v. past tense) To behave seductively in the manner of a vamp.
VAMPER	(n.) One who vamps; one who pieces an old thing with something new; a cobbler.
VANE	(n.) A contrivance attached to some elevated object for the purpose of showing which way the wind blows; a weathercock.
VANNED	(v. past tense) To transport by van.
VANNER	(n.) A machine for concentrating ore.
VARIER	(n.) A wanderer; one who strays in search of variety.
VAT	(n.) A large vessel, cistern, or tub.
VAUNTS	(v.) To speak boastfully.
VECTOR	(n.) A directed quantity, as a straight line, a force, or a velocity.
VEE	(n.) The letter v.
VEERY	(n.) An American thrush (Turdus fuscescens) common in the Northern United States and Canada.
VELAR	(adj.) Of or pertaining to a velum; esp. the soft palate.
VELARS	(n. plural) A sound articulated with the back of the tongue on the soft palate, as g or k.
VELDT	(n.) An open grazing area of southern Africa.
VELDTS	(n. plural) An open grazing area of southern Africa.
VERIER	(adj.) Complete, absolute.
VERSER	(n.) A versifier.
VERTEX	(n.) A turning point; the principal or highest point; top; summit; crown; apex.
VETOER	(n.) One who exercises the power to refuse approval.
VETTED	(v. past tense) To subject to thorough examination, to jury.
VEX	(v. t.) To agitate; to disquiet.
VIA	(prep.) By the way of.
VIE	(v.) To strive for superiority; to contend.
VIS	(n.) Force; power.
VISEED	(v. past tense) To examine and indorse, as a passport; to visa.
VIVACE	(adj. & adv.) Brisk; vivacious; with spirit; -- a direction to perform a passage in a brisk and lively manner.
VIVIFY	(v.) To endue with life; to make to be living; to quicken; to animate.
VOIDER	(n.) One who, or that which, voids, empties, vacates, or annuls.
VOLT	(n.) A circular tread; a gait by which a horse going sideways round a center makes two concentric tracks.
VOLTA	(n.) A turning; a time; -- chiefly used in phrases signifying that the part is to be repeated.
WACKE	(n.) Alt. of Wacky
WADI	(n.) A valley, gully, or streambed in northern Africa and southwest Asia that remains dry except during the rainy season.
WADIS	(n. plural) A valley, gully, or streambed in northern Africa and southwest Asia that remains dry except during the rainy season.
WAIVER	(n.) The act of waiving, or not insisting on, some right, claim, or privilege.
WALE	(n.) A ridge or streak rising above the surface, as of cloth; hence, the texture of cloth.
WALER	(n.) A light saddle horse of mixed breed developed in Australia .
WALERS	(n. plural) A light saddle horse of mixed breed developed in Australia .
WAN	(a.) Having a pale or sickly hue.
WANGLE	(v.) To achieve through contrivance.
WANNED	(adj.) Made wan, or pale.
WAPITI	(n.) The American elk (Cervus Canadensis). It is closely related to the European red deer, which it somewhat exceeds in size.
WARPER	(n.) One who, or that which, warps or twists out of shape.
WASHY	(adj.) Watery; damp; soft.
WATT	(n.) A unit of power or activity equal to 107 C.G.S. units of power, or to work done at the rate of one joule a second.  An English horse power is approximately equal to 746 watts.
WEAL	(adv.) A sound, healthy, or prosperous state of a person or thing; prosperity; happiness; welfare.
WEALD	(n.) A wood or forest; a wooded land or region; also, an open country; -- often used in place names.
WEAN	(v.) To cause to cease to depend on the mother for nourishment.
WEBER	(n.) The standard unit of electrical quantity, and also of current.
WEBERS	(n. plural) The standard unit of electrical quantity, and also of current.
WELTED	(v. past tense) To reinforce with strips of material.
WESTER	(n.) A strong westerly wind.
WHELK	(n.) Any one numerous species of large marine gastropods belonging to Buccinum and allied genera, and much used as food in Europe.
WHELMS	(v.) To cover with water; submerge.
WHET	(v.) To rub or on with some substance, as a piece of stone, for the purpose of sharpening; to sharpen by attrition; as, to whet a knife.
WHIG	(n.) Acidulated whey, sometimes mixed with buttermilk and sweet herbs, used as a cooling beverage.
WHIT	(n.) The smallest part or particle imaginable; a bit; a jot; an iota.
WHOP	(v.) To throw one's self quickly, or by an abrupt motion; to turn suddenly.
WIDGET	(n.) An unnamed or hypothetical manufactured article.
WILE	(n.) A trick or stratagem practiced for insnaring or deception; a sly, insidious; artifice; a beguilement; an allurement.
WINGER	(n.) One of the casks stowed in the wings of a vessel's hold, being smaller than such as are stowed more amidships.
WINKER	(n.) A horse's blinder; a blinker.
WINKLE	(n.) Any one of various marine spiral gastropods, esp., in the United States, either of two species of Fulgar (F. canaliculata, and F. carica).
WINNOW	(v.) To separate chaff from grain.
WINO	(n.) A wine-drinking alcoholic.
WINOS	(n. plural) A wine-drinking alcoholic.
WINY	(adj.) Having the taste or qualities of wine; vinous; as, grapes of a winy taste.
WISP	(n.) A small bundle, as of straw or other like substance.
WITHE	(n.) A flexible, slender twig or branch used as a band; a willow or osier twig; a withy.
WITHED	(v. past tense) To bind with willow twigs.
WITHES	(n. plural) A flexible, slender twig or branch used as a band; a willow or osier twig; a withy.
WITHY	(n.) The osier willow (Salix viminalis).
WITING	(n.) Knowledge.
WIVER	(n.) A mythical two-legged creature with the head of a dragon and wings.
WOE	(n.) Grief; sorrow; misery; heavy calamity.
WOK	(n.) A metal pan having a rounded bottom.
WOKS	(n. plural) A metal pan with a rounded bottom used in Asian cooking.
WOLD	(n.) A wood; a forest.
WOLDS	(n. plural) A wood; a forest.
WOO	(v. t.) To solicit in love; to court.
WRESTS	(v.) To obtain by pulling or violent force.
WRIED	(v.past tense) To distort or twist.
WRY	(adj.) Dryly humorous.
WYNN	(n.) A kind of timber truck, or carriage.
WYNNS	(n. plural) An Old English rune having the sound (w).
XENON	(n.) A colorless, odorless, inert gaseous element.
XYLEM	(n.) That portion of a fibrovascular bundle which has developed, or will develop, into wood cells.
XYLEMS	(n. plural) That portion of a fibrovascular bundle which has developed, or will develop, into wood cells.
XYLENE	(n.) Any of a group of metameric hydrocarbons of the aromatic series, found in coal and wood tar. They are colorless, oily, inflammable liquids.
YAK	(n.) A bovine mammal (Poephagus grunnies) native of the high plains of Central Asia.
YAKS	(n. plural) A bovine mammal (Poephagus grunnies) native of the high plains of Central Asia.
YAM	(n.) The starchy root of a tropical vine.
YAMMER	(v.) To complain loudly or peevishly.
YANG	(n.) The cry of the wild goose; a honk.
YAW	(n.) A movement of a vessel by which she temporarily alters her course; a deviation from a straight course in steering.
YAWL	(n.) A small ship's boat, usually rowed by four or six oars.
YAWS	(n.) A contagious disease characterized by yellowish or reddish tumors, which often resemble currants, strawberries, or raspberries.
YEN	(n.) The unit of value and account in Japan.
YENNED	(v. past tense) Tp have a strong desire; yearn.
YENS	(n. plural) Unit of Japanese currency.
YIN	(n.) The passive cosmic principle in Chinese philosophy.
YIP	(n.) A sharp, high-pitched bark.
YOKE	(n.) A bar or frame of wood by which two oxen are joined at the heads or necks for working together.
YON	(a.) At a distance, but within view; yonder.
YOND	(adj.) Furious; mad; angry; fierce.
YORE	(adv.) In time long past; in old time; long since.
YUCCA	(n.) A genus of liliaceous plants having long, pointed, and rigid leaves at the top of a woody stem, and bearing a large panicle of showy white blossoms.
YUCCAS	(n. plural) A genus of liliaceous plants having long, pointed, and rigid leaves at the top of a woody stem, and bearing a large panicle of showy white blossoms.
ZAG	(n.) One of a series of sharp turns or reversals.
ZAIRE	(n.) The unit of currency of Zaire.
ZAIRES	(n. plural) The unit of currency of Zaire.
ZAZEN	(n.) Meditation as practiced in Zen Buddhism.
ZEAL	(n.) Passionate ardor in the pursuit of anything; eagerness in fav
ZEROTH	(n.) The ordinal number matching the number 0 in a series.
ZESTER	(n.) A kitchen implement used to remove the peels of citrus fruits.
ZIG	(n.) A sharp turn.
ZIRCON	(n.) A mineral occurring in tetragonal crystals, usually of a brown or gray color. It consists of silica and zirconia.
ZLOTY	(n.) A Polish unit of currency.
ZLOTYS	(n. plural) A Polish unit of currency.
