9 Letter 9 Letter 5 Letter Spelltower Words Starting With F

6,695 words found — all lengths, starting with F

Use this list of 9 Letter 9 Letter 5 Letter Spelltower Words Starting With F to find your next winning play. Click any word to unscramble it and see all possible words from those letters.
Starting With F Ending With F Containing F
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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

3-Letter Words (48)

FAD (7) [noun] A phenomenon that becomes popular for a very short time. FAG (7) [noun] In textile inspections, a rough or coarse defect in the woven fabric. | [noun] (dated in US and Canada) A cigarette. | [noun] The worst part or end of a thing. | [noun] A chore: an arduous and tiresome task. | [noun] (usually offensive, sometimes affectionate) A homosexual man, especially (usually derogatory) an especially effeminate or unusual one. FAN (6) [noun] A hand-held device consisting of concertinaed material, or slats of material, gathered together at one end, that may be opened out into the shape of a sector of a circle and waved back and forth in order to move air towards oneself and cool oneself. | [noun] An electrical or mechanical device for moving air, used for cooling people, machinery, etc. | [noun] The action of fanning; agitation of the air. | [noun] A person who is fond of something or someone, especially an admirer of a performer or aficionado of a sport. FAR (6) [adjective] Distant; remote in space. | [adjective] Remote in time. | [adjective] Long. | [noun] Spelt (a type of wheat, Triticum spelta), especially in the context of Roman use of it. | [noun] A litter of piglets; a farrow. FAS (6) [noun] A syllable used in solfège to represent the fourth note of a major scale. FAT (6) [noun] A specialized animal tissue with a high oil content, used for long-term storage of energy. | [noun] A refined substance chemically resembling the oils in animal fat. | [noun] That part of an organization deemed wasteful. | [noun] A large tub or vessel for water, wine, or other liquids; a cistern. FAX (13) [noun] The hair of the head. | [noun] A fax machine or a document received and printed by one. | [verb] To send a document via a fax machine. FAY (9) [verb] To fit. | [verb] To join or unite closely or tightly. | [verb] To lie close together. | [verb] To cleanse; clean out. | [noun] A fairy. | [noun] A white person. FED (7) [noun] A federal government officer or official, especially FBI, CIA, NSA, ATF, and DEA agents. | [noun] A police officer. | [noun] A “federation” in which powerlifters organize to compete. | [verb] (ditransitive) To give (someone or something) food to eat. FEE (6) [noun] (feudal law) A right to the use of a superior's land, as a stipend for services to be performed; also, the land so held; a fief. | [noun] An inheritable estate in land held of a feudal lord on condition of the performing of certain services. | [noun] An estate of inheritance in land, either absolute and without limitation to any particular class of heirs (fee simple) or limited to a particular class of heirs (fee tail). FEH (9) [interjection] An expression of disgust or contempt. FEM (8) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A feminine or effeminate person. | [adjective] Feminine, effeminate. | [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. FEN (6) [noun] A type of wetland fed by ground water and runoff, containing peat below the waterline, characteristically alkaline. | [noun] Unit of currency in China, one-hundredth of a yuan | [noun] Fans; a plural form used by enthusiasts of science fiction, fantasy, and anime, partly from whimsy and partly to distinguish themselves from fans of sport, etc. | [noun] A kind of mildew that grows on hops. FER (6) [noun] A metallic element with atomic number 26, commonly known as iron. | [noun] In Scottish dialect, a companion or mate. FET (6) [verb] To fetch | [noun] A piece | [noun] Something which is believed to possess, contain, or cause spiritual or magical powers; an amulet or a talisman. FEU (6) [noun] Land held in feudal tenure. | [verb] To bring (land) under the system of feudal tenure. FEW (9) [pronoun] Few people, few things. FEY (9) [adjective] About to die; doomed; on the verge of sudden or violent death. | [adjective] Dying; dead. | [adjective] Possessing second sight, clairvoyance, or clairaudience. | [noun] Fairy folk collectively. FEZ (15) [noun] A felt hat in the shape of a truncated cone, having a flat top with a tassel attached. FIB (8) [noun] A lie, especially one that is more or less inconsequential. | [noun] A liar. | [verb] To lie, especially more or less inconsequentially. | [noun] The fibula. | [verb] (thieves cant) To punch, especially a series of punches in rapid succession; to beat; to hit; to strike. | [noun] A kind of experimental poem where the number of syllables in each line is the next succeeding Fibonacci number. FID (7) [noun] A pointed tool without any sharp edges, used in weaving or knotwork to tighten and form up weaves or complex knots; used in sailing ships to open the strands of a rope before splicing. Compare marlinespike. | [noun] A square bar of wood or iron, with a shoulder at one end, to support the weight of the topmast (on a ship). | [noun] A plug of oakum for the vent of a gun. FIE (6) [interjection] Often followed by on or upon: used to express distaste, disgust, or outrage. FIG (7) [noun] A fruit-bearing tree or shrub of the genus Ficus that is native mainly to the tropics. | [noun] The fruit of the fig tree, pear-shaped and containing many small seeds. | [noun] A small piece of tobacco. | [verb] To move suddenly or quickly; rove about. | [noun] A person's figure; dress or appearance. | [verb] To insert a ginger root into the anus, vagina or urethra of: to perform figging upon. FIL (6) [noun] A Nordic dairy product, similar to yogurt, but using different bacteria which give a different taste and texture. FIN (6) [noun] One of the appendages of a fish, used to propel itself and to manoeuvre/maneuver. | [noun] A similar appendage of a cetacean or other marine animal. | [noun] A thin, rigid component of an aircraft, extending from the fuselage and used to stabilise and steer the aircraft. | [noun] (formerly Australia) a five-pound (£5) note; the sum of five pounds. FIR (6) [noun] A conifer of the genus Abies. | [noun] Any pinaceous conifer of related genera, especially a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga) or a Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris). | [noun] Wood of such trees. FIT (6) [noun] The degree to which something fits. | [noun] Conformity of elements one to another. | [noun] The part of an object upon which anything fits tightly. | [noun] A section of a poem or ballad. | [noun] A seizure or convulsion. FIX (13) [noun] A repair or corrective action. | [noun] A difficult situation; a quandary or dilemma; a predicament. | [noun] A single dose of an addictive drug administered to a drug user. FIZ (15) [noun] A hissing or fizzing sound. | [verb] To make a hissing or bubbling sound. FLU (6) [noun] Influenza. | [noun] Stomach flu. FLY (9) [noun] Any insect of the order Diptera; characterized by having two wings (except for some wingless species), also called true flies. | [noun] (non-technical) Especially, any of the insects of the family Muscidae, such as the common housefly (other families of Diptera include mosquitoes and midges). | [noun] Any similar, but unrelated insect such as dragonfly or butterfly. | [noun] The action of flying; flight. | [adjective] Quick-witted, alert, mentally sharp. | [noun] (rural) A wing. FOB (8) [noun] A little pocket near the waistline of a pair of trousers or in a waistcoat or vest to hold a pocketwatch; a watch pocket. | [noun] A short chain or ribbon to connect such a pocket to the watch. | [noun] A small ornament attached to such a chain. (See Usage Notes below) | [verb] To cheat, to deceive, to trick, to take in, to impose upon someone. FOE (6) [noun] An enemy. | [adjective] Hostile. | [noun] A unit of energy equal to 1044 joules. FOG (7) [noun] A thick cloud that forms near the ground; the obscurity of such a cloud. | [noun] A mist or film clouding a surface. | [noun] A state of mind characterized by lethargy and confusion. | [noun] A new growth of grass appearing on a field that has been mowed or grazed. FOH (9) FON (6) [noun] A fool or idiot. | [noun] A chieftain or king of a region of Cameroon. FOP (8) [noun] A vain man; a dandy. FOR (6) [preposition] Indicating the person or thing that something is intended to benefit or be given to. | [preposition] Indicating the reason or cause of something. | [preposition] Indicating a period of time during which something occurs or is intended to occur. FOU (6) [adjective] Drunk. FOX (13) [noun] A red fox, small carnivore (Vulpes vulpes), related to dogs and wolves, with red or silver fur and a bushy tail. | [noun] Any of numerous species of small wild canids resembling the red fox. In the taxonomy they form the tribe Vulpini within the family Canidae, consisting of nine genera (see the Wikipedia article on the fox). | [noun] The fur of a fox. FOY (9) [noun] A farewell feast or gift given by a host to departing guests. FRO (6) [adverb] From; away; back or backward. | [noun] A hairstyle characterized by a tightly curled locks and a rounded shape. FRY (9) [noun] (usually in the plural, fries) A fried strip of potato. | [noun] A meal of fried sausages, bacon, eggs, etc. | [noun] A state of excitement. | [noun] Offspring; progeny; children; brood. | [noun] A kind of sieve. FUB (8) FUD (7) FUG (7) [noun] A heavy, musty, and unpleasant atmosphere, usually in a poorly-ventilated area. | [noun] A state of lethargy and confusion; daze. | [noun] A state of chaos or confusion. | [noun] An act of sexual intercourse. FUN (6) [noun] Amusement, enjoyment or pleasure | [noun] Playful, often noisy, activity. | [verb] To tease, kid, poke fun at, make fun of. FUR (6) [noun] The hairy coat of various mammal species, especially when fine, soft and thick. | [noun] The hairy skin of an animal processed into clothing for humans. | [noun] A pelt used to make, trim or line clothing apparel. | [preposition] Towards; in the direction of.

4-Letter Words (191)

FACE (9) [noun] The front part of the head of a human or other animal, featuring the eyes, nose and mouth, and the surrounding area. | [noun] One's facial expression. | [noun] (in expressions such as 'make a face') A distorted facial expression; an expression of displeasure, insult, etc. FACT (9) [noun] Something actual as opposed to invented. | [noun] Something which is real. | [noun] Something concrete used as a basis for further interpretation. FADE (8) [noun] A golf shot that (for the right-handed player) curves intentionally to the right. See slice, hook, draw. | [noun] A haircut where the hair is short or shaved on the sides of the head and longer on top. See also high-top fade and low fade. | [noun] A fight. | [adjective] Strong; bold; doughty. FADO (8) [noun] A Portuguese folk song, usually featuring a single vocalist, Portuguese guitar and sometimes classical guitar. Lyrical themes are often melancholic in nature; the structure of the song is of greater importance. FADS (8) [noun] A phenomenon that becomes popular for a very short time. FAGS (8) [noun] In textile inspections, a rough or coarse defect in the woven fabric. | [noun] (dated in US and Canada) A cigarette. | [noun] The worst part or end of a thing. FAIL (7) [noun] Poor quality; substandard workmanship. | [noun] A failure (condition of being unsuccessful) | [noun] A failure (something incapable of success) | [noun] A piece of turf cut from grassland. FAIN (7) [adjective] Well-pleased, glad. | [adjective] Satisfied, contented. | [adjective] Eager, willing or inclined to. | [adverb] With joy; gladly. | [verb] To be delighted or glad; to rejoice. FAIR (7) [noun] Something which is fair (in various senses of the adjective). | [noun] A woman, a member of the ‘fair sex’; also as a collective singular, women. | [noun] Fairness, beauty. | [noun] A community gathering to celebrate and exhibit local achievements. FAKE (11) [noun] Something which is not genuine, or is presented fraudulently. | [noun] A trick; a swindle. | [noun] A move meant to deceive an opposing player, used for gaining advantage for example when dribbling an opponent. | [noun] One of the circles or windings of a cable or hawser, as it lies in a coil; a single turn or coil. FALL (7) [noun] The act of moving to a lower position under the effect of gravity. | [noun] A reduction in quantity, pitch, etc. | [noun] The time of the year when the leaves typically fall from the trees; autumn; the season of the year between the autumnal equinox and the winter solstice. | [noun] The chasing of a hunted whale. FALX (14) [noun] A sickle-shaped anatomical structure, especially the fold of dura mater in the brain. | [noun] A sickle-shaped or curved tool or weapon. FAME (9) [noun] What is said or reported; gossip, rumour. | [noun] One's reputation. | [noun] The state of being famous or well-known and spoken of. FANE (7) [noun] A weathercock, a weather vane. | [noun] A banner, especially a military banner. | [noun] A temple or sacred place. FANG (8) [noun] A long, pointed canine tooth used for biting and tearing flesh | [noun] (in snakes) a long pointed tooth for injecting venom | [verb] To strike or attack with the fangs. | [verb] To catch, capture; seize; grip; clutch; lay hold of. | [noun] A grasping; capture; the act or power of seizing; hold. FANO (7) FANS (7) [noun] A hand-held device consisting of concertinaed material, or slats of material, gathered together at one end, that may be opened out into the shape of a sector of a circle and waved back and forth in order to move air towards oneself and cool oneself. | [noun] An electrical or mechanical device for moving air, used for cooling people, machinery, etc. | [noun] The action of fanning; agitation of the air. FARD (8) [noun] Colour or paint, especially white paint, used on the face; makeup, war-paint. | [verb] To paint, as the cheeks or face. | [verb] To embellish or gloss over. | [noun] Force of movement, impetus, rush; hence, a violent onset. | [noun] A commandment from Allah that a Muslim has to fulfil; a religious duty or obligation. FARE (7) [noun] A going; journey; travel; voyage; course; passage. | [noun] Money paid for a transport ticket. | [noun] A paying passenger, especially in a taxi. | [verb] To go, travel. FARL (7) [noun] A quarter of a thin oatmeal or flour cake. | [noun] Any such cake or bread, now particularly used for Irish specialities as soda farls and potato farls. | [verb] To lower, roll up and secure (something, such as a sail or flag) FARM (9) [noun] A place where agricultural and similar activities take place, especially the growing of crops or the raising of livestock. | [noun] A tract of land held on lease for the purpose of cultivation. | [noun] (usually in combination) A location used for an industrial purpose, having many similar structures | [verb] To cleanse; clean out; put in order; empty; empty out FARO (7) [noun] A game of chance played by betting on the order in which certain cards will appear when taken singly from the top of the pack. FART (7) [noun] An emission of digestive gases from the anus; a flatus. | [noun] (impolite) An irritating person; a fool. | [noun] (impolite, potentially offensive) (usually as "old fart") An elderly person; especially one perceived to hold old-fashioned views. FASH (10) [noun] A worry; trouble; bother. | [verb] To worry; to bother, annoy. | [verb] To trouble oneself; to take pains. | [noun] A fascist, a member of the far-right. FAST (7) [noun] A train that calls at only some stations it passes between its origin and destination, typically just the principal stations | [adjective] Firmly or securely fixed in place; stable. | [adjective] Firm against attack; fortified by nature or art; impregnable; strong. | [noun] The act or practice of abstaining from food or of eating very little food. FATE (7) [noun] The presumed cause, force, principle, or divine will that predetermines events. | [noun] The effect, consequence, outcome, or inevitable events predetermined by this cause. | [noun] An event or a situation which is inevitable in the fullness of time. FATS (7) [noun] A specialized animal tissue with a high oil content, used for long-term storage of energy. | [noun] A refined substance chemically resembling the oils in animal fat. | [noun] That part of an organization deemed wasteful. FAUN (7) [noun] A woodland creature with pointed ears, legs, and short horns of a goat and a fondness for unrestrained revelry. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus Faunis. FAUX (14) [adjective] Fake or artificial FAVA (10) [noun] A fava bean; a bean (seed or seed pod) of the plant Vicia faba or the plant itself. FAVE (10) [noun] Favorite (US) or favourite (UK) | [verb] Favorite (US) or favourite (UK) | [adjective] Favorite (US) or favourite (UK). FAWN (10) [noun] A young deer. | [noun] A pale brown colour tinted with yellow, like that of a fawn. | [noun] The young of an animal; a whelp. | [noun] A servile cringe or bow. FAYS (10) [noun] A fairy. | [noun] A white person. FAZE (16) [verb] To frighten or cause hesitation; to daunt, put off (usually used in the negative); to disconcert, to perturb. FEAL (7) [adjective] Faithful or loyal; faithful to one's lord or obligations (archaic). FEAR (7) [noun] A strong, uncontrollable, unpleasant emotion or feeling caused by actual or perceived danger or threat. | [noun] A phobia, a sense of fear induced by something or someone. | [noun] Terrified veneration or reverence, particularly towards God, gods, or sovereigns. | [adjective] Able; capable; stout; strong; sound. FEAT (7) [noun] A relatively rare or difficult accomplishment. | [verb] To form; to fashion. | [adjective] Dexterous in movements or service; skilful; neat; pretty. | [verb] To feature. I FECK (13) [noun] Effect, value; vigor. | [noun] The greater or larger part. | [verb] To throw. | [verb] Fuck. FEDS (8) [noun] A federal government officer or official, especially FBI, CIA, NSA, ATF, and DEA agents. | [noun] A police officer. | [noun] A “federation” in which powerlifters organize to compete. FEED (8) [noun] Food given to (especially herbivorous) animals. | [noun] Something supplied continuously. | [noun] The part of a machine that supplies the material to be operated upon. | [verb] To reward for services performed, or to be performed; to recompense; to hire or keep in hire; hence, to bribe. FEEL (7) [noun] A quality of an object experienced by touch. | [noun] A vague mental impression. | [noun] An act of fondling. | [adjective] Much; many. FEES (7) [noun] (feudal law) A right to the use of a superior's land, as a stipend for services to be performed; also, the land so held; a fief. | [noun] An inheritable estate in land held of a feudal lord on condition of the performing of certain services. | [noun] An estate of inheritance in land, either absolute and without limitation to any particular class of heirs (fee simple) or limited to a particular class of heirs (fee tail). FEET (7) [noun] A biological structure found in many animals that is used for locomotion and that is frequently a separate organ at the terminal part of the leg. | [noun] Specifically, a human foot, which is found below the ankle and is used for standing and walking. | [noun] (often used attributively) Travel by walking. | [noun] Fact; performance; feat. FEHS (10) [noun] Plural of feh, an exclamation expressing disgust or contempt. FELL (7) [noun] A cutting-down of timber. | [noun] The stitching down of a fold of cloth; specifically, the portion of a kilt, from the waist to the seat, where the pleats are stitched down. | [noun] The end of a web, formed by the last thread of the weft. | [noun] An animal skin, hide, pelt. | [noun] (obsolete outside Britain) A rocky ridge or chain of mountains. | [adjective] Of a strong and cruel nature; eager and unsparing; grim; fierce; ruthless; savage. | [noun] Anger; gall; melancholy. | [noun] The finer portions of ore, which go through the meshes when the ore is sorted by sifting. | [verb] (heading) To be moved downwards. FELT (7) [noun] A cloth or stuff made of matted fibres of wool, or wool and fur, fulled or wrought into a compact substance by rolling and pressure, with lees or size, without spinning or weaving. | [noun] A hat made of felt. | [noun] A skin or hide; a fell; a pelt. | [verb] (heading) To use or experience the sense of touch. FEME (9) [noun] A woman or wife, especially a wife in a feudal relationship. | [noun] In law, a woman, particularly one who is married or under the protection of a man. FEMS (9) [noun] (sometimes derogatory) A feminine or effeminate person. | [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. | [noun] A lesbian or other queer woman whose appearance, identity etc. is seen as feminine as opposed to butch. FEND (8) [noun] Self-support; taking care of one's own well-being. | [verb] To take care of oneself; to take responsibility for one's own well-being. | [verb] (except as "fend for oneself") To defend, to take care of (typically construed with for); to block or push away (typically construed with off). | [noun] An enemy; fiend; the Devil. FENS (7) [noun] A type of wetland fed by ground water and runoff, containing peat below the waterline, characteristically alkaline. | [noun] Unit of currency in China, one-hundredth of a yuan FEOD (8) [noun] A freehold estate in land; a feudal holding or fee. FERE (7) [noun] A companion or mate; a fellow or peer. | [noun] A wife or woman. FERN (7) [noun] Any of a group of some twenty thousand species of vascular plants classified in the division Pteridophyta that lack seeds and reproduce by shedding spores to initiate an alternation of generations. FESS (7) [verb] To confess; to admit. | [noun] A horizontal band across the middle of the shield. | [adjective] (British dialect) Proud; conceited. FETA (7) [noun] A variety of curd cheese made from sheep’s or goat’s milk and originating from Greece. FETE (7) [noun] A festival open to the public, the proceeds from which are often given to charity. | [noun] A feast, celebration or carnival. | [verb] (usually in the passive) To celebrate (a person). FETS (7) [verb] To fetch FEUD (8) [noun] A state of long-standing mutual hostility. | [noun] A staged rivalry between wrestlers. | [noun] A combination of kindred to avenge injuries or affronts, done or offered to any of their blood, on the offender and all his race. | [noun] An estate granted to a vassal by a feudal lord in exchange for service. FEUS (7) [noun] Land held in feudal tenure. | [verb] To bring (land) under the system of feudal tenure. FIAR (7) [noun] In Scottish law, the person who has the reversion of property; one who purchases the reversion of a feu. | [noun] The price paid for grain to be delivered at a future date. FIAT (7) [noun] An arbitrary or authoritative command or order to do something; an effectual decree. | [noun] Authorization, permission or (official) sanction. | [noun] (English law) A warrant of a judge for certain processes. FIBS (9) [noun] A lie, especially one that is more or less inconsequential. | [noun] A liar. | [noun] The fibula. FICE (9) [noun] A small dog, especially a mongrel or one of mixed breed. FICO (9) [noun] A fig, especially a dried fig. | [noun] An obscene gesture made by inserting the thumb between the index and middle fingers of a closed fist. FIDO (8) [noun] A coin that is defective, having been incorrectly minted, often prized by collectors. FIDS (8) [noun] A pointed tool without any sharp edges, used in weaving or knotwork to tighten and form up weaves or complex knots; used in sailing ships to open the strands of a rope before splicing. Compare marlinespike. | [noun] A square bar of wood or iron, with a shoulder at one end, to support the weight of the topmast (on a ship). | [noun] A plug of oakum for the vent of a gun. FIEF (10) [noun] An estate held by a person on condition of providing military service to a superior. | [noun] Something over which one has rights or exercises control. | [noun] An area of dominion, especially in a corporate or governmental bureaucracy. FIFE (10) [noun] A small shrill pipe, resembling the piccolo flute, used chiefly to accompany the drum in military music | [verb] To play this instrument. | [numeral] Used instead of five in radio communications to avoid confusion. FIGS (8) [noun] A fruit-bearing tree or shrub of the genus Ficus that is native mainly to the tropics. | [noun] The fruit of the fig tree, pear-shaped and containing many small seeds. | [noun] A small piece of tobacco. FILA (7) FILE (7) [noun] A collection of papers collated and archived together. | [noun] A roll or list. | [noun] Course of thought; thread of narration. | [noun] A column of people one behind another, whether "single file" or in a large group with many files side by side. | [noun] A hand tool consisting of a handle to which a block of coarse metal is attached, and used for removing sharp edges or for cutting, especially through metal. | [verb] To defile FILL (7) [verb] To occupy fully, to take up all of. | [verb] To add contents to (a container, cavity or the like) so that it is full. | [verb] To enter (something), making it full. | [noun] (after a possessive) A sufficient or more than sufficient amount. | [noun] One of the thills or shafts of a carriage. FILM (9) [noun] A thin layer of some substance; a pellicle; a membranous covering, causing opacity. | [noun] A medium used to capture images in a camera. | [noun] A movie. FILO (7) [noun] A type of dough, originating in Mediterranean cuisine, that is used in thin layers to make pastries (such as baklava and apple strudel) and pies and becomes very flaky when cooked. FILS (7) [noun] A son, especially used in French names to distinguish a son from his father (as in "Alexandre Dumas fils"). | [noun] Plural of "fil," a thread or wire. FIND (8) [noun] Anything that is found (usually valuable), as objects on an archeological site or a person with talent. | [noun] The act of finding. | [verb] To encounter or discover by accident; to happen upon. FINE (7) [noun] Fine champagne; French brandy. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Something that is fine; fine particles. | [verb] To make finer, purer, or cleaner; to purify or clarify. | [noun] A fee levied as punishment for breaking the law. | [noun] The end of a musical composition. | [noun] End; conclusion; termination; extinction. FINK (11) [noun] A contemptible person. | [noun] An informer. | [noun] A strikebreaker. | [verb] To ponder, to go over in one's head. | [noun] Any of several birds in the family Ploceidae native to southern Africa. FINO (7) [noun] The driest and palest type of traditional sherry. FINS (7) [noun] One of the appendages of a fish, used to propel itself and to manoeuvre/maneuver. | [noun] A similar appendage of a cetacean or other marine animal. | [noun] A thin, rigid component of an aircraft, extending from the fuselage and used to stabilise and steer the aircraft. FIRE (7) [noun] A (usually self-sustaining) chemical reaction involving the bonding of oxygen with carbon or other fuel, with the production of heat and the presence of flame or smouldering. | [noun] An instance of this chemical reaction, especially when intentionally created and maintained in a specific location to a useful end (such as a campfire or a hearth fire). | [noun] The occurrence, often accidental, of fire in a certain place, causing damage and danger. | [verb] To set (something, often a building) on fire. | [adjective] Amazing; excellent. FIRM (9) [noun] A business partnership; the name under which it trades. | [noun] A business enterprise, however organized. | [noun] A criminal gang, especially based around football hooliganism. | [verb] To make firm or strong; fix securely. FIRN (7) [noun] A type of old snow which has gone through multiple thaw and refreeze cycles and thus is made of numerous small icy grains, though it is not nearly as saturated with water as snow-cone slush is; can be hard or somewhat soft depending on recent and current weather conditions. FIRS (7) [noun] A conifer of the genus Abies. | [noun] Any pinaceous conifer of related genera, especially a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga) or a Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris). | [noun] Wood of such trees. FISC (9) [noun] The public treasury of Rome. | [noun] Any state treasury or exchequer. FISH (10) [noun] A cold-blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills. | [noun] Any animal (or any vertebrate) that lives exclusively in water. | [noun] The flesh of the fish used as food. | [noun] A period of time spent fishing. | [verb] To hunt fish or other aquatic animals. | [noun] A counter, used in various games. FIST (7) [noun] A hand with the fingers clenched or curled inward. | [noun] The pointing hand symbol ☞. | [noun] The characteristic signaling rhythm of an individual telegraph or CW operator when sending Morse code. | [noun] The act of breaking wind; fise. FITS (7) [noun] The degree to which something fits. | [noun] Conformity of elements one to another. | [noun] The part of an object upon which anything fits tightly. FIVE (10) [noun] The digit/figure 5. | [noun] A banknote with a denomination of five units of currency. See also fiver. | [noun] Anything measuring five units, as length. FIXT (14) FIZZ (25) [noun] An emission of a rapid stream of bubbles. | [noun] The sound of such an emission. | [noun] A carbonated beverage, especially champagne. FLAB (9) [noun] Soft, loose flesh on a person's body; fat. FLAG (8) [noun] A piece of cloth, often decorated with an emblem, used as a visual signal or symbol. | [noun] An exact representation of a flag (for example: a digital one used in websites). | [noun] A flag flown by a ship to show the presence on board of the admiral; the admiral himself, or his flagship. | [verb] To weaken, become feeble. | [noun] Any of various plants with sword-shaped leaves, especially irises; specifically, Iris pseudacorus. | [noun] A slice of turf; a sod. | [noun] A group of feathers on the lower part of the legs of certain hawks, owls, etc. FLAK (11) [noun] Ground-based anti-aircraft guns firing explosive shells. | [noun] Anti-aircraft shell fire. | [noun] Adverse criticism. FLAM (9) [noun] A freak or whim; an idle fancy. | [noun] A falsehood; a lie; an illusory pretext | [verb] To deceive with a falsehood. | [noun] (drumming) Two taps (a grace note followed by a full-volume tap) played very close together in order to sound like one slightly longer note. FLAN (7) [noun] Baked tart with sweet or savoury filling in an open-topped pastry case. (Compare quiche.) | [noun] (Belize) A dessert of congealed custard, often topped with caramel, especially popular in Spanish-speaking countries. | [noun] A coin die. (Compare planchet.) | [noun] A fan of the U.S. TV series Firefly. FLAP (9) [noun] A flat piece hinged or attached on one side that moves back and forth or up and down. | [noun] The sound or motion of something moving loosely. | [verb] To wave or swing back and forth, or to move with a flapping motion. FLAT (7) [noun] An area of level ground. | [noun] A note played a semitone lower than a natural, denoted by the symbol ♭ placed after the letter representing the note (e.g., B♭) or in front of the note symbol (e.g. ♭♪). | [noun] A flat tyre/tire. | [noun] An apartment, usually on one level and usually consisting of more than one room. | [verb] To beat or strike; pound FLAW (10) [noun] A flake, fragment, or shiver. | [noun] A thin cake, as of ice. | [noun] A crack or breach, a gap or fissure; a defect of continuity or cohesion. | [noun] A sudden burst or gust of wind of short duration; windflaw. FLAX (14) [noun] A plant of the genus Linum, especially Linum usitatissimum, which has a single, slender stalk, about a foot and a half high, with blue flowers. Also known as linseed, especially when referring to the seeds. | [noun] The fibers of Linum usitatissimum, grown to make linen and related textiles. | [noun] The flax bush, a plant of the genus Phormium, native to New Zealand, with strap-like leaves up to 3 metres long that grow in clumps. FLAY (10) [noun] A fright; a scare. | [noun] Fear; a source of fear; a formidable matter; a fearsome or repellent-looking individual. | [verb] To cause to fly; put to flight; drive off (by frightening). | [verb] To strip skin off FLEA (7) [noun] A small, wingless, parasitic insect of the order Siphonaptera, renowned for its bloodsucking habits and jumping abilities. | [noun] A thing of no significance. | [verb] To remove fleas from (an animal). | [verb] To cause to fly; put to flight; drive off (by frightening). FLED (8) [verb] To run away; to escape. | [verb] To escape from. | [verb] To disappear quickly; to vanish. FLEE (7) [verb] To run away; to escape. | [verb] To escape from. | [verb] To disappear quickly; to vanish. FLEW (10) [noun] (chiefly plural) The thick, dangling upper lip of certain breeds of dog, or the canine equivalent of the upper lip. | [verb] To travel through the air, another gas or a vacuum, without being in contact with a grounded surface. | [verb] To flee, to escape (from). | [adjective] Shallow; flat FLEX (14) [noun] Flexibility, pliancy. | [noun] The or an act of flexing. | [noun] Any flexible insulated electrical wiring. FLEY (10) [verb] To turn or twist away; to flinch or recoil. | [verb] To frighten or scare away. FLIC (9) [noun] A data file containing computer animations. | [noun] A French policeman. FLIP (9) [noun] A maneuver which rotates an object end over end. | [noun] A complete change of direction, decision, movement etc. | [noun] A slingshot. | [interjection] Used to express annoyance, especially when the speaker has made an error. | [adjective] Having the quality of playfulness, or lacking seriousness of purpose. | [noun] A mixture of beer, spirit, etc., stirred and heated by a hot iron (a flip dog). FLIT (7) [noun] A fluttering or darting movement. | [noun] A particular, unexpected, short lived change of state. | [noun] A homosexual. FLOC (9) [noun] A floccule; a soft or fluffy particle suspended in a liquid, or the fluffy mass of suspended particles so formed. FLOE (7) [noun] A low, flat mass of floating ice. FLOG (8) [noun] A contemptible, often arrogant person. | [verb] To whip or scourge someone or something as punishment. | [verb] To use something to extreme; to abuse. | [noun] A weblog designed to look authentic, but actually developed as part of a commercial marketing strategy to promote some product or service. FLOP (9) [noun] An incident of a certain type of fall; a plopping down. | [noun] A complete failure, especially in the entertainment industry. | [noun] The first three cards turned face-up by the dealer in a community card poker game. | [noun] Any simple operation, such as addition, multiplication or division, performed on floating point numbers using a single operation. FLOW (10) [noun] A movement in people or things with a particular way in large numbers or amounts | [noun] The movement of a real or figurative fluid. | [noun] A formalization of the idea of the motion of particles in a fluid, as a group action of the real numbers on a set. | [noun] A morass or marsh. FLUB (9) [noun] An error; a mistake in the performance of an action. | [verb] To goof, fumble, or err in the performance of an action. FLUE (7) [noun] A pipe or duct that carries gaseous combustion products away from the point of combustion (such as a furnace). | [noun] An enclosed passageway in which to direct air or other gaseous current along. | [noun] A woolly or downy substance; down, nap; a piece of this. | [adjective] Shallow; flat FLUS (7) [noun] Plural of flu, a contagious respiratory illness. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of "flu" (archaic usage meaning to flow). FLUX (14) [noun] The act of flowing; a continuous moving on or passing by, as of a flowing stream. | [noun] A state of ongoing change. | [noun] A chemical agent for cleaning metal prior to soldering or welding. FOAL (7) [noun] A young horse or related animal, especially just after birth or less than a year old. | [noun] A young boy who assisted the headsman by pushing or pulling the tub. | [verb] To give birth to (a foal); to bear offspring. FOAM (9) [noun] A substance composed of a large collection of bubbles or their solidified remains. | [noun] A substance formed by trapping pockets of gas in a liquid or solid. | [noun] (by extension) Sea foam; the sea. FOBS (9) [noun] A little pocket near the waistline of a pair of trousers or in a waistcoat or vest to hold a pocketwatch; a watch pocket. | [noun] A short chain or ribbon to connect such a pocket to the watch. | [noun] A small ornament attached to such a chain. (See Usage Notes below) FOCI (9) [noun] A point at which reflected or refracted rays of light converge. | [noun] A point of a conic at which rays reflected from a curve or surface converge. | [noun] The fact of the convergence of light on the photographic medium. FOES (7) [noun] An enemy. | [noun] A unit of energy equal to 1044 joules. FOGS (8) [noun] A thick cloud that forms near the ground; the obscurity of such a cloud. | [noun] A mist or film clouding a surface. | [noun] A state of mind characterized by lethargy and confusion. FOGY (11) [noun] A dull old fellow; a person behind the times, over-conservative, or slow. | [noun] Extra pay granted to officers for length of service. FOHN (10) [noun] A warm dry wind blowing down the north sides of the Alps, especially in Switzerland. | [noun] A similar katabatic wind developing on the lee side of a mountain. FOIL (7) [noun] A very thin sheet of metal. | [noun] Thin aluminium/aluminum (or, formerly, tin) used for wrapping food. | [noun] A thin layer of metal put between a jewel and its setting to make it seem more brilliant. | [noun] Failure when on the point of attainment; defeat; frustration; miscarriage. | [noun] The track of an animal. | [verb] To expand a product of two or more algebraic expressions, typically binomials. | [verb] To defile; to soil. FOIN (7) [verb] To thrust with a sword or foil. | [noun] A thrust with a sword or foil. FOLD (8) [noun] An act of folding. | [noun] A bend or crease. | [noun] Any correct move in origami. | [noun] A pen or enclosure for sheep or other domestic animals. | [noun] The Earth; earth; land, country. FOLK (11) [noun] A grouping of smaller peoples or tribes as a nation. | [noun] The inhabitants of a region, especially the native inhabitants. | [noun] (plural: folks) One’s relatives, especially one’s parents. FOND (8) [verb] To have a foolish affection for, to be fond of. | [verb] To caress; to fondle. | [adjective] (chiefly with of) Having a liking or affection (for). | [noun] The background design in lace-making. FONS (7) [noun] A fool or idiot. | [noun] A chieftain or king of a region of Cameroon. FONT (7) [noun] A receptacle in a church for holy water, especially one used in baptism. | [noun] A receptacle for oil in a lamp. | [noun] Spring, source, fountain. | [noun] A set of glyphs of unified design, belonging to one typeface (e.g., Helvetica), style (e.g., italic), and weight (e.g., bold). Usually representing the letters of an alphabet and its supplementary characters. | [noun] A source, wellspring, fount. FOOD (8) [noun] Any solid substance that can be consumed by living organisms, especially by eating, in order to sustain life. | [noun] A foodstuff. | [noun] Anything that nourishes or sustains. FOOL (7) [noun] A person with poor judgment or little intelligence. | [noun] A jester; a person whose role was to entertain a sovereign and the court (or lower personages). | [noun] Someone who derives pleasure from something specified. FOOT (7) [noun] A biological structure found in many animals that is used for locomotion and that is frequently a separate organ at the terminal part of the leg. | [noun] Specifically, a human foot, which is found below the ankle and is used for standing and walking. | [noun] (often used attributively) Travel by walking. FOPS (9) [noun] A vain man; a dandy. FORA (7) [noun] A place for discussion. | [noun] A gathering for the purpose of discussion. | [noun] A form of discussion involving a panel of presenters and often participation by members of the audience. FORB (9) [noun] Any non-woody flowering plant that is not a graminoid (a grass, sedge, or rush). FORD (8) [noun] A location where a stream is shallow and the bottom has good footing, making it possible to cross from one side to the other with no bridge, by walking, riding, or driving through the water; a crossing. | [noun] A stream; a current. | [verb] To cross a stream using a ford. FORE (7) [noun] The front; the forward part of something; the foreground. | [adjective] Former; occurring earlier (in some order); previous. | [adjective] Forward; situated towards the front (of something). | [verb] To go, travel. FORK (11) [noun] A pronged tool having a long straight handle, used for digging, lifting, throwing etc. | [noun] A pronged tool for use in the garden; a smaller hand fork for weeding etc., or larger for turning over the soil. | [noun] A gallows. | [noun] The bottom of a sump into which the water of a mine drains. FORM (9) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FORT (7) [noun] A fortified defensive structure stationed with troops. | [noun] Any permanent army post. | [noun] An outlying trading-station, as in British North America. FOSS (7) [noun] A pit, groove, cavity, or depression. | [noun] A long, narrow, shallow depression on the body of an extraterrestrial body, such as a planet or moon. | [noun] A carnivorous mammal endemic to Madagascar, Cryptoprocta ferox. | [noun] Waterfall (permanent flow of water over the edge of a cliff). FOUL (7) [adjective] Covered with, or containing unclean matter; dirty. | [adjective] (of words or a way of speaking) obscene, vulgar or abusive. | [adjective] Detestable, unpleasant, loathsome. | [noun] A breach of the rules of a game, especially one involving inappropriate contact with an opposing player in order to gain an advantage; for example, tripping someone up in soccer, or contact of any kind in basketball. FOUR (7) [noun] The digit or figure 4; an occurrence thereof. | [noun] Anything measuring four units, as length. | [noun] A person who is four years old. FOWL (10) [noun] A bird. | [noun] A bird of the order Galliformes, including chickens, turkeys, pheasant, partridges and quail. | [noun] Birds which are hunted or kept for food, including Galliformes and also waterfowl of the order Anseriformes such as ducks, geese and swans. | [adjective] Foul FOXY (17) [adjective] Having the qualities of a fox. | [adjective] Cunning, sly. | [adjective] Attractive, sexy (of a woman). FOYS (10) [noun] Plural of foy, which is a farewell feast or gift given when parting from someone. FOZY (19) FRAE (7) [preposition] From (Scottish dialect form of "from"). FRAG (8) [noun] A fragmentation grenade. | [noun] A successful kill in a deathmatch game. | [verb] To deliberately kill (one's superior officer) with a fragmentation grenade. FRAP (9) [verb] To draw together tightly; to secure by many turns of a lashing. | [verb] To strike. | [noun] An iced cappuccino. FRAT (7) [noun] Shortened form for fraternity, college organization. (Often used as a noun modifier.) FRAY (10) [verb] To (cause to) unravel; used particularly for the edge of something made of cloth, or the end of a rope. | [verb] To cause exhaustion, wear out (a person's mental strength). | [verb] Frighten; alarm | [noun] A fight or argument FREE (7) [noun] Free transfer | [noun] The usual means of restarting play after a foul is committed, where the non-offending team restarts from where the foul was committed. | [verb] To make free; set at liberty; release. FRET (7) [noun] Agitation of the surface of a fluid by fermentation or some other cause; a rippling on the surface of water. | [noun] Agitation of the mind marked by complaint and impatience; disturbance of temper; irritation. | [noun] Herpes; tetter. | [noun] An ornamental pattern consisting of repeated vertical and horizontal lines, often in relief. | [noun] A ferrule, a ring. | [noun] A channel, a strait; a fretum. | [noun] A channel or passage created by the sea. | [noun] A fog or mist at sea, or coming inland from the sea. FRIG (8) [noun] An act of frigging. | [noun] A temporary modification to a piece of equipment to change the way it operates (usually away from as originally designed). | [noun] A fuck. | [noun] An insulated bin, box or cabinet used to keep food or beverages cold. FRIT (7) [noun] A fused mixture of materials used to make glass. | [noun] A similar material used in the manufacture of ceramic beads and small ornaments. (eastern Mediterranean; Bronze and Iron Age) | [verb] To add frit to a glass or ceramic mixture | [adjective] Frightened. | [noun] A frit fly. FRIZ (16) FROE (7) [noun] A cleaving tool for splitting cask staves and shingles from the block. | [noun] A dirty woman; a slattern; a frow. FROG (8) [noun] A small tailless amphibian of the order Anura that typically hops. | [noun] The part of a violin bow (or that of other similar string instruments such as the viola, cello and contrabass) located at the end held by the player, to which the horsehair is attached. | [noun] Road. Shorter, more common form of frog and toad. | [noun] A French person. | [noun] A leather or fabric loop used to attach a sword or bayonet, or its scabbard, to a waist or shoulder belt. | [verb] To unravel part of (a knitted garment) while knitting it in order to correct a mistake. FROM (9) [preposition] Used to indicate source or provenance. | [preposition] Originating at (a year, time, etc.) | [preposition] Used to indicate a starting point or initial reference. FROW (10) [noun] A woman; a wife, especially a Dutch or German one. | [noun] A slovenly woman; a wench; a lusty woman. | [noun] A big, fat woman; a slovenly, coarse, or untidy woman; a woman of low character. | [noun] A cleaving tool for splitting cask staves and shingles from the block. | [adjective] Brittle; tender; crisp | [noun] A cleaving tool with handle at right angles to the blade, for splitting cask staves and shingles from the block; a frower. FRUG (8) [noun] (usually preceded by definite article) A dance derived from the twist, popular in the 1960s. | [verb] To perform this dance. FUBS (9) FUCI (9) [noun] Any alga of the genus Fucus. FUCK (13) [noun] An act of sexual intercourse. | [noun] A sexual partner, especially a casual one. | [noun] A highly contemptible person. FUDS (8) FUEL (7) [noun] Substance consumed to provide energy through combustion, or through chemical or nuclear reaction. | [noun] Substance that provides nourishment for a living organism; food. | [noun] Something that stimulates, encourages or maintains an action. FUGS (8) [noun] An act of sexual intercourse. | [noun] A sexual partner, especially a casual one. | [noun] A highly contemptible person. FUGU (8) [noun] Blowfish: a delicacy popular in Japan served raw as sushi that may, if improperly prepared, contain deadly levels of neurotoxins. FUJI (14) [noun] A plain spun silk fabric. | [noun] A Nigerian musical genre. FULL (7) [adjective] Containing the maximum possible amount that can fit in the space available. | [adjective] Complete; with nothing omitted. | [adjective] Total, entire. | [noun] Utmost measure or extent; highest state or degree; the state, position, or moment of fullness; fill. | [verb] To baptise. | [verb] To make cloth denser and firmer by soaking, beating and pressing, to waulk, walk FUME (9) [noun] A gas or vapour/vapor that is strong-smelling or dangerous to inhale. | [noun] A material that has been vaporized from the solid or liquid state to the gas state and re-coalesced to the solid state. | [noun] Rage or excitement which deprives the mind of self-control. FUMY (12) FUND (8) [noun] A sum or source of money. | [noun] An organization managing such money. | [noun] A money-management operation, such as a mutual fund. FUNK (11) [noun] Foul or unpleasant smell, especially body odor. | [noun] A style of music derived from 1960s soul music, with elements of rock and other styles, characterized by a prominent bass guitar, dance-friendly sound, a strong emphasis on the one, and much syncopation. | [verb] To emit an offensive smell; to stink. | [noun] Spark. | [noun] Mental depression. FUNS (7) [verb] To tease, kid, poke fun at, make fun of. FURL (7) [verb] To lower, roll up and secure (something, such as a sail or flag) FURS (7) [noun] The hairy coat of various mammal species, especially when fine, soft and thick. | [noun] The hairy skin of an animal processed into clothing for humans. | [noun] A pelt used to make, trim or line clothing apparel. FURY (10) [noun] Extreme anger. | [noun] Strength or violence in action. | [noun] An angry or malignant person. | [noun] A thief. FUSE (7) [noun] A cord that, when lit, conveys the fire to some explosive device. | [noun] The mechanism that ignites the charge in an explosive device. | [noun] A device to prevent the overloading of an electrical circuit, containing a component that melts and interrupts the current when too high a load is passed through it. | [verb] To melt together; to blend; to mix indistinguishably. FUSS (7) [noun] Excessive activity, worry, bother, or talk about something. | [noun] A complaint or noise; a scene. | [noun] An exhibition of affection or admiration. FUTZ (16) [noun] An objectionable woman | [verb] To be frivolous and waste time | [verb] To experiment by trial and error FUZE (16) [noun] (professional usage) An auxiliary device with explosive components, used to detonate a munition. | [verb] (professional usage) To attach a fuze to. FUZZ (25) [noun] A frizzy mass of hair or fibre. | [noun] Quality of an image that is unclear; a blurred image. | [noun] The random data used in fuzz testing. | [noun] (with "the") The police. FYCE (12) FYKE (14) [noun] A type of fish-trap consisting of tubular nets that are supported by hoops.

5-Letter Words (430)

FABLE (10) [noun] A fictitious narrative intended to enforce some useful truth or precept, usually with animals, etc. as characters; an apologue. Prototypically, Aesop's Fables. | [noun] Any story told to excite wonder; common talk; the theme of talk. | [noun] Fiction; untruth; falsehood. FACED (11) [verb] (of a person or animal) To position oneself or itself so as to have one's face closest to (something). | [verb] (of an object) To have its front closest to, or in the direction of (something else). | [verb] To cause (something) to turn or present a face or front, as in a particular direction. | [adjective] Drunk FACER (10) [noun] An unexpected and stunning blow or defeat. | [noun] One who faces; one who puts on a false show; a bold-faced person. | [noun] A blow in the face, as in boxing; hence, any severe or stunning check or defeat, as in controversy. FACES (10) [noun] The front part of the head of a human or other animal, featuring the eyes, nose and mouth, and the surrounding area. | [noun] One's facial expression. | [noun] (in expressions such as 'make a face') A distorted facial expression; an expression of displeasure, insult, etc. FACET (10) [noun] Any one of the flat surfaces cut into a gem. | [noun] One among many similar or related, yet still distinct things. | [noun] One of a series of things, such as steps in a project. FACIA (10) [noun] A wide band of material covering the ends of roof rafters, sometimes supporting a gutter in steep-slope roofing, but typically it is a border or trim in low-slope roofing. | [noun] A face or front cover of an appliance, especially of a mobile phone. | [noun] A dashboard. FACTS (10) [noun] Something actual as opposed to invented. | [noun] Something which is real. | [noun] Something concrete used as a basis for further interpretation. FADDY (13) [adjective] Having characteristics of a fad. | [adjective] Fussy, having particular tastes or whims FADED (10) [verb] To grow weak; to lose strength; to decay; to perish gradually; to wither, as a plant. | [verb] To lose freshness, color, or brightness; to become faint in hue or tint; hence, to be wanting in color. | [verb] To sink away; to disappear gradually; to grow dim; to vanish. FADER (9) [adjective] Weak; insipid; tasteless. | [adjective] Strong; bold; doughty. | [noun] A device used to control sound volume. FADES (9) [noun] A golf shot that (for the right-handed player) curves intentionally to the right. See slice, hook, draw. | [noun] A haircut where the hair is short or shaved on the sides of the head and longer on top. See also high-top fade and low fade. | [noun] A fight. FADGE (10) [verb] To be suitable (with or to something). | [verb] To agree, to get along (with). | [verb] To get on well; to cope, to thrive. | [noun] Irish potato bread; a flat farl, griddle-baked, often served fried. FADOS (9) [noun] A Portuguese folk song, usually featuring a single vocalist, Portuguese guitar and sometimes classical guitar. Lyrical themes are often melancholic in nature; the structure of the song is of greater importance. FAENA (8) [noun] A series of passes by a bullfighter with a cape or muleta during a bullfight. FAERY (11) [noun] The realm of faerie; enchantment, illusion. | [noun] A mythical being with magical powers, known in many sizes and descriptions, although often depicted in modern illustrations only as a small sprite with gauze-like wings, and revered in some modern forms of paganism. | [noun] An enchantress, or creature of overpowering charm. FAGGY (13) [adjective] Effeminate; homosexual; gay. FAGIN (9) FAGOT (9) [noun] (collective) A bundle of sticks or brushwood intended to be used for fuel tied together for carrying. (Some sources specify that a faggot is tied with two bands or withes, whereas a bavin is tied with just one.) | [noun] Burdensome baggage. | [noun] A bundle of pieces of iron or steel cut off into suitable lengths for welding. FAILS (8) [noun] Poor quality; substandard workmanship. | [noun] A failure (condition of being unsuccessful) | [noun] A failure (something incapable of success) FAINT (8) [noun] The act of fainting, syncope. | [noun] The state of one who has fainted; a swoon. | [adjective] (of a being) Lacking strength; weak; languid; inclined to lose consciousness | [verb] To lose consciousness through a lack of oxygen or nutrients to the brain, usually as a result of suddenly reduced blood flow (may be caused by emotional trauma, loss of blood or various medical conditions). FAIRS (8) [noun] A community gathering to celebrate and exhibit local achievements. | [noun] An event for public entertainment and trade, a market. | [noun] An event for professionals in a trade to learn of new products and do business, a trade fair. FAIRY (11) [noun] The realm of faerie; enchantment, illusion. | [noun] A mythical being with magical powers, known in many sizes and descriptions, although often depicted in modern illustrations only as a small sprite with gauze-like wings, and revered in some modern forms of paganism. | [noun] An enchantress, or creature of overpowering charm. FAITH (11) [noun] A trust or confidence in the intentions or abilities of a person, object, or ideal from prior empirical evidence. | [noun] The process of forming or understanding abstractions, ideas, or beliefs, without empirical evidence, experience or observation. | [noun] A religious or spiritual belief system. FAKED (13) [verb] To cheat; to swindle; to steal; to rob. | [verb] To modify fraudulently, so as to make an object appear better or other than it really is | [verb] To make a counterfeit, to counterfeit, to forge, to falsify. FAKER (12) [noun] One who fakes something. | [noun] An impostor or impersonator. | [noun] A thief. FAKES (12) [noun] Something which is not genuine, or is presented fraudulently. | [noun] A trick; a swindle. | [noun] A move meant to deceive an opposing player, used for gaining advantage for example when dribbling an opponent. FAKEY (15) FAKIR (12) [noun] A faqir, owning no personal property and usually living solely off alms. | [noun] (Hindu) An ascetic mendicant, especially one who performs feats of endurance or apparent magic. | [noun] Someone who takes advantage of the gullible through fakery, especially of a spiritual or religious nature. FALLS (8) [noun] The act of moving to a lower position under the effect of gravity. | [noun] A reduction in quantity, pitch, etc. | [noun] The time of the year when the leaves typically fall from the trees; autumn; the season of the year between the autumnal equinox and the winter solstice. FALSE (8) [noun] One of two options on a true-or-false test. | [adjective] Untrue, not factual, factually incorrect. | [adjective] Based on factually incorrect premises. FAMED (11) [adjective] Having fame; famous or noted. FAMES (10) [noun] Plural of fame; widespread reputation or renown. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of the verb "fame," meaning to make famous (archaic usage). FANCY (13) [noun] The imagination. | [noun] An image or representation of anything formed in the mind. | [noun] An opinion or notion formed without much reflection. | [verb] To appreciate without jealousy or greed. FANES (8) [noun] A weathercock, a weather vane. | [noun] A banner, especially a military banner. | [noun] A temple or sacred place. FANGA (9) FANGS (9) [noun] A long, pointed canine tooth used for biting and tearing flesh | [noun] (in snakes) a long pointed tooth for injecting venom | [verb] To strike or attack with the fangs. FANNY (11) [noun] The female genitalia. | [noun] The buttocks; arguably the most nearly polite of several euphemisms. | [noun] Sexual intercourse with a woman. | [noun] (naval slang) Mess kettle or cooking pot. FANON (8) FANOS (8) FANUM (10) FAQIR (17) [noun] A religious mendicant who owns no personal property. FARAD (9) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical capacitance; the capacitance of a capacitor in which one coulomb of charge causes a potential difference of one volt across the capacitor. Symbol: F FARCE (10) [noun] A style of humor marked by broad improbabilities with little regard to regularity or method. | [noun] A motion picture or play featuring this style of humor. | [noun] A situation abounding with ludicrous incidents. | [noun] Forcemeat, stuffing. FARCI (10) [adjective] Stuffed with a forcemeat or filling, as in cooking. FARCY (13) [noun] A contagious disease of horses, resembling glanders FARDS (9) [noun] Force of movement, impetus, rush; hence, a violent onset. | [noun] Colour or paint, especially white paint, used on the face; makeup, war-paint. | [verb] To paint, as the cheeks or face. FARED (9) [verb] To go, travel. | [verb] To get along, succeed (well or badly); to be in any state, or pass through any experience, good or bad; to be attended with any circumstances or train of events. | [verb] To eat, dine. FARER (8) [noun] One who fares; a person who travels or journeys. | [noun] A passenger, especially one who pays for passage. FARES (8) [noun] A going; journey; travel; voyage; course; passage. | [noun] Money paid for a transport ticket. | [noun] A paying passenger, especially in a taxi. FARLE (8) [noun] A type of oatmeal cake or flatbread, especially from Ireland or Scotland. | [noun] A quarter of an oatcake. FARLS (8) [noun] A quarter of a thin oatmeal or flour cake. | [noun] Any such cake or bread, now particularly used for Irish specialities as soda farls and potato farls. FARMS (10) [noun] A place where agricultural and similar activities take place, especially the growing of crops or the raising of livestock. | [noun] A tract of land held on lease for the purpose of cultivation. | [noun] (usually in combination) A location used for an industrial purpose, having many similar structures FAROS (8) [noun] Plural of faro, a gambling card game. | [noun] Plural of faro, the forward part of a ship's bow. FARTS (8) [noun] An emission of digestive gases from the anus; a flatus. | [noun] (impolite) An irritating person; a fool. | [noun] (impolite, potentially offensive) (usually as "old fart") An elderly person; especially one perceived to hold old-fashioned views. FASTS (8) [noun] A train that calls at only some stations it passes between its origin and destination, typically just the principal stations | [noun] The act or practice of abstaining from food or of eating very little food. | [noun] The period of time during which one abstains from or eats very little food. FATAL (8) [noun] A fatality; an event that leads to death. | [noun] A fatal error; a failure that causes a program to terminate. | [adjective] Proceeding from, or appointed by, fate or destiny. FATED (9) [verb] To foreordain or predetermine, to make inevitable. | [adjective] Foreordained, predetermined, established in advance by fate. FATES (8) [noun] The presumed cause, force, principle, or divine will that predetermines events. | [noun] The effect, consequence, outcome, or inevitable events predetermined by this cause. | [noun] An event or a situation which is inevitable in the fullness of time. FATLY (11) [adverb] In a fat manner; with fatness or obesity. FATSO (8) [noun] Someone who is overweight. FATTY (11) [adjective] Containing, composed of, or consisting of fat. | [adjective] Like fat; greasy. | [adjective] Literally or figuratively large. | [noun] An obese person. FATWA (11) [noun] A legal opinion, decree or ruling issued by a mufti or other Islamic lawyer. | [verb] To make somebody the subject of a fatwa, especially a ban or death sentence. FAUGH (12) [interjection] An exclamation of contempt, or of disgust, especially for a smell. FAULD (9) [noun] A piece of armor that protects the waist and hips, typically consisting of overlapping plates. FAULT (8) [noun] A defect; something that detracts from perfection. | [noun] A mistake or error. | [noun] A weakness of character; a failing. FAUNA (8) [noun] Animals considered as a group; especially those of a particular country, region, time. | [noun] A book, cataloguing the animals of a country. FAUNS (8) [noun] A woodland creature with pointed ears, legs, and short horns of a goat and a fondness for unrestrained revelry. | [noun] Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus Faunis. FAUVE (11) [noun] A painter or artist associated with Fauvism, an early 20th-century art movement characterized by bold, non-naturalistic use of color. FAVAS (11) [noun] A fava bean; a bean (seed or seed pod) of the plant Vicia faba or the plant itself. FAVES (11) [noun] Favorite (US) or favourite (UK) | [verb] Favorite (US) or favourite (UK) FAVOR (11) [noun] A kind or helpful deed; an instance of voluntarily assisting (someone). | [noun] Goodwill; benevolent regard. | [noun] A small gift; a party favor. FAVUS (11) [noun] A fungal infection of the scalp characterized by cup-shaped crusts and scarring alopecia. FAWNS (11) [noun] A young deer. | [noun] A pale brown colour tinted with yellow, like that of a fawn. | [noun] The young of an animal; a whelp. FAWNY (14) FAXED (16) [adjective] Having a head of hair; hairy. | [verb] To send a document via a fax machine. FAXES (15) [noun] The hair of the head. | [noun] A fax machine or a document received and printed by one. | [verb] To send a document via a fax machine. FAYED (12) [verb] Past tense of "fay," meaning to fit closely together or to join seamlessly. | [verb] Past tense of "fay," meaning to have fairy-like qualities or to behave in a fey manner. FAZED (18) [verb] To frighten or cause hesitation; to daunt, put off (usually used in the negative); to disconcert, to perturb. | [adjective] Hesitant, frightened; daunted, disconcerted; perturbed, put off (usually used in the negative). FAZES (17) [verb] To frighten or cause hesitation; to daunt, put off (usually used in the negative); to disconcert, to perturb. FEARS (8) [noun] A strong, uncontrollable, unpleasant emotion or feeling caused by actual or perceived danger or threat. | [noun] A phobia, a sense of fear induced by something or someone. | [noun] Terrified veneration or reverence, particularly towards God, gods, or sovereigns. FEASE (8) [verb] To twist or curl; to fidget or move restlessly. | [noun] A twisted or curled condition. FEAST (8) [noun] A very large meal, often of a ceremonial nature. | [noun] Something delightful | [noun] A festival; a holy day or holiday; a solemn, or more commonly, a joyous, anniversary. | [verb] To partake in a feast, or large meal. FEATS (8) [noun] A relatively rare or difficult accomplishment. | [verb] To form; to fashion. | [verb] To feature. I FEAZE (17) [verb] To unravel or fray the edge of cloth. | [verb] To twist or untwist fibers. FECAL (10) [adjective] Of or relating to feces. FECES (10) [noun] Digested waste material (typically solid or semi-solid) discharged from the bowels; excrement. FECKS (14) [verb] To throw. | [verb] To steal. | [verb] To leave hastily. | [noun] (in minced oaths) Faith. FEEDS (9) [noun] Food given to (especially herbivorous) animals. | [noun] Something supplied continuously. | [noun] The part of a machine that supplies the material to be operated upon. FEELS (8) [adjective] Of or relating to the emotions. | [adjective] Characterised by emotion. | [adjective] Determined by emotion rather than reason. FEEZE (17) [verb] To twist or unravel. | [verb] To move restlessly or fidget. FEIGN (9) [verb] To make a false show or pretence of; to counterfeit or simulate. | [verb] To imagine; to invent; to pretend. | [verb] To make an action as if doing one thing, but actually doing another, for example to trick an opponent. FEINT (8) [noun] A movement made to confuse the opponent; a dummy. | [noun] That which is feigned; an assumed or false appearance; a pretense or stratagem. | [noun] (war) An offensive movement resembling an attack in all but its continuance | [noun] The narrowest rule used in the production of lined writing paper. FEIST (8) [noun] A small dog, especially a mongrel or one of mixed breed. | [noun] A person of little importance or a contemptible person. FELID (9) [noun] Any member of the cat family (Felidae). FELLA (8) [noun] (chiefly South US) used to address a male | [noun] A colleague or partner. | [noun] A companion; a comrade. FELLS (8) [noun] A cutting-down of timber. | [noun] The stitching down of a fold of cloth; specifically, the portion of a kilt, from the waist to the seat, where the pleats are stitched down. | [noun] The end of a web, formed by the last thread of the weft. FELLY (11) [noun] The outer rim of a wheel, supported by the spokes. | [adverb] Fiercely, harshly. FELON (8) [noun] A person who has committed a felony. | [noun] A person who has been tried and convicted of a felony. | [noun] A wicked person. | [noun] A bacterial infection at the end of a finger or toe. FELTS (8) [verb] To make into felt, or a feltlike substance; to cause to adhere and mat together. | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, felt. | [verb] To cause a player to lose all their chips. FEMES (10) [noun] Plural of feme, a legal term for a woman or wife, particularly in the phrase "feme covert" (a married woman) or "feme sole" (a single woman). FEMME (12) [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. | [noun] A lesbian or other queer woman whose appearance, identity etc. is seen as feminine as opposed to butch. | [noun] A person whose gender is feminine-leaning, such as a feminine non-binary person. FEMUR (10) [noun] A thighbone. | [noun] The middle segment of the leg of an insect, between the trochanter and the tibia. | [noun] A segment of the leg of an arachnid. FENCE (10) [noun] A thin artificial barrier that separates two pieces of land or a house perimeter. | [noun] Someone who hides or buys and sells stolen goods, a criminal middleman for transactions of stolen goods. | [noun] Skill in oral debate. FENDS (9) [verb] To take care of oneself; to take responsibility for one's own well-being. | [verb] (except as "fend for oneself") To defend, to take care of (typically construed with for); to block or push away (typically construed with off). FENNY (11) [adjective] Marshy or boggy; relating to or resembling a fen. FEODS (9) [noun] Plural of feod, a variant of fief; an estate in land held in feudal tenure. FEOFF (14) [verb] To invest with a fief or fee; to put in possession of a freehold estate in land. | [verb] To give a feoff to; to enfeoff. FERAL (8) [noun] A domesticated animal that has returned to the wild; an animal, particularly a domesticated animal, living independently of humans. | [noun] A contemptible young person, a lout, a person who behaves wildly. | [noun] A person who has isolated themselves from the outside world; one living an alternative lifestyle. FERES (8) [noun] Plural of fere, an archaic or dialectal word meaning a companion, mate, or spouse. FERIA (8) [noun] A weekday on a Church calendar on which no feast is observed. FERLY (11) [adjective] Strange, unusual, or wonderful; marvelous or surprising. FERMI (10) [noun] An obsolete unit of length equal to one femtometer or femtometre (10−15 m). FERNS (8) [noun] Any of a group of some twenty thousand species of vascular plants classified in the division Pteridophyta that lack seeds and reproduce by shedding spores to initiate an alternation of generations. FERNY (11) [adjective] Resembling, containing, or abounding in ferns. FERRY (11) [noun] A ship used to transport people, smaller vehicles and goods from one port to another, usually on a regular schedule. | [noun] A place where passengers are transported across water in such a ship. | [noun] The legal right or franchise that entitles a corporate body or an individual to operate such a service. FESSE (8) [noun] A horizontal band across the middle of the shield. FETAL (8) [adjective] Pertaining to, or connected with, a fetus. FETAS (8) [noun] Plural of feta, a white cheese made from the milk of goats or sheep, originating from Greece. FETCH (13) [noun] An act of fetching, of bringing something from a distance. | [noun] The object of fetching; the source of an attraction; a force, propensity, or quality which attracts. | [noun] A stratagem or trick; an artifice. | [noun] (originally Ireland) The apparition of a living person; a person's double, the sight of which is supposedly a sign that they are fated to die soon, a doppelganger; a wraith. FETED (9) [verb] (usually in the passive) To celebrate (a person). | [adjective] Honoured; celebrated. FETES (8) [noun] A festival open to the public, the proceeds from which are often given to charity. | [noun] A feast, celebration or carnival. | [verb] (usually in the passive) To celebrate (a person). FETID (9) [noun] The foul-smelling asafoetida plant, or its extracts. | [adjective] Foul-smelling, stinking. FETOR (8) [noun] An unpleasant smell. FETUS (8) [noun] An unborn or unhatched vertebrate showing signs of the mature animal. | [noun] A human embryo after the eighth week of gestation. FEUAR (8) [noun] A person who holds the perpetual lease of land in Scotland, paying a fixed annual rent called feu duty. FEUDS (9) [noun] A state of long-standing mutual hostility. | [noun] A staged rivalry between wrestlers. | [noun] A combination of kindred to avenge injuries or affronts, done or offered to any of their blood, on the offender and all his race. FEUED (9) [verb] To bring (land) under the system of feudal tenure. FEVER (11) [noun] A higher than normal body temperature of a person (or, generally, a mammal), usually caused by disease. | [noun] (usually in combination with one or more preceding words) Any of various diseases. | [noun] A state of excitement or anxiety. FEWER (11) [adjective] A smaller number or amount of something countable. | [determiner] Used to indicate a smaller quantity of people or things. FEYER (11) FEYLY (14) FEZES (17) [noun] Plural of fez, a brimless felt hat with a flat top, typically red and often decorated with a tassel. FIARS (8) [noun] In Scottish law, the official price of grain fixed annually for the purpose of valuing tithes and setting stipends. | [noun] Plural of fiar, a person who has the reversion of property. FIATS (8) [noun] An arbitrary or authoritative command or order to do something; an effectual decree. | [noun] Authorization, permission or (official) sanction. | [noun] (English law) A warrant of a judge for certain processes. FIBER (10) [noun] A single elongated piece of a given material, roughly round in cross-section, often twisted with other fibers to form thread. | [noun] A material in the form of fibers. | [noun] A material whose length is at least 1000 times its width. FIBRE (10) [noun] A single piece of a given material, elongated and roughly round in cross-section, often twisted with other fibres to form thread. | [noun] Material in the form of fibres. | [noun] Dietary fibre. FICES (10) FICHE (13) [noun] A microfiche FICHU (13) [noun] A woman's lightweight triangular scarf worn over the shoulders and tied in front, or tucked into a bodice to cover the exposed part of the neck and chest. FICIN (10) [noun] A proteolytic enzyme found in fig plants, used in food processing and medicine. FICUS (10) [noun] A plant belonging to the genus Ficus, including the rubber plant. FIDGE (10) FIDOS (9) [noun] A coin that is defective, having been incorrectly minted, often prized by collectors. FIEFS (11) [noun] An estate held by a person on condition of providing military service to a superior. | [noun] Something over which one has rights or exercises control. | [noun] An area of dominion, especially in a corporate or governmental bureaucracy. FIELD (9) [noun] A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; open country. | [noun] A wide, open space that is usually used to grow crops or to hold farm animals. | [noun] A place where competitive matches are carried out. FIEND (9) [noun] A devil or demon; a malignant or diabolical being; an evil spirit. | [noun] A very evil person. | [noun] An enemy; a foe. FIERY (11) [adjective] Of or relating to fire. | [adjective] Burning or glowing. | [adjective] Inflammable or easily ignited. FIFED (12) [verb] To play this instrument. FIFER (11) [noun] A person who plays the fife, a small high-pitched flute-like instrument. FIFES (11) [noun] A small shrill pipe, resembling the piccolo flute, used chiefly to accompany the drum in military music FIFTH (14) [noun] The person or thing in the fifth position. | [noun] One of five equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The fifth gear of an engine. FIFTY (14) [noun] A banknote or coin with a denomination of 50. | [noun] A batsman's score of at least 50 runs and less than 100 runs. | [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after forty-nine and before fifty-one. FIGHT (12) [verb] To contend in physical conflict, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To contend in physical conflict with each other, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To strive for something; to campaign or contend for success. | [noun] An occasion of fighting. FILAR (8) [adjective] Of or relating to a thread or threadlike structure. | [noun] A fine wire or thread used in optical instruments for measurement or alignment. FILCH (13) [noun] Something which has been filched or stolen. | [noun] An act of filching; larceny, theft. | [noun] A person who filches; a filcher, a pilferer, a thief. FILED (9) [verb] To commit (official papers) to some office. | [verb] To place in an archive in a logical place and order | [verb] To store a file (aggregation of data) on a storage medium such as a disc or another computer. FILER (8) [noun] One who files documents or records. | [noun] A tool used for smoothing or shaping surfaces. FILES (8) [noun] A collection of papers collated and archived together. | [noun] A roll or list. | [noun] Course of thought; thread of narration. FILET (8) [noun] A headband; a ribbon or other band used to tie the hair up, or keep a headdress in place, or for decoration. | [noun] A fine strip of any material, in various technical uses. | [noun] A heavy bead of waterproofing compound or sealant material generally installed at the point where vertical and horizontal surfaces meet. FILLE (8) [noun] A girl or young woman, especially a daughter or female child. FILLO (8) [noun] A thin pastry dough used in Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cuisine, often layered and filled with savory or sweet ingredients. | [noun] A sheet or roll made from this pastry. FILLS (8) [verb] To occupy fully, to take up all of. | [verb] To add contents to (a container, cavity or the like) so that it is full. | [verb] To enter (something), making it full. FILLY (11) [noun] A young female horse. | [noun] A young attractive female. FILMS (10) [noun] A thin layer of some substance; a pellicle; a membranous covering, causing opacity. | [noun] A medium used to capture images in a camera. | [noun] A movie. FILMY (13) [adjective] Resembling or made of a thin film; gauzy | [adjective] Covered by (or as if by) a film; hazy FILOS (8) [noun] Plural of filo, a type of thin pastry dough used in Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cuisine. | [noun] Plural of filo, thin sheets of phyllo pastry. FILTH (11) [noun] Dirt; foul matter; that which soils or defiles. | [noun] Smut; that which sullies or defiles the moral character; corruption; pollution. | [noun] (with definite article) The police. FILUM (10) [noun] A threadlike structure or filament, especially in anatomy or biology. | [noun] In taxonomy, a category of classification in some organisms. FINAL (8) [noun] A final examination; a test or examination given at the end of a term or class; the test that concludes a class. | [noun] The last round, game or match in a contest, after which the winner is determined. | [noun] A contest that narrows a field of contestants (finalists) to ranked positions, usually in numbered places (1st place/prize, 2nd place/prize, etc.) or a winner and numbered runners-up (1st runner-up, etc.). FINCH (13) [noun] Any bird of the family Fringillidae, seed-eating passerine birds, native chiefly to the Northern Hemisphere and usually having a conical beak. | [verb] To hunt for finches, to go finching. FINDS (9) [noun] Anything that is found (usually valuable), as objects on an archeological site or a person with talent. | [noun] The act of finding. | [verb] To encounter or discover by accident; to happen upon. FINED (9) [verb] To make finer, purer, or cleaner; to purify or clarify. | [verb] To become finer, purer, or cleaner. | [verb] To make finer, or less coarse, as in bulk, texture, etc. FINER (8) [adjective] Senses referring to subjective quality. | [adjective] Senses referring to objective quality. | [adjective] Behind the batsman and at a small angle to the line between the wickets. FINES (8) [noun] Fine champagne; French brandy. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Something that is fine; fine particles. | [verb] To make finer, purer, or cleaner; to purify or clarify. FINIS (8) [noun] The end (of a book or other work). FINKS (12) [noun] A contemptible person. | [noun] An informer. | [noun] A strikebreaker. FINNY (11) [adjective] (of a fish) Having one or more fins. | [adjective] Resembling a fin. | [adjective] Abounding in fishes. FINOS (8) [noun] The driest and palest type of traditional sherry. | [noun] Second-best wool from Merino sheep. FIORD (9) [noun] A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs. FIQUE (17) [noun] A tropical plant native to Mexico and Central America, also known as Agave fourcroydes, from which a strong fiber is extracted and used to make rope and twine. FIRED (9) [verb] To set (something, often a building) on fire. | [verb] To heat as with fire, but without setting on fire, as ceramic, metal objects, etc. | [verb] To drive away by setting a fire. FIRER (8) [noun] One who fires, such as a person who operates a firearm or dismisses an employee. | [noun] A worker who tends a furnace or fire in an industrial setting. FIRES (8) [noun] A (usually self-sustaining) chemical reaction involving the bonding of oxygen with carbon or other fuel, with the production of heat and the presence of flame or smouldering. | [noun] An instance of this chemical reaction, especially when intentionally created and maintained in a specific location to a useful end (such as a campfire or a hearth fire). | [noun] The occurrence, often accidental, of fire in a certain place, causing damage and danger. FIRMS (10) [noun] A business partnership; the name under which it trades. | [noun] A business enterprise, however organized. | [noun] A criminal gang, especially based around football hooliganism. FIRNS (8) [noun] Granular snow that becomes compacted and is the intermediate stage between snow and glacial ice. FIRRY (11) [adjective] Resembling or containing fir trees; covered with firs. | [adjective] Having the characteristics of fir wood. FIRST (8) [noun] The person or thing in the first position. | [noun] The first gear of an engine. | [noun] Something that has never happened before; a new occurrence. | [noun] Time; time granted; respite. FIRTH (11) [noun] An arm or inlet of the sea; a river estuary. | [noun] An arm or inlet of the sea; a river estuary. | [noun] Peace; security. FISCS (10) [noun] The public treasury of Rome. | [noun] Any state treasury or exchequer. FISHY (14) [noun] A cold-blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills. | [noun] Any animal (or any vertebrate) that lives exclusively in water. | [noun] The flesh of the fish used as food. FISTS (8) [noun] A hand with the fingers clenched or curled inward. | [noun] The pointing hand symbol ☞. | [noun] The characteristic signaling rhythm of an individual telegraph or CW operator when sending Morse code. FITCH (13) [noun] The European polecat, Mustela putorius. | [noun] The skin of the polecat | [noun] A word found in the Authorized Version of the Bible, representing different Hebrew originals. In Isaiah xxviii. 25, 27, it means the black aromatic seeds of Nigella sativa. In Ezekiel iv. 9, the Revised Version now reads "spelt". FITLY (11) [adverb] In a manner that is suitable, appropriate, or proper for a particular purpose or situation. FIVER (11) [noun] A banknote with a value of five units of currency. | [noun] (by extension) The value in money that this represents. | [noun] A clenched fist. FIVES (11) [noun] The digit/figure 5. | [noun] A banknote with a denomination of five units of currency. See also fiver. | [noun] Anything measuring five units, as length. FIXED (16) [verb] To pierce; now generally replaced by transfix. | [verb] To attach; to affix; to hold in place or at a particular time. | [verb] To mend, to repair. FIXER (15) [noun] Agent noun of fix; one who, or that which, fixes. | [noun] A chemical (sodium thiosulfate) used in photographic development that fixes the image in place, preventing further chemical reactions. | [noun] (criminal justice) A person who arranges immunity for defendants by tampering with the justice system via bribery or extortion, especially as a business endeavor for profit. FIXES (15) [noun] A repair or corrective action. | [noun] A difficult situation; a quandary or dilemma; a predicament. | [noun] A single dose of an addictive drug administered to a drug user. FIXIT (15) FIZZY (29) [noun] A non-alcoholic carbonated beverage. | [adjective] (of a liquid) Containing bubbles. | [adjective] Lively, vivacious. FJELD (16) [noun] A high barren plateau in Scandinavia. FJORD (16) [noun] A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs. FLABS (10) [noun] Plural of flab, referring to loose or excess flesh on the body. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of flab, meaning to move loosely or flabbily. FLACK (14) [verb] To flutter; palpitate. | [verb] To hang loosely; flag. | [verb] To beat by flapping. | [noun] A publicist, a publicity agent. | [noun] Ground-based anti-aircraft guns firing explosive shells. FLAGS (9) [noun] A piece of cloth, often decorated with an emblem, used as a visual signal or symbol. | [noun] An exact representation of a flag (for example: a digital one used in websites). | [noun] A flag flown by a ship to show the presence on board of the admiral; the admiral himself, or his flagship. FLAIL (8) [noun] A tool used for threshing, consisting of a long handle with a shorter stick attached with a short piece of chain, thong or similar material. | [noun] A weapon which has the (usually spherical) striking part attached to the handle with a flexible joint such as a chain. | [verb] To beat using a flail or similar implement. FLAIR (8) [noun] A natural or innate talent or aptitude. | [noun] Distinctive style or elegance. | [noun] Smell; odor. FLAKE (12) [noun] A loose filmy mass or a thin chiplike layer of anything | [noun] A scale of a fish or similar animal | [noun] A prehistoric tool chipped out of stone. | [noun] Dogfish. | [noun] Something which is not genuine, or is presented fraudulently. FLAKY (15) [adjective] Consisting of flakes or of small, loose masses; lying, or cleaving off, in flakes or layers; flakelike. | [adjective] (of a person) Unreliable; likely to make plans with others but then abandon those plans. | [adjective] (of a thing) Unreliable; working only on an intermittent basis; likely to malfunction. FLAME (10) [noun] The visible part of fire; a stream of burning vapour or gas, emitting light and heat. | [noun] A romantic partner or lover in a usually short-lived but passionate affair. | [noun] Intentionally insulting criticism or remark meant to incite anger. FLAMS (10) [verb] To deceive with a falsehood. | [verb] (drumming) To play (notes as) a flam. FLAMY (13) FLANK (12) [noun] The flesh between the last rib and the hip; the side. | [noun] A cut of meat from the flank of an animal. | [noun] The extreme left or right edge of a military formation, army etc. FLANS (8) [noun] Baked tart with sweet or savoury filling in an open-topped pastry case. (Compare quiche.) | [noun] (Belize) A dessert of congealed custard, often topped with caramel, especially popular in Spanish-speaking countries. | [noun] A coin die. (Compare planchet.) FLAPS (10) [noun] Broad pieces of material or skin that hang loosely or move back and forth. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of flap, meaning to move back and forth or wave rapidly. FLARE (8) [noun] A sudden bright light. | [noun] A source of brightly burning light or intense heat. | [noun] A sudden eruption or outbreak; a flare-up. FLASH (11) [noun] A device that produces a short flash of light to help illuminate a scene, mostly for night-time or indoors photography. | [noun] A sudden, short, temporary burst of light. | [noun] A very short amount of time. | [noun] A pool. FLASK (12) [noun] A narrow-necked vessel of metal or glass, used for various purposes; as of sheet metal, to carry gunpowder in; or of wrought iron, to contain quicksilver; or of glass, to heat water in, etc. | [noun] A container used to discreetly carry a small amount of a hard alcoholic beverage; a pocket flask. | [noun] Laboratory glassware used to hold larger volumes than test tubes, normally having a narrow mouth of a standard size which widens to a flat or spherical base. FLATS (8) [noun] An area of level ground. | [noun] A note played a semitone lower than a natural, denoted by the symbol ♭ placed after the letter representing the note (e.g., B♭) or in front of the note symbol (e.g. ♭♪). | [noun] A flat tyre/tire. FLAWS (11) [noun] A flake, fragment, or shiver. | [noun] A thin cake, as of ice. | [noun] A crack or breach, a gap or fissure; a defect of continuity or cohesion. FLAWY (14) FLAXY (18) [adjective] Resembling or containing flax; having the characteristics of flax fiber or flax seeds. FLAYS (11) [verb] To cause to fly; put to flight; drive off (by frightening). | [verb] To frighten; scare; terrify. | [verb] To be fear-stricken. FLEAM (10) [noun] A surgical instrument used for bloodletting, consisting of a small blade set in a handle. FLEAS (8) [verb] To cause to fly; put to flight; drive off (by frightening). | [verb] To frighten; scare; terrify. | [verb] To be fear-stricken. FLECK (14) [noun] A flake | [noun] A lock, as of wool. | [noun] A small spot or streak; a speckle. FLEER (8) [noun] Mockery; derision | [verb] To make a wry face in contempt, or to grin in scorn | [verb] To grin with an air of civility; to leer. | [noun] One who flees FLEES (8) [verb] To run away; to escape. | [verb] To escape from. | [verb] To disappear quickly; to vanish. FLEET (8) [noun] A group of vessels or vehicles. | [noun] Any group of associated items. | [noun] A large, coordinated group of people. | [noun] An arm of the sea; a run of water, such as an inlet or a creek. | [verb] To float. | [noun] Floor; bottom; lower surface. FLESH (11) [noun] The soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat. | [noun] The skin of a human or animal. | [noun] (by extension) Bare arms, bare legs, bare torso. FLEWS (11) [noun] (chiefly plural) The thick, dangling upper lip of certain breeds of dog, or the canine equivalent of the upper lip. FLEYS (11) [verb] To turn or twist to one side. | [noun] Plural of fley, meaning a sudden fright or scare. FLICK (14) [noun] A short, quick movement, especially a brush, sweep, or flip. | [noun] A motion picture; (in plural, usually preceded by "the") movie theater, cinema. | [noun] A cut that lands with the point, often involving a whip of the foible of the blade to strike at a concealed target. FLICS (10) [noun] A data file containing computer animations. | [noun] A French policeman. FLIED (9) [verb] To hit a fly ball; to hit a fly ball that is caught for an out. Compare ground (verb) and line (verb). FLIER (8) [noun] That which flies, as a bird or insect. | [noun] A machine that flies. | [noun] An airplane pilot. FLIES (8) [noun] The open area above a stage where scenery and equipment may be hung. | [noun] Any insect of the order Diptera; characterized by having two wings (except for some wingless species), also called true flies. | [noun] (non-technical) Especially, any of the insects of the family Muscidae, such as the common housefly (other families of Diptera include mosquitoes and midges). FLING (9) [noun] An act of throwing, often violently. | [noun] An act of moving the limbs or body with violent movements, especially in a dance. | [noun] An act or period of unrestrained indulgence. | [verb] To move (oneself) abruptly or violently; to rush or dash. FLINT (8) [noun] A hard, fine-grained quartz that fractures conchoidally and generates sparks when struck. | [noun] A piece of flint, such as a gunflint, used to produce a spark by striking it with a firestriker. | [noun] A small cylinder of some other material of the same function in a cigarette lighter, etc. FLIPS (10) [noun] A maneuver which rotates an object end over end. | [noun] A complete change of direction, decision, movement etc. | [noun] A slingshot. FLIRT (8) [noun] A sudden jerk; a quick throw or cast; a darting motion | [noun] Someone who flirts a lot or enjoys flirting; a flirtatious person. | [noun] An act of flirting. FLITE (8) [verb] To quarrel or scold. | [verb] To move swiftly. FLITS (8) [noun] A fluttering or darting movement. | [noun] A particular, unexpected, short lived change of state. | [noun] A homosexual. FLOAT (8) [noun] A buoyant device used to support something in water or another liquid. | [noun] A mass of timber or boards fastened together, and conveyed down a stream by the current; a raft. | [noun] A float board. FLOCK (14) [noun] A large number of birds, especially those gathered together for the purpose of migration. | [noun] A large number of animals, especially sheep or goats kept together. | [noun] Those served by a particular pastor or shepherd. | [noun] Coarse tufts of wool or cotton used in bedding. FLOCS (10) [noun] A floccule; a soft or fluffy particle suspended in a liquid, or the fluffy mass of suspended particles so formed. FLOES (8) [noun] A low, flat mass of floating ice. FLOGS (9) [noun] A contemptible, often arrogant person. | [verb] To whip or scourge someone or something as punishment. | [verb] To use something to extreme; to abuse. FLONG (9) [noun] A papier-mâché mold used in stereotyping or electrotyping to reproduce printing plates. FLOOD (9) [noun] A (usually disastrous) overflow of water from a lake or other body of water due to excessive rainfall or other input of water. | [noun] A large number or quantity of anything appearing more rapidly than can easily be dealt with. | [noun] The flowing in of the tide, opposed to the ebb. FLOOR (8) [noun] The interior bottom or surface of a house or building; the supporting surface of a room. | [noun] Ground (surface of the Earth, as opposed to the sky or water or underground). | [noun] The lower inside surface of a hollow space. FLOPS (10) [noun] Any simple operation, such as addition, multiplication or division, performed on floating point numbers using a single operation. | [noun] An incident of a certain type of fall; a plopping down. | [noun] A complete failure, especially in the entertainment industry. FLORA (8) [noun] Plants considered as a group, especially those of a particular country, region, time, etc. | [noun] A book describing the plants of a country, region, time, etc. | [noun] The microorganisms that inhabit some part of the body FLOSS (8) [noun] A thread used to clean the gaps between the teeth. | [noun] Raw silk fibres. | [noun] The fibres covering a corncob etc.; the loose downy or silky material inside the husks of certain plants, such as beans. | [noun] A small stream of water. FLOTA (8) FLOUR (8) [noun] Powder obtained by grinding or milling cereal grains, especially wheat, or other foodstuffs such as soybeans and potatoes, and used to bake bread, cakes, and pastry. | [noun] The food made by grinding and bolting cleaned wheat (not durum or red durum) until it meets specified levels of fineness, dryness and freedom from bran and germ, also containing any of certain enzymes, ascorbic acid and certain bleaching agents. | [noun] Powder of other material. FLOUT (8) [noun] The act by which something is flouted; violation of a law. | [noun] A mockery or insult. | [verb] To express contempt for (laws, rules, etc.) by word or action. FLOWN (11) [adjective] Suspended in the flies. | [verb] To travel through the air, another gas or a vacuum, without being in contact with a grounded surface. | [verb] To flee, to escape (from). FLOWS (11) [noun] A movement in people or things with a particular way in large numbers or amounts | [noun] The movement of a real or figurative fluid. | [noun] A formalization of the idea of the motion of particles in a fluid, as a group action of the real numbers on a set. FLUBS (10) [noun] An error; a mistake in the performance of an action. | [verb] To goof, fumble, or err in the performance of an action. FLUED (9) [verb] Past tense of "flue," meaning to provide with a flue or to clean a flue (a duct for smoke or gas in a chimney). FLUES (8) [noun] A pipe or duct that carries gaseous combustion products away from the point of combustion (such as a furnace). | [noun] An enclosed passageway in which to direct air or other gaseous current along. | [noun] A woolly or downy substance; down, nap; a piece of this. FLUFF (14) [noun] Anything light, soft or fuzzy, especially fur, hair, feathers. | [noun] Anything inconsequential or superficial. | [noun] A lapse or mistake, especially a mistake in an actor's lines. FLUID (9) [noun] Any substance which can flow with relative ease, tends to assume the shape of its container, and obeys Bernoulli's principle; a liquid, gas or plasma. | [noun] A liquid (as opposed to a solid or gas). | [noun] (specifically, typically in the plural) Intravenous fluids. FLUKE (12) [noun] A lucky or improbable occurrence, with the implication that the occurrence could not be repeated. | [verb] To obtain a successful outcome by pure chance. | [verb] To fortuitously pot a ball in an unintended way. | [noun] A flounder. | [noun] Either of the two lobes of a whale's or similar creature's tail. FLUKY (15) [adjective] Lucky | [adjective] Unstable, prone to rapid and unpredictable changes FLUME (10) [noun] A ravine or gorge, usually one with water running through. | [noun] An open channel or trough used to direct or divert liquids. | [verb] To transport (logs of wood) by floating them along a water-filled channel or trough. FLUMP (12) [noun] The dull sound so produced. | [noun] A type of large marshmallow. | [noun] (by extension) A fat out-of-shape person. FLUNG (9) [verb] To move (oneself) abruptly or violently; to rush or dash. | [verb] To throw with violence or quick movement; to hurl. | [verb] To throw; to wince; to flounce. FLUNK (12) [verb] Of a student, to fail a class; to not pass. | [verb] Of a teacher, to deny a student a passing grade. | [verb] To shirk (a task or duty). FLUOR (8) [noun] A fluorescent lamp or light fixture. | [noun] Fluorite or fluorspar, a mineral form of calcium fluoride. FLUSH (11) [noun] A group of birds that have suddenly started up from undergrowth, trees etc. | [verb] To cause to take flight from concealment. | [verb] To take suddenly to flight, especially from cover. | [adjective] Smooth, even, aligned; not sticking out. | [noun] A sudden flowing; a rush which fills or overflows, as of water for cleansing purposes. | [noun] A hand consisting of all cards with the same suit. FLUTE (8) [noun] A woodwind instrument consisting of a tube with a row of holes that produce sound through vibrations caused by air blown across the edge of the holes, often tuned by plugging one or more holes with a finger; the Western concert flute, a transverse side-blown flute of European origin. | [noun] A recorder, also a woodwind instrument. | [noun] A glass with a long, narrow bowl and a long stem, used for drinking wine, especially champagne. | [noun] A kind of flyboat; a storeship. FLUTY (11) [adjective] Resembling the sound of a flute. FLUYT (11) [noun] A small, fast sailing vessel with a shallow draft used by the Dutch in the 17th century. FLYBY (16) [noun] A flight past a celestial object in order to make observations. | [noun] A low-level ceremonial flight, typically in connection with an airshow or a military parade. | [noun] A brief visit. FLYER (11) [noun] That which flies, as a bird or insect. | [noun] A machine that flies. | [noun] An airplane pilot. FLYTE (11) [noun] A stream or small river. | [verb] To scold or rail at someone; to engage in a quarrelsome dispute. FOALS (8) [noun] A young horse or related animal, especially just after birth or less than a year old. | [noun] A young boy who assisted the headsman by pushing or pulling the tub. | [verb] To give birth to (a foal); to bear offspring. FOAMS (10) [noun] A substance composed of a large collection of bubbles or their solidified remains. | [noun] A substance formed by trapping pockets of gas in a liquid or solid. | [noun] (by extension) Sea foam; the sea. FOAMY (13) [noun] An inexpensive surfboard made of extruded polystyrene foam | [adjective] Full of foam. FOCAL (10) [adjective] Belonging to, concerning, or located at a focus | [adjective] Limited to a small area FOCUS (10) [noun] A point at which reflected or refracted rays of light converge. | [noun] A point of a conic at which rays reflected from a curve or surface converge. | [noun] The fact of the convergence of light on the photographic medium. FOEHN (11) [noun] A warm dry wind blowing down the north sides of the Alps, especially in Switzerland. | [noun] A similar katabatic wind developing on the lee side of a mountain. FOGEY (12) [noun] A dull old fellow; a person behind the times, over-conservative, or slow. FOGGY (13) [adjective] Obscured by mist or fog; unclear; hazy | [adjective] Confused, befuddled, etc. FOGIE (9) [noun] An old-fashioned or conservative person; an old fogey. FOHNS (11) [noun] A warm dry wind blowing down the north sides of the Alps, especially in Switzerland. | [noun] A similar katabatic wind developing on the lee side of a mountain. FOILS (8) [noun] A very thin sheet of metal. | [noun] Thin aluminium/aluminum (or, formerly, tin) used for wrapping food. | [noun] A thin layer of metal put between a jewel and its setting to make it seem more brilliant. FOINS (8) [verb] To thrust with a sword or pointed weapon. | [verb] To move quickly or nimbly. FOIST (8) [noun] A thief or pickpocket. | [verb] To introduce or insert surreptitiously or without warrant. | [verb] To force another to accept especially by stealth or deceit. | [noun] A light and fast-sailing ship. | [noun] A cask for wine. FOLDS (9) [noun] An act of folding. | [noun] A bend or crease. | [noun] Any correct move in origami. FOLIA (8) [noun] A leaf, especially a thin leaf or plate. | [noun] A curve of the third order, consisting of two infinite branches having a common asymptote. The curve has a double point, and a leaf-shaped loop. FOLIO (8) [noun] A leaf of a book or manuscript | [noun] A page of a book, that is, one side of a leaf of a book. | [noun] A page number. The even folios are on the left-hand pages and the odd folios on the right-hand pages. FOLKS (12) [noun] A grouping of smaller peoples or tribes as a nation. | [noun] The inhabitants of a region, especially the native inhabitants. | [noun] (plural: folks) One’s relatives, especially one’s parents. | [noun] (California) Late 19th and early 20th century migrants to California from Iowa and other parts of the Midwestern United States. FOLKY (15) [adjective] Having the character of folk music FOLLY (11) [noun] Foolishness. | [noun] Thoughtless action resulting in tragic consequence. | [noun] A fanciful building built for purely ornamental reasons. FONDS (9) [noun] The stock or broth made by simmering bones, meat, or vegetables, used as a base for sauces and soups in cooking. | [noun] A collection or supply of something, such as books or documents in an archive. FONDU (9) [noun] The graded shift from one color into another. | [noun] Involving a lowering of the body by bending the knee of the supporting leg. | [noun] A dish made of melted cheese, chocolate etc., or of a boiling liquid into which food can be dipped. FONTS (8) [noun] A receptacle in a church for holy water, especially one used in baptism. | [noun] A receptacle for oil in a lamp. | [noun] Spring, source, fountain. FOODS (9) [noun] Any solid substance that can be consumed by living organisms, especially by eating, in order to sustain life. | [noun] A foodstuff. | [noun] Anything that nourishes or sustains. FOOLS (8) [noun] A person with poor judgment or little intelligence. | [noun] A jester; a person whose role was to entertain a sovereign and the court (or lower personages). | [noun] Someone who derives pleasure from something specified. FOOTS (8) [verb] To use the foot to kick (usually a ball). | [verb] To pay (a bill). | [verb] To tread to measure or music; to dance; to trip; to skip. FOOTY (11) [adjective] Having foots, or settlings. | [adjective] Poor; mean FORAM (10) [noun] A microscopic marine organism with a calcium carbonate shell, commonly found in sedimentary rocks and used in paleontology and geology. FORAY (11) [noun] A sudden or irregular incursion in border warfare; hence, any irregular incursion for war or spoils; a raid. | [noun] A brief excursion or attempt, especially outside one's accustomed sphere. | [verb] To scour (an area or place) for food, treasure, booty etc. FORBS (10) [noun] Any non-woody flowering plant that is not a graminoid (a grass, sedge, or rush). FORBY (13) [adjective] Uncommon; out of the ordinary; extraordinary; superior. | [adverb] Past; by; beyond. | [adverb] Uncommonly; exceptionally. FORCE (10) [noun] Strength or energy of body or mind; active power; vigour; might; capacity of exercising an influence or producing an effect. | [noun] Power exerted against will or consent; compulsory power; violence; coercion. | [noun] Anything that is able to make a substantial change in a person or thing. | [noun] A waterfall or cascade. | [verb] To stuff; to lard; to farce. FORDO (9) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FORDS (9) [noun] A location where a stream is shallow and the bottom has good footing, making it possible to cross from one side to the other with no bridge, by walking, riding, or driving through the water; a crossing. | [noun] A stream; a current. | [verb] To cross a stream using a ford. FORES (8) [noun] Plural of fore, referring to the front parts of ships or other structures. | [noun] In golf, a warning shout to alert people of danger from a ball in flight. FORGE (9) [noun] Furnace or hearth where metals are heated prior to hammering them into shape. | [noun] Workshop in which metals are shaped by heating and hammering them. | [noun] The act of beating or working iron or steel. | [verb] To shape a metal by heating and hammering. | [verb] (often as forge ahead) To move forward heavily and slowly (originally as a ship); to advance gradually but steadily; to proceed towards a goal in the face of resistance or difficulty. FORGO (9) [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. | [verb] To refrain from, to abstain from, to pass up, to withgo. FORKS (12) [noun] A pronged tool having a long straight handle, used for digging, lifting, throwing etc. | [noun] A pronged tool for use in the garden; a smaller hand fork for weeding etc., or larger for turning over the soil. | [noun] A gallows. FORKY (15) FORME (10) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FORMS (10) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FORTE (8) [noun] A strength or talent. | [noun] The strong part of a sword blade, close to the hilt. | [noun] A passage in music to be played loudly; a loud section of music. FORTH (11) [adverb] Forward in time, place or degree. | [adverb] Out into view; from a particular place or position. | [adverb] Beyond a (certain) boundary; away; abroad; out. FORTS (8) [noun] A fortified defensive structure stationed with troops. | [noun] Any permanent army post. | [noun] An outlying trading-station, as in British North America. FORTY (11) [noun] A bottle of beer containing forty fluid ounces. | [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after thirty-nine and before forty-one. FORUM (10) [noun] A place for discussion. | [noun] A gathering for the purpose of discussion. | [noun] A form of discussion involving a panel of presenters and often participation by members of the audience. FOSSA (8) [noun] A pit, groove, cavity, or depression. | [noun] A long, narrow, shallow depression on the body of an extraterrestrial body, such as a planet or moon. | [noun] A carnivorous mammal endemic to Madagascar, Cryptoprocta ferox. FOSSE (8) [noun] A pit, groove, cavity, or depression. | [noun] A long, narrow, shallow depression on the body of an extraterrestrial body, such as a planet or moon. | [noun] A carnivorous mammal endemic to Madagascar, Cryptoprocta ferox. FOULS (8) [noun] A breach of the rules of a game, especially one involving inappropriate contact with an opposing player in order to gain an advantage; for example, tripping someone up in soccer, or contact of any kind in basketball. | [noun] A (usually accidental) contact between a bowler and the lane before the bowler has released the ball. | [noun] A foul ball, a ball which has been hit outside of the base lines. FOUND (9) [verb] To encounter or discover by accident; to happen upon. | [verb] To encounter or discover something being searched for; to locate. | [verb] (ditransitive) To discover by study or experiment direct to an object or end. | [verb] To start (an institution or organization). | [verb] To melt, especially of metal in an industrial setting. | [noun] A thin, single-cut file for comb-makers. FOUNT (8) [noun] Something from which water flows. | [noun] A device from which poultry may drink. | [noun] That from which something flows or proceeds; a source. | [noun] A typographic font. FOURS (8) [noun] The digit or figure 4; an occurrence thereof. | [noun] Anything measuring four units, as length. | [noun] A person who is four years old. FOVEA (11) [noun] A slight depression or pit in a bone or organ. | [noun] The retinal fovea, or fovea centralis, responsible for sharp central vision. FOWLS (11) [noun] A bird. | [noun] A bird of the order Galliformes, including chickens, turkeys, pheasant, partridges and quail. | [noun] Birds which are hunted or kept for food, including Galliformes and also waterfowl of the order Anseriformes such as ducks, geese and swans. FOXED (16) [verb] To trick, fool or outwit (someone) by cunning or ingenuity. | [verb] To confuse or baffle (someone). | [verb] To act slyly or craftily. FOXES (15) [noun] A red fox, small carnivore (Vulpes vulpes), related to dogs and wolves, with red or silver fur and a bushy tail. | [noun] Any of numerous species of small wild canids resembling the red fox. In the taxonomy they form the tribe Vulpini within the family Canidae, consisting of nine genera (see the Wikipedia article on the fox). | [noun] The fur of a fox. FOYER (11) [noun] A lobby, corridor, or waiting room, used in a hotel, theater, etc. | [noun] The crucible or basin in a furnace which receives the molten metal. | [noun] A hostel offering accommodation and work opportunities to homeless young people. FRAGS (9) [noun] A fragmentation grenade. | [noun] A successful kill in a deathmatch game. | [verb] To deliberately kill (one's superior officer) with a fragmentation grenade. FRAIL (8) [noun] A basket made of rushes, used chiefly to hold figs and raisins. | [noun] The quantity of fruit or other items contained in a frail. | [noun] A rush for weaving baskets. FRAME (10) [noun] The structural elements of a building or other constructed object. | [noun] Anything composed of parts fitted and united together; a fabric; a structure. | [noun] The structure of a person's body; the human body. FRANC (10) [noun] A former unit of currency of France, Belgium and Luxembourg, replaced by the euro. | [noun] Any of several units of currency, some of which are multi-national (West African CFA Franc (XOF), Central African CFA Franc (XAF), the Swiss franc (CHF)) while others are national currencies. FRANK (12) [noun] Free postage, a right exercised by governments (usually with definite article). | [noun] The notice on an envelope where a stamp would normally be found. | [verb] To place a frank on an envelope. | [noun] A hot dog or sausage. | [noun] The grey heron. | [noun] A pigsty. FRAPS (10) [verb] To draw together tightly; to secure by many turns of a lashing. | [verb] To strike. | [noun] An iced cappuccino. FRASS (8) [noun] The droppings or excrement of insects. | [adjective] Under the influence of marijuana, stoned FRATS (8) [noun] Shortened form for fraternity, college organization. (Often used as a noun modifier.) FRAUD (9) [noun] The crime of stealing or otherwise illegally obtaining money by use of deception tactics. | [noun] Any act of deception carried out for the purpose of unfair, undeserved and/or unlawful gain. | [noun] The assumption of a false identity to such deceptive end. FRAYS (11) [verb] To (cause to) unravel; used particularly for the edge of something made of cloth, or the end of a rope. | [verb] To cause exhaustion, wear out (a person's mental strength). | [verb] Frighten; alarm FREAK (12) [noun] A sudden change of mind | [noun] Someone or something that is markedly unusual or unpredictable. | [noun] A hippie. | [noun] A man, particularly a bold, strong, vigorous man. FREED (9) [verb] To make free; set at liberty; release. | [verb] To rid of something that confines or oppresses. FREER (8) [adjective] (social) Unconstrained. | [adjective] Obtainable without any payment. | [adjective] (abstract) Unconstrained. FREES (8) [noun] Free transfer | [noun] The usual means of restarting play after a foul is committed, where the non-offending team restarts from where the foul was committed. | [verb] To make free; set at liberty; release. FREMD (11) [adjective] Strange or foreign; not native or familiar. FRENA (8) [noun] Plural of frenum, a small fold of tissue that connects or restrains a part of the body, such as the fold under the tongue. FRERE (8) FRESH (11) [noun] A rush of water, along a river or onto the land; a flood. | [noun] A stream or spring of fresh water. | [noun] The mingling of fresh water with salt in rivers or bays, as by means of a flood of fresh water flowing toward or into the sea. | [adjective] Rude, cheeky, or inappropriate; presumptuous; disrespectful; forward. FRETS (8) [noun] Agitation of the surface of a fluid by fermentation or some other cause; a rippling on the surface of water. | [noun] Agitation of the mind marked by complaint and impatience; disturbance of temper; irritation. | [noun] Herpes; tetter. FRIAR (8) [noun] A member of a mendicant Christian order such as the Augustinians, Carmelites (white friars), Franciscans (grey friars) or the Dominicans (black friars). | [noun] A white or pale patch on a printed page. | [noun] An American fish, the silverside. FRIED (9) [adjective] Cooked by frying. | [adjective] (specifically, of an egg) Fried with the yolk unbroken. | [adjective] Cooked in a deep fryer or pressure fryer or the like after being coated (breaded) in batter; compare deep-fried. FRIER (8) [noun] A container for frying food. | [noun] A young chicken suitable for frying; a pullet | [noun] A member of a mendicant Christian order such as the Augustinians, Carmelites (white friars), Franciscans (grey friars) or the Dominicans (black friars). FRIES (8) [noun] (usually in the plural, fries) A fried strip of potato. | [noun] A meal of fried sausages, bacon, eggs, etc. | [noun] A state of excitement. FRIGS (9) [noun] An act of frigging. | [noun] A temporary modification to a piece of equipment to change the way it operates (usually away from as originally designed). | [noun] A fuck. FRILL (8) [noun] A strip of pleated fabric or paper used as decoration or trim. | [noun] A substance or material on the edge of something, resembling such a strip of fabric. | [noun] A wrinkled edge to a film. | [verb] To shake or shiver as with cold (with reference to a hawk). FRISE (8) FRISK (12) [noun] A frolic; a fit of wanton gaiety; a gambol: a little playful skip or leap. | [verb] To frolic, gambol, skip, dance, leap. | [verb] To search somebody by feeling his or her body and clothing. FRITH (11) [noun] Peace; security. | [noun] Sanctuary, asylum. | [verb] To protect; guard. | [noun] A forest or wood; woodland generally. | [noun] An arm or inlet of the sea; a river estuary. FRITS (8) [noun] A fused mixture of materials used to make glass. | [noun] A similar material used in the manufacture of ceramic beads and small ornaments. (eastern Mediterranean; Bronze and Iron Age) | [verb] To add frit to a glass or ceramic mixture FRITT (8) FRITZ (17) [noun] The state of being defective. | [noun] (chiefly South Australia) A type of processed meat sausage; devon | [verb] To go wrong or become defective. FRIZZ (26) [verb] Of hair, to form into a mass of tight curls. | [verb] To curl; to make frizzy. | [verb] To form into little burs, knobs, or tufts, as the nap of cloth. | [noun] A mass of tightly curled or unruly hair. FROCK (14) [noun] A dress, a piece of clothing for a female, which consists of a skirt and a cover for the upper body. | [noun] An outer garment worn by priests and other clericals; a habit. | [noun] A sailor's jersey. | [noun] A frog. FROES (8) [noun] A cleaving tool for splitting cask staves and shingles from the block. | [noun] A dirty woman; a slattern; a frow. FROGS (9) [noun] A small tailless amphibian of the order Anura that typically hops. | [noun] The part of a violin bow (or that of other similar string instruments such as the viola, cello and contrabass) located at the end held by the player, to which the horsehair is attached. | [noun] Road. Shorter, more common form of frog and toad. FROND (9) [noun] The leaf of a fern, especially a compound leaf. | [noun] Any fern-like leaf or other object resembling a fern leaf. FRONS (8) [noun] In vertebrates, especially mammals, the forehead; the part of the cranium between the orbits and the vertex. | [noun] The front part of the epicranium or head capsule of many insects; generally speaking the frons is the area below or between the antennae and above the clypeus. Generally it lies between the genal or "cheek" areas on either side of the head. | [noun] (of Diptera) the postfrons FRONT (8) [noun] The foremost side of something or the end that faces the direction it normally moves. | [noun] The side of a building with the main entrance. | [noun] A field of activity. FRORE (8) [verb] Especially of a liquid, to become solid due to low temperature. | [verb] To lower something's temperature to the point that it freezes or becomes hard. | [verb] To drop to a temperature below zero degrees celsius, where water turns to ice. FROSH (11) [noun] A frog. | [noun] A first-year student, at certain universities, and a first-or-second-year student at other universities. | [verb] To initiate academic freshmen, notably in a testing way. FROST (8) [noun] A cover of minute ice crystals on objects that are exposed to the air. Frost is formed by the same process as dew, except that the temperature of the frosted object is below freezing. | [noun] The cold weather that causes these ice crystals to form. | [noun] Coldness or insensibility; severity or rigidity of character. FROTH (11) [noun] Foam | [noun] Unimportant events or actions; drivel | [verb] To create froth in (a liquid). FROWN (11) [noun] A facial expression in which the eyebrows are brought together, and the forehead is wrinkled, usually indicating displeasure, sadness or worry, or less often confusion or concentration. | [noun] A facial expression in which the corners of the mouth are pointed down. | [verb] To have a frown on one's face. FROWS (11) [noun] A cleaving tool for splitting cask staves and shingles from the block. | [noun] A dirty woman; a slattern; a frow. | [noun] A woman; a wife, especially a Dutch or German one. FROZE (17) [verb] Especially of a liquid, to become solid due to low temperature. | [verb] To lower something's temperature to the point that it freezes or becomes hard. | [verb] To drop to a temperature below zero degrees celsius, where water turns to ice. FRUGS (9) [noun] (usually preceded by definite article) A dance derived from the twist, popular in the 1960s. FRUIT (8) [noun] (often in the plural) In general, a product of plant growth useful to man or animals. | [noun] Specifically, a sweet, edible part of a plant that resembles seed-bearing fruit (see next sense), even if it does not develop from a floral ovary; also used in a technically imprecise sense for some sweet or sweetish vegetables, such as the petioles of rhubarb, that resemble a true fruit or are used in cookery as if they were a fruit. | [noun] A product of fertilization in a plant, specifically: FRUMP (12) [noun] A frumpy person, somebody who is unattractive, drab or dowdy. | [noun] The clothes that such a person would wear. | [noun] A bad-tempered person. FRYER (11) [noun] A container for frying food. | [noun] A young chicken suitable for frying; a pullet FUBSY (13) [adjective] Short and stout; low and wide FUCKS (14) [noun] An act of sexual intercourse. | [noun] A sexual partner, especially a casual one. | [noun] A highly contemptible person. FUCUS (10) [noun] Any alga of the genus Fucus. FUDGE (10) [noun] A type of very sweet candy or confection, usually made from sugar, butter, and milk or cream. Often used in the US synonymously with chocolate fudge. | [noun] Light or frothy nonsense. | [noun] A deliberately misleading or vague answer. FUELS (8) [noun] Substance consumed to provide energy through combustion, or through chemical or nuclear reaction. | [noun] Substance that provides nourishment for a living organism; food. | [noun] Something that stimulates, encourages or maintains an action. FUGAL (9) [adjective] Relating to a fugue | [adjective] Relating to flight (fleeing) FUGGY (13) [adjective] Muggy, stuffy, with bad ventilation FUGIO (9) FUGLE (9) FUGUE (9) [noun] A contrapuntal piece of music wherein a particular melody is played in a number of voices, each voice introduced in turn by playing the melody. | [noun] Anything in literature, poetry, film, painting, etc., that resembles a fugue in structure or in its elaborate complexity and formality. | [noun] A fugue state. FUGUS (9) FUJIS (15) [noun] A plain spun silk fabric. | [noun] A Nigerian musical genre. FULLS (8) [verb] (of the moon) To become full or wholly illuminated. | [verb] To baptise. | [verb] To make cloth denser and firmer by soaking, beating and pressing, to waulk, walk FULLY (11) [adverb] In a full manner; without lack or defect. | [adverb] In a full degree; to a full extent. | [adverb] As a minimum; at least. FUMED (11) [verb] To expose (something) to fumes; specifically, to expose wood, etc., to ammonia in order to produce dark tints. | [verb] To apply or offer incense to. | [verb] To emit fumes. FUMER (10) FUMES (10) [noun] A gas or vapour/vapor that is strong-smelling or dangerous to inhale. | [noun] A material that has been vaporized from the solid or liquid state to the gas state and re-coalesced to the solid state. | [noun] Rage or excitement which deprives the mind of self-control. FUMET (10) [noun] A type of concentrated food stock that is added to sauces to enhance their flavour. Variations are fish fumet and mushroom fumet. | [noun] A ragout of partridge and rabbit braised in wine. | [noun] The stench or high flavour of game or other meat when kept long. | [noun] The dung of deer, hares, etc. FUNDI (9) [noun] (Zimbabwe) expert, guru, maven | [noun] The large, hollow part of an organ farthest from an opening; especially FUNDS (9) [noun] A sum or source of money. | [noun] An organization managing such money. | [noun] A money-management operation, such as a mutual fund. FUNGI (9) [noun] Any member of the kingdom Fungi; a eukaryotic organism typically having chitin cell walls but no chlorophyll or plastids. Fungi may be unicellular or multicellular. | [noun] A spongy, abnormal excrescence, such as excessive granulation tissue formed in a wound. | [noun] A style of folk and popular music from the Virgin Islands, traditionally performed by bands consisting of ukulele, banjo, guitar and washboard with various percussion instruments on rhythm. | [noun] A cornmeal dish eaten in the Caribbean, usually made with okra and served with salt fish, shellfish or chicken; variant recipes are also known as cou-cou (coucou) or coo-coo (coocoo). FUNGO (9) [noun] A fielding practice drill where a person hits fly balls intended to be caught. | [noun] A fungo bat. FUNKS (12) [noun] Foul or unpleasant smell, especially body odor. | [noun] A style of music derived from 1960s soul music, with elements of rock and other styles, characterized by a prominent bass guitar, dance-friendly sound, a strong emphasis on the one, and much syncopation. | [verb] To emit an offensive smell; to stink. FUNKY (15) [adjective] Offbeat, unconventional or eccentric. | [adjective] Not quite right; of questionable quality; not appropriate to the context. | [adjective] Cool; great; excellent. FUNNY (11) [noun] A joke. | [noun] A comic strip. | [adjective] Amusing; humorous; comical. | [noun] A narrow clinker-built boat for sculling. FURAN (8) [noun] Any of a class of aromatic heterocyclic compounds containing a ring of four carbon atoms, two double bonds and an oxygen atom; especially the simplest one, C4H4O. FURLS (8) [verb] To lower, roll up and secure (something, such as a sail or flag) FUROR (8) [noun] A general uproar or commotion | [noun] Violent anger or frenzy | [noun] A state of intense excitement FURRY (11) [noun] An animal character with human-like characteristics; most commonly refers to such characters created by members of the furry subculture. | [noun] A member of the furry fandom. | [noun] Someone who roleplays or identifies with a furry character. (Compare therianthrope.) FURZE (17) [noun] A thorny evergreen shrub, with yellow flowers, Ulex gen. et spp., of which Ulex europaeus is particularly common upon the plains and hills of Great Britain and Ireland. FURZY (20) FUSED (9) [verb] To melt together; to blend; to mix indistinguishably. | [verb] To melt together. | [verb] To furnish with or install a fuse. FUSEE (8) [noun] A light musket or firelock. | [noun] A conical, grooved pulley in early clocks. | [noun] A large friction match. | [noun] The track of a buck. | [noun] One who, or that which, fuses or is fused; an individual component of a fusion. FUSEL (8) FUSES (8) [noun] A cord that, when lit, conveys the fire to some explosive device. | [noun] The mechanism that ignites the charge in an explosive device. | [noun] A device to prevent the overloading of an electrical circuit, containing a component that melts and interrupts the current when too high a load is passed through it. FUSIL (8) [noun] A bearing of a rhomboidal figure, originally representing a spindle in shape, longer than a heraldic lozenge. | [noun] A light flintlock musket or firelock. | [adjective] That can be melted; meltable. FUSSY (11) [adjective] Anxious or particular about petty details. | [adjective] Having a tendency to fuss, cry, or be bad-tempered/ill-tempered (especially of babies). FUSTY (11) [adjective] Moldy or musty. | [adjective] Stale-smelling or stuffy. | [adjective] (by extension) Old-fashioned, refusing to change or update. FUTON (8) [noun] A thin mattress of tufted cotton or similar material, placed on a floor or on a raised, foldable frame as a bed. | [noun] A round cushion used for Zen meditation, traditionally made of woven bulrush leaves. FUZED (18) [verb] (professional usage) To attach a fuze to. | [adjective] Being equipped with a fuze FUZEE (17) [noun] A light musket or firelock. | [noun] A conical, grooved pulley in early clocks. | [noun] A large friction match. FUZES (17) [noun] (professional usage) An auxiliary device with explosive components, used to detonate a munition. | [verb] (professional usage) To attach a fuze to. FUZIL (17) FUZZY (29) [noun] (often in the plural) A very small piece of plush material. | [noun] Something covered with fuzz or hair, as an animal or plush toy. | [noun] A person, especially a college student, interested in humanities or social sciences, as opposed to one interested in mathematics, science, or engineering. FYCES (13) FYKES (15) [noun] A type of fish-trap consisting of tubular nets that are supported by hoops. FYTTE (11) [noun] The degree to which something fits. | [noun] Conformity of elements one to another. | [noun] The part of an object upon which anything fits tightly.

6-Letter Words (704)

FABLED (12) [verb] To compose fables; hence, to write or speak fiction; to write or utter what is not true. | [verb] To make up; to devise, and speak of, as true or real; to tell of falsely; to recount in the form of a fable. | [adjective] Known only in fables; fictitious. FABLER (11) [noun] One who fables; a teller of fables. | [noun] One who tells lies or falsehoods. FABLES (11) [noun] A fictitious narrative intended to enforce some useful truth or precept, usually with animals, etc. as characters; an apologue. Prototypically, Aesop's Fables. | [noun] Any story told to excite wonder; common talk; the theme of talk. | [noun] Fiction; untruth; falsehood. FABRIC (13) [noun] An edifice or building. | [noun] The act of constructing, construction, fabrication. | [noun] The structure of anything, the manner in which the parts of a thing are united; workmanship, texture, make. FACADE (12) [noun] The face of a building, especially the front view or elevation. | [noun] (by extension) The face or front (most visible side) of any other thing, such as an organ. | [noun] A deceptive or insincere outward appearance; a front. FACERS (11) [noun] An unexpected and stunning blow or defeat. | [noun] One who faces; one who puts on a false show; a bold-faced person. | [noun] A blow in the face, as in boxing; hence, any severe or stunning check or defeat, as in controversy. FACETE (11) [adjective] Witty, humorous, or amusing in a clever way. FACETS (11) [noun] Any one of the flat surfaces cut into a gem. | [noun] One among many similar or related, yet still distinct things. | [noun] One of a series of things, such as steps in a project. FACEUP (13) FACIAL (11) [noun] A personal care beauty treatment which involves cleansing and moisturizing of the human face. | [noun] A kind of early silent film focusing on the facial expressions of the actor. | [noun] (in some contact sports) A foul play which involves one player hitting another in the face. FACIAS (11) [noun] A wide band of material covering the ends of roof rafters, sometimes supporting a gutter in steep-slope roofing, but typically it is a border or trim in low-slope roofing. | [noun] A face or front cover of an appliance, especially of a mobile phone. | [noun] A dashboard. FACIES (11) [noun] Appearance. | [noun] Facial features, like an expression or complexion, typical for patients having certain diseases or conditions. | [noun] A body of rock with specified characteristics reflecting the way it was formed. FACILE (11) [adjective] Easy, now especially in a disparaging sense; contemptibly easy. | [adjective] Amiable, flexible, easy to get along with. | [adjective] Effortless, fluent (of work, abilities etc.). FACING (12) [verb] (of a person or animal) To position oneself or itself so as to have one's face closest to (something). | [verb] (of an object) To have its front closest to, or in the direction of (something else). | [verb] To cause (something) to turn or present a face or front, as in a particular direction. FACTOR (11) [noun] A doer, maker; a person who does things for another person or organization. | [noun] An agent or representative. | [noun] A commission agent. FACULA (11) [noun] A bright spot or patch between sunspots FADERS (10) [noun] A device used to control sound volume. | [noun] A program or algorithm for fading out colors. FADGED (12) [verb] Past tense of fadge; to fit or adjust something awkwardly or with difficulty. | [adjective] Tired, exhausted, or worn out. FADGES (11) [verb] To be suitable (with or to something). | [verb] To agree, to get along (with). | [verb] To get on well; to cope, to thrive. FADING (11) [verb] To grow weak; to lose strength; to decay; to perish gradually; to wither, as a plant. | [verb] To lose freshness, color, or brightness; to become faint in hue or tint; hence, to be wanting in color. | [verb] To sink away; to disappear gradually; to grow dim; to vanish. FAECAL (11) [adjective] Of or relating to feces. FAECES (11) [noun] Digested waste material (typically solid or semi-solid) discharged from the bowels; excrement. FAENAS (9) [noun] Plural of faena, a series of passes with the cape in bullfighting. FAERIE (9) [noun] Realm of the fays, fairyland. | [noun] The realm of faerie; enchantment, illusion. | [noun] A mythical being with magical powers, known in many sizes and descriptions, although often depicted in modern illustrations only as a small sprite with gauze-like wings, and revered in some modern forms of paganism. FAGGED (12) [verb] (used mainly in passive form) To make exhausted, tired out. | [verb] To droop; to tire. | [verb] For a younger student to act as a servant for senior students in many British boarding schools. FAGGOT (11) [noun] (collective) A bundle of sticks or brushwood intended to be used for fuel tied together for carrying. (Some sources specify that a faggot is tied with two bands or withes, whereas a bavin is tied with just one.) | [noun] Burdensome baggage. | [noun] A bundle of pieces of iron or steel cut off into suitable lengths for welding. FAGINS (10) [noun] Plural of Fagin; a person who teaches or trains others in crime, or an adult who exploits children for criminal purposes. FAGOTS (10) [noun] (collective) A bundle of sticks or brushwood intended to be used for fuel tied together for carrying. (Some sources specify that a faggot is tied with two bands or withes, whereas a bavin is tied with just one.) | [noun] Burdensome baggage. | [noun] A bundle of pieces of iron or steel cut off into suitable lengths for welding. FAILED (10) [verb] To be unsuccessful. | [verb] Not to achieve a particular stated goal. (Usage note: The direct object of this word is usually an infinitive.) | [verb] To neglect. FAILLE (9) [noun] A fabric woven from silk, cotton, or rayon with slight ribs. FAINER (9) FAINTS (9) [noun] The act of fainting, syncope. | [noun] The state of one who has fainted; a swoon. | [verb] To lose consciousness through a lack of oxygen or nutrients to the brain, usually as a result of suddenly reduced blood flow (may be caused by emotional trauma, loss of blood or various medical conditions). FAIRED (10) [verb] To smoothen or even a surface (especially a connection or junction on a surface). | [verb] To bring into perfect alignment (especially about rivet holes when connecting structural members). | [verb] To construct or design a structure whose primary function is to produce a smooth outline or reduce air drag or water resistance. FAIRER (9) [adjective] Beautiful, of a pleasing appearance, with a pure and fresh quality. | [adjective] Unblemished (figuratively or literally); clean and pure; innocent. | [adjective] Light in color, pale, particularly with regard to skin tone but also referring to blond hair. FAIRLY (12) [adverb] (manner) In a fair manner; fair; not biased or skewed or favouring a certain party | [adverb] Favorably; auspiciously; commodiously. | [adverb] Honestly; properly. FAITHS (12) [noun] A trust or confidence in the intentions or abilities of a person, object, or ideal from prior empirical evidence. | [noun] The process of forming or understanding abstractions, ideas, or beliefs, without empirical evidence, experience or observation. | [noun] A religious or spiritual belief system. FAJITA (16) [noun] A Tex-Mex dish of strips of spicy marinated meat and/or vegetables in a soft flour tortilla, often served with salad or a savoury filling. FAKEER (13) [noun] An Eastern religious ascetic or monk. FAKERS (13) [noun] One who fakes something. | [noun] An impostor or impersonator. | [noun] A thief. FAKERY (16) [noun] The practice of faking or fraudulent deception; something that is fake or not genuine. FAKING (14) [verb] To cheat; to swindle; to steal; to rob. | [verb] To modify fraudulently, so as to make an object appear better or other than it really is | [verb] To make a counterfeit, to counterfeit, to forge, to falsify. FAKIRS (13) [noun] A faqir, owning no personal property and usually living solely off alms. | [noun] (Hindu) An ascetic mendicant, especially one who performs feats of endurance or apparent magic. | [noun] Someone who takes advantage of the gullible through fakery, especially of a spiritual or religious nature. FALCES (11) [noun] Plural of falx, a sickle-shaped anatomical structure or bone, particularly in the brain and falciform ligament. FALCON (11) [noun] Any bird of the genus Falco, all of which are birds of prey. | [noun] A female such bird, a male being a tiercel. | [noun] A light cannon used from the 15th to the 17th century; a falconet. FALLAL (9) [noun] A showy or decorative trinket or ornament of little practical value. | [noun] A flounce or ruffle on a garment. FALLEN (9) [verb] (heading) To be moved downwards. | [verb] To move downwards. | [verb] To happen, to change negatively. FALLER (9) [noun] One who falls. | [noun] A fruit that falls from the tree, rather than being picked. | [noun] A part which acts by falling, such as a stamp in a fulling mill, or the device in a spinning machine to arrest motion when a thread breaks. FALLOW (12) [noun] Ground ploughed and harrowed but left unseeded for one year. | [noun] Uncultivated land. | [noun] The ploughing or tilling of land, without sowing it for a season. | [verb] To make land fallow for agricultural purposes. | [adjective] (color) Of a pale red or yellow, light brown; dun. FALSER (9) [adjective] Untrue, not factual, factually incorrect. | [adjective] Based on factually incorrect premises. | [adjective] Spurious, artificial. FALSIE (9) [noun] A false eyelash or pair of false eyelashes. FALTER (9) [noun] Unsteadiness. | [verb] To waver or be unsteady; to weaken or trail off. | [verb] To stammer; to utter with hesitation, or in a weak and trembling manner. FAMILY (14) [noun] A group of people who are closely related to one another (by blood, marriage or adoption); kin; for example, a set of parents and their children; an immediate family. | [noun] An extended family; a group of people who are related to one another by blood or marriage. | [noun] A (close-knit) group of people related by blood, friendship, marriage, law, or custom, especially if they live or work together. FAMINE (11) [noun] Extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] A period of extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] Starvation or malnutrition. FAMING (12) [verb] Present participle of "fame," meaning to make famous or renowned. | [verb] Making a name for oneself; becoming well-known. FAMISH (14) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FAMOUS (11) [verb] To make famous; to bring renown to. | [adjective] Well known. | [adjective] In the public eye. FAMULI (11) [noun] A close attendant or assistant, especially of a magician or occult scholar. FANDOM (12) [noun] The fans of a sport, activity, work, person etc., taken as a group. | [noun] The subculture of fans. | [noun] The state, quality, or condition of being a fan. FANEGA (10) [noun] A unit of dry measure used in Spain and Spanish America, typically equal to about 1.6 bushels. FANGAS (10) FANGED (11) [verb] To strike or attack with the fangs. | [verb] To enable to catch or tear; to furnish with fangs. | [verb] To catch, capture; seize; grip; clutch; lay hold of. FANION (9) [noun] A small flag carried by soldiers or used as a military standard. | [noun] A surveying flag used to mark positions during land measurement. FANJET (16) [noun] A turbofan engine. | [noun] An airplane powered by turbofan engines. FANNED (10) [verb] To blow air on (something) by means of a fan (hand-held, mechanical or electrical) or otherwise. | [verb] To slap (a behind, especially). | [verb] (usually to fan out) To move or spread in multiple directions from one point, in the shape of a hand-held fan. FANNER (9) [noun] One who fans. | [noun] A tool or device used for fanning. | [noun] In baseball, a pitcher who strikes out many batters. FANONS (9) [noun] Plural of fanon; unofficial or fan-created canon in fictional universes. | [noun] In some contexts, a type of fabric or material (archaic usage). FANTOD (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A state of worry or nervous anxiety, irritability. | [noun] An irritable outburst. FANTOM (11) FANUMS (11) FAQIRS (18) [noun] A religious mendicant who owns no personal property. FAQUIR (18) [noun] A faqir, owning no personal property and usually living solely off alms. | [noun] (Hindu) An ascetic mendicant, especially one who performs feats of endurance or apparent magic. | [noun] Someone who takes advantage of the gullible through fakery, especially of a spiritual or religious nature. FARADS (10) [noun] In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical capacitance; the capacitance of a capacitor in which one coulomb of charge causes a potential difference of one volt across the capacitor. Symbol: F FARCED (12) [verb] Past tense of farce; to stuff (meat or poultry) with forcemeat. | [verb] To fill or pad out with unnecessary material. FARCER (11) [noun] One who farces or stuff things, particularly in cooking. | [noun] An actor in farces or comedies. FARCES (11) [noun] A style of humor marked by broad improbabilities with little regard to regularity or method. | [noun] A motion picture or play featuring this style of humor. | [noun] A situation abounding with ludicrous incidents. FARCIE (11) [adjective] Stuffed with a forcemeat filling, used especially in French cooking to describe vegetables or meats prepared with a savory mixture. FARDED (11) [verb] Painted with cosmetics or makeup, especially excessively or garishly. FARDEL (10) [noun] A fourth part: a quarter of anything. | [noun] An English unit of land area variously understood as the fourth part of an oxgang or of a yardland. | [noun] A bundle or burden. FARERS (9) [noun] People who travel, especially by sea; travelers or voyagers. FARFAL (12) FARFEL (12) [noun] Egg noodle paste formed into small pellets or granules, used in Jewish cuisine. | [noun] A game of chance or lottery. FARINA (9) [noun] 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. FARING (10) [noun] A structure on various parts of a vehicle, for example an aircraft, automobile, or motorcycle, that produces a smooth exterior and reduces drag | [noun] A present; originally, one given or purchased at a fair. | [noun] Something edible; fare. FARLES (9) [noun] A type of oatcake or flatbread, traditionally made in Ireland and Scotland. | [noun] Plural of farle, a quarter of an oatcake. FARMED (12) [verb] To work on a farm, especially in the growing and harvesting of crops. | [verb] To devote (land) to farming. | [verb] To grow (a particular crop). FARMER (11) [noun] A person who works the land and/or who keeps livestock, especially on a farm. | [noun] Agent noun of farm; someone or something that farms. | [noun] One who takes taxes, customs, excise, or other duties, to collect for a certain rate per cent. FARROW (12) [noun] A litter of piglets. | [verb] To give birth to a (litter of piglets). | [adjective] (of cows) Not pregnant; not producing young (not calving) in a given season or year; barren. FARTED (10) [verb] (impolite) To emit digestive gases from the anus; to flatulate. | [verb] (usually as "fart around") To waste time with idle and inconsequential tasks; to go about one's activities in a lackadaisical manner; to be lazy or over-relaxed in one's manner or bearing. | [verb] To emit (fumes, gases, etc.). FASCES (11) [noun] A Roman symbol of judicial authority consisting of a bundle of wooden sticks, with an axe blade embedded in the centre; used also as a symbol of fascism FASCIA (11) [noun] A wide band of material covering the ends of roof rafters, sometimes supporting a gutter in steep-slope roofing, but typically it is a border or trim in low-slope roofing. | [noun] A face or front cover of an appliance, especially of a mobile phone. | [noun] A dashboard. FASHED (13) [verb] To worry; to bother, annoy. | [verb] To trouble oneself; to take pains. FASHES (12) [noun] A worry; trouble; bother. | [verb] To worry; to bother, annoy. | [verb] To trouble oneself; to take pains. FASTED (10) [verb] To restrict one’s personal consumption, generally of food, but sometimes other things, in various manners (totally, temporally, by avoiding particular items), often for religious or medical reasons. FASTEN (9) [verb] To attach or connect in a secure manner. | [verb] To cause to take close effect; to make to tell; to land. FASTER (9) [adjective] Firmly or securely fixed in place; stable. | [adjective] Firm against attack; fortified by nature or art; impregnable; strong. | [adjective] (of people) Steadfast, with unwavering feeling. (Now mostly in set phrases like fast friend(s).) | [noun] One who fasts, or voluntarily refrains from eating. FATHER (12) [noun] A (generally human) male who begets a child. | [noun] A male ancestor more remote than a parent; a progenitor; especially, a first ancestor. | [noun] A term of respectful address for an elderly man. FATHOM (14) [noun] Grasp, envelopment, control. | [noun] (now usually nautical) An English unit of length for water depth notionally based upon the width of grown man's outstretched arms but standardized as 6 feet (about 1.8 m). | [noun] Various similar units in other systems. FATING (10) [verb] To foreordain or predetermine, to make inevitable. FATSOS (9) [noun] Someone who is overweight. FATTED (10) [adjective] Made fat; fattened. FATTEN (9) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to be fat or fatter. | [verb] (of a person or animal) To become fat or fatter. | [verb] To make thick or thicker (something containing paper, often money). FATTER (9) [adjective] Carrying more fat than usual on one's body; plump; not lean or thin. | [adjective] Thick. | [adjective] Bountiful. FATWAS (12) [noun] A legal opinion, decree or ruling issued by a mufti or other Islamic lawyer. FAUCAL (11) [adjective] Relating to or produced in the fauces (the passage from the mouth to the pharynx). FAUCES (11) [noun] The narrow passage from the mouth to the pharynx, situated between the soft palate and the base of the tongue. | [noun] The throat of a calyx, corolla, etc. | [noun] That portion of the interior of a spiral shell which can be seen by looking into the aperture. FAUCET (11) [noun] An exposed plumbing fitting; a tap or spigot; a regulator for controlling the flow of a liquid from a reservoir. | [noun] (game development) One or several systems that inject currency into the game's economy, thus controlling or preventing inflation FAULDS (10) [noun] Pieces of armor that protect the hips and lower abdomen, typically consisting of overlapping plates attached to the breastplate. FAULTS (9) [noun] A defect; something that detracts from perfection. | [noun] A mistake or error. | [noun] A weakness of character; a failing. FAULTY (12) [adjective] Having or displaying faults; not perfect; not adequate or acceptable. | [adjective] At fault, to blame; guilty. FAUNAE (9) [noun] Animals considered as a group; especially those of a particular country, region, time. | [noun] A book, cataloguing the animals of a country. FAUNAL (9) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of fauna, the animals of a particular region or time period. FAUNAS (9) [noun] Animals considered as a group; especially those of a particular country, region, time. | [noun] A book, cataloguing the animals of a country. FAUVES (12) [noun] Members of an early 20th-century art movement characterized by bold, non-naturalistic use of color. FAVELA (12) [noun] A slum or shantytown, especially in Brazil FAVISM (14) [noun] A hereditary metabolic disorder caused by an enzyme deficiency that results in hemolytic anemia when fava beans are consumed. FAVORS (12) [noun] A kind or helpful deed; an instance of voluntarily assisting (someone). | [noun] Goodwill; benevolent regard. | [noun] A small gift; a party favor. FAVOUR (12) [noun] A kind or helpful deed; an instance of voluntarily assisting (someone). | [noun] Goodwill; benevolent regard. | [noun] A small gift; a party favor. FAWNED (13) [verb] To give birth to a fawn. | [verb] To exhibit affection or attempt to please. | [verb] To seek favour by flattery and obsequious behaviour (with on or upon). FAWNER (12) [noun] One who fawns; a sycophant. FAXING (17) [verb] To send a document via a fax machine. FAYING (13) [verb] Present participle of "fay," meaning to fit closely together or to join closely, particularly in carpentry or masonry. FAZING (19) [verb] To frighten or cause hesitation; to daunt, put off (usually used in the negative); to disconcert, to perturb. FEALTY (12) [noun] Fidelity to one's lord or master; the feudal obligation by which the tenant or vassal was bound to be faithful to his lord | [noun] The oath by which this obligation was assumed. FEARED (10) [verb] To feel fear about (something or someone); to be afraid of; to consider or expect with alarm. | [verb] To feel fear (about something). | [verb] (used with for) To worry about, to feel concern for, to be afraid for. FEARER (9) [noun] One who fears; a person who is afraid of something. FEASED (10) FEASES (9) [noun] Plural of feast, meaning large meals or celebrations. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of feast, meaning to eat and drink sumptuously. FEASTS (9) [noun] A very large meal, often of a ceremonial nature. | [noun] Something delightful | [noun] A festival; a holy day or holiday; a solemn, or more commonly, a joyous, anniversary. FEATER (9) FEATLY (12) [adverb] In a neat, dexterous, or skillful manner; nimbly or gracefully. FEAZED (19) [verb] Past tense of feaze; to twist or unravel. | [verb] To worry or disturb. FEAZES (18) [verb] To unravel or fray the edges of cloth. | [verb] To twist or braid together. FECIAL (11) [adjective] Of or relating to the fetial, an ancient Roman official who conducted diplomatic negotiations and declared war. FECKLY (18) FECULA (11) [noun] A starchy substance extracted from plants, used in cooking and textile manufacturing. | [noun] Fine sediment or dregs. FECUND (12) [adjective] Highly fertile; able to produce offspring. | [adjective] Leading to new ideas or innovation. FEDORA (10) [noun] A felt hat with a fairly low, creased crown with a brim that can be turned up or down. FEEBLE (11) [verb] To make feeble; to enfeeble. | [adjective] Deficient in physical strength | [adjective] Lacking force, vigor, or efficiency in action or expression; faint. FEEBLY (14) [adverb] In a feeble manner. FEEDER (10) [noun] One who feeds, or gives food to another. | [noun] One who feeds, or takes in food. | [noun] One who, or that which, feeds material into something. FEEING (10) [verb] To reward for services performed, or to be performed; to recompense; to hire or keep in hire; hence, to bribe. | [noun] The hiring of servants for a fee FEELER (9) [noun] Someone or something that feels. | [noun] An antenna or appendage used for feeling, especially on an insect. | [noun] Something ventured to test another's feelings, opinion, or position. FEEZED (19) FEEZES (18) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "feeze," meaning to twist or unravel. | [noun] Plural of "feeze," a strand or thread that has been twisted or unraveled. FEIGNS (10) [verb] To make a false show or pretence of; to counterfeit or simulate. | [verb] To imagine; to invent; to pretend. | [verb] To make an action as if doing one thing, but actually doing another, for example to trick an opponent. FEIJOA (16) [noun] A South American evergreen shrub, Acca sellowiana (syn. Feijoa sellowiana). | [noun] The green, ellipsoid fruit of this shrub, having a tart and sweet taste. FEINTS (9) [noun] A movement made to confuse the opponent; a dummy. | [noun] That which is feigned; an assumed or false appearance; a pretense or stratagem. | [noun] (war) An offensive movement resembling an attack in all but its continuance FEIRIE (9) FEISTS (9) [noun] Small dogs, typically mongrels or curs, often used for hunting. | [noun] Plural of feist, a lively or spirited person. FEISTY (12) [adjective] Tenacious, energetic, spunky. | [adjective] Belligerent; prepared to stand and fight, especially in spite of relatively small stature or some other disadvantage. | [adjective] Easily offended and ready to bicker. FELIDS (10) [noun] Any member of the cat family (Felidae). FELINE (9) [adjective] Of or pertaining to cats. | [adjective] Catlike (resembling a cat) | [noun] A cat; member of the cat family Felidae. FELLAH (12) [noun] A peasant, farmer or agricultural laborer in the Middle East and North Africa. | [noun] (chiefly South US) used to address a male | [noun] A colleague or partner. FELLAS (9) [noun] (chiefly South US) used to address a male | [noun] A colleague or partner. | [noun] A companion; a comrade. FELLED (10) [verb] To make something fall; especially to chop down a tree. | [verb] To strike down, kill, destroy. | [verb] To stitch down a protruding flap of fabric, as a seam allowance, or pleat. FELLER (9) [noun] A person who fells trees; a lumberjack | [noun] A machine for felling trees. | [noun] A person who fells a seam. | [noun] A colleague or partner. | [adjective] Of a strong and cruel nature; eager and unsparing; grim; fierce; ruthless; savage. FELLOE (9) [noun] The outer rim of a wheel, supported by the spokes. FELLOW (12) [noun] A colleague or partner. | [noun] A companion; a comrade. | [noun] A man without good breeding or worth; an ignoble or mean man. FELONS (9) [noun] A person who has committed a felony. | [noun] A person who has been tried and convicted of a felony. | [noun] A wicked person. FELONY (12) [noun] A serious criminal offense, which, under United States federal law, is punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year or by death. FELTED (10) [verb] To make into felt, or a feltlike substance; to cause to adhere and mat together. | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, felt. | [verb] To cause a player to lose all their chips. FEMALE (11) [noun] One of the female (feminine) sex or gender. | [adjective] Belonging to the sex which typically produces eggs (ova), or to the gender which is typically associated with it. | [adjective] Characteristic of this sex/gender. (Compare feminine, womanly.) FEMMES (13) [noun] A woman, a wife; a young woman or girl. | [noun] A lesbian or other queer woman whose appearance, identity etc. is seen as feminine as opposed to butch. | [noun] A person whose gender is feminine-leaning, such as a feminine non-binary person. FEMORA (11) [noun] A thighbone. | [noun] The middle segment of the leg of an insect, between the trochanter and the tibia. | [noun] A segment of the leg of an arachnid. FEMURS (11) [noun] A thighbone. | [noun] The middle segment of the leg of an insect, between the trochanter and the tibia. | [noun] A segment of the leg of an arachnid. FENCED (12) [verb] To enclose, contain or separate by building fence. | [verb] To defend or guard. | [verb] To engage in the selling or buying of stolen goods. FENCER (11) [noun] A person who practices or competes in the sport of fencing with a sword. | [noun] A person who buys and sells stolen goods. FENCES (11) [noun] A thin artificial barrier that separates two pieces of land or a house perimeter. | [noun] Someone who hides or buys and sells stolen goods, a criminal middleman for transactions of stolen goods. | [noun] Skill in oral debate. FENDED (11) [verb] To take care of oneself; to take responsibility for one's own well-being. | [verb] (except as "fend for oneself") To defend, to take care of (typically construed with for); to block or push away (typically construed with off). FENDER (10) [noun] Panel of a car which encloses the wheel area, especially the front wheels | [noun] A shield, usually of plastic or metal, on a bicycle that protects the rider from mud or water | [noun] Any shaped cushion-like object normally made from polymers, rubber or wood that is placed along the sides of a boat to prevent damage when moored alongside another vessel or jetty, or when using a lock, etc. Modern variations are cylindrical although older wooden version and rubbing strips can still be found; old tyres are used as a cheap substitute FENNEC (11) [noun] A small fox of the species Vulpes zerda, found in the Sahara (excluding the coast) and having distinctive oversized ears. FENNEL (9) [noun] A plant, Foeniculum vulgare, of the parsley family, which has a sweet, anise-like flavor. | [noun] The bulb, leaves, or stalks of the plant, eaten as a vegetable. | [noun] The seeds of the fennel plant used as a spice in cooking. FEOFFS (15) [verb] To invest with a fief or fee; to put in possession of a feudal holding. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of feoff, meaning to give a fief to someone. FERBAM (13) [noun] A fungicide consisting of a ferric dimethyldithiocarbamate compound, used to protect plants from fungal diseases. FERIAE (9) [noun] Plural of feria, a weekday in the Christian calendar, especially one not a Sunday or feast day. | [noun] In ancient Rome, a day of rest or holiday. FERIAL (9) [noun] A feria. | [adjective] Pertaining to an ordinary weekday, rather than a festival or fast. | [adjective] Jovial, festive, as if pertaining to a holiday. FERIAS (9) [noun] A weekday on a Church calendar on which no feast is observed. FERINE (9) [adjective] Wild or untamed; relating to or characteristic of wild animals. FERITY (12) [noun] The quality or fact of being wild or in a wild state; wildness, brutishness. FERLIE (9) [noun] A wonder or marvel; something astonishing or extraordinary. | [noun] In Scottish dialect, a companion or mate. FERMIS (11) [noun] Plural of fermi, a unit of length equal to 10^-15 meters, used in nuclear physics. FERREL (9) [noun] A band or cap (usually metal) placed around a shaft to reinforce it or to prevent splitting. | [noun] A band holding parts of an object together. FERRET (9) [noun] An often domesticated mammal (Mustela putorius furo) rather like a weasel, descended from the polecat and often trained to hunt burrowing animals. | [noun] The black-footed ferret, Mustela nigripes. | [noun] A diligent searcher. | [noun] A tape of silk, cotton, or ribbon, used to tie documents, clothing, etc. or along the edge of fabric. FERRIC (11) [adjective] Pertaining to, derived from, or containing iron. | [adjective] Of compounds of iron in which it has a valence or oxidation number of 3 FERRUM (11) [noun] The Latin name for iron, used in chemistry and medicine; iron or an iron compound. FERULA (9) [noun] A ferule. | [noun] A stroke from a cane. | [noun] The imperial sceptre in the Byzantine Empire. FERULE (9) [noun] A ruler-shaped instrument, generally used to slap naughty children on the hand. | [verb] To punish with a ferule. FERVID (13) [adjective] Intensely hot, emotional, or zealous. FERVOR (12) [noun] An intense, heated emotion; passion, ardor. | [noun] A passionate enthusiasm for some cause. | [noun] Heat. FESCUE (11) [noun] A straw, wire, stick, etc., used chiefly to point out letters to children when learning to read. | [noun] A hardy grass commonly used to border golf fairways in temperate climates. Any member of the genus Festuca. | [noun] An instrument for playing on the harp; a plectrum. FESSED (10) [verb] To confess; to admit. FESSES (9) [noun] A horizontal band across the middle of the shield. FESTAL (9) [adjective] Festive, relating to a festival or feast FESTER (9) [noun] A fistula. | [noun] A sore or an ulcer of the skin. | [noun] The condition of something that festers; a festering; a festerment. FETIAL (9) [adjective] Relating to or denoting a member of a college of Roman priests who conducted diplomatic negotiations and declared war. FETICH (14) [noun] Something which is believed to possess, contain, or cause spiritual or magical powers; an amulet or a talisman. | [noun] Sexual attraction to or arousal at something sexual or nonsexual, such as an object or a part of the body. | [noun] An irrational, or abnormal fixation or preoccupation; an obsession. FETING (10) [verb] (usually in the passive) To celebrate (a person). FETISH (12) [noun] Something which is believed to possess, contain, or cause spiritual or magical powers; an amulet or a talisman. | [noun] Sexual attraction to or arousal at something sexual or nonsexual, such as an object or a part of the body. | [noun] An irrational, or abnormal fixation or preoccupation; an obsession. FETORS (9) [noun] An unpleasant smell. FETTED (10) FETTER (9) [noun] A chain or similar object used to bind a person or animal – often by its legs (usually in plural). | [noun] Anything that restricts or restrains. | [verb] To shackle or bind up with fetters. FETTLE (9) [noun] A state of proper physical condition; kilter or trim. | [noun] One's mental state; spirits. | [noun] Sand used to line a furnace. FEUARS (9) [noun] Plural of feuar; a person who holds the tenure of land in fee or in perpetuity under Scottish law. | [verb] Third person singular present of feuar; to grant land in fee under Scottish law. FEUDAL (10) [adjective] Of, or relating to feudalism. FEUDED (11) [verb] To carry on a feud. FEUING (10) [verb] To bring (land) under the system of feudal tenure. FEVERS (12) [noun] A higher than normal body temperature of a person (or, generally, a mammal), usually caused by disease. | [noun] (usually in combination with one or more preceding words) Any of various diseases. | [noun] A state of excitement or anxiety. FEWEST (12) [adjective] The smallest number or amount of something. FEYEST (12) [adjective] Superlative form of fey; most fey, meaning most magical, otherworldly, or having an otherworldly quality; or most fated to die soon. FEZZED (28) [adjective] Wearing a fez (a cylindrical felt hat). FEZZES (27) [noun] A felt hat in the shape of a truncated cone, having a flat top with a tassel attached. FIACRE (11) [noun] A small carriage for hire. FIANCE (11) [verb] To betroth; to affiance. | [noun] A man who is engaged to be married. | [noun] A person engaged to be married. FIASCO (11) [noun] A sudden or unexpected failure. | [noun] A ludicrous or humiliating situation. Some effort that went quite wrong. | [noun] A wine bottle in a (usually straw) jacket. FIBBED (14) [verb] To lie, especially more or less inconsequentially. | [verb] (thieves cant) To punch, especially a series of punches in rapid succession; to beat; to hit; to strike. FIBBER (13) [noun] A person who tells lies or fibs. FIBERS (11) [noun] A single elongated piece of a given material, roughly round in cross-section, often twisted with other fibers to form thread. | [noun] A material in the form of fibers. | [noun] A material whose length is at least 1000 times its width. FIBRES (11) [noun] A single piece of a given material, elongated and roughly round in cross-section, often twisted with other fibres to form thread. | [noun] Material in the form of fibres. | [noun] Dietary fibre. FIBRIL (11) [noun] A fine fibre or filament | [noun] Any fine, filamentous structure in animals or plants FIBRIN (11) [noun] A white, albuminous, fibrous substance, formed in the coagulation of the blood. | [noun] An elastic, insoluble, whitish protein produced by the action of thrombin on fibrinogen and forming an interlacing fibrous network in the coagulation of blood. | [noun] An albuminous body, resembling animal fibrin in composition, found in cereal grains and similar seeds; vegetable fibrin. FIBULA (11) [noun] An ancient kind of brooch used to hold clothing together, similar in function to the modern safety pin. | [noun] The smaller of the two bones in the lower leg, the calf bone. FICHES (14) [noun] A microfiche FICHUS (14) [noun] A woman's lightweight triangular scarf worn over the shoulders and tied in front, or tucked into a bodice to cover the exposed part of the neck and chest. FICINS (11) [noun] Plural of ficin, an enzyme found in fig plants used in biochemistry and food processing. FICKLE (15) [adjective] Quick to change one’s opinion or allegiance; insincere; not loyal or reliable. | [adjective] Changeable. | [verb] To deceive, flatter. FICKLY (18) FICOES (11) FIDDLE (11) [noun] Any of various bowed string instruments, often a violin when played in any of various traditional styles, as opposed to classical violin. | [noun] A kind of dock (Rumex pulcher) with leaves shaped like the musical instrument. | [noun] An adjustment intended to cover up a basic flaw. FIDDLY (14) [adjective] Requiring dexterity to operate. | [adjective] (by extension) Having many small bits or embellishments. | [adjective] Of or relating to fiddling or fidgeting. FIDGED (12) FIDGES (11) [verb] Third person singular of "fidge," meaning to fidget or move restlessly. FIDGET (11) [noun] A nervous wriggling or twitching motion. | [noun] A person who fidgets, especially habitually. | [noun] A toy intended to be fidgeted with. FIELDS (10) [noun] A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; open country. | [noun] A wide, open space that is usually used to grow crops or to hold farm animals. | [noun] A place where competitive matches are carried out. FIENDS (10) [noun] A devil or demon; a malignant or diabolical being; an evil spirit. | [noun] A very evil person. | [noun] An enemy; a foe. FIERCE (11) [adjective] Exceedingly violent, severe, ferocious, cruel or savage. | [adjective] Resolute or strenuously active. | [adjective] Threatening in appearance or demeanor. FIESTA (9) [noun] (In Spanish speaking countries) A religious festival. | [noun] A festive occasion. FIFERS (12) [noun] People who play the fife, a small flute-like musical instrument. | [noun] Members of a fife and drum corps or band. FIFING (13) [verb] To play this instrument. FIFTHS (15) [noun] The person or thing in the fifth position. | [noun] One of five equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The fifth gear of an engine. FIGGED (12) [verb] To insult with a fico, or contemptuous motion. | [verb] To put into the head of, as something useless or contemptible. | [verb] (soap-making) To develop, or cause (a soap) to develop, white streaks or granulations. FIGHTS (13) [verb] To contend in physical conflict, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To contend in physical conflict with each other, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To strive for something; to campaign or contend for success. FIGURE (10) [noun] A drawing or diagram conveying information. | [noun] The representation of any form, as by drawing, painting, modelling, carving, embroidering, etc.; especially, a representation of the human body. | [noun] A person or thing representing a certain consciousness. FILERS (9) [noun] People or things that file documents, records, or other materials. | [noun] Tools or devices used for smoothing, shaping, or grinding surfaces. FILETS (9) [noun] A headband; a ribbon or other band used to tie the hair up, or keep a headdress in place, or for decoration. | [noun] A fine strip of any material, in various technical uses. | [noun] A heavy bead of waterproofing compound or sealant material generally installed at the point where vertical and horizontal surfaces meet. FILIAL (9) [adjective] Pertaining to or befitting a son or daughter. | [adjective] Respectful of the duties and attitudes of a son or daughter toward their parents. | [adjective] Of a generation or generations descending from a specific previous one. FILING (10) [verb] To commit (official papers) to some office. | [verb] To place in an archive in a logical place and order | [verb] To store a file (aggregation of data) on a storage medium such as a disc or another computer. FILLED (10) [verb] To occupy fully, to take up all of. | [verb] To add contents to (a container, cavity or the like) so that it is full. | [verb] To enter (something), making it full. FILLER (9) [noun] One who fills. | [noun] Something added to fill a space or add weight or size. | [noun] Any semisolid substance used to fill gaps, cracks or pores. FILLES (9) [noun] Plural of fille, a French word for girl or daughter sometimes used in English contexts, particularly in historical or literary references. | [noun] In architecture, small ornamental elements or decorative bands used in classical design. FILLET (9) [noun] A headband; a ribbon or other band used to tie the hair up, or keep a headdress in place, or for decoration. | [noun] A fine strip of any material, in various technical uses. | [noun] A heavy bead of waterproofing compound or sealant material generally installed at the point where vertical and horizontal surfaces meet. FILLIP (11) [noun] The action of holding the tip of a finger against the thumb and then releasing it with a snap; a flick. | [noun] A smart strike or tap made using this action, or (by extension) by other means. | [noun] (by extension) Something unimportant, a trifle; also, the brief time it takes to flick one's finger (see noun sense 1); a jiffy. FILLOS (9) FILMED (12) [verb] To record (activity, or a motion picture) on photographic film. | [verb] To cover or become covered with a thin skin or pellicle. | [adjective] Covered with a film. FILMER (11) [noun] One who films; a person who makes films or movies. FILMIC (13) [adjective] Of or relating to movies; cinematic. FILOSE (9) [adjective] Having the form of or resembling a thread; threadlike. FILTER (9) [noun] A device which separates a suspended, dissolved, or particulate matter from a fluid, solution, or other substance; any device that separates one substance from another. | [noun] Electronics or software that separates unwanted signals (for example noise) from wanted signals or that attenuates selected frequencies. | [noun] Any item, mechanism, device or procedure that acts to separate or isolate. FILTHS (12) [noun] Plural of filth; obscene or offensive material. | [noun] States or conditions of being extremely dirty or morally corrupt. FILTHY (15) [verb] To make very dirty; to cover in filth. | [adjective] Covered with filth; very dirty. | [adjective] Obscene or offensive. FIMBLE (13) [adjective] Resembling or consisting of a fringe or border; fringed. | [adjective] (archaic) Thin and weak; infirm. FINALE (9) [noun] The grand end of something, especially a show or piece of music. | [noun] The chronological conclusion of a series of narrative works. FINALS (9) [noun] A final examination; a test or examination given at the end of a term or class; the test that concludes a class. | [noun] The last round, game or match in a contest, after which the winner is determined. | [noun] A contest that narrows a field of contestants (finalists) to ranked positions, usually in numbered places (1st place/prize, 2nd place/prize, etc.) or a winner and numbered runners-up (1st runner-up, etc.). FINDER (10) [noun] One who finds or discovers something. | [noun] An optical device, such as a viewfinder, used to locate a target or other object of interest FINELY (12) [adverb] So as to produce a fine texture. | [adverb] In a fine, handsome or attractive way; very well. FINERY (12) [noun] Fineness; beauty. | [noun] Ornament; decoration; especially, excessive decoration; showy clothes; jewels. | [noun] (ironworking) A charcoal hearth or furnace for the conversion of cast iron into wrought iron, or into iron suitable for puddling. FINEST (9) [adjective] Senses referring to subjective quality. | [adjective] Senses referring to objective quality. | [adjective] Behind the batsman and at a small angle to the line between the wickets. FINGER (10) [noun] A slender jointed extremity of the human hand, exclusive of the thumb. | [noun] Similar or similar-looking extremities in other animals, particularly: | [noun] Something similar in shape to the human finger, particularly: FINIAL (9) [noun] The knot or bunch of foliage, or foliated ornament, that forms the upper extremity of a pinnacle in Gothic architecture. | [noun] Any decorative fitting at the peak of a gable, or on the top of a flagpole, fence post or staircase newel post. FINING (10) [verb] To make finer, purer, or cleaner; to purify or clarify. | [verb] To become finer, purer, or cleaner. | [verb] To make finer, or less coarse, as in bulk, texture, etc. FINISH (12) [noun] An end; the end of anything. | [noun] A protective coating given to wood or metal and other surfaces. | [noun] The result of any process changing the physical or chemical properties of cloth. FINITE (9) [adjective] Having an end or limit; (of a quantity) constrained by bounds; (of a set) whose number of elements is a natural number. | [adjective] (grammar, as opposed to infinite or nonfinite) limited by person or number. FINKED (14) [verb] To betray a trust; to inform on. FINNED (10) [verb] To cut the fins from a fish, shark, etc. | [verb] (Of a fish) to swim with the dorsal fin above the surface of the water. | [verb] To swim in the manner of a fish. FIORDS (10) [noun] A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs. FIPPLE (13) [noun] The mouthpiece of a ducted flute, or the plug forming the floor of the windway. FIQUES (18) FIRERS (9) [noun] Plural of firer; people who fire or dismiss employees. | [noun] People who ignite or set fire to something. FIRING (10) [verb] To set (something, often a building) on fire. | [verb] To heat as with fire, but without setting on fire, as ceramic, metal objects, etc. | [verb] To drive away by setting a fire. FIRKIN (13) [noun] A varying measure of capacity, usually being a quarter of a barrel; specifically, a measure equal to nine imperial gallons. | [noun] A small wooden vessel or cask of indeterminate size, used for butter, lard, etc. | [noun] A weight measure for butter, equalling 56 pounds. FIRMAN (11) [noun] A royal decree issued by a sovereign in certain historical Islamic states, especially by the Sultan of Turkey. FIRMED (12) [verb] To make firm or strong; fix securely. | [verb] To make compact or resistant to pressure; solidify. | [verb] To become firm; stabilise. FIRMER (11) [adjective] Steadfast, secure, solid (in position) | [adjective] Fixed (in opinion) | [adjective] Durable, rigid (material state) FIRMLY (14) [adverb] (manner) In a firm or definite or strong manner. | [adverb] (manner) Securely. FIRSTS (9) [noun] The person or thing in the first position. | [noun] The first gear of an engine. | [noun] Something that has never happened before; a new occurrence. FIRTHS (12) [noun] An arm or inlet of the sea; a river estuary. | [noun] Peace; security. | [noun] Sanctuary, asylum. FISCAL (11) [noun] A public official in certain countries having control of public revenue. | [noun] Procurator fiscal, a public prosecutor. | [noun] In certain countries, including Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands, and former colonies of these countries and certain British colonies, solicitor or attorney general. | [noun] Any of various African shrikes of the genus Lanius. FISHED (13) [verb] To hunt fish or other aquatic animals. | [verb] To search (a body of water) for something other than fish. | [verb] To use as bait when fishing. FISHER (12) [noun] A person who catches fish, especially for a living or for sport. | [noun] A person attempting to catch fish. | [noun] A North American marten, Martes pennanti, that has thick brown fur. FISHES (12) [noun] A cold-blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills. | [noun] Any animal (or any vertebrate) that lives exclusively in water. | [noun] The flesh of the fish used as food. FISTED (10) [verb] To strike with the fist. | [verb] To close (the hand) into a fist. | [verb] To grip with a fist. FISTIC (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to boxing or fighting with fists. FITCHY (17) [adjective] Sharpened to a point; pointed. FITFUL (12) [adjective] Irregular; unsteady; characterized by fits. FITTED (10) [verb] To be suitable for. | [verb] To conform to in size and shape. | [verb] To be of the right size and shape FITTER (9) [adjective] Suitable, proper. | [adjective] Adapted to a purpose or environment. | [adjective] In good shape; physically well. FIVERS (12) [noun] A banknote with a value of five units of currency. | [noun] (by extension) The value in money that this represents. | [noun] A clenched fist. FIXATE (16) [verb] To make something fixed and stable; to fix. | [verb] To stare fixedly at something. | [verb] To attend to something to the exclusion of all others; used with on. FIXERS (16) [noun] Agent noun of fix; one who, or that which, fixes. | [noun] A chemical (sodium thiosulfate) used in photographic development that fixes the image in place, preventing further chemical reactions. | [noun] (criminal justice) A person who arranges immunity for defendants by tampering with the justice system via bribery or extortion, especially as a business endeavor for profit. FIXING (17) [verb] To pierce; now generally replaced by transfix. | [verb] To attach; to affix; to hold in place or at a particular time. | [verb] To mend, to repair. FIXITY (19) [noun] The state or condition of being fixed. | [noun] Something fixed. | [noun] The position of an operator relative to its operand (prefix, postfix) or operands (infix). FIXURE (16) FIZGIG (20) [noun] A flirtatious, coquettish girl, inclined to gad or gallivant about; a gig, a giglot, a jillflirt. | [noun] Something frivolous or trivial; a gewgaw, a trinket. | [verb] To roam around in a frivolous manner; to gad about, to gallivant. | [noun] A small squib-like firework that explodes with a fizzing or hissing noise. | [noun] A spear with a barb on the end of it, used for catching fish; a type of harpoon. | [noun] A police informer, a stool pigeon, someone employed by police to entrap someone elseor provoke them to commit a crime. | [noun] The common ragwort (Jacobaea vulgaris). FIZZED (28) [verb] To emit bubbles. | [verb] To make a rapid hissing or bubbling sound. | [verb] To shoot or project something moving at great velocity. FIZZER (27) [noun] Something which fizzes. | [noun] A party or social gathering which turns out to be a disappointment. | [noun] A disciplinary charge. FIZZES (27) [noun] An emission of a rapid stream of bubbles. | [noun] The sound of such an emission. | [noun] A carbonated beverage, especially champagne. FIZZLE (27) [noun] A spluttering or hissing sound. | [noun] Failure of a nuclear bomb to meet its expected yield during testing. | [noun] An abortive effort; a flop or dud. FJELDS (17) [noun] Plural of fjeld; a high barren plateau in Scandinavia. FJORDS (17) [noun] A long, narrow, deep inlet between cliffs. FLABBY (16) [adjective] Yielding to the touch, and easily moved or shaken; hanging loose by its own weight; lacking firmness; flaccid. | [adjective] (of wine) Having a slight lack of acidity; having mild sweetness. | [adjective] (of writing, etc.) overwrought. FLACKS (15) [verb] To flutter; palpitate. | [verb] To hang loosely; flag. | [verb] To beat by flapping. FLACON (11) [noun] A small stoppered glass bottle, often used for keeping perfume. FLAGGY (14) [adjective] Resembling or containing flags; marked with flags. | [adjective] Inclined to droop or become limp; wilting. FLAGON (10) [noun] A large bottle for drinks such as wine, cider or beer. | [noun] The amount that such a bottle holds, about 1.13 litres. | [noun] A large vessel usually with a handle, spout and lid, for drinks such as wine or cider. FLAILS (9) [noun] A tool used for threshing, consisting of a long handle with a shorter stick attached with a short piece of chain, thong or similar material. | [noun] A weapon which has the (usually spherical) striking part attached to the handle with a flexible joint such as a chain. | [verb] To beat using a flail or similar implement. FLAIRS (9) [noun] Plural of flair; natural talent or aptitude. | [noun] Distinctive elegance or style. FLAKED (14) [verb] To break or chip off in a flake. | [verb] To prove unreliable or impractical; to abandon or desert, to fail to follow through. | [verb] To store an item such as rope or sail in layers FLAKER (13) [noun] One who flakes or breaks into flakes. | [noun] A person who is unreliable or fails to follow through on commitments. FLAKES (13) [noun] Something which is not genuine, or is presented fraudulently. | [noun] A trick; a swindle. | [noun] A move meant to deceive an opposing player, used for gaining advantage for example when dribbling an opponent. FLAKEY (16) [adjective] Consisting of flakes or of small, loose masses; lying, or cleaving off, in flakes or layers; flakelike. | [adjective] (of a person) Unreliable; likely to make plans with others but then abandon those plans. | [adjective] (of a thing) Unreliable; working only on an intermittent basis; likely to malfunction. FLAMBE (13) [noun] A showy cooking technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. | [noun] A flambéed dish. | [verb] To cook with a showy technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. FLAMED (12) [verb] To produce flames; to burn with a flame or blaze. | [verb] To burst forth like flame; to break out in violence of passion; to be kindled with zeal or ardour. | [verb] To post a destructively critical or abusive message (to somebody). FLAMEN (11) [noun] A priest devoted to the service of a particular god, from whom he received a distinguishing epithet. The most honored were those of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, called respectively Flamen Dialis, Flamen Martialis, and Flamen Quirinalis. FLAMER (11) [noun] A very flamboyant ("flaming"), effeminate gay male. | [noun] One who flames, or posts vitriolic criticism. FLAMES (11) [noun] The visible part of fire; a stream of burning vapour or gas, emitting light and heat. | [noun] A romantic partner or lover in a usually short-lived but passionate affair. | [noun] Intentionally insulting criticism or remark meant to incite anger. FLANES (9) FLANGE (10) [noun] An external or internal rib or rim, used either to add strength or to hold something in place. | [noun] The projecting edge of a rigid or semi-rigid component. | [noun] An ability in a role-playing game which is not commonly available, overpowered or arbitrarily imposed by the referees. FLANKS (13) [verb] To attack the flank(s) of. | [verb] To defend the flank(s) of. | [verb] To place to the side(s) of. FLAPPY (16) [adjective] Inclined to flap or flutter; moving with a flapping motion. | [adjective] Informal term for something unstable or unreliable. FLARED (10) [verb] To cause to burn. | [verb] To cause inflammation; to inflame. | [verb] To open outward in shape. FLARES (9) [noun] A sudden bright light. | [noun] A source of brightly burning light or intense heat. | [noun] A sudden eruption or outbreak; a flare-up. FLASHY (15) [adjective] Showy; visually impressive, attention-getting, or appealing. | [adjective] Flashing; producing flashes. | [adjective] Drunk; tipsy FLASKS (13) [noun] A narrow-necked vessel of metal or glass, used for various purposes; as of sheet metal, to carry gunpowder in; or of wrought iron, to contain quicksilver; or of glass, to heat water in, etc. | [noun] A container used to discreetly carry a small amount of a hard alcoholic beverage; a pocket flask. | [noun] Laboratory glassware used to hold larger volumes than test tubes, normally having a narrow mouth of a standard size which widens to a flat or spherical base. FLATLY (12) [adverb] In a physically flat or level manner. | [adverb] In a definite manner; in a manner showing complete certainty. | [adverb] In a manner that shows no emotion. FLATUS (9) [noun] Gas generated in the digestive tract. | [noun] Expulsion of such gas through the anus. | [noun] Morbid inflation or swelling. FLAUNT (9) [noun] Anything displayed for show. | [verb] To wave or flutter smartly in the wind. | [verb] To parade, display with ostentation. | [verb] To flout. FLAVIN (12) [noun] Any of a class of tricyclic heterocyclic compounds derived from riboflavin; found especially as the adenine dinucleotide (FAD) FLAVOR (12) [noun] The quality produced by the sensation of taste or, especially, of taste and smell in combined effect. | [noun] A substance used to produce a taste. Flavoring. | [noun] A variety (of taste) attributed to an object. FLAWED (13) [adjective] Having a flaw or imperfection. FLAXEN (16) [adjective] Made of or resembling flax fibers. | [adjective] A pale yellow brown; the colour of dried flax stalks and of the fiber obtained therefrom. FLAXES (16) [noun] Plural of flax, a plant with blue flowers cultivated for its fiber and seeds. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of flax (to make into flax or process flax). FLAYED (13) [verb] To cause to fly; put to flight; drive off (by frightening). | [verb] To frighten; scare; terrify. | [verb] To be fear-stricken. FLAYER (12) [noun] One who flays or strips skin from something. | [noun] A skinning tool or instrument. FLEAMS (11) [noun] Plural of fleam, a surgical instrument with a blade used historically for bloodletting or lancing. FLECHE (14) [noun] An arrow. | [noun] Any of the twenty-four points on a backgammon board. | [noun] A spire or steeple, especially of Gothic style; an object emerging from the ridge of a roof. FLECKS (15) [noun] A flake | [noun] A lock, as of wool. | [noun] A small spot or streak; a speckle. FLECKY (18) [adjective] Having flecks; marked or spotted with small streaks or particles of color or texture. FLEDGE (11) [verb] To care for a young bird until it is capable of flight. | [verb] To grow, cover or be covered with feathers. | [verb] To decorate with feathers. FLEDGY (14) [adjective] Resembling or covered with fledge (the soft down feathers of a bird); fluffy or downy. FLEECE (11) [noun] Hair or wool of a sheep or similar animal | [noun] Insulating skin with the wool attached | [noun] A textile similar to velvet, but with a longer pile that gives it a softness and a higher sheen. FLEECH (14) FLEECY (14) [adjective] Resembling or covered in fleece. FLEERS (9) [verb] To make a wry face in contempt, or to grin in scorn | [verb] To grin with an air of civility; to leer. FLEETS (9) [noun] A group of vessels or vehicles. | [noun] Any group of associated items. | [noun] A large, coordinated group of people. FLENCH (14) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLENSE (9) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLESHY (15) [adjective] Of, related to, or resembling flesh. | [adjective] (of a person) Having considerable flesh; plump. FLETCH (14) [noun] The vane toward the back of an arrow, used to stabilise the arrow during flight. | [noun] (fisheries) A large boneless fillet of halibut, swordfish or tuna. | [verb] To feather, as an arrow. FLEURY (12) [adjective] (especially of a cross) Decorated (finished at the ends) with fleurs-de-lis. FLEXED (17) [verb] To bend something. | [verb] To repeatedly bend one of one's joints. | [verb] To move part of the body using one's muscles. FLEXES (16) [noun] Flexibility, pliancy. | [noun] The or an act of flexing. | [noun] Any flexible insulated electrical wiring. FLEXOR (16) [noun] A muscle whose contraction acts to bend a joint or limb. FLEYED (13) FLICKS (15) [noun] A short, quick movement, especially a brush, sweep, or flip. | [noun] A motion picture; (in plural, usually preceded by "the") movie theater, cinema. | [noun] A cut that lands with the point, often involving a whip of the foible of the blade to strike at a concealed target. FLIERS (9) [noun] That which flies, as a bird or insect. | [noun] A machine that flies. | [noun] An airplane pilot. FLIEST (9) [adjective] Superlative form of "fly," meaning most stylish, cool, or impressive in appearance or manner. FLIGHT (13) [noun] The act of flying. | [noun] An instance of flying. | [noun] The act of fleeing. | [noun] The act of fleeing. FLIMSY (14) [noun] Thin typing paper used to make multiple copies. | [noun] A service certificate | [noun] (in the plural) Skimpy underwear. FLINCH (14) [noun] A reflexive jerking away. | [noun] The slipping of the foot from a ball, when attempting to give a tight croquet. | [verb] To make a sudden, involuntary movement in response to a (usually negative) stimulus; to cringe. | [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLINGS (10) [noun] An act of throwing, often violently. | [noun] An act of moving the limbs or body with violent movements, especially in a dance. | [noun] An act or period of unrestrained indulgence. FLINTS (9) [noun] A hard, fine-grained quartz that fractures conchoidally and generates sparks when struck. | [noun] A piece of flint, such as a gunflint, used to produce a spark by striking it with a firestriker. | [noun] A small cylinder of some other material of the same function in a cigarette lighter, etc. FLINTY (12) [adjective] Resembling or containing flint. | [adjective] Siliceous (including basanite). | [adjective] Showing a lack of emotion. FLIPPY (16) [noun] A flippy disk. | [adjective] Having a tendency to flip. FLIRTS (9) [noun] A sudden jerk; a quick throw or cast; a darting motion | [noun] Someone who flirts a lot or enjoys flirting; a flirtatious person. | [noun] An act of flirting. FLIRTY (12) [adjective] Flirting, or seeming to flirt. FLITCH (14) [noun] The flank or side of an animal, now almost exclusively a pig when cured and salted; a side of bacon. | [noun] A piece or strip cut off of something else, generally a piece of wood (timber). | [verb] To cut into, or off in, flitches or strips. FLITED (10) [verb] Past tense of flit, meaning to move quickly or briefly from one place to another. FLITES (9) [verb] Third person singular of "flite," meaning to scold, quarrel, or exchange insults with someone. | [noun] Plural of "flit," meaning quick movements or brief visits. FLOATS (9) [noun] A buoyant device used to support something in water or another liquid. | [noun] A mass of timber or boards fastened together, and conveyed down a stream by the current; a raft. | [noun] A float board. FLOATY (12) [noun] A lilo or similar item that floats on water and can be sat on. | [noun] A particle of food, etc. found floating in liquid. | [adjective] Buoyant, tending to float on a liquid or rise in air or gas FLOCCI (13) [noun] A cloud species which consists of rounded tufts of cloud, often formed by dissipation from larger cloud species. Associated with cirrus, cirrocumulus, altocumulus, and stratocumulus genera. | [noun] A flock or tuft of wool or wool-like hairs; the downy plumage of unfledged birds. FLOCKS (15) [noun] A large number of birds, especially those gathered together for the purpose of migration. | [noun] A large number of animals, especially sheep or goats kept together. | [noun] Those served by a particular pastor or shepherd. FLOCKY (18) [adjective] Resembling or containing flock; having a fluffy or woolly texture. | [adjective] Tending to form flocks or clusters. FLONGS (10) [noun] Papier-mâché molds used in printing to form the curved plates of a rotary printing press. FLOODS (10) [noun] A (usually disastrous) overflow of water from a lake or other body of water due to excessive rainfall or other input of water. | [noun] A large number or quantity of anything appearing more rapidly than can easily be dealt with. | [noun] The flowing in of the tide, opposed to the ebb. FLOOEY (12) [adjective] Out of order or broken; not functioning properly. FLOOIE (9) FLOORS (9) [noun] The interior bottom or surface of a house or building; the supporting surface of a room. | [noun] Ground (surface of the Earth, as opposed to the sky or water or underground). | [noun] The lower inside surface of a hollow space. FLOOSY (12) [noun] A woman of loose morals or promiscuous behavior. | [noun] A frivolous or disreputable person. FLOOZY (21) [noun] A vulgar or sexually promiscuous woman; a hussy or slattern. | [noun] A prostitute who attracts customers by walking the streets. FLOPPY (16) [noun] A floppy disk. | [noun] (Rhodesia) An insurgent in the Rhodesian Bush War, called as such for the way they "flop" when shot. | [noun] A comic book. FLORAE (9) [noun] Plants considered as a group, especially those of a particular country, region, time, etc. | [noun] A book describing the plants of a country, region, time, etc. | [noun] The microorganisms that inhabit some part of the body FLORAL (9) [noun] A design involving flowers | [noun] A perfume redolent of flowers | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or connected with flowers. FLORAS (9) [noun] Plants considered as a group, especially those of a particular country, region, time, etc. | [noun] A book describing the plants of a country, region, time, etc. | [noun] The microorganisms that inhabit some part of the body FLORET (9) [noun] A small flower, especially one of a cluster in a composite flower. FLORID (10) [adjective] Having a rosy or pale red colour; ruddy. | [adjective] Elaborately ornate; flowery. | [adjective] (of a disorder, especially mental) In a blatant, vivid, or highly disorganized state. FLORIN (9) [noun] The currency of Aruba, divided into 100 cents, symbol ƒ. | [noun] A pre-decimal British coin, worth two shillings or ten new pence. | [noun] A guilder (former currency unit of the Netherlands). FLOSSY (12) [adjective] Resembling floss. | [adjective] Extravagantly showy; flashy FLOTAS (9) [noun] Plural of flota, a fleet of ships, especially a Spanish fleet of merchant vessels. | [noun] A system of connected waterways or canals used for transportation. FLOURS (9) [noun] Powder obtained by grinding or milling cereal grains, especially wheat, or other foodstuffs such as soybeans and potatoes, and used to bake bread, cakes, and pastry. | [noun] The food made by grinding and bolting cleaned wheat (not durum or red durum) until it meets specified levels of fineness, dryness and freedom from bran and germ, also containing any of certain enzymes, ascorbic acid and certain bleaching agents. | [noun] Powder of other material. FLOURY (12) [adjective] Resembling flour. | [adjective] Covered in flour. FLOUTS (9) [verb] To express contempt for (laws, rules, etc.) by word or action. | [verb] To scorn. FLOWED (13) [verb] To move as a fluid from one position to another. | [verb] To proceed; to issue forth. | [verb] To move or match smoothly, gracefully, or continuously. FLOWER (12) [noun] A colorful, conspicuous structure associated with angiosperms, frequently scented and attracting various insects, and which may or may not be used for sexual reproduction. | [noun] A reproductive structure in angiosperms (flowering plants), often conspicuously colourful and typically including sepals, petals, and either or both stamens and/or a pistil. | [noun] A plant that bears flowers, especially a plant that is small and lacks wood. | [noun] Something that flows, such as a river. FLUENT (9) [noun] A continuous variable, especially one with respect to time in Newton's Method of Fluxions. | [adjective] That flows; flowing, liquid. | [adjective] Able to use a language accurately, rapidly, and confidently – in a flowing way. FLUFFS (15) [noun] Anything light, soft or fuzzy, especially fur, hair, feathers. | [noun] Anything inconsequential or superficial. | [noun] A lapse or mistake, especially a mistake in an actor's lines. FLUFFY (18) [noun] Someone or something that has a fluffy texture. | [noun] A person who is superficial, who lacks depth or seriousness. | [noun] A babycino (frothy milk drink). FLUIDS (10) [noun] Any substance which can flow with relative ease, tends to assume the shape of its container, and obeys Bernoulli's principle; a liquid, gas or plasma. | [noun] A liquid (as opposed to a solid or gas). | [noun] (specifically, typically in the plural) Intravenous fluids. FLUKED (14) [verb] To obtain a successful outcome by pure chance. | [verb] To fortuitously pot a ball in an unintended way. | [adjective] Having flukes. FLUKES (13) [noun] A lucky or improbable occurrence, with the implication that the occurrence could not be repeated. | [noun] A flounder. | [noun] A trematode; a parasitic flatworm of the Trematoda class, related to the tapeworm. FLUKEY (16) [adjective] Lucky | [adjective] Unstable, prone to rapid and unpredictable changes FLUMED (12) [verb] Past tense of flume, meaning to convey through a flume or channel, or to move swiftly like water through a flume. FLUMES (11) [noun] A ravine or gorge, usually one with water running through. | [noun] An open channel or trough used to direct or divert liquids. | [verb] To transport (logs of wood) by floating them along a water-filled channel or trough. FLUMPS (13) [noun] The dull sound so produced. | [noun] A type of large marshmallow. | [noun] (by extension) A fat out-of-shape person. FLUNKS (13) [verb] Of a student, to fail a class; to not pass. | [verb] Of a teacher, to deny a student a passing grade. | [verb] To shirk (a task or duty). FLUNKY (16) [noun] An underling; a liveried servant or a footman; servant, retainer – a person working in the service of another (especially in the household) | [noun] One who is obsequious or cringing; a snob. | [noun] One easily deceived in buying stocks; an inexperienced and unwary jobber. FLUORS (9) [noun] Plural of fluor, a mineral form of calcium fluoride, or fluorescent substances used in various applications. FLURRY (12) [noun] A light, brief snowfall. | [noun] A sudden and brief blast or gust; a light, temporary breeze. | [noun] A shower of dust, leaves etc. brought on by a sudden gust of wind. FLUTED (10) [verb] To play on a flute. | [verb] To make a flutelike sound. | [verb] To utter with a flutelike sound. FLUTER (9) FLUTES (9) [noun] A woodwind instrument consisting of a tube with a row of holes that produce sound through vibrations caused by air blown across the edge of the holes, often tuned by plugging one or more holes with a finger; the Western concert flute, a transverse side-blown flute of European origin. | [noun] A recorder, also a woodwind instrument. | [noun] A glass with a long, narrow bowl and a long stem, used for drinking wine, especially champagne. FLUTEY (12) [adjective] Resembling the sound of a flute. FLUXED (17) [verb] To use flux on. | [verb] To melt. | [verb] To flow as a liquid. FLUXES (16) [noun] The act of flowing; a continuous moving on or passing by, as of a flowing stream. | [noun] A state of ongoing change. | [noun] A chemical agent for cleaning metal prior to soldering or welding. FLUYTS (12) [noun] Plural of fluyt, a type of Dutch merchant ship used in the 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a narrow stern and large cargo capacity. FLYBOY (17) [noun] An aircraft pilot, especially of a military combat aircraft. FLYBYS (17) [noun] A flight past a celestial object in order to make observations. | [noun] A low-level ceremonial flight, typically in connection with an airshow or a military parade. | [noun] A brief visit. FLYERS (12) [noun] That which flies, as a bird or insect. | [noun] A machine that flies. | [noun] An airplane pilot. FLYING (13) [verb] To hit a fly ball; to hit a fly ball that is caught for an out. Compare ground (verb) and line (verb). | [verb] To travel through the air, another gas or a vacuum, without being in contact with a grounded surface. | [verb] To flee, to escape (from). | [noun] An act of flight. FLYMAN (14) [noun] Someone who drives the type of coach called a fly. | [noun] Someone who operates a fly system in a theatre. FLYMEN (14) [noun] Someone who drives the type of coach called a fly. | [noun] Someone who operates a fly system in a theatre. FLYOFF (18) [noun] A competition or contest to determine a winner between two rivals or finalists. | [noun] In aviation, a test flight or aerial competition between aircraft. FLYSCH (17) [noun] A series of sandstones and schists overlying the true nummulitic formation in the Alps, and included in the Eocene Tertiary. FLYTED (13) [verb] Past tense of "flyte," meaning to engage in a heated argument or exchange of insults, particularly in Scottish tradition. FLYTES (12) [verb] To engage in a flyting, which is a ritualized exchange of insults or invective, especially in Scottish tradition. | [noun] Plural of flyte; instances of such exchanges. FLYWAY (18) [noun] A migratory route used by birds between breeding areas. FOALED (10) [verb] To give birth to (a foal); to bear offspring. FOAMED (12) [verb] To form or emit foam. | [verb] To spew saliva as foam, to foam at the mouth. FOAMER (11) [noun] A person who is excessively enthusiastic about a particular hobby or interest, often used in railroad enthusiast contexts. | [noun] A beverage that froths or foams excessively. FOBBED (14) [verb] To cheat, to deceive, to trick, to take in, to impose upon someone. | [verb] To beat; to maul. FODDER (11) [noun] Food for animals; that which is fed to cattle, horses, and sheep, such as hay, cornstalks, vegetables, etc. | [noun] A load: various English units of weight or volume based upon standardized cartloads of certain commodities, generally around 1000 kg. | [noun] (drafting) Tracing paper. FODGEL (11) FOEHNS (12) [noun] A warm dry wind blowing down the north sides of the Alps, especially in Switzerland. | [noun] A similar katabatic wind developing on the lee side of a mountain. FOEMAN (11) [noun] An enemy or adversary in war; an opponent. FOEMEN (11) [noun] Plural of foeman; enemies or adversaries, especially in war or conflict. FOETAL (9) [adjective] Pertaining to, or connected with, a fetus. FOETID (10) [adjective] Foul-smelling, stinking. FOETOR (9) [noun] An unpleasant smell. FOETUS (9) [noun] An unborn or unhatched vertebrate showing signs of the mature animal. | [noun] A human embryo after the eighth week of gestation. FOGBOW (15) [noun] A white arc or circle, similar to a rainbow, which can appear in the sky in foggy conditions as sunlight passes through small airborne water droplets. FOGDOG (12) FOGEYS (13) [noun] A dull old fellow; a person behind the times, over-conservative, or slow. FOGGED (12) [verb] To become covered with or as if with fog. | [verb] To become obscured in condensation or water. | [verb] To become dim or obscure. FOGGER (11) [noun] A device or person that applies fog or mist, typically used for pest control or special effects. | [noun] Something that obscures or makes unclear. FOGIES (10) [noun] A dull old fellow; a person behind the times, over-conservative, or slow. FOIBLE (11) [noun] A quirk, idiosyncrasy, or mannerism; unusual habit or way (usage is typically plural), that is slightly strange or silly. | [noun] A weakness or failing of character. | [noun] Part of a sword between the middle and the point, weaker than the forte. FOILED (10) [verb] To cover or wrap with foil. | [verb] To prevent (something) from being accomplished. | [verb] To prevent (someone) from accomplishing something. FOINED (10) [verb] Past tense of "foin," meaning to thrust with a weapon such as a sword or foil. FOISON (9) [noun] A plentiful harvest or abundant supply of something. | [noun] Abundance or plenty, especially of provisions or food. FOISTS (9) [verb] To introduce or insert surreptitiously or without warrant. | [verb] To force another to accept especially by stealth or deceit. | [verb] To pass off as genuine or worthy. FOLATE (9) [noun] A salt or ester of folic acid, especially one present in the vitamin B complex. FOLDED (11) [verb] To bend (any thin material, such as paper) over so that it comes in contact with itself. | [verb] To make the proper arrangement (in a thin material) by bending. | [verb] To become folded; to form folds. FOLDER (10) [noun] An organizer that papers are kept in, usually with an index tab, to be stored as a single unit in a filing cabinet. | [noun] A virtual container in a computer's file system, in which files and other folders may be stored. The files and subfolders in a folder are usually related. | [noun] A machine or person that folds things. FOLIAR (9) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or via the leaves FOLIOS (9) [noun] A leaf of a book or manuscript | [noun] A page of a book, that is, one side of a leaf of a book. | [noun] A page number. The even folios are on the left-hand pages and the odd folios on the right-hand pages. FOLIUM (11) [noun] A leaf, especially a thin leaf or plate. | [noun] A curve of the third order, consisting of two infinite branches having a common asymptote. The curve has a double point, and a leaf-shaped loop. FOLKIE (13) [noun] A folk singer, or an enthusiast of folk music. | [adjective] Of, or relating to folk music FOLKSY (16) [adjective] Characteristic of simple country life. | [adjective] Informal, affable and familiar. FOLLES (9) [noun] Plural of folle, a foolish or silly person, particularly used in historical contexts to refer to someone considered mad or foolish. | [noun] Plural of folly, referring to costly structures built with no practical purpose, or instances of foolishness. FOLLIS (9) [noun] A large bronze coin minted during the Roman Empire. FOLLOW (12) [noun] (sometimes attributive) In billiards and similar games, a stroke causing a ball to follow another ball after hitting it. | [noun] The act of following another user's online activity. | [verb] To go after; to pursue; to move behind in the same path or direction. FOMENT (11) [noun] Fomentation. | [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOMITE (11) [noun] An inanimate object capable of carrying infectious agents (such as bacteria, viruses and parasites), and thus passively enabling their transmission between hosts. FONDED (11) FONDER (10) [adjective] (chiefly with of) Having a liking or affection (for). | [adjective] Affectionate. | [adjective] Indulgent. FONDLE (10) [verb] To touch or stroke lovingly. | [verb] To grasp. FONDLY (13) [adverb] In a fond manner; affectionately; tenderly. | [adverb] Foolishly. FONDUE (10) [noun] A dish made of melted cheese, chocolate etc., or of a boiling liquid into which food can be dipped. | [verb] To prepare or serve as a fondue. FONDUS (10) FONTAL (9) [adjective] Relating to or issuing from a source or fountain; of or pertaining to a font or baptismal basin. FOODIE (10) [noun] A person with a special interest in or knowledge of food, a gourmet. FOOLED (10) [verb] To trick; to deceive | [verb] To act in an idiotic manner; to act foolishly FOOTED (10) [verb] To use the foot to kick (usually a ball). | [verb] To pay (a bill). | [verb] To tread to measure or music; to dance; to trip; to skip. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified form or type of foot or number of feet. FOOTER (9) [noun] A footgoer; pedestrian | [noun] A line of information printed at the bottom of a page as identification of the document (compare foot, 13). | [noun] (in combination) something that is a stated number of feet in some dimension - such as a six-footer. | [noun] Football / soccer. | [verb] To meddle with or pass time without accomplishing anything meaningful. FOOTIE (9) [noun] (especially in plural) pyjamas or a similar covering that covers the feet | [noun] Alternative spelling of footy FOOTLE (9) [noun] Nonsense; foolishness. | [verb] To waste time; to trifle. | [verb] To talk nonsense. FOOTSY (12) [noun] A flirting game where two people touch their feet together, under a table or otherwise concealed, as a romantic prelude. | [noun] A foot. | [noun] A selfie (self-taken photograph) of one's feet. FOOZLE (18) [noun] A fogey. | [noun] A mistaken shot in golf. | [noun] The final boss character in a game. FOPPED (14) [verb] Past tense of fop; to dress or groom oneself in an excessively fashionable or vain manner. | [verb] To strike or hit with a fop (a foolish person). FORAGE (10) [noun] Fodder for animals, especially cattle and horses. | [noun] An act or instance of foraging. | [noun] The demand for fodder etc by an army from the local population FORAMS (11) [noun] Plural of foram, short for foraminifer, a single-celled marine organism with a chambered shell. FORAYS (12) [noun] A sudden or irregular incursion in border warfare; hence, any irregular incursion for war or spoils; a raid. | [noun] A brief excursion or attempt, especially outside one's accustomed sphere. | [verb] To scour (an area or place) for food, treasure, booty etc. FORBAD (12) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORBID (12) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORBYE (14) [adverb] Past; by; beyond. | [adverb] Uncommonly; exceptionally. | [preposition] Beyond; past; more than; greater than; over and above; moreover. FORCED (12) [verb] To violate (a woman); to rape. | [verb] To exert oneself, to do one's utmost. | [verb] To compel (someone or something) to do something. FORCER (11) [noun] One who forces or compels. | [noun] In bridge, a bid that requires partner to make another bid. FORCES (11) [noun] Strength or energy of body or mind; active power; vigour; might; capacity of exercising an influence or producing an effect. | [noun] Power exerted against will or consent; compulsory power; violence; coercion. | [noun] Anything that is able to make a substantial change in a person or thing. FORDED (11) [verb] To cross a stream using a ford. FORDID (11) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREBY (14) FOREDO (10) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREGO (10) [verb] To precede, to go before. | [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. FOREST (9) [noun] A dense uncultivated tract of trees and undergrowth, larger than woods. | [noun] Any dense collection or amount. | [noun] A defined area of land set aside in England as royal hunting ground or for other privileged use; all such areas. FORGAT (10) FORGED (11) [verb] To shape a metal by heating and hammering. | [verb] To form or create with concerted effort. | [verb] To create a forgery of; to make a counterfeit item of; to copy or imitate unlawfully. FORGER (10) [noun] A person who creates forgeries, falsifies documents with intent to defraud, e.g. to create a false will or illicit copies of currency; counterfeiter. | [noun] A person who forges metals. FORGES (10) [noun] Furnace or hearth where metals are heated prior to hammering them into shape. | [noun] Workshop in which metals are shaped by heating and hammering them. | [noun] The act of beating or working iron or steel. FORGET (10) [verb] To lose remembrance of. | [verb] To unintentionally not do, neglect. | [verb] To unintentionally leave something behind. FORGOT (10) [verb] To lose remembrance of. | [verb] To unintentionally not do, neglect. | [verb] To unintentionally leave something behind. FORINT (9) [noun] The basic unit of currency of Hungary; formerly subdivided into 100 fillér. FORKED (14) [verb] To divide into two or more branches. | [verb] To move with a fork (as hay or food). | [verb] To spawn a new child process in some sense duplicating the existing process. FORKER (13) [noun] One who forks. | [noun] A tool or utensil with prongs used for eating or digging. FORMAL (11) [noun] Formalin. | [noun] An evening gown. | [noun] An event with a formal dress code. FORMAT (11) [noun] The layout of a publication or document. | [noun] (hence) The form of presentation of something. | [noun] The type of programming that a radio station broadcasts; such as a certain genre of music, news, sports, talk, etc. FORMED (12) [verb] To assume (a certain shape or visible structure). | [verb] To give (a shape or visible structure) to a thing or person. | [verb] To take shape. FORMEE (11) [noun] A person who is formed or shaped, especially in a particular way or tradition. | [adjective] Formed or shaped in a particular manner. FORMER (11) [adjective] Previous. | [adjective] First of aforementioned two items. Used with the, often without a noun. | [noun] Someone who forms something; a maker; a creator or founder. FORMES (11) [noun] (heading, physical) To do with shape. | [noun] (social) To do with structure or procedure. | [noun] A blank document or template to be filled in by the user. FORMIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or derived from ants. | [adjective] Relating to formic acid, a colorless corrosive liquid found in ant venom. FORMOL (11) [noun] A 10% solution of formaldehyde in water. FORMYL (14) [noun] The univalent radical -CHO, derived from formaldehyde, that is characteristic of aldehydes FORNIX (16) [noun] An archlike structure or fold. | [noun] Specifically, the arched bundle of fibres or axons at the base of the brain. FORRIT (9) FORTES (9) [noun] A strength or talent. | [noun] The strong part of a sword blade, close to the hilt. | [noun] A passage in music to be played loudly; a loud section of music. FORTIS (9) [noun] A fortis consonant. | [adjective] Strongly articulated (of a consonant), hence voiceless. FORUMS (11) [noun] A place for discussion. | [noun] A gathering for the purpose of discussion. | [noun] A form of discussion involving a panel of presenters and often participation by members of the audience. FORWHY (18) [conjunction] An archaic or dialectal word meaning "why" or "for what reason." FOSSAE (9) [noun] A pit, groove, cavity, or depression. | [noun] A long, narrow, shallow depression on the body of an extraterrestrial body, such as a planet or moon. FOSSAS (9) [noun] A carnivorous mammal endemic to Madagascar, Cryptoprocta ferox. FOSSES (9) [noun] Waterfall (permanent flow of water over the edge of a cliff). | [noun] A pit, groove, cavity, or depression. | [noun] A long, narrow, shallow depression on the body of an extraterrestrial body, such as a planet or moon. FOSSIL (9) [noun] The mineralized remains of an animal or plant. | [noun] Any preserved evidence of ancient life, including shells, imprints, burrows, coprolites, and organically-produced chemicals. | [noun] A fossil word. FOSTER (9) [noun] A foster parent. | [noun] The care given to another; guardianship. | [verb] To nurture or bring up offspring, or to provide similar parental care to an unrelated child. | [noun] A forester. FOUGHT (13) [verb] To contend in physical conflict, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To contend in physical conflict with each other, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To strive for something; to campaign or contend for success. FOULED (10) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To besmirch. | [verb] To clog or obstruct. FOULER (9) [adjective] Covered with, or containing unclean matter; dirty. | [adjective] (of words or a way of speaking) obscene, vulgar or abusive. | [adjective] Detestable, unpleasant, loathsome. FOULLY (12) [adverb] In a foul or offensive manner; wickedly or disgustingly. | [adverb] In a manner that violates the rules of a game or sport. FOUNDS (10) [verb] To start (an institution or organization). | [verb] To begin building. | [verb] To melt, especially of metal in an industrial setting. FOUNTS (9) [noun] Something from which water flows. | [noun] A device from which poultry may drink. | [noun] That from which something flows or proceeds; a source. FOURTH (12) [noun] (not used in the plural) The person or thing in the fourth position. | [noun] (chiefly American) A quarter, one of four equal parts of a whole. | [noun] (not used in the plural) The fourth gear of an engine. FOVEAE (12) [noun] A slight depression or pit in a bone or organ. | [noun] The retinal fovea, or fovea centralis, responsible for sharp central vision. FOVEAL (12) [adjective] Relating to or affecting the fovea, a small depression in the retina of the eye responsible for sharp central vision. FOVEAS (12) [noun] Plural of fovea; small pits or depressions, especially the small depression in the retina of the eye where vision is sharpest. FOWLED (13) [verb] Past tense of foul; to make foul or dirty. | [verb] In sports, to commit a foul or violation of the rules. | [verb] To become entangled or caught, as in nautical contexts. FOWLER (12) [noun] A person who hunts or catches wild birds or game. | [noun] A person skilled in fowling, the sport of hunting wild birds. FOXIER (16) [adjective] Having the qualities of a fox. | [adjective] Cunning, sly. | [adjective] Attractive, sexy (of a woman). FOXILY (19) [adverb] In a foxily manner; with cunning, slyness, or craftiness resembling that of a fox. FOXING (17) [verb] To trick, fool or outwit (someone) by cunning or ingenuity. | [verb] To confuse or baffle (someone). | [verb] To act slyly or craftily. FOYERS (12) [noun] A lobby, corridor, or waiting room, used in a hotel, theater, etc. | [noun] The crucible or basin in a furnace which receives the molten metal. | [noun] A hostel offering accommodation and work opportunities to homeless young people. FOZIER (18) FRACAS (11) [noun] A noisy disorderly quarrel, fight, brawl, disturbance or scrap. FRACTI (11) FRAENA (9) [noun] Plural of fraenum, a small fold of tissue that connects or restrains a part of the body, such as the membrane under the tongue. FRAILS (9) [noun] A basket made of rushes, used chiefly to hold figs and raisins. | [noun] The quantity of fruit or other items contained in a frail. | [noun] A rush for weaving baskets. FRAISE (9) [verb] To put in danger, in terror, or at risk. | [noun] A type of palisade placed for defence around a berm; a defence consisting of pointed stakes driven into the ramparts in a horizontal or inclined position. | [noun] A ruff worn (especially by women) in the 16th century. | [noun] A large thick pancake with slices of bacon in it. | [noun] A stylized strawberry with leaves. | [noun] Commotion. FRAMED (12) [verb] To fit, as for a specific end or purpose; make suitable or comfortable; adapt; adjust. | [verb] To construct by fitting or uniting together various parts; fabricate by union of constituent parts. | [verb] To bring or put into form or order; adjust the parts or elements of; compose; contrive; plan; devise. FRAMER (11) [noun] A person who makes frames for paintings. | [noun] A person who assembles the frame of a ship. | [noun] A person who assembles the timbers of a wood-framed building. FRAMES (11) [noun] The structural elements of a building or other constructed object. | [noun] Anything composed of parts fitted and united together; a fabric; a structure. | [noun] The structure of a person's body; the human body. FRANCS (11) [noun] A former unit of currency of France, Belgium and Luxembourg, replaced by the euro. | [noun] Any of several units of currency, some of which are multi-national (West African CFA Franc (XOF), Central African CFA Franc (XAF), the Swiss franc (CHF)) while others are national currencies. FRANKS (13) [noun] Free postage, a right exercised by governments (usually with definite article). | [noun] The notice on an envelope where a stamp would normally be found. | [verb] To place a frank on an envelope. FRAPPE (13) [noun] Liqueur poured over shaved ice. | [noun] A thick milkshake containing ice cream. | [noun] (Greece) An iced, sweetened, beaten coffee drink. FRATER (9) [noun] A monk. | [noun] A frater house. | [noun] A comrade. FRAUDS (10) [noun] The crime of stealing or otherwise illegally obtaining money by use of deception tactics. | [noun] Any act of deception carried out for the purpose of unfair, undeserved and/or unlawful gain. | [noun] The assumption of a false identity to such deceptive end. FRAYED (13) [verb] To (cause to) unravel; used particularly for the edge of something made of cloth, or the end of a rope. | [verb] To cause exhaustion, wear out (a person's mental strength). | [verb] Frighten; alarm FRAZIL (18) [noun] A collection of stray ice crystals that form in fast-moving water. FREAKS (13) [noun] A sudden change of mind | [noun] Someone or something that is markedly unusual or unpredictable. | [noun] A hippie. FREAKY (16) [adjective] Resembling a freak. | [adjective] Odd; bizarre; unusual. | [adjective] Scary; frightening. FREELY (12) [adjective] Free; frank. | [adjective] Generous; noble; excellent; beautiful; lovely. | [adverb] In a free manner. FREERS (9) [noun] Plural of freer, one who frees or liberates. | [adjective] Comparative form of free, more free or at greater liberty. FREEST (9) [verb] To make free; set at liberty; release. | [verb] To rid of something that confines or oppresses. | [adjective] (social) Unconstrained. FREEZE (18) [verb] Especially of a liquid, to become solid due to low temperature. | [verb] To lower something's temperature to the point that it freezes or becomes hard. | [verb] To drop to a temperature below zero degrees celsius, where water turns to ice. | [noun] A period of intensely cold weather. | [noun] A kind of coarse woolen cloth or stuff with a shaggy or tufted (friezed) nap on one side. FRENCH (14) [verb] To prepare food by cutting it into strips. | [verb] To kiss (another person) while inserting one’s tongue into the other person's mouth. | [verb] To kiss in this manner. FRENUM (11) [noun] A frenulum. FRENZY (21) [noun] A state of wild activity or panic. | [noun] A violent agitation of the mind approaching madness; rage. | [verb] To render frantic. FRERES (9) FRESCO (11) [noun] A cool, refreshing state of the air; coolness, duskiness, shade. | [noun] An artwork made by applying water-based pigment to wet or fresh lime mortar or plaster. | [noun] The technique used to make such an artwork. FRETTY (12) FRIARS (9) [noun] A member of a mendicant Christian order such as the Augustinians, Carmelites (white friars), Franciscans (grey friars) or the Dominicans (black friars). | [noun] A white or pale patch on a printed page. | [noun] An American fish, the silverside. FRIARY (12) [noun] House or dwelling where friars or members of certain religious communities live | [adjective] Like a friar; relating to friars or to a convent. FRIDGE (11) [noun] A refrigerator. | [verb] To place inside of a refrigerator. | [verb] To gratuitously kill, disempower, or otherwise remove a character, usually female, from a narrative, often strictly to hurt another character, usually male, and provide him with a personal motivation for fighting the antagonist(s). | [verb] To rub, chafe. FRIEND (10) [noun] A person other than a family member, spouse or lover whose company one enjoys and towards whom one feels affection. | [noun] An associate who provides assistance. | [noun] A person with whom one is vaguely or indirectly acquainted. FRIERS (9) [noun] A member of a mendicant Christian order such as the Augustinians, Carmelites (white friars), Franciscans (grey friars) or the Dominicans (black friars). | [noun] A white or pale patch on a printed page. | [noun] An American fish, the silverside. FRIEZE (18) [noun] A kind of coarse woolen cloth or stuff with a shaggy or tufted (friezed) nap on one side. | [verb] To make a nap on (cloth); to friz. | [noun] That part of the entablature of an order which is between the architrave and cornice. It is a flat member or face, either uniform or broken by triglyphs, and often enriched with figures and other ornaments of sculpture. FRIGHT (13) [noun] A state of terror excited by the sudden appearance of danger; sudden and violent fear, usually of short duration; a sudden alarm. | [noun] Anything strange, ugly or shocking, producing a feeling of alarm or aversion. | [verb] To frighten. | [adjective] Frightened; afraid; affright FRIGID (11) [adjective] Very cold; lacking warmth; icy. | [adjective] Chilly in manner; lacking affection or zeal; impassive. | [adjective] Sexually unresponsive, especially of a woman. FRIJOL (16) FRILLS (9) [noun] A strip of pleated fabric or paper used as decoration or trim. | [noun] A substance or material on the edge of something, resembling such a strip of fabric. | [noun] A wrinkled edge to a film. FRILLY (12) [adjective] Having frills; frilled. | [adjective] Over-elaborate or showy in character or appearance. FRINGE (10) [noun] Hair hanging over the forehead. | [noun] A hairstyle including such hair, especially cut straight across the forehead. | [noun] Brucellosis, a bacterial disease. FRINGY (13) FRISES (9) FRISKS (13) [verb] To frolic, gambol, skip, dance, leap. | [verb] To search somebody by feeling his or her body and clothing. FRISKY (16) [adjective] Abounding in energy or playfulness | [adjective] Sexually aroused FRITHS (12) [noun] An arm or inlet of the sea; a river estuary. | [noun] Peace; security. | [noun] Sanctuary, asylum. FRITTS (9) FRIVOL (12) [noun] An unserious person; a shallow person. | [noun] An idle diversion or pastime; a frivolity. | [verb] To behave frivolously. FRIZED (19) FRIZER (18) FRIZES (18) FRIZZY (30) [noun] A small amount of unkempt, curly hair | [adjective] Formed of a mass of small, tight, wiry curls; unruly or extending in all directions. FROCKS (15) [noun] A dress, a piece of clothing for a female, which consists of a skirt and a cover for the upper body. | [noun] An outer garment worn by priests and other clericals; a habit. | [noun] A sailor's jersey. FROGGY (14) [noun] A frog. | [noun] A Frenchman. | [adjective] Froglike. FROLIC (11) [noun] Gaiety; merriment. | [noun] A playful antic. | [noun] A social gathering. FRONDS (10) [noun] The leaf of a fern, especially a compound leaf. | [noun] Any fern-like leaf or other object resembling a fern leaf. FRONTS (9) [noun] The foremost side of something or the end that faces the direction it normally moves. | [noun] The side of a building with the main entrance. | [noun] A field of activity. FROSTS (9) [noun] A cover of minute ice crystals on objects that are exposed to the air. Frost is formed by the same process as dew, except that the temperature of the frosted object is below freezing. | [noun] The cold weather that causes these ice crystals to form. | [noun] Coldness or insensibility; severity or rigidity of character. FROSTY (12) [adjective] Cold, chilly. | [adjective] Having frost on it. | [adjective] Having an aloof or inhospitable manner. FROTHS (12) [verb] To create froth in (a liquid). | [verb] (of a liquid) To bubble. | [verb] To spit, vent, or eject, as froth. FROTHY (15) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A serving of beer. | [adjective] Foamy or churned to the point of becoming infused with bubbles. | [adjective] Lightweight; lacking depth or substance FROUZY (21) FROWNS (12) [noun] A facial expression in which the eyebrows are brought together, and the forehead is wrinkled, usually indicating displeasure, sadness or worry, or less often confusion or concentration. | [noun] A facial expression in which the corners of the mouth are pointed down. | [verb] To have a frown on one's face. FROWST (12) [noun] Stuffiness; stifling warmth in a room. | [verb] To enjoy being in a warm, close, stuffy place. FROWSY (15) [adjective] Having a dingy, neglected, and scruffy appearance. FROWZY (24) [adjective] Having a dingy, neglected, and scruffy appearance. FROZEN (18) [verb] Especially of a liquid, to become solid due to low temperature. | [verb] To lower something's temperature to the point that it freezes or becomes hard. | [verb] To drop to a temperature below zero degrees celsius, where water turns to ice. FRUGAL (10) [adjective] Avoiding unnecessary expenditure either of money or of anything else which is to be used or consumed; avoiding waste. FRUITS (9) [noun] (often in the plural) In general, a product of plant growth useful to man or animals. | [noun] Specifically, a sweet, edible part of a plant that resembles seed-bearing fruit (see next sense), even if it does not develop from a floral ovary; also used in a technically imprecise sense for some sweet or sweetish vegetables, such as the petioles of rhubarb, that resemble a true fruit or are used in cookery as if they were a fruit. | [noun] A product of fertilization in a plant, specifically: FRUITY (12) [adjective] Containing fruit or fruit flavoring. | [adjective] Similar to fruit or tasting of fruit. | [adjective] Mad, crazy. FRUMPS (13) [noun] A frumpy person, somebody who is unattractive, drab or dowdy. | [noun] The clothes that such a person would wear. | [noun] A bad-tempered person. FRUMPY (16) [adjective] Dowdy, unkempt, or unfashionable. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FRUSTA (9) [noun] A cone or pyramid whose tip has been truncated by a plane parallel to its base. | [noun] A portion of a sphere, or in general any solid, delimited by two parallel planes. FRYERS (12) [noun] A container for frying food. | [noun] A young chicken suitable for frying; a pullet FRYING (13) [verb] A method of cooking food. | [verb] To be affected by extreme heat or current. | [noun] The action of the verb fry. FRYPAN (14) [noun] A frying pan. FUBBED (14) FUCKED (16) [verb] To have sexual intercourse, to copulate. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. | [verb] To insert one’s penis, a dildo or other phallic object, into a specified orifice or cleft. FUCKER (15) [noun] An undesirable person. | [noun] The object of some effort. | [noun] People, friends, especially of very high solidarity. FUCKUP (17) [noun] A serious mistake. | [noun] One who continually makes mistakes. | [noun] An ineffective person; a person who fucks up a lot FUCOID (12) [noun] A fucoid seaweed. | [adjective] Resembling or relating to seaweeds of the genus Fucus. | [adjective] Of sandstone: bearing seaweed-like markings. FUCOSE (11) FUCOUS (11) FUDDLE (11) [noun] Intoxication. | [noun] Intoxicating drink; liquor. | [noun] Muddle, confusion. FUDGED (12) [verb] To try to avoid giving a direct answer. | [verb] To alter something from its true state, as to hide a flaw or uncertainty. Always deliberate, but not necessarily dishonest or immoral. | [verb] To botch or bungle something. FUDGES (11) [noun] A type of very sweet candy or confection, usually made from sugar, butter, and milk or cream. Often used in the US synonymously with chocolate fudge. | [noun] Light or frothy nonsense. | [noun] A deliberately misleading or vague answer. FUELED (10) [verb] To provide with fuel. | [verb] To exacerbate, to cause to grow or become greater. FUELER (9) FUGATO (10) [noun] A fugal passage in a composition that is not a strict or complete fugue. FUGGED (12) FUGIOS (10) FUGLED (11) FUGLES (10) FUGUED (11) FUGUES (10) [noun] A contrapuntal piece of music wherein a particular melody is played in a number of voices, each voice introduced in turn by playing the melody. | [noun] Anything in literature, poetry, film, painting, etc., that resembles a fugue in structure or in its elaborate complexity and formality. | [noun] A fugue state. FUHRER (12) [noun] A leader, especially one exercising the powers of a tyrant | [noun] (definite) Adolf Hitler when he was the chancellor of Nazi Germany FULCRA (11) [noun] The support about which a lever pivots. | [noun] A crux or pivot; a central point. FULFIL (12) [verb] To satisfy, carry out, bring to completion (an obligation, a requirement, etc.). | [verb] To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest. | [verb] To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.). FULGID (11) FULHAM (14) FULLAM (11) FULLED (10) [verb] (of the moon) To become full or wholly illuminated. | [verb] To baptise. | [verb] To make cloth denser and firmer by soaking, beating and pressing, to waulk, walk FULLER (9) [adjective] Containing the maximum possible amount that can fit in the space available. | [adjective] Complete; with nothing omitted. | [adjective] Total, entire. | [noun] A person who fulls cloth. | [noun] A convex, rounded or grooved tool, used by blacksmiths for shaping metal. FULMAR (11) [noun] Either of two species of pelagic seabird in the genus Fulmarus, Fulmarus glacialis and F. glacialoides, which breed on cliffs. FUMBLE (13) [noun] A ball etc. that has been dropped by accident. | [verb] To handle nervously or awkwardly. | [verb] To grope awkwardly in trying to find something | [noun] A dessert similar to a cross between a fool and a crumble. FUMERS (11) FUMETS (11) [noun] A type of concentrated food stock that is added to sauces to enhance their flavour. Variations are fish fumet and mushroom fumet. | [noun] A ragout of partridge and rabbit braised in wine. | [noun] The stench or high flavour of game or other meat when kept long. FUMIER (11) FUMING (12) [verb] To expose (something) to fumes; specifically, to expose wood, etc., to ammonia in order to produce dark tints. | [verb] To apply or offer incense to. | [verb] To emit fumes. FUMULI (11) FUNDED (11) [verb] To pay for. | [verb] To place (money) in a fund. | [verb] To form a debt into a stock charged with interest. FUNDIC (12) FUNDUS (10) [noun] The large, hollow part of an organ farthest from an opening; especially FUNEST (9) FUNGAL (10) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a fungus or fungi. FUNGIC (12) FUNGUS (10) [noun] Any member of the kingdom Fungi; a eukaryotic organism typically having chitin cell walls but no chlorophyll or plastids. Fungi may be unicellular or multicellular. | [noun] A spongy, abnormal excrescence, such as excessive granulation tissue formed in a wound. FUNKED (14) [verb] To emit an offensive smell; to stink. | [verb] To envelop with an offensive smell or smoke. | [verb] To shrink from, or avoid something because of fear. FUNKER (13) FUNKIA (13) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Funkia (now Hosta). FUNNED (10) [verb] To tease, kid, poke fun at, make fun of. FUNNEL (9) [noun] A utensil in the shape of an inverted hollow cone terminating in a narrow pipe, for channeling liquids or granular material; typically used when transferring said substances from any container into ones with a significantly smaller opening. | [noun] A passage or avenue for a fluid or flowing substance; specifically, a smoke flue or pipe; the chimney of a steamship or the like. | [verb] To use a funnel. | [noun] A hinny; hybrid of male horse and female donkey. FUNNER (9) [adjective] Enjoyable, amusing | [adjective] Whimsical, flamboyant FURANE (9) FURANS (9) [noun] Any of a class of aromatic heterocyclic compounds containing a ring of four carbon atoms, two double bonds and an oxygen atom; especially the simplest one, C4H4O. FURFUR (12) FURIES (9) [noun] Extreme anger. | [noun] Strength or violence in action. | [noun] An angry or malignant person. FURLED (10) [verb] To lower, roll up and secure (something, such as a sail or flag) FURLER (9) FURORE (9) [noun] Uproar; enthusiastic anger. | [noun] Excitement or commotion. FURORS (9) [noun] A general uproar or commotion | [noun] Violent anger or frenzy | [noun] A state of intense excitement FURRED (10) [verb] To cover with fur or a fur-like coating. | [verb] To become covered with fur or a fur-like coating. | [verb] To level a surface by applying furring to it. FURROW (12) [noun] A trench cut in the soil, as when plowed in order to plant a crop. | [noun] Any trench, channel, or groove, as in wood or metal. | [noun] A deep wrinkle in the skin of the face, especially on the forehead. FURZES (18) FUSAIN (9) [noun] Fine charcoal of willow wood, used as a drawing implement. | [noun] A drawing made with it. FUSEES (9) [noun] A light musket or firelock. | [noun] A conical, grooved pulley in early clocks. | [noun] A large friction match. FUSELS (9) FUSILE (9) FUSILS (9) [noun] A bearing of a rhomboidal figure, originally representing a spindle in shape, longer than a heraldic lozenge. | [noun] A light flintlock musket or firelock. FUSING (10) [verb] To melt together; to blend; to mix indistinguishably. | [verb] To melt together. | [verb] To furnish with or install a fuse. FUSION (9) [noun] The act of merging separate elements, or the result thereof. | [verb] To combine; to fuse FUSSED (10) [verb] To be very worried or excited about something, often too much. | [verb] To fiddle; fidget; wiggle, or adjust | [verb] (especially of babies) To cry or be ill-humoured. FUSSER (9) FUSSES (9) [noun] Excessive activity, worry, bother, or talk about something. | [noun] A complaint or noise; a scene. | [noun] An exhibition of affection or admiration. FUSTIC (11) [noun] A tropical American tree, Maclura tinctoria, whose wood produces a yellow dye. | [noun] A European tree, Eurasian smoketree, Cotinus coggygria, whose wood produces an orange dye. | [noun] The wood of these trees. FUTILE (9) [adjective] Incapable of producing results; doomed not to be successful; not worth attempting. FUTONS (9) [noun] A thin mattress of tufted cotton or similar material, placed on a floor or on a raised, foldable frame as a bed. | [noun] A round cushion used for Zen meditation, traditionally made of woven bulrush leaves. FUTURE (9) [noun] The time ahead; those moments yet to be experienced. | [noun] Something that will happen in moments yet to come. | [noun] Goodness in what is yet to come. Something to look forward to. FUTZED (19) [verb] To be frivolous and waste time | [verb] To experiment by trial and error FUTZES (18) [verb] To be frivolous and waste time | [verb] To experiment by trial and error FUZEES (18) [noun] A light musket or firelock. | [noun] A conical, grooved pulley in early clocks. | [noun] A large friction match. FUZILS (18) FUZING (19) [verb] (professional usage) To attach a fuze to. FUZZED (28) [verb] To make fuzzy. | [verb] To become fuzzy. | [verb] To make drunk. FUZZES (27) [noun] A frizzy mass of hair or fibre. | [noun] Quality of an image that is unclear; a blurred image. | [noun] The random data used in fuzz testing. FYLFOT (15) [noun] A swastika, especially one with the arms bent in an anticlockwise direction. FYTTES (12) [noun] The degree to which something fits. | [noun] Conformity of elements one to another. | [noun] The part of an object upon which anything fits tightly.

7-Letter Words (1030)

FABLERS (12) [noun] Plural of fabler; those who tell fables or create fictional stories. FABLIAU (12) [noun] A short, farcical, often bawdy tale of a genre written in the North of France in the 12th, 13th and 14th centuries. FABLING (13) [verb] To compose fables; hence, to write or speak fiction; to write or utter what is not true. | [verb] To make up; to devise, and speak of, as true or real; to tell of falsely; to recount in the form of a fable. | [noun] The act of telling fables. FABRICS (14) [noun] An edifice or building. | [noun] The act of constructing, construction, fabrication. | [noun] The structure of anything, the manner in which the parts of a thing are united; workmanship, texture, make. FABULAR (12) [adjective] Relating to or of the nature of a fable; legendary or mythical. FACADES (13) [noun] The face of a building, especially the front view or elevation. | [noun] (by extension) The face or front (most visible side) of any other thing, such as an organ. | [noun] A deceptive or insincere outward appearance; a front. FACETED (13) [verb] To cut a facet into a gemstone. | [adjective] Having facets. FACIALS (12) [noun] A personal care beauty treatment which involves cleansing and moisturizing of the human face. | [noun] A kind of early silent film focusing on the facial expressions of the actor. | [noun] (in some contact sports) A foul play which involves one player hitting another in the face. FACIEND (13) FACINGS (13) [noun] The most external portion of exterior siding. | [noun] Fabric applied to a garment edge on the underside. | [noun] A powdered substance, such as charcoal or bituminous coal, applied to the face of a mould, or mixed with the sand that forms it, to give a fine smooth surface to the casting. FACTFUL (15) FACTION (12) [noun] A group of people, especially within a political organization, which expresses a shared belief or opinion different from people who are not part of the group. | [noun] Strife; discord. | [noun] A form of literature, film etc., that treats real people or events as if they were fiction; a mix of fact and fiction FACTOID (13) [noun] An inaccurate statement or statistic believed to be true because of broad repetition, especially if cited in the media. | [noun] (originally North America) An interesting item of trivia; a minor fact. FACTORS (12) [noun] A doer, maker; a person who does things for another person or organization. | [noun] An agent or representative. | [noun] A commission agent. FACTORY (15) [noun] A trading establishment, especially set up by merchants working in a foreign country. | [noun] The position or state of being a factor. | [noun] A building or other place where manufacturing takes place. FACTUAL (12) [adjective] Pertaining to or consisting of objective claims. | [adjective] True, accurate, corresponding to reality. FACTURE (12) [noun] The act or manner of making or doing anything, especially of a literary, musical, or pictorial production. | [noun] An invoice or bill of parcels. FACULAE (12) [noun] A bright spot or patch between sunspots FACULAR (12) [adjective] Relating to or resembling faculae, which are bright regions on the sun's surface. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to torches or artificial light. FACULTY (15) [noun] The academic staff at schools, colleges, universities or not-for-profit research institutes, as opposed to the students or support staff. | [noun] A division of a university. | [noun] An ability, skill, or power, often plural. FADABLE (13) FADDIER (12) [adjective] Having characteristics of a fad. | [adjective] Fussy, having particular tastes or whims FADDISH (15) [adjective] Inclined to follow fads; characterized by or given to adopting fads. | [adjective] Temporary or superficial in nature; likely to be short-lived or go out of fashion. FADDISM (14) [noun] The practice of following fads or temporary fashions; excessive enthusiasm for fads. FADDIST (12) [noun] A person who follows fads; someone who enthusiastically adopts temporary fashions or trends. FADEDLY (15) FADGING (13) FADINGS (12) [noun] The plural of fading; gradual loss of brightness, color, or strength. | [verb] Present participle of fade; gradually losing brightness, color, or strength. FAERIES (10) [noun] Realm of the fays, fairyland. | [noun] The realm of faerie; enchantment, illusion. | [noun] A mythical being with magical powers, known in many sizes and descriptions, although often depicted in modern illustrations only as a small sprite with gauze-like wings, and revered in some modern forms of paganism. FAGGING (13) [verb] (used mainly in passive form) To make exhausted, tired out. | [verb] To droop; to tire. | [verb] For a younger student to act as a servant for senior students in many British boarding schools. FAGGOTS (12) [noun] (collective) A bundle of sticks or brushwood intended to be used for fuel tied together for carrying. (Some sources specify that a faggot is tied with two bands or withes, whereas a bavin is tied with just one.) | [noun] Burdensome baggage. | [noun] A bundle of pieces of iron or steel cut off into suitable lengths for welding. FAGGOTY (15) [adjective] Relating to or consisting of faggots of wood. | [adjective] Characteristic of or appropriate for homosexual men, especially effeminate ones. FAGOTED (12) [verb] To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or bundle. FAGOTER (11) FAIENCE (12) [noun] A type of tin-glazed earthenware ceramic. | [noun] The beads and small ornaments of the eastern Mediterranean. (Of bronze and iron age manufacture using frit technology.) FAILING (11) [verb] To be unsuccessful. | [verb] Not to achieve a particular stated goal. (Usage note: The direct object of this word is usually an infinitive.) | [verb] To neglect. FAILLES (10) [noun] A fabric woven from silk, cotton, or rayon with slight ribs. FAILURE (10) [noun] State or condition of not meeting a desirable or intended objective, opposite of success. | [noun] An object, person or endeavour in a state of failure or incapable of success. | [noun] Termination of the ability of an item to perform its required function; breakdown. FAINEST (10) FAINTED (11) [verb] To lose consciousness through a lack of oxygen or nutrients to the brain, usually as a result of suddenly reduced blood flow (may be caused by emotional trauma, loss of blood or various medical conditions). | [verb] To sink into dejection; to lose courage or spirit; to become depressed or despondent. | [verb] To decay; to disappear; to vanish. FAINTER (10) [adjective] (of a being) Lacking strength; weak; languid; inclined to lose consciousness | [adjective] Lacking courage, spirit, or energy; cowardly; dejected | [adjective] Barely perceptible; not bright, or loud, or sharp FAINTLY (13) [adverb] In a faint manner; very quietly or lightly. FAIREST (10) [adjective] Beautiful, of a pleasing appearance, with a pure and fresh quality. | [adjective] Unblemished (figuratively or literally); clean and pure; innocent. | [adjective] Light in color, pale, particularly with regard to skin tone but also referring to blond hair. FAIRIES (10) [noun] The realm of faerie; enchantment, illusion. | [noun] A mythical being with magical powers, known in many sizes and descriptions, although often depicted in modern illustrations only as a small sprite with gauze-like wings, and revered in some modern forms of paganism. | [noun] An enchantress, or creature of overpowering charm. FAIRING (11) [verb] To smoothen or even a surface (especially a connection or junction on a surface). | [verb] To bring into perfect alignment (especially about rivet holes when connecting structural members). | [verb] To construct or design a structure whose primary function is to produce a smooth outline or reduce air drag or water resistance. FAIRISH (13) [adjective] Moderately fair; somewhat fair or acceptable in quality or appearance. FAIRWAY (16) [noun] The area between the tee and the green, where the grass is cut short. | [noun] Any tract of land free from obstacles. | [noun] (Military) A channel either from offshore, in a river, or in a harbor that has enough depth to accommodate the draft of large vessels. (JP 4-01.6) FAITHED (14) FAITOUR (10) [noun] A vagabond or impostor; a beggar who pretends to be diseased or distressed to gain sympathy. FAJITAS (17) [noun] A Tex-Mex dish of strips of spicy marinated meat and/or vegetables in a soft flour tortilla, often served with salad or a savoury filling. FAKEERS (14) [noun] An Eastern religious ascetic or monk. FALAFEL (13) [noun] A Middle Eastern food in the form of balls made from chickpeas and other ingredients. Often served in a pita. | [noun] A pita with falafel balls inside (like a sandwich or a wrap). | [noun] A single falafel ball. FALBALA (12) [noun] A gathered or pleated strip of fabric used as a decoration or ruffle on clothing. FALCATE (12) [adjective] Shaped like a sickle. FALCONS (12) [noun] Any bird of the genus Falco, all of which are birds of prey. | [noun] A female such bird, a male being a tiercel. | [noun] A light cannon used from the 15th to the 17th century; a falconet. FALLACY (15) [noun] Deceptive or false appearance; that which misleads the eye or the mind. | [noun] An argument, or apparent argument, which professes to be decisive of the matter at issue, while in reality it is not. A specious argument. FALLALS (10) [noun] Showy ornaments or decorative items of little value; trinkets or gewgaws. FALLERS (10) [noun] One who falls. | [noun] A fruit that falls from the tree, rather than being picked. | [noun] A part which acts by falling, such as a stamp in a fulling mill, or the device in a spinning machine to arrest motion when a thread breaks. FALLING (11) [verb] (heading) To be moved downwards. | [verb] To move downwards. | [verb] To happen, to change negatively. FALLOFF (16) [noun] A reduction or decline. FALLOUT (10) [noun] The event of small airborne particles falling to the ground in significant quantities as a result of major industrial activity, volcano eruption, sandstorm, nuclear explosion, etc. | [noun] The particles themselves. | [noun] A negative side effect; an undesirable or unexpected consequence. FALLOWS (13) [noun] Ground ploughed and harrowed but left unseeded for one year. | [noun] Uncultivated land. | [noun] The ploughing or tilling of land, without sowing it for a season. FALSELY (13) [adverb] In a false manner. FALSEST (10) [adjective] Untrue, not factual, factually incorrect. | [adjective] Based on factually incorrect premises. | [adjective] Spurious, artificial. FALSIES (10) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) padding worn inside a brassiere to make the breasts appear larger | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) a false eyelash, used as a cosmetic enhancement FALSIFY (16) [verb] To alter so as to make false; to make incorrect. | [verb] To misrepresent. | [verb] To prove to be false. FALSITY (13) [noun] Something that is false; an untrue assertion. | [noun] The characteristic of being untrue. FALTERS (10) [verb] To waver or be unsteady; to weaken or trail off. | [verb] To stammer; to utter with hesitation, or in a weak and trembling manner. | [verb] To fail in distinctness or regularity of exercise; said of the mind or of thought. FAMINES (12) [noun] Extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] A period of extreme shortage of food in a region. | [noun] Starvation or malnutrition. FAMULUS (12) [noun] A close attendant or assistant, especially of a magician or occult scholar. FANATIC (12) [noun] A person who is zealously enthusiastic for some cause, especially in religion. | [adjective] Fanatical. | [adjective] Showing evidence of possession by a god or demon; frenzied, overzealous. FANCIED (13) [adjective] Imagined. | [verb] To appreciate without jealousy or greed. | [verb] Would like FANCIER (12) [noun] One who fancies; a person with a special interest, attraction or liking for something. An aficionado. | [noun] A person who breeds or grows a particular animal or plant for points of excellence. | [noun] One who fancies or imagines. FANCIES (12) [noun] The imagination. | [noun] An image or representation of anything formed in the mind. | [noun] An opinion or notion formed without much reflection. FANCIFY (18) [verb] To make something fancy or more elaborate in appearance or style. FANCILY (15) [adverb] In a fancy or elaborate manner; with decorative or ornamental style. FANDOMS (13) [noun] The fans of a sport, activity, work, person etc., taken as a group. | [noun] The subculture of fans. | [noun] The state, quality, or condition of being a fan. FANEGAS (11) [noun] A unit of dry measure used in Spain and Spanish America, typically equal to about 1.6 bushels or 55 liters. FANFARE (13) [noun] A flourish of trumpets or horns as to announce; a short and lively air performed on hunting horns during the chase. | [noun] A show of ceremony or celebration. | [verb] To play a fanfare. FANFOLD (14) [noun] Paper folded in a zigzag pattern, commonly used in computer printers and typewriters. | [verb] To fold paper in a zigzag pattern. FANIONS (10) [noun] Small flags or banners, especially those carried by soldiers or used as military signals. | [noun] Plural of fanion, a surveying flag used to mark points in surveying and mapping. FANJETS (17) [noun] A turbofan engine. | [noun] An airplane powered by turbofan engines. FANLIKE (14) [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a fan; having the form or appearance of a fan. FANNERS (10) [noun] People or things that fan. | [noun] Plural of fanner, a device or person that creates air movement by fanning. FANNIES (10) [noun] The female genitalia. | [noun] The buttocks; arguably the most nearly polite of several euphemisms. | [noun] Sexual intercourse with a woman. FANNING (11) [verb] To blow air on (something) by means of a fan (hand-held, mechanical or electrical) or otherwise. | [verb] To slap (a behind, especially). | [verb] (usually to fan out) To move or spread in multiple directions from one point, in the shape of a hand-held fan. FANTAIL (10) [noun] Any of several birds, of the genus Rhipidura, from Asia, Australia and New Zealand. | [noun] Any of several domestic varieties of pigeon having a fan-shaped tail. | [noun] Any of several goldfish having a large fan-shaped tail. FANTASM (12) [noun] A phantom or ghost; an apparition. | [noun] A product of the imagination; an illusion or fantasy. FANTAST (10) [noun] One whose manners or ideas are fantastic and fanciful. FANTASY (13) [noun] That which comes from one's imagination. | [noun] The literary genre generally dealing with themes of magic and the supernatural, imaginary worlds and creatures, etc. | [noun] A fantastical design. FANTODS (11) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A state of worry or nervous anxiety, irritability. | [noun] An irritable outburst. FANTOMS (12) FANWISE (13) FANWORT (13) [noun] An aquatic plant (Cabomba caroliniana) with finely divided leaves, commonly used in aquariums. FANZINE (19) [noun] A magazine, normally produced by amateurs, intended for people who share a common interest FAQUIRS (19) [noun] A faqir, owning no personal property and usually living solely off alms. | [noun] (Hindu) An ascetic mendicant, especially one who performs feats of endurance or apparent magic. | [noun] Someone who takes advantage of the gullible through fakery, especially of a spiritual or religious nature. FARADAY (14) [noun] The quantity of electricity required to deposit or liberate 1 gram equivalent weight of a substance during electrolysis; approximately −96,487 coulombs. FARADIC (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to electricity, especially to electrical induction. | [adjective] Of a current that is alternating, as opposed to galvanic. FARAWAY (16) [adjective] Distant. | [adjective] Not mentally present, as when daydreaming. FARCERS (12) [noun] Plural of farcer; people who perform in or write farces, or people who engage in deceptive or ridiculous behavior. FARCEUR (12) [noun] A person who writes farces, or who performs in them. | [noun] A farcical comedian. FARCIES (12) [verb] Plural third-person singular form of "farcie," meaning to stuff (food, especially meat or vegetables) with a filling. FARCING (13) [verb] The present participle of farce, meaning to stuff (poultry or meat) with forcemeat, or to fill out or pad something with unnecessary material. FARDELS (11) [noun] A fourth part: a quarter of anything. | [noun] An English unit of land area variously understood as the fourth part of an oxgang or of a yardland. | [noun] A bundle or burden. FARDING (12) [noun] The practice of applying cosmetics, makeup, or paint to the face. | [verb] Present participle of "fard," meaning to apply cosmetics or makeup to the face. FARFALS (13) [noun] Plural of farfel, a type of pasta made from eggs and flour, shaped into small pellets or granules. FARFELS (13) [noun] Small pellets of pasta, typically made from egg noodle dough, used in soups or as a side dish. | [noun] Fragments or scraps of something broken into small pieces. FARINAS (10) [noun] 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. FARINHA (13) FARMERS (12) [noun] A person who works the land and/or who keeps livestock, especially on a farm. | [noun] Agent noun of farm; someone or something that farms. | [noun] One who takes taxes, customs, excise, or other duties, to collect for a certain rate per cent. FARMING (13) [verb] To work on a farm, especially in the growing and harvesting of crops. | [verb] To devote (land) to farming. | [verb] To grow (a particular crop). FARNESS (10) [noun] The state of being far off, or the degree to which something is far; distance, span; remoteness FARRAGO (11) [noun] A collection containing a confused variety of miscellaneous things. FARRIER (10) [noun] A person who maintains the health and balance of horses' feet through the trimming of the hoof and fitting of horseshoes. | [verb] To practise as a farrier; to carry on the trade of a farrier. FARROWS (13) [noun] A litter of piglets. | [verb] To give birth to a (litter of piglets). FARSIDE (11) [noun] The side of a moon that faces away from the planet that it orbits FARTHER (13) [verb] To help forward; to assist. | [verb] To encourage growth; to support progress or growth of something; to promote. FARTING (11) [verb] (impolite) To emit digestive gases from the anus; to flatulate. | [verb] (usually as "fart around") To waste time with idle and inconsequential tasks; to go about one's activities in a lackadaisical manner; to be lazy or over-relaxed in one's manner or bearing. | [verb] To emit (fumes, gases, etc.). FASCIAE (12) [noun] A wide band of material covering the ends of roof rafters, sometimes supporting a gutter in steep-slope roofing, but typically it is a border or trim in low-slope roofing. | [noun] A face or front cover of an appliance, especially of a mobile phone. | [noun] A dashboard. FASCIAL (12) [adjective] Relating to or affecting fascia, the connective tissue that surrounds muscles and organs in the body. FASCIAS (12) [noun] A wide band of material covering the ends of roof rafters, sometimes supporting a gutter in steep-slope roofing, but typically it is a border or trim in low-slope roofing. | [noun] A face or front cover of an appliance, especially of a mobile phone. | [noun] A dashboard. FASCINE (12) [noun] (fortification) A cylindrical bundle of small sticks of wood, bound together, used in raising batteries, filling ditches, strengthening ramparts, and making parapets; also in revetments for river banks, and in mats for dams, jetties, etc. FASCISM (14) [noun] An authoritarian ultranationalist political ideology and movement characterized by dictatorial power, suppression of opposition, and often racism. | [noun] A system of government with strong centralized power and suppression of opposition under a single leader or party. FASCIST (12) [noun] A member of a fascist political movement or authoritarian nationalist regime. | [adjective] Of, relating to, or characteristic of fascism or fascists. FASHING (14) [verb] To worry; to bother, annoy. | [verb] To trouble oneself; to take pains. FASHION (13) [noun] A current (constantly changing) trend, favored for frivolous rather than practical, logical, or intellectual reasons. | [noun] Popular trends. | [noun] A style or manner in which something is done. FASTENS (10) [verb] To attach or connect in a secure manner. | [verb] To cause to take close effect; to make to tell; to land. FASTEST (10) [adjective] Firmly or securely fixed in place; stable. | [adjective] Firm against attack; fortified by nature or art; impregnable; strong. | [adjective] (of people) Steadfast, with unwavering feeling. (Now mostly in set phrases like fast friend(s).) FASTING (11) [verb] To restrict one’s personal consumption, generally of food, but sometimes other things, in various manners (totally, temporally, by avoiding particular items), often for religious or medical reasons. | [noun] Abstinence from food FATALLY (13) [adverb] In a fatal manner; lethally. | [adverb] Ultimately, with finality or irrevocability, moving towards the demise of something. | [adverb] Fatedly; according to the dictates of fate or doom. FATBACK (18) [noun] A layer of fat, along the back of a pig, used as a cut of meat or to make lard | [noun] A fish, the menhaden. FATBIRD (13) FATEFUL (13) [adjective] Momentous, significant, setting or sealing one’s fate. | [adjective] Determined in advance by fate, fated. FATHEAD (14) [noun] An idiot; a fool. | [noun] A cyprinid fish of the Mississippi valley, Pimephales promelas, the black-headed minnow. | [noun] A labroid food fish of California; the California sheephead. Semicossyphus pulcher. FATHERS (13) [noun] A (generally human) male who begets a child. | [noun] A male ancestor more remote than a parent; a progenitor; especially, a first ancestor. | [noun] A term of respectful address for an elderly man. FATHOMS (15) [noun] Grasp, envelopment, control. | [noun] (now usually nautical) An English unit of length for water depth notionally based upon the width of grown man's outstretched arms but standardized as 6 feet (about 1.8 m). | [noun] Various similar units in other systems. FATIDIC (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to prophecy; prophetic FATIGUE (11) [noun] A weariness caused by exertion; exhaustion. | [noun] (often in the plural) A menial task or tasks, especially in the military. | [noun] Material failure, such as cracking or separation, caused by stress on the material. FATLESS (10) [adjective] Containing no fat or having fat removed. | [adjective] Lacking richness, substance, or interest. FATLIKE (14) FATLING (11) [noun] A young animal (especially a calf or lamb) which has been fattened for slaughter. FATNESS (10) [noun] The state, quality, or condition of being fat. FATSOES (10) FATTENS (10) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to be fat or fatter. | [verb] (of a person or animal) To become fat or fatter. | [verb] To make thick or thicker (something containing paper, often money). FATTEST (10) [adjective] Carrying more fat than usual on one's body; plump; not lean or thin. | [adjective] Thick. | [adjective] Bountiful. FATTIER (10) [adjective] Containing, composed of, or consisting of fat. | [adjective] Like fat; greasy. | [adjective] Literally or figuratively large. FATTIES (10) [noun] An obese person. | [noun] A large marijuana cigar; a blunt. FATTILY (13) [adverb] In a fatty manner; with excess fat or grease. FATTING (11) [verb] To make fat; to fatten. | [verb] To become fat; to fatten. FATTISH (13) [adjective] Somewhat fat or having a tendency to be fat; slightly overweight. FATUITY (13) [noun] The quality of being fatuous; foolishness or lack of intelligence. | [noun] A stupid or pointless remark or action. FATUOUS (10) [adjective] Obnoxiously stupid, vacantly silly, content in one's foolishness. FATWOOD (14) [noun] Resinous wood from pine trees that ignites easily and is used for starting fires. | [noun] The wood of a dead tree that has become impregnated with resin. FAUCALS (12) FAUCETS (12) [noun] An exposed plumbing fitting; a tap or spigot; a regulator for controlling the flow of a liquid from a reservoir. | [noun] (game development) One or several systems that inject currency into the game's economy, thus controlling or preventing inflation FAUCIAL (12) [adjective] Relating to the fauces, which is the passage from the mouth to the pharynx. FAULTED (11) [verb] To criticize, blame or find fault with something or someone. | [verb] To fracture. | [verb] To commit a mistake or error. FAUVISM (15) [noun] An artistic movement of the last part of the 19th century which emphasized spontaneity and the use of extremely bright colors. FAUVIST (13) [noun] An artist who practices Fauvism, an early 20th-century art movement characterized by vivid, non-naturalistic colors and bold brushwork. | [adjective] Of or relating to Fauvism or its practitioners. FAVELAS (13) [noun] A slum or shantytown, especially in Brazil FAVELLA (13) [noun] A slum or shantytown, particularly in Brazil. FAVISMS (15) [noun] Plural of favism, a genetic disorder causing hemolytic anemia in response to consumption of fava beans or exposure to certain medications. FAVORED (14) [verb] To look upon fondly; to prefer. | [verb] To encourage, conduce to | [verb] To do a favor [noun sense 1] for; to show beneficence toward. FAVORER (13) FAVOURS (13) [noun] A kind or helpful deed; an instance of voluntarily assisting (someone). | [noun] Goodwill; benevolent regard. | [noun] A small gift; a party favor. FAVUSES (13) [noun] Plural of favus, a fungal infection of the scalp characterized by cup-shaped crusts. FAWNERS (13) [noun] One who fawns; a sycophant. FAWNIER (13) [adjective] More fawning; displaying excessive flattery or attention in a more pronounced manner than before. FAWNING (14) [verb] To give birth to a fawn. | [verb] To exhibit affection or attempt to please. | [verb] To seek favour by flattery and obsequious behaviour (with on or upon). FAZENDA (20) [noun] A Brazilian plantation, often associated with slavery during the colonial period. FEARERS (10) [noun] People who experience fear or are afraid of something. | [noun] People who revere or show respect for someone or something. FEARFUL (13) [adjective] Frightening. | [adjective] Tending to fear; timid. | [adjective] Terrible; shockingly bad. FEARING (11) [verb] To feel fear about (something or someone); to be afraid of; to consider or expect with alarm. | [verb] To feel fear (about something). | [verb] (used with for) To worry about, to feel concern for, to be afraid for. FEASING (11) FEASTED (11) [verb] To partake in a feast, or large meal. | [verb] To dwell upon (something) with delight. | [verb] To hold a feast in honor of (someone). FEASTER (10) [noun] One who feasts; a person who eats and drinks lavishly or participates in a feast. FEATEST (10) FEATHER (13) [noun] A branching, hair-like structure that grows on the bodies of birds, used for flight, swimming, protection and display. | [noun] Long hair on the lower legs of a dog or horse, especially a draft horse, notably the Clydesdale breed. Narrowly only the rear hair. | [noun] One of the fins or wings on the shaft of an arrow. FEATURE (10) [noun] One's structure or make-up: form, shape, bodily proportions. | [noun] An important or main item. | [noun] A long, prominent article or item in the media, or the department that creates them; frequently used technically to distinguish content from news. FEAZING (20) [verb] To twist or unravel (fibers, rope, or strands) into separate parts. FEBRILE (12) [adjective] Feverish, or having a high temperature. | [adjective] Full of nervous energy. FECIALS (12) FECULAE (12) [noun] Plural of fecule; fine starch or sediment, especially from plants. FEDAYEE (14) [noun] A member of an Arab commando or guerrilla group, especially one dedicated to a particular cause. FEDERAL (11) [noun] A law-enforcement official of the FBI; a federal agent. | [noun] A supporter of federation. | [noun] A unionist soldier in the American Civil War. FEDORAS (11) [noun] A felt hat with a fairly low, creased crown with a brim that can be turned up or down. FEEBLER (12) [adjective] Deficient in physical strength | [adjective] Lacking force, vigor, or efficiency in action or expression; faint. FEEDBAG (14) [noun] A horse's nosebag. FEEDBOX (20) [noun] A box containing animal feed. FEEDERS (11) [noun] One who feeds, or gives food to another. | [noun] One who feeds, or takes in food. | [noun] One who, or that which, feeds material into something. FEEDING (12) [verb] (ditransitive) To give (someone or something) food to eat. | [verb] To eat (usually of animals). | [verb] To give (someone or something) to (someone or something else) as food. FEEDLOT (11) [noun] Land on which livestock are fattened for market. FEELERS (10) [noun] Someone or something that feels. | [noun] An antenna or appendage used for feeling, especially on an insect. | [noun] Something ventured to test another's feelings, opinion, or position. FEELESS (10) [adjective] Without a fee; not requiring payment. FEELING (11) [verb] (heading) To use or experience the sense of touch. | [verb] (heading) To sense or think emotionally or judgmentally. | [verb] To be or become aware of. FEEZING (20) FEIGNED (12) [verb] To make a false show or pretence of; to counterfeit or simulate. | [verb] To imagine; to invent; to pretend. | [verb] To make an action as if doing one thing, but actually doing another, for example to trick an opponent. FEIGNER (11) [noun] One who feigns; a person who pretends or simulates something false. FEIJOAS (17) [noun] A South American evergreen shrub, Acca sellowiana (syn. Feijoa sellowiana). | [noun] The green, ellipsoid fruit of this shrub, having a tart and sweet taste. FEINTED (11) [verb] To make a feint, or mock attack. FELAFEL (13) [noun] A Middle Eastern food in the form of balls made from chickpeas and other ingredients. Often served in a pita. | [noun] A pita with falafel balls inside (like a sandwich or a wrap). | [noun] A single falafel ball. FELINES (10) [noun] A cat; member of the cat family Felidae. FELLAHS (13) [noun] (chiefly South US) used to address a male | [noun] A peasant, farmer or agricultural laborer in the Middle East and North Africa. | [noun] A colleague or partner. FELLATE (10) [verb] To perform oral sex on (a man); to stimulate (a penis or testicles) using the mouth. | [verb] (by extension) To suck (something) in a manner suggestive of fellatio. | [verb] To suck up to, to flatter or be shamefully subservient to. FELLERS (10) [noun] A person who fells trees; a lumberjack | [noun] A machine for felling trees. | [noun] A person who fells a seam. FELLEST (10) [adjective] Most cruel, savage, or terrible. | [verb] Past tense of fell, meaning to cut down or cause to fall. FELLIES (10) [noun] The outer rim of a wheel, supported by the spokes. FELLING (11) [verb] To make something fall; especially to chop down a tree. | [verb] To strike down, kill, destroy. | [verb] To stitch down a protruding flap of fabric, as a seam allowance, or pleat. FELLOES (10) [noun] The outer rim of a wheel, supported by the spokes. FELLOWS (13) [noun] A colleague or partner. | [noun] A companion; a comrade. | [noun] A man without good breeding or worth; an ignoble or mean man. FELONRY (13) [noun] Felons as a group. | [noun] The convict population of a penal colony. FELSITE (10) [noun] A fine-grained igneous rock composed primarily of quartz and feldspar. FELSPAR (12) [noun] Any of a large group of rock-forming minerals that, together, make up about 60% of the earth's outer crust. The feldspars are all aluminum silicates of the alkali metals sodium, potassium, calcium and barium. Feldspars are the principal constituents of igneous and plutonic rocks. FELTING (11) [verb] To make into felt, or a feltlike substance; to cause to adhere and mat together. | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, felt. | [verb] To cause a player to lose all their chips. FELUCCA (14) [noun] A traditional wooden shallow-draught sailing boat used in the Mediterranean and along the Nile in Egypt, its rig consisting of one or two lateen sails. FELWORT (13) [noun] A European herb, Swertia perennis (star swertia), of the gentian family. | [noun] Any member of any species in genus Swertia. | [noun] Any member of any species in the tribe Gentianeae FEMALES (12) [noun] One of the female (feminine) sex or gender. FEMINIE (12) FEMORAL (12) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or near the femur or thigh. FENAGLE (11) FENCERS (12) [noun] Plural of fencer; people who practice or compete in the sport of fencing with swords. FENCING (13) [verb] To enclose, contain or separate by building fence. | [verb] To defend or guard. | [verb] To engage in the selling or buying of stolen goods. FENDERS (11) [noun] Panel of a car which encloses the wheel area, especially the front wheels | [noun] A shield, usually of plastic or metal, on a bicycle that protects the rider from mud or water | [noun] Any shaped cushion-like object normally made from polymers, rubber or wood that is placed along the sides of a boat to prevent damage when moored alongside another vessel or jetty, or when using a lock, etc. Modern variations are cylindrical although older wooden version and rubbing strips can still be found; old tyres are used as a cheap substitute FENDING (12) [verb] To take care of oneself; to take responsibility for one's own well-being. | [verb] (except as "fend for oneself") To defend, to take care of (typically construed with for); to block or push away (typically construed with off). FENLAND (11) [noun] A kind of low-lying ground, often wet or marshy FENNECS (12) [noun] A small fox of the species Vulpes zerda, found in the Sahara (excluding the coast) and having distinctive oversized ears. FENNELS (10) [noun] Plural of fennel, a plant with feathery leaves and small yellow flowers, whose seeds and bulb are used as flavoring in cooking. FENURON (10) [noun] A selective herbicide used to control weeds in crops, particularly in cotton and sugarcane production. FEODARY (14) [noun] An accomplice. | [noun] An ancient officer of the Court of Wards. FEOFFED (17) [verb] Past tense of feoff, meaning to invest with a fief or fee; to give a freehold estate to someone. FEOFFEE (16) [noun] A vassal holding a fief. FEOFFER (16) [noun] A person who makes a feoffment; one who invests another with a fief or fee. FEOFFOR (16) [noun] A person who conveys a freehold estate to another; one who enfeoffs. FERBAMS (14) FERLIES (10) [noun] Plural of ferlie; Scottish and Northern English dialect word meaning wonders, marvels, or strange things. FERMATA (12) [noun] The holding of a note or rest for longer than its usual duration; also the notation of such a prolongation, usually represented as a dot with a semi-circle above or below it, written above or below the prolonged note or rest. FERMATE (12) FERMENT (12) [noun] Something, such as a yeast or barm, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A state of agitation or of turbulent change. | [noun] A gentle internal motion of the constituent parts of a fluid; fermentation. FERMION (12) [noun] (Standard Model) Any elementary or composite particle that has half-integer spin and thus obeys Fermi–Dirac statistics and the Pauli exclusion principle (equivalently, a particle for which the wavefunction of any system of identical such particles changes sign whenever two are swapped); a baryon, a lepton or a quark; (slightly more loosely) any such particle or any composite particle composed of fermions. FERMIUM (14) [noun] A transuranic chemical element (symbol Fm) with an atomic number of 100. FERNERY (13) [noun] A garden or greenhouse where ferns are grown and displayed. FERNIER (10) [adjective] More ferny; resembling or abounding in ferns. | [adjective] More fern-like in appearance or characteristics. FERRATE (10) [noun] The anion FeO42- in which iron is in a +6 formal oxidation state. FERRELS (10) [noun] A band or cap (usually metal) placed around a shaft to reinforce it or to prevent splitting. | [noun] A band holding parts of an object together. FERRETS (10) [noun] An often domesticated mammal (Mustela putorius furo) rather like a weasel, descended from the polecat and often trained to hunt burrowing animals. | [noun] The black-footed ferret, Mustela nigripes. | [noun] A diligent searcher. FERRETY (13) FERRIED (11) [verb] To carry; transport; convey. | [verb] To move someone or something from one place to another, usually repeatedly. | [verb] To carry or transport over a contracted body of water, as a river or strait, in a boat or other floating conveyance plying between opposite shores. FERRIES (10) [noun] A ship used to transport people, smaller vehicles and goods from one port to another, usually on a regular schedule. | [noun] A place where passengers are transported across water in such a ship. | [noun] The legal right or franchise that entitles a corporate body or an individual to operate such a service. FERRITE (10) [noun] The interstitial solid solution of carbon in body-centered cubic iron. | [noun] Any of a class of metal oxides which show ferrimagnetism; used in transformers, inductors, antennas, recording heads, microwave devices, motors and loudspeakers. | [noun] The anion FeO22-, and any of the salts (formally derived from the unknown ferrous acid) derived from it. FERROUS (10) [adjective] Of or containing iron. | [adjective] Of compounds of iron in which it has a valence or oxidation number of 2. FERRULE (10) [noun] A band or cap (usually metal) placed around a shaft to reinforce it or to prevent splitting. | [noun] A band holding parts of an object together. | [verb] To equip with a ferrule. FERRUMS (12) [noun] Plural of ferrum, the Latin name for iron; also used in chemistry and medicine to refer to iron or iron compounds. FERTILE (10) [adjective] (of land etc) capable of growing abundant crops; productive | [adjective] Capable of reproducing; fecund, fruitful | [adjective] Capable of developing past the egg stage FERULAE (10) [noun] Plural of ferula; a flat ruler or cane used for punishment, especially in schools. | [noun] A ferrule or metal ring used to strengthen or bind something. FERULAS (10) [noun] A ferule. | [noun] A stroke from a cane. | [noun] The imperial sceptre in the Byzantine Empire. FERULED (11) [verb] Past tense of ferule; to furnish with a ferule (a metal ring or band used to strengthen or bind something). | [verb] To strike with a ferule or rod as punishment. FERULES (10) [noun] A ruler-shaped instrument, generally used to slap naughty children on the hand. FERVENT (13) [adjective] Exhibiting particular enthusiasm, zeal, conviction, persistence, or belief. | [adjective] Having or showing emotional warmth, fervor, or passion. | [adjective] Glowing, burning, very hot. FERVORS (13) [noun] An intense, heated emotion; passion, ardor. | [noun] A passionate enthusiasm for some cause. | [noun] Heat. FERVOUR (13) [noun] An intense, heated emotion; passion, ardour. | [noun] A passionate enthusiasm for some cause. | [noun] Heat. FESCUES (12) [noun] A straw, wire, stick, etc., used chiefly to point out letters to children when learning to read. | [noun] A hardy grass commonly used to border golf fairways in temperate climates. Any member of the genus Festuca. | [noun] An instrument for playing on the harp; a plectrum. FESSING (11) [verb] To confess; to admit. FESTERS (10) [verb] To become septic; to become rotten. | [verb] To worsen, especially due to lack of attention. | [verb] To cause to fester or rankle. FESTIVE (13) [adjective] Having the atmosphere, decoration, or attitude of a festival, holiday, or celebration. | [adjective] In the mood to celebrate. FESTOON (10) [noun] An ornament such as a garland or chain which hangs loosely from two tacked spots. | [noun] A bas-relief, painting, or structural motif resembling such an ornament. | [noun] A raised cable with light globes attached. FETCHED (16) [verb] To retrieve; to bear towards; to go and get. | [verb] To obtain as price or equivalent; to sell for. | [verb] To bring or get within reach by going; to reach; to arrive at; to attain; to reach by sailing. FETCHER (15) [noun] One who fetches; a dog or person that retrieves something. | [noun] A person who performs menial tasks or runs errands. FETCHES (15) [verb] To retrieve; to bear towards; to go and get. | [verb] To obtain as price or equivalent; to sell for. | [verb] To bring or get within reach by going; to reach; to arrive at; to attain; to reach by sailing. FETIALS (10) [noun] Plural of fetial; Roman officials who conducted diplomatic negotiations and declared war on behalf of the state. FETIDLY (14) [adverb] In a manner that has a strong, foul, or offensive smell. FETLOCK (16) [noun] A joint of the horse's leg below the knee or hock and above the hoof. | [noun] The tuft of hair that grows at this joint. FETTERS (10) [noun] A chain or similar object used to bind a person or animal – often by its legs (usually in plural). | [noun] Anything that restricts or restrains. | [verb] To shackle or bind up with fetters. FETTING (11) [verb] Present participle of "fet," an archaic or dialectal term meaning to fetch or bring. | [verb] In metalworking, the process of removing excess material or burrs from a cast or forged object. FETTLED (11) [verb] To sort out, to fix, to mend, to repair. | [verb] To make preparations; to put things in order; to do trifling business. | [verb] To line the hearth of a furnace with sand prior to pouring molten metal. FETTLES (10) [noun] A state of proper physical condition; kilter or trim. | [noun] One's mental state; spirits. | [noun] Sand used to line a furnace. FETUSES (10) [noun] An unborn or unhatched vertebrate showing signs of the mature animal. | [noun] A human embryo after the eighth week of gestation. FEUDARY (14) [noun] A vassal or feudal tenant; one who holds land from a superior lord in a feudal system. FEUDING (12) [verb] To carry on a feud. | [noun] Participation in feuds. FEUDIST (11) [noun] One who takes part in feuds. | [noun] A writer on feuds; a person versed in feudal law. FEVERED (14) [verb] To put into a fever; to affect with fever. | [verb] To become fevered. | [adjective] Affected by a fever; feverish. FEWNESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being few in number; scarcity. FEYNESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being fey; an otherworldly or magical character or atmosphere. | [noun] A sense of impending doom or fate. FIACRES (12) [noun] A small carriage for hire. FIANCEE (12) [noun] A woman who is engaged to be married. FIANCES (12) [noun] A man who is engaged to be married. | [noun] A person engaged to be married. FIASCHI (15) FIASCOS (12) [noun] A sudden or unexpected failure. | [noun] A ludicrous or humiliating situation. Some effort that went quite wrong. | [noun] A wine bottle in a (usually straw) jacket. FIBBERS (14) [noun] Plural of fibber; people who tell small lies or untruths. FIBBING (15) [verb] To lie, especially more or less inconsequentially. | [verb] (thieves cant) To punch, especially a series of punches in rapid succession; to beat; to hit; to strike. | [noun] Repeatedly striking an opponent's head while holding them in a headlock; a pummelling; a drubbing; a beating. FIBERED (13) [adjective] Having fibers or composed of fibers. | [verb] Past tense of fiber, meaning to provide with fibers or to form into fibers. FIBRILS (12) [noun] A fine fibre or filament | [noun] Any fine, filamentous structure in animals or plants FIBRINS (12) [noun] Plural of fibrin, a protein involved in blood clotting that forms the structural framework of blood clots. FIBROID (13) [noun] A benign tumour of the uterus that is composed of either fibrous connective tissue or muscle. | [noun] A fibroma. FIBROIN (12) [noun] A tough elastic protein that is the main component of silk and of spider's webs FIBROMA (14) [noun] A benign tumour of fibrous connective tissue. FIBROUS (12) [adjective] Of or pertaining to fibre. | [adjective] Containing many fibres - referring mainly to food. FIBULAE (12) [noun] An ancient kind of brooch used to hold clothing together, similar in function to the modern safety pin. | [noun] The smaller of the two bones in the lower leg, the calf bone. FIBULAR (12) [adjective] Relating to or involving the fibula, the smaller of the two bones in the lower leg. FIBULAS (12) [noun] An ancient kind of brooch used to hold clothing together, similar in function to the modern safety pin. | [noun] The smaller of the two bones in the lower leg, the calf bone. FICKLER (16) [adjective] Quick to change one’s opinion or allegiance; insincere; not loyal or reliable. | [adjective] Changeable. FICTILE (12) [adjective] Capable of being molded into the shape of an artifact or art work | [adjective] (of an art work or artifact) Molded of clay or earth | [adjective] Of or relating to earthenware FICTION (12) [noun] Literary type using invented or imaginative writing, instead of real facts, usually written as prose. | [noun] A verbal or written account that is not based on actual events (often intended to mislead). | [noun] A legal fiction. FICTIVE (15) [adjective] Having the characteristics of fiction: fictional. | [adjective] Resulting from imaginative creation: fanciful or invented. | [adjective] Being feigned, ingenuine or unreal. FICUSES (12) [noun] Plural of ficus, a genus of flowering plants including fig trees and ornamental houseplants. FIDDLED (13) [verb] To play aimlessly. | [verb] To adjust or manipulate for deception or fraud. | [verb] To play traditional tunes on a violin in a non-classical style. FIDDLER (12) [noun] One who plays the fiddle. | [noun] One who fiddles. | [noun] A burrowing crab of the genus Gelasimus, of many species. The male has one claw very much enlarged, and often holds it in a position similar to that in which a musician holds a fiddle. FIDDLES (12) [noun] Any of various bowed string instruments, often a violin when played in any of various traditional styles, as opposed to classical violin. | [noun] A kind of dock (Rumex pulcher) with leaves shaped like the musical instrument. | [noun] An adjustment intended to cover up a basic flaw. FIDEISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that faith is the basis of all knowledge FIDEIST (11) [noun] A person who believes in faith as opposed to reason or empirical evidence, particularly in religious matters. FIDGETS (12) [noun] A nervous wriggling or twitching motion. | [noun] A person who fidgets, especially habitually. | [noun] A toy intended to be fidgeted with. FIDGETY (15) [adjective] Having, or pertaining to, a tendency to fidget; restless. FIDGING (13) FIEFDOM (16) [noun] The estate controlled by a feudal lord; a fief. | [noun] (by extension) Any organization in the control of a dominant individual. FIELDED (12) [verb] To intercept or catch (a ball) and play it. | [verb] (and other batting sports) To be the team catching and throwing the ball, as opposed to hitting it. | [verb] To place (a team, its players, etc.) in a game. FIELDER (11) [noun] A player of the fielding side, whose task is to gather the ball after the batsman has hit it, to catch the batsman out, or to prevent him from scoring. | [noun] A defensive player in the field. | [noun] A dog trained in pursuit of game in the field. FIERCER (12) [adjective] Exceedingly violent, severe, ferocious, cruel or savage. | [adjective] Resolute or strenuously active. | [adjective] Threatening in appearance or demeanor. FIERIER (10) [adjective] Of or relating to fire. | [adjective] Burning or glowing. | [adjective] Inflammable or easily ignited. FIERILY (13) [adverb] In a fiery manner; with intense heat, passion, or anger. FIESTAS (10) [noun] (In Spanish speaking countries) A religious festival. | [noun] A festive occasion. FIFTEEN (13) [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after fourteen (14) and before sixteen (16). FIFTHLY (19) [adverb] In the fifth place; as the fifth item in a series or list. FIFTIES (13) [noun] The decade of the 1850s, 1950s, etc. | [noun] The decade of one's life from age 50 through age 59. | [noun] (temperature, rates) The range between 50 and 59. FIGGING (13) [noun] The insertion of ginger root into the anus, vagina or urethra, originally applied to slaves and prisoners as a punishment, then to horses as a form of deception as to the horse's condition, and later used in BDSM. | [verb] To insult with a fico, or contemptuous motion. | [verb] To put into the head of, as something useless or contemptible. FIGHTER (14) [noun] A person who fights; a combatant. | [noun] A warrior; fighting soldier. | [noun] A pugnacious, competitive person. FIGMENT (13) [noun] A fabrication, fantasy, invention; something fictitious. FIGURAL (11) [adjective] Representing by means of a figure; emblematic. | [adjective] Figurative, not literal. | [adjective] Of numbers, describing a geometrical figure. FIGURED (12) [verb] To calculate, to solve a mathematical problem. | [verb] To come to understand. | [verb] To think, to assume, to suppose, to reckon. FIGURER (11) [noun] One who figures; a person who calculates or works with numbers. | [verb] Third-person singular present tense of "figure" (to calculate, compute, or plan). FIGURES (11) [noun] A drawing or diagram conveying information. | [noun] The representation of any form, as by drawing, painting, modelling, carving, embroidering, etc.; especially, a representation of the human body. | [noun] A person or thing representing a certain consciousness. FIGWORT (14) [noun] Any of various woodland herbs and shrubs of the genus Scrophularia. | [noun] Ficaria verna, formerly Ranunculus ficaria. FILAREE (10) [noun] A plant of the geranium family with seed pods resembling a needle or thread, found in arid regions of the southwestern United States and Mexico. FILARIA (10) [noun] Any of the parasitic nematode worms of superfamily Filarioidea that live in the blood of vertebrates and is transmitted by insects: the cause of filariasis. FILBERT (12) [noun] The hazelnut. | [noun] The hazel tree. | [noun] A paintbrush used in oil and acrylic painting with a long ferrule and a curving, tongue-shaped head. FILCHED (16) [verb] To illegally take possession of (especially items of low value); to pilfer, to steal. FILCHER (15) [noun] A person who steals or pilfers small items; a petty thief. FILCHES (15) [noun] Something which has been filched or stolen. | [noun] An act of filching; larceny, theft. | [noun] A person who filches; a filcher, a pilferer, a thief. FILEMOT (12) FILETED (11) [verb] Past tense of filet; to remove the bones from fish or meat. | [adjective] Decorated with a filet or net-like pattern. FILIATE (10) [verb] To determine or establish the parentage of a child, especially for legal purposes. | [verb] To affiliate or associate with a parent organization or group. FILIBEG (13) [noun] A little kilt. FILINGS (11) [noun] Any particle that has been removed by a file or similar implement; a shaving. | [noun] The act of storing documents in an archive; archiving. | [noun] Something that has been officially filed; a document on file. FILLERS (10) [noun] One who fills. | [noun] Something added to fill a space or add weight or size. | [noun] Any semisolid substance used to fill gaps, cracks or pores. FILLETS (10) [noun] A headband; a ribbon or other band used to tie the hair up, or keep a headdress in place, or for decoration. | [noun] A fine strip of any material, in various technical uses. | [noun] A heavy bead of waterproofing compound or sealant material generally installed at the point where vertical and horizontal surfaces meet. FILLIES (10) [noun] A young female horse. | [noun] A young attractive female. FILLING (11) [verb] To occupy fully, to take up all of. | [verb] To add contents to (a container, cavity or the like) so that it is full. | [verb] To enter (something), making it full. FILLIPS (12) [noun] The action of holding the tip of a finger against the thumb and then releasing it with a snap; a flick. | [noun] A smart strike or tap made using this action, or (by extension) by other means. | [noun] (by extension) Something unimportant, a trifle; also, the brief time it takes to flick one's finger (see noun sense 1); a jiffy. FILMDOM (15) [noun] The film industry and the world of cinema collectively. FILMERS (12) [noun] People who film or make films; videographers or cinematographers. FILMIER (12) [adjective] Resembling or made of a thin film; gauzy | [adjective] Covered by (or as if by) a film; hazy FILMILY (15) FILMING (13) [verb] To record (activity, or a motion picture) on photographic film. | [verb] To cover or become covered with a thin skin or pellicle. | [noun] The action of the verb to film. FILMSET (12) [noun] The enclosure in which a film scene is shot; includes scenery and props | [verb] To typeset by exposing type characters onto photographic film, which is then used to generate printing plates. | [adjective] Created using a process of filmsetting. FILTERS (10) [noun] A device which separates a suspended, dissolved, or particulate matter from a fluid, solution, or other substance; any device that separates one substance from another. | [noun] Electronics or software that separates unwanted signals (for example noise) from wanted signals or that attenuates selected frequencies. | [noun] Any item, mechanism, device or procedure that acts to separate or isolate. FIMBLES (14) FIMBRIA (14) [noun] Any anatomical structure in the form of a fringe, but especially that around the ovarian end of the Fallopian tube. | [noun] Hairlike appendage found on the cell surface of many bacteria; used by the bacteria to adhere to one another, to animal cells and to some inanimate objects. FINABLE (12) [adjective] Capable of being fined; subject to a fine or penalty. FINAGLE (11) [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by indirect, complicated and/or intensive efforts. | [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by deceitful methods, by trickery. | [verb] To cheat or swindle; to use crafty, deceitful methods. (often with "out of" preceding the object) FINALES (10) [noun] The grand end of something, especially a show or piece of music. | [noun] The chronological conclusion of a series of narrative works. FINALIS (10) FINALLY (13) [adverb] At the end or conclusion; ultimately. | [adverb] (sequence) To finish (with); lastly (in the present). | [adverb] (manner) Definitively, comprehensively. FINANCE (12) [noun] The management of money and other assets. | [noun] The science of management of money and other assets. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Monetary resources, especially those of a public entity or a company. FINBACK (18) [noun] A large baleen whale, Balaenoptera physalus, that has a ridge on its back; the fin whale. FINCHES (15) [noun] Any bird of the family Fringillidae, seed-eating passerine birds, native chiefly to the Northern Hemisphere and usually having a conical beak. FINDERS (11) [noun] One who finds or discovers something. | [noun] An optical device, such as a viewfinder, used to locate a target or other object of interest FINDING (12) [verb] To encounter or discover by accident; to happen upon. | [verb] To encounter or discover something being searched for; to locate. | [verb] (ditransitive) To discover by study or experiment direct to an object or end. FINESSE (10) [noun] Skill in the handling or manipulation of a situation. | [noun] The property of having elegance, grace, refinement, or skill. | [noun] An adroit manoeuvre. FINFISH (16) [noun] A fish with true fins, as distinguished from shellfish or other aquatic animals. FINFOOT (13) [noun] Three species in three monospecific genera of aquatic bird in the family Heliornithidae. FINGERS (11) [noun] A slender jointed extremity of the human hand, exclusive of the thumb. | [noun] Similar or similar-looking extremities in other animals, particularly: | [noun] Something similar in shape to the human finger, particularly: FINIALS (10) [noun] The knot or bunch of foliage, or foliated ornament, that forms the upper extremity of a pinnacle in Gothic architecture. | [noun] Any decorative fitting at the peak of a gable, or on the top of a flagpole, fence post or staircase newel post. FINICAL (12) [adjective] Finicky, fastidious, overly precise or delicate. FINICKY (19) [adjective] (of a person) Fastidious and fussy; difficult to please; exacting, especially about details. | [adjective] Demanding; requiring above-normal care. FINIKIN (14) FININGS (11) [noun] Substances added to wine, beer and certain other beverages to remove organic compounds in order to improve clarity or to adjust the flavour or aroma. FINISES (10) FINITES (10) [noun] Plural of finite; things that are limited or bounded in extent. | [adjective] Limited in number or quantity; not infinite. FINKING (15) [verb] To betray a trust; to inform on. FINLESS (10) [adjective] Without fins; lacking fins, as a fish or other aquatic animal. FINLIKE (14) [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a fin; having characteristics of a fin. FINMARK (16) FINNIER (10) [adjective] More finny; having more fins or fin-like qualities. FINNING (11) [verb] To cut the fins from a fish, shark, etc. | [verb] (Of a fish) to swim with the dorsal fin above the surface of the water. | [verb] To swim in the manner of a fish. FIPPLES (14) [noun] The mouthpiece of a ducted flute, or the plug forming the floor of the windway. FIREARM (12) [noun] A personal weapon that uses explosive powder to propel a projectile often made of lead. FIREBOX (19) [noun] The chamber of a steam engine, or a steam locomotive, in which the fuel is burned. | [noun] The part of a fireplace where the fuel is burned. | [noun] A redheaded woman (by synecdoche, pars pro toto), or her red pubic hair. FIREBUG (13) [noun] Pyrrhocoris apterus, a common red and black insect, that is the type species of the family Pyrrhocoridae. | [noun] A pyromaniac or arsonist. FIREDOG (12) [noun] A Bronze Age artifact used in worshipping either bulls or the moon, or as a holder for wooden logs to be used in a fire altar. | [noun] (chiefly US) Either of a pair of horizontal metal supports for holding logs in a fireplace FIREFLY (16) [noun] Any beetle of the family Lampyridae, which exhibit bioluminescence during twilight. FIRELIT (10) [adjective] Illuminated by a fire FIREMAN (12) [noun] Someone (especially one who is male) who is skilled in the work of fighting fire. | [noun] A person (originally a man) who keeps the fire going underneath a steam boiler (originally, shoveling coal by hand), particularly on a railroad locomotive or steamship. | [noun] By extension of the above, an assistant on any locomotive, whether steam-powered or not. FIREMEN (12) [noun] Someone (especially one who is male) who is skilled in the work of fighting fire. | [noun] A person (originally a man) who keeps the fire going underneath a steam boiler (originally, shoveling coal by hand), particularly on a railroad locomotive or steamship. | [noun] By extension of the above, an assistant on any locomotive, whether steam-powered or not. FIREPAN (12) FIREPOT (12) FIRINGS (11) [noun] The process of applying heat or fire, especially to clay etc to produce pottery. | [noun] The fuel for a fire. | [noun] The act of adding fuel to a fire. FIRKINS (14) [noun] A varying measure of capacity, usually being a quarter of a barrel; specifically, a measure equal to nine imperial gallons. | [noun] A small wooden vessel or cask of indeterminate size, used for butter, lard, etc. | [noun] A weight measure for butter, equalling 56 pounds. FIRMANS (12) [noun] A royal decree issued by a sovereign in certain historical Islamic states, especially by the Sultan of Turkey. FIRMERS (12) [noun] Plural of firmer, a woodworking tool with a flat or curved blade used for chiseling. | [verb] Third person singular of firm, meaning to make or become firm or solid. FIRMEST (12) [adjective] Steadfast, secure, solid (in position) | [adjective] Fixed (in opinion) | [adjective] Durable, rigid (material state) FIRMING (13) [verb] To make firm or strong; fix securely. | [verb] To make compact or resistant to pressure; solidify. | [verb] To become firm; stabilise. FIRSTLY (13) [adverb] In the first place; before anything else; first. FISCALS (12) [noun] A public official in certain countries having control of public revenue. | [noun] Procurator fiscal, a public prosecutor. | [noun] In certain countries, including Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands, and former colonies of these countries and certain British colonies, solicitor or attorney general. FISHERS (13) [noun] A person who catches fish, especially for a living or for sport. | [noun] A person attempting to catch fish. | [noun] A North American marten, Martes pennanti, that has thick brown fur. FISHERY (16) [noun] Fishing: the catching, processing and marketing of fish or other seafood. | [noun] A place related to fishing, particularly: | [noun] A right to fish in a particular location; Territorial fishing waters. FISHEYE (16) [noun] An unfriendly or suspicious glance. | [noun] An undesirable effect in paint, particularly automotive finishes, normally caused by oil or other contaminants on the painted surface. | [noun] An undesirable dull appearance in the table of a diamond that has been cut too shallow. FISHGIG (15) [noun] A pronged spear or harpoon used for catching fish. | [verb] To catch fish with a fishgig. FISHIER (13) [adjective] Of, from, or similar to fish. | [adjective] Suspicious; inspiring doubt. | [adjective] Of drag queens: appearing feminine. FISHILY (16) [adverb] In a manner resembling or characteristic of fish. | [adverb] In a manner that is suspicious, questionable, or dubious. FISHING (14) [noun] The act of catching fish. | [noun] The act of catching other forms of seafood, separately or together with fish. | [noun] Commercial fishing: the business or industry of catching fish and other seafood for sale. | [verb] To hunt fish or other aquatic animals. FISHNET (13) [noun] A net used to catch fish. | [noun] A fabric with an open diamond-shaped structure; normally used for stockings etc | [noun] (usually in plural) Stockings made of fishnet fabric. FISHWAY (19) [noun] A structure built on or around dams or locks to facilitate the migration of fish. FISSATE (10) FISSILE (10) [adjective] Able to be split | [adjective] Easily split along a grain | [adjective] Capable of undergoing nuclear fission, especially by collision with a thermal neutron FISSION (10) [noun] The process whereby one item splits to become two. | [noun] Short for nuclear fission: The process of splitting the nucleus of an atom into smaller particles. | [noun] The process by which a bacterium splits to form two daughter cells. FISSURE (10) [noun] A crack or opening, as in a rock. | [noun] A groove, deep furrow, elongated cleft or tear; a sulcus. | [verb] To split, forming fissures. FISTFUL (13) [noun] The amount that can be held in a closed fist | [noun] A blow with the fist. FISTING (11) [verb] To strike with the fist. | [verb] To close (the hand) into a fist. | [verb] To grip with a fist. FISTULA (10) [noun] An abnormal connection or passageway between organs or vessels that normally do not connect. | [noun] A tube, a pipe, or a hole. | [noun] The tube through which the wine of the Eucharist was once sucked from the chalice. FITCHEE (15) [noun] A heraldic representation of a small square or lozenge shape, typically used in coats of arms. FITCHES (15) [noun] The European polecat, Mustela putorius. | [noun] The skin of the polecat FITCHET (15) [noun] A polecat or similar small carnivorous mammal, particularly used in historical contexts for hunting rabbits. FITCHEW (18) [noun] Polecat FITMENT (12) [noun] Something that suits or fits. | [noun] A thing fitted to another in order to accomplish a specific purpose. | [noun] An item of permanent furniture or equipment. FITNESS (10) [noun] The condition of being fit, suitable or appropriate. | [noun] The cultivation of an attractive and/or healthy physique. | [noun] An organism's or species' degree of success in finding a mate and producing offspring. FITTERS (10) [noun] A person who fits or assembles something. | [noun] An epileptic. | [noun] A coal broker who conducts the sales between the owner of a coal pit and the shipper. FITTEST (10) [verb] To be suitable for. | [verb] To conform to in size and shape. | [verb] To be of the right size and shape FITTING (11) [verb] To be suitable for. | [verb] To conform to in size and shape. | [verb] To be of the right size and shape FIXABLE (19) [adjective] Capable of being fixed, repaired, or resolved. FIXATED (18) [verb] To make something fixed and stable; to fix. | [verb] To stare fixedly at something. | [verb] To attend to something to the exclusion of all others; used with on. FIXATES (17) [verb] To make something fixed and stable; to fix. | [verb] To stare fixedly at something. | [verb] To attend to something to the exclusion of all others; used with on. FIXATIF (20) [noun] A fixative spray or liquid used to preserve artwork, particularly drawings and pastels, by coating the surface to prevent smudging. FIXEDLY (21) [adverb] In a fixed, steady, or unwavering manner; with fixed attention or gaze. FIXINGS (18) [noun] The act of subverting (fixing) a vote. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Something to aid attachment during construction (screws, wall plugs, etc) | [noun] See fixings. FIXTURE (17) [noun] Something that is fixed in place, especially a permanent appliance or other item of personal property that is considered part of a house and is sold with it; compare fitting, furnishing. | [noun] A regular patron of a place or institution. | [noun] A lighting unit; a luminaire. FIXURES (17) FIZGIGS (21) [noun] A flirtatious, coquettish girl, inclined to gad or gallivant about; a gig, a giglot, a jillflirt. | [noun] Something frivolous or trivial; a gewgaw, a trinket. | [verb] To roam around in a frivolous manner; to gad about, to gallivant. FIZZERS (28) [noun] Something which fizzes. | [noun] A party or social gathering which turns out to be a disappointment. | [noun] A disciplinary charge. FIZZIER (28) [adjective] (of a liquid) Containing bubbles. | [adjective] Lively, vivacious. | [adjective] Makes a hissing sound. FIZZING (29) [verb] To emit bubbles. | [verb] To make a rapid hissing or bubbling sound. | [verb] To shoot or project something moving at great velocity. FIZZLED (29) [verb] To sputter or hiss. | [verb] To decay or die off to nothing; to burn out; to end less successfully than previously hoped. FIZZLES (28) [verb] To sputter or hiss. | [verb] To decay or die off to nothing; to burn out; to end less successfully than previously hoped. FLACCID (15) [adjective] Flabby. | [adjective] Soft; floppy. | [adjective] Lacking energy or vigor. FLACKED (17) [verb] To flutter; palpitate. | [verb] To hang loosely; flag. | [verb] To beat by flapping. FLACONS (12) [noun] A small stoppered glass bottle, often used for keeping perfume. FLAGGED (13) [verb] To furnish or deck out with flags. | [verb] To mark with a flag, especially to indicate the importance of something. | [verb] (often with down) To signal to, especially to stop a passing vehicle etc. | [adjective] Paved with flagstones. | [adjective] Having split, bushy ends (of bristles). FLAGGER (12) [noun] A person who waves a flag, especially one who signals with flags for communication or direction. | [noun] A person who plants flags to mark a route or course. | [noun] One who becomes fatigued or loses energy; something that flags or droops. FLAGMAN (13) [noun] A man who carries a flag, especially one used for signalling. FLAGMEN (13) [noun] A man who carries a flag, especially one used for signalling. FLAGONS (11) [noun] A large bottle for drinks such as wine, cider or beer. | [noun] The amount that such a bottle holds, about 1.13 litres. | [noun] A large vessel usually with a handle, spout and lid, for drinks such as wine or cider. FLAILED (11) [verb] To beat using a flail or similar implement. | [verb] To wave or swing vigorously | [verb] To thresh. FLAKERS (14) [noun] People or things that flake or break off in thin layers. | [noun] People who are unreliable or tend to cancel plans at the last moment. FLAKIER (14) [adjective] Consisting of flakes or of small, loose masses; lying, or cleaving off, in flakes or layers; flakelike. | [adjective] (of a person) Unreliable; likely to make plans with others but then abandon those plans. | [adjective] (of a thing) Unreliable; working only on an intermittent basis; likely to malfunction. FLAKILY (17) [adverb] In a flaky manner; tending to break into flakes or showing unreliability and inconsistency. FLAKING (15) [verb] To break or chip off in a flake. | [verb] To prove unreliable or impractical; to abandon or desert, to fail to follow through. | [verb] To store an item such as rope or sail in layers FLAMBEE (14) [verb] To pour flaming liquor over food and ignite it as a cooking technique. | [noun] A dish prepared by flambéing. FLAMBES (14) [noun] A showy cooking technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. | [noun] A flambéed dish. FLAMENS (12) [noun] A priest devoted to the service of a particular god, from whom he received a distinguishing epithet. The most honored were those of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, called respectively Flamen Dialis, Flamen Martialis, and Flamen Quirinalis. FLAMERS (12) [noun] A very flamboyant ("flaming"), effeminate gay male. | [noun] One who flames, or posts vitriolic criticism. FLAMIER (12) [adjective] More flamy or resembling flames; having more of the quality of flames. FLAMING (13) [verb] To produce flames; to burn with a flame or blaze. | [verb] To burst forth like flame; to break out in violence of passion; to be kindled with zeal or ardour. | [verb] To post a destructively critical or abusive message (to somebody). FLAMMED (15) FLANEUR (10) [noun] One who wanders aimlessly, who roams, who travels at a lounging pace. | [noun] An idler, a loafer. | [verb] To wander aimlessly or at a lounging pace. FLANGED (12) [adjective] Having a flange or flanges; equipped with a projecting rim or collar. FLANGER (11) [noun] An electronic device or software that alters the sound of an instrument by combining out-of-phase copies of its original sound. | [noun] A mechanical device used to remove ice and snow from railway lines. FLANGES (11) [noun] An external or internal rib or rim, used either to add strength or to hold something in place. | [noun] The projecting edge of a rigid or semi-rigid component. | [noun] An ability in a role-playing game which is not commonly available, overpowered or arbitrarily imposed by the referees. FLANKED (15) [verb] To attack the flank(s) of. | [verb] To defend the flank(s) of. | [verb] To place to the side(s) of. FLANKEN (14) [noun] A cut of beef from the lower chest or breast area, typically used for braising or slow cooking. FLANKER (14) [noun] A player who plays in the back row of the scrum. | [noun] A wide receiver who lines up behind the line of scrimmage. | [noun] A fortification or soldier projecting so as to defend another work or to command the flank of an assailing body. FLANNEL (10) [noun] A soft cloth material woven from wool, possibly combined with cotton or synthetic fibers. | [noun] A washcloth. | [noun] A flannel shirt. FLAPPED (15) [adjective] Fitted with a flap. FLAPPER (14) [noun] A young woman, especially when unconventional or without decorum; now particularly associated with the 1920s. | [noun] Something that flaps. | [noun] A young wild duck. FLARING (11) [verb] To cause to burn. | [verb] To cause inflammation; to inflame. | [verb] To open outward in shape. FLASHED (14) [verb] To cause to shine briefly or intermittently. | [verb] To blink; to shine or illuminate intermittently. | [verb] To be visible briefly. FLASHER (13) [noun] Anything that flashes, especially a device that switches a light on and off. | [noun] An indicator or turn signal. | [noun] A person who exposes their genitals or female nipples. FLASHES (13) [noun] A device that produces a short flash of light to help illuminate a scene, mostly for night-time or indoors photography. | [noun] A sudden, short, temporary burst of light. | [noun] A very short amount of time. FLASKET (14) FLATBED (13) [noun] An open freight vehicle with no sides, designed to carry heavy or outsized loads. | [noun] A railway freight car with no sides; a flatcar. | [noun] A document scanner with a flat bed. FLATCAP (14) [noun] A rounded cap with a small stiff brim in front, traditionally worn in Britain and Ireland. FLATCAR (12) [noun] A railroad freight car without sides or a roof. FLATLET (10) [noun] A small flat or apartment, typically consisting of a few rooms in a larger building. FLATTED (11) [verb] To make a flat call; to call without raising. | [verb] To become flat or flattened; to sink or fall to an even surface. | [verb] To fall from the pitch. FLATTEN (10) [verb] To make something flat or flatter. | [verb] To press one's body tightly against a surface, such as a wall or floor, especially in order to avoid being seen or harmed. | [verb] To knock down or lay low. FLATTER (10) [adjective] Having no variations in height. | [adjective] (voice) Without variations in pitch. | [adjective] Having small or invisible breasts and/or buttocks. | [verb] To compliment someone, often insincerely and sometimes to win favour. | [noun] A type of set tool used by blacksmiths. | [noun] Someone who lives in a rented flat. FLATTOP (12) [noun] A short haircut in which the hair is brushed straight up then cut flat across the top. | [noun] An aircraft carrier. | [noun] A type of stringed instrument, most often an acoustic guitar, with a flat top (as opposed to an archtop), with strings held in place with pins, and with a complex system of bracing struts on the top. FLAUNTS (10) [verb] To wave or flutter smartly in the wind. | [verb] To parade, display with ostentation. | [verb] To show off, as with flashy clothing. FLAUNTY (13) FLAVINE (13) [noun] A yellow or orange B vitamin (riboflavin) found in foods, used in nutrition and as a food additive. | [noun] Any of a class of organic compounds derived from riboflavin. FLAVINS (13) [noun] Any of a class of tricyclic heterocyclic compounds derived from riboflavin; found especially as the adenine dinucleotide (FAD) FLAVONE (13) [noun] Any of a class of tricyclic aromatic heterocyclic ketones, especially the naturally occurring flavonoids FLAVORS (13) [verb] To add flavoring to something. FLAVORY (16) FLAVOUR (13) [noun] The quality produced by the sensation of taste or, especially, of taste and smell in combined effect. | [noun] A substance used to produce a taste. Flavoring. | [noun] A variety (of taste) attributed to an object. FLAWIER (13) [adjective] More flawed or having more defects than something else. FLAWING (14) [verb] To add a flaw to, to make imperfect or defective. | [verb] To become imperfect or defective; to crack or break. FLAXIER (17) [adjective] Comparative form of flaxen; more resembling or containing flax, or having the light yellow color of flax. FLAYERS (13) [noun] Plural of flayer; those who strip skin or outer covering from something. | [noun] In fantasy contexts, creatures that remove skin from their victims. FLAYING (14) [verb] To cause to fly; put to flight; drive off (by frightening). | [verb] To frighten; scare; terrify. | [verb] To be fear-stricken. FLEABAG (13) [noun] A bed or sleeping bag. | [noun] A place of shabby lodging, particularly a filthy hotel or run-down apartment. | [noun] An unkempt mammal. FLEAPIT (12) [noun] A dilapidated building, stereotypically hosting a low-grade cinema. FLECHES (15) [noun] An arrow. | [noun] Any of the twenty-four points on a backgammon board. | [noun] A spire or steeple, especially of Gothic style; an object emerging from the ridge of a roof. FLECKED (17) [verb] To mark with small spots FLEDGED (13) [verb] To care for a young bird until it is capable of flight. | [verb] To grow, cover or be covered with feathers. | [verb] To decorate with feathers. FLEDGES (12) [verb] To care for a young bird until it is capable of flight. | [verb] To grow, cover or be covered with feathers. | [verb] To decorate with feathers. FLEECED (13) [verb] To con or trick (someone) out of money. | [verb] To shear the fleece from (a sheep or other animal). | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, wool. FLEECER (12) [noun] One who fleeces; a person who swindles or defrauds others. | [noun] A sheep that has been sheared. FLEECES (12) [verb] To con or trick (someone) out of money. | [verb] To shear the fleece from (a sheep or other animal). | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, wool. FLEEING (11) [verb] To run away; to escape. | [verb] To escape from. | [verb] To disappear quickly; to vanish. FLEERED (11) [verb] To make a wry face in contempt, or to grin in scorn | [verb] To grin with an air of civility; to leer. FLEETED (11) [verb] To float. | [verb] To pass over rapidly; to skim the surface of. | [verb] To hasten over; to cause to pass away lightly, or in mirth and joy. FLEETER (10) [adjective] Swift in motion; light and quick in going from place to place. | [adjective] Light; superficially thin; not penetrating deep, as soil. FLEETLY (13) [adverb] In a fleet or swift manner; with speed. FLEMISH (15) [noun] A rope that has been coiled into a neat mat; a flemish coil. | [verb] To coil a rope into a neat pattern on the deck of a ship. FLENSED (11) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLENSER (10) [noun] A person who strips the blubber or skin from a whale or seal. FLENSES (10) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLESHED (14) [adjective] Having flesh; corpulent. | [adjective] (in combination) Having a specified form of flesh or body. FLESHER (13) [noun] A person who removes the flesh from the skin during the making of leather. | [noun] A tool used to remove the flesh from the skin during the making of leather. | [noun] A butcher. FLESHES (13) [noun] The soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat. | [noun] The skin of a human or animal. | [noun] (by extension) Bare arms, bare legs, bare torso. FLESHLY (16) [adjective] Of or relating to the body. | [adjective] Of, relating to or resembling flesh; composed of flesh; having a lot of flesh. | [adjective] Of or relating to pleasurable (often sexual) sensations. FLEXILE (17) [adjective] Flexible; capable of being repeatedly flexed without breaking FLEXING (18) [verb] To bend something. | [verb] To repeatedly bend one of one's joints. | [verb] To move part of the body using one's muscles. FLEXION (17) [noun] The act of bending a joint, especially a bone joint; the counteraction of extension. | [noun] The state of being bent or flexed. | [noun] Deviation from straightness. FLEXORS (17) [noun] A muscle whose contraction acts to bend a joint or limb. FLEXURE (17) [noun] The act of bending or flexing; flexion. | [noun] A turn; a bend; a fold; a curve. | [noun] A curve or bend in a tubular organ. FLEYING (14) [noun] A Scottish form of flyting, which is a witty or abusive exchange of insults or mockery between two people. | [verb] Present participle of "fley," meaning to frighten or scare. FLICKED (17) [verb] To move or hit (something) with a short, quick motion. FLICKER (16) [noun] An unsteady flash of light. | [noun] A short moment. | [verb] To burn or shine unsteadily, or with a wavering light. | [noun] Any of certain small woodpeckers, especially of the genus Colaptes. | [noun] One who flicks. FLIGHTS (14) [noun] The act of flying. | [noun] An instance of flying. | [noun] The act of fleeing. FLIGHTY (17) [adjective] Given to unplanned and silly ideas or actions. | [adjective] (of a bird) That flies easily or often. | [adjective] Swift. FLINDER (11) [noun] A small piece or fragment; a thin slice; splinter | [noun] A butterfly. | [verb] To flirt; run about in a fluttering manner FLINGER (11) [noun] One who flings or throws something with force. | [noun] A device or mechanism that flings or launches something. FLINTED (11) [verb] Past tense of flint, meaning to strike or spark with flint, or to provide with flint. | [adjective] Made of or containing flint; resembling flint in hardness or color. FLIPPED (15) [verb] To throw so as to turn over. | [verb] To put into a quick revolving motion through a snap of the thumb and index finger. | [verb] To win a state (or county) won by another party in the preceding elections FLIPPER (14) [noun] In marine mammals such as whales, a wide flat limb, adapted for swimming. | [noun] A flat, wide, paddle-like rubber covering for the foot, used in swimming. | [noun] A flat lever in a pinball machine, triggered by the player to strike the ball and keep it in play. FLIRTED (11) [verb] To throw (something) with a jerk or sudden movement; to fling. | [verb] To jeer at; to mock. | [verb] To dart about; to move with quick, jerky motions. FLIRTER (10) [noun] One who flirts; a person who behaves amorously without serious intent. | [noun] A device that flirts or moves back and forth. FLITING (11) [verb] Present participle of flit; to move quickly and lightly from one place to another. | [verb] To flirt or behave amorously. FLITTED (11) [verb] To move about rapidly and nimbly. | [verb] To move quickly from one location to another. | [verb] To unpredictably change state for short periods of time. FLITTER (10) [noun] A rag; a tatter; a small piece or fragment. | [noun] Any of various hesperiid butterflies of the genus Hyarotis. | [noun] A small aircraft or spacecraft. FLIVVER (16) [noun] An automobile, particularly one which is old and inexpensive. FLOATED (11) [verb] Of an object or substance, to be supported by a liquid of greater density than the object so as that part of the object or substance remains above the surface. | [verb] To cause something to be suspended in a liquid of greater density. | [verb] To be capable of floating. FLOATEL (10) [noun] A floating hotel; a boatel FLOATER (10) [noun] Agent noun of float; one who or that which floats. | [noun] An employee of a company who does not have fixed tasks to do but fills in wherever needed, usually when someone else is away. | [noun] An unaffiliated player. FLOCCED (15) [verb] Past tense of "floc," meaning to cause to form into flocs (fine particles suspended in a liquid that aggregate together). FLOCCUS (14) [noun] A cloud species which consists of rounded tufts of cloud, often formed by dissipation from larger cloud species. Associated with cirrus, cirrocumulus, altocumulus, and stratocumulus genera. | [noun] A flock or tuft of wool or wool-like hairs; the downy plumage of unfledged birds. FLOCKED (17) [verb] To congregate in or head towards a place in large numbers. | [verb] To flock to; to crowd. | [verb] To treat a pool with chemicals to remove suspended particles. FLOGGED (13) [verb] To whip or scourge someone or something as punishment. | [verb] To use something to extreme; to abuse. | [verb] To sell. FLOGGER (12) [noun] One who flogs. | [noun] (BDSM) A lightweight whip with multiple lashes. FLOKATI (14) [noun] A handwoven woolen rug with a thick pile. FLOODED (12) [verb] To overflow, as by water from excessive rainfall. | [verb] To cover or partly fill as if by a flood. | [verb] To provide (someone or something) with a larger number or quantity of something than can easily be dealt with. FLOODER (11) [noun] One that floods. | [noun] In irrigation, a device or person that controls water flow for flooding fields. FLOORED (11) [verb] To cover or furnish with a floor. | [verb] To strike down or lay level with the floor; to knock down. | [verb] (driving) To accelerate rapidly. FLOORER (10) [noun] Something that floors or knocks down. | [noun] A person or thing that astonishes or defeats someone completely. FLOOSIE (10) [noun] A vulgar or sexually promiscuous woman; a hussy or slattern. | [noun] A prostitute who attracts customers by walking the streets. FLOOZIE (19) [noun] A vulgar or sexually promiscuous woman; a hussy or slattern. | [noun] A prostitute who attracts customers by walking the streets. FLOPPED (15) [verb] To fall heavily due to lack of energy. | [verb] To cause to drop heavily. | [verb] To fail completely; not to be successful at all (of a movie, play, book, song etc.). FLOPPER (14) [noun] One who flops. | [noun] (skittles) The knocking down of all nine pins in one go. | [noun] A person who deliberately falls down on a slippery floor or in front of an automobile etc. so as to claim compensation. FLORALS (10) [noun] A design involving flowers | [noun] A perfume redolent of flowers FLORETS (10) [noun] A small flower, especially one of a cluster in a composite flower. FLORINS (10) [noun] The currency of Aruba, divided into 100 cents, symbol ƒ. | [noun] A pre-decimal British coin, worth two shillings or ten new pence. | [noun] A guilder (former currency unit of the Netherlands). FLORIST (10) [noun] A person who sells flowers. | [noun] A person who cultivates flowers. | [noun] A person who studies or writes about flowers. FLORUIT (10) [noun] The time period during which a person, group, culture, etc. is at its peak. FLOSSED (11) [verb] To clean the area between the teeth using floss. | [verb] To show off, especially by exhibiting one's wealth or talent. | [verb] To perform the floss dance move. FLOSSES (10) [noun] A thread used to clean the gaps between the teeth. | [noun] Raw silk fibres. | [noun] The fibres covering a corncob etc.; the loose downy or silky material inside the husks of certain plants, such as beans. FLOSSIE (10) FLOTAGE (11) [noun] The act of floating or the state of being afloat. | [noun] Goods or wreckage floating on water. FLOTSAM (12) [noun] Debris floating in a river or sea, in particular fragments from a shipwreck. FLOUNCE (12) [noun] A strip of decorative material, usually pleated, attached along one edge; a ruffle.W | [noun] The act of flouncing. | [verb] To move in an exaggerated, bouncy manner. FLOUNCY (15) [adjective] Characterized by exaggerated, ostentatious, or showy movements or behavior. | [adjective] (of fabric or clothing) Having a light, billowing quality that moves in an exaggerated manner. FLOURED (11) [verb] To apply flour to something; to cover with flour. | [verb] To reduce to flour. | [verb] To break up into fine globules of mercury in the amalgamation process. FLOUTED (11) [verb] To express contempt for (laws, rules, etc.) by word or action. | [verb] To scorn. FLOUTER (10) [noun] One who flouts; a person who openly disregards or treats with contempt rules, laws, or conventions. FLOWAGE (14) [noun] The act or process of flowing. | [noun] An area of land that is flooded or inundated, especially by water backed up behind a dam. FLOWERS (13) [noun] A colorful, conspicuous structure associated with angiosperms, frequently scented and attracting various insects, and which may or may not be used for sexual reproduction. | [noun] A reproductive structure in angiosperms (flowering plants), often conspicuously colourful and typically including sepals, petals, and either or both stamens and/or a pistil. | [noun] A plant that bears flowers, especially a plant that is small and lacks wood. FLOWERY (16) [adjective] Pertaining to flowers. | [adjective] Decorated with or abundant in flowers. | [adjective] (of a speech or piece of writing) overly complicated or elaborate; with grandiloquent expressions FLOWING (14) [verb] To move as a fluid from one position to another. | [verb] To proceed; to issue forth. | [verb] To move or match smoothly, gracefully, or continuously. FLUBBED (15) [verb] To goof, fumble, or err in the performance of an action. FLUBBER (14) [noun] Rubber or a rubber-like substance. | [verb] To move or behave in a clumsy or bouncy manner. FLUBDUB (15) FLUENCY (15) [noun] The quality of smoothness of flow. | [noun] The quality of being fluent in a language; A person's command of a particular language. | [noun] The quality of consistently applying skill correctly in the manner of one well-practiced at it, requiring little deliberate thought to perform without mistakes FLUERIC (12) FLUFFED (17) [verb] To make something fluffy. | [verb] To become fluffy, puff up. | [verb] To move lightly like fluff. FLUIDAL (11) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of fluid; flowing or capable of flowing. | [adjective] In geology, relating to the flow or movement of rock material in a plastic state. FLUIDIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or based on the principles of fluid mechanics, especially involving the controlled flow of fluids through channels and devices. | [adjective] Characterized by smooth, continuous motion or flow. FLUIDLY (14) [adverb] In a fluid manner; smoothly. FLUKIER (14) [adjective] Lucky | [adjective] Unstable, prone to rapid and unpredictable changes FLUKING (15) [verb] To obtain a successful outcome by pure chance. | [verb] To fortuitously pot a ball in an unintended way. FLUMING (13) [verb] Present participle of "flume," meaning to convey through a flume (an artificial water channel) or to move swiftly like water through a channel. FLUMMOX (21) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. FLUMPED (15) [verb] To move or fall heavily, or with a dull sound. | [verb] To drop something heavily or with a dull sound. FLUNKED (15) [verb] Of a student, to fail a class; to not pass. | [verb] Of a teacher, to deny a student a passing grade. | [verb] To shirk (a task or duty). FLUNKER (14) [noun] One who flunks or fails, especially a student who fails an examination or course. FLUNKEY (17) [noun] An underling; a liveried servant or a footman; servant, retainer – a person working in the service of another (especially in the household) | [noun] One who is obsequious or cringing; a snob. | [noun] One easily deceived in buying stocks; an inexperienced and unwary jobber. FLUORIC (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, or containing fluorine or fluoride. FLUORID (11) FLUORIN (10) FLUSHED (14) [verb] To cause to take flight from concealment. | [verb] To take suddenly to flight, especially from cover. | [verb] To cleanse by flooding with generous quantities of a fluid. FLUSHER (13) [noun] One that flushes. | [noun] A device that causes flushing, such as in a toilet. | [noun] In poker, a hand containing five cards of the same suit. FLUSHES (13) [noun] A group of birds that have suddenly started up from undergrowth, trees etc. | [verb] To cause to take flight from concealment. | [verb] To take suddenly to flight, especially from cover. FLUSTER (10) [noun] A state of being flustered; overwrought confusion. | [verb] To make hot and rosy, as with drinking. | [verb] (by extension) To confuse; befuddle; throw into panic by making overwrought with confusion. FLUTERS (10) [noun] Plural of flutter; things that flutter or move with quick, light movements. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of flutter; moves with quick, light movements. FLUTIER (10) [adjective] Resembling the sound of a flute. FLUTING (11) [verb] To play on a flute. | [verb] To make a flutelike sound. | [verb] To utter with a flutelike sound. FLUTIST (10) [noun] One who plays the flute. FLUTTER (10) [noun] The act of fluttering; quick and irregular motion. | [noun] A state of agitation. | [noun] An abnormal rapid pulsation of the heart. FLUVIAL (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, inhabiting, or produced by the action of a river or stream FLUXING (18) [verb] To use flux on. | [verb] To melt. | [verb] To flow as a liquid. FLUXION (17) [noun] The derivative of a function. | [noun] The action of flowing. | [noun] A difference or variation. FLYABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being flown or suitable for flying. FLYAWAY (19) [noun] A stray hair that is difficult to style. | [noun] Anything that is difficult to capture or restrain. | [noun] A kind of dismount from bars that incorporates one or more flips or twists. FLYBELT (15) FLYBLEW (18) [verb] Past tense of flyby, or to pass by quickly like a fly. | [verb] Past tense of blow (archaic/dialect form), or affected by blowflies (of meat). FLYBLOW (18) [noun] The larva of the blowfly, especially when found on rotten meat. | [verb] To deposit eggs upon, as a blowfly does on meat; to cause to be maggoty. | [verb] (by extension) To taint or contaminate. FLYBOAT (15) [noun] A small, fast Dutch sailing vessel used in the 16th and 17th centuries, designed for shallow waters and trade routes. FLYBOYS (18) [noun] An aircraft pilot, especially of a military combat aircraft. FLYINGS (14) [noun] The plural of flying, referring to instances or acts of flight, or material used in theater productions to create scenic effects suspended above the stage. FLYLEAF (16) [noun] A blank page at the front or back of a book. FLYLESS (13) FLYOFFS (19) [noun] Plural of flyoff, a deciding contest or playoff between competitors to determine a winner. | [noun] In aviation, final decisive maneuvers or competitions between aircraft or pilots. FLYOVER (16) [noun] A low-level flight, especially of military aircraft, of a ceremonial nature; a flypast (British). | [noun] A road or railway that passes over another, allowing routes to cross without interruption. | [noun] A high-level overpass built above main overpass lanes. FLYPAST (15) [noun] A low-level flight of a ceremonial nature; a flyover (US) FLYTIER (13) [noun] A person who ties artificial flies for fishing. FLYTING (14) [noun] A Scottish tradition of exchanging insults or abuse in verse form, typically as a poetic contest. | [verb] To engage in flyting; to exchange harsh words or insults in a witty or poetic manner. FLYTRAP (15) [noun] A carnivorous plant with hinged leaves that snap shut to trap insects, native to the southeastern United States. FLYWAYS (19) [noun] A migratory route used by birds between breeding areas. FOALING (11) [verb] To give birth to (a foal); to bear offspring. | [noun] Act of giving birth to a foal FOAMERS (12) [noun] People who are excessively enthusiastic about trains or railroads, often collecting memorabilia or spotting trains as a hobby. | [noun] People who produce or collect foam, or engage in activities involving foam. FOAMIER (12) [adjective] Full of foam. FOAMILY (15) FOAMING (13) [verb] To form or emit foam. | [verb] To spew saliva as foam, to foam at the mouth. | [noun] A process that forms foam. FOBBING (15) [verb] To cheat, to deceive, to trick, to take in, to impose upon someone. | [verb] To beat; to maul. FOCALLY (15) [adverb] In a manner relating to or located at a focus or center of attention or activity. FOCUSED (13) [verb] (followed by on or upon) To concentrate one's attention. | [verb] To cause (rays of light, etc) to converge at a single point. | [verb] To adjust (a lens, an optical instrument) in order to position an image with respect to the focal plane. FOCUSER (12) [noun] One who focuses; a device or person that brings something into focus. | [noun] In photography or optics, a tool or mechanism used to adjust focus. FOCUSES (12) [noun] A point at which reflected or refracted rays of light converge. | [noun] A point of a conic at which rays reflected from a curve or surface converge. | [noun] The fact of the convergence of light on the photographic medium. FODDERS (12) [noun] Food for animals; that which is fed to cattle, horses, and sheep, such as hay, cornstalks, vegetables, etc. | [noun] A load: various English units of weight or volume based upon standardized cartloads of certain commodities, generally around 1000 kg. | [noun] (drafting) Tracing paper. FOETORS (10) [noun] An unpleasant smell. FOGBOWS (16) [noun] A white arc or circle, similar to a rainbow, which can appear in the sky in foggy conditions as sunlight passes through small airborne water droplets. FOGDOGS (13) [noun] Balls of fog that form over water and appear to move across the surface, often seen in coastal areas. | [noun] In folklore, mysterious luminous phenomena or ghostly apparitions associated with fog near water. FOGGAGE (13) [noun] Aftermath grass that grows after hay has been cut, or the right to feed cattle on such grass. | [noun] A thick mist or fog. FOGGERS (12) [noun] Devices or people that produce fog or mist, typically used for pest control or special effects. | [noun] Plural of fogger, a person who is confused or unclear in thinking. FOGGIER (12) [adjective] Obscured by mist or fog; unclear; hazy | [adjective] Confused, befuddled, etc. FOGGILY (15) [adverb] In a foggy manner; with fog or obscurity; unclearly or confusedly. FOGGING (13) [verb] To become covered with or as if with fog. | [verb] To become obscured in condensation or water. | [verb] To become dim or obscure. FOGHORN (14) [noun] A very loud low-pitched horn, used especially in lighthouses and on large boats. FOGLESS (11) FOGYISH (17) FOGYISM (16) FOIBLES (12) [noun] A quirk, idiosyncrasy, or mannerism; unusual habit or way (usage is typically plural), that is slightly strange or silly. | [noun] A weakness or failing of character. | [noun] Part of a sword between the middle and the point, weaker than the forte. FOILING (11) [verb] To cover or wrap with foil. | [verb] To prevent (something) from being accomplished. | [verb] To prevent (someone) from accomplishing something. FOINING (11) [verb] To thrust with a sword or pointed weapon. | [verb] To move or act quickly and suddenly. FOISONS (10) [noun] An abundance or plentiful supply of something. | [verb] Third person singular present of "foison," meaning to produce abundantly or prosper. FOISTED (11) [verb] To introduce or insert surreptitiously or without warrant. | [verb] To force another to accept especially by stealth or deceit. | [verb] To pass off as genuine or worthy. FOLACIN (12) [noun] Folic acid FOLATES (10) [noun] A salt or ester of folic acid, especially one present in the vitamin B complex. FOLDERS (11) [noun] An organizer that papers are kept in, usually with an index tab, to be stored as a single unit in a filing cabinet. | [noun] A virtual container in a computer's file system, in which files and other folders may be stored. The files and subfolders in a folder are usually related. | [noun] A machine or person that folds things. FOLDING (12) [verb] To bend (any thin material, such as paper) over so that it comes in contact with itself. | [verb] To make the proper arrangement (in a thin material) by bending. | [verb] To become folded; to form folds. FOLDOUT (11) [noun] A gatefold. | [noun] A foldout bed. | [adjective] That folds out from a closed position FOLIAGE (11) [noun] The leaves of plants. | [noun] (short for) Fall foliage. | [noun] An architectural ornament representing foliage. FOLIATE (10) [verb] To form into leaves. | [verb] To beat into a leaf, or thin plate. | [verb] To spread over with a thin coat of tin and quicksilver. FOLIOED (11) [verb] Past tense of folio; to number the pages or leaves of a book or manuscript. FOLIOSE (10) [adjective] Leafy or leaf-like. FOLIOUS (10) [adjective] Having leaves or a leaflike appearance; composed of or resembling leaves or foils. FOLIUMS (12) [noun] Plural of folium, a leaf-shaped curve in mathematics, or leaves in botanical contexts. FOLKIES (14) [noun] A folk singer, or an enthusiast of folk music. FOLKISH (17) [adjective] Popular; referring to the culture of ordinary people. | [adjective] In the style of folk music. FOLKMOT (16) [noun] A general assembly or parliament of the people in ancient Scandinavian countries, particularly Iceland. FOLKWAY (20) [noun] Often plural: a belief or custom common to members of a culture or society. FOLLIES (10) [noun] Foolishness. | [noun] Thoughtless action resulting in tragic consequence. | [noun] A fanciful building built for purely ornamental reasons. FOLLOWS (13) [noun] (sometimes attributive) In billiards and similar games, a stroke causing a ball to follow another ball after hitting it. | [noun] The act of following another user's online activity. | [verb] To go after; to pursue; to move behind in the same path or direction. FOMENTS (12) [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOMITES (12) [noun] The morbid matter created by a disease. | [noun] Anything which similarly facilitates the spread of something similarly deleterious. | [noun] An inanimate object capable of carrying infectious agents (such as bacteria, viruses and parasites), and thus passively enabling their transmission between hosts. FONDANT (11) [noun] (usually uncountable) A flavored, creamy sugar preparation, used for icing cakes or as a base for candies. | [noun] A candy filled with such a preparation. | [noun] A sugar dough, usually prepared as large sheets (rolled fondant), used in place of icing to cover large areas of cakes, composed of sugar, water, gelatin, glycerine. | [adjective] Stooping, as for prey: said of an eagle, a falcon, etc. FONDEST (11) [adjective] (chiefly with of) Having a liking or affection (for). | [adjective] Affectionate. | [adjective] Indulgent. FONDING (12) [verb] Present participle of "fond," meaning to treat with affection or to be excessively sentimental about something. | [verb] Archaic or dialect form meaning to fondle or caress. FONDLED (12) [verb] To touch or stroke lovingly. | [verb] To grasp. FONDLER (11) [noun] One who fondles; a person who touches or handles something affectionately or tenderly. | [noun] One who fondles in an inappropriate or unwanted manner. FONDLES (11) [verb] To touch or stroke lovingly. | [verb] To grasp. FONDUES (11) [noun] A dish made of melted cheese, chocolate etc., or of a boiling liquid into which food can be dipped. | [verb] To prepare or serve as a fondue. FONTINA (10) [noun] A pale yellow cheese from Valle d'Aosta in Italy FOODIES (11) [noun] A person with a special interest in or knowledge of food, a gourmet. FOOLERY (13) [noun] Foolish behaviour or speech. FOOLING (11) [verb] To trick; to deceive | [verb] To act in an idiotic manner; to act foolishly | [noun] The act of one who fools. FOOLISH (13) [adjective] (of a person, an action, etc.) Lacking good sense or judgement; unwise. | [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a fool. FOOTAGE (11) [noun] An amount of film or tape that has been used to record something. | [noun] A measurement in feet. FOOTBOY (15) [noun] A young male servant or page, historically employed in a household or by a person of rank. FOOTERS (10) [noun] A footgoer; pedestrian | [noun] A line of information printed at the bottom of a page as identification of the document (compare foot, 13). | [noun] (in combination) something that is a stated number of feet in some dimension - such as a six-footer. FOOTIER (10) [adjective] More resembling or characteristic of feet; having more prominent or pronounced feet. | [adjective] More trifling or foolish (British slang). FOOTIES (10) [noun] (especially in plural) pyjamas or a similar covering that covers the feet FOOTING (11) [verb] To use the foot to kick (usually a ball). | [verb] To pay (a bill). | [verb] To tread to measure or music; to dance; to trip; to skip. FOOTLED (11) [verb] To waste time; to trifle. | [verb] To talk nonsense. FOOTLER (10) [verb] To engage in fruitless activity or waste time on trivial matters. | [verb] To tinker or fiddle with something in an aimless way. FOOTLES (10) [verb] To waste time; to trifle. | [verb] To talk nonsense. FOOTMAN (12) [noun] A soldier who marches and fights on foot; a foot soldier. | [noun] A man in waiting; a male servant whose duties are to attend the door, the carriage, the table, etc. | [noun] A servant who runs in front of his master's carriage. FOOTMEN (12) [noun] A soldier who marches and fights on foot; a foot soldier. | [noun] A man in waiting; a male servant whose duties are to attend the door, the carriage, the table, etc. | [noun] A servant who runs in front of his master's carriage. FOOTPAD (13) [noun] The soft underside of an animal's paw. | [noun] A medicated bandage for the treatment of corns and warts. | [noun] A thief on foot who robs travellers on the road. FOOTSIE (10) [noun] A flirting game where two people touch their feet together, under a table or otherwise concealed, as a romantic prelude. | [noun] A foot. | [noun] A selfie (self-taken photograph) of one's feet. FOOTWAY (16) [noun] A passage for pedestrians only. FOOZLED (20) [verb] To do something clumsily or awkwardly; to bungle. FOOZLER (19) FOOZLES (19) [noun] A fogey. | [noun] A mistaken shot in golf. | [noun] The final boss character in a game. FOPPERY (17) [noun] The dress or actions of a fop. | [noun] Stupidity. FOPPING (15) [verb] Present participle of "fop," meaning to dress or groom oneself in an excessively fashionable or affected manner. | [verb] To behave like a fop; to act in a vain or foolish way. FOPPISH (17) [adjective] Like a fop, a man overly concerned with his appearance; vain and showy. FORAGED (12) [verb] To search for and gather food for animals, particularly cattle and horses. | [verb] To rampage through, gathering and destroying as one goes. | [verb] To rummage. FORAGER (11) [noun] An animal or person who forages FORAGES (11) [noun] Fodder for animals, especially cattle and horses. | [noun] An act or instance of foraging. | [noun] The demand for fodder etc by an army from the local population FORAMEN (12) [noun] An opening, an orifice; a short passage. FORAYED (14) [verb] To scour (an area or place) for food, treasure, booty etc. | [verb] To pillage; to ravage. FORAYER (13) [noun] One who forays; a person who makes a sudden attack or raid. | [noun] One who ventures into a new area or activity. FORBADE (13) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORBEAR (12) [verb] To keep away from; to avoid; to abstain from. | [verb] To refrain from proceeding; to pause; to delay. | [verb] To refuse; to decline; to withsay; to unheed. | [noun] An ancestor. FORBIDS (13) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORBODE (13) [verb] Past tense of forbode, meaning to be an omen or sign of something that will happen; to portend or foreshadow. FORBORE (12) [verb] To keep away from; to avoid; to abstain from. | [verb] To refrain from proceeding; to pause; to delay. | [verb] To refuse; to decline; to withsay; to unheed. FORCEPS (14) [noun] An instrument used in surgery or medical procedures for grasping and holding objects, similar to tongs or pincers. FORCERS (12) [noun] Plural of forcer; things or people that force. | [noun] In hockey, forwards who apply aggressive pressure to force turnovers. FORCING (13) [verb] To violate (a woman); to rape. | [verb] To exert oneself, to do one's utmost. | [verb] To compel (someone or something) to do something. FORDING (12) [verb] To cross a stream using a ford. | [noun] The act by which something is forded. | [noun] Fording place FORDOES (11) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FORDONE (11) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREARM (12) [noun] The part of the arm between the wrist and the elbow. | [noun] A section of the weapon between the receiver and the muzzle, used to hold the firearm steady. | [verb] (sometimes figurative) To arm in preparation. FOREBAY (15) [noun] A reservoir or pond that supplies water to a mill or power station. | [noun] In swimming, the area of water just before a diving board or starting point. FOREBYE (15) FOREDID (12) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREGUT (11) [noun] The anterior part of the alimentary canal of an embryo, from the mouth to the duodenum. FOREIGN (11) [noun] A foreign person, particularly: | [noun] A foreign ship. | [noun] Clipping of chamber foreign: an outhouse. FORELEG (11) [noun] Either of the two legs towards the front of a four-legged animal, a piece of furniture, etc. FOREMAN (12) [noun] The leader of a work crew. | [noun] The member of a jury who presides over it and speaks on its behalf. | [noun] (during the era of slavery) A black (slave) assistant to the white overseer who managed field hands. FOREMEN (12) [noun] The leader of a work crew. | [noun] The member of a jury who presides over it and speaks on its behalf. | [noun] (during the era of slavery) A black (slave) assistant to the white overseer who managed field hands. FOREPAW (15) [noun] Either of the paws of an animal's foreleg, homologous to the hand in humans. FORERAN (10) [verb] To run in front. | [verb] To precede; to forecast or foreshadow. FORERUN (10) [verb] To run in front. | [verb] To precede; to forecast or foreshadow. FORESAW (13) [verb] To be able to see beforehand: to anticipate; predict. | [verb] To provide. FORESEE (10) [verb] To be able to see beforehand: to anticipate; predict. | [verb] To provide. FORESTS (10) [noun] A dense uncultivated tract of trees and undergrowth, larger than woods. | [noun] Any dense collection or amount. | [noun] A defined area of land set aside in England as royal hunting ground or for other privileged use; all such areas. FORETOP (12) [noun] The top of the head; the top of the forehead. | [noun] The lock of hair which grows on top of the forehead; the corresponding part of a wig. | [noun] In the phrase, to take time (or occasion or opportunity) by the foretop, meaning "to boldly seize an opportunity". FOREVER (13) [noun] An extremely long time. | [noun] A mythical time in the infinite future that will never come. | [adjective] Permanent, lasting FORFEIT (13) [noun] A penalty for or consequence of a misdemeanor. | [noun] A thing forfeited; that which is taken from somebody in requital of a misdeed committed; that which is lost, or the right to which is alienated, by a crime, breach of contract, etc. | [noun] Something deposited and redeemable by a sportive fine as part of a game. FORFEND (14) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FORGAVE (14) [verb] To pardon; to waive any negative feeling or desire for punishment, retribution, or compensation. | [verb] To accord forgiveness. FORGERS (11) [noun] A person who creates forgeries, falsifies documents with intent to defraud, e.g. to create a false will or illicit copies of currency; counterfeiter. | [noun] A person who forges metals. FORGERY (14) [noun] The act of forging metal into shape. | [noun] The act of forging, fabricating, or producing falsely; especially the crime of fraudulently making or altering a writing or signature purporting to be made by another, the false making or material alteration of or addition to a written instrument for the purpose of deceit and fraud. | [noun] That which is forged, fabricated, falsely devised or counterfeited. FORGETS (11) [verb] To lose remembrance of. | [verb] To unintentionally not do, neglect. | [verb] To unintentionally leave something behind. FORGING (12) [verb] To shape a metal by heating and hammering. | [verb] To form or create with concerted effort. | [verb] To create a forgery of; to make a counterfeit item of; to copy or imitate unlawfully. FORGIVE (14) [verb] To pardon; to waive any negative feeling or desire for punishment, retribution, or compensation. | [verb] To accord forgiveness. FORGOER (11) [noun] One who forgoes; a person who refrains from or abstains from something. FORGOES (11) [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. | [verb] To refrain from, to abstain from, to pass up, to withgo. FORGONE (11) [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. | [verb] To refrain from, to abstain from, to pass up, to withgo. FORINTS (10) [noun] The basic unit of currency of Hungary; formerly subdivided into 100 fillér. FORKERS (14) [noun] Plural of forker; people or things that fork. | [noun] In cryptocurrency, individuals or groups who create a fork of a blockchain project. FORKFUL (17) [noun] The amount of food that a fork can hold or carry. | [noun] A fork-shaped object or tool used for digging or lifting. FORKIER (14) [adjective] More forked or divided into branches; having more prongs or points than something else. FORKING (15) [verb] To divide into two or more branches. | [verb] To move with a fork (as hay or food). | [verb] To spawn a new child process in some sense duplicating the existing process. FORLORN (10) [verb] To abandon, forsake. | [noun] A forlorn hope. | [noun] A member of a forlorn hope. FORMALS (12) [noun] Formalin. | [noun] An evening gown. | [noun] An event with a formal dress code. FORMANT (12) [noun] A band of frequencies, in a sound spectrum, that have a greater intensity; they determine the quality of a sound; especially the characteristic sounds of the consonants. | [noun] A morpheme occurring as an affix to a root or stem, forming an extended root or stem. FORMATE (12) [noun] Any salt or ester of formic acid. | [verb] To assemble flying aircraft into formation; to fly in formation. FORMATS (12) [noun] The layout of a publication or document. | [noun] (hence) The form of presentation of something. | [noun] The type of programming that a radio station broadcasts; such as a certain genre of music, news, sports, talk, etc. FORMERS (12) [noun] Someone who forms something; a maker; a creator or founder. | [noun] An object used to form something, such as a template, gauge, or cutting die. | [noun] (used in combinations) Someone in, or of, a certain form (class). FORMFUL (15) FORMING (13) [verb] To assume (a certain shape or visible structure). | [verb] To give (a shape or visible structure) to a thing or person. | [verb] To take shape. FORMOLS (12) [noun] Plural of formol, a solution of formaldehyde in water used as a disinfectant and preservative. FORMULA (12) [noun] Any mathematical rule expressed symbolically. | [noun] A symbolic expression of the structure of a compound. | [noun] A plan or method for dealing with a problem or for achieving a result. FORMYLS (15) [noun] Plural of formyl, a chemical group consisting of a carbon atom bonded to hydrogen and oxygen (CHO), commonly found in organic compounds. FORSAKE (14) [verb] To abandon, to give up, to leave (permanently), to renounce. FORSOOK (14) [verb] To abandon, to give up, to leave (permanently), to renounce. FORTIES (10) [noun] The decade of the 1840s, 1940s, etc. | [noun] The decade of one's life from age 40 through age 49. | [noun] (temperature, rates) The range between 40 and 49. FORTIFY (16) [verb] To increase the defenses of; to strengthen and secure by military works; to render defensible against an attack by hostile forces. | [verb] To impart strength or vigor to. | [verb] To add spirits to wine to increase the alcohol content. FORTUNE (10) [noun] Destiny, especially favorable. | [noun] A prediction or set of predictions about a person's future provided by a fortune teller. | [noun] A small slip of paper with wise or vaguely prophetic words printed on it, baked into a fortune cookie. FORWARD (14) [noun] One of the eight players (comprising two props, one hooker, two locks, two flankers and one number eight, collectively known as the pack) whose primary task is to gain and maintain possession of the ball (compare back). | [noun] A player on a team in football (soccer) in the row nearest to the opposing team's goal, who are therefore principally responsible for scoring goals. | [noun] An umbrella term for a centre or winger in ice hockey. | [noun] An introductory section preceding the main text of a book or other document; a preface or introduction. FORWENT (13) [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. | [verb] To refrain from, to abstain from, to pass up, to withgo. FORWORN (13) [adjective] Worn out; exhausted; shabby from long use or wear. FOSSATE (10) [adjective] Marked or characterized by ditches or trenches; having a ditch-like appearance or structure. FOSSICK (16) [verb] To search for something; to rummage. | [verb] (British dialect) To be troublesome. FOSSILS (10) [noun] The mineralized remains of an animal or plant. | [noun] Any preserved evidence of ancient life, including shells, imprints, burrows, coprolites, and organically-produced chemicals. | [noun] A fossil word. FOSTERS (10) [noun] A foster parent. | [noun] The care given to another; guardianship. | [verb] To nurture or bring up offspring, or to provide similar parental care to an unrelated child. FOUETTE (10) [noun] A ballet movement in which the dancer rises on one leg and whips the other leg around, creating a spinning motion. FOULARD (11) [noun] A lightweight silk or silk-and-cotton fabric, often with a printed pattern. | [noun] A piece of clothing, or a handkerchief, made with this fabric. FOULEST (10) [adjective] Covered with, or containing unclean matter; dirty. | [adjective] (of words or a way of speaking) obscene, vulgar or abusive. | [adjective] Detestable, unpleasant, loathsome. FOULING (11) [verb] To make dirty. | [verb] To besmirch. | [verb] To clog or obstruct. FOUNDED (12) [verb] To start (an institution or organization). | [verb] To begin building. | [verb] To melt, especially of metal in an industrial setting. FOUNDER (11) [noun] One who founds or establishes (especially said of a company, project, organisation, state) | [noun] Someone for whose parents one has no data. | [noun] The iron worker in charge of the blast furnace and the smelting operation. | [noun] A severe laminitis of a horse, caused by untreated internal inflammation in the hooves. FOUNDRY (14) [noun] A facility that melts metals in special furnaces and pours the molten metal into molds to make products. Foundries are usually specified according to the type of metal dealt with: iron foundry, brass foundry, etc. | [noun] The act, process, or art of casting metals; founding. | [noun] A semiconductor fabrication plant in the microelectronics industry. FOURGON (11) FOURTHS (13) [noun] (not used in the plural) The person or thing in the fourth position. | [noun] (chiefly American) A quarter, one of four equal parts of a whole. | [noun] (not used in the plural) The fourth gear of an engine. FOVEATE (13) [verb] To focus one's gaze on a central point, especially in vision where the fovea (the area of sharpest vision in the retina) is directed toward an object. FOVEOLA (13) [noun] A small depression or pit, especially the small depression in the retina of the eye that is the center of sharpest vision. FOVEOLE (13) [noun] A small pit or depression, especially a small fovea or dimple on a surface. FOWLERS (13) [noun] Plural of fowler; people who hunt or trap wild birds, especially game birds. | [noun] Plural of fowler; people who catch or shoot birds for food or sport. FOWLING (14) [verb] To hunt fowl. | [noun] A session of hunting fowl. FOWLPOX (22) [noun] A viral disease affecting domestic fowl, characterized by pustular lesions on unfeathered skin areas. FOXFIRE (20) [noun] Bioluminescence created by some types of fungus, particularly those growing on rotting wood. | [noun] (by extension) Wood exhibiting fungal bioluminescence; torchwood. FOXFISH (23) FOXHOLE (20) [noun] The burrow in the ground where a fox lives. | [noun] A small pit dug into the ground as a shelter for protection against enemy fire. | [verb] To dig a military foxhole into, or convert into a foxhole by digging. FOXHUNT (20) [noun] A hunt for foxes, usually with dogs. | [noun] A hunt for radio transmitters; radiosport. | [verb] To hunt foxes, usually with dogs. FOXIEST (17) [adjective] Having the qualities of a fox. | [adjective] Cunning, sly. | [adjective] Attractive, sexy (of a woman). FOXINGS (18) [noun] Brown or reddish stains that appear on old paper, typically caused by oxidation or mold. | [verb] Third person singular present of "fox," meaning to trick or deceive someone. FOXLIKE (21) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a fox; cunning, sly, or crafty in behavior or appearance. FOXSKIN (21) FOXTAIL (17) [noun] The tail of a fox. | [noun] A dry spikelet or spikelet seed and flower cluster of some grasses | [noun] A plant having a part resembling the tail of a fox or such spikelet. FOXTROT (17) [noun] A ballroom dance with a slow-slow-quick-quick rhythm. | [noun] A pace with short steps, as in changing from trotting to walking. | [noun] The letter F in the ICAO spelling alphabet. FOZIEST (19) [adjective] Superlative form of fozy; musty, stuffy, or having a warm, close atmosphere. FRACTAL (12) [noun] A mathematical set that has a non-integer and constant Hausdorff dimension; a geometric figure that is self-similar at all scales. | [noun] An object, system, or idea that exhibits a fractal-like property. | [adjective] Having the form of a fractal. FRACTED (13) FRACTUR (12) FRACTUS (12) FRAENUM (12) [noun] A frenulum. FRAGGED (13) [verb] To deliberately kill (one's superior officer) with a fragmentation grenade. | [verb] To hit with the explosion of a fragmentation grenade. | [verb] To kill. FRAGILE (11) [adjective] Easily broken or destroyed, and thus often of subtle or intricate structure. | [adjective] Feeling weak or easily disturbed as a result of illness. FRAILER (10) [adjective] Easily broken physically; not firm or durable; liable to fail and perish | [adjective] Weak; infirm. | [adjective] Mentally fragile. FRAILLY (13) [adverb] In a frail manner; weakly or delicately. FRAILTY (13) [noun] The condition quality of being frail, physically, mentally, or morally; weakness of resolution; liability to be deceived or seduced. | [noun] A fault proceeding from weakness; foible; sin of infirmity. FRAISES (10) [noun] A type of palisade placed for defence around a berm; a defence consisting of pointed stakes driven into the ramparts in a horizontal or inclined position. | [noun] A ruff worn (especially by women) in the 16th century. | [noun] An embroidered scarf with its ends crossed over the chest and pinned, worn (especially by women) in the 19th century. FRAKTUR (14) [noun] A style of black letter type, used especially in Germany in the 16th to 20th centuries. | [noun] A Pennsylvania German document style, incorporating watercolour illustration and fraktur lettering. FRAMERS (12) [noun] A person who makes frames for paintings. | [noun] A person who assembles the frame of a ship. | [noun] A person who assembles the timbers of a wood-framed building. FRAMING (13) [verb] To fit, as for a specific end or purpose; make suitable or comfortable; adapt; adjust. | [verb] To construct by fitting or uniting together various parts; fabricate by union of constituent parts. | [verb] To bring or put into form or order; adjust the parts or elements of; compose; contrive; plan; devise. FRANKED (15) [verb] To place a frank on an envelope. | [verb] To exempt from charge for postage, as a letter, package, or packet, etc. | [verb] To send by public conveyance free of expense. FRANKER (14) [adjective] Honest, especially in a manner that seems slightly blunt; candid; not reserved or disguised. | [adjective] Unmistakable, clinically obvious, self-evident | [adjective] Unbounded by restrictions, limitations, etc.; free. | [noun] Somebody or something which franks. FRANKLY (17) [adverb] (manner) In a frank, open or (too) honest manner. | [adverb] (sentence adverb) In truth, to tell the truth. FRANTIC (12) [noun] A person who is insane or mentally unstable, madman. | [adjective] Insane, mentally unstable. | [adjective] In a state of panic, worry, frenzy or rush. FRAPPED (15) [verb] To draw together tightly; to secure by many turns of a lashing. | [verb] To strike. FRAPPES (14) [noun] Liqueur poured over shaved ice. | [noun] A thick milkshake containing ice cream. | [noun] (Greece) An iced, sweetened, beaten coffee drink. FRASSES (10) [noun] The droppings or fecal pellets of insects, especially caterpillars. | [noun] Plural of frass. FRATERS (10) [noun] A monk. | [noun] A frater house. | [noun] A comrade. FRAUGHT (14) [noun] The hire of a ship or boat to transport cargo. | [noun] Money paid to hire a ship or boat to transport cargo; freight | [noun] The transportation of goods, especially in a ship or boat. | [verb] To load (a ship, cargo etc.). FRAYING (14) [verb] To (cause to) unravel; used particularly for the edge of something made of cloth, or the end of a rope. | [verb] To cause exhaustion, wear out (a person's mental strength). | [verb] Frighten; alarm FRAZILS (19) [noun] Small, thin, needle-like crystals of ice that form in supercooled water and accumulate on the surface of rivers or lakes. FRAZZLE (28) [noun] A burnt fragment; a cinder or crisp. | [noun] The condition or quality of being frazzled; a frayed end. | [verb] To fray or wear down, especially at the edges. FREAKED (15) [verb] To make greatly distressed and/or a discomposed appearance | [verb] To be placed or place someone under the influence of a psychedelic drug | [verb] To streak; to variegate FRECKLE (16) [noun] A small brownish or reddish pigmentation spot on the surface of the skin. | [noun] Any small spot or discoloration. | [noun] A small sweet consisting of a flattish mound of chocolate covered in hundreds and thousands. FRECKLY (19) [adjective] Having many freckles or marked by freckles. FREEBEE (12) [noun] Something which is free; a giveaway or handout. FREEBIE (12) [noun] Something which is free; a giveaway or handout. FREEDOM (13) [noun] The state of being free, of not being imprisoned or enslaved. | [noun] The lack of a specific constraint, or of constraints in general; a state of being free, unconstrained. | [noun] Frankness; openness; unreservedness. FREEING (11) [verb] To make free; set at liberty; release. | [verb] To rid of something that confines or oppresses. | [noun] The act of making something free; liberation. FREEMAN (12) [noun] A free person, particularly: FREEMEN (12) [noun] A free person, particularly: FREESIA (10) [noun] Any flowering plant of the genus Freesia, native to South Africa. FREEWAY (16) [noun] A road designed for safe, high-speed operation of motor vehicles through the elimination of at-grade intersections, usually divided and having at least two lanes in each direction; a dual carriageway with no at-grade crossings, a motorway. | [noun] A toll-free highway. FREEZER (19) [noun] An appliance or room used to store food or other perishable items at temperatures below 0° Celsius (32° Fahrenheit). | [noun] The section of a refrigerator used to store food or other perishable items at a temperature below 0° Celsius (32° Fahrenheit). | [noun] (Parkinson's disease) A Parkinson's disease patient that experiences freezing of gait (FOG) episodes. FREEZES (19) [verb] Especially of a liquid, to become solid due to low temperature. | [verb] To lower something's temperature to the point that it freezes or becomes hard. | [verb] To drop to a temperature below zero degrees celsius, where water turns to ice. FREIGHT (14) [noun] Payment for transportation. | [noun] Goods or items in transport. | [noun] Transport of goods. FRENULA (10) FRENUMS (12) [noun] A frenulum. FRESCOS (12) [noun] A cool, refreshing state of the air; coolness, duskiness, shade. | [noun] An artwork made by applying water-based pigment to wet or fresh lime mortar or plaster. | [noun] The technique used to make such an artwork. FRESHED (14) FRESHEN (13) [verb] To become fresh. | [verb] (of wind) To become stronger. | [verb] (of a cow) To begin or resume giving milk, especially after calving; to cause to resume giving milk. FRESHER (13) [adjective] Newly produced or obtained; recent. | [adjective] (of food) Not cooked, dried, frozen, or spoiled. | [adjective] (of plant material) Still green and not dried. | [noun] A first year student at a university. FRESHES (13) FRESHET (13) [noun] A flood resulting from heavy rain or a spring thaw. | [noun] A small stream, especially one flowing into the sea. FRESHLY (16) [adverb] Recently, newly. | [adverb] In a rude or impertinent manner. FRESNEL (10) [noun] A unit of frequency equal to 1012 hertz, or one terahertz. | [noun] A Fresnel lens or a light feature using such a lens FRETFUL (13) [adjective] Irritable, bad-tempered, grumpy or peevish. | [adjective] Unable to relax; fidgety or restless. FRETSAW (13) [noun] A saw consisting of a metal frame having a fine-toothed narrow blade held under tension, used in making curved cuts. | [verb] To cut with a fretsaw. FRETTED (11) [verb] Especially when describing animals: to consume, devour, or eat. | [verb] To chafe or irritate; to worry. | [verb] To make rough, to agitate or disturb; to cause to ripple. FRETTER (10) FRIABLE (12) [adjective] Easily broken into small fragments, crumbled, or reduced to powder. | [adjective] (of soil) Loose and large-grained in consistency. | [adjective] (of poisons) Likely to crumble and become airborne, thus becoming a health risk FRIARLY (13) FRIBBLE (14) [noun] A trifling action. | [noun] A trifler. | [noun] A frivolous, contemptible fellow; a fop. FRIDGES (12) [noun] A refrigerator. | [verb] To place inside of a refrigerator. | [verb] To gratuitously kill, disempower, or otherwise remove a character, usually female, from a narrative, often strictly to hurt another character, usually male, and provide him with a personal motivation for fighting the antagonist(s). FRIENDS (11) [noun] A person other than a family member, spouse or lover whose company one enjoys and towards whom one feels affection. | [noun] An associate who provides assistance. | [noun] A person with whom one is vaguely or indirectly acquainted. FRIEZES (19) [noun] A kind of coarse woolen cloth or stuff with a shaggy or tufted (friezed) nap on one side. | [noun] That part of the entablature of an order which is between the architrave and cornice. It is a flat member or face, either uniform or broken by triglyphs, and often enriched with figures and other ornaments of sculpture. | [noun] Any sculptured or richly ornamented band in a building or, by extension, in rich pieces of furniture. FRIGATE (11) [noun] An obsolete type of sailing warship with a single continuous gun deck, typically used for patrolling, blockading, etc, but not in line of battle. | [noun] A 19th-century warship combining sail and steam propulsion, typically of ironclad timber construction, supplementing and superseding sailing ships of the battle line until made obsolete by the development of the solely steam-propelled iron battleship. | [noun] A modern type of warship, smaller than a destroyer, originally (WWII) introduced as an anti-submarine vessel but now general purpose. FRIGGED (13) [verb] To fidget, to wriggle around | [verb] To masturbate | [verb] To fuck (misapplied euphemism) FRIGHTS (14) [noun] A state of terror excited by the sudden appearance of danger; sudden and violent fear, usually of short duration; a sudden alarm. | [noun] Anything strange, ugly or shocking, producing a feeling of alarm or aversion. | [verb] To frighten. FRIJOLE (17) [noun] (in Mexico, the southwestern United States, and the West Indies) Any cultivated bean of the genus Phaseolus, especially the black seed of a variety of Phaseolus vulgaris. | [noun] (in Mexico, the southwestern United States, and the West Indies) The bean-like seed of any of several related plants, such as the cowpea, used as food. FRILLED (11) FRILLER (10) FRINGED (12) [verb] To decorate with fringe. | [verb] To serve as a fringe. | [adjective] Possessing a fringe. FRINGES (11) [noun] Hair hanging over the forehead. | [noun] A hairstyle including such hair, especially cut straight across the forehead. | [noun] Brucellosis, a bacterial disease. FRISEUR (10) [noun] A hairdresser. FRISKED (15) [verb] To frolic, gambol, skip, dance, leap. | [verb] To search somebody by feeling his or her body and clothing. FRISKER (14) FRISKET (14) [noun] A thin frame in a printing press that holds the sheet of paper in position and acts as a mask. FRISSON (10) [noun] A sudden surge of excitement. | [noun] A shiver, a thrill. FRITTED (11) [verb] To add frit to a glass or ceramic mixture | [verb] To prepare by heat (the materials for making glass); to fuse partially. FRITTER (10) [noun] A dish made by deep-frying food coated in batter. | [noun] A fragment; a shred; a small piece. | [verb] (often with about, around, or away) To squander or waste time, money, or other resources; e.g. occupy oneself idly or without clear purpose, to tinker with an unimportant part of a project, to dally, sometimes as a form of procrastination. FRITZES (19) [verb] To go wrong or become defective. FRIVOLS (13) [noun] An unserious person; a shallow person. | [noun] An idle diversion or pastime; a frivolity. FRIZERS (19) FRIZING (20) FRIZZED (29) [verb] Of hair, to form into a mass of tight curls. | [verb] To curl; to make frizzy. | [verb] To form into little burs, knobs, or tufts, as the nap of cloth. FRIZZER (28) FRIZZES (28) [verb] Of hair, to form into a mass of tight curls. | [verb] To curl; to make frizzy. | [verb] To form into little burs, knobs, or tufts, as the nap of cloth. FRIZZLE (28) [noun] A curl; a lock of hair crisped. | [verb] To fry something until crisp and curled. | [verb] To scorch. FRIZZLY (31) FROCKED (17) FROGEYE (14) FROGGED (13) [verb] To hunt or trap frogs. | [verb] To use a pronged plater to transfer (cells) to another plate. | [verb] To spatchcock (a chicken). FROGMAN (13) [noun] A diver, especially one in a diving suit (as opposed to one in scuba gear). | [noun] A military diver, e.g. a US Navy SEAL. FROGMEN (13) [noun] A diver, especially one in a diving suit (as opposed to one in scuba gear). | [noun] A military diver, e.g. a US Navy SEAL. FROLICS (12) [noun] Gaiety; merriment. | [noun] A playful antic. | [noun] A social gathering. FROMAGE (13) FRONDED (12) FRONTAL (10) [noun] The bone at the front of the skull, behind the forehead. | [noun] The façade of a building. | [noun] A drapery covering the front of an altar. FRONTED (11) [verb] To face (on, to); to be pointed in a given direction. | [verb] To face, be opposite to. | [verb] To face up to, to meet head-on, to confront. FRONTER (10) FRONTES (10) FRONTON (10) [noun] A pediment. | [noun] A two-walled or single-walled court used as a playing area for Basque pelota. FROSTED (11) [noun] A kind of milkshake made with ice cream. | [adjective] Covered in frost; frosty. | [adjective] Appearing to be covered in frost. FROTHED (14) [verb] To create froth in (a liquid). | [verb] (of a liquid) To bubble. | [verb] To spit, vent, or eject, as froth. FROUNCE (12) [noun] A canker in the mouth of a hawk. | [noun] A plait or curl. | [verb] To curl. FROWARD (14) [adjective] Disobedient, contrary, unmanageable; difficult to deal with; with an evil disposition. | [preposition] Away from. FROWNED (14) [verb] To have a frown on one's face. | [verb] To manifest displeasure or disapprobation; to look with disfavour or threateningly. | [verb] To repress or repel by expressing displeasure or disapproval; to rebuke with a look. FROWNER (13) FROWSTS (13) [noun] Stuffiness; stifling warmth in a room. | [verb] To enjoy being in a warm, close, stuffy place. FROWSTY (16) [adjective] Musty; stuffy (atmosphere) FRUGGED (13) [verb] To perform this dance. FRUITED (11) [verb] To produce fruit, seeds, or spores. | [adjective] Containing fruit; bearing fruit. FRUITER (10) [noun] Any organism that fruits. | [noun] A ship for transporting fruit. FRUSTUM (12) [noun] A cone or pyramid whose tip has been truncated by a plane parallel to its base. | [noun] A portion of a sphere, or in general any solid, delimited by two parallel planes. FRYPANS (15) [noun] A frying pan. FUBBING (15) FUBSIER (12) [adjective] Short and stout; low and wide FUCHSIA (15) [noun] A popular garden plant, of the genus Fuchsia, of the Onagraceae family, shrubs with red, pink or purple flowers. | [noun] A purplish-red colour, the color of fuchsin, an aniline dye. | [adjective] Having a purplish-red colour. FUCHSIN (15) [noun] A dye (rosaniline hydrochloride, C20H19N3·HCl) usually a deep red or magenta colour. FUCKERS (16) [noun] An undesirable person. | [noun] The object of some effort. | [noun] People, friends, especially of very high solidarity. FUCKING (17) [verb] To have sexual intercourse, to copulate. | [verb] To have sexual intercourse with. | [verb] To insert one’s penis, a dildo or other phallic object, into a specified orifice or cleft. FUCKUPS (18) [noun] A serious mistake. | [noun] One who continually makes mistakes. | [noun] An ineffective person; a person who fucks up a lot FUCOIDS (13) [noun] A fucoid seaweed. FUCOSES (12) FUCUSES (12) FUDDLED (13) [verb] To confuse or befuddle. | [verb] To intoxicate. | [verb] To become intoxicated; to get drunk. FUDDLES (12) [verb] To confuse or befuddle. | [verb] To intoxicate. | [verb] To become intoxicated; to get drunk. FUDGING (13) [verb] To try to avoid giving a direct answer. | [verb] To alter something from its true state, as to hide a flaw or uncertainty. Always deliberate, but not necessarily dishonest or immoral. | [verb] To botch or bungle something. FUEHRER (13) [noun] A leader, especially one exercising the powers of a tyrant | [noun] (definite) Adolf Hitler when he was the chancellor of Nazi Germany FUELERS (10) FUELING (11) [verb] To provide with fuel. | [verb] To exacerbate, to cause to grow or become greater. | [noun] The act or process by which something is fueled. FUELLED (11) [verb] To provide with fuel. | [verb] To exacerbate, to cause to grow or become greater. FUELLER (10) FUGALLY (14) FUGATOS (11) [noun] A fugal passage in a composition that is not a strict or complete fugue. FUGGIER (12) [adjective] Muggy, stuffy, with bad ventilation FUGGILY (15) FUGGING (13) FUGLING (12) FUGUING (12) FUGUIST (11) FUHRERS (13) [noun] A leader, especially one exercising the powers of a tyrant | [noun] (definite) Adolf Hitler when he was the chancellor of Nazi Germany FULCRUM (14) [noun] The support about which a lever pivots. | [noun] A crux or pivot; a central point. FULFILL (13) [verb] To satisfy, carry out, bring to completion (an obligation, a requirement, etc.). | [verb] To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest. | [verb] To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.). FULFILS (13) [verb] To satisfy, carry out, bring to completion (an obligation, a requirement, etc.). | [verb] To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest. | [verb] To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.). FULGENT (11) [adjective] Shining brilliantly; radiant. FULHAMS (15) FULLAMS (12) FULLERS (10) [noun] A person who fulls cloth. | [noun] A convex, rounded or grooved tool, used by blacksmiths for shaping metal. | [noun] A groove made by such a tool (in the blade of a sword etc.). FULLERY (13) FULLEST (10) [adjective] Containing the maximum possible amount that can fit in the space available. | [adjective] Complete; with nothing omitted. | [adjective] Total, entire. FULLING (11) [noun] Baptism. | [verb] (of the moon) To become full or wholly illuminated. | [verb] To baptise. FULMARS (12) [noun] Either of two species of pelagic seabird in the genus Fulmarus, Fulmarus glacialis and F. glacialoides, which breed on cliffs. FULMINE (12) FULNESS (10) [noun] Being full; completeness. | [noun] The degree to which a space is full. | [noun] The degree to which fate has become known. FULSOME (12) [adjective] Offensive to good taste, tactless, overzealous, excessive. | [adjective] Excessively flattering (connoting insincerity). | [adjective] Marked by fullness; abundant, copious. FULVOUS (13) [adjective] Tawny-coloured. FUMARIC (14) FUMBLED (15) [verb] To handle nervously or awkwardly. | [verb] To grope awkwardly in trying to find something | [verb] To blunder uncertainly. FUMBLER (14) FUMBLES (14) [noun] A ball etc. that has been dropped by accident. | [noun] A dessert similar to a cross between a fool and a crumble. FUMETTE (12) FUMIEST (12) FUMULUS (12) FUNCTOR (12) [noun] (grammar) A function word. | [noun] A function object. | [noun] A category homomorphism; a morphism from a source category to a target category which maps objects to objects and arrows to arrows, in such a way as to preserve domains and codomains (of the arrows) as well as composition and identities. FUNDING (12) [verb] To pay for. | [verb] To place (money) in a fund. | [verb] To form a debt into a stock charged with interest. FUNERAL (10) [noun] A ceremony to honour and remember a deceased person. Often distinguished from a memorial service by the presence of the body of the deceased. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A funeral sermon. | [adjective] Of or relating to a funeral. FUNFAIR (13) [noun] A travelling amusement park. FUNGALS (11) FUNGOES (11) [noun] A fielding practice drill where a person hits fly balls intended to be caught. | [noun] A fungo bat. FUNGOID (12) [noun] A fungus, or some other organism closely resembling a fungus. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or resembling a fungus. FUNGOUS (11) [adjective] Of or pertaining to fungi; fungal. | [adjective] Of or containing a spongy, abnormal excrescence. FUNICLE (12) [noun] The stalk or stem of an ovule or seed. | [noun] Intermediate segments of the antenna of chalcid wasps adjoining the pedicel basally and the clava distally. FUNKERS (14) FUNKIAS (14) [noun] Any of the plants of the genus Funkia (now Hosta). FUNKIER (14) [adjective] Offbeat, unconventional or eccentric. | [adjective] Not quite right; of questionable quality; not appropriate to the context. | [adjective] Cool; great; excellent. FUNKING (15) [verb] To emit an offensive smell; to stink. | [verb] To envelop with an offensive smell or smoke. | [verb] To shrink from, or avoid something because of fear. FUNNELS (10) [noun] A hinny; hybrid of male horse and female donkey. | [noun] A utensil in the shape of an inverted hollow cone terminating in a narrow pipe, for channeling liquids or granular material; typically used when transferring said substances from any container into ones with a significantly smaller opening. | [noun] A passage or avenue for a fluid or flowing substance; specifically, a smoke flue or pipe; the chimney of a steamship or the like. FUNNEST (10) [adjective] Enjoyable, amusing | [adjective] Whimsical, flamboyant FUNNIER (10) [adjective] Amusing; humorous; comical. | [adjective] Strange or unusual, often implying unpleasant. | [adjective] Showing unexpected resentment. FUNNIES (10) [noun] A joke. | [noun] A comic strip. | [noun] A narrow clinker-built boat for sculling. FUNNILY (13) [adverb] In a funny or amusing manner. | [adverb] In a strange or unexpected manner, especially of a coincidence. FUNNING (11) [verb] To tease, kid, poke fun at, make fun of. FURANES (10) FURBISH (15) [verb] To polish or burnish. | [verb] To renovate or recondition. FURCATE (12) [verb] To fork or branch out. | [adjective] Forked, branched; divided at one end into parts. FURCULA (12) [noun] A forked process or structure, generally two-pronged. | [noun] The forked bone formed by the fusion of the clavicles in birds, the wishbone or merrythought. | [noun] The (two-pronged) forked, somewhat tail-like organ held bent forward and secured by a catch beneath most species of Collembola (springtails), with which they jump by releasing the catch abruptly when alarmed. FURIOSO (10) [noun] A furious person; a violent madman. | [adverb] Rapidly and with passion. FURIOUS (10) [adjective] Feeling great anger; raging; violent. | [adjective] Rushing with impetuosity; moving with violence. FURLERS (10) FURLESS (10) FURLING (11) [verb] To lower, roll up and secure (something, such as a sail or flag) | [noun] The act by which something is furled. FURLONG (11) [noun] A unit of length equal to 220 yards, 1/8 mile, or 201.168 meters, now only used in measuring distances in horse racing. FURMETY (15) [noun] A porridge made by boiling hulled wheat, typically with additional ingredients such as milk, egg yolks, and/or almond milk, traditionally served with venison or porpoise. FURMITY (15) FURNACE (12) [noun] An industrial heating device, e.g. for smelting metal or baking ceramics. | [noun] A device that provides heat for a building; a space heater. | [noun] Any area that is excessively hot. FURNISH (13) [noun] Material used to create an engineered product. | [verb] To provide a place with furniture, or other equipment. | [verb] To supply or give (something). FURORES (10) [noun] Uproar; enthusiastic anger. | [noun] Excitement or commotion. FURRIER (10) [noun] A person who sells, makes, repairs, alters, cleans, or otherwise deals in clothing made of fur. | [noun] A person who secures accommodation for an army. | [adjective] Covered with fur, or with something resembling fur. FURRILY (13) FURRING (11) [verb] To cover with fur or a fur-like coating. | [verb] To become covered with fur or a fur-like coating. | [verb] To level a surface by applying furring to it. FURROWS (13) [noun] A trench cut in the soil, as when plowed in order to plant a crop. | [noun] Any trench, channel, or groove, as in wood or metal. | [noun] A deep wrinkle in the skin of the face, especially on the forehead. FURROWY (16) FURTHER (13) [verb] To help forward; to assist. | [verb] To encourage growth; to support progress or growth of something; to promote. | [adjective] (comparative form of far) More distant; relatively distant. FURTIVE (13) [adjective] Stealthy. | [adjective] Exhibiting guilty or evasive secrecy. FURZIER (19) FUSAINS (10) FUSCOUS (12) [adjective] Dark in color, dark-hued; dusky, swarthy. FUSIBLE (12) [noun] Any substance that can be fused or melted. | [adjective] Able to be fused or melted. FUSIBLY (15) FUSILLI (10) [noun] Pasta in the shape of short spirals. FUSIONS (10) [noun] The act of merging separate elements, or the result thereof. FUSSERS (10) FUSSIER (10) [adjective] Anxious or particular about petty details. | [adjective] Having a tendency to fuss, cry, or be bad-tempered/ill-tempered (especially of babies). FUSSILY (13) FUSSING (11) [verb] To be very worried or excited about something, often too much. | [verb] To fiddle; fidget; wiggle, or adjust | [verb] (especially of babies) To cry or be ill-humoured. FUSSPOT (12) [noun] A person who makes a fuss, particularly about trivial things. FUSTIAN (10) [noun] A kind of coarse twilled cotton or cotton and linen stuff. | [noun] A class of cloth including corduroy and velveteen. | [noun] Pompous, inflated or pretentious writing or speech. FUSTICS (12) FUSTIER (10) [adjective] Moldy or musty. | [adjective] Stale-smelling or stuffy. | [adjective] (by extension) Old-fashioned, refusing to change or update. FUSTILY (13) FUTHARC (15) FUTHARK (17) [noun] The Germanic runic alphabet; especially specifically the Elder or Younger futhark alphabet (of Scandinavia and the European mainland), as contrasted with the Anglo-Saxon futhorc. FUTHORC (15) [noun] The Runic alphabet as used to write Old English. FUTHORK (17) [noun] The Runic alphabet as used to write Old English. FUTTOCK (16) [noun] Any of the curved rib-like timbers that form the frame of a wooden ship. FUTURAL (10) FUTURES (10) [noun] The time ahead; those moments yet to be experienced. | [noun] Something that will happen in moments yet to come. | [noun] Goodness in what is yet to come. Something to look forward to. | [noun] Short for futures contract. FUTZING (20) [verb] To be frivolous and waste time | [verb] To experiment by trial and error FUZZIER (28) [adjective] Covered with fuzz or a large number of tiny loose fibres like a carpet or many stuffed animals | [adjective] Vague or imprecise. | [adjective] Not clear; unfocused. FUZZILY (31) FUZZING (29) [verb] To make fuzzy. | [verb] To become fuzzy. | [verb] To make drunk. FYLFOTS (16) [noun] A swastika, especially one with the arms bent in an anticlockwise direction.

8-Letter Words (1300)

FABLIAUX (20) [noun] A short, farcical, often bawdy tale of a genre written in the North of France in the 12th, 13th and 14th centuries. FABULIST (13) [noun] One who writes or tells fables. | [noun] A liar. FABULOUS (13) [adjective] Of or relating to fable, myth or legend. | [adjective] Characteristic of fables; marvelous, extraordinary, incredible. | [adjective] Fictional or not believable; made up. FACEABLE (15) [adjective] Able to be faced or confronted; capable of being dealt with. FACEDOWN (17) [adjective] Lying with the face or front side turned downward. | [adverb] In a position with the face or front side turned downward. FACELESS (13) [adjective] Having no face | [adjective] Having or revealing no individual identity or character; anonymous. | [adjective] Having or revealing no individuality, personality or distinctive characteristics. FACETELY (16) FACETIAE (13) [noun] Witty or amusing writings or remarks. | [noun] Indecent books. FACETING (14) [verb] The process of cutting flat surfaces or facets on a gemstone or crystal. | [noun] The arrangement or pattern of facets on a gemstone. FACETTED (14) [adjective] Having facets; cut or polished with multiple flat surfaces. | [verb] Past tense of facet; to cut facets into a gemstone or similar object. FACIALLY (16) [adverb] In a manner relating to or affecting the face. | [adverb] On the surface or as it appears outwardly. FACIENDS (14) FACILELY (16) [adverb] In a facile manner; with ease or fluency, often implying superficiality or lack of depth. FACILITY (16) [noun] The fact of being easy, or easily done; absence of difficulty, simplicity. | [noun] Dexterity of speech or action; skill, talent. | [noun] The physical means or contrivances to make something (especially a public service) possible; the required equipment, infrastructure, location etc. FACTIONS (13) [noun] A group of people, especially within a political organization, which expresses a shared belief or opinion different from people who are not part of the group. | [noun] Strife; discord. FACTIOUS (13) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or caused by factions. | [adjective] Given to or characterized by discordance or insubordination. FACTOIDS (14) [noun] An inaccurate statement or statistic believed to be true because of broad repetition, especially if cited in the media. | [noun] (originally North America) An interesting item of trivia; a minor fact. FACTORED (14) [verb] To find all the factors of (a number or other mathematical object) (the objects that divide it evenly). | [verb] (of a number or other mathematical object) To be a product of other objects. | [verb] (commercial) To sell a debt or debts to an agent (the factor) to collect. FACTOTUM (15) [noun] A person having many diverse activities or responsibilities. | [noun] A general servant. | [noun] An individual employed to do all sorts of duties. FACTURES (13) [noun] Invoices or bills for goods or services rendered. | [noun] The manner or style in which something is made or constructed. FADDIEST (13) [adjective] Having characteristics of a fad. | [adjective] Fussy, having particular tastes or whims FADDISMS (15) [noun] The plural of faddism; the practice of following fads or trends enthusiastically and uncritically. FADDISTS (13) [noun] People who enthusiastically follow fads or temporary fashions. FADEAWAY (18) [noun] A basketball shot taken while moving away from the basket, typically with a jump shot. | [noun] A gradual disappearance or decline. FADELESS (12) [adjective] Not fading; resistant to fading or loss of color. | [adjective] Not diminishing in brightness, vividness, or intensity. FAGGOTED (14) [verb] To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or bundle. FAGGOTRY (16) [noun] A bundle of sticks or twigs bound together for fuel. | [noun] In British cuisine, a meatball made from offal, especially pork liver. FAGOTERS (12) FAGOTING (13) [verb] To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or bundle. | [noun] A decoration of a fabric achieved by removing threads and tying others into bunches. | [noun] The joining of hemmed edges of fabric with crisscrossed threads. FAHLBAND (17) [noun] A layer of sedimentary rock containing iron ore, typically found in Precambrian formations. FAIENCES (13) [noun] Glazed earthenware or pottery, typically decorated with bright colors and often used for ornamental tiles or vessels. FAILINGS (12) [noun] Weakness; defect FAILURES (11) [noun] State or condition of not meeting a desirable or intended objective, opposite of success. | [noun] An object, person or endeavour in a state of failure or incapable of success. | [noun] Termination of the ability of an item to perform its required function; breakdown. FAINEANT (11) [noun] An irresponsible or lazy person. FAINTERS (11) [noun] People who faint or lose consciousness. | [noun] Things that cause fainting or are faint in nature. FAINTEST (11) [adjective] (of a being) Lacking strength; weak; languid; inclined to lose consciousness | [adjective] Lacking courage, spirit, or energy; cowardly; dejected | [adjective] Barely perceptible; not bright, or loud, or sharp FAINTING (12) [verb] To lose consciousness through a lack of oxygen or nutrients to the brain, usually as a result of suddenly reduced blood flow (may be caused by emotional trauma, loss of blood or various medical conditions). | [verb] To sink into dejection; to lose courage or spirit; to become depressed or despondent. | [verb] To decay; to disappear; to vanish. FAINTISH (14) FAIRINGS (12) [noun] A structure on various parts of a vehicle, for example an aircraft, automobile, or motorcycle, that produces a smooth exterior and reduces drag | [noun] A present; originally, one given or purchased at a fair. | [noun] Something edible; fare. FAIRLEAD (12) [noun] A device to guide a line, rope or cable around an object or out of the way, or to stop it from moving laterally FAIRNESS (11) [noun] The property of being fair or equitable. | [noun] The property of being fair or beautiful. FAIRWAYS (17) [noun] The area between the tee and the green, where the grass is cut short. | [noun] Any tract of land free from obstacles. | [noun] (Military) A channel either from offshore, in a river, or in a harbor that has enough depth to accommodate the draft of large vessels. (JP 4-01.6) FAIRYISM (16) FAITHFUL (17) [noun] (in the plural) The practicing members of a religion or followers of a cause. | [noun] Someone or something that is faithful or reliable. | [adjective] Loyal; adhering firmly to person or cause. FAITHING (15) FAITOURS (11) [noun] Plural of faitour; persons who feign illness or disability to obtain alms; impostors or vagabonds. FAKERIES (15) [noun] Plural of fakery; the practice of faking or making fraudulent imitations; instances of deception or fraudulent behavior. FALBALAS (13) [noun] Gathered or pleated strips of fabric used as a decoration or trim on clothing, particularly on skirts or dresses. FALCATED (14) [adjective] Curved or sickle-shaped; having the form of a sickle or curved blade. FALCHION (16) [noun] A somewhat curved, single-edged medieval sword of European origin, with the cutting edge on its convex side, whose design is reminiscent of the Persian scimitar and the Chinese dao. | [noun] A billhook. | [verb] Attack with a falchion. FALCONER (13) [noun] A person who breeds or trains hawks or other birds of prey for taking birds or game. | [noun] One who follows the sport of fowling with hawks. FALCONET (13) [noun] A small or young falcon. | [noun] Any of various small, tropical Asian falcons of the genus Microhierax found in Southeast Asia. | [noun] A light cannon developed in the late 15th century and decorated with an image of a falcon. FALCONRY (16) [noun] The sport of hunting by using trained birds of prey, especially falcons and hawks. FALDERAL (12) [noun] Nonsense or foolishness. | [noun] A decorative object of little value; a trifle or gewgaw. FALDEROL (12) [noun] A showy but worthless trinket or decoration. | [noun] Nonsense or foolish talk. FALLAWAY (17) [noun] A shot taken while moving away from the basket. | [adjective] Of a shot, taken while moving away from the basket. FALLBACK (19) [noun] An act of falling back. | [noun] A backup plan or contingency strategy; an alternative which can be used if something goes wrong with the main plan; a recourse. | [noun] A reduction in bitumen softening point, sometimes called refluxing or overheating in a relatively closed container. FALLFISH (17) [noun] A small silvery freshwater fish (Semotilus corporalis) found in North America. FALLIBLE (13) [adjective] Capable of making mistakes or being wrong. FALLIBLY (16) [adverb] In a manner capable of making mistakes or being wrong; with the possibility of error. FALLOFFS (17) [noun] A reduction or decline. FALLOUTS (11) [noun] The radioactive particles that fall to the earth after a nuclear explosion. | [noun] The adverse effects or consequences of an event or action. FALLOWED (15) [verb] To make land fallow for agricultural purposes. | [adjective] Of land, ploughed but left unseeded. FALSETTO (11) [noun] The "false" (singing) voice in any human, usually airy and lacking a purity of vowels; created by utilizing the next highest vocal folds above those used for speech and normal range singing. It is commonly confused with the Head Voice register. | [noun] A person who sings in falsetto. | [verb] To sing or utter in falsetto. FALTBOAT (13) FALTERED (12) [verb] To waver or be unsteady; to weaken or trail off. | [verb] To stammer; to utter with hesitation, or in a weak and trembling manner. | [verb] To fail in distinctness or regularity of exercise; said of the mind or of thought. FALTERER (11) [noun] One who falters; a person who hesitates, stumbles, or wavers in speech or action. FAMELESS (13) FAMILIAL (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a human family. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to any grouping of things referred to as a family. | [adjective] Inherited. FAMILIAR (13) [noun] An attendant spirit, often in animal or demon form. | [noun] A member of one's family or household. | [noun] A member of a pope's or bishop's household. FAMILIES (13) [noun] A group of people who are closely related to one another (by blood, marriage or adoption); kin; for example, a set of parents and their children; an immediate family. | [noun] An extended family; a group of people who are related to one another by blood or marriage. | [noun] A (close-knit) group of people related by blood, friendship, marriage, law, or custom, especially if they live or work together. FAMILISM (15) [noun] A social pattern in which the family is the primary unit of social organization and loyalty to family interests takes precedence over individual or community concerns. FAMISHED (17) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FAMISHES (16) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FAMOUSLY (16) [adverb] In a celebrated manner. | [adverb] Indicates that the act, state or occurrence described by the sentence is famous. | [adverb] Really well, having great rapport FANATICS (13) [noun] A person who is zealously enthusiastic for some cause, especially in religion. FANCIERS (13) [noun] One who fancies; a person with a special interest, attraction or liking for something. An aficionado. | [noun] A person who breeds or grows a particular animal or plant for points of excellence. | [noun] One who fancies or imagines. FANCIEST (13) [adjective] Decorative. | [adjective] Of a superior grade. | [adjective] Executed with skill. FANCIFUL (16) [adjective] Imaginative or fantastic. | [adjective] Unreal or imagined. FANCYING (17) [verb] To appreciate without jealousy or greed. | [verb] Would like | [verb] To be sexually attracted to. FANDANGO (13) [noun] A form of lively flamenco music and dance that has many regional variations (e.g. fandango de Huelva), some of which have their own names (e.g. malagueña, granadina). | [noun] A gathering for dancing; a ball. | [noun] An unknown entity or contraption. FANEGADA (13) [noun] A unit of land area used in Spain and Spanish America, typically equivalent to about 1.6 acres. FANFARES (14) [noun] A flourish of trumpets or horns as to announce; a short and lively air performed on hunting horns during the chase. | [noun] A show of ceremony or celebration. | [verb] To play a fanfare. FANFARON (14) [noun] A person who makes exaggerated claims; a braggart or blusterer. FANFOLDS (15) [noun] Continuous form paper folded in a zigzag pattern for use in computer printers. | [verb] To fold paper in a zigzag pattern. FANGLESS (12) [adjective] Lacking fangs; without fangs. FANGLIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of a fang; shaped like a fang. FANLIGHT (15) [noun] A semicircular or semioval window over a door or other window, normally having a fan-like structure of ribs; sometimes hinged to the transom FANTAILS (11) [noun] Any of several birds, of the genus Rhipidura, from Asia, Australia and New Zealand. | [noun] Any of several domestic varieties of pigeon having a fan-shaped tail. | [noun] Any of several goldfish having a large fan-shaped tail. FANTASIA (11) [noun] A form of instrumental composition with a free structure and improvisational characteristics; specifically, one combining a number of well-known musical pieces. | [noun] (by extension) Any work which is unstructured or comprises other works of different genres or styles. | [noun] A traditional festival of the Berbers of the Maghreb (in northwest Africa) featuring exhibitions of horsemanship. FANTASIE (11) FANTASMS (13) [noun] Plural of fantasm, which is an alternative spelling of phantom; a ghost, specter, or illusion. | [noun] Products of the imagination or fantasy; apparitions or imaginary visions. FANTASTS (11) [noun] One whose manners or ideas are fantastic and fanciful. FANWORTS (14) [noun] Plural of fanwort, an aquatic plant with feathery leaves commonly used in freshwater aquariums. FANZINES (20) [noun] A magazine, normally produced by amateurs, intended for people who share a common interest FARADAIC (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to electricity, especially to electrical induction FARADAYS (15) [noun] The quantity of electricity required to deposit or liberate 1 gram equivalent weight of a substance during electrolysis; approximately −96,487 coulombs. FARADISE (12) FARADISM (14) [noun] The therapeutic application of electric currents to the body, particularly using an induction coil to produce intermittent currents for medical treatment. FARADIZE (21) [verb] To treat with or subject to faradism (electrical stimulation using an induction coil). FARCEURS (13) [noun] A person who writes farces, or who performs in them. | [noun] A farcical comedian. FARCICAL (15) [adjective] Resembling a farce; ludicrous; absurd. FAREWELL (14) [noun] A wish of happiness or safety at parting, especially a permanent departure | [noun] A departure; the act of leaving | [verb] To bid farewell or say goodbye. FARINHAS (14) FARINOSE (11) [adjective] Resembling or containing flour or starch; powdery or mealy in appearance or texture. FARMABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being farmed or suitable for farming; land or soil that can be cultivated for agricultural purposes. FARMHAND (17) [noun] A person who works on a farm. | [noun] A player in the minor leagues. FARMINGS (14) [noun] The plural of farming; multiple instances or types of agricultural practices or operations. FARMLAND (14) [noun] Land that is suitable for farming and agricultural production. FARMWIFE (19) [noun] A woman who is married to a farmer or who works on a farm as a farmer's wife. FARMWORK (20) [noun] Labor or work performed on a farm, including tasks such as planting, harvesting, and caring for livestock. FARMYARD (17) [noun] The area around a farm, excluding the fields. FARNESOL (11) [noun] A colorless liquid alcohol found in essential oils, used in perfumery and as a precursor in the synthesis of other compounds. FAROUCHE (16) [adjective] Sullen or recalcitrant. FARRIERS (11) [noun] A person who maintains the health and balance of horses' feet through the trimming of the hoof and fitting of horseshoes. FARRIERY (14) [noun] The craft or practice of shoeing horses; the work of a farrier. FARROWED (15) [verb] To give birth to a (litter of piglets). FARSIDES (12) [noun] The side of a moon that faces away from the planet that it orbits FARTHEST (14) [adjective] At or to the greatest distance; most distant. | [adverb] To or at the greatest distance. FARTHING (15) [noun] Former British unit of currency worth one-quarter of an old penny; or a coin representing this. | [noun] A very small quantity or value; the least possible amount. | [noun] A division of land. FASCIATE (13) [verb] To bind with a band or strip of material. | [adjective] Bound together; bundled. FASCICLE (15) [noun] A bundle or cluster. | [noun] A bundle of skeletal muscle fibers surrounded by connective tissue. | [noun] A cluster of flowers or leaves, such as the bundles of the thin leaves (or needles) of pines. FASCINES (13) [noun] (fortification) A cylindrical bundle of small sticks of wood, bound together, used in raising batteries, filling ditches, strengthening ramparts, and making parapets; also in revetments for river banks, and in mats for dams, jetties, etc. FASCISMS (15) [noun] Plural of fascism; authoritarian political movements or systems characterized by dictatorial power and suppression of opposition. FASCISTS (13) [noun] Plural of fascist; members of a fascist political movement or ideology characterized by authoritarian ultranationalism, dictatorial power, and suppression of opposition. | [noun] Adherents of fascism as a political system. FASHIONS (14) [noun] A current (constantly changing) trend, favored for frivolous rather than practical, logical, or intellectual reasons. | [noun] Popular trends. | [noun] A style or manner in which something is done. FASHIOUS (14) FASTBACK (19) [noun] A motor car having a continuous slope from the roof to the rear FASTBALL (13) [noun] Any of the variations of high speed pitches thrown in baseball | [noun] A four-seam fastball, which is a backspin pitch thrown with a ball gripped in the direction to cause four of the seams of the ball to cross the flight path and released with roughly equal pressure by the index and middle fingers FASTENED (12) [verb] To attach or connect in a secure manner. | [verb] To cause to take close effect; to make to tell; to land. FASTENER (11) [noun] Something or someone that fastens. | [noun] Mechanically, any device that fastens; especially, a collective term for items such as screws, nuts, washers, clasps, bolts and the like. FASTINGS (12) [noun] Plural of fasting; periods of abstaining from food or drink, especially for religious or health reasons. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of the verb "to fast"; refrains from eating or drinking. FASTNESS (11) [noun] A secure or fortified place; a stronghold, a fortress. | [noun] The state of being fast. | [noun] The ability of a dye to withstand fading. FASTUOUS (11) FATALISM (13) [noun] The doctrine that all events are subject to fate or inevitable necessity, or determined in advance in such a way that human beings cannot change them. FATALIST (11) [noun] A person who believes that all events are predetermined and inevitable. | [adjective] Of or relating to the belief that events are predetermined and cannot be changed. FATALITY (14) [noun] The state proceeding from destiny; invincible necessity, superior to, and independent of, free and rational control. | [noun] Tendency to death, destruction or danger, as if by decree of fate. | [noun] That which is decreed by fate or which is fatal; a fatal event. FATBACKS (19) [noun] A layer of fat, along the back of a pig, used as a cut of meat or to make lard | [noun] A fish, the menhaden. FATBIRDS (14) FATHEADS (15) [noun] An idiot; a fool. | [noun] A cyprinid fish of the Mississippi valley, Pimephales promelas, the black-headed minnow. | [noun] A labroid food fish of California; the California sheephead. Semicossyphus pulcher. FATHERED (15) [verb] To be a father to; to sire. | [verb] To give rise to. | [verb] To act as a father; to support and nurture. FATHERLY (17) [adjective] Characteristic of what is considered the ideal behaviour pertaining to fatherhood. | [adjective] Characteristic of fathers, paternal. FATHOMED (17) [verb] To encircle with outstretched arms, especially to take a measurement; to embrace. | [verb] To measure the depth of, take a sounding of. | [verb] To get to the bottom of; to manage to comprehend; understand (a problem etc.). FATIGUED (13) [verb] To tire or make weary by physical or mental exertion | [verb] To wilt a salad by dressing or tossing it | [verb] To lose so much strength or energy that one becomes tired, weary, feeble or exhausted FATIGUES (12) [noun] A weariness caused by exertion; exhaustion. | [noun] (often in the plural) A menial task or tasks, especially in the military. | [noun] Material failure, such as cracking or separation, caused by stress on the material. FATLINGS (12) [noun] A young animal (especially a calf or lamb) which has been fattened for slaughter. FATSTOCK (17) [noun] Fattened livestock FATTENED (12) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to be fat or fatter. | [verb] (of a person or animal) To become fat or fatter. | [verb] To make thick or thicker (something containing paper, often money). FATTENER (11) [noun] Something that makes fat or causes to become fat. | [noun] An animal fed to increase its weight before slaughter. FATTIEST (11) [adjective] Containing, composed of, or consisting of fat. | [adjective] Like fat; greasy. | [adjective] Literally or figuratively large. FATWOODS (15) [noun] Resinous wood from pine trees that ignites easily and is used for starting fires. | [noun] The pine trees themselves that produce such wood. FAUBOURG (14) [noun] An outlying part of a city or town, beyond the walls; a suburb, especially of Paris. FAULTIER (11) [adjective] Having or displaying faults; not perfect; not adequate or acceptable. | [adjective] At fault, to blame; guilty. FAULTILY (14) [adverb] In a faulty or defective manner; in a way that contains errors or defects. FAULTING (12) [verb] To criticize, blame or find fault with something or someone. | [verb] To fracture. | [verb] To commit a mistake or error. FAUNALLY (14) [adverb] In a manner relating to fauna; with respect to animal life or wildlife. FAUNLIKE (15) FAUTEUIL (11) [noun] An armchair. | [noun] The chair of a presiding officer. | [noun] (by extension) Membership in the Académie française. FAUVISMS (16) [noun] Plural of fauvism, an early 20th-century art movement characterized by the use of bold, nonnatural colors and simplified forms. FAUVISTS (14) [noun] Artists associated with Fauvism, an early 20th-century art movement characterized by wild, non-naturalistic use of color. FAVELLAS (14) [noun] Plural of favella, a sprawling slum or shantytown, particularly in Brazil. FAVONIAN (14) [adjective] Of or relating to the Favonius, the Roman god of the west wind; mild and favorable. FAVORERS (14) [noun] Plural of favorer, one who favors or supports something or someone. FAVORING (15) [verb] To look upon fondly; to prefer. | [verb] To encourage, conduce to | [verb] To do a favor [noun sense 1] for; to show beneficence toward. FAVORITE (14) [noun] A person or thing who enjoys special regard or favour. | [noun] A person who is preferred or trusted above all others. | [noun] A contestant or competitor thought most likely to win. FAVOURED (15) [verb] To look upon fondly; to prefer. | [verb] To encourage, conduce to | [verb] To do a favor [noun sense 1] for; to show beneficence toward. FAVOURER (14) [noun] One who favors; a person who shows preference or support for something or someone. FAWNIEST (14) [adjective] Superlative form of fawny; most resembling or characterized by the color fawn (a light brownish color). | [adjective] Most excessively flattering or obsequious in manner. FAWNLIKE (18) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a fawn, particularly in being timid, gentle, or having a light brown color. FAYALITE (14) [noun] Yellow, olive green, brown or black mineral with orthorhombic crystals of the olivine group, Fe2SiO4. FAZENDAS (21) [noun] A Brazilian plantation, often associated with slavery during the colonial period. FEALTIES (11) [noun] Plural of fealty; loyalties or allegiances, especially to a feudal lord or sovereign. FEARLESS (11) [adjective] Without fear. FEARSOME (13) [adjective] Frightening, especially in appearance. | [adjective] Fearful, frightened FEASANCE (13) [noun] The performance of a duty or obligation, or the doing of an act. | [noun] In law, a wrongful act or misdeed, particularly the improper performance of a lawful act. FEASIBLE (13) [adjective] Able to be done in practice. FEASIBLY (16) [adverb] In a feasible manner FEASTERS (11) [noun] People who feast or eat and drink sumptuously. | [noun] Plural of feaster, one who participates in a feast. FEASTFUL (14) FEASTING (12) [verb] To partake in a feast, or large meal. | [verb] To dwell upon (something) with delight. | [verb] To hold a feast in honor of (someone). FEATHERS (14) [noun] A branching, hair-like structure that grows on the bodies of birds, used for flight, swimming, protection and display. | [noun] Long hair on the lower legs of a dog or horse, especially a draft horse, notably the Clydesdale breed. Narrowly only the rear hair. | [noun] One of the fins or wings on the shaft of an arrow. FEATHERY (17) [noun] (furry fandom) Someone who roleplays or describes themselves as being a bird or bird-like animal character with human characteristics. | [adjective] Resembling feathers. | [adjective] Covered with feathers. FEATLIER (11) FEATURED (12) [verb] To ascribe the greatest importance to something within a certain context. | [verb] To star, to contain. | [verb] To appear, to make an appearance. FEATURES (11) [noun] One's structure or make-up: form, shape, bodily proportions. | [noun] An important or main item. | [noun] A long, prominent article or item in the media, or the department that creates them; frequently used technically to distinguish content from news. FEBRIFIC (18) [adjective] Causing or producing fever; tending to cause fever. FECKLESS (17) [adjective] Lacking purpose. | [adjective] Without skill, ineffective, incompetent. | [adjective] Lacking the courage to act in any meaningful way. FECULENT (13) [adjective] Dirty with faeces or other impurities FEDAYEEN (15) [noun] An Arab guerrilla or commando. FEDERACY (17) [noun] A form of government where one or several substate units enjoy considerably more independence than the majority. FEDERALS (12) [noun] Agents or officers of the federal government, particularly law enforcement officials. | [noun] Soldiers of the federal government, especially during the American Civil War. FEDERATE (12) [noun] A member of a federation. | [noun] In computer simulation, a system participating in a collective simulation, particularly within the context of the HLA (High Level Architecture) standard. | [verb] To unite in a federation. FEEBLEST (13) [adjective] Deficient in physical strength | [adjective] Lacking force, vigor, or efficiency in action or expression; faint. FEEBLISH (16) FEEDABLE (14) FEEDBACK (20) [noun] Critical assessment of a process or activity or of their results. | [noun] (control theory) The part of an output signal that is looped back into the input to control or modify a system. | [noun] The high-pitched howling noise heard when there is a loop between a microphone and a speaker. FEEDBAGS (15) [noun] A horse's nosebag. FEEDHOLE (15) FEEDLOTS (12) [noun] Land on which livestock are fattened for market. FEELINGS (12) [noun] Sensation, particularly through the skin. | [noun] Emotion; impression. | [noun] (always in the plural) Emotional state or well-being. FEETLESS (11) [adjective] Lacking feet or without feet; having no feet. FEIGNERS (12) [noun] Plural of feigner; people who pretend or simulate something false. | [verb] Third person singular of feign; pretends or simulates falsely. FEIGNING (13) [verb] To make a false show or pretence of; to counterfeit or simulate. | [verb] To imagine; to invent; to pretend. | [verb] To make an action as if doing one thing, but actually doing another, for example to trick an opponent. FEINTING (12) [verb] To make a feint, or mock attack. FEISTIER (11) [adjective] Tenacious, energetic, spunky. | [adjective] Belligerent; prepared to stand and fight, especially in spite of relatively small stature or some other disadvantage. | [adjective] Easily offended and ready to bicker. FELDSHER (15) [noun] A medical practitioner in Russia or Eastern Europe with less training than a fully qualified doctor; a paramedic or medical assistant. FELDSPAR (14) [noun] Any of a large group of rock-forming minerals that, together, make up about 60% of the earth's outer crust. The feldspars are all aluminum silicates of the alkali metals sodium, potassium, calcium and barium. Feldspars are the principal constituents of igneous and plutonic rocks. FELICITY (16) [noun] Happiness. | [noun] An apt and pleasing style in speech, writing, etc. | [noun] (semiology) Reproduction of a sign with fidelity. FELINELY (14) FELINITY (14) [noun] The quality or state of being feline; cat-like characteristics or behavior. FELLABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being felled or cut down. FELLAHIN (14) [noun] A peasant, farmer or agricultural laborer in the Middle East and North Africa. FELLATED (12) [verb] To perform oral sex on (a man); to stimulate (a penis or testicles) using the mouth. | [verb] (by extension) To suck (something) in a manner suggestive of fellatio. | [verb] To suck up to, to flatter or be shamefully subservient to. FELLATES (11) [verb] To perform oral sex on (a man); to stimulate (a penis or testicles) using the mouth. | [verb] (by extension) To suck (something) in a manner suggestive of fellatio. | [verb] To suck up to, to flatter or be shamefully subservient to. FELLATIO (11) [noun] (sex) The stimulation of the penis (or testicles) using the mouth. FELLATOR (11) [noun] One who performs fellatio. FELLNESS (11) FELLOWED (15) [verb] Past tense of fellow, meaning to associate with as a companion or equal, or to pursue a person or animal. FELLOWLY (17) FELONIES (11) [noun] A serious criminal offense, which, under United States federal law, is punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year or by death. FELSITES (11) [noun] Plural of felsite, a fine-grained igneous rock that is typically light-colored and composed of feldspar and quartz. FELSITIC (13) [adjective] Of or relating to felsitic rock, a fine-grained igneous rock composed primarily of feldspar and quartz. FELSPARS (13) [noun] Any of a large group of rock-forming minerals that, together, make up about 60% of the earth's outer crust. The feldspars are all aluminum silicates of the alkali metals sodium, potassium, calcium and barium. Feldspars are the principal constituents of igneous and plutonic rocks. FELSTONE (11) FELTINGS (12) [noun] Plural of felting, the process of matting fibers together to create felt fabric. | [noun] Pieces of felt material or products made from the felting process. FELTLIKE (15) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of felt; made of or covered with felt material. FELUCCAS (15) [noun] A traditional wooden shallow-draught sailing boat used in the Mediterranean and along the Nile in Egypt, its rig consisting of one or two lateen sails. FELWORTS (14) [noun] A European herb, Swertia perennis (star swertia), of the gentian family. | [noun] Any member of any species in genus Swertia. | [noun] Any member of any species in the tribe Gentianeae FEMINACY (18) FEMININE (13) [noun] That which is feminine. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) A woman. | [noun] (grammar) The feminine gender. FEMINISE (13) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FEMINISM (15) [noun] The state of being feminine; femininity. | [noun] A social theory or political movement which argues that legal and social restrictions on women must be removed in order to bring about equality of the sexes in all aspects of public and private life. FEMINIST (13) [noun] An advocate of feminism; a person who believes in bringing about the equality of the sexes (of women and men) in all aspects of public and private life | [noun] A member of a feminist political movement | [adjective] Relating to or in accordance with feminism. FEMINITY (16) [noun] Femininity. FEMINIZE (22) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FENAGLED (13) [verb] Past tense of finagle; to obtain something through cunning or dishonest means. | [verb] To manage or manipulate in a devious way. FENAGLES (12) FENCEROW (16) [noun] The land adjacent to a fence FENCIBLE (15) [noun] A militia unit raised for homeland defense. | [noun] A soldier in such a unit. | [adjective] Capable of being defended FENCINGS (14) [noun] Plural of fencing; barriers made of wood, metal, or other materials used to enclose or separate areas. | [noun] The sport of fighting with swords (foils, épées, or sabres) according to set rules. FENDERED (13) [verb] Past tense of "fender," meaning to ward off or protect from impact, particularly referring to the installation or use of fenders (protective devices on vehicles or ships). FENESTRA (11) [noun] An opening in a body, sometimes with a membrane. FENLANDS (12) [noun] A kind of low-lying ground, often wet or marshy FENTHION (14) [noun] An organophosphate insecticide used to control pests on crops and livestock. FENURONS (11) [noun] Plural of fenuron, a selective herbicide used to control weeds in certain crops. FEOFFEES (17) [noun] A vassal holding a fief. FEOFFERS (17) [noun] Plural of feoffer; persons who invest another with a fief or fee in land. FEOFFING (18) [verb] The act of investing someone with a fief or fee; to give possession of a freehold estate in land. | [verb] To put someone in possession of property or rights. FEOFFORS (17) [noun] Plural of feoffor, a person who grants a fief or fee; one who invests another with a freehold estate in land. FERACITY (16) FERETORY (14) [noun] A receptacle that houses relics of saints. | [noun] An area of a church where relics are kept. FERITIES (11) FERMATAS (13) [noun] The holding of a note or rest for longer than its usual duration; also the notation of such a prolongation, usually represented as a dot with a semi-circle above or below it, written above or below the prolonged note or rest. FERMENTS (13) [noun] Something, such as a yeast or barm, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A state of agitation or of turbulent change. | [noun] A gentle internal motion of the constituent parts of a fluid; fermentation. FERMIONS (13) [noun] (Standard Model) Any elementary or composite particle that has half-integer spin and thus obeys Fermi–Dirac statistics and the Pauli exclusion principle (equivalently, a particle for which the wavefunction of any system of identical such particles changes sign whenever two are swapped); a baryon, a lepton or a quark; (slightly more loosely) any such particle or any composite particle composed of fermions. FERMIUMS (15) [noun] Plural of fermium, a synthetic radioactive chemical element with atomic number 100. FERNIEST (11) [adjective] Most resembling or characteristic of a fern; having the qualities or appearance of ferns. FERNLESS (11) FERNLIKE (15) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of a fern, especially in appearance or structure. FEROCITY (16) [noun] The condition of being ferocious. FERRATES (11) [noun] The anion FeO42- in which iron is in a +6 formal oxidation state. FERRELED (12) [verb] Past tense of ferrel, meaning to bind or fit with a ferrule (a metal ring or band used to strengthen or hold something together). FERREOUS (11) [adjective] Containing or composed of iron. | [adjective] Of or relating to iron. FERRETED (12) [verb] To hunt game with ferrets. | [verb] (by extension) To uncover and bring to light by searching; usually to ferret out. FERRETER (11) [noun] One who ferrets; a person who searches out or uncovers hidden information or objects. | [noun] One who hunts with ferrets. FERRIAGE (12) [noun] Transportation by ferry. | [noun] The fee paid for a ferry ride. FERRITES (11) [noun] The interstitial solid solution of carbon in body-centered cubic iron. | [noun] Any of a class of metal oxides which show ferrimagnetism; used in transformers, inductors, antennas, recording heads, microwave devices, motors and loudspeakers. | [noun] The anion FeO22-, and any of the salts (formally derived from the unknown ferrous acid) derived from it. FERRITIC (13) [adjective] Relating to or containing ferrite, an iron oxide compound found in steel and other alloys. FERRITIN (11) [noun] Any of a family of iron-carrying globular protein complexes consisting of 24 protein subunits. FERRULED (12) [verb] Fitted with a ferule (a metal ring or band used to strengthen or bind something, such as the end of a tool handle or umbrella). FERRULES (11) [noun] A band or cap (usually metal) placed around a shaft to reinforce it or to prevent splitting. | [noun] A band holding parts of an object together. | [verb] To equip with a ferrule. FERRYING (15) [verb] To carry; transport; convey. | [verb] To move someone or something from one place to another, usually repeatedly. | [verb] To carry or transport over a contracted body of water, as a river or strait, in a boat or other floating conveyance plying between opposite shores. FERRYMAN (16) [noun] A person who operates a ferry boat to transport passengers and vehicles across a body of water. FERRYMEN (16) [noun] Plural of ferryman; people who operate or work on ferries to transport passengers and cargo across water. FERULING (12) [verb] The present participle of "ferule," meaning to strike or punish with a ferule (a flat ruler or stick), or to bind or reinforce with a metal ring or band. FERVENCY (19) [noun] The quality of being fervent; intense heat or passion. FERVIDLY (18) [adverb] In a passionate, intense, or fervent manner; with great warmth or enthusiasm. FERVOURS (14) [noun] An intense, heated emotion; passion, ardour. | [noun] A passionate enthusiasm for some cause. | [noun] Heat. FESSWISE (14) [adjective] In heraldry, divided or arranged horizontally across the middle of a shield, following the fess line. FESTALLY (14) FESTERED (12) [verb] To become septic; to become rotten. | [verb] To worsen, especially due to lack of attention. | [verb] To cause to fester or rankle. FESTIVAL (14) [noun] An event or community gathering, usually staged by a local community, which centers on some theme, sometimes on some unique aspect of the community. | [noun] In mythology, a set of celebrations in the honour of a god. | [noun] Fried cornbread FESTOONS (11) [noun] An ornament such as a garland or chain which hangs loosely from two tacked spots. | [noun] A bas-relief, painting, or structural motif resembling such an ornament. | [noun] A raised cable with light globes attached. FETATION (11) FETCHERS (16) [noun] Plural of fetcher; one who fetches or retrieves things. | [noun] In some contexts, dogs or animals trained to retrieve game or objects. FETCHING (17) [verb] To retrieve; to bear towards; to go and get. | [verb] To obtain as price or equivalent; to sell for. | [verb] To bring or get within reach by going; to reach; to arrive at; to attain; to reach by sailing. | [noun] The act by which something is fetched. FETERITA (11) [noun] A type of grain sorghum grown for its edible seeds and used as a cereal crop. FETIALES (11) [noun] Plural of fetial, referring to Roman priests who conducted diplomatic negotiations and declared war on behalf of the state. FETIALIS (11) FETICHES (16) [noun] Something which is believed to possess, contain, or cause spiritual or magical powers; an amulet or a talisman. | [noun] Sexual attraction to or arousal at something sexual or nonsexual, such as an object or a part of the body. | [noun] An irrational, or abnormal fixation or preoccupation; an obsession. FETICIDE (14) [noun] An abortion, specifically, the killing of a fetus. | [noun] One who kills a fetus. FETISHES (14) [noun] Something which is believed to possess, contain, or cause spiritual or magical powers; an amulet or a talisman. | [noun] Sexual attraction to or arousal at something sexual or nonsexual, such as an object or a part of the body. | [noun] An irrational, or abnormal fixation or preoccupation; an obsession. FETLOCKS (17) [noun] A joint of the horse's leg below the knee or hock and above the hoof. | [noun] The tuft of hair that grows at this joint. FETOLOGY (15) [noun] The branch of medicine concerned with the fetus and its diseases, especially in the prenatal period. FETTERED (12) [verb] To shackle or bind up with fetters. | [verb] To restrain or impede; to hamper. | [adjective] Bound by chains or shackles. FETTERER (11) [noun] One who fetters or restrains. | [noun] A device used to shackle or confine. FETTLING (12) [verb] To sort out, to fix, to mend, to repair. | [verb] To make preparations; to put things in order; to do trifling business. | [verb] To line the hearth of a furnace with sand prior to pouring molten metal. FEUDALLY (15) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of feudalism or the feudal system. FEUDISTS (12) [noun] One who takes part in feuds. | [noun] A writer on feuds; a person versed in feudal law. FEVERFEW (20) [noun] A European aromatic perennial herb, Tanacetum parthenium (or Chrysanthemum parthenium or Pyrethrum parthenium), having daisy-like flowers; valued as a traditional medicine, especially for headaches. FEVERING (15) [verb] To put into a fever; to affect with fever. | [verb] To become fevered. FEVERISH (17) [adjective] Having a fever, an elevated body temperature. | [adjective] Filled with excess energy. | [adjective] Morbidly eager. FEVEROUS (14) [adjective] Affected with fever or ague | [adjective] Having the nature of fever | [adjective] Having a tendency to produce fever FEWTRILS (14) FIANCEES (13) [noun] A woman who is engaged to be married. FIASCOES (13) [noun] Plural of fiasco; complete failures or ridiculous breakdowns, especially of something planned or expected to succeed. FIBERIZE (22) [verb] To convert into fibers or a fibrous form; to make fibrous. FIBRANNE (13) [noun] A synthetic fabric made from regenerated cellulose, similar to rayon. FIBRILLA (13) [noun] A small fiber or filament, especially a small branch of a nerve or blood vessel. FIBROIDS (14) [noun] A benign tumour of the uterus that is composed of either fibrous connective tissue or muscle. | [noun] A fibroma. FIBROINS (13) [noun] Fibrous proteins that form the structural component of silk fibers and are produced by silkworms and spiders. FIBROMAS (15) [noun] A benign tumour of fibrous connective tissue. FIBROSES (13) [verb] Third person singular simple present indicative form of fibrosis, or to undergo or cause fibrosis (the formation of excess fibrous connective tissue). | [noun] Plural of fibrosis (the thickening and scarring of connective tissue, usually as a result of injury). FIBROSIS (13) [noun] The formation of (excess) fibrous connective tissue in an organ. FIBROTIC (15) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by the formation of fibrous tissue, especially as a result of injury or disease. FICKLEST (17) [adjective] Quick to change one’s opinion or allegiance; insincere; not loyal or reliable. | [adjective] Changeable. FICTIONS (13) [noun] Literary type using invented or imaginative writing, instead of real facts, usually written as prose. | [noun] A verbal or written account that is not based on actual events (often intended to mislead). | [noun] A legal fiction. FIDDLERS (13) [noun] One who plays the fiddle. | [noun] One who fiddles. | [noun] A burrowing crab of the genus Gelasimus, of many species. The male has one claw very much enlarged, and often holds it in a position similar to that in which a musician holds a fiddle. FIDDLING (14) [verb] To play aimlessly. | [verb] To adjust or manipulate for deception or fraud. | [verb] To play traditional tunes on a violin in a non-classical style. FIDEISMS (14) [noun] Plural of fideism; the philosophical doctrine that faith is independent of reason and that religious belief does not require rational justification. FIDEISTS (12) [noun] Believers in fideism, the philosophical doctrine that faith rather than reason is the foundation of religious belief. FIDELITY (15) [noun] Faithfulness to one's duties. | [noun] Loyalty to one's spouse or partner, including abstention from extramarital affairs. | [noun] Accuracy, or exact correspondence to some given quality or fact. FIDGETED (14) [verb] To wiggle or twitch; to move around nervously or idly. | [verb] To cause to fidget; to make uneasy. FIDGETER (13) [noun] One who fidgets; a person who makes restless movements. FIDUCIAL (14) [noun] In manufacturing, a small mark on a circuit board used to align components, a fiducial point. | [adjective] Accepted as a fixed basis of reference. | [adjective] Based on having trust. FIEFDOMS (17) [noun] The estate controlled by a feudal lord; a fief. | [noun] (by extension) Any organization in the control of a dominant individual. FIELDERS (12) [noun] A player of the fielding side, whose task is to gather the ball after the batsman has hit it, to catch the batsman out, or to prevent him from scoring. | [noun] A defensive player in the field. | [noun] A dog trained in pursuit of game in the field. FIELDING (13) [verb] To intercept or catch (a ball) and play it. | [verb] (and other batting sports) To be the team catching and throwing the ball, as opposed to hitting it. | [verb] To place (a team, its players, etc.) in a game. FIENDISH (15) [adjective] Sinister; evil; like a fiend. FIERCELY (16) [adverb] In a fierce manner. FIERCEST (13) [adjective] Exceedingly violent, severe, ferocious, cruel or savage. | [adjective] Resolute or strenuously active. | [adjective] Threatening in appearance or demeanor. FIERIEST (11) [adjective] Of or relating to fire. | [adjective] Burning or glowing. | [adjective] Inflammable or easily ignited. FIFTEENS (14) [noun] Plural of fifteen; the number 15 repeated multiple times. | [noun] In cribbage, combinations of cards that add up to fifteen, which score points. FIFTIETH (17) [noun] The person or thing in the fiftieth position. | [noun] One of fifty equal parts of a whole. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number fifty. FIFTYISH (20) [adjective] Approximately fifty years old or fifty in quantity or amount. FIGEATER (12) [noun] A large iridescent beetle (Cotinis mutabilis) found in the southwestern United States, known for feeding on fig fruits and other plant matter. | [noun] Any of various beetles that feed on figs. FIGHTERS (15) [noun] A person who fights; a combatant. | [noun] A warrior; fighting soldier. | [noun] A pugnacious, competitive person. FIGHTING (16) [verb] To contend in physical conflict, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To contend in physical conflict with each other, either singly or in war, battle etc. | [verb] To strive for something; to campaign or contend for success. | [noun] The act or process of contending; violence or conflict. FIGMENTS (14) [noun] A fabrication, fantasy, invention; something fictitious. FIGULINE (12) [adjective] Of or relating to pottery or earthenware made from clay. | [adjective] Capable of being molded or shaped. FIGURANT (12) [noun] An actor or dancer in the background lacking an aural presence. FIGURATE (12) [adjective] Consisting of or formed by figures. | [verb] To form into a figure or shape. FIGURERS (12) [noun] Plural of figurer; people who figure or calculate. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of the verb "to figurer" (one who figures out or solves problems). FIGURINE (12) [noun] A small carved or molded figure; a statuette. FIGURING (13) [verb] To calculate, to solve a mathematical problem. | [verb] To come to understand. | [verb] To think, to assume, to suppose, to reckon. FIGWORTS (15) [noun] Any of various woodland herbs and shrubs of the genus Scrophularia. | [noun] Ficaria verna, formerly Ranunculus ficaria. FILAGREE (12) [noun] A delicate and intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver (or sometimes other metal) twisted wire. | [noun] A design resembling such intricate ornamentation. | [verb] To decorate something with intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver twisted wire. FILAMENT (13) [noun] A fine thread or wire. | [noun] Such a wire, as can be heated until it glows, in an incandescent light bulb or a thermionic valve. | [noun] A massive, thread-like structure, such as those gaseous ones which extend outward from the surface of the sun, or such as those (much larger) ones which form the boundaries between large voids in the universe. FILAREES (11) [noun] Plural of filaree, a plant of the geranium family with small flowers and seeds with long, threadlike appendages. FILARIAE (11) [noun] Any of the parasitic nematode worms of superfamily Filarioidea that live in the blood of vertebrates and is transmitted by insects: the cause of filariasis. FILARIAL (11) [adjective] Relating to or caused by filarial worms, parasitic nematodes that infect humans and animals. FILARIAN (11) FILARIID (12) [noun] A parasitic nematode worm of the family Filariidae that causes filariasis in humans and animals. FILATURE (11) [noun] The process of drawing fibres into threads, especially the process of reeling raw silk from cocoons. | [noun] A spool or bobbin used for the above. | [noun] A place where silk is reeled onto spools. FILBERTS (13) [noun] The hazelnut. | [noun] The hazel tree. | [noun] A paintbrush used in oil and acrylic painting with a long ferrule and a curving, tongue-shaped head. FILCHERS (16) [noun] Plural of filcher; people who steal or pilfer small items. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of filch; steals or takes something dishonestly. FILCHING (17) [verb] To illegally take possession of (especially items of low value); to pilfer, to steal. | [noun] The act of one who filches; theft. FILEABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being filed; suitable for filing. FILEFISH (17) [noun] Any fish of the family Monacanthidae, with very slender bodies. FILETING (12) [verb] Present participle of filet, meaning to remove the bones from fish or meat, or to decorate with a filet (a thin line or narrow band). FILIALLY (14) [adverb] In a manner befitting or characteristic of a son or daughter; with the relationship or duty of a child to a parent. FILIATED (12) [verb] Past tense of filiate; to establish or determine the paternity or filiation of a child. | [verb] To affiliate or associate with a larger organization. FILIATES (11) FILIBEGS (14) [noun] A little kilt. FILICIDE (14) [noun] A person who kills their own child. | [noun] The killing of one's own child. FILIFORM (16) [adjective] Shaped like or resembling a thread or filament; filamentous. | [adjective] Having all component parts or segments cylindrical and more or less uniform in size. FILIGREE (12) [noun] A delicate and intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver (or sometimes other metal) twisted wire. | [noun] A design resembling such intricate ornamentation. | [verb] To decorate something with intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver twisted wire. FILISTER (11) FILLETED (12) [verb] To slice, bone or make into fillets. | [verb] To apply, create, or specify a rounded or filled corner to. FILLINGS (12) [noun] Anything that is used to fill something. | [noun] The contents of a pie, etc. | [noun] Any material used to fill a cavity in a tooth or the result of using such material. FILLIPED (14) [verb] To strike, project, or propel with a fillip (that is, a finger released quickly after being pressed against the thumb); to flick. | [verb] (by extension) To project quickly; to snap. | [verb] (by extension) To strike or tap smartly. FILMABLE (15) [adjective] Suitable or appropriate for being made into a film; capable of being adapted for cinema. FILMCARD (16) FILMDOMS (16) [noun] Plural of filmdom; the film industry or the world of cinema collectively. FILMGOER (14) [noun] A moviegoer. FILMIEST (13) [adjective] Resembling or made of a thin film; gauzy | [adjective] Covered by (or as if by) a film; hazy FILMLAND (14) FILMSETS (13) [noun] The enclosure in which a film scene is shot; includes scenery and props | [verb] To typeset by exposing type characters onto photographic film, which is then used to generate printing plates. FILTERED (12) [verb] To sort, sift, or isolate. | [verb] To diffuse; to cause to be less concentrated or focused. | [verb] To pass through a filter or to act as though passing through a filter. FILTERER (11) [noun] One who filters or uses a filter. | [noun] A device that filters. FILTHIER (14) [adjective] Covered with filth; very dirty. | [adjective] Obscene or offensive. | [adjective] Very unpleasant or disagreeable. FILTHILY (17) [adverb] In a filthy or dirty manner; in an obscene or vulgar way. FILTRATE (11) [noun] The liquid or solution that has passed through a filter, and which has been separated from the filtride. | [verb] To filter. FIMBRIAE (15) [noun] Any anatomical structure in the form of a fringe, but especially that around the ovarian end of the Fallopian tube. | [noun] Hairlike appendage found on the cell surface of many bacteria; used by the bacteria to adhere to one another, to animal cells and to some inanimate objects. FIMBRIAL (15) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a fimbriae, which are small thread-like structures or fringe-like projections found in biology, particularly in microorganisms and anatomy. FINAGLED (13) [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by indirect, complicated and/or intensive efforts. | [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by deceitful methods, by trickery. | [verb] To cheat or swindle; to use crafty, deceitful methods. (often with "out of" preceding the object) FINAGLER (12) [noun] One who finagles; a person who obtains something through scheming or manipulation. FINAGLES (12) [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by indirect, complicated and/or intensive efforts. | [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by deceitful methods, by trickery. | [verb] To cheat or swindle; to use crafty, deceitful methods. (often with "out of" preceding the object) FINALISE (11) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINALISM (13) [noun] Teleology FINALIST (11) [noun] Somebody or something that appears in the final stage of a competition. | [noun] A university student in his/her final year of study. FINALITY (14) [noun] The state of being final; the condition from which no further changes occur. FINALIZE (20) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINANCED (14) [verb] To conduct, or procure money for, financial operations; manage finances. | [verb] To pay ransom. | [verb] To manage financially; be financier for; provide or obtain funding for a transaction or undertaking. FINANCES (13) [noun] The management of money and other assets. | [noun] The science of management of money and other assets. | [noun] (usually in the plural) Monetary resources, especially those of a public entity or a company. FINBACKS (19) [noun] A large baleen whale, Balaenoptera physalus, that has a ridge on its back; the fin whale. FINDABLE (14) [adjective] Able to be found or located. FINDINGS (13) [noun] A result of research or an investigation. | [noun] A formal conclusion by a judge, jury or regulatory agency on issues of fact. | [noun] That which is found, a find, a discovery. FINEABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being fined or subject to a fine; punishable by a fine. FINENESS (11) [noun] The quality or state of being fine; excellence or delicacy. | [noun] The purity of a precious metal, expressed as the proportion of pure metal in an alloy. FINERIES (11) [noun] Fineness; beauty. | [noun] Ornament; decoration; especially, excessive decoration; showy clothes; jewels. | [noun] (ironworking) A charcoal hearth or furnace for the conversion of cast iron into wrought iron, or into iron suitable for puddling. FINESPUN (13) [adjective] Spun into a fine thread | [adjective] Delicate and subtle, with fine detail FINESSED (12) [verb] To evade (a problem, situation, etc.) by using some clever argument or strategem. | [verb] To play (a card) as a finesse. | [verb] To handle or manage carefully or skilfully; to manipulate in a crafty way. FINESSES (11) [verb] To evade (a problem, situation, etc.) by using some clever argument or strategem. | [verb] To play (a card) as a finesse. | [verb] To handle or manage carefully or skilfully; to manipulate in a crafty way. FINFOOTS (14) [noun] Three species in three monospecific genera of aquatic bird in the family Heliornithidae. FINGERED (13) [verb] To identify or point out. Also put the finger on. To report to or identify for the authorities, rat on, rat out, squeal on, tattle on, turn in. | [verb] To poke, probe, feel, or fondle with a finger or fingers. | [verb] To use the fingers to penetrate and sexually stimulate one's own or another person's vagina or anus; to fingerbang FINGERER (12) [noun] One who fingers, such as a musician who plays a stringed instrument. | [noun] One who points or indicates with a finger. FINIALED (12) FINICKIN (17) FINIKING (16) FINISHED (15) [verb] To complete (something). | [verb] To apply a treatment to (a surface or similar). | [verb] To change an animal's food supply in the months before it is due for slaughter, with the intention of fattening the animal. FINISHER (14) [noun] A person who finishes or completes something. | [noun] A person who applies a finish to something, such as furniture. | [noun] The person who applies the gilding and decoration in bookbinding. FINISHES (14) [noun] An end; the end of anything. | [noun] A protective coating given to wood or metal and other surfaces. | [noun] The result of any process changing the physical or chemical properties of cloth. FINITELY (14) [adverb] In a manner or degree that is limited or bounded; not infinitely. FINITUDE (12) [noun] The state or characteristic of being finite; limitedness. FINMARKS (17) FINNICKY (20) [adjective] Fussy about details; particular or hard to please. | [adjective] Requiring or involving great care and attention to detail. FINNIEST (11) [adjective] Most resembling or characteristic of a fin; having prominent or exaggerated fin-like qualities. | [adjective] Most amusing or funny (informal superlative of "finny" used colloquially). FINNMARK (17) FINOCHIO (16) FIREABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being fired or dismissed from employment. | [adjective] Capable of being fired or discharged (as a weapon or projectile). FIREARMS (13) [noun] A personal weapon that uses explosive powder to propel a projectile often made of lead. FIREBACK (19) [noun] Any of certain species of pheasant in the genus Lophura. | [noun] A piece of iron that fits into the back of a fireplace to distribute the heat and keep the brick from cracking. FIREBALL (13) [noun] A ball of fire, especially one associated with an explosion. | [noun] A meteor bright enough to cast shadows. | [noun] A class of sailing dinghy with a single trapeze and a symmetrical spinnaker, sailed by a crew of two. FIREBASE (13) [noun] An encampment designed to provide indirect artillery support to infantry troops operating beyond the normal range of fire support from their own base camps; a fire support base. FIREBIRD (14) [noun] A mythical bird of fire from Russian folklore that glows with brilliant light. | [noun] Any of various brightly colored birds, especially those with red or orange plumage. FIREBOAT (13) [noun] A harbor boat designed for pumping large volumes of harbor water onto dockside fires. FIREBOMB (17) [noun] A weapon that causes fire, an incendiary weapon. | [verb] To attack with a firebomb. FIREBRAT (13) [noun] A thysanuran insect, Thermobia domestica. FIREBUGS (14) [noun] Pyrrhocoris apterus, a common red and black insect, that is the type species of the family Pyrrhocoridae. | [noun] A pyromaniac or arsonist. FIRECLAY (16) [noun] A type of clay that is able to withstand intense heat; used to make firebricks, crucibles, and other ceramics FIREDAMP (16) [noun] An inflammable gas (mostly methane) found in coal mines; forms an explosive mixture with air. FIREDOGS (13) [noun] A Bronze Age artifact used in worshipping either bulls or the moon, or as a holder for wooden logs to be used in a fire altar. | [noun] (chiefly US) Either of a pair of horizontal metal supports for holding logs in a fireplace FIREFANG (15) FIREHALL (14) [noun] A fire station. FIRELESS (11) [adjective] Without fire; not using or requiring fire for operation or warmth. FIRELOCK (17) [noun] A form of gunlock, in which the priming is ignited by a spark. | [noun] A firearm using such a gunlock. FIREPANS (13) [noun] Plural of firepan; shallow metal pans used to hold burning coals or fire, historically used for heating or cooking purposes. FIREPINK (17) [noun] A plant of the pink family (Silene virginica) with bright red or pink flowers, native to eastern North America. FIREPLUG (14) [noun] A fire hydrant. FIREPOTS (13) [noun] Containers or vessels filled with burning material, used historically as weapons or for illumination during military sieges or naval warfare. FIREROOM (13) [noun] A room or chamber in a ship or building where fires are made or maintained, historically used for heating purposes or in steamships to tend the furnace. FIRESIDE (12) [noun] The area near a domestic fire or hearth. | [noun] (by extension, symbolic) One's home. | [noun] (by extension) Home life. FIRETRAP (13) [noun] A building with limited emergency exits in which people would be trapped in the event of a fire. FIREWEED (15) [noun] A perennial herbaceous plant (Epilobium angustifolium or Chamaenerion angustifolium) in the willowherb family Onagraceae. FIREWOOD (15) [noun] Wood intended to be burned, typically for heat. FIREWORK (18) [noun] A device using gunpowder and other chemicals which, when lit, emits a combination of coloured flames, sparks, whistles or bangs, and sometimes made to rocket high into the sky before exploding, used for entertainment or celebration. FIREWORM (16) [noun] A marine polychaete worm with a segmented body and bristles, found in tropical and subtropical waters. | [noun] Any of various other worms or larvae that are luminescent or have a fiery appearance. FIRMNESS (13) [noun] The state of being firm; strength; permanence; stability; hardness; resolution. FIRMWARE (16) [noun] Something in between hardware and software. Like software, it is created from source code, but it is closely tied to the hardware it runs on. | [noun] Software intended for such embedded computer applications. FISCALLY (16) [adverb] In a fiscal manner; concerning finance FISHABLE (16) [adjective] Suitable or fit for fishing; capable of being fished in or for. FISHBOLT (16) FISHBONE (16) [noun] A bone from a fish. FISHBOWL (19) [noun] A small, rounded, transparent, and domestic aquarium. | [noun] (by extension) Any place or event that lacks privacy or is intensely scrutinized. | [noun] A variety of discussions where participants are organized in concentric circles and take turns where they and others in the same group are allowed to speak according to a set of rules. FISHEYES (17) [noun] An unfriendly or suspicious glance. | [noun] An undesirable effect in paint, particularly automotive finishes, normally caused by oil or other contaminants on the painted surface. | [noun] An undesirable dull appearance in the table of a diamond that has been cut too shallow. FISHGIGS (16) [noun] A pronged spear or harpoon used for catching fish. | [verb] To fish using a gig or spear. FISHHOOK (21) [noun] A barbed hook, usually metal, used for fishing | [noun] A jack (the playing card) FISHIEST (14) [adjective] Of, from, or similar to fish. | [adjective] Suspicious; inspiring doubt. | [adjective] Of drag queens: appearing feminine. FISHINGS (15) [noun] Plural of fishing; the act or practice of catching fish, or attempts to obtain something by indirect methods. | [noun] Plural of fishing; instances or occasions of fishing activities. FISHLESS (14) [adjective] Containing no fish or devoid of fish. FISHLIKE (18) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a fish in appearance or behavior. FISHLINE (14) [noun] A line or cord used in fishing to catch fish. FISHMEAL (16) [noun] Ground dried fish, used mainly for livestock feed. FISHNETS (14) [noun] A net used to catch fish. | [noun] A fabric with an open diamond-shaped structure; normally used for stockings etc | [noun] (usually in plural) Stockings made of fishnet fabric. FISHPOLE (16) FISHPOND (17) [noun] A freshwater pond stocked with fish; especially one formerly attached to a monastery etc as a source of food FISHTAIL (14) [noun] The tail of a fish, or an object resembling this. | [noun] The skidding of the back of a vehicle from side to side. | [noun] A kind of chisel with a flared blade. FISHWAYS (20) [noun] A structure built on or around dams or locks to facilitate the migration of fish. FISHWIFE (20) [noun] A woman who sells or works with fish; a female fishmonger. | [noun] A vulgar, abusive or nagging woman with a loud, unpleasant voice. | [noun] A person, especially a woman, with poor personal hygiene. FISHWORM (19) FISSIONS (11) [noun] The process whereby one item splits to become two. | [noun] Short for nuclear fission: The process of splitting the nucleus of an atom into smaller particles. | [noun] The process by which a bacterium splits to form two daughter cells. FISSIPED (14) [adjective] Having claws or nails on the feet; belonging to the Fissipedia, a suborder of carnivorous mammals with separate toes. FISSURED (12) [verb] To split, forming fissures. | [adjective] Having fissures. FISSURES (11) [noun] A crack or opening, as in a rock. | [noun] A groove, deep furrow, elongated cleft or tear; a sulcus. | [verb] To split, forming fissures. FISTFULS (14) [noun] The amount that can be held in a closed fist | [noun] A blow with the fist. FISTNOTE (11) FISTULAE (11) [noun] An abnormal connection or passageway between organs or vessels that normally do not connect. | [noun] A tube, a pipe, or a hole. | [noun] The tube through which the wine of the Eucharist was once sucked from the chalice. FISTULAR (11) [adjective] Relating to or having the characteristics of a fistula, which is an abnormal passage or opening between two body parts or organs. FISTULAS (11) [noun] An abnormal connection or passageway between organs or vessels that normally do not connect. | [noun] A tube, a pipe, or a hole. | [noun] The tube through which the wine of the Eucharist was once sucked from the chalice. FITCHETS (16) [noun] A polecat or ferret, or the fur of such an animal. | [noun] An opening in a wall or fortification for shooting arrows or other projectiles. FITCHEWS (19) [noun] Polecat FITFULLY (17) [adverb] In a fitful manner; irregularly or unsteadily. FITMENTS (13) [noun] Something that suits or fits. | [noun] A thing fitted to another in order to accomplish a specific purpose. | [noun] An item of permanent furniture or equipment. FITTABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being fitted or made to fit; suitable or appropriate for fitting. FITTINGS (12) [noun] A small part, especially a standardized or detachable part of a device or machine. | [noun] A tube connector; a standardized connecting part of a piping system to attach sections of pipe together, such as a coupling | [noun] The act of trying on clothes to inspect or adjust the fit. FIVEFOLD (18) [adjective] In fives; consisting of five in one; quintuple. | [adverb] By a factor of five. FIVEPINS (16) FIXATIFS (21) [noun] Plural of fixatif; a type of varnish or spray used to protect drawings, particularly charcoal or pastel artwork, from smudging. FIXATING (19) [verb] To make something fixed and stable; to fix. | [verb] To stare fixedly at something. | [verb] To attend to something to the exclusion of all others; used with on. FIXATION (18) [noun] The act of fixing. | [noun] The state of being fixed or fixated. | [noun] The act of uniting chemically with a solid substance or in a solid form; reduction to a non-volatile condition; -- said of volatile elements. FIXATIVE (21) [noun] A substance that fixes, protects, or preserves. | [noun] (perfumery) The components of a perfume that prolong or bolster the notes, and may or may not be the base note itself. | [adjective] Serving to fix or bind. FIXITIES (18) [noun] The plural of fixity; the state or quality of being fixed, stable, or unchanging. FIXTURES (18) [noun] Something that is fixed in place, especially a permanent appliance or other item of personal property that is considered part of a house and is sold with it; compare fitting, furnishing. | [noun] A regular patron of a place or institution. | [noun] A lighting unit; a luminaire. FIZZIEST (29) [adjective] (of a liquid) Containing bubbles. | [adjective] Lively, vivacious. | [adjective] Makes a hissing sound. FIZZLING (30) [verb] To sputter or hiss. | [verb] To decay or die off to nothing; to burn out; to end less successfully than previously hoped. | [noun] The sound of something that fizzles. FLABBIER (15) [adjective] Yielding to the touch, and easily moved or shaken; hanging loose by its own weight; lacking firmness; flaccid. | [adjective] (of wine) Having a slight lack of acidity; having mild sweetness. | [adjective] (of writing, etc.) overwrought. FLABBILY (18) [adverb] In a flabby manner; with flabbiness or lack of firmness. FLABELLA (13) [noun] Plural of flabellum; fan-shaped anatomical structures or ornaments, particularly in religious or architectural contexts. FLACKERY (20) FLACKING (18) [verb] To flutter; palpitate. | [verb] To hang loosely; flag. | [verb] To beat by flapping. FLAGELLA (12) [noun] In protists, a long, whiplike membrane-enclosed organelle used for locomotion or feeding. | [noun] In bacteria, a long, whiplike proteinaceous appendage, used for locomotion. | [noun] A whip FLAGGERS (13) [noun] People who wave flags or carry flags in parades or ceremonies. | [noun] Workers who direct traffic at construction sites or road work using flags or stop signs. FLAGGIER (13) [adjective] More flaggy; having more flags or flag-like characteristics. FLAGGING (14) [verb] To furnish or deck out with flags. | [verb] To mark with a flag, especially to indicate the importance of something. | [verb] (often with down) To signal to, especially to stop a passing vehicle etc. FLAGLESS (12) FLAGPOLE (14) [noun] A tall pole up which one or more flags may be raised and flown. | [verb] Exit a country momentarily and reenter. Usually this is done to satisfy immigration requirements. FLAGRANT (12) [adjective] Obvious and offensive; blatant; scandalous. | [adjective] On fire; flaming. FLAGSHIP (17) [noun] (maritime) The ship occupied by the fleet's commander (usually an admiral); it denotes this by flying his flag. | [noun] (maritime) The ship regarded as most important out of a group, e.g. a nation's navy or company's fleet. | [noun] (by extension) The most important one out of a related group. FLAILING (12) [verb] To beat using a flail or similar implement. | [verb] To wave or swing vigorously | [verb] To thresh. FLAKIEST (15) [adjective] Consisting of flakes or of small, loose masses; lying, or cleaving off, in flakes or layers; flakelike. | [adjective] (of a person) Unreliable; likely to make plans with others but then abandon those plans. | [adjective] (of a thing) Unreliable; working only on an intermittent basis; likely to malfunction. FLAMBEAU (15) [noun] A burning torch, especially one carried in procession. FLAMBEED (16) [verb] To cook with a showy technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. FLAMENCO (15) [noun] A genre of folk music and dance native to Andalusia, in Spain. | [noun] A song or dance performed in such a style. | [verb] To dance flamenco. FLAMEOUT (13) [noun] The act of flaming out or burning out; extinguishing. | [noun] The act of quitting or failing, especially due to overwork or in a dramatic manner. | [noun] The sudden extinguishing of the flame of a burner (due to obstruction of fuel) FLAMIEST (13) [adjective] Superlative form of flamy; most resembling or characteristic of flames, or most showy and ostentatious in style. FLAMINES (13) [noun] A priest devoted to the service of a particular god, from whom he received a distinguishing epithet. The most honored were those of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, called respectively Flamen Dialis, Flamen Martialis, and Flamen Quirinalis. FLAMINGO (14) [noun] A wading bird of the family Phoenicopteridae. | [noun] A deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. | [adjective] Of a deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. FLAMMING (16) FLANCARD (14) FLANERIE (11) [noun] The act of strolling or wandering aimlessly through city streets, typically for leisure or observation. FLANEURS (11) [noun] One who wanders aimlessly, who roams, who travels at a lounging pace. | [noun] An idler, a loafer. FLANGERS (12) [noun] An electronic device or software that alters the sound of an instrument by combining out-of-phase copies of its original sound. | [noun] A mechanical device used to remove ice and snow from railway lines. FLANGING (13) [noun] A flange. | [noun] A time-based audio effect produced when two identical signals are mixed together, but with one signal time-delayed by a small and gradually changing amount, usually smaller than 20 milliseconds. FLANKERS (15) [noun] A player who plays in the back row of the scrum. | [noun] A wide receiver who lines up behind the line of scrimmage. | [noun] A fortification or soldier projecting so as to defend another work or to command the flank of an assailing body. FLANKING (16) [verb] To attack the flank(s) of. | [verb] To defend the flank(s) of. | [verb] To place to the side(s) of. FLANNELS (11) [noun] A soft cloth material woven from wool, possibly combined with cotton or synthetic fibers. | [noun] A washcloth. | [noun] A flannel shirt. FLAPJACK (26) [noun] A pancake. | [noun] A bar made of (though not limited to) rolled oats, butter, golden syrup, and brown sugar, baked in a tray. FLAPLESS (13) FLAPPERS (15) [noun] A young woman, especially when unconventional or without decorum; now particularly associated with the 1920s. | [noun] Something that flaps. | [noun] A young wild duck. FLAPPIER (15) [adjective] More inclined to flap or flutter; comparative form of flappy. FLAPPING (16) [noun] An instance where one flaps. | [noun] A phonological process found in many dialects of English, especially American English and Canadian English, by which intervocalic /t/ and /d/ surface as the alveolar flap /ɾ/ before an unstressed syllable, so that words such as "metal" and "medal" are pronounced similarly or identically. | [noun] The situation where a resource, a network destination, etc., is advertised as being available and then unavailable (or available by different routes) in rapid succession. FLASHERS (14) [noun] Anything that flashes, especially a device that switches a light on and off. | [noun] An indicator or turn signal. | [noun] A person who exposes their genitals or female nipples. FLASHGUN (15) [noun] An electrically powered device used to trigger a flashbulb | [noun] Any similar unit used to generate repeatable flashes of light for photography FLASHIER (14) [adjective] Showy; visually impressive, attention-getting, or appealing. | [adjective] Flashing; producing flashes. | [adjective] Drunk; tipsy FLASHILY (17) [adverb] In a flashy or ostentatiously showy manner; with excessive or gaudy display. FLASHING (15) [verb] To cause to shine briefly or intermittently. | [verb] To blink; to shine or illuminate intermittently. | [verb] To be visible briefly. FLASKETS (15) FLATBEDS (14) [noun] An open freight vehicle with no sides, designed to carry heavy or outsized loads. | [noun] A railway freight car with no sides; a flatcar. | [noun] A document scanner with a flat bed. FLATBOAT (13) [noun] A boxy, flat-bottomed boat used for carrying livestock, freight, and people on rivers. FLATCAPS (15) [noun] Plural of flatcap, a rounded cap with a small stiff brim in front. FLATCARS (13) [noun] A railroad freight car without sides or a roof. FLATFEET (14) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A condition in which the arch of the foot makes contact with the ground | [noun] A person having the above condition | [noun] (law enforcement) (plural typically flatfoots) A policeman FLATFISH (17) [noun] A fish of the order Pleuronectiformes, the adults of which have both eyes on one side and usually swim with the other side down, such as a flounder, a halibut, or a sole. FLATFOOT (14) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A condition in which the arch of the foot makes contact with the ground | [noun] A person having the above condition | [noun] (law enforcement) (plural typically flatfoots) A policeman FLATHEAD (15) [noun] Any fish in the Platycephalidae family. | [noun] (plural only "flatheads") A type of screw or bolt designed to fit in a countersink so that it sits flush with a surface. | [noun] (plural only "flatheads") A type of engine that has the valves placed in the engine block beside the piston, instead of in the cylinder head, as in an overhead valve engine. FLATIRON (11) [noun] A tough cut of beef from the shoulder of the steer. | [noun] A simple iron (for pressing laundry) which is heated on a stove. | [noun] A pair of metal tongs with heated ceramic plates used for straightening hair. FLATLAND (12) [noun] A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; open country. | [noun] A wide, open space that is usually used to grow crops or to hold farm animals. | [noun] A place where competitive matches are carried out. FLATLETS (11) [noun] Small apartments or dwelling units, typically consisting of one or two rooms with basic facilities. | [noun] Plural of flatlet, a self-contained residential unit smaller than a standard flat or apartment. FLATLING (12) FLATLONG (12) FLATMATE (13) [noun] A person with whom one shares a flat. | [noun] A person with whom one shares any rental dwelling, not necessarily a flat. FLATNESS (11) [noun] The state of being flat | [noun] The state of being two-dimensional; planar : planarity | [noun] The state of being bland : dullness FLATTENS (11) [verb] To make something flat or flatter. | [verb] To press one's body tightly against a surface, such as a wall or floor, especially in order to avoid being seen or harmed. | [verb] To knock down or lay low. FLATTERS (11) [verb] To compliment someone, often insincerely and sometimes to win favour. | [verb] To enhance someone's vanity by praising them. | [verb] To portray someone to advantage. FLATTERY (14) [noun] Excessive praise or approval, which is often insincere and sometimes contrived to win favour. | [noun] An instance of excessive praise. FLATTEST (11) [adjective] Having no variations in height. | [adjective] (voice) Without variations in pitch. | [adjective] Having small or invisible breasts and/or buttocks. FLATTING (12) [verb] To make a flat call; to call without raising. | [verb] To become flat or flattened; to sink or fall to an even surface. | [verb] To fall from the pitch. FLATTISH (14) [adjective] Somewhat flat or having a tendency to be flat in appearance or quality. FLATTOPS (13) [noun] A short haircut in which the hair is brushed straight up then cut flat across the top. | [noun] An aircraft carrier. | [noun] A type of stringed instrument, most often an acoustic guitar, with a flat top (as opposed to an archtop), with strings held in place with pins, and with a complex system of bracing struts on the top. FLATUSES (11) [noun] Plural of flatus; intestinal gas or air in the digestive system. | [noun] Plural of flatus; a breaking of wind; flatulence. FLATWARE (14) [noun] Eating utensils; cutlery, such as forks, knives and spoons. | [noun] Plates, dishes and other relatively flat crockery. FLATWASH (17) FLATWAYS (17) [adverb] With the flat side or surface foremost or in contact with something. FLATWISE (14) [adverb] In a flat manner or position; with the flat side down or facing a particular direction. FLATWORK (18) [noun] Laundry such as sheets and tablecloths that are pressed flat rather than hung or folded. | [noun] Decorative work on metal or other surfaces that is flat or level with the surrounding surface. FLATWORM (16) [noun] Any of very many parasitic or free-living worms, of the phylum Platyhelminthes, having a flattened body with no skeleton or body cavity. FLAUNTED (12) [verb] To wave or flutter smartly in the wind. | [verb] To parade, display with ostentation. | [verb] To show off, as with flashy clothing. FLAUNTER (11) [noun] One who flaunts; a person who displays something ostentatiously or proudly. FLAUTIST (11) [noun] One who plays the flute. FLAVANOL (14) [noun] Any of a class of flavonoids that use the 2-phenyl-3,4-dihydro-2H-chromen-3-ol molecular skeleton FLAVINES (14) [noun] Plural of flavine, a yellow fluorescent compound found in living organisms; also spelled flavin. FLAVONES (14) [noun] Any of a class of tricyclic aromatic heterocyclic ketones, especially the naturally occurring flavonoids FLAVONOL (14) [noun] Any of several flavonoids that have a 3-hydroxyflavone backbone. FLAVORED (15) [verb] To add flavoring to something. | [adjective] Having a specific taste, often due to the addition of flavouring. FLAVORER (14) [noun] One who flavors; something that imparts flavor. FLAVOURS (14) [noun] The quality produced by the sensation of taste or, especially, of taste and smell in combined effect. | [noun] A substance used to produce a taste. Flavoring. | [noun] A variety (of taste) attributed to an object. FLAVOURY (17) FLAWIEST (14) [adjective] Superlative form of flawy, meaning having the most flaws or defects. FLAWLESS (14) [adjective] Without flaws, defects, or shortcomings; perfect. FLAXIEST (18) [adjective] Superlative form of flaxen or flax-like; most resembling flax in color (pale yellow) or texture. FLAXSEED (19) [noun] The seed of the flax plant; a source of linseed oil. FLEABAGS (14) [noun] A bed or sleeping bag. | [noun] A place of shabby lodging, particularly a filthy hotel or run-down apartment. | [noun] An unkempt mammal. FLEABANE (13) [noun] Any of various species of flowering plants, mostly in two subfamilies in Asteroideae, that typically repel insects: | [noun] In Cichorioideae, Vernonia (ironweeds). FLEABITE (13) [noun] The bite of a flea, or the mark caused by such a bite. | [noun] Something which causes only trifling irritation; a minor inconvenience. FLEAPITS (13) [noun] A dilapidated building, stereotypically hosting a low-grade cinema. FLEAWORT (14) [noun] Any of various unrelated plants that are supposed to kill or ward off fleas. | [noun] A herb, Plantago psyllium, whose seeds are supposed to resemble fleas FLECKING (18) [verb] To mark with small spots | [noun] A flecked pattern. FLECTION (13) [noun] The act of bending a joint, especially a bone joint; the counteraction of extension. | [noun] The state of being bent or flexed. | [noun] Deviation from straightness. FLEDGIER (13) [adjective] More fledgy; having more developed feathers or plumage, or more ready to fledge (leave the nest). | [adjective] More established or matured, as in a fledgling stage of development. FLEDGING (14) [verb] To care for a young bird until it is capable of flight. | [verb] To grow, cover or be covered with feathers. | [verb] To decorate with feathers. FLEECERS (13) [noun] Plural of fleecer; people or things that fleece or swindle others. | [noun] Plural of fleecer; soft synthetic jackets or garments made of fleece material. FLEECHED (17) FLEECHES (16) FLEECIER (13) [adjective] Resembling or covered in fleece. FLEECILY (16) FLEECING (14) [verb] To con or trick (someone) out of money. | [verb] To shear the fleece from (a sheep or other animal). | [verb] To cover with, or as if with, wool. FLEERING (12) [verb] To make a wry face in contempt, or to grin in scorn | [verb] To grin with an air of civility; to leer. | [noun] Scorn; derision FLEETEST (11) [adjective] Swift in motion; light and quick in going from place to place. | [adjective] Light; superficially thin; not penetrating deep, as soil. FLEETING (12) [verb] To float. | [verb] To pass over rapidly; to skim the surface of. | [verb] To hasten over; to cause to pass away lightly, or in mirth and joy. FLEISHIG (15) FLENCHED (17) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLENCHES (16) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLENSERS (11) [noun] People who strip blubber from whales or seals. | [noun] Tools or knives used for removing blubber from marine mammals. FLENSING (12) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. | [noun] The act of one who flenses; the operation of stripping off blubber. FLESHERS (14) [noun] A person who removes the flesh from the skin during the making of leather. | [noun] A tool used to remove the flesh from the skin during the making of leather. | [noun] A butcher. FLESHIER (14) [adjective] Of, related to, or resembling flesh. | [adjective] (of a person) Having considerable flesh; plump. FLESHING (15) [verb] To reward (a hound, bird of prey etc.) with flesh of the animal killed, to excite it for further hunting; to train (an animal) to have an appetite for flesh. | [verb] To bury (something, especially a weapon) in flesh. | [verb] To inure or habituate someone in or to a given practice. FLESHPOT (16) [noun] A place offering entertainment of a sensual or luxurious nature. FLETCHED (17) [verb] To feather, as an arrow. FLETCHER (16) [noun] One who fletches or feathers arrows. | [noun] A device to assist in fletching or feathering arrows. | [noun] Generally, a manufacturer of bows and arrows. FLETCHES (16) [noun] The vane toward the back of an arrow, used to stabilise the arrow during flight. | [noun] (fisheries) A large boneless fillet of halibut, swordfish or tuna. | [verb] To feather, as an arrow. FLEXAGON (19) [noun] A paper polygon that can be flexed to reveal hidden faces with different patterns or colors on each side. FLEXIBLE (20) [noun] Something that is flexible. | [adjective] Capable of being flexed or bent without breaking; able to be turned or twisted without breaking. | [adjective] Willing or prone to give way to the influence of others; not invincibly rigid or obstinate. FLEXIBLY (23) [adverb] In a flexible manner FLEXIONS (18) [noun] The act of bending a joint, especially a bone joint; the counteraction of extension. | [noun] The state of being bent or flexed. | [noun] Deviation from straightness. FLEXTIME (20) [noun] An arrangement that allows employees to set their own working hours within agreed limits; normally must include certain periods (core time) when they must be at work. FLEXUOSE (18) [adjective] Full of bends or curves; winding or sinuous. FLEXUOUS (18) [adjective] Winding from side to side; sinuous FLEXURAL (18) [adjective] Relating to or involving bending or the ability to bend. FLEXURES (18) [noun] The act of bending or flexing; flexion. | [noun] A turn; a bend; a fold; a curve. | [noun] A curve or bend in a tubular organ. FLICHTER (16) FLICKERS (17) [noun] An unsteady flash of light. | [noun] A short moment. | [verb] To burn or shine unsteadily, or with a wavering light. FLICKERY (20) [adjective] Flickering or tending to flicker; characterized by an unsteady, wavering light or flame. FLICKING (18) [verb] To move or hit (something) with a short, quick motion. | [noun] The act by which something is flicked. FLIGHTED (16) [verb] (of a spin bowler) To throw the ball in such a way that it has more airtime and more spin than usual. | [verb] (by extension) To throw or kick something so as to send it flying with more loft or airtime than usual. | [adjective] (of birds) Capable of flight. FLIMFLAM (18) [noun] Nonsense. | [noun] Deception. | [verb] To swindle or cheat. FLIMSIER (13) [adjective] Likely to bend or break under pressure. | [adjective] Weak; ill-founded. FLIMSIES (13) [noun] Thin typing paper used to make multiple copies. | [noun] A service certificate | [noun] (in the plural) Skimpy underwear. FLIMSILY (16) [adverb] In a flimsy manner; without strength, substance, or solidity. | [adverb] In a weak or unconvincing way; lacking adequate support or justification. FLINCHED (17) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. | [verb] To make a sudden, involuntary movement in response to a (usually negative) stimulus; to cringe. | [verb] To dodge (a question), to avoid an unpleasant task or duty FLINCHER (16) [noun] One who flinches; a person who draws back or recoils in pain or fear. | [noun] In horse racing, a horse that refuses to run or compete. FLINCHES (16) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. | [verb] To make a sudden, involuntary movement in response to a (usually negative) stimulus; to cringe. | [verb] To dodge (a question), to avoid an unpleasant task or duty FLINDERS (12) [noun] Fragments, splinters | [noun] A small piece or fragment; a thin slice; splinter | [noun] A butterfly. FLINGERS (12) [noun] Plural of flinger; one who flings or throws something. | [noun] In some games, objects or projectiles that are flung or thrown. FLINGING (13) [verb] To move (oneself) abruptly or violently; to rush or dash. | [verb] To throw with violence or quick movement; to hurl. | [verb] To throw; to wince; to flounce. FLINKITE (15) FLINTIER (11) [adjective] Resembling or containing flint. | [adjective] Siliceous (including basanite). | [adjective] Showing a lack of emotion. FLINTILY (14) [adverb] In a flint-like manner; with the hardness, coldness, or unyielding quality of flint. FLINTING (12) [verb] The act of striking or shaping flint, or traveling in a flint-like manner. | [verb] To move quickly or nimbly. FLIPPANT (15) [adjective] Glib; speaking with ease and rapidity | [adjective] Nimble; limber. | [adjective] Showing disrespect through a casual attitude, levity, and a lack of due seriousness; pert. FLIPPERS (15) [noun] In marine mammals such as whales, a wide flat limb, adapted for swimming. | [noun] A flat, wide, paddle-like rubber covering for the foot, used in swimming. | [noun] A flat lever in a pinball machine, triggered by the player to strike the ball and keep it in play. FLIPPEST (15) [adjective] Most flippant or disrespectful in manner or speech. | [adjective] Most likely to flip or turn over easily. FLIPPING (16) [verb] To throw so as to turn over. | [verb] To put into a quick revolving motion through a snap of the thumb and index finger. | [verb] To win a state (or county) won by another party in the preceding elections FLIRTERS (11) [noun] People who engage in flirting or playful, romantic behavior with others. | [noun] Small fish or aquatic creatures that move with quick, darting motions. FLIRTIER (11) [adjective] Flirting, or seeming to flirt. FLIRTING (12) [verb] To throw (something) with a jerk or sudden movement; to fling. | [verb] To jeer at; to mock. | [verb] To dart about; to move with quick, jerky motions. FLITCHED (17) [verb] Past tense of flitch, meaning to cut into flitches (sides of bacon or fish) or to move restlessly. | [noun] A side of bacon or salted fish. FLITCHES (16) [noun] The flank or side of an animal, now almost exclusively a pig when cured and salted; a side of bacon. | [noun] A piece or strip cut off of something else, generally a piece of wood (timber). FLITTERS (11) [verb] To scatter in pieces. | [verb] To move about rapidly and nimbly. | [verb] To move quickly from one condition or location to another. FLITTING (12) [verb] To move about rapidly and nimbly. | [verb] To move quickly from one location to another. | [verb] To unpredictably change state for short periods of time. FLIVVERS (17) [noun] An automobile, particularly one which is old and inexpensive. FLOATAGE (12) [noun] The act or state of floating. | [noun] Matter or goods that float on water, especially wreckage or flotsam. FLOATELS (11) [noun] A floating hotel; a boatel FLOATERS (11) [noun] Agent noun of float; one who or that which floats. | [noun] An employee of a company who does not have fixed tasks to do but fills in wherever needed, usually when someone else is away. | [noun] An unaffiliated player. FLOATIER (11) [adjective] Buoyant, tending to float on a liquid or rise in air or gas | [adjective] (of a dress) lightweight, so as to rise when the wearer is walking. | [adjective] Light, hypnotic and relaxing. FLOATING (12) [verb] Of an object or substance, to be supported by a liquid of greater density than the object so as that part of the object or substance remains above the surface. | [verb] To cause something to be suspended in a liquid of greater density. | [verb] To be capable of floating. FLOCCING (16) [verb] Present participle of "floc," meaning to form into flocs (fine particles that aggregate together), commonly used in water treatment and chemistry contexts. FLOCCOSE (15) [adjective] Covered or growing in wooly tufts FLOCCULE (15) [noun] A small, loosely aggregated mass of material suspended in, or precipitated from a solution; a floc. FLOCCULI (15) [noun] A small fluffy tuft. | [noun] Either of two small lobes on the posterior border of the cerebellum. | [noun] A marking on the surface of the sun associated with a solar prominence. FLOCKIER (17) [adjective] More resembling or characterized by flocks; having more of the texture or appearance of a flock. | [adjective] More inclined to gather in flocks or groups. FLOCKING (18) [verb] To congregate in or head towards a place in large numbers. | [verb] To flock to; to crowd. | [verb] To treat a pool with chemicals to remove suspended particles. FLOGGERS (13) [noun] One who flogs. | [noun] (BDSM) A lightweight whip with multiple lashes. FLOGGING (14) [verb] To whip or scourge someone or something as punishment. | [verb] To use something to extreme; to abuse. | [verb] To sell. FLOKATIS (15) [noun] A handwoven woolen rug with a thick pile. FLOODERS (12) [noun] Plural of flooder; devices or people that flood. | [noun] In some contexts, bots or users that send excessive messages to overwhelm a chat or system. FLOODING (13) [verb] To overflow, as by water from excessive rainfall. | [verb] To cover or partly fill as if by a flood. | [verb] To provide (someone or something) with a larger number or quantity of something than can easily be dealt with. FLOODLIT (12) [verb] To enlighten or illuminate with floodlight(s). | [adjective] Lit by floodlights. FLOODWAY (18) [noun] An engineered path to channel floodwaters away from areas to be protected FLOORAGE (12) [noun] The total area of floor space in a building or room, measured in square units. FLOORERS (11) [noun] Things or people that floor someone, causing them to be astonished or knocked down. | [noun] In construction, materials or workers that install flooring. FLOORING (12) [verb] To cover or furnish with a floor. | [verb] To strike down or lay level with the floor; to knock down. | [verb] (driving) To accelerate rapidly. FLOOSIES (11) [noun] A vulgar or sexually promiscuous woman; a hussy or slattern. | [noun] A prostitute who attracts customers by walking the streets. FLOOZIES (20) [noun] A vulgar or sexually promiscuous woman; a hussy or slattern. | [noun] A prostitute who attracts customers by walking the streets. FLOPOVER (16) FLOPPERS (15) [noun] One who flops. | [noun] (skittles) The knocking down of all nine pins in one go. | [noun] A person who deliberately falls down on a slippery floor or in front of an automobile etc. so as to claim compensation. FLOPPIER (15) [adjective] Limp, not hard, firm, or rigid; flexible. FLOPPIES (15) [noun] A floppy disk. | [noun] (Rhodesia) An insurgent in the Rhodesian Bush War, called as such for the way they "flop" when shot. | [noun] A comic book. FLOPPILY (18) [adverb] In a floppy manner; with a loose, drooping, or limp quality. FLOPPING (16) [verb] To fall heavily due to lack of energy. | [verb] To cause to drop heavily. | [verb] To fail completely; not to be successful at all (of a movie, play, book, song etc.). FLORALLY (14) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characterized by flowers or floral designs. FLORENCE (13) FLORIDLY (15) [adverb] In a florid manner; with excessive ornamentation or flowery language. FLORIGEN (12) [noun] A hypothetical plant hormone that promotes flowering, transmitted from leaves to the apical meristem. FLORISTS (11) [noun] A person who sells flowers. | [noun] A person who cultivates flowers. | [noun] A person who studies or writes about flowers. FLORUITS (11) [noun] The time period during which a person, group, culture, etc. is at its peak. FLOSSIER (11) [adjective] Resembling floss. | [adjective] Extravagantly showy; flashy FLOSSIES (11) [noun] Plural of flossy; dental floss or threads used for cleaning between teeth. | [noun] Showy or ostentatious things or people. FLOSSILY (14) [adverb] In a flossily manner; in a way that is ostentatiously stylish or showy. | [adverb] In a manner characterized by the use or appearance of dental floss. FLOSSING (12) [verb] To clean the area between the teeth using floss. | [verb] To show off, especially by exhibiting one's wealth or talent. | [verb] To perform the floss dance move. FLOTAGES (12) [noun] The act or process of floating; material that floats. | [noun] Floating debris or matter on water. FLOTILLA (11) [noun] A small fleet of warships (usually of the same class), or a fleet of small ships. FLOTSAMS (13) [noun] Plural of flotsam; wreckage or cargo that floats on the sea after a ship has sunk. | [noun] Discarded or unimportant items; odds and ends. FLOUNCED (14) [verb] To move in an exaggerated, bouncy manner. | [verb] To flounder; to make spastic motions. | [verb] To decorate with a flounce. FLOUNCES (13) [verb] To move in an exaggerated, bouncy manner. | [verb] To flounder; to make spastic motions. | [verb] To decorate with a flounce. FLOUNDER (12) [noun] A European species of flatfish having dull brown colouring with reddish-brown blotches; fluke, European flounder, Platichthys flesus. | [noun] Any of various flatfish of the family Pleuronectidae or Bothidae. | [noun] A bootmaker's tool for crimping boot fronts. | [verb] To flop around as a fish out of water. FLOURING (12) [verb] To apply flour to something; to cover with flour. | [verb] To reduce to flour. | [verb] To break up into fine globules of mercury in the amalgamation process. FLOURISH (14) [noun] A dramatic gesture such as the waving of a flag. | [noun] An ornamentation. | [noun] A ceremonious passage such as a fanfare. FLOUTERS (11) [noun] People who openly disregard or mock rules, laws, or authority. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of "flout," meaning to openly disregard or treat with contempt. FLOUTING (12) [verb] To express contempt for (laws, rules, etc.) by word or action. | [verb] To scorn. | [noun] The act by which something is flouted. FLOWAGES (15) [noun] The overflow of water; a body of water that has overflowed its banks. | [noun] The act or process of flowing over or flooding an area. FLOWERED (15) [verb] To put forth blooms. | [verb] To decorate with pictures of flowers. | [verb] To reach a state of full development or achievement. FLOWERER (14) [noun] Something (originally a plant) that flowers (often in a specified manner, or at a specified time) FLOWERET (14) [noun] A floret, or small or component flower FLUBBERS (15) [verb] Third person singular of flubber, meaning to move or speak in a clumsy or confused manner. | [noun] Plural of flubber, referring to blubber or excess fat. FLUBBING (16) [verb] To goof, fumble, or err in the performance of an action. FLUBDUBS (16) FLUENTLY (14) [adverb] In a fluent manner, as expressing oneself easily, especially in a foreign language. | [adverb] In a fluent manner, as having graceful movements. FLUERICS (13) FLUFFIER (17) [adjective] Covered with fluff. | [adjective] Light; soft; airy. | [adjective] Warm and comforting. FLUFFILY (20) [adverb] In a fluffy manner; with a soft, light, or airy quality. FLUFFING (18) [verb] To make something fluffy. | [verb] To become fluffy, puff up. | [verb] To move lightly like fluff. FLUIDICS (14) [noun] The branch of engineering and technology that is concerned with the construction of devices that use the flow and pressure of a fluid in circuits analogous to electronic ones FLUIDISE (12) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUIDITY (15) [noun] The state of being fluid rather than viscous | [noun] A measure of the extent to which something is fluid. The reciprocal of its viscosity. | [noun] The quality of being fluid or free-flowing FLUIDIZE (21) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUIDRAM (14) [noun] The dram (unit of volume). FLUKIEST (15) [adjective] Lucky | [adjective] Unstable, prone to rapid and unpredictable changes FLUMMERY (18) [noun] A custard; any of several bland, gelatinous foodstuffs, usually made from stewed fruit and thickened with oatmeal, cornstarch or flour. | [noun] Empty or meaningless talk, especially when used to flatter. | [noun] Pretentious trappings, useless ornaments used to impress. FLUMPING (16) [verb] To move or fall heavily, or with a dull sound. | [verb] To drop something heavily or with a dull sound. FLUNKERS (15) [noun] People who fail a test or course. | [verb] Third person singular present of "flunk," meaning to fail or perform poorly. FLUNKEYS (18) [noun] An underling; a liveried servant or a footman; servant, retainer – a person working in the service of another (especially in the household) | [noun] One who is obsequious or cringing; a snob. | [noun] One easily deceived in buying stocks; an inexperienced and unwary jobber. FLUNKIES (15) [noun] An underling; a liveried servant or a footman; servant, retainer – a person working in the service of another (especially in the household) | [noun] One who is obsequious or cringing; a snob. | [noun] One easily deceived in buying stocks; an inexperienced and unwary jobber. FLUNKING (16) [verb] Of a student, to fail a class; to not pass. | [verb] Of a teacher, to deny a student a passing grade. | [verb] To shirk (a task or duty). FLUORENE (11) [noun] A colorless crystalline hydrocarbon found in coal tar, consisting of three fused benzene rings and used in organic synthesis and as a precursor for various chemical compounds. FLUORIDE (12) [noun] Any salt of hydrofluoric acid; for example, potassium fluoride. | [noun] A binary compound of fluorine and another element or radical. FLUORIDS (12) [noun] Plural of fluorid, a compound containing fluorine, particularly used in dental care and water fluoridation. FLUORINE (11) [noun] The chemical element (symbol F) with an atomic number of 9. It is the lightest of the halogens, a pale yellow-green, highly reactive gas that attacks all metals. | [noun] A single atom of this element. FLUORINS (11) FLUORITE (11) [noun] A widely occurring mineral (calcium fluoride), of various colours, used as a flux in steelmaking, and in the manufacture of glass, enamels and hydrofluoric acid. FLURRIED (12) [adjective] Agitated, confused. | [verb] To agitate, bewilder, fluster. | [verb] To move or fall in a flurry. FLURRIES (11) [noun] A light, brief snowfall. | [noun] A sudden and brief blast or gust; a light, temporary breeze. | [noun] A shower of dust, leaves etc. brought on by a sudden gust of wind. FLUSHERS (14) [noun] People or things that flush. | [noun] In poker, players who attempt to make a flush hand. FLUSHEST (14) [adjective] Most flush; in the superlative degree of flush, meaning most level, even, or direct in alignment. | [adjective] Most affluent or having the most money available. FLUSHING (15) [verb] To cause to take flight from concealment. | [verb] To take suddenly to flight, especially from cover. | [verb] To cleanse by flooding with generous quantities of a fluid. | [noun] The act by which something is flushed. | [noun] A heavy, coarse cloth manufactured from shoddy. FLUSTERS (11) [noun] A state of being flustered; overwrought confusion. | [verb] To make hot and rosy, as with drinking. | [verb] (by extension) To confuse; befuddle; throw into panic by making overwrought with confusion. FLUTIEST (11) [adjective] Resembling the sound of a flute. FLUTINGS (12) [noun] A decoration consisting of parallel, normally vertical, flutes (grooves) incised into the surface. | [noun] The act of making such grooves. | [noun] A flute-like sound. FLUTISTS (11) [noun] One who plays the flute. FLUTTERS (11) [noun] The act of fluttering; quick and irregular motion. | [noun] A state of agitation. | [noun] An abnormal rapid pulsation of the heart. FLUTTERY (14) [adjective] That flutters; fluttering FLUXGATE (19) [noun] Any of several devices that use soft iron cores surrounded by coils of wire that generate a pattern of induced currents when it moves relative to an external magnetic field FLUXIONS (18) [noun] The derivative of a function. | [noun] The action of flowing. | [noun] A difference or variation. FLYAWAYS (20) [noun] A stray hair that is difficult to style. | [noun] Anything that is difficult to capture or restrain. | [noun] A kind of dismount from bars that incorporates one or more flips or twists. FLYBELTS (16) FLYBLOWN (19) [adjective] Contaminated with flyblows | [adjective] Tainted | [adjective] Sordid, squalid FLYBLOWS (19) [noun] Eggs or larvae of a blowfly, especially those deposited on meat or a wound. | [verb] Third-person singular present tense of "flyblown," meaning to contaminate with flyblows or to taint. FLYBOATS (16) [noun] Plural of flyboat, a type of fast sailing vessel used historically in the Netherlands and northern Europe, characterized by a shallow draft and used for cargo transport. FLYOVERS (17) [noun] A low-level flight, especially of military aircraft, of a ceremonial nature; a flypast (British). | [noun] A road or railway that passes over another, allowing routes to cross without interruption. | [noun] A high-level overpass built above main overpass lanes. FLYPAPER (18) [noun] A strip of paper coated with a sticky, often poisonous, substance that catches and kills flies that land on it | [verb] To cause something to become stuck with, or as if with, flypaper. FLYPASTS (16) [noun] A low-level flight of a ceremonial nature; a flyover (US) FLYSCHES (19) FLYSPECK (22) [noun] Housefly excrement, visible as a minuscule black dot. | [noun] (by extension) Anything tiny or insignificant. | [verb] To bespeckle with tiny spatters of color. FLYTIERS (14) [noun] People who tie fishing flies by hand, typically as a hobby or profession. FLYTINGS (15) [noun] Plural of flyting, a Scottish and Northern English tradition of exchanging insults or abusive language in verse or speech, often as a form of entertainment or competition. FLYTRAPS (16) [noun] Plural of flytrap; devices or plants that trap flying insects, such as the Venus flytrap. | [noun] Figuratively, traps or schemes designed to catch or deceive someone. FLYWHEEL (20) [noun] A rotating mass used to maintain the speed of a machine within certain limits while the machine receives or releases energy at a varying rate. FOAMABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being made into foam or froth. FOAMIEST (13) [adjective] Full of foam. FOAMLESS (13) FOAMLIKE (17) [adjective] Resembling foam in appearance or texture; having a light, airy, or bubbly quality. FOCACCIA (17) [noun] A flatbread similar in style, composition, and texture to modern pizza doughs and topped with herbs, cheese and other products. Focaccia typically consists of high-gluten flour, oil, water, sugar, salt and yeast. | [noun] A sandwich made with this type of bread. FOCALISE (13) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCALIZE (22) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCUSERS (13) [noun] Plural of focuser; devices or people that focus light, attention, or other things. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of the verb "to focuser" (non-standard usage). FOCUSING (14) [verb] (followed by on or upon) To concentrate one's attention. | [verb] To cause (rays of light, etc) to converge at a single point. | [verb] To adjust (a lens, an optical instrument) in order to position an image with respect to the focal plane. FOCUSSED (14) [verb] (followed by on or upon) To concentrate one's attention. | [verb] To cause (rays of light, etc) to converge at a single point. | [verb] To adjust (a lens, an optical instrument) in order to position an image with respect to the focal plane. FOCUSSES (13) [noun] A point at which reflected or refracted rays of light converge. | [noun] A point of a conic at which rays reflected from a curve or surface converge. | [noun] The fact of the convergence of light on the photographic medium. FODDERED (14) [verb] To feed animals (with fodder). FOETUSES (11) [noun] An unborn or unhatched vertebrate showing signs of the mature animal. | [noun] A human embryo after the eighth week of gestation. FOGBOUND (15) [adjective] Enveloped in fog to such an extent that movement is dangerous or impossible FOGFRUIT (15) [noun] A low-growing plant of the Phyla genus, native to North America, having small flowers and fruit that resembles fog or mist. | [noun] Any of various similar plants in the acanthus family. FOGGAGES (14) FOGGIEST (13) [adjective] Obscured by mist or fog; unclear; hazy | [adjective] Confused, befuddled, etc. FOGHORNS (15) [noun] A very loud low-pitched horn, used especially in lighthouses and on large boats. FOGYISMS (17) FOILABLE (13) [adjective] Capable of being foiled or thwarted; able to be prevented from succeeding. FOILSMAN (13) FOILSMEN (13) FOISTING (12) [verb] To introduce or insert surreptitiously or without warrant. | [verb] To force another to accept especially by stealth or deceit. | [verb] To pass off as genuine or worthy. FOLACINS (13) [noun] A group of B vitamins found in leafy greens and other foods, also known as folic acid or folate. FOLDABLE (14) [adjective] Capable of being folded or designed to fold into a more compact form. FOLDAWAY (18) [noun] A piece of furniture, of any kind, that can be folded away when not in use. | [adjective] That may be folded away when not in use. FOLDBOAT (14) [noun] A small collapsible boat made of canvas or rubberized fabric stretched over a folding frame. FOLDEROL (12) [noun] Nonsense or foolishness. | [noun] A decorative object of little value; a trifle or gewgaw. FOLDOUTS (12) [noun] A gatefold. | [noun] A foldout bed. FOLIAGED (13) [adjective] Having foliage; covered with leaves or leafy vegetation. FOLIAGES (12) [noun] The plural of foliage, referring to the leaves of plants and trees collectively, or decorative leaf designs used in art and architecture. FOLIATED (12) [verb] To form into leaves. | [verb] To beat into a leaf, or thin plate. | [verb] To spread over with a thin coat of tin and quicksilver. FOLIATES (11) [verb] To form into leaves. | [verb] To beat into a leaf, or thin plate. | [verb] To spread over with a thin coat of tin and quicksilver. FOLIOING (12) [verb] The act of numbering pages or leaves in a book or manuscript. | [verb] In accounting, the process of posting entries to a ledger or folio. FOLKLIFE (18) [noun] Folklore; those cultural traditions passed down orally or informally. FOLKLIKE (19) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of folk music, folk art, or folk culture; having qualities associated with traditional or popular culture. FOLKLORE (15) [noun] The tales, legends and superstitions of a particular ethnic population. FOLKMOOT (17) [noun] A public assembly or meeting of the people in Anglo-Saxon England. | [noun] Any gathering or assembly of common people. FOLKMOTE (17) [noun] A public assembly or court in Anglo-Saxon England where local disputes were settled and laws were administered. FOLKMOTS (17) [noun] Plural of folkmoot, an assembly of the people in early Germanic or Anglo-Saxon communities, typically for judicial or legislative purposes. FOLKSIER (15) [adjective] Characteristic of simple country life. | [adjective] Informal, affable and familiar. FOLKSILY (18) [adverb] In a folksy manner; in a way that is informal, friendly, and characteristic of ordinary people or folk traditions. FOLKTALE (15) [noun] A tale or story that is part of the oral tradition of a people or a place. FOLKWAYS (21) [noun] Often plural: a belief or custom common to members of a culture or society. FOLLICLE (13) [noun] A small cavity or sac, such as a hair follicle. | [noun] A type of primitive dry fruit produced by certain flowering plants. FOLLOWED (15) [verb] To go after; to pursue; to move behind in the same path or direction. | [verb] To go or come after in a sequence. | [verb] To carry out (orders, instructions, etc.). FOLLOWER (14) [noun] One who follows, comes after another. | [noun] Something that comes after another thing. | [noun] One who is a part of master's physical group, such as a servant or retainer. FOMENTED (14) [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FOMENTER (13) [noun] One who foments; a person who incites or stirs up trouble, rebellion, or discord. FONDANTS (12) [noun] (usually uncountable) A flavored, creamy sugar preparation, used for icing cakes or as a base for candies. | [noun] A candy filled with such a preparation. | [noun] A sugar dough, usually prepared as large sheets (rolled fondant), used in place of icing to cover large areas of cakes, composed of sugar, water, gelatin, glycerine. FONDLERS (12) [noun] Plural of fondler; people who fondle or touch affectionately or inappropriately. FONDLING (13) [noun] A foolish person. | [noun] A pet or person who is fondled; someone who is much loved. | [verb] To touch or stroke lovingly. FONDNESS (12) [noun] The quality of being fond: liking something, foolishness; doting affection; propensity. FONTANEL (11) [noun] A soft membraneous spot on the head of a baby due to incomplete fusion of the cranial bones. FONTINAS (11) [noun] Plural of fontina, a semi-soft Italian cheese with a mild, nutty flavor. FOODLESS (12) [adjective] Without food; lacking food or nourishment. FOODWAYS (18) [noun] The traditional practices, habits, and cultural attitudes surrounding the preparation, consumption, and sharing of food within a group or society. FOOFARAW (17) [noun] A fuss or commotion over something trivial; unnecessary fuss and bother. FOOLFISH (17) FOOLSCAP (15) [noun] A cap, usually brightly coloured with bells and tassels, as worn by a court jester or fool. | [noun] (strictly) Writing paper sheets measuring 13.25 x 16.5 inches | [noun] (more usually) Such a sheet folded or cut in half, thus approximately 8 x 13.25 inches. FOOTAGES (12) [noun] The length of film or video material measured in feet. | [noun] Plural of footage, referring to multiple pieces of recorded video or film content. FOOTBALL (13) [noun] (general) A sport played on foot in which teams attempt to get a ball into a goal or zone defended by the other team. | [noun] Association football: a game in which two teams each contend to get a round ball into the other team's goal primarily by kicking the ball. Known as soccer in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand. | [noun] American football: a game played on a field of 100 yards long and 53 1/3 yards wide in which two teams of 11 players attempt to get an ovoid ball to the end of each other's territory. FOOTBATH (16) [noun] The act of soaking or washing the feet. | [noun] A small basin or bath designed for soaking or washing the feet. | [noun] A liquid mixture, often medicinal, for soaking or washing the feet with. FOOTBOYS (16) [noun] Young male servants or attendants, historically employed in royal or noble households. | [noun] Pages or lackeys, particularly those who ran errands or performed menial tasks. FOOTFALL (14) [noun] The sound made by a footstep. | [noun] Foot (pedestrian) traffic. FOOTGEAR (12) [noun] Sturdy footwear FOOTHILL (14) [noun] A hill at the base of a mountain or mountain range. FOOTHOLD (15) [noun] A solid grip with the feet. | [noun] (by extension) A secure position from which it is difficult to be dislodged. | [noun] Airhead, beachhead, bridgehead, lodgement. FOOTIEST (11) [adjective] Superlative form of footy, relating most to football or having the greatest characteristics of football; most resembling or suggestive of football. FOOTINGS (12) [noun] A ground for the foot; place for the foot to rest on; firm foundation to stand on. | [noun] A standing; position; established place; basis for operation; permanent settlement; foothold. | [noun] A relative condition; state. FOOTLERS (11) [verb] To engage in fruitless activity or waste time on trivial matters. | [verb] To tinker or fiddle with something in a clumsy or ineffective way. FOOTLESS (11) [adjective] Without feet or a base of support. | [adjective] Lacking a foundation or basis; groundless or illogical. FOOTLIKE (15) [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a foot. FOOTLING (12) [verb] To waste time; to trifle. | [verb] To talk nonsense. | [adjective] Trivial, silly and irritating. | [noun] A fetus oriented so that, at birth, its foot will emerge first. A type of breech birth. FOOTMARK (17) [noun] Footprint (an impression made by a foot) FOOTNOTE (11) [noun] A short piece of text, often numbered, placed at the bottom of a printed page, that adds a comment, citation, reference etc, to a designated part of the main text. | [noun] (by extension) An event of lesser importance than some larger event to which it is related. | [noun] A qualification to the import of something. FOOTPACE (15) [noun] A walking pace or step. | [noun] A dais, or elevated platform; the highest step of the altar; a landing in a staircase. FOOTPADS (14) [noun] The soft underside of an animal's paw. | [noun] A medicated bandage for the treatment of corns and warts. | [noun] A thief on foot who robs travellers on the road. FOOTPATH (16) [noun] A path for pedestrians. FOOTRACE (13) [noun] A race run on foot. FOOTREST (11) [noun] A support on which to rest the feet. FOOTROPE (13) [noun] A rope or line on a ship that sailors stand on when working on the sails, typically running along the bottom of a sail. FOOTSIES (11) [noun] A flirting game where two people touch their feet together, under a table or otherwise concealed, as a romantic prelude. | [noun] A foot. | [noun] A selfie (self-taken photograph) of one's feet. FOOTSLOG (12) [noun] An instance of footslogging. | [verb] To walk heavily over a long distance or in a weary manner; to trudge FOOTSORE (11) [adjective] Having sore feet, but perhaps also a certain sense of satisfaction, after walking or hiking too much. FOOTSTEP (13) [noun] The mark or impression left by a foot; a track. | [noun] By extension, the indications or waypoints of a course or direction taken. | [noun] The sound made by walking, running etc. FOOTWALL (14) [noun] The section of rock that extends below a diagonal fault line (the corresponding upper section being the hanging wall). | [noun] The under wall of an enclosed vein. FOOTWAYS (17) [noun] A passage for pedestrians only. FOOTWEAR (14) [noun] Items or an item of clothing that is worn on the foot; a shoe, sandal, etc. FOOTWORK (18) [noun] Any movement of the feet, especially intricate or complex movement, as in sports or dancing. | [noun] A subgenre of juke/ghetto house and style of street dance that originated in Chicago in the early 1990s. FOOTWORN (14) FOOZLERS (20) FOOZLING (21) [verb] To do something clumsily or awkwardly; to bungle. FORAGERS (12) [noun] An animal or person who forages FORAGING (13) [verb] To search for and gather food for animals, particularly cattle and horses. | [verb] To rampage through, gathering and destroying as one goes. | [verb] To rummage. FORAMENS (13) [noun] Plural of foramen, which are small openings or holes in bones or other anatomical structures. | [noun] Openings or passages, particularly in anatomical or biological contexts. FORAMINA (13) [noun] An opening, an orifice; a short passage. FORAYERS (14) [noun] People who make forays; those who venture into or raid a place or subject area. FORAYING (15) [verb] To scour (an area or place) for food, treasure, booty etc. | [verb] To pillage; to ravage. FORBEARS (13) [verb] To keep away from; to avoid; to abstain from. | [verb] To refrain from proceeding; to pause; to delay. | [verb] To refuse; to decline; to withsay; to unheed. FORBIDAL (14) FORBODED (15) [verb] Past tense of forbode; to be a sign or indication of something bad about to happen; to portend or presage. FORBODES (14) [verb] Third person singular of forbode, meaning to be an omen or sign of something, typically something bad or unpleasant; to presage or portend. FORBORNE (13) [verb] To keep away from; to avoid; to abstain from. | [verb] To refrain from proceeding; to pause; to delay. | [verb] To refuse; to decline; to withsay; to unheed. FORCEDLY (17) [adverb] In a way that is forced, compelled, or done against one's natural inclination or resistance. FORCEFUL (16) [adjective] Capable of either physical or coercive force; powerful. FORCIBLE (15) [adjective] Done by force, forced. | [adjective] (rare or obsolete) Having (physical) force, forceful. | [adjective] Having a powerful effect; forceful, telling, strong, convincing, effective. FORCIBLY (18) [adverb] In a forcible manner, by force, against one's will. | [adverb] In a forcible manner, with force, with powerful effect, powerfully, strongly. FORCIPES (15) [noun] Plural of forceps; surgical instruments with two blades and a handle, used for grasping and holding objects during medical procedures. FORDABLE (14) [adjective] Capable of being forded; passable on foot through water. FORDLESS (12) FORDOING (13) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREARMS (13) [noun] The part of the arm between the wrist and the elbow. | [noun] A section of the weapon between the receiver and the muzzle, used to hold the firearm steady. FOREBAYS (16) [noun] A reservoir or pond that supplies water to a mill or power plant. | [noun] The part of a canal or waterway before a lock or dam. FOREBEAR (13) [verb] To keep away from; to avoid; to abstain from. | [verb] To refrain from proceeding; to pause; to delay. | [verb] To refuse; to decline; to withsay; to unheed. FOREBODE (14) [noun] Prognostication; presage | [verb] To predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device). | [verb] To be prescient of (some ill or misfortune); to have an inward conviction of, as of a calamity which is about to happen; to augur despondingly. FOREBODY (17) [noun] The front part of a ship's hull, located forward of the bridge or control area. FOREBOOM (15) FORECAST (13) [noun] An estimation of a future condition. | [noun] (betting) exacta | [verb] To estimate how something will be in the future. FOREDATE (12) [verb] To date (a document) with a date earlier than the actual date of writing or execution. FOREDECK (18) [noun] The part of the deck of a ship or boat that lies forward of the mast FOREDOES (12) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREDONE (12) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREDOOM (14) [noun] A doom that is predicted; destiny. | [verb] To predestine to a doom. FOREFACE (16) FOREFEEL (14) [verb] To have a premonition or feeling about something before it happens. | [verb] To feel beforehand; to anticipate by sensation. FOREFEET (14) [noun] Either of the front feet of a quadruped. | [noun] A piece of timber terminating the keel at the fore end, connecting it with the lower end of the stem. FOREFELT (14) [verb] Past tense of forefeel; to feel or perceive beforehand. FOREFEND (15) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FOREFOOT (14) [noun] Either of the front feet of a quadruped. | [noun] A piece of timber terminating the keel at the fore end, connecting it with the lower end of the stem. | [verb] To repair the front area of (a shoe etc). FOREGOER (12) [noun] One who foregoes or goes before; a predecessor. | [noun] One who abstains from or relinquishes something. FOREGOES (12) [verb] To precede, to go before. | [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. FOREGONE (12) [verb] To precede, to go before. | [adjective] Previous, former | [adjective] Bygone FOREGUTS (12) [noun] The anterior part of the alimentary canal of an embryo, from the mouth to the duodenum. FOREHAND (15) [noun] (racket sports) A stroke in which the palm of the hand faces the direction of the stroke. | [noun] (disc sports) A throw similar to a sidearm throw in baseball, where the disc remains on the throwing-arm side of the body and is led by the middle finger. | [noun] All of the part of a horse which is before the rider. FOREHEAD (15) [noun] The part of the face above the eyebrows and below the hairline. | [noun] Confidence; audacity | [noun] The upper part of a mobile phone, above the screen. FOREHOOF (17) FOREKNEW (18) [verb] To have knowledge of beforehand. FOREKNOW (18) [verb] To have knowledge of beforehand. FORELADY (15) [noun] The female equivalent of a foreman FORELAND (12) [noun] A headland. | [noun] In plate tectonics, the zone adjacent to a mountain chain where material eroded from it is deposited. FORELEGS (12) [noun] Either of the two legs towards the front of a four-legged animal, a piece of furniture, etc. FORELIMB (15) [noun] The anterior limb (or equivalent appendage) of an animal FORELOCK (17) [noun] The part of a person's hairstyle which covers the forehead. | [noun] The part of a horse's (or similar animal's) mane that lies on its forehead. | [noun] A wedge pushed through a hole at the end of a bolt to hold it in place. FOREMAST (13) [noun] The mast nearest the bow, on a ship with more than one mast. FOREMILK (17) [noun] The first milk drawn from a cow during milking; in humans, the milk secreted initially during breastfeeding, typically low in fat and rich in protein. FOREMOST (13) [adjective] First, either in time or in space | [adjective] Most forward; front | [adjective] Of a higher rank or position; paramount FORENAME (13) [noun] A name that precedes the surname. FORENOON (11) [noun] The part of the day from dawn to noon. | [noun] The part of the day between midnight and noon. | [noun] The early part of anything. FORENSIC (13) [adjective] Relating to the use of science and technology in the investigation and establishment of facts or evidence in a court of law. | [adjective] Relating to, or appropriate for, courts of law. | [adjective] Relating to, or used in, debate or argument. FOREPART (13) [noun] The front or anterior part of something. FOREPAST (13) FOREPAWS (16) [noun] Either of the paws of an animal's foreleg, homologous to the hand in humans. FOREPEAK (17) [noun] The part of the hold of a ship within the angle of the bow FOREPLAY (16) [noun] In human sexual behavior, the acts at the beginning of a sexual encounter that serve to build up sexual arousal. | [verb] To engage in foreplay. FORERANK (15) FORERUNS (11) [verb] To run in front. | [verb] To precede; to forecast or foreshadow. FORESAID (12) [adjective] Mentioned or named before; aforesaid. FORESAIL (11) [noun] (on a square-rigged ship) The lowest (and usually the largest) square sail hung on the foremast | [noun] A square fore-and-aft sail set on the foremast, but behind it, on a schooner or other similar vessel. | [noun] (on a sloop) A triangular sail set forward of the foremast: forestaysail. FORESEEN (11) [verb] To be able to see beforehand: to anticipate; predict. | [verb] To provide. FORESEER (11) [noun] One who foresees; a person who predicts or anticipates future events. FORESEES (11) [verb] To be able to see beforehand: to anticipate; predict. | [verb] To provide. FORESHOW (17) [verb] To show in advance; to foretell, predict. | [verb] To foreshadow or prefigure. | [noun] A manifestation in advance; a prior indication. FORESIDE (12) FORESKIN (15) [noun] The nerve-dense, retractable fold of skin which covers and protects the head of the penis in humans and some other animals. | [verb] To remove the foreskin | [verb] To sexually stimulate by manipulating the foreskin. FORESTAL (11) [adjective] Relating to or denoting forests or forestry. FORESTAY (14) [noun] A stay that extends from the top of the foremast to the bow or bowsprit of a sailing ship | [verb] To stay beforehand; secure or fasten with or as with a forestay. | [verb] To stay, delay, postpone, or hinder beforehand; forestall; prevent. FORESTED (12) [verb] To cover an area with trees. | [adjective] Covered in forest. FORESTER (11) [noun] A person who practices forestry. | [noun] A person who lives in a forest. | [noun] A moth in the family Zygaenidae. FORESTRY (14) [noun] The science of planting and growing trees in forests. | [noun] The art and practice of planting and growing trees in forests. | [noun] The art and practice of cultivating, exploiting and renewing forests for commercial purposes. FORETELL (11) [verb] To predict; to tell (the future) before it occurs; to prophesy. | [verb] To tell (a person) of the future. FORETIME (13) [noun] Time in the past; antiquity or former times. FORETOLD (12) [verb] To predict; to tell (the future) before it occurs; to prophesy. | [verb] To tell (a person) of the future. FORETOPS (13) [noun] The top of the head; the top of the forehead. | [noun] The lock of hair which grows on top of the forehead; the corresponding part of a wig. | [noun] In the phrase, to take time (or occasion or opportunity) by the foretop, meaning "to boldly seize an opportunity". FOREVERS (14) [noun] Plural of forever; indefinite or unlimited periods of time. | [noun] In informal usage, things or relationships that are meant to last indefinitely. FOREWARN (14) [verb] To warn in advance. FOREWENT (14) [verb] To precede, to go before. | [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. FOREWING (15) [noun] (in an insect) Either member of the pair of wings closest to the head. FOREWORD (15) [noun] An introductory section preceding the main text of a book or other document; a preface or introduction. FOREWORN (14) FOREYARD (15) [noun] A yard in front; front yard | [noun] A yard on the lower mast of a square-rigged foremast of a ship used to support the foresail. FORFEITS (14) [noun] A penalty for or consequence of a misdemeanor. | [noun] A thing forfeited; that which is taken from somebody in requital of a misdeed committed; that which is lost, or the right to which is alienated, by a crime, breach of contract, etc. | [noun] Something deposited and redeemable by a sportive fine as part of a game. FORFENDS (15) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FORGINGS (13) [noun] Pieces of metal shaped by heating and hammering. | [verb] Third-person singular present tense of forge, meaning to create or produce something, especially fraudulently or through hard work. FORGIVEN (15) [verb] To pardon; to waive any negative feeling or desire for punishment, retribution, or compensation. | [verb] To accord forgiveness. FORGIVER (15) [noun] One who forgives; a person who pardons or excuses another's wrongdoing. FORGIVES (15) [verb] To pardon; to waive any negative feeling or desire for punishment, retribution, or compensation. | [verb] To accord forgiveness. FORGOERS (12) [noun] Plural of forgoer; those who forgo or abstain from something. | [noun] Those who go before; predecessors. FORGOING (13) [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. | [verb] To do without, to abandon, to renounce. | [verb] To refrain from, to abstain from, to pass up, to withgo. FORJUDGE (20) FORKBALL (17) [noun] A baseball pitch, much like the sinker. FORKEDLY (19) FORKFULS (18) [noun] Plural of forkful; the amount that a fork can hold or carry, as of food. FORKIEST (15) [adjective] Most resembling or characteristic of a fork; having fork-like branches or projections. FORKLESS (15) FORKLIFT (18) [noun] A small industrial vehicle with a power-operated fork-like pronged platform that can be raised and lowered for insertion under a load, often on pallets, to be lifted and moved | [verb] To move or stack with, or as if with, such a vehicle. FORKLIKE (19) [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a fork; having prongs or branches that divide like a fork. FORKSFUL (18) [noun] Plural of forksful; the amount that a fork can hold or carry. FORMABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being formed or shaped. FORMALIN (13) [noun] A solution of formaldehyde in water; used as a disinfectant and to preserve biological specimens. FORMALLY (16) [adverb] In a formal manner. | [adverb] In accordance with official procedure. | [adverb] In accordance with rigorous rules. FORMANTS (13) [noun] A band of frequencies, in a sound spectrum, that have a greater intensity; they determine the quality of a sound; especially the characteristic sounds of the consonants. | [noun] A morpheme occurring as an affix to a root or stem, forming an extended root or stem. FORMATES (13) [verb] To assemble flying aircraft into formation; to fly in formation. FORMERLY (16) [adverb] At some time in the past | [adverb] Previously; once FORMLESS (13) [adjective] Without form; shapeless. | [adjective] Without the use of forms or templates. FORMULAE (13) [noun] Any mathematical rule expressed symbolically. | [noun] A symbolic expression of the structure of a compound. | [noun] A plan or method for dealing with a problem or for achieving a result. FORMULAS (13) [noun] Any mathematical rule expressed symbolically. | [noun] A symbolic expression of the structure of a compound. | [noun] A plan or method for dealing with a problem or for achieving a result. FORMWORK (20) [noun] A temporary mould, made from planks, into which concrete is poured FORNICAL (13) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a fornix (an arched anatomical structure, particularly in the brain or vagina). FORNICES (13) [noun] An archlike structure or fold. | [noun] Specifically, the arched bundle of fibres or axons at the base of the brain. FORRADER (12) [adverb] Pronunciation spelling of forwarder. FORSAKEN (15) [verb] To abandon, to give up, to leave (permanently), to renounce. | [adjective] Deserted; abandoned. | [adjective] Helpless. FORSAKER (15) [noun] One who forsakes; a person who abandons or deserts someone or something. FORSAKES (15) [verb] To abandon, to give up, to leave (permanently), to renounce. FORSOOTH (14) [adverb] Used as an intensifier, often ironic: indeed, really, truthfully. FORSPENT (13) FORSWEAR (14) [verb] To renounce or deny something, especially under oath. | [verb] To commit perjury; to break an oath. FORSWORE (14) [verb] Past tense of forswear; to renounce, reject, or swear off something. | [verb] To break an oath or promise. FORSWORN (14) [verb] To renounce or deny something, especially under oath. | [verb] To commit perjury; to break an oath. | [adjective] Having lied under oath; perjured. FORTIETH (14) [noun] The person or thing in the fortieth position. | [noun] One of forty equal parts of a whole. | [adjective] The ordinal form of the number forty. FORTRESS (11) [noun] A fortified place; a large and permanent fortification, sometimes including a town; for example a fort, a castle; a stronghold; a place of defense or security. | [noun] A position that, if obtained by the weaker side, will prevent penetration by the opposing side, generally achieving a draw. | [verb] To furnish with a fortress or with fortresses; to guard, to fortify. FORTUITY (14) [noun] The state of being fortuitous. | [noun] A fortuitous event; an accident. FORTUNED (12) FORTUNES (11) [noun] Destiny, especially favorable. | [noun] A prediction or set of predictions about a person's future provided by a fortune teller. | [noun] A small slip of paper with wise or vaguely prophetic words printed on it, baked into a fortune cookie. FORTYISH (17) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of someone who is approximately forty years old in appearance or manner. FORWARDS (15) [adverb] Toward the front. | [adverb] In a progressive direction. | [verb] To advance, promote. | [noun] An introductory section preceding the main text of a book or other document; a preface or introduction. FORZANDO (21) [adverb] With sudden force or emphasis, used as a musical direction to indicate a note or chord should be played with a sharp, forceful attack. FOSSETTE (11) [noun] A small dimple or depression, especially in the cheek or chin. FOSSICKS (17) [verb] To search for something; to rummage. | [verb] (British dialect) To be troublesome. FOSTERED (12) [verb] To nurture or bring up offspring, or to provide similar parental care to an unrelated child. | [verb] To cultivate and grow something. | [verb] To nurse or cherish something. FOSTERER (11) [noun] One who fosters; a person who cares for and raises a child or animal that is not their own biological offspring. FOUETTES (11) [noun] A spinning movement in ballet where a dancer repeatedly whips one leg around while turning on the supporting leg. FOUGHTEN (15) [verb] Past participle of fight, used in some dialects as an archaic or nonstandard form meaning "engaged in combat or conflict." FOULARDS (12) [noun] A lightweight silk or silk-and-cotton fabric, often with a printed pattern. | [noun] A piece of clothing, or a handkerchief, made with this fabric. FOULINGS (12) [noun] The plural of fouling, referring to instances of entanglement, collision, or rule violations in sports or nautical contexts. | [noun] Accumulations of unwanted material such as algae, barnacles, or corrosion on surfaces, particularly ship hulls or pipes. FOULNESS (11) [noun] The quality or state of being foul; moral or physical corruption or filthiness. | [noun] An offensive or obscene word or expression. FOUNDERS (12) [noun] One who founds or establishes (especially said of a company, project, organisation, state) | [noun] Someone for whose parents one has no data. | [noun] The iron worker in charge of the blast furnace and the smelting operation. FOUNDING (13) [verb] To start (an institution or organization). | [verb] To begin building. | [verb] To melt, especially of metal in an industrial setting. FOUNTAIN (11) [noun] A natural source of water; a spring. | [noun] An artificial, usually ornamental, water feature (usually in a garden or public place) consisting of one or more streams of water originating from a statue or other structure. | [noun] The structure from which an artificial fountain can issue. FOURCHEE (16) FOURFOLD (15) [noun] An algebraic variety of degree 4. | [verb] To increase to four times as much; to multiply by four | [adjective] Four times as great; quadruple. FOURGONS (12) [noun] Plural of fourgon, a baggage wagon or supply vehicle, particularly used in military contexts. FOURPLEX (20) [noun] A residential building containing four separate dwelling units. | [noun] A multiplex movie theater with four screens. FOURSOME (13) [noun] A group of four, a quartet or a game (such as golf) played by four players, especially by two teams of two. | [noun] A sex act between four people. FOURTEEN (11) [numeral] The cardinal number occurring after thirteen and before fifteen, represented in Roman numerals as XIV and in Arabic numerals as 14. FOURTHLY (17) [adverb] In the fourth place; fourth in a row. FOVEATED (15) [adjective] Having a fovea or foveae (small depressions or pits); relating to or characterized by a fovea, particularly the fovea centralis of the eye. | [verb] Past tense of foveate; to focus attention on a particular area while reducing peripheral awareness. FOVEOLAE (14) [noun] Plural of foveola; small pits or depressions, particularly in anatomical structures such as the retina of the eye. FOVEOLAR (14) [adjective] Relating to or resembling a foveola, a small pit or depression, particularly in anatomical structures such as the retina of the eye. FOVEOLAS (14) [noun] Plural of foveola, small anatomical pits or depressions, particularly referring to small foveae in the eye or other structures. FOVEOLES (14) [noun] Plural of foveole, small pit-like depressions or dimples, particularly used in anatomy to describe small fossae or indentations in biological structures. FOVEOLET (14) FOWLINGS (15) [noun] The act of committing fouls in sports or games. | [noun] Plural of fowling, referring to multiple instances of fouling or the sport of hunting wild birds. FOXFIRES (21) [noun] A luminescent glow produced by certain fungi (fox fire fungus) that grows on decaying wood. | [noun] A phosphorescent light sometimes seen in swamps and marshes, caused by spontaneous combustion of gases from decomposing organic matter. FOXGLOVE (22) [noun] Digitalis, a genus of about 20 species of herbaceous biennials native to the Old World, certain of which are prized for their showy flowers. The drug digitalis or digoxin was first isolated from the plant. FOXHOLES (21) [noun] The burrow in the ground where a fox lives. | [noun] A small pit dug into the ground as a shelter for protection against enemy fire. | [verb] To dig a military foxhole into, or convert into a foxhole by digging. FOXHOUND (22) [noun] A dog of a medium-sized breed developed for hunting. FOXHUNTS (21) [noun] A hunt for foxes, usually with dogs. | [noun] A hunt for radio transmitters; radiosport. | [verb] To hunt foxes, usually with dogs. FOXINESS (18) [noun] The quality of being foxy; cunningness, shrewdness, or attractiveness. | [noun] A reddish-brown discoloration or staining that appears on old paper or books. FOXSKINS (22) FOXTAILS (18) [noun] The tail of a fox. | [noun] A dry spikelet or spikelet seed and flower cluster of some grasses | [noun] A plant having a part resembling the tail of a fox or such spikelet. FOXTROTS (18) [noun] A ballroom dance with a slow-slow-quick-quick rhythm. | [noun] A pace with short steps, as in changing from trotting to walking. | [noun] The letter F in the ICAO spelling alphabet. FOZINESS (20) FRABJOUS (20) [adjective] Fabulous, joyous; great, wonderful. FRACASES (13) [noun] A noisy disorderly quarrel, fight, brawl, disturbance or scrap. FRACTALS (13) [noun] A mathematical set that has a non-integer and constant Hausdorff dimension; a geometric figure that is self-similar at all scales. | [noun] An object, system, or idea that exhibits a fractal-like property. FRACTION (13) [noun] A part of a whole, especially a comparatively small part. | [noun] A ratio of two numbers, the numerator and the denominator, usually written one above the other and separated by a horizontal bar. | [noun] A component of a mixture, separated by fractionation. FRACTURE (13) [noun] An instance of breaking, a place where something has broken. | [noun] A break in bone or cartilage. | [noun] A fault or crack in a rock. FRACTURS (13) FRAENUMS (13) [noun] A frenulum. FRAGGING (14) [verb] To deliberately kill (one's superior officer) with a fragmentation grenade. | [verb] To hit with the explosion of a fragmentation grenade. | [verb] To kill. FRAGMENT (14) [noun] A part broken off; a small, detached portion; an imperfect part, either physically or not | [noun] (grammar) A sentence not containing a subject or a predicate. | [noun] An incomplete portion of code. FRAGRANT (12) [adjective] Sweet-smelling; having a pleasant (usually strong) scent or fragrance. FRAILEST (11) [adjective] Easily broken physically; not firm or durable; liable to fail and perish | [adjective] Weak; infirm. | [adjective] Mentally fragile. FRAKTURS (15) [noun] A style of German Gothic typeface characterized by sharp, angular lines and heavy strokes. FRAMABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being framed or suitable for framing. | [adjective] Able to be falsely incriminated or set up. FRAMINGS (14) [noun] The plural of framing; structural frameworks or borders, as in construction or picture frames. | [noun] The act of constructing frames or frameworks. | [noun] In communication, the manner in which information is presented or contextualized to influence perception. FRANCIUM (15) [noun] The chemical element (symbol Fr) with an atomic number of 87. It is an intensely radioactive alkali metal that is not found in nature. | [noun] A single atom of this element. FRANKERS (15) [noun] People who frank mail; those who use a frank or signature to indicate postage has been paid. | [noun] People who speak openly or honestly; those who are frank in manner. FRANKEST (15) [adjective] Honest, especially in a manner that seems slightly blunt; candid; not reserved or disguised. | [adjective] Unmistakable, clinically obvious, self-evident | [adjective] Unbounded by restrictions, limitations, etc.; free. FRANKING (16) [verb] To place a frank on an envelope. | [verb] To exempt from charge for postage, as a letter, package, or packet, etc. | [verb] To send by public conveyance free of expense. FRANKLIN (15) [noun] A freeholder, especially as belonging to a class of landowners in the 14th and 15th century ranking below the gentry. FRAPPING (16) [verb] To draw together tightly; to secure by many turns of a lashing. | [verb] To strike. | [noun] (usually plural) Rope lashed tightly over the rigging or other area. FRAUGHTS (15) [verb] Third person singular simple present indicative form of "fraught," meaning to load or burden heavily. | [adjective] Plural or alternative form relating to being filled with or characterized by something undesirable. FRAULEIN (11) [noun] A young German woman. FRAYINGS (15) [noun] Plural of fraying; instances of threads or fibers becoming worn or tattered at the edges. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of fray; the action of threads or fabric becoming worn or tattered. FRAZZLED (30) [verb] To fray or wear down, especially at the edges. | [verb] To drain emotionally or physically. | [adjective] Frayed at the edges FRAZZLES (29) [verb] To fray or wear down, especially at the edges. | [verb] To drain emotionally or physically. FREAKIER (15) [adjective] Resembling a freak. | [adjective] Odd; bizarre; unusual. | [adjective] Scary; frightening. FREAKILY (18) [adverb] In a freaky or strange manner; in an unusual or bizarre way. FREAKING (16) [verb] To make greatly distressed and/or a discomposed appearance | [verb] To be placed or place someone under the influence of a psychedelic drug | [verb] To streak; to variegate FREAKISH (18) [adjective] Resembling a freak. | [adjective] Strange, unusual, abnormal or bizarre. | [adjective] Capricious, unpredictable. FREAKOUT (15) [noun] A frightening or disorientating experience, especially one that results from the use of a hallucinogenic drug. | [noun] An occurrence of unrestrained or irrational behaviour. FRECKLED (18) [adjective] Having freckles; covered with freckles. FRECKLES (17) [noun] A small brownish or reddish pigmentation spot on the surface of the skin. | [noun] Any small spot or discoloration. | [noun] A small sweet consisting of a flattish mound of chocolate covered in hundreds and thousands. FREEBASE (13) [noun] The purified, dry form of an amine, especially an alkaloid natural product, that is normally used in solution. | [noun] (specifically) The purified, dry form of certain illegal drugs, especially cocaine. | [verb] To purify a drug by crystallization. FREEBEES (13) [noun] Something which is free; a giveaway or handout. FREEBIES (13) [noun] Something which is free; a giveaway or handout. FREEBOOT (13) [verb] To pillage or plunder. | [verb] To rehost (online media) without legal authorization. FREEBORN (13) [adjective] Born free rather than in bondage or as a slave FREEDMAN (14) [noun] A man who has been released from a condition of slavery. FREEDMEN (14) [noun] A man who has been released from a condition of slavery. FREEDOMS (14) [noun] The state of being free, of not being imprisoned or enslaved. | [noun] The lack of a specific constraint, or of constraints in general; a state of being free, unconstrained. | [noun] Frankness; openness; unreservedness. FREEFORM (16) [adjective] Having an unconventional, variable or asymmetric form. | [adjective] Referring to a roleplaying game which does not use a formal system of rules. FREEHAND (15) [verb] To conduct a procedure involving use of the hands without any helping device or guide. | [adjective] Drawn using the hand without any helping device. FREEHOLD (15) [noun] The tenure of property held in fee simple for life. | [noun] An estate held by a tenure of this type. | [verb] To dispense property in this way. FREELOAD (12) [verb] To live off the generosity or hospitality of others FREENESS (11) [noun] The quality or state of being free; freedom or liberty. FREESIAS (11) [noun] Any flowering plant of the genus Freesia, native to South Africa. FREEWAYS (17) [noun] A road designed for safe, high-speed operation of motor vehicles through the elimination of at-grade intersections, usually divided and having at least two lanes in each direction; a dual carriageway with no at-grade crossings, a motorway. | [noun] A toll-free highway. FREEWILL (14) [adjective] Voluntary, done of one's own accord FREEZERS (20) [noun] An appliance or room used to store food or other perishable items at temperatures below 0° Celsius (32° Fahrenheit). | [noun] The section of a refrigerator used to store food or other perishable items at a temperature below 0° Celsius (32° Fahrenheit). | [noun] (Parkinson's disease) A Parkinson's disease patient that experiences freezing of gait (FOG) episodes. FREEZING (21) [verb] Especially of a liquid, to become solid due to low temperature. | [verb] To lower something's temperature to the point that it freezes or becomes hard. | [verb] To drop to a temperature below zero degrees celsius, where water turns to ice. FREIGHTS (15) [noun] Payment for transportation. | [noun] Goods or items in transport. | [noun] Transport of goods. FREMITUS (13) [noun] A vibration felt through the chest wall during physical examination, typically caused by vocal vibrations or abnormal lung sounds. FRENCHED (17) [verb] To trim the meat from the end of a bone, as in preparing lamb chops or a rack of lamb for cooking. | [verb] To cut food into thin strips, as in french fries. FRENCHES (16) [verb] Third person singular of "french," meaning to kiss with an open mouth and tongue contact. | [verb] To cut into thin strips, as in french fries. FRENETIC (13) [noun] One who is frenetic. | [adjective] Fast, harried; having extreme enthusiasm or energy. | [adjective] Mentally deranged, insane. FRENULUM (13) [noun] A small fold of tissue that prevents an organ in the body from moving too far. FRENZIED (21) [adjective] In a state of hurry, panic or wild activity. FRENZIES (20) [noun] A state of wild activity or panic. | [noun] A violent agitation of the mind approaching madness; rage. FRENZILY (23) FREQUENT (20) [adjective] Done or occurring often; common. | [adjective] Occurring at short intervals. | [adjective] Addicted to any course of conduct; inclined to indulge in any practice; habitual; persistent. | [verb] To visit often. FRESCOED (14) [verb] To paint using fresco. | [adjective] Painted with frescos FRESCOER (13) FRESCOES (13) [noun] A cool, refreshing state of the air; coolness, duskiness, shade. | [noun] An artwork made by applying water-based pigment to wet or fresh lime mortar or plaster. | [noun] The technique used to make such an artwork. FRESHENS (14) [verb] To become fresh. | [verb] (of wind) To become stronger. | [verb] (of a cow) To begin or resume giving milk, especially after calving; to cause to resume giving milk. FRESHEST (14) [adjective] Newly produced or obtained; recent. | [adjective] (of food) Not cooked, dried, frozen, or spoiled. | [adjective] (of plant material) Still green and not dried. FRESHETS (14) [noun] A flood resulting from heavy rain or a spring thaw. | [noun] A small stream, especially one flowing into the sea. FRESHING (15) FRESHMAN (16) [noun] A novice; one in the rudiments of knowledge. | [noun] A person of either sex entering the first year of an institution, especially a high school (ninth grade), a university, or legislative body. FRESHMEN (16) [noun] A novice; one in the rudiments of knowledge. | [noun] A person of either sex entering the first year of an institution, especially a high school (ninth grade), a university, or legislative body. FRESNELS (11) [noun] A unit of frequency equal to 1012 hertz, or one terahertz. | [noun] A Fresnel lens or a light feature using such a lens FRETLESS (11) FRETSAWS (14) [noun] A saw consisting of a metal frame having a fine-toothed narrow blade held under tension, used in making curved cuts. FRETSOME (13) FRETTERS (11) FRETTIER (11) FRETTING (12) [verb] Especially when describing animals: to consume, devour, or eat. | [verb] To chafe or irritate; to worry. | [verb] To make rough, to agitate or disturb; to cause to ripple. FRETWORK (18) [noun] Ornamental woodwork either carved in low relief or cut through FRIARIES (11) [noun] House or dwelling where friars or members of certain religious communities live FRIBBLED (16) FRIBBLER (15) FRIBBLES (15) [noun] A trifling action. | [noun] A trifler. | [noun] A frivolous, contemptible fellow; a fop. FRICANDO (14) FRICTION (13) [noun] The rubbing of one object or surface against another. | [noun] A force that resists the relative motion or tendency to such motion of two bodies in contact. | [noun] Massage of the body to restore circulation. FRIENDED (13) [verb] To act as a friend to, to befriend; to be friendly to, to help. | [verb] To add (a person) to a list of friends on a social networking site; to officially designate (someone) as a friend. | [adjective] Supplied with friends. FRIENDLY (15) [noun] A game which is of no consequence in terms of ranking, betting etc. | [noun] A person or entity on the same side in a conflict. | [adjective] Generally warm, approachable and easy to relate with in character. | [adverb] In a friendly manner, like a friend. FRIGATES (12) [noun] An obsolete type of sailing warship with a single continuous gun deck, typically used for patrolling, blockading, etc, but not in line of battle. | [noun] A 19th-century warship combining sail and steam propulsion, typically of ironclad timber construction, supplementing and superseding sailing ships of the battle line until made obsolete by the development of the solely steam-propelled iron battleship. | [noun] A modern type of warship, smaller than a destroyer, originally (WWII) introduced as an anti-submarine vessel but now general purpose. FRIGGING (14) [verb] To fidget, to wriggle around | [verb] To masturbate | [verb] To fuck (misapplied euphemism) FRIGHTED (16) [verb] To frighten. FRIGHTEN (15) [verb] To cause to feel fear; to scare; to cause to feel alarm or fright. FRIGIDLY (16) FRIJOLES (18) [noun] (in Mexico, the southwestern United States, and the West Indies) Any cultivated bean of the genus Phaseolus, especially the black seed of a variety of Phaseolus vulgaris. | [noun] (in Mexico, the southwestern United States, and the West Indies) The bean-like seed of any of several related plants, such as the cowpea, used as food. FRILLERS (11) FRILLIER (11) [adjective] Having frills; frilled. | [adjective] Over-elaborate or showy in character or appearance. FRILLING (12) [verb] To make into a frill. | [verb] To become wrinkled. | [verb] To provide or decorate with a frill or frills; to turn back in crimped plaits. FRINGIER (12) FRINGING (13) [verb] To decorate with fringe. | [verb] To serve as a fringe. | [noun] A fringe or border. FRIPPERY (18) [noun] Ostentation, as in fancy clothing. | [noun] Useless things; trifles. | [noun] Cast-off clothes. FRISETTE (11) FRISEURS (11) [noun] A hairdresser. FRISKERS (15) FRISKETS (15) [noun] A thin frame in a printing press that holds the sheet of paper in position and acts as a mask. FRISKIER (15) [adjective] Abounding in energy or playfulness | [adjective] Sexually aroused FRISKILY (18) FRISKING (16) [verb] To frolic, gambol, skip, dance, leap. | [verb] To search somebody by feeling his or her body and clothing. | [noun] The action or motion of one who frisks; a gambol. FRISSONS (11) [noun] A sudden surge of excitement. | [noun] A shiver, a thrill. FRITTATA (11) [noun] A form of omelette in which vegetables, cheese etc are mixed into the eggs and cooked together. FRITTERS (11) [noun] A dish made by deep-frying food coated in batter. | [noun] A fragment; a shred; a small piece. | [verb] (often with about, around, or away) To squander or waste time, money, or other resources; e.g. occupy oneself idly or without clear purpose, to tinker with an unimportant part of a project, to dally, sometimes as a form of procrastination. FRITTING (12) [verb] To add frit to a glass or ceramic mixture | [verb] To prepare by heat (the materials for making glass); to fuse partially. | [noun] The formation of frit or slag by heat with only incipient fusion. FRIVOLED (15) [verb] To behave frivolously. | [verb] To trifle. FRIVOLER (14) FRIZETTE (20) FRIZZERS (29) FRIZZIER (29) [adjective] Formed of a mass of small, tight, wiry curls; unruly or extending in all directions. FRIZZILY (32) FRIZZING (30) [verb] Of hair, to form into a mass of tight curls. | [verb] To curl; to make frizzy. | [verb] To form into little burs, knobs, or tufts, as the nap of cloth. FRIZZLED (30) [verb] To fry something until crisp and curled. | [verb] To scorch. | [verb] To fry noisily, sizzle. FRIZZLER (29) FRIZZLES (29) [verb] To fry something until crisp and curled. | [verb] To scorch. | [verb] To fry noisily, sizzle. FROCKING (18) FROGEYED (16) FROGEYES (15) FROGFISH (18) [noun] Any of several benthic anglerfish, of the family Antennariidae, having a frog-like mouth with a lure. | [noun] Any of the benthic ray-finned fish of the family Batrachoididae (the sole family of order Batrachoidiformes), which are ambush predators and have a toad-like appearance. | [noun] Any fish of genus Lophius. FROGGIER (13) FROGGING (14) [verb] To hunt or trap frogs. | [verb] To use a pronged plater to transfer (cells) to another plate. | [verb] To spatchcock (a chicken). FROGLIKE (16) FROLICKY (20) FROMAGES (14) FROMENTY (16) FRONDEUR (12) [noun] A political rebel FRONDOSE (12) FRONTAGE (12) [noun] The front part of a property or building that faces the street. | [noun] The land between a property and the street. | [noun] The length of a property along a street. FRONTALS (11) [noun] The bone at the front of the skull, behind the forehead. | [noun] The façade of a building. | [noun] A drapery covering the front of an altar. FRONTIER (11) [noun] The part of a country which borders or faces another country or unsettled region | [noun] The most advanced or recent version of something; leading edge. | [noun] An outwork of a fortification. FRONTING (12) [verb] To face (on, to); to be pointed in a given direction. | [verb] To face, be opposite to. | [verb] To face up to, to meet head-on, to confront. FRONTLET (11) [noun] The forehead. | [noun] The forehead of an animal, especially of a deer or stag (including the antlers). | [noun] An ornament worn on the forehead. FRONTONS (11) [noun] A pediment. | [noun] A two-walled or single-walled court used as a playing area for Basque pelota. FROSTBIT (13) FROSTEDS (12) FROSTIER (11) [adjective] Cold, chilly. | [adjective] Having frost on it. | [adjective] Having an aloof or inhospitable manner. FROSTILY (14) FROSTING (12) [verb] To cover with frost. | [verb] To become covered with frost. | [verb] To coat (something, e.g. a cake) with icing to resemble frost. FROTHIER (14) [adjective] Foamy or churned to the point of becoming infused with bubbles. | [adjective] Lightweight; lacking depth or substance FROTHILY (17) FROTHING (15) [verb] To create froth in (a liquid). | [verb] (of a liquid) To bubble. | [verb] To spit, vent, or eject, as froth. FROTTAGE (12) [noun] A method of making an image by placing a piece of paper against an object and then rubbing over it, usually with a pencil or charcoal. | [noun] An image so made. | [noun] The practice of rubbing parts of the body against those of another person for sexual stimulation. FROTTEUR (11) [noun] One who commits an act of frotteurism. FROUFROU (14) [noun] A rustling sound, as of silk fabric. FROUNCED (14) FROUNCES (13) FROUZIER (20) FROWNERS (14) FROWNING (15) [verb] To have a frown on one's face. | [verb] To manifest displeasure or disapprobation; to look with disfavour or threateningly. | [verb] To repress or repel by expressing displeasure or disapproval; to rebuke with a look. FROWSIER (14) [adjective] Having a dingy, neglected, and scruffy appearance. FROWSTED (15) [verb] To enjoy being in a warm, close, stuffy place. FROWZIER (23) [adjective] Having a dingy, neglected, and scruffy appearance. FROWZILY (26) FROZENLY (23) FRUCTIFY (19) [verb] To bear fruit; to generate useful products or ideas. | [verb] To make productive or fruitful. | [verb] To be satisfied sexually. FRUCTOSE (13) [noun] A monosaccharide ketose sugar, formula C6H12O6. FRUGALLY (15) FRUGGING (14) [noun] The process whereby a product marketer falsely purports to be a market researcher conducting a statistical survey, when in reality the "researcher" is attempting to solicit a donation. FRUITAGE (12) [noun] Fruit, collectively. | [noun] Product or result of any action, effect, good, or ill. FRUITERS (11) [noun] Any organism that fruits. | [noun] A ship for transporting fruit. FRUITFUL (14) [adjective] Favourable to the growth of fruit or useful vegetation; not barren. | [adjective] Being productive in any sense; yielding benefits. FRUITIER (11) [adjective] Containing fruit or fruit flavoring. | [adjective] Similar to fruit or tasting of fruit. | [adjective] Mad, crazy. FRUITILY (14) FRUITING (12) [verb] To produce fruit, seeds, or spores. | [noun] Fruiting body | [noun] The act of producing fruit, seeds, or spores; fructification. FRUITION (11) [noun] The fulfillment of something worked for. | [noun] The enjoyment derived from a possession. | [noun] The condition of bearing fruit. FRUITLET (11) [noun] A young, unripe fruit FRUMENTY (16) [noun] A porridge made by boiling hulled wheat, typically with additional ingredients such as milk, egg yolks, and/or almond milk, traditionally served with venison or porpoise. FRUMPIER (15) [adjective] Dowdy, unkempt, or unfashionable. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FRUMPILY (18) FRUMPISH (18) [adjective] Poorly dressed; wearing drab, lifeless, ill-fitting clothing, or being clothing of this kind. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FRUSTULE (11) [noun] The siliceous shell of a diatom. FRUSTUMS (13) [noun] A cone or pyramid whose tip has been truncated by a plane parallel to its base. | [noun] A portion of a sphere, or in general any solid, delimited by two parallel planes. FUBSIEST (13) [adjective] Short and stout; low and wide FUCHSIAS (16) [noun] A popular garden plant, of the genus Fuchsia, of the Onagraceae family, shrubs with red, pink or purple flowers. | [noun] A purplish-red colour, the color of fuchsin, an aniline dye. FUCHSINE (16) [noun] A dye (rosaniline hydrochloride, C20H19N3·HCl) usually a deep red or magenta colour. FUCHSINS (16) FUCOIDAL (14) FUDDLING (14) [verb] To confuse or befuddle. | [verb] To intoxicate. | [verb] To become intoxicated; to get drunk. FUEHRERS (14) [noun] A leader, especially one exercising the powers of a tyrant | [noun] (definite) Adolf Hitler when he was the chancellor of Nazi Germany FUELLERS (11) FUELLING (12) [verb] To provide with fuel. | [verb] To exacerbate, to cause to grow or become greater. | [noun] The act or process by which something is fueled. FUELWOOD (15) [noun] Wood grown or felled for use as commercial fuel FUGACITY (17) [noun] A measure of the tendency of a fluid to expand or escape. | [noun] A measure of the relative stability of different phases of a substance under the same conditions. | [noun] Transience. FUGGIEST (13) [adjective] Muggy, stuffy, with bad ventilation FUGITIVE (15) [noun] A person who flees or escapes and travels secretly from place to place, and sometimes using disguises and aliases to conceal his/her identity, as to avoid law authorities in order to avoid an arrest or prosecution; or to avoid some other unwanted situation. | [adjective] Fleeing or running away | [adjective] Transient, fleeting or ephemeral FUGLEMAN (14) [noun] The member of a military group who leads the way or demonstrates drill; hence, someone who keeps the beat or timing, and/or demonstrates motions in other contexts. | [noun] (by extension) A political leader, or a ringleader. FUGLEMEN (14) [noun] The member of a military group who leads the way or demonstrates drill; hence, someone who keeps the beat or timing, and/or demonstrates motions in other contexts. | [noun] (by extension) A political leader, or a ringleader. FUGUISTS (12) FULCRUMS (15) [noun] The support about which a lever pivots. | [noun] A crux or pivot; a central point. FULFILLS (14) [verb] To satisfy, carry out, bring to completion (an obligation, a requirement, etc.). | [verb] To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest. | [verb] To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.). FULLBACK (19) [noun] A player who plays on the left or right side of defence. | [noun] The player who wears the number 15 jersey at the start of play. The last line of defence responsible for catching punts. | [noun] An offensive back whose primary jobs are to block in advance of the halfback on running plays and for the quarterback on passing plays. FULLERED (12) [verb] To form a groove or channel in, by a fuller or set hammer. FULLFACE (16) FULLNESS (11) [noun] Being full; completeness. | [noun] The degree to which a space is full. | [noun] The degree to which fate has become known. FULMINED (14) FULMINES (13) FULMINIC (15) FUMARASE (13) FUMARATE (13) [noun] Any salt or ester of fumaric acid; they are produced in the body as part of the urea cycle. FUMAROLE (13) [noun] An opening in the ground that emits steam and gases due to volcanic activity. FUMATORY (16) FUMBLERS (15) FUMBLING (16) [verb] To handle nervously or awkwardly. | [verb] To grope awkwardly in trying to find something | [verb] To blunder uncertainly. FUMELESS (13) FUMELIKE (17) FUMETTES (13) FUMIGANT (14) [noun] Any substance used, in the gaseous state, to fumigate or disinfect. FUMIGATE (14) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMINGLY (17) FUMITORY (16) [noun] A plant of the taxonomic genus Fumaria, which are annual herbaceous flowering plants in the family Papaveraceae, native to temperate Europe and Asia. FUNCTION (13) [noun] What something does or is used for. | [noun] A professional or official position. | [noun] An official or social occasion. FUNCTORS (13) [noun] (grammar) A function word. | [noun] A function object. | [noun] A category homomorphism; a morphism from a source category to a target category which maps objects to objects and arrows to arrows, in such a way as to preserve domains and codomains (of the arrows) as well as composition and identities. FUNERALS (11) [noun] A ceremony to honour and remember a deceased person. Often distinguished from a memorial service by the presence of the body of the deceased. | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A funeral sermon. FUNERARY (14) [adjective] Of or relating to a funeral. FUNEREAL (11) [adjective] Of or relating to a funeral. | [adjective] Similar to a funeral in mood; dignified or solemn. FUNFAIRS (14) [noun] A travelling amusement park. FUNGIBLE (14) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Any fungible item. | [adjective] Able to be substituted for something of equal value or utility; interchangeable, exchangeable, replaceable. FUNGOIDS (13) [noun] A fungus, or some other organism closely resembling a fungus. FUNGUSES (12) [noun] Any member of the kingdom Fungi; a eukaryotic organism typically having chitin cell walls but no chlorophyll or plastids. Fungi may be unicellular or multicellular. | [noun] A spongy, abnormal excrescence, such as excessive granulation tissue formed in a wound. FUNICLES (13) [noun] The stalk or stem of an ovule or seed. | [noun] Intermediate segments of the antenna of chalcid wasps adjoining the pedicel basally and the clava distally. FUNICULI (13) [noun] Any of several cordlike structures, especially the umbilical cord, or a bundle of nerve fibres in the spinal cord | [noun] A stalk that connects the seed (or ovule) with the placenta FUNKIEST (15) [adjective] Offbeat, unconventional or eccentric. | [adjective] Not quite right; of questionable quality; not appropriate to the context. | [adjective] Cool; great; excellent. FUNNELED (12) [verb] To use a funnel. | [verb] To proceed through a narrow gap or passageway akin to a funnel; to condense or narrow. | [verb] To channel, direct, or focus (emotions, money, resources, etc.). FUNNIEST (11) [adjective] Amusing; humorous; comical. | [adjective] Strange or unusual, often implying unpleasant. | [adjective] Showing unexpected resentment. FUNNYMAN (16) [noun] Comedian FUNNYMEN (16) [noun] Comedian FURANOSE (11) FURBELOW (16) [noun] A frill, flounce, or ruffle, as on clothing; a decorative piece of fabric, especially one gathered or pleated as into a ruffle, etc. | [noun] A small, showy ornamentation. | [verb] To adorn with a furbelow; to ornament. FURCATED (14) [adjective] Forked or branched FURCATES (13) [verb] To fork or branch out. FURCRAEA (13) FURCULAE (13) [noun] A forked process or structure, generally two-pronged. | [noun] The forked bone formed by the fusion of the clavicles in birds, the wishbone or merrythought. | [noun] The (two-pronged) forked, somewhat tail-like organ held bent forward and secured by a catch beneath most species of Collembola (springtails), with which they jump by releasing the catch abruptly when alarmed. FURCULAR (13) FURCULUM (15) FURFURAL (14) [noun] A heterocyclic aldehyde derivative of furan; it is obtained commercially from bran, and has several industrial uses. FURFURAN (14) FURFURES (14) FURIBUND (14) FURLABLE (13) FURLONGS (12) [noun] A unit of length equal to 220 yards, 1/8 mile, or 201.168 meters, now only used in measuring distances in horse racing. FURLOUGH (15) [noun] A leave of absence or vacation. | [noun] The documents authorizing such leave. | [noun] A period of unpaid time off, used by an employer to reduce costs. FURMENTY (16) FURNACED (14) FURNACES (13) [noun] An industrial heating device, e.g. for smelting metal or baking ceramics. | [noun] A device that provides heat for a building; a space heater. | [noun] Any area that is excessively hot. FURRIERS (11) [noun] A person who sells, makes, repairs, alters, cleans, or otherwise deals in clothing made of fur. | [noun] A person who secures accommodation for an army. FURRIERY (14) [noun] Furs in general. | [noun] The business of a furrier; trade in furs. FURRIEST (11) [adjective] Covered with fur, or with something resembling fur. | [adjective] Of or related to the furry subculture. FURRINER (11) FURRINGS (12) FURROWED (15) [verb] To cut one or more grooves in (the ground, etc.). | [verb] To wrinkle. | [verb] To pull one's brows or eyebrows together due to concentration, worry, etc. FURROWER (14) FURTHERS (14) [verb] To help forward; to assist. | [verb] To encourage growth; to support progress or growth of something; to promote. FURTHEST (14) FURUNCLE (13) [noun] A boil or infected, inflamed, pus-filled sore. FURZIEST (20) FUSELAGE (12) [noun] (aeronautical) The main body of an aerospace vehicle; the long central structure of an aircraft to which the wings (or rotors), tail, and engines are attached, and which accommodates crew and cargo. FUSELESS (11) FUSIFORM (16) [adjective] Shaped like a spindle with yarn spun on it; having round or roundish cross-section and tapering at each end. FUSILEER (11) [noun] An infantryman armed with a form of flintlock musket | [noun] A soldier in any of several regiments that once fought with such weapons | [noun] A fish in family Caesionidae, related to snappers FUSILIER (11) [noun] An infantryman armed with a form of flintlock musket | [noun] A soldier in any of several regiments that once fought with such weapons | [noun] A fish in family Caesionidae, related to snappers FUSILLIS (11) FUSSIEST (11) [adjective] Anxious or particular about petty details. | [adjective] Having a tendency to fuss, cry, or be bad-tempered/ill-tempered (especially of babies). FUSSPOTS (13) [noun] A person who makes a fuss, particularly about trivial things. FUSTIANS (11) FUSTIEST (11) [adjective] Moldy or musty. | [adjective] Stale-smelling or stuffy. | [adjective] (by extension) Old-fashioned, refusing to change or update. FUTHARCS (16) FUTHARKS (18) [noun] The Germanic runic alphabet; especially specifically the Elder or Younger futhark alphabet (of Scandinavia and the European mainland), as contrasted with the Anglo-Saxon futhorc. FUTHORCS (16) [noun] The Runic alphabet as used to write Old English. FUTHORKS (18) [noun] The Runic alphabet as used to write Old English. FUTILELY (14) FUTILITY (14) [noun] The quality of being futile or useless. | [noun] Something, especially an act, that is futile. | [noun] Unimportance. FUTTOCKS (17) [noun] Any of the curved rib-like timbers that form the frame of a wooden ship. FUTURISM (13) [noun] An early 20th century avant-garde art movement focused on speed, the mechanical, and the modern, which took a deeply antagonistic attitude to traditional artistic conventions. | [noun] The study and prediction of possible futures. | [noun] The Jewish expectation of the messiah in the future rather than recognizing him in the presence of Christ. FUTURIST (11) [noun] An adherent to the principles of the artistic movement of futurism. | [noun] One who studies and predicts possible futures. | [adjective] In the style of futurism. FUTURITY (14) [noun] The future. | [noun] The state of being in the future. | [noun] A future event. FUZZIEST (29) [adjective] Covered with fuzz or a large number of tiny loose fibres like a carpet or many stuffed animals | [adjective] Vague or imprecise. | [adjective] Not clear; unfocused.

9-Letter Words (1013)

FABRICANT (16) FABRICATE (16) [verb] To form into a whole by uniting its parts; to construct; to build. | [verb] To form by art and labor; to manufacture; to produce. | [verb] To invent and form; to forge; to devise falsely. FABULISTS (14) [noun] One who writes or tells fables. | [noun] A liar. FACECLOTH (19) [noun] A flannel for washing the face. | [noun] A cloth laid over the face of a corpse. FACEPLATE (16) [noun] A removable protective shield separating the inner workings of a machine from operator and observer. | [noun] A rigid flat surface that has an active role in the interaction of a device with an operator or user. FACETIOUS (14) [adjective] Treating serious issues with (often deliberately) inappropriate humour; flippant. | [adjective] Pleasantly humorous; jocular. FACETTING (15) [verb] The present participle of facet, meaning to cut facets on a gemstone or to give multiple aspects or dimensions to something. FACSIMILE (16) [noun] A copy or reproduction. | [noun] A fax, a machine for making and sending copies of printed material and images via radio or telephone network. | [noun] The image sent by the machine itself. FACTICITY (19) [noun] The quality or state of being a fact. | [noun] (specifically) In existentialism, the state of being in the world without any knowable reason for such existence, or of being in a particular state of affairs which one has no control over. | [noun] A fact that is not changeable or that is assumed to be true without further evaluation. FACTIONAL (14) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or composed of factions. FACTITIVE (17) [adjective] (of a verb) Taking a complement that expresses a result along with a direct object, or inherently implying a complement; or synonymous with causative. | [adjective] (of a verb) Factive. FACTORAGE (15) [noun] The commission paid to a factor | [noun] The business of a factor. FACTORIAL (14) [noun] The result of multiplying a given number of consecutive integers from 1 to the given number. In equations, it is symbolized by an exclamation mark (!). For example, 5! = 1 × 2 × 3 × 4 × 5 = 120. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a factor or factorial. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a factor, a kind of business agent. FACTORIES (14) [noun] A trading establishment, especially set up by merchants working in a foreign country. | [noun] The position or state of being a factor. | [noun] A building or other place where manufacturing takes place. FACTORING (15) [verb] To find all the factors of (a number or other mathematical object) (the objects that divide it evenly). | [verb] (of a number or other mathematical object) To be a product of other objects. | [verb] (commercial) To sell a debt or debts to an agent (the factor) to collect. FACTORIZE (23) [verb] To create a list of the factors of. | [verb] To divide an expression into a list of items that, when multiplied together, will produce the original quantity. | [verb] To warn not to pay or give up goods. FACTOTUMS (16) [noun] A person having many diverse activities or responsibilities. | [noun] A general servant. | [noun] An individual employed to do all sorts of duties. FACTUALLY (17) [adverb] In a factual manner FACULTIES (14) [noun] The academic staff at schools, colleges, universities or not-for-profit research institutes, as opposed to the students or support staff. | [noun] A division of a university. | [noun] An ability, skill, or power, often plural. FADEAWAYS (19) [noun] Plural of fadeaway, a basketball shot taken while moving away from the basket. | [noun] Gradual disappearances or diminishments. FAGGOTING (15) [noun] A decoration of a fabric achieved by removing threads and tying others into bunches. | [noun] The joining of hemmed edges of fabric with crisscrossed threads. FAGOTINGS (14) [noun] Decorative openwork or embroidery created by pulling out threads from fabric and tying the remaining threads together in a pattern. | [noun] Bundles of sticks or twigs bound together, especially as used for fuel or in construction. FAHLBANDS (18) [noun] Bands or streaks of discolored rock formed by the oxidation of sulfide minerals, typically found in metamorphic rocks. FAILINGLY (16) [adverb] In a failing manner; with failure or decline. FAINEANTS (12) [noun] An irresponsible or lazy person. FAINTNESS (12) [noun] The quality or state of being faint; weakness or dimness. | [noun] A temporary loss of consciousness or fainting spell. FAIRISHLY (18) FAIRLEADS (13) [noun] A device to guide a line, rope or cable around an object or out of the way, or to stop it from moving laterally FAIRYISMS (17) FAIRYLAND (16) [noun] The imaginary land or abode of fairies. | [adjective] Having qualities ascribed to fairies and their realm; fanciful, delicate, surreal, or diminutive. FAIRYLIKE (19) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a fairy; delicate, ethereal, or magical in appearance. FAITHFULS (18) [noun] Plural of faithful; people who are loyal, devoted, or religious believers. | [adjective] Plural form used attributively to describe multiple loyal or devoted persons or things. FAITHLESS (15) [adjective] Lacking faith; lacking belief in something. | [adjective] Not believing in God, religion, or a comparable ideology. | [adjective] Unfaithful (said of people, towards their partners) FALCHIONS (17) [noun] A somewhat curved, single-edged medieval sword of European origin, with the cutting edge on its convex side, whose design is reminiscent of the Persian scimitar and the Chinese dao. | [noun] A billhook. FALCIFORM (19) [adjective] Sickle-shaped. FALCONERS (14) [noun] A person who breeds or trains hawks or other birds of prey for taking birds or game. | [noun] One who follows the sport of fowling with hawks. FALCONETS (14) [noun] A small or young falcon. | [noun] Any of various small, tropical Asian falcons of the genus Microhierax found in Southeast Asia. | [noun] A light cannon developed in the late 15th century and decorated with an image of a falcon. FALCONINE (14) FALDERALS (13) [noun] Nonsense or foolishness. | [noun] A decorative object of little value; a trifle or gewgaw. FALDEROLS (13) [noun] Showy but worthless ornaments or trinkets. | [noun] Nonsensical talk or ideas; foolish nonsense. FALDSTOOL (13) [noun] A portable, folding chair used by a bishop when away from his throne. | [noun] Any similar stool used in a divine service (such as the coronation of a British monarch). FALLACIES (14) [noun] Deceptive or false appearance; that which misleads the eye or the mind. | [noun] An argument, or apparent argument, which professes to be decisive of the matter at issue, while in reality it is not. A specious argument. FALLALERY (15) [noun] Costume jewelry; trinkets; fake jewelry as opposed to "real" (fine) jewelry. FALLAWAYS (18) [noun] A shot taken while moving away from the basket. FALLBACKS (20) [noun] An act of falling back. | [noun] A backup plan or contingency strategy; an alternative which can be used if something goes wrong with the main plan; a recourse. | [noun] A reduction in bitumen softening point, sometimes called refluxing or overheating in a relatively closed container. FALLOWING (16) [verb] To make land fallow for agricultural purposes. | [noun] A period during which a field is left fallow. FALSEHOOD (16) [noun] The property of being false. | [noun] A false statement, especially an intentional one; a lie. | [noun] Mendacity, deceitfulness; the trait of a person who is mendacious and deceitful. FALSENESS (12) [noun] The quality or state of being false, untrue, or dishonest. | [noun] Something that is false or fraudulent. FALSETTOS (12) [noun] The "false" (singing) voice in any human, usually airy and lacking a purity of vowels; created by utilizing the next highest vocal folds above those used for speech and normal range singing. It is commonly confused with the Head Voice register. | [noun] A person who sings in falsetto. FALSEWORK (19) [noun] A temporary framework used in the building of bridges and arched structures in order to hold items in place until the structure is able to support itself. | [noun] Scaffolding, a temporary frame serving to support and brace a building under construction until it can stand alone. FALSIFIED (16) [adjective] Demonstrated to be false. | [verb] To alter so as to make false; to make incorrect. | [verb] To misrepresent. FALSIFIER (15) [noun] One that falsifies. FALSIFIES (15) [verb] To alter so as to make false; to make incorrect. | [verb] To misrepresent. | [verb] To prove to be false. FALSITIES (12) [noun] Something that is false; an untrue assertion. | [noun] The characteristic of being untrue. FALTBOATS (14) [noun] Collapsible boats made of a canvas or rubberized fabric stretched over a folding frame, designed for portability and easy transport. FALTERERS (12) [noun] Plural of falterer; one who falters or hesitates. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of falter; to stumble, hesitate, or show weakness. FALTERING (13) [verb] To waver or be unsteady; to weaken or trail off. | [verb] To stammer; to utter with hesitation, or in a weak and trembling manner. | [verb] To fail in distinctness or regularity of exercise; said of the mind or of thought. FAMILIARS (14) [noun] An attendant spirit, often in animal or demon form. | [noun] A member of one's family or household. | [noun] A member of a pope's or bishop's household. FAMILISMS (16) [noun] Plural of familism; the practice of prioritizing family interests and loyalty over individual or broader social concerns. FAMISHING (18) [verb] To starve (to death); to kill or destroy with hunger. | [verb] To exhaust the strength or endurance of, by hunger; to distress with hunger. | [verb] To kill, or to cause to suffer extremity, by deprivation or denial of anything necessary. FANATICAL (14) [adjective] Having an extreme, irrational zeal or enthusiasm for a specific cause. FANCIFIED (18) [verb] Past tense of fancify; to make fancy or to dress up in an elaborate or showy manner. FANCIFIES (17) [verb] To make fancy or more elaborate; to dress up or adorn in an ornate or decorative manner. FANCINESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being fancy; elaborate or ornate decoration or style. FANCYWORK (24) [noun] Decorative embroidery. FANDANGOS (14) [noun] A form of lively flamenco music and dance that has many regional variations (e.g. fandango de Huelva), some of which have their own names (e.g. malagueña, granadina). | [noun] A gathering for dancing; a ball. | [noun] An unknown entity or contraption. FANEGADAS (14) [noun] A unit of land area used in Spain and Spanish America, typically equal to about 1.6 acres. FANFARONS (15) [noun] Plural of fanfaron; people who make ostentatious displays or boast excessively. FANFOLDED (17) [verb] Folded into a series of alternating folds like an accordion, typically used to describe paper or documents arranged in a zigzag pattern. FANLIGHTS (16) [noun] A semicircular or semioval window over a door or other window, normally having a fan-like structure of ribs; sometimes hinged to the transom FANTASIAS (12) [noun] A form of instrumental composition with a free structure and improvisational characteristics; specifically, one combining a number of well-known musical pieces. | [noun] (by extension) Any work which is unstructured or comprises other works of different genres or styles. | [noun] A traditional festival of the Berbers of the Maghreb (in northwest Africa) featuring exhibitions of horsemanship. FANTASIED (13) [adjective] Filled with imaginations or fancies. | [verb] To fantasize (about). | [verb] To have a fancy for; to be pleased with; to like. FANTASIES (12) [noun] That which comes from one's imagination. | [noun] The literary genre generally dealing with themes of magic and the supernatural, imaginary worlds and creatures, etc. | [noun] A fantastical design. FANTASISE (12) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASIST (12) [noun] One who creates fantasies. | [noun] One living in a fantasy world. | [noun] A writer who writes in the fantasy style. FANTASIZE (21) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASTIC (14) [noun] A fanciful or whimsical person. | [adjective] Existing in or constructed from fantasy; of or relating to fantasy; fanciful. | [adjective] Not believable; implausible; seemingly only possible in fantasy. FARADISED (14) [verb] To subject to the action of a faradaic current; to treat with electrical stimulation using an induced current. | [verb] Past tense of "faradise," the British spelling of "faradize," meaning to apply faradism (electrical therapy) to tissue or muscle. FARADISES (13) FARADISMS (15) [noun] Plural of faradism, the therapeutic use of electrical currents produced by a farad or induction coil to stimulate muscles and nerves. FARADIZED (23) [verb] Past tense of faradize; to subject to the therapeutic application of electrical current, particularly in medical treatment. FARADIZES (22) [verb] To apply faradism (electrical stimulation) to muscles or nerves for therapeutic purposes. | [verb] To subject to the action of a faraday cage or electromagnetic induction. FARANDOLE (13) [noun] A lively chain dance in 6/8 time, of Provençal origin. FAREWELLS (15) [noun] A wish of happiness or safety at parting, especially a permanent departure | [noun] A departure; the act of leaving FARMHANDS (18) [noun] A person who works on a farm. | [noun] A player in the minor leagues. FARMHOUSE (17) [noun] A farmer's residence. FARMLANDS (15) [noun] Land that is suitable for farming and agricultural production. FARMSTEAD (15) [noun] The main building of a farm. | [noun] A farm, including its buildings. FARMWIVES (20) [noun] Plural of farmwife; women who are married to farmers or who work on farms. FARMWORKS (21) FARMYARDS (18) [noun] The area around a farm, excluding the fields. FARNESOLS (12) [noun] Plural of farnesol, a type of organic compound found in essential oils and used in perfumes and cosmetics. FARNESSES (12) [noun] Plural of farness; the quality or state of being far or distant. FARRAGOES (13) [noun] A collection containing a confused variety of miscellaneous things. FARROWING (16) [verb] To give birth to a (litter of piglets). | [noun] The act of producing a litter of pigs | [adjective] Producing a litter of piglets FARSEEING (13) [adjective] Having good eyesight; eagle-eyed | [adjective] Characterized by prudence and foresight FARTHINGS (16) [noun] Former British unit of currency worth one-quarter of an old penny; or a coin representing this. | [noun] A very small quantity or value; the least possible amount. | [noun] A division of land. FASCIATED (15) [verb] To bind. | [verb] To apply fascia. | [adjective] Fasciate FASCICLED (17) [adjective] Arranged in or having the form of a fascicle; grouped in bundles or clusters. FASCICLES (16) [noun] A bundle or cluster. | [noun] A bundle of skeletal muscle fibers surrounded by connective tissue. | [noun] A cluster of flowers or leaves, such as the bundles of the thin leaves (or needles) of pines. FASCICULE (16) [noun] A bundle or cluster. | [noun] A bundle of skeletal muscle fibers surrounded by connective tissue. | [noun] A cluster of flowers or leaves, such as the bundles of the thin leaves (or needles) of pines. FASCICULI (16) [noun] A small bundle of nerve, muscle or tendon fibers. | [noun] One of the divisions of a book published in separate parts; a fascicle. FASCINATE (14) [verb] To evoke an intense interest or attraction in someone. | [verb] To make someone hold motionless; to spellbind. | [verb] To be irresistibly charming or attractive to. FASCISTIC (16) [adjective] Of or relating to fascism. | [adjective] Supporting the principles of fascism. | [adjective] Unfairly oppressive or needlessly strict. FASHIONED (16) [verb] To make, build or construct, especially in a crude or improvised way. | [verb] To make in a standard manner; to work. | [verb] To fit, adapt, or accommodate to. FASHIONER (15) [noun] One who fashions or makes something; a creator or maker. FASTBACKS (20) [noun] A motor car having a continuous slope from the roof to the rear FASTBALLS (14) [noun] Any of the variations of high speed pitches thrown in baseball | [noun] A four-seam fastball, which is a backspin pitch thrown with a ball gripped in the direction to cause four of the seams of the ball to cross the flight path and released with roughly equal pressure by the index and middle fingers FASTENERS (12) [noun] Something or someone that fastens. | [noun] Mechanically, any device that fastens; especially, a collective term for items such as screws, nuts, washers, clasps, bolts and the like. FASTENING (13) [verb] To attach or connect in a secure manner. | [verb] To cause to take close effect; to make to tell; to land. | [noun] A hook or similar restraint used to fasten things together; fastener. FATALISMS (14) [noun] The plural of fatalism, a philosophical belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable, or instances of this belief system. FATALISTS (12) [noun] People who believe that all events are predetermined and inevitable, and that humans have no free will to change their destiny. FATEFULLY (18) [adverb] In a manner involving or controlled by fate; destined or predetermined. | [adverb] In a way that has significant and often disastrous consequences. FATHEADED (17) [adjective] Characteristic of a fathead; stupid FATHERING (16) [verb] To be a father to; to sire. | [verb] To give rise to. | [verb] To act as a father; to support and nurture. FATHOMING (18) [verb] To encircle with outstretched arms, especially to take a measurement; to embrace. | [verb] To measure the depth of, take a sounding of. | [verb] To get to the bottom of; to manage to comprehend; understand (a problem etc.). FATIDICAL (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to fate; revealing or determining fate; prophetic or destined. FATIGABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being fatigued or tired; susceptible to fatigue. FATIGUING (14) [verb] To tire or make weary by physical or mental exertion | [verb] To wilt a salad by dressing or tossing it | [verb] To lose so much strength or energy that one becomes tired, weary, feeble or exhausted FATNESSES (12) [noun] The plural of fatness; the quality or state of being fat or obese. FATSTOCKS (18) FATTENERS (12) [noun] Things or substances used to make animals gain weight for market. | [noun] People or things that make something fatter or more substantial. FATTENING (13) [verb] To cause (a person or animal) to be fat or fatter. | [verb] (of a person or animal) To become fat or fatter. | [verb] To make thick or thicker (something containing paper, often money). FATTINESS (12) [noun] The quality or state of being fatty; the presence or abundance of fat. FATUITIES (12) [noun] Plural of fatuity; instances of foolishness, stupidity, or thoughtless remarks. | [noun] Foolish or inane statements or ideas. FATUOUSLY (15) [adverb] In a fatuous manner; showing or characterized by a lack of intelligence or understanding; foolishly or smugly. FAUBOURGS (15) [noun] An outlying part of a city or town, beyond the walls; a suburb, especially of Paris. FAULTIEST (12) [adjective] Having or displaying faults; not perfect; not adequate or acceptable. | [adjective] At fault, to blame; guilty. FAULTLESS (12) [adjective] Without fault; free from defect or error. FAUNISTIC (14) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of fauna, the animals native to a particular region or time period. FAUTEUILS (12) [noun] An armchair. | [noun] The chair of a presiding officer. | [noun] (by extension) Membership in the Académie française. FAVORABLE (17) [adjective] Pleasing, encouraging or approving. | [adjective] Useful or helpful. | [adjective] Convenient or at a suitable time; opportune. FAVORABLY (20) [adverb] In a favorable manner. FAVORITES (15) [noun] A person or thing who enjoys special regard or favour. | [noun] A person who is preferred or trusted above all others. | [noun] A contestant or competitor thought most likely to win. FAVOURERS (15) [noun] Plural of favourer; those who support, prefer, or show favor to someone or something. FAVOURING (16) [verb] To look upon fondly; to prefer. | [verb] To encourage, conduce to | [verb] To do a favor [noun sense 1] for; to show beneficence toward. FAWNINGLY (19) [adverb] In a manner showing exaggerated flattery or affection; obsequiously. FAYALITES (15) [noun] Plural of fayalite, an iron silicate mineral (Fe2SiO4) that is a member of the olivine group, typically found in igneous rocks. FEARFULLY (18) [adverb] In a fearful manner; characterized by fear. | [adverb] Very; very much. FEASANCES (14) [noun] Plural of feasance; the performance of a duty or obligation, especially in legal contexts referring to the execution of an act or function. FEATHERED (16) [verb] To cover or furnish with feathers. | [verb] To arrange in the manner or appearance of feathers. | [verb] To rotate the oars while they are out of the water to reduce wind resistance. FEATLIEST (12) [adjective] Superlative form of "featy," meaning most neat, dexterous, or skillfully made. FEATURING (13) [verb] To ascribe the greatest importance to something within a certain context. | [verb] To star, to contain. | [verb] To appear, to make an appearance. FEBRIFUGE (18) [noun] An antipyretic (fever-reducing) medication. FECULENCE (16) [noun] The quality or state of being feculent; foulness or filthiness. | [noun] Sediment or dregs, especially in a liquid. FECUNDATE (15) [verb] To make fertile. | [verb] To inseminate. FECUNDITY (18) [noun] Ability to produce offspring. | [noun] Ability to cause growth. | [noun] Number, rate, or capacity of offspring production. FEDERALLY (16) [adverb] In a federal manner. FEDERATED (14) [verb] To unite in a federation. | [adjective] United, as a federation, under a central government FEDERATES (13) [verb] To unite in a federation. FEEDBACKS (21) [noun] Plural of feedback; responses or reactions to something, such as information about the results of a process or a person's performance. | [noun] Plural instances of the return of a portion of output signal back to the input, especially in electronic systems. FEEDBOXES (22) [noun] A box containing animal feed. FEEDHOLES (16) FEEDSTOCK (19) [noun] Any bulk raw material constituting the principal input for an industrial process. FEEDSTUFF (19) [noun] Feed for animals; fodder | [noun] Any particular form of such feed FEELINGLY (16) [adverb] In a feeling manner. FEETFIRST (15) FEISTIEST (12) [adjective] Tenacious, energetic, spunky. | [adjective] Belligerent; prepared to stand and fight, especially in spite of relatively small stature or some other disadvantage. | [adjective] Easily offended and ready to bicker. FELDSHERS (16) [noun] Plural of feldsher, a medical practitioner or paramedic in Russia and some Eastern European countries who has training below that of a fully qualified doctor. FELDSPARS (15) [noun] Any of a large group of rock-forming minerals that, together, make up about 60% of the earth's outer crust. The feldspars are all aluminum silicates of the alkali metals sodium, potassium, calcium and barium. Feldspars are the principal constituents of igneous and plutonic rocks. FELICIFIC (19) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or producing pleasure or happiness. FELLAHEEN (15) [noun] Egyptian peasants or laborers; the plural of fellah. FELLATING (13) [verb] To perform oral sex on (a man); to stimulate (a penis or testicles) using the mouth. | [verb] (by extension) To suck (something) in a manner suggestive of fellatio. | [verb] To suck up to, to flatter or be shamefully subservient to. FELLATION (12) [noun] The act of cutting down trees. | [noun] In geology, the process of breaking down rock surfaces through weathering and erosion. FELLATIOS (12) [noun] Plural of fellatio, the act of oral stimulation of the penis. FELLATORS (12) [noun] Plural of fellator; persons who perform fellatio. FELLOWING (16) FELLOWMAN (17) [noun] A fellow human being; one's fellow man. FELLOWMEN (17) [noun] Fellow human beings; men regarded as one's equals or companions. FELONIOUS (12) [adjective] Of, relating to, being, or having the quality of felony | [adjective] Done with intent to commit a crime. FELONRIES (12) [noun] Plural of felonry, which is an archaic or obsolete term referring to the condition or status of being a felon, or acts constituting felony. FELSTONES (12) FEMININES (14) [noun] That which is feminine. | [noun] (possibly obsolete) A woman. | [noun] (grammar) The feminine gender. FEMINISED (15) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Made feminine; made to have more feminine behaviour, traits or physiology. FEMINISES (14) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FEMINISMS (16) [noun] Plural of feminism; multiple forms or schools of thought advocating for women's rights and gender equality. FEMINISTS (14) [noun] An advocate of feminism; a person who believes in bringing about the equality of the sexes (of women and men) in all aspects of public and private life | [noun] A member of a feminist political movement FEMINIZED (24) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Made feminine; made to have more feminine behaviour, traits or physiology. FEMINIZES (23) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. FENAGLING (14) FENCELESS (14) [adjective] Without a fence; not enclosed by a fence. FENCEROWS (17) [noun] The land adjacent to a fence FENCIBLES (16) [noun] A militia unit raised for homeland defense. | [noun] A soldier in such a unit. FENESTRAE (12) [noun] An opening in a body, sometimes with a membrane. FENESTRAL (12) [adjective] Relating to or having the characteristics of a window or opening; characterized by windows or window-like openings. FENTHIONS (15) [noun] Plural of fenthion, an organophosphate insecticide used in agriculture and pest control. FENUGREEK (17) [noun] Any of the species leguminous plant, Trigonella foenum-graecum, eaten as a vegetable and with seeds used as a spice. | [noun] The seeds of this plant, used as a spice (especially in Indian and Thai cooking). FEODARIES (13) [noun] An accomplice. | [noun] An ancient officer of the Court of Wards. FEOFFMENT (20) [noun] The grant of a feud or fee. | [noun] A gift or conveyance in fee of land or other corporeal hereditaments, accompanied by actual delivery of possession. | [noun] The instrument or deed by which corporeal hereditaments are conveyed. FERMENTED (15) [verb] To react, using fermentation; especially to produce alcohol by aging or by allowing yeast to act on sugars; to brew. | [verb] To stir up, agitate, cause unrest or excitement in. | [adjective] Produced by fermentation. FERMENTER (14) [noun] Any organism, such as a yeast, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A fermentor; a vessel in which fermentation takes place. FERMENTOR (14) [noun] The vessel in which fermentation takes place FERNERIES (12) [noun] Plural of fernery; places where ferns are grown or collections of ferns. | [noun] Glass houses or shaded areas designed for cultivating ferns. FEROCIOUS (14) [adjective] Marked by extreme and violent energy. | [adjective] Extreme or intense. FERRELING (13) FERRELLED (13) [verb] Past tense of ferrel, meaning to fit with a ferrule (a metal ring or cap used to strengthen or protect the end of a tool or object). FERRETERS (12) [noun] Plural of ferreter; people who hunt with ferrets or who search out and expose something hidden. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of ferreter; to hunt with ferrets or to search persistently for something. FERRETING (13) [verb] To hunt game with ferrets. | [verb] (by extension) To uncover and bring to light by searching; usually to ferret out. | [noun] Hunting with ferrets. FERRIAGES (13) [noun] The act of transporting people or goods across a river or body of water by ferry. | [noun] The charge or fee paid for such transportation. FERRITINS (12) [noun] Any of a family of iron-carrying globular protein complexes consisting of 24 protein subunits. FERROCENE (14) [noun] Any of a class of metallocenes containing an iron atom between two cyclopentadienyl rings; especially the simplest of the class bis-cyclopentadienyl iron. FERROTYPE (17) [noun] A photograph produced on a thin sheet of iron coated with a dark enamel, popular in the 19th century. | [noun] The photographic process or technique used to create such images. FERRULING (13) [verb] Present participle of ferule, meaning to bind or fit with a ferrule (a metal ring or cap). | [verb] To strike with a ferule (a flat stick used for punishment). FERRYBOAT (17) [noun] A boat used to ferry passengers, vehicles, or goods across open water, especially one that runs to a regular schedule FERTILELY (15) [adverb] In a fertile manner; with the ability to produce or generate offspring, crops, or ideas abundantly. FERTILITY (15) [noun] The condition, or the degree, of being fertile. | [noun] The birthrate of a population; the number of live births per 1000 people per year. | [noun] The average number of births per woman within a population. FERTILIZE (21) [verb] To make (the soil) more fertile by adding nutrients to it. | [verb] To make more creative or intellectually productive. | [verb] To cause to produce offspring through insemination; to inseminate. FERVENTLY (18) [adverb] In a fervent manner. FESTERING (13) [verb] To become septic; to become rotten. | [verb] To worsen, especially due to lack of attention. | [verb] To cause to fester or rankle. FESTINATE (12) [verb] To hurry or move with haste. FESTIVALS (15) [noun] An event or community gathering, usually staged by a local community, which centers on some theme, sometimes on some unique aspect of the community. | [noun] In mythology, a set of celebrations in the honour of a god. | [noun] Fried cornbread FESTIVELY (18) [adverb] In a festive manner; with celebration, joy, or a festive atmosphere. FESTIVITY (18) [noun] (often pluralized) A festival or similar celebration. | [noun] An experience or expression of celebratory feeling, merriment, gaiety. FESTOONED (13) [verb] To decorate with ornaments, such as garlands or chains, which hang loosely from two tacked spots. | [verb] To make festoons. | [verb] To decorate or bedeck abundantly. FETATIONS (12) FETERITAS (12) FETICHISM (19) [noun] Belief in or practice of attributing magical powers to inanimate objects or fetishes. | [noun] An excessive and irrational commitment to something. FETICIDES (15) [noun] An abortion, specifically, the killing of a fetus. | [noun] One who kills a fetus. FETIDNESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being fetid; a foul or offensive smell. FETISHISM (17) [noun] The belief that natural objects have supernatural powers, or that something created by people has power over people. | [noun] A form of paraphilia where the object of attraction is an inanimate object or a part of a person's body. FETISHIST (15) [noun] One who has a sexual fetish. | [noun] A believer in magical fetishes or talismans. FETOSCOPE (16) [noun] A stethoscope designed for listening to fetal heart sounds through the mother's abdomen during pregnancy. FETOSCOPY (19) [noun] A medical procedure in which a fiber-optic instrument is inserted into the uterus to directly visualize the fetus and perform diagnostic or therapeutic interventions. FETTERERS (12) [noun] Plural of fetterer; those who fetter or restrain. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of fetter; to chain, shackle, or restrict the freedom of someone or something. FETTERING (13) [verb] To shackle or bind up with fetters. | [verb] To restrain or impede; to hamper. | [noun] The act by which something is fettered or constricted. FETTLINGS (13) [noun] Small pieces of metal or waste material removed during the finishing of castings or other metal objects. | [verb] Third-person singular present tense of "fettle," meaning to trim or clean up metal objects, or to put in good condition. FETTUCINE (14) [noun] A type of flat ribbon pasta, wider than linguine, typically served with cream or butter sauces. FETTUCINI (14) [noun] A long, broad, thick noodle; a type of pasta having this shape. FEUDALISM (15) [noun] A social system based on personal ownership of resources and personal fealty between a suzerain (lord) and a vassal (subject). Defining characteristics are direct ownership of resources, personal loyalty, and a hierarchical social structure reinforced by religion. FEUDALIST (13) [noun] A person who practices or advocates feudalism, a medieval system of social and political organization. | [adjective] Of or relating to feudalism or its practices. FEUDALITY (16) [noun] The state or quality of being feudal; feudal form or constitution. FEUDALIZE (22) [verb] To make something feudal. FEUDARIES (13) [noun] Plural of feudary; persons who hold land in fee or under a feudal tenure; vassals or tenants. FEUDATORY (16) [noun] A feudal vassal. | [noun] A feudal territory, a fief. | [noun] A fee paid by such a vassal to hold land. FEVERFEWS (21) [noun] A European aromatic perennial herb, Tanacetum parthenium (or Chrysanthemum parthenium or Pyrethrum parthenium), having daisy-like flowers; valued as a traditional medicine, especially for headaches. FEVERWORT (18) [noun] A plant of the genus Triosteum, also called horse gentian, having clusters of flowers and used traditionally as a medicinal herb to reduce fever. FEWNESSES (15) [noun] Plural of fewness; the quality or state of being few in number or amount. FEYNESSES (15) [noun] Plural of feyness; the quality or state of being fey, characterized by an otherworldly, magical, or fatalistic nature. FIBERFILL (17) [noun] A lightweight synthetic fiber used as insulation in clothing FIBERIZED (24) [verb] Past tense of fiberize; converted into fibers or given a fibrous structure. FIBERIZES (23) [verb] To convert into fibers or fiber-like material. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of "fiberize," meaning to make or process something into fibers. FIBRANNES (14) [noun] A type of regenerated cellulose fiber made from wood pulp, used in textiles and fabrics. FIBREFILL (17) [noun] A lightweight synthetic fiber used as insulation in clothing FIBRILLAE (14) [noun] Plural of fibrilla; small fibers or filaments, especially in biological or anatomical contexts. FIBRILLAR (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to fibrils. | [adjective] Having the characteristics of fibrils. FIBRINOID (15) [adjective] Resembling fibrin or having the characteristics of fibrin; relating to or containing fibrinoid material found in pathological tissue samples. FIBROMATA (16) [noun] A benign tumour of fibrous connective tissue. FICTIONAL (14) [adjective] Invented, as opposed to real. | [adjective] Containing invented elements. FICTIVELY (20) [adverb] In a manner that is imaginary, invented, or created rather than real or factual. FIDEISTIC (15) [adjective] Relating to or based on faith rather than reason or empirical evidence; characterized by reliance on faith. FIDGETERS (14) [noun] People who move restlessly or fidget; those who engage in fidgeting behavior. FIDGETING (15) [verb] To wiggle or twitch; to move around nervously or idly. | [verb] To cause to fidget; to make uneasy. | [noun] A fidgety motion. FIDUCIARY (18) [noun] One who holds a thing in trust for another; a trustee. | [noun] One who depends for salvation on faith, without works; an antinomian. | [adjective] Relating to an entity that owes to another good faith, accountability and trust, often in the context of trusts and trustees. FIELDFARE (16) [noun] A large thrush, Turdus pilaris, a bird of Eurasia. FIELDWORK (20) [noun] Work done out in the fields as opposed to that done elsewhere on the farm (e.g., barn, house, outbuildings, office). | [noun] Work done out in the real world rather than in controlled conditions | [noun] (in scientific research) The collection of raw data in the field, field research, field study, field studies. FIERINESS (12) [noun] The quality or state of being fiery; intense heat, passion, or temperament. FIFTEENTH (18) [noun] The person or thing in the fifteenth position. | [noun] One of fifteen equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The interval comprising two octaves. FIFTIETHS (18) [noun] The person or thing in the fiftieth position. | [noun] One of fifty equal parts of a whole. FIGEATERS (13) [noun] Plural of figeater, a large green beetle found in the southwestern United States that feeds on fruit and flowers. FIGHTINGS (17) [noun] The act or process of contending; violence or conflict. | [noun] A fight or battle; an occasion on which people fight FIGULINES (13) [noun] Figurines or small figures made of clay or similar material. | [noun] Objects made of clay that are molded or shaped, especially decorative items. FIGURANTS (13) [noun] An actor or dancer in the background lacking an aural presence. FIGURINES (13) [noun] A small carved or molded figure; a statuette. FILAGREED (14) [verb] To decorate something with intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver twisted wire. FILAGREES (13) [noun] A delicate and intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver (or sometimes other metal) twisted wire. | [noun] A design resembling such intricate ornamentation. FILAMENTS (14) [noun] A fine thread or wire. | [noun] Such a wire, as can be heated until it glows, in an incandescent light bulb or a thermionic valve. | [noun] A massive, thread-like structure, such as those gaseous ones which extend outward from the surface of the sun, or such as those (much larger) ones which form the boundaries between large voids in the universe. FILARIIDS (13) [noun] Parasitic nematode worms of the family Filariidae that cause filarial diseases in humans and animals. FILATURES (12) [noun] The process of drawing fibres into threads, especially the process of reeling raw silk from cocoons. | [noun] A spool or bobbin used for the above. | [noun] A place where silk is reeled onto spools. FILIATING (13) [verb] Present participle of filiate; to establish the paternity or origin of something, or to affiliate or connect as a branch or subordinate member. FILIATION (12) [noun] The condition of being a child of a specified parent. | [noun] The ancestry or lineage shared by a group having the same bloodline. | [noun] The determination of paternity. FILICIDES (15) [noun] A person who kills their own child. | [noun] The killing of one's own child. FILIGREED (14) [verb] To decorate something with intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver twisted wire. | [adjective] Having filigree ornamentation FILIGREES (13) [noun] A delicate and intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver (or sometimes other metal) twisted wire. | [noun] A design resembling such intricate ornamentation. | [verb] To decorate something with intricate ornamentation made from gold or silver twisted wire. FILISTERS (12) FILLETING (13) [verb] To slice, bone or make into fillets. | [verb] To apply, create, or specify a rounded or filled corner to. | [noun] The protecting of a joint, as between roof and parapet wall, with mortar or cement, where flashing is employed in better work. FILLIPING (15) [verb] To strike, project, or propel with a fillip (that is, a finger released quickly after being pressed against the thumb); to flick. | [verb] (by extension) To project quickly; to snap. | [verb] (by extension) To strike or tap smartly. FILMCARDS (17) FILMGOERS (15) [noun] A moviegoer. FILMINESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being filmy; the characteristic of being thin, translucent, or gossamer-like. FILMLANDS (15) FILMMAKER (20) [noun] A producer or director of films/movies. FILMSTRIP (16) [noun] A length of film containing individual photographs or diagrams intended to be shown in sequence as instruction or as a visual aid. | [noun] A file containing a sequence of images or video frames. FILTERERS (12) [noun] Plural of filterer; those who filter or devices that filter substances. FILTERING (13) [verb] To sort, sift, or isolate. | [verb] To diffuse; to cause to be less concentrated or focused. | [verb] To pass through a filter or to act as though passing through a filter. FILTHIEST (15) [adjective] Covered with filth; very dirty. | [adjective] Obscene or offensive. | [adjective] Very unpleasant or disagreeable. FILTRABLE (14) [adjective] Able to be separated by filtration | [adjective] That can pass through a specified filter FILTRATED (13) [verb] To filter. | [adjective] Filtered FILTRATES (12) [verb] To filter. FIMBRIATE (16) [verb] To hem; to fringe. | [adjective] Fringed, e.g. where the ends of a petal are split into two or more divisions. FINAGLERS (13) [verb] Third person singular present tense of finagle; to obtain or arrange something through cunning or devious means. | [noun] Plural of finagler; people who finagle or scheme. FINAGLING (14) [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by indirect, complicated and/or intensive efforts. | [verb] To obtain, arrange, or achieve by deceitful methods, by trickery. | [verb] To cheat or swindle; to use crafty, deceitful methods. (often with "out of" preceding the object) FINALISED (13) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINALISES (12) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINALISMS (14) [noun] The plural of finalism, referring to philosophical positions that emphasize purpose, design, or end goals as fundamental to explaining natural phenomena or reality. FINALISTS (12) [noun] Somebody or something that appears in the final stage of a competition. | [noun] A university student in his/her final year of study. FINALIZED (22) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINALIZES (21) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINANCIAL (14) [adjective] Related to finances. | [adjective] Having dues and fees paid up to date for a club or society. FINANCIER (14) [noun] A person who, as a profession, profits from large financial transactions. | [noun] A company that does the same. | [noun] One charged with the administration of finance; an officer who administers the public revenue; a treasurer. FINANCING (15) [verb] To conduct, or procure money for, financial operations; manage finances. | [verb] To pay ransom. | [verb] To manage financially; be financier for; provide or obtain funding for a transaction or undertaking. FINESSING (13) [verb] To evade (a problem, situation, etc.) by using some clever argument or strategem. | [verb] To play (a card) as a finesse. | [verb] To handle or manage carefully or skilfully; to manipulate in a crafty way. FINFISHES (18) [noun] Plural of finfish; fish that have fins and true backbones, as distinguished from shellfish and other aquatic animals. FINGERERS (13) [noun] Plural of fingerer; one who fingers something, such as a musician who fingers an instrument, or one who touches or handles with fingers. FINGERING (14) [verb] To identify or point out. Also put the finger on. To report to or identify for the authorities, rat on, rat out, squeal on, tattle on, turn in. | [verb] To poke, probe, feel, or fondle with a finger or fingers. | [verb] To use the fingers to penetrate and sexually stimulate one's own or another person's vagina or anus; to fingerbang FINGERTIP (15) [noun] The tip of the human finger. | [verb] To move or deflect with the fingertips FINICALLY (17) [adverb] In a finicky manner; fussily or with excessive concern about details. FINICKIER (18) [adjective] (of a person) Fastidious and fussy; difficult to please; exacting, especially about details. | [adjective] Demanding; requiring above-normal care. FINICKING (19) [noun] Finicky behaviour; fussing | [adjective] Finical FINISHERS (15) [noun] A person who finishes or completes something. | [noun] A person who applies a finish to something, such as furniture. | [noun] The person who applies the gilding and decoration in bookbinding. FINISHING (16) [verb] To complete (something). | [verb] To apply a treatment to (a surface or similar). | [verb] To change an animal's food supply in the months before it is due for slaughter, with the intention of fattening the animal. FINITUDES (13) [noun] The quality or state of being finite; the condition of having limits or boundaries. | [noun] Plural of finitude, referring to multiple instances or aspects of being limited or bounded. FINNMARKS (18) FINOCHIOS (17) [noun] Plural of finocchio, an Italian word for fennel or a derogatory term (considered offensive). | [noun] A type of fennel vegetable used in Italian cuisine. FIORITURA (12) [noun] A musical embellishment or ornamentation. FIORITURE (12) [noun] Little "flowers" of ornament introduced into a melody by a singer or player. FIREBACKS (20) [noun] Any of certain species of pheasant in the genus Lophura. | [noun] A piece of iron that fits into the back of a fireplace to distribute the heat and keep the brick from cracking. FIREBALLS (14) [noun] A ball of fire, especially one associated with an explosion. | [noun] A meteor bright enough to cast shadows. | [noun] A class of sailing dinghy with a single trapeze and a symmetrical spinnaker, sailed by a crew of two. FIREBASES (14) [noun] An encampment designed to provide indirect artillery support to infantry troops operating beyond the normal range of fire support from their own base camps; a fire support base. FIREBIRDS (15) FIREBOATS (14) [noun] A harbor boat designed for pumping large volumes of harbor water onto dockside fires. FIREBOMBS (18) [noun] A weapon that causes fire, an incendiary weapon. | [verb] To attack with a firebomb. FIREBOXES (21) [noun] The chamber of a steam engine, or a steam locomotive, in which the fuel is burned. | [noun] The part of a fireplace where the fuel is burned. | [noun] A redheaded woman (by synecdoche, pars pro toto), or her red pubic hair. FIREBRAND (15) [noun] An argumentative troublemaker or revolutionary; one who agitates against the current situation. | [noun] A torch or other burning stick with a flame at one end. FIREBRATS (14) [noun] A thysanuran insect, Thermobia domestica. FIREBREAK (18) [noun] An area cleared of all flammable material to prevent a fire from spreading across it. FIREBRICK (20) [noun] A brick capable of withstanding high temperatures without deforming. FIRECLAYS (17) [noun] Refractory clays that can withstand high temperatures, used in making fire bricks and furnace linings. FIREDAMPS (17) [noun] Explosive gases, chiefly methane, that accumulate in coal mines and can cause explosions when ignited. | [noun] The plural of firedamp. FIREDRAKE (17) [noun] A fire-breathing dragon. | [noun] A fiery meteor, an ignis fatuus, a rocket | [noun] A kind of firework FIREFANGS (16) FIREFIGHT (19) [noun] A skirmish involving an exchange of gunfire. FIREFLIES (15) [noun] Any beetle of the family Lampyridae, which exhibit bioluminescence during twilight. FIREGUARD (14) [noun] A mesh screen around a fire to prevent sparks or falling embers. FIREHALLS (15) [noun] Plural of firehouse; buildings where fire departments are stationed and firefighting equipment is housed. FIREHOUSE (15) [noun] A house containing a fire to heat it; a dwelling-house, as opposed to a barn, a stable, or other outhouse. | [noun] A fire station FIRELIGHT (16) [noun] The light of a fire, such as from a campfire or fireplace. FIRELOCKS (18) [noun] A form of gunlock, in which the priming is ignited by a spark. | [noun] A firearm using such a gunlock. FIREMANIC (16) FIREPINKS (18) [noun] Plural of firepink, a plant of the genus Silene with bright red or pink flowers, native to North America. FIREPLACE (16) [noun] An open hearth for holding a fire at the base of a chimney. FIREPLUGS (15) [noun] A fire hydrant. FIREPOWER (17) [noun] The capacity of a weapon to deliver fire onto a target | [noun] The ability to deliver fire | [noun] The ability to shoot and score goals. FIREPROOF (17) [verb] To make resistant to damage from fire. | [adjective] Resistant to damage from fire. FIREROOMS (14) FIRESIDES (13) [noun] Plural of fireside; the area beside a fireplace or fire, or informal social gatherings held near a fire. | [noun] In broadcasting, informal talks or speeches delivered as if speaking to people gathered by a fire. FIRESTONE (12) [noun] Iron pyrites, formerly used for striking fire. | [noun] A flint. | [noun] A stone which will bear the heat of a furnace without injury; especially applied to the sandstone at the top of the upper greensand in the south of England, used for lining kilns and furnaces. FIRESTORM (14) [noun] A fire whose intensity is greatly increased by inrushing winds. | [noun] An intense or violent altercation. FIRETHORN (15) [noun] A plant of the genus Pyracantha; the pyracantha. FIRETRAPS (14) [noun] A building with limited emergency exits in which people would be trapped in the event of a fire. FIREWATER (15) [noun] High-proof alcohol, especially whiskey (especially in the context of its sale to or consumption by Native Americans). | [noun] High-temperature hydraulic condensate discharged from industrial boilers. | [noun] Water for use in firefighting. FIREWEEDS (16) [noun] Plural of fireweed, a plant with pink or purple flowers that grows in disturbed areas and after fires. FIREWOODS (16) [noun] Pieces of wood suitable for burning in a fireplace or stove as fuel. FIREWORKS (19) [noun] A device using gunpowder and other chemicals which, when lit, emits a combination of coloured flames, sparks, whistles or bangs, and sometimes made to rocket high into the sky before exploding, used for entertainment or celebration. | [noun] An event or a display where fireworks are set off. | [noun] A boisterous or violent event or situation. FIREWORMS (17) FIRMAMENT (16) [noun] (usually uncountable) The vault of the heavens, where the clouds, sun, moon, and stars can be seen; the heavens, the sky. | [noun] The field or sphere of an activity or interest. | [noun] In the geocentric Ptolemaic system, the eighth celestial sphere which carried the fixed stars; (by extension) any celestial sphere. FIRMWARES (17) [noun] Plural of firmware; permanent software programmed into a computer or electronic device's read-only memory. FIRSTBORN (14) [noun] The first child to be born to a parent or family. | [adjective] Born as the first one in a family, flock or the like. | [adjective] Most excellent; most distinguished or exalted. FIRSTHAND (16) [adjective] Direct, without intermediate stages. | [adjective] Not previously owned or used; contrasted with secondhand. FIRSTLING (13) [noun] The first produce or result, notably firstborn offspring. | [noun] The first of a class or kind. | [noun] The thing first thought or done. FISHBOLTS (17) FISHBONES (17) [noun] A bone from a fish. FISHBOWLS (20) [noun] A small, rounded, transparent, and domestic aquarium. | [noun] (by extension) Any place or event that lacks privacy or is intensely scrutinized. | [noun] A variety of discussions where participants are organized in concentric circles and take turns where they and others in the same group are allowed to speak according to a set of rules. FISHERIES (15) [noun] Fishing: the catching, processing and marketing of fish or other seafood. | [noun] A place related to fishing, particularly: | [noun] A right to fish in a particular location; Territorial fishing waters. FISHERMAN (17) [noun] A fisher, a person engaged in fishing: | [noun] A vessel (boat or ship) used for fishing. FISHERMEN (17) [noun] A fisher, a person engaged in fishing: | [noun] A vessel (boat or ship) used for fishing. FISHHOOKS (22) [noun] A barbed hook, usually metal, used for fishing | [noun] A jack (the playing card) FISHLINES (15) FISHMEALS (17) [noun] Ground or powdered fish used as fertilizer or animal feed. FISHPLATE (17) [noun] A metal bar that is bolted to the ends of two rails to join them together in a track. | [verb] To connect (rails) together using a fishplate. FISHPOLES (17) [noun] Plural of fishpole; long flexible rods used for fishing, or poles used in film/television production to position microphones above actors. FISHPONDS (18) [noun] A freshwater pond stocked with fish; especially one formerly attached to a monastery etc as a source of food FISHTAILS (15) [noun] The tail of a fish, or an object resembling this. | [noun] The skidding of the back of a vehicle from side to side. | [noun] A kind of chisel with a flared blade. FISHWIVES (21) [noun] A woman who sells or works with fish; a female fishmonger. | [noun] A vulgar, abusive or nagging woman with a loud, unpleasant voice. | [noun] A person, especially a woman, with poor personal hygiene. FISHWORMS (20) FISSILITY (15) [noun] The quality or property of being capable of being split or cleaved along natural planes or layers, especially in minerals and rocks. FISSIONAL (12) [adjective] Of or relating to fission, the splitting of atomic nuclei or biological cells. | [adjective] Capable of undergoing or causing fission. FISSIONED (13) [verb] To cause to undergo fission. | [verb] To undergo fission. FISSIPEDS (15) [noun] Members of the order Carnivora that have separate toes, including cats, dogs, bears, and seals, distinguished from pinnipeds by their feet structure. FISSURING (13) [verb] To split, forming fissures. | [noun] The formation of a fissure. FISTFIGHT (19) [noun] A fight using bare fists. | [verb] To fight using bare fists. FISTNOTES (12) FISTULOUS (12) [adjective] Relating to, characterized by, or affected with a fistula (an abnormal passage or opening in the body). FITNESSES (12) [noun] The condition of being fit, suitable or appropriate. | [noun] The cultivation of an attractive and/or healthy physique. | [noun] An organism's or species' degree of success in finding a mate and producing offspring. FITTINGLY (16) [adverb] In a fitting manner FIXATIONS (19) [noun] The act of fixing. | [noun] The state of being fixed or fixated. | [noun] The act of uniting chemically with a solid substance or in a solid form; reduction to a non-volatile condition; -- said of volatile elements. FIXATIVES (22) [noun] A substance that fixes, protects, or preserves. | [noun] (perfumery) The components of a perfume that prolong or bolster the notes, and may or may not be the base note itself. FIXEDNESS (20) [noun] The quality or state of being fixed, stable, or unchanging. | [noun] The state of being firmly attached or positioned in place. FLABBIEST (16) [adjective] Yielding to the touch, and easily moved or shaken; hanging loose by its own weight; lacking firmness; flaccid. | [adjective] (of wine) Having a slight lack of acidity; having mild sweetness. | [adjective] (of writing, etc.) overwrought. FLABELLUM (16) [noun] A fan-shaped liturgical implement used in religious ceremonies, particularly in the Roman Catholic Church. | [noun] A fan-shaped anatomical structure or appendage found in various organisms. FLACCIDLY (20) [adverb] In a flaccid manner; without firmness, vigor, or energy. FLAGELLAR (13) [adjective] Of or pertaining to a flagellum FLAGELLIN (13) [noun] A protein that makes up the whip-like tail structure of bacteria and other microorganisms, enabling locomotion. FLAGELLUM (15) [noun] In protists, a long, whiplike membrane-enclosed organelle used for locomotion or feeding. | [noun] In bacteria, a long, whiplike proteinaceous appendage, used for locomotion. | [noun] A whip FLAGEOLET (13) [noun] A type of small flute of the fipple family. | [noun] A type of kidney bean, common in France. FLAGGIEST (14) [adjective] Superlative form of "flaggy," meaning most inclined to droop, sag, or lack vigor; or most resembling a flag in appearance. FLAGGINGS (15) [noun] The act of marking or flagging something, such as items of concern or attention. | [noun] Plural of flagging, referring to flat stones or slabs used for paving surfaces. FLAGPOLES (15) [noun] A tall pole up which one or more flags may be raised and flown. | [verb] Exit a country momentarily and reenter. Usually this is done to satisfy immigration requirements. FLAGRANCE (15) [noun] The quality or state of being flagrant; glaring or notorious character, especially of an offense or violation. FLAGRANCY (18) [noun] The quality or state of being flagrant; the obvious and offensive nature of something wrong or bad. FLAGSHIPS (18) [noun] (maritime) The ship occupied by the fleet's commander (usually an admiral); it denotes this by flying his flag. | [noun] (maritime) The ship regarded as most important out of a group, e.g. a nation's navy or company's fleet. | [noun] (by extension) The most important one out of a related group. FLAGSTAFF (19) [noun] A pole on which a flag is raised. FLAGSTICK (19) [noun] The pin or stick placed in the hole on a golf green to mark its location. FLAGSTONE (13) [noun] A flat, rectangular piece of rock or stone used for paving or roofing. | [noun] One of several types of rock easily split and suitable for making flagstones. FLAKINESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being flaky, such as tending to break into flakes or being unreliable. | [noun] A tendency to be eccentric or unconventional in behavior. FLAMBEAUS (16) [noun] A burning torch, especially one carried in procession. FLAMBEAUX (23) [noun] A burning torch, especially one carried in procession. FLAMBEING (17) [verb] To cook with a showy technique where an alcoholic beverage, such as brandy, is added to hot food and then the fumes are ignited. FLAMENCOS (16) [noun] A genre of folk music and dance native to Andalusia, in Spain. | [noun] A song or dance performed in such a style. FLAMEOUTS (14) [noun] The act of flaming out or burning out; extinguishing. | [noun] The act of quitting or failing, especially due to overwork or in a dramatic manner. | [noun] The sudden extinguishing of the flame of a burner (due to obstruction of fuel) FLAMINGLY (18) [adverb] In a manner that is flaming, blazing, or intensely bright; with conspicuous intensity or passion. FLAMINGOS (15) [noun] A wading bird of the family Phoenicopteridae. | [noun] A deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. FLAMMABLE (18) [noun] Any flammable substance. | [adjective] Capable of burning, especially a liquid. | [adjective] Easily set on fire. FLANCARDS (15) FLANERIES (12) [noun] Leisurely wandering or strolling through a city or countryside, typically as a form of aimless exploration or observation. | [noun] In literature, a narrative account of such wandering or idle movement through urban or natural spaces. FLANNELED (13) [adjective] Covered or wrapped in flannel. FLANNELLY (15) FLAPJACKS (27) [noun] A pancake. | [noun] A bar made of (though not limited to) rolled oats, butter, golden syrup, and brown sugar, baked in a tray. FLAPPABLE (18) FLAPPIEST (16) [adjective] Superlative form of flappy; having the greatest tendency to flap or move loosely back and forth. FLARINGLY (16) [adverb] In a manner that is strikingly bright, conspicuous, or offensive to the eye; in a glaringly obvious way. FLASHBACK (23) [noun] (authorship) A dramatic device in which an earlier event is inserted into the normal chronological flow of a narrative. | [noun] A vivid mental image of a past trauma, especially one that recurs. | [noun] A similar recurrence of the effects of a hallucinogenic drug. FLASHBULB (19) [noun] A glass bulb that made a single bright flash for illumination during a photograph. FLASHCUBE (19) [noun] A rotating cube containing a flashbulb in each of four sides FLASHGUNS (16) [noun] An electrically powered device used to trigger a flashbulb | [noun] Any similar unit used to generate repeatable flashes of light for photography FLASHIEST (15) [adjective] Most showy, ostentatious, or attention-grabbing in appearance or style. FLASHINGS (16) [noun] A sudden blazing or bursting, as of fire or water. | [noun] (roofing) Components used to weatherproof or seal roof system edges at perimeters, penetrations, walls, expansion joints, valleys, drains and other places where the roof covering is interrupted or terminated. | [noun] The process of getting rid of gaps on shelves by bringing products from the back of the shelf to the front to create a 'fuller' shelf. FLASHLAMP (19) [noun] A kind of lamp that uses an electric current to start powder burning and produce a brief sudden burst of bright light. It was formerly used in flash photography. FLASHOVER (18) [noun] The near simultaneous ignition of all combustible material in an enclosed area. | [noun] An unintended electric discharge or arc over or around an insulator FLASHTUBE (17) [noun] A tube that produces a brief intense flash of light, used in photography and electronic devices. FLATBOATS (14) [noun] A boxy, flat-bottomed boat used for carrying livestock, freight, and people on rivers. FLATFOOTS (15) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) A condition in which the arch of the foot makes contact with the ground | [noun] A person having the above condition | [noun] (law enforcement) (plural typically flatfoots) A policeman FLATHEADS (16) [noun] Any fish in the Platycephalidae family. | [noun] (plural only "flatheads") A type of screw or bolt designed to fit in a countersink so that it sits flush with a surface. | [noun] (plural only "flatheads") A type of engine that has the valves placed in the engine block beside the piston, instead of in the cylinder head, as in an overhead valve engine. FLATIRONS (12) [noun] A tough cut of beef from the shoulder of the steer. | [noun] A simple iron (for pressing laundry) which is heated on a stove. | [noun] A pair of metal tongs with heated ceramic plates used for straightening hair. FLATLANDS (13) [noun] A land area free of woodland, cities, and towns; open country. | [noun] A wide, open space that is usually used to grow crops or to hold farm animals. | [noun] A place where competitive matches are carried out. FLATLINGS (13) FLATMATES (14) [noun] A person with whom one shares a flat. | [noun] A person with whom one shares any rental dwelling, not necessarily a flat. FLATTENED (13) [verb] To make something flat or flatter. | [verb] To press one's body tightly against a surface, such as a wall or floor, especially in order to avoid being seen or harmed. | [verb] To knock down or lay low. FLATTENER (12) [noun] A person or thing that flattens. | [noun] In business, a technology or innovation that disrupts an industry by leveling the playing field between competitors. FLATTERED (13) [verb] To compliment someone, often insincerely and sometimes to win favour. | [verb] To enhance someone's vanity by praising them. | [verb] To portray someone to advantage. FLATTERER (12) [noun] One who flatters. FLATULENT (12) [adjective] Affected by gas in the intestine; likely to fart. | [adjective] Empty; vain. FLATWARES (15) [noun] Tableware made of metal, typically silverware or stainless steel, used for eating and serving food. | [noun] Plural of flatware, referring to multiple pieces or sets of such utensils. FLATWORKS (19) FLATWORMS (17) [noun] Any of very many parasitic or free-living worms, of the phylum Platyhelminthes, having a flattened body with no skeleton or body cavity. FLAUNTERS (12) [noun] Plural of flaunter; people who display or show off something ostentatiously. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of flaunt; displays or shows off in a way that is intended to impress others. FLAUNTIER (12) [adjective] The comparative form of flaunt, meaning more inclined to display ostentatiously or show off. FLAUNTING (13) [verb] To wave or flutter smartly in the wind. | [verb] To parade, display with ostentation. | [verb] To show off, as with flashy clothing. FLAUTISTS (12) [noun] One who plays the flute. FLAVANOLS (15) [noun] Any of a class of flavonoids that use the 2-phenyl-3,4-dihydro-2H-chromen-3-ol molecular skeleton FLAVANONE (15) [noun] A type of flavonoid compound found in plants, characterized by a three-ring structure with a ketone group, commonly found in citrus fruits and used in biochemistry and nutrition studies. FLAVONOID (16) [noun] Any of many compounds that are plant metabolites, being formally derived from flavone; they have antioxidant properties, and sometimes contribute to flavor. FLAVONOLS (15) [noun] Any of several flavonoids that have a 3-hydroxyflavone backbone. FLAVORERS (15) [noun] Plural of flavorer; substances or ingredients that add flavor to food or beverages. FLAVORFUL (18) [adjective] Full of flavor. FLAVORING (16) [verb] To add flavoring to something. | [noun] Something that gives flavor, usually a food ingredient. FLAVORIST (15) [noun] A person who creates or develops artificial or natural flavors for food and beverage products. FLAVOURED (16) [verb] To add flavoring to something. | [adjective] Having a specific taste, often due to the addition of flavouring. FLAXSEEDS (20) [noun] The seed of the flax plant; a source of linseed oil. FLEABANES (14) [noun] Any of various species of flowering plants, mostly in two subfamilies in Asteroideae, that typically repel insects: | [noun] In Cichorioideae, Vernonia (ironweeds). FLEABITES (14) [noun] The bite of a flea, or the mark caused by such a bite. | [noun] Something which causes only trifling irritation; a minor inconvenience. FLEAWORTS (15) [noun] Any of various unrelated plants that are supposed to kill or ward off fleas. | [noun] A herb, Plantago psyllium, whose seeds are supposed to resemble fleas FLECHETTE (17) [noun] A small sharp antipersonnel projectile, used as shrapnel, fired from a shotgun, or scattered from an aircraft. | [noun] The game of lawn darts. FLECTIONS (14) [noun] The act of bending a joint, especially a bone joint; the counteraction of extension. | [noun] The state of being bent or flexed. | [noun] Deviation from straightness. FLEDGIEST (14) [adjective] Superlative form of fledgy; most resembling or characteristic of a fledgling bird, or most recently developed or immature. FLEDGLING (15) [noun] A young bird which has just developed its flight feathers (notably wings). | [noun] An insect that has just fledged, i.e. undergone its final moult to become an adult or imago. | [noun] An immature, naïve or inexperienced person. FLEECHING (18) FLEECIEST (14) [adjective] Resembling or covered in fleece. FLEETNESS (12) [noun] The quality or state of being fleet; swiftness or speed of movement. FLEMISHED (18) FLEMISHES (17) [verb] Third person singular present of "flemish," meaning to deck or adorn a ship with flags and bunting, or to finish or complete something in a showy manner. FLENCHING (18) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. FLESHIEST (15) [adjective] Of, related to, or resembling flesh. | [adjective] (of a person) Having considerable flesh; plump. FLESHINGS (16) [noun] Flesh-coloured tights (worn by actors or dancers) FLESHLIER (15) [adjective] Of or relating to the body. | [adjective] Of, relating to or resembling flesh; composed of flesh; having a lot of flesh. | [adjective] Of or relating to pleasurable (often sexual) sensations. FLESHMENT (17) FLESHPOTS (17) [noun] A place offering entertainment of a sensual or luxurious nature. FLETCHERS (17) [noun] One who fletches or feathers arrows. | [noun] A device to assist in fletching or feathering arrows. | [noun] Generally, a manufacturer of bows and arrows. FLETCHING (18) [verb] To feather, as an arrow. | [noun] The process of attaching fins, such as halved feathers, to a projectile in order to stabilize its flight. | [noun] The fins or feathers so attached. FLEXAGONS (20) [noun] Polygon-shaped paper models that can be flexed and folded to reveal hidden surfaces and patterns. FLEXITIME (21) [noun] An arrangement that allows employees to set their own working hours within agreed limits; normally must include certain periods (core time) when they must be at work. FLEXTIMES (21) [noun] Plural of flextime; arrangements allowing employees to vary their working hours within agreed limits. FLICHTERS (17) FLICKERED (19) [verb] To burn or shine unsteadily, or with a wavering light. | [verb] To keep going on and off; to appear and disappear for short moments; to flutter. | [verb] To flutter; to flap the wings without flying. FLIGHTIER (16) [adjective] Given to unplanned and silly ideas or actions. | [adjective] (of a bird) That flies easily or often. | [adjective] Swift. FLIGHTILY (19) [adverb] In a flighty manner; with frivolous, capricious, or irresponsible behavior. FLIGHTING (17) [verb] (of a spin bowler) To throw the ball in such a way that it has more airtime and more spin than usual. | [verb] (by extension) To throw or kick something so as to send it flying with more loft or airtime than usual. FLIMFLAMS (19) [noun] Nonsense. | [noun] Deception. FLIMSIEST (14) [adjective] Likely to bend or break under pressure. | [adjective] Weak; ill-founded. FLINCHERS (17) [noun] Plural of flincher; people who flinch or draw back from something painful or unpleasant. | [noun] In poker, players who show signs of weakness or hesitation. FLINCHING (18) [verb] To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc. | [verb] To make a sudden, involuntary movement in response to a (usually negative) stimulus; to cringe. | [verb] To dodge (a question), to avoid an unpleasant task or duty FLINKITES (16) FLINTIEST (12) [adjective] Resembling or containing flint. | [adjective] Siliceous (including basanite). | [adjective] Showing a lack of emotion. FLINTLIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling flint in hardness, color, or other qualities; hard and unyielding. FLINTLOCK (18) [noun] An early type of firearm, using a spring-loaded flint to strike sparks into the firing pan. FLIPPANCY (21) [noun] A disrespectful levity or pertness especially in respect to grave or sacred matters. FLIRTIEST (12) [adjective] Flirting, or seeming to flirt. FLITCHING (18) [verb] Present participle of flitch, meaning to cut into flitches (sides of bacon or fish) | [noun] A side of bacon or a similar cut of meat. FLITTERED (13) [verb] To scatter in pieces. | [verb] To move about rapidly and nimbly. | [verb] To move quickly from one condition or location to another. FLOATAGES (13) [noun] The plural of floatage; items or materials that float, or the act of floating. | [noun] The part of a ship's hull that is below the water line. FLOATIEST (12) [adjective] Buoyant, tending to float on a liquid or rise in air or gas | [adjective] (of a dress) lightweight, so as to rise when the wearer is walking. | [adjective] Light, hypnotic and relaxing. FLOCCULES (16) [noun] A small, loosely aggregated mass of material suspended in, or precipitated from a solution; a floc. FLOCCULUS (16) [noun] A small fluffy tuft. | [noun] Either of two small lobes on the posterior border of the cerebellum. | [noun] A marking on the surface of the sun associated with a solar prominence. FLOCKIEST (18) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of flock; having a fluffy or woolly texture. | [adjective] Most inclined to flock or gather in groups. FLOCKINGS (19) [noun] Fibrous or fuzzy material used as a coating or filling. | [noun] Plural of flocking, the process of depositing fibers onto a surface to create a textured finish. FLOGGINGS (15) [noun] Infliction of punishment by dealing blows or whipping. FLOODGATE (14) [noun] An adjustable gate or valve used to control the flow of water through a sluice. | [noun] (by extension) Anything that controls or limits an outpouring of people, emotion etc. FLOODWAYS (19) [noun] An engineered path to channel floodwaters away from areas to be protected FLOORAGES (13) [noun] The plural of flooring; the collective floor surfaces or materials used in buildings or structures. FLOORINGS (13) [noun] A floor. | [noun] A material used to make floors. | [noun] The act of putting one's opponent on the floor; a knockdown. FLOPHOUSE (17) [noun] A cheap hotel or boarding house where many people sleep in large rooms. | [verb] To stay in a flophouse. FLOPOVERS (17) FLOPPIEST (16) [adjective] Limp, not hard, firm, or rigid; flexible. FLORENCES (14) [noun] Plural of Florence, a city in Italy; or plural of florence, a type of silk fabric with a stiff finish used in millinery and garment construction. FLORIATED (13) [adjective] Having floral ornaments FLORIDITY (16) FLORIGENS (13) [noun] A plant hormone that promotes flowering, hypothesized to be produced in leaves and transported to the shoot apex to induce flower formation. FLORISTIC (14) [adjective] Describing a region with a relatively uniform composition of plant species. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to floristics. FLORISTRY (15) [noun] The art or business of arranging and selling flowers. FLOSSIEST (12) [adjective] Resembling floss. | [adjective] Extravagantly showy; flashy FLOTATION (12) [noun] A state of floating, or being afloat. | [noun] The ability (as of a tire or snowshoes) to stay on the surface of soft ground or snow. | [noun] (chemical engineering) A process of separating minerals by agitating a mixture with water and detergents etc; selected substances being carried to the surface in air bubbles. FLOTILLAS (12) [noun] A small fleet of warships (usually of the same class), or a fleet of small ships. FLOUNCIER (14) [adjective] More flouncy; characterized by more exaggerated, showy, or ostentatious movement or style. FLOUNCING (15) [verb] To move in an exaggerated, bouncy manner. | [verb] To flounder; to make spastic motions. | [verb] To decorate with a flounce. FLOUNDERS (13) [verb] To flop around as a fish out of water. | [verb] To make clumsy attempts to move or regain one's balance. | [verb] To act clumsily or confused; to struggle or be flustered. FLOURLESS (12) [adjective] Without flour; made without the use of flour. FLOWCHART (20) [noun] A schematic representation of how the different stages in a process are interconnected. FLOWERAGE (16) FLOWERERS (15) [noun] Something (originally a plant) that flowers (often in a specified manner, or at a specified time) FLOWERETS (15) [noun] A floret, or small or component flower FLOWERFUL (18) FLOWERIER (15) [adjective] Pertaining to flowers. | [adjective] Decorated with or abundant in flowers. | [adjective] (of a speech or piece of writing) overly complicated or elaborate; with grandiloquent expressions FLOWERILY (18) [adverb] In a flowery manner; with elaborate or ornate language and expression. FLOWERING (16) [verb] To put forth blooms. | [verb] To decorate with pictures of flowers. | [verb] To reach a state of full development or achievement. FLOWERPOT (17) [noun] A pot filled with soil in which plants are grown. FLOWINGLY (19) [adverb] In a flowing manner; with smooth, continuous movement or expression. FLOWMETER (17) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure the flow of a fluid through a pipe, etc. FLOWSTONE (15) [noun] A secondary layered mineral deposit of calcite or other mineral, formed by water flowing down the walls and along the floor of a cave. FLUCTUANT (14) [adjective] That fluctuates, or causes fluctuation | [adjective] Used to describe a fluid-filled structure, such as an abscess, that produces a wave-like motion when palpated FLUCTUATE (14) [verb] To vary irregularly; to swing. | [verb] To undulate. | [verb] To be irresolute; to waver. FLUENCIES (14) [noun] The quality of being fluent; smooth and effortless flow in speech or writing. | [noun] Plural of fluency; multiple instances or types of fluency in different languages or skills. FLUFFIEST (18) [adjective] Covered with fluff. | [adjective] Light; soft; airy. | [adjective] Warm and comforting. FLUIDALLY (16) FLUIDISED (14) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUIDISES (13) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUIDIZED (23) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas | [adjective] Given the properties of a fluid (by shaking or injection of gas) FLUIDIZER (22) [noun] A device or substance that causes a material to behave like a fluid by reducing friction between particles. | [noun] In industrial processes, equipment that agitates or suspends solid particles in a gas or liquid stream. FLUIDIZES (22) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUIDNESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being fluid; the ability to flow smoothly or easily. | [noun] Ease and smoothness in movement, speech, or performance. FLUIDRAMS (15) [noun] The dram (unit of volume). FLUMMOXED (24) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. | [adjective] Confused, perplexed or flustered. FLUMMOXES (23) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. FLUORENES (12) [noun] Plural of fluorene, an organic compound consisting of three fused aromatic rings, used in chemistry and materials science. FLUORESCE (14) [verb] To emit electromagnetic radiation, especially visible light, when absorbing radiation of some other wavelength. | [verb] Of colours, to be very bright; to be so bright as to appear to radiate as a light source. FLUORIDES (13) [noun] Any salt of hydrofluoric acid; for example, potassium fluoride. | [noun] A binary compound of fluorine and another element or radical. FLUORINES (12) [noun] Plural of fluorine, a highly reactive chemical element with atomic number 9. FLUORITES (12) [noun] Plural of fluorite, a crystalline mineral form of calcium fluoride that is valued for its optical properties and industrial uses. FLUOROSES (12) [noun] Plural of fluorosis, a condition caused by excessive fluorine intake, typically resulting in dental discoloration or mottling of tooth enamel. FLUOROSIS (12) [noun] Any adverse condition due to an excess of fluoride. FLUOROTIC (14) [adjective] Relating to or affected by fluorosis, a condition caused by excessive fluorine intake that results in dental or skeletal damage. FLUORSPAR (14) [noun] A halide mineral composed of calcium fluoride. FLURRYING (16) [verb] To agitate, bewilder, fluster. | [verb] To move or fall in a flurry. | [noun] A brief blast or shower, as of snow. FLUSHABLE (17) [adjective] Capable of being flushed, especially referring to toiletries or waste products that can be safely disposed of through plumbing systems. | [adjective] Able to be rinsed or washed away with water. FLUSHNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being flush; abundance or plenty. | [noun] The condition of being level or even with a surface. FLUSTERED (13) [verb] To make hot and rosy, as with drinking. | [verb] (by extension) To confuse; befuddle; throw into panic by making overwrought with confusion. | [verb] To be in a heat or bustle; to be agitated and confused. FLUTELIKE (16) [adjective] Resembling or having the quality of a flute; producing a sound similar to that of a flute. FLUTTERED (13) [verb] To flap or wave quickly but irregularly. | [verb] Of a winged animal: to flap the wings without flying; to fly with a light flapping of the wings. | [verb] To cause something to flap. FLUTTERER (12) [noun] One that flutters; something that moves with quick, light, irregular motions. | [noun] A device or mechanism that produces a fluttering effect. FLUXGATES (20) [noun] Any of several devices that use soft iron cores surrounded by coils of wire that generate a pattern of induced currents when it moves relative to an external magnetic field FLUXIONAL (19) [adjective] Pertaining to, or having the nature of, fluxion or fluxions; variable; inconstant. | [adjective] (of a compound) That undergoes rapid intramolecular rearrangements, component atoms being interchanged among equivalent structures. FLYBRIDGE (19) [noun] A flying bridge FLYLEAVES (18) [noun] A blank page at the front or back of a book. FLYPAPERS (19) [noun] A strip of paper coated with a sticky, often poisonous, substance that catches and kills flies that land on it | [verb] To cause something to become stuck with, or as if with, flypaper. FLYSPECKS (23) [noun] Housefly excrement, visible as a minuscule black dot. | [noun] (by extension) Anything tiny or insignificant. FLYWEIGHT (22) [noun] A weight that moves outward depending on centrifugal force. | [noun] A weight class in many combat sports; e.g. in professional boxing of a maximum of 112 pounds or 50.8 kilograms. | [noun] (adjectival use) Small, light or unimportant. FLYWHEELS (21) [noun] A rotating mass used to maintain the speed of a machine within certain limits while the machine receives or releases energy at a varying rate. FOAMINESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being foamy; the presence of foam or froth. FOCACCIAS (18) [noun] Plural of focaccia, an Italian flatbread made with olive oil and often topped with herbs, salt, or other ingredients. FOCALISED (15) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCALISES (14) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCALIZED (24) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCALIZES (23) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCUSABLE (16) FOCUSLESS (14) FOCUSSING (15) [verb] (followed by on or upon) To concentrate one's attention. | [verb] To cause (rays of light, etc) to converge at a single point. | [verb] To adjust (a lens, an optical instrument) in order to position an image with respect to the focal plane. FODDERING (15) [verb] To feed animals (with fodder). | [noun] The feeding of an animal with fodder. FOGFRUITS (16) [noun] Plural of fogfruit, a low-growing plant of the genus Phyla found in warm regions, having small clustered flowers and used in herbal medicine. FOGGINESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being foggy; lack of clarity or obscurity. | [noun] Mental confusion or lack of mental clarity. FOLDBOATS (15) [noun] A lightweight collapsible boat that can be folded for transport and storage. FOLDEROLS (13) [noun] Nonsense or foolishness. | [noun] A decorative object of little value; a trifle or gewgaw. FOLIATING (13) [verb] To form into leaves. | [verb] To beat into a leaf, or thin plate. | [verb] To spread over with a thin coat of tin and quicksilver. FOLIATION (12) [noun] The process of forming into a leaf or leaves. | [noun] The process of forming into pages; pagination. | [noun] The manner in which the young leaves are disposed within the bud. FOLKLIVES (19) FOLKLORES (16) [noun] Plural of folklore; traditional beliefs, customs, and stories of a community or culture. FOLKLORIC (18) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of folklore; traditional and typical of a particular culture or group. FOLKMOOTS (18) [noun] Plural of folkmoot, an assembly of the people in Anglo-Saxon England, or a modern gathering of folk music enthusiasts. FOLKMOTES (18) [noun] Plural of folkmote, an assembly or meeting of the people in Anglo-Saxon England, typically a local gathering for judicial or administrative purposes. FOLKSIEST (16) [adjective] Characteristic of simple country life. | [adjective] Informal, affable and familiar. FOLKTALES (16) [noun] A tale or story that is part of the oral tradition of a people or a place. FOLLICLES (14) [noun] A small cavity or sac, such as a hair follicle. | [noun] A type of primitive dry fruit produced by certain flowering plants. FOLLOWERS (15) [noun] One who follows, comes after another. | [noun] Something that comes after another thing. | [noun] One who is a part of master's physical group, such as a servant or retainer. FOLLOWING (16) [verb] To go after; to pursue; to move behind in the same path or direction. | [verb] To go or come after in a sequence. | [verb] To carry out (orders, instructions, etc.). FOMENTERS (14) [noun] Plural of fomenter; people who instigate or stir up trouble, rebellion, or unrest. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of foment; to instigate or encourage something undesirable. FOMENTING (15) [verb] To incite or cause troublesome acts; to encourage; to instigate. | [verb] To apply a poultice to; to bathe with a cloth or sponge. FONDLINGS (14) [noun] Plural of fondling; instances of touching or caressing affectionately or tenderly. | [verb] Third person singular present of fondle; to touch or handle tenderly or affectionately. FONTANELS (12) [noun] A soft membraneous spot on the head of a baby due to incomplete fusion of the cranial bones. FOODSTUFF (19) [noun] A material that may be used as food. FOOFARAWS (18) [noun] Unnecessary activity or fuss; a commotion or to-do. | [noun] Plural of foofaraw, meaning instances of unnecessary fussing or elaborate but pointless activity. FOOLERIES (12) [noun] Foolish behaviour or speech. FOOLHARDY (19) [adjective] Marked by unthinking recklessness with disregard for danger; boldly rash; hotheaded. FOOLISHER (15) FOOLISHLY (18) [adverb] In a foolish manner. | [adverb] Without good judgment. FOOLPROOF (17) [verb] To make foolproof. | [adjective] For a device: protected, or designed to be proof against misuse or error. | [adjective] For an idea or plan: infallible, or bulletproof. FOOLSCAPS (16) [noun] Plural of foolscap, a size of paper (typically 13.5 by 17 inches) or a fool's cap worn by a jester. FOOTBALLS (14) [noun] (general) A sport played on foot in which teams attempt to get a ball into a goal or zone defended by the other team. | [noun] Association football: a game in which two teams each contend to get a round ball into the other team's goal primarily by kicking the ball. Known as soccer in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand. | [noun] American football: a game played on a field of 100 yards long and 53 1/3 yards wide in which two teams of 11 players attempt to get an ovoid ball to the end of each other's territory. FOOTBATHS (17) [noun] The act of soaking or washing the feet. | [noun] A small basin or bath designed for soaking or washing the feet. | [noun] A liquid mixture, often medicinal, for soaking or washing the feet with. FOOTBOARD (15) [noun] An upright board across the foot of a bedstead. | [noun] A board or small raised platform on which to support or rest the feet, such as that found in a carriage. | [noun] A place to stand on a scooter or skateboard. FOOTCLOTH (17) FOOTFALLS (15) [noun] The sound made by a footstep. | [noun] Foot (pedestrian) traffic. FOOTFAULT (15) [noun] A violation in tennis or other racquet sports where a player's foot touches or crosses the baseline or sideline while serving. | [noun] In Scrabble, an illegal move or rule violation made during play. FOOTGEARS (13) [noun] Plural of footgear; protective or decorative coverings worn on the feet, such as shoes, boots, or sandals. FOOTHILLS (15) [noun] A hill at the base of a mountain or mountain range. FOOTHOLDS (16) [noun] A solid grip with the feet. | [noun] (by extension) A secure position from which it is difficult to be dislodged. | [noun] Airhead, beachhead, bridgehead, lodgement. FOOTLOOSE (12) [adjective] Tending to travel or do as one pleases; readily without many commitments or responsibility. | [adjective] Of a sail: not properly secured at the bottom. FOOTMARKS (18) [noun] Footprint (an impression made by a foot) FOOTNOTED (13) [verb] To add footnotes to a text. FOOTNOTES (12) [noun] A short piece of text, often numbered, placed at the bottom of a printed page, that adds a comment, citation, reference etc, to a designated part of the main text. | [noun] (by extension) An event of lesser importance than some larger event to which it is related. | [noun] A qualification to the import of something. FOOTPACES (16) [noun] A walking pace or step. | [noun] A dais, or elevated platform; the highest step of the altar; a landing in a staircase. FOOTPATHS (17) [noun] A path for pedestrians. FOOTPRINT (14) [noun] The impression of the foot in a soft substance such as sand or snow. | [noun] Space required by a piece of equipment. | [noun] The amount of hard drive space required for a program. FOOTRACES (14) [noun] Plural of footrace; competitions in which people run on foot against each other. | [noun] Running races or sprinting contests held on a track or similar surface. FOOTRESTS (12) [noun] A support on which to rest the feet. FOOTROPES (14) [noun] Ropes attached to the lower edge of a sail that allow sailors to haul it up or control it during sailing. FOOTSLOGS (13) [noun] An instance of footslogging. | [verb] To walk heavily over a long distance or in a weary manner; to trudge FOOTSTEPS (14) [noun] The mark or impression left by a foot; a track. | [noun] By extension, the indications or waypoints of a course or direction taken. | [noun] The sound made by walking, running etc. FOOTSTONE (12) [noun] A stone placed at the foot of a grave or burial site, typically marking the lower end of a grave. FOOTSTOOL (12) [noun] A low stool for supporting the feet while seated. | [noun] Anything trodden upon or treated as subservient. FOOTWALLS (15) [noun] The section of rock that extends below a diagonal fault line (the corresponding upper section being the hanging wall). | [noun] The under wall of an enclosed vein. FOOTWORKS (19) [noun] The footwork or footsteps, particularly in dancing or boxing. | [noun] Plural of footwork, referring to the skillful movement of the feet in sports or dance. FOPPERIES (16) [noun] The dress or actions of a fop. | [noun] Stupidity. FOPPISHLY (22) [adverb] In a manner characteristic of a fop; with excessive concern for appearance or trivial matters. FORAMINAL (14) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by a foramen, which is a small opening or hole, especially in a bone or anatomical structure. FORBEARER (14) [noun] One who forbears; a person who practices forbearance or restraint. | [noun] An ancestor or forebear. FORBIDALS (15) FORBIDDEN (16) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORBIDDER (16) [noun] One who forbids; a person that prohibits or prevents something. FORBODING (16) [verb] Present participle of forbode, meaning to be an omen or sign of something, typically something bad. | [adjective] Serving as an omen of something bad; ominous. FORCELESS (14) [adjective] Lacking force, power, or effectiveness; weak or feeble. FORCEMEAT (16) [noun] Meat chopped fine and highly seasoned, either served up alone, or used as a stuffing. FOREARMED (15) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To arm in preparation. | [adjective] (in combination) Having some specific type of forearm. FOREBEARS (14) [verb] To keep away from; to avoid; to abstain from. | [verb] To refrain from proceeding; to pause; to delay. | [verb] To refuse; to decline; to withsay; to unheed. FOREBODED (16) [verb] To predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device). | [verb] To be prescient of (some ill or misfortune); to have an inward conviction of, as of a calamity which is about to happen; to augur despondingly. FOREBODER (15) FOREBODES (15) [verb] To predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device). | [verb] To be prescient of (some ill or misfortune); to have an inward conviction of, as of a calamity which is about to happen; to augur despondingly. FOREBOOMS (16) FOREBRAIN (14) [noun] The anterior part of the brain, including the cerebrum, thalamus, and hypothalamus. FORECASTS (14) [noun] An estimation of a future condition. | [noun] (betting) exacta | [verb] To estimate how something will be in the future. FORECHECK (23) [verb] To pressure the puck carrier for the opposing team FORECLOSE (14) [verb] To repossess a mortgaged property whose owner has failed to make the necessary payments; used with on. | [verb] To cut off (a mortgager) by a judgment of court from the power of redeeming the mortgaged premises. | [verb] To shut up or out; to prevent from doing something. FORECOURT (14) [noun] The area in front of a petrol station where the petrol pumps are situated. | [noun] Any open area in front of a building. FOREDATED (14) [verb] To date a document with an earlier date than when it was actually written. | [verb] To occur or exist before a particular date or event. FOREDATES (13) [verb] To date something earlier than its actual date. | [verb] To precede in time; to come before. FOREDECKS (19) [noun] The part of the deck of a ship or boat that lies forward of the mast FOREDOING (14) [verb] To kill, destroy. | [verb] To annul, abolish, cancel. | [verb] To do away with, undo; to ruin. FOREDOOMS (15) [verb] To predestine to a doom. FOREFACES (17) [noun] The front faces or forward-facing surfaces of something, such as the front of buildings or the anterior surfaces of objects. FOREFEELS (15) FOREFENDS (16) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FOREFRONT (15) [noun] The leading position or edge. | [verb] To bring to the forefront; to emphasize, or focus on. FOREGOERS (13) [noun] Plural of foregoer; those who go before or precede others. | [noun] Those who forgo or abstain from something. FOREGOING (14) [adjective] Occurring before or in front of something else, in time, place, rank or sequence. | [verb] To precede, to go before. | [verb] To let pass, to leave alone, to let go. FOREHANDS (16) [noun] (racket sports) A stroke in which the palm of the hand faces the direction of the stroke. | [noun] (disc sports) A throw similar to a sidearm throw in baseball, where the disc remains on the throwing-arm side of the body and is led by the middle finger. | [noun] All of the part of a horse which is before the rider. FOREHEADS (16) [noun] The part of the face above the eyebrows and below the hairline. | [noun] Confidence; audacity | [noun] The upper part of a mobile phone, above the screen. FOREHOOFS (18) [noun] Plural of forehoof, the front hooves of a four-legged animal. FOREIGNER (13) [noun] A person from a foreign country. | [noun] A private job run by an employee at a trade factory rather than going through the business. FOREJUDGE (21) [verb] To exclude, oust, or dispossess by a judgment; prohibit (from). | [verb] To condemn judicially (to a penalty). | [verb] To judge beforehand; prejudge. FOREKNOWN (19) [verb] To have knowledge of beforehand. | [adjective] Anticipated or predicted FOREKNOWS (19) [verb] To have knowledge of beforehand. FORELANDS (13) [noun] A headland. | [noun] In plate tectonics, the zone adjacent to a mountain chain where material eroded from it is deposited. FORELIMBS (16) [noun] The anterior limb (or equivalent appendage) of an animal FORELOCKS (18) [noun] The part of a person's hairstyle which covers the forehead. | [noun] The part of a horse's (or similar animal's) mane that lies on its forehead. | [noun] A wedge pushed through a hole at the end of a bolt to hold it in place. FOREMASTS (14) [noun] The mast nearest the bow, on a ship with more than one mast. FOREMILKS (18) [noun] The first milk secreted by a mammal after giving birth, rich in antibodies and nutrients. | [noun] The initial milk drawn from a cow's udder at the beginning of milking. FORENAMED (15) [adjective] Mentioned or named before; aforesaid. FORENAMES (14) [noun] A name that precedes the surname. FORENOONS (12) [noun] The part of the day from dawn to noon. | [noun] The part of the day between midnight and noon. | [noun] The early part of anything. FORENSICS (14) [noun] The study of formal debate; rhetoric | [noun] Forensic science FOREPARTS (14) [noun] The front or anterior part of something. FOREPEAKS (18) [noun] The part of the hold of a ship within the angle of the bow FOREPLAYS (17) [noun] Preliminary sexual activity before intercourse. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of foreplay, meaning to engage in preliminary sexual activity. FORERANKS (16) FOREREACH (17) [verb] To gain an advantage over a competitor or rival. | [verb] (nautical) To make progress to windward while tacking. FORESAILS (12) [noun] (on a square-rigged ship) The lowest (and usually the largest) square sail hung on the foremast | [noun] A square fore-and-aft sail set on the foremast, but behind it, on a schooner or other similar vessel. | [noun] (on a sloop) A triangular sail set forward of the foremast: forestaysail. FORESEERS (12) [noun] Plural of foreseer; people who foresee or predict future events. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of foresee; to see or know beforehand. FORESHANK (19) [noun] The part of a leg of meat, especially beef or lamb, that is in front of the shank. | [noun] In butchering, the front portion of the hind leg or the front leg of an animal. FORESHEET (15) [noun] One of the sheets (ropes) that controls the foresail FORESHOCK (21) [noun] A small earth tremor which precedes the mainshock in an earthquake sequence. Not all mainshocks have foreshocks. | [noun] Any shock or disturbance which precedes an event FORESHORE (15) [noun] The part of a shore between high water and low water, especially the beach exposed at maximum ebb spring tides. FORESHOWN (18) [verb] To show in advance; to foretell, predict. | [verb] To foreshadow or prefigure. FORESHOWS (18) [verb] To show in advance; to foretell, predict. | [verb] To foreshadow or prefigure. | [noun] A manifestation in advance; a prior indication. FORESIDES (13) FORESIGHT (16) [noun] The ability to foresee or prepare wisely for the future. | [noun] The front sight on a rifle or similar weapon | [noun] A bearing taken forwards towards a new object FORESKINS (16) [noun] The nerve-dense, retractable fold of skin which covers and protects the head of the penis in humans and some other animals. FORESPEAK (18) [verb] To speak beforehand or in advance. | [verb] To arrange or settle by previous agreement. FORESPOKE (18) [verb] Past tense of forespeak; to speak beforehand or predict. | [verb] To arrange or order in advance. FORESTAGE (13) [noun] The part of a stage in front of the curtain; the apron of a stage. | [noun] The area in front of a storefront or building entrance. FORESTALL (12) [verb] To prevent, delay or hinder something by taking precautionary or anticipatory measures; to avert. | [verb] To preclude or bar from happening, render impossible. | [verb] To purchase the complete supply of a good, particularly foodstuffs, in order to charge a monopoly price. | [noun] An ambush; plot; an interception; waylaying; rescue. FORESTAYS (15) [noun] A stay that extends from the top of the foremast to the bow or bowsprit of a sailing ship FORESTERS (12) [noun] A person who practices forestry. | [noun] A person who lives in a forest. | [noun] A moth in the family Zygaenidae. FORESTIAL (12) FORESTING (13) [verb] Present participle of "forest," meaning to plant with trees or convert land into forest. FORESWEAR (15) [verb] To renounce or reject solemnly; to swear off. | [verb] To swear falsely; to perjure oneself. FORESWORE (15) [verb] Past tense of forswear; to renounce, reject, or swear off something. | [verb] To deny or disavow under oath. FORESWORN (15) [adjective] Having broken an oath or promise; perjured. | [verb] Past participle of forswear; to renounce or reject something solemnly. FORETASTE (12) [noun] A taste beforehand. | [noun] A sample taken in anticipation; an experience undergone in advance. | [verb] To taste beforehand. FORETELLS (12) [verb] To predict; to tell (the future) before it occurs; to prophesy. | [verb] To tell (a person) of the future. FORETIMES (14) [noun] Former or ancient times; times long past. FORETOKEN (16) [noun] A prognostic; a premonitory sign; warning or presentment. | [verb] To betoken beforehand; prognosticate; foreshadow; give warning of; presage. FOREWARNS (15) [verb] To warn in advance. FOREWINGS (16) [noun] (in an insect) Either member of the pair of wings closest to the head. FOREWOMAN (17) [noun] A female leader of a work crew (a female foreperson or female foreman). | [noun] A female foreman of a jury. FOREWOMEN (17) [noun] A female leader of a work crew (a female foreperson or female foreman). | [noun] A female foreman of a jury. FOREWORDS (16) [noun] An introductory section preceding the main text of a book or other document; a preface or introduction. FOREYARDS (16) [noun] A yard in front; front yard | [noun] A yard on the lower mast of a square-rigged foremast of a ship used to support the foresail. FORFEITED (16) [verb] To suffer the loss of something by wrongdoing or non-compliance | [verb] To lose a contest, game, match, or other form of competition by voluntary withdrawal, by failing to attend or participate, or by violation of the rules | [verb] To be guilty of a misdeed; to be criminal; to transgress. FORFEITER (15) [noun] One who forfeits or loses something, especially as a penalty or consequence of breaking an agreement or rule. FORFENDED (17) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FORGATHER (16) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FORGEABLE (15) [adjective] Capable of being forged or counterfeited. | [adjective] Capable of being shaped or worked, as metal. FORGERIES (13) [noun] The act of forging metal into shape. | [noun] The act of forging, fabricating, or producing falsely; especially the crime of fraudulently making or altering a writing or signature purporting to be made by another, the false making or material alteration of or addition to a written instrument for the purpose of deceit and fraud. | [noun] That which is forged, fabricated, falsely devised or counterfeited. FORGETFUL (16) [adjective] Unable to remember things well; liable to forget. | [adjective] Dropping some of the input's structure or properties before producing an output. FORGETIVE (16) FORGETTER (13) [noun] One who forgets. | [noun] A person with a poor memory. FORGIVERS (16) [noun] People who forgive or grant forgiveness to others. | [noun] Plural of forgiver, one who pardons or excuses offenses. FORGIVING (17) [verb] To pardon; to waive any negative feeling or desire for punishment, retribution, or compensation. | [verb] To accord forgiveness. | [noun] An act of forgiveness. FORGOTTEN (13) [verb] To lose remembrance of. | [verb] To unintentionally not do, neglect. | [verb] To unintentionally leave something behind. FORJUDGED (22) FORJUDGES (21) FORKBALLS (18) [noun] A baseball pitch, much like the sinker. FORKLIFTS (19) [noun] A small industrial vehicle with a power-operated fork-like pronged platform that can be raised and lowered for insertion under a load, often on pallets, to be lifted and moved FORLORNER (12) FORLORNLY (15) [adverb] In a sad and lonely manner; expressing loneliness, abandonment, or despair. FORMALINS (14) [noun] Plural of formalin, a solution of formaldehyde in water used as a disinfectant and preservative for biological specimens. FORMALISE (14) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISM (16) [noun] Strict adherence to a given form of conduct, practice etc. | [noun] One of several alternative computational paradigms for a given theory. | [noun] An approach to interpretation and/or evaluation focused on the (usually linguistic) structure of a literary work rather than on the contexts of its origin or reception. FORMALIST (14) [noun] An overly formal person, especially one who adheres to current forms; a stickler | [noun] An advocate of formalism | [adjective] Of or pertaining to formalism; formalistic FORMALITY (17) [noun] The state of being formal. | [noun] Something said or done as a matter of form. | [noun] A customary ritual without new or unique meaning. FORMALIZE (23) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMAMIDE (17) [noun] The amide of formic acid HCO-NH2 or any N-substituted derivative; they are used in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals FORMATION (14) [noun] Something possessing structure or form. | [noun] The act of assembling a group or structure. | [noun] The process during which something comes into being and gains its characteristics. FORMATIVE (17) [noun] (grammar) A language unit that has morphological function. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the formation and subsequent growth of something. | [adjective] Capable of forming something. FORMATTED (15) [verb] To create or edit the layout of a document. | [verb] Change a document so it will fit onto a different type of page. | [verb] To prepare a mass storage medium for initial use, erasing any existing data in the process. FORMATTER (14) [noun] One who formats; a person or tool that arranges data, text, or documents into a specified format or structure. FORMICARY (19) [noun] An ant colony, a pile of earth built by ants in which they nest. FORMULAIC (16) [adjective] Closely following a formula or predictable pattern; imitative, not original. FORMULARY (17) [noun] A list of formulas; a collection of set forms to be followed, especially in religious belief. | [noun] A pharmacopoeia or list of available drugs, particularly prescription drugs | [noun] A list of drugs, created by health insurers, hospitals, or prescription drug plans, that defines how costs for any drug are shared between patient and health care provider, typically broken down by tiers such as preferred generics with lowest copay, or preferred brand with higher copay, or non-preferred brand and not covered tiers with the highest cost to the patient. FORMULATE (14) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULIZE (23) [verb] To reduce to or express in the form of a formula. | [verb] To devise or create a formula for something. FORMWORKS (21) [noun] Temporary structures or molds made of wood, metal, or other materials used to support concrete or other materials during construction until they harden and can support themselves. FORNICATE (14) [verb] To engage in fornication; to have sex, especially illicit sex. | [adjective] Shaped like an arch or vault; resembling a fornix. FORRARDER (13) FORSAKERS (16) [noun] Plural of forsaker; those who abandon or desert someone or something. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of forsake; abandons or deserts. FORSAKING (17) [verb] To abandon, to give up, to leave (permanently), to renounce. | [noun] The act by which somebody is forsaken; an abandonment. FORSWEARS (15) [verb] To renounce or deny something, especially under oath. | [verb] To commit perjury; to break an oath. FORSYTHIA (18) [noun] Any of several shrubs, of the genus Forsythia, native to Asia and Eastern Europe, that are cultivated for their yellow flowers, which bloom in early spring. FORTALICE (14) [noun] A small fortress. FORTHWITH (21) [adverb] Without delay; immediately. FORTIETHS (15) [noun] The person or thing in the fortieth position. | [noun] One of forty equal parts of a whole. FORTIFIED (16) [noun] A fortified wine. | [verb] To increase the defenses of; to strengthen and secure by military works; to render defensible against an attack by hostile forces. | [verb] To impart strength or vigor to. FORTIFIER (15) [noun] One who fortifies or strengthens something. | [noun] A food additive that increases nutritional value by adding vitamins or minerals. FORTIFIES (15) [verb] To increase the defenses of; to strengthen and secure by military works; to render defensible against an attack by hostile forces. | [verb] To impart strength or vigor to. | [verb] To add spirits to wine to increase the alcohol content. FORTITUDE (13) [noun] Mental or emotional strength that enables courage in the face of adversity. | [noun] Physical strength. FORTNIGHT (16) [noun] A period of 2 weeks. FORTUNATE (12) [adjective] Auspicious. | [adjective] Happening by good luck or favorable chance. | [adjective] Favored by fortune. FORTUNING (13) FORWARDED (17) [verb] To advance, promote. | [verb] To send (a letter, email etc.) to a third party. | [verb] To assemble (a book) by sewing sections, attaching cover boards, and so on. FORWARDER (16) [noun] One who, or that which, forwards something to another destination. FORWARDLY (19) [adverb] In a forward direction or manner; toward the front. | [adverb] In a bold or presumptuous manner; candidly or directly. FORZANDOS (22) [noun] Plural of forzando, a musical direction indicating a note should be played with sudden emphasis or force. FOSSETTES (12) [noun] Small depressions or dimples, particularly those on the cheeks or chin. FOSSICKED (19) [verb] To search for something; to rummage. | [verb] (British dialect) To be troublesome. FOSSICKER (18) [noun] A person who searches for gold or gemstones in alluvial deposits or abandoned mining sites. | [verb] To search or rummage through something, especially for small valuable items. FOSSILISE (12) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOSSILIZE (21) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOSSORIAL (12) [noun] Any digging animal (such as a mole) | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or adapted for digging or burrowing. FOSTERAGE (13) [noun] The act of fostering another's child as if it were one's own. | [noun] The act of caring for another human being or animal. | [noun] The condition of being the foster child. FOSTERERS (12) [noun] People who raise or care for children or animals that are not their own. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of foster, meaning to encourage the development or growth of something. FOSTERING (13) [verb] To nurture or bring up offspring, or to provide similar parental care to an unrelated child. | [verb] To cultivate and grow something. | [verb] To nurse or cherish something. FOULBROOD (15) [noun] A bacterial disease of bees. FOUNDERED (14) [verb] Of a ship, to fill with water and sink. | [verb] To fall; to stumble and go lame, as a horse. | [verb] To fail; to miscarry. FOUNDLING (14) [noun] An abandoned child, left by its parent(s), often a baby left at a convent or similar safe place. FOUNDRIES (13) [noun] A facility that melts metals in special furnaces and pours the molten metal into molds to make products. Foundries are usually specified according to the type of metal dealt with: iron foundry, brass foundry, etc. | [noun] The act, process, or art of casting metals; founding. | [noun] A semiconductor fabrication plant in the microelectronics industry. FOUNTAINS (12) [noun] A natural source of water; a spring. | [noun] An artificial, usually ornamental, water feature (usually in a garden or public place) consisting of one or more streams of water originating from a statue or other structure. | [noun] The structure from which an artificial fountain can issue. FOURSCORE (14) [noun] A quantity or amount of eighty. | [numeral] Eighty. | [numeral] A full-length life, reckoned as eighty years. FOURSOMES (14) [noun] A group of four, a quartet or a game (such as golf) played by four players, especially by two teams of two. | [noun] A sex act between four people. FOURTEENS (12) FOVEOLETS (15) FOWLPOXES (24) [noun] Plural of fowlpox; a viral disease affecting poultry and other birds, characterized by warty growths on the skin and mucous membranes. FOXFISHES (25) FOXGLOVES (23) [noun] Digitalis, a genus of about 20 species of herbaceous biennials native to the Old World, certain of which are prized for their showy flowers. The drug digitalis or digoxin was first isolated from the plant. FOXHOUNDS (23) [noun] A dog of a medium-sized breed developed for hunting. FOXHUNTED (23) FOXHUNTER (22) [noun] A person who hunts foxes, typically on horseback with a pack of hounds. FRACTIONS (14) [noun] A part of a whole, especially a comparatively small part. | [noun] A ratio of two numbers, the numerator and the denominator, usually written one above the other and separated by a horizontal bar. | [noun] A component of a mixture, separated by fractionation. FRACTIOUS (14) [adjective] Given to troublemaking. | [adjective] Irritable; argumentative; quarrelsome. FRACTURED (15) [verb] To break, or cause something to break. | [verb] To amuse (a person) greatly; to split someone's sides. | [adjective] Broken into sharp pieces. FRACTURES (14) [noun] An instance of breaking, a place where something has broken. | [noun] A break in bone or cartilage. | [noun] A fault or crack in a rock. FRAGGINGS (15) [noun] Plural of fragging, the act of killing or attacking someone with a fragmentation grenade, particularly in military contexts. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of frag, meaning to attack or kill with a fragmentation grenade. FRAGILITY (16) [noun] The condition or quality of being fragile; brittleness; frangibility. | [noun] Weakness; feebleness. | [noun] Liability to error and sin; frailty. FRAGMENTS (15) [noun] A part broken off; a small, detached portion; an imperfect part, either physically or not | [noun] (grammar) A sentence not containing a subject or a predicate. | [noun] An incomplete portion of code. FRAGRANCE (15) [noun] A pleasant smell or odour. | [verb] To apply a fragrance to; to perfume. FRAGRANCY (18) [noun] Fragrance FRAILNESS (12) [noun] The quality or state of being frail; physical weakness or delicacy. FRAILTIES (12) [noun] The condition quality of being frail, physically, mentally, or morally; weakness of resolution; liability to be deceived or seduced. | [noun] A fault proceeding from weakness; foible; sin of infirmity. FRAMBESIA (16) [noun] Yaws, the disease FRAMBOISE (16) [noun] Raspberry liqueur. FRAMEABLE (16) [adjective] Suitable or worthy of being framed; capable of being framed in a picture frame or as a display piece. FRAMEWORK (21) [noun] A support structure comprising joined parts or conglomerated particles and intervening open spaces of similar or larger size. | [noun] The arrangement of support beams that represent a building's general shape and size. | [noun] The larger branches of a tree that determine its shape. FRANCHISE (17) [noun] The right to vote at a public election or referendum; see: suffrage, suffragette. | [noun] A right or privilege officially granted to a person, a group of people, or a company by a government. | [noun] An acknowledgment of a corporation's existence and ownership. | [verb] To confer certain powers on; grant a franchise to; authorize. FRANCIUMS (16) [noun] Plural of francium, a highly radioactive alkali metal element with atomic number 87. FRANCOLIN (14) [noun] Any of various terrestrial partridges of the genera Francolinus, Peliperidix, and Scleroptila in tribe Gallini, and genus Pternistis in tribe Tetraogallini, all in family Phasianidae. FRANGIBLE (15) [noun] Something that is breakable or fragile; especially something that is intentionally made so, such as a bullet. | [adjective] Able to be broken; breakable, fragile. FRANGLAIS (13) [noun] Alternative letter-case form of Franglais FRANKABLE (18) FRANKFURT (19) FRANKLINS (16) [noun] A freeholder, especially as belonging to a class of landowners in the 14th and 15th century ranking below the gentry. FRANKNESS (16) [noun] The state of being frank; candour; honesty. FRATERNAL (12) [noun] A society formed to provide mutual aid, such as insurance. | [noun] A fraternal twin. | [adjective] Of or pertaining to a brother or brothers. FRAUGHTED (17) [adjective] Filled or laden with; loaded with a large number or amount of something. | [adjective] Accompanied by or involving something undesirable or burdensome. FRAULEINS (12) [noun] A young German woman. FRAZZLING (31) [verb] To fray or wear down, especially at the edges. | [verb] To drain emotionally or physically. FREAKIEST (16) [adjective] Resembling a freak. | [adjective] Odd; bizarre; unusual. | [adjective] Scary; frightening. FREAKOUTS (16) [noun] A frightening or disorientating experience, especially one that results from the use of a hallucinogenic drug. | [noun] An occurrence of unrestrained or irrational behaviour. FRECKLIER (18) [adjective] More covered with freckles; having more freckles than another person or thing. FRECKLING (19) [verb] To cover with freckles. | [verb] To become covered with freckles. | [noun] A pattern of freckles FREEBASED (15) [verb] To purify a drug by crystallization. | [verb] To use a purified drug, especially cocaine, by heating it and inhaling the fumes produced. FREEBASER (14) [noun] A person who prepares or uses freebase cocaine, a purified form of cocaine that is smoked rather than snorted. FREEBASES (14) [noun] The purified, dry form of an amine, especially an alkaloid natural product, that is normally used in solution. | [noun] (specifically) The purified, dry form of certain illegal drugs, especially cocaine. FREEBOARD (15) [noun] The vertical distance between the waterline and the uppermost watertight deck of a vessel. | [noun] The distance between a water level and the top of something that contains or restrains it (such as a dam). | [noun] The distance between the top of sea ice and the water level. | [noun] A type of skateboard which simulates the movement of a snowboard when used on a downhill coarse, allowing snowboarding techniques, which has an addition of two centerline casters that extend below the traditional skateboard wheels and bogies. FREEBOOTS (14) [verb] To pillage or plunder. | [verb] To rehost (online media) without legal authorization. FREEHOLDS (16) [noun] The tenure of property held in fee simple for life. | [noun] An estate held by a tenure of this type. FREELANCE (14) [noun] Someone who sells their services to clients without a long-term employment contract. | [noun] A medieval mercenary. | [verb] To work as a freelance. FREELOADS (13) [verb] To live off the generosity or hospitality of others FREESTONE (12) [noun] Sedimentary rock: a type of stone that is composed of small particles and easily shaped, most commonly sandstone or limestone. | [noun] A stone fruit having a stone (pit) that is relatively free of the flesh. FREESTYLE (15) [noun] A sports event where competitors can choose their own method of participation. | [noun] A form of rapping in which the emcee makes up lyrics while rapping. | [noun] Modifying programming code in production and quality assurance environments, violating the existing procedures for deploying it. FREEWHEEL (18) [noun] A device in a transmission that disengages the driveshaft from the driven shaft when the driven shaft rotates faster than the driveshaft. | [verb] (of a gear) To continue spinning after disengagement. | [verb] (of a cyclist) To ride a bicycle without pedalling, e.g. downhill. FREIGHTED (17) [verb] To transport (goods). | [verb] To load with freight. Also figurative. | [adjective] Loaded; charged FREIGHTER (16) [noun] One who loads a ship, or one who charters and loads a ship. | [noun] One employed in receiving and forwarding freight. | [noun] One for whom freight is transported. FRENCHIFY (23) [verb] To make French in character, style, or manner; to adopt French customs or language. FRENCHING (18) [verb] To trim the meat from the end of a bone, as in a lamb chop or chicken wing. | [verb] To kiss with tongues touching. FRENETICS (14) FRENULUMS (14) [noun] A small fold of tissue that prevents an organ in the body from moving too far. FRENZYING (25) FREQUENCE (23) FREQUENCY (26) [noun] The rate of occurrence of anything; the relationship between incidence and time period. | [noun] The property of occurring often rather than infrequently. | [noun] The quotient of the number of times n a periodic phenomenon occurs over the time t in which it occurs: f = n / t. FREQUENTS (21) [verb] To visit often. FRESCOERS (14) FRESCOING (15) [verb] To paint using fresco. | [noun] A fresco. FRESHENED (16) [verb] To become fresh. | [verb] (of wind) To become stronger. | [verb] (of a cow) To begin or resume giving milk, especially after calving; to cause to resume giving milk. FRESHENER (15) [noun] (often in combination) Something that freshens | [noun] Air freshener FRESHNESS (15) [noun] The state or quality of being fresh. FRETFULLY (18) FRETTIEST (12) FRETWORKS (19) FRIBBLERS (16) FRIBBLING (17) FRICASSEE (14) [noun] Meat or poultry cut into small pieces, stewed or fried and served in its own gravy. | [verb] To cook meat or poultry in this manner. FRICATIVE (17) [noun] Any of several sounds produced by air flowing through a constriction in the oral cavity and typically producing a sibilant, hissing, or buzzing quality; a fricative consonant. | [adjective] Produced by air flowing through a restriction in the oral cavity. FRICTIONS (14) FRIEDCAKE (19) FRIENDING (14) [verb] To act as a friend to, to befriend; to be friendly to, to help. | [verb] To add (a person) to a list of friends on a social networking site; to officially designate (someone) as a friend. | [noun] A sentiment of friendship FRIGHTENS (16) [verb] To cause to feel fear; to scare; to cause to feel alarm or fright. FRIGHTFUL (19) [adjective] Full of fright, whether | [adjective] Full of something causing fright, whether | [adverb] Frightfully; very. FRIGHTING (17) [verb] To frighten. FRIGIDITY (17) FRILLIEST (12) [adjective] Having frills; frilled. | [adjective] Over-elaborate or showy in character or appearance. FRILLINGS (13) [noun] A frilled ornamentation on clothing. FRINGIEST (13) FRISETTES (12) FRISKIEST (16) [adjective] Abounding in energy or playfulness | [adjective] Sexually aroused FRITTATAS (12) [noun] A form of omelette in which vegetables, cheese etc are mixed into the eggs and cooked together. FRITTERED (13) [verb] (often with about, around, or away) To squander or waste time, money, or other resources; e.g. occupy oneself idly or without clear purpose, to tinker with an unimportant part of a project, to dally, sometimes as a form of procrastination. | [verb] To sinter. | [verb] To cut (meat etc.) into small pieces for frying. FRITTERER (12) FRIVOLERS (15) FRIVOLING (16) [verb] To behave frivolously. | [verb] To trifle. FRIVOLITY (18) [noun] Frivolous act | [noun] State of being frivolous FRIVOLLED (16) [verb] To behave frivolously. | [verb] To trifle. FRIVOLLER (15) FRIVOLOUS (15) [adjective] Silly, especially at an inappropriate time or in an inappropriate manner. | [adjective] Of little weight or importance; not worth notice; slight. | [adjective] (said of a lawsuit) Having no reasonable prospect of success because its claim is without merit, lacking a supporting legal or factual basis, while the filing party is, or should be, aware of this. FRIZETTES (21) FRIZZIEST (30) [adjective] Formed of a mass of small, tight, wiry curls; unruly or extending in all directions. FRIZZLERS (30) FRIZZLIER (30) FRIZZLING (31) [verb] To fry something until crisp and curled. | [verb] To scorch. | [verb] To fry noisily, sizzle. FROGGIEST (14) FROLICKED (19) [verb] To make merry; to have fun; to romp; to behave playfully and uninhibitedly. | [verb] To cause to be merry. FRONDEURS (13) [noun] A political rebel FRONTAGES (13) [noun] The front part of a property or building that faces the street. | [noun] The land between a property and the street. | [noun] The length of a property along a street. FRONTALLY (15) FRONTIERS (12) [noun] The part of a country which borders or faces another country or unsettled region | [noun] The most advanced or recent version of something; leading edge. | [noun] An outwork of a fortification. FRONTLESS (12) FRONTLETS (12) [noun] The forehead. | [noun] The forehead of an animal, especially of a deer or stag (including the antlers). | [noun] An ornament worn on the forehead. FRONTLINE (12) [noun] A front, or a boundary between opposing positions. | [noun] A site of a conflict, effort, or controversial matter of any kind. | [noun] The site of interaction with outsiders, such as customers. FRONTWARD (16) [adjective] Frontwards. | [adverb] Frontwards. FROSTBITE (14) [noun] An injury suffered as a result of freezing of some part of the body, typically fingers, toes or the nose. | [verb] To expose to the effect of frost, or a frosty air; to blight or nip with frost. | [verb] To engage in winter sailboating. FROSTIEST (12) [adjective] Cold, chilly. | [adjective] Having frost on it. | [adjective] Having an aloof or inhospitable manner. FROSTINGS (13) FROSTWORK (19) [noun] Any naturally occurring intricate pattern of ice crystals. | [noun] Any pattern that resembles a frost formation. FROTHIEST (15) [adjective] Foamy or churned to the point of becoming infused with bubbles. | [adjective] Lightweight; lacking depth or substance FROTTAGES (13) [noun] A method of making an image by placing a piece of paper against an object and then rubbing over it, usually with a pencil or charcoal. | [noun] An image so made. | [noun] The practice of rubbing parts of the body against those of another person for sexual stimulation. FROTTEURS (12) [noun] One who commits an act of frotteurism. FROUFROUS (15) [noun] A rustling sound, as of silk fabric. FROUNCING (15) FROUZIEST (21) FROWARDLY (19) FROWSIEST (15) [adjective] Having a dingy, neglected, and scruffy appearance. FROWSTIER (15) [adjective] Musty; stuffy (atmosphere) FROWSTING (16) [verb] To enjoy being in a warm, close, stuffy place. FROWZIEST (24) [adjective] Having a dingy, neglected, and scruffy appearance. FRUCTOSES (14) FRUCTUOUS (14) [adjective] Fruitful FRUGALITY (16) [noun] The quality of being frugal; prudent economy; thrift. | [noun] A sparing use; sparingness. FRUGIVORE (16) [noun] An animal whose diet is mostly fruit. FRUITAGES (13) FRUITCAKE (18) [noun] A cake containing dried fruits and, optionally, nuts, citrus peel and spice. | [noun] A crazy or eccentric person. | [noun] A homosexual male. FRUITERER (12) [noun] One who sells fruit. FRUITIEST (12) [adjective] Containing fruit or fruit flavoring. | [adjective] Similar to fruit or tasting of fruit. | [adjective] Mad, crazy. FRUITIONS (12) FRUITLESS (12) [adjective] Bearing no fruit; barren. | [adjective] Unproductive, useless. | [adjective] Of a person: unable to have children; barren, infertile. FRUITLETS (12) [noun] A young, unripe fruit FRUITWOOD (16) [noun] The wood of any fruit tree, particularly hardwood from species such as pear and cherry, that is valued for furniture, woodcuts and other applications. | [noun] In orchard culture, the woody growth of the scion of any grafted fruit tree above the graft, as opposed to the rootstock, which is the part of the plant below the graft. | [noun] Particular branches or twigs in particular positions, or of particular types or ages, that may be expected to bear fruit in most types of orchard trees, since fruit is not borne randomly all over the tree. FRUMPIEST (16) [adjective] Dowdy, unkempt, or unfashionable. | [adjective] Bad-tempered. FRUSTRATE (12) [verb] To disappoint or defeat; to vex by depriving of something expected or desired. | [verb] To hinder or thwart. | [verb] To cause stress or annoyance. FRUSTULES (12) [noun] The siliceous shell of a diatom. FRUTICOSE (14) [adjective] (of a plant) Having woody stems and branches; shrubby FUCHSINES (17) FUELWOODS (16) FUGACIOUS (15) [adjective] Fleeting, fading quickly, transient. FUGITIVES (16) [noun] A person who flees or escapes and travels secretly from place to place, and sometimes using disguises and aliases to conceal his/her identity, as to avoid law authorities in order to avoid an arrest or prosecution; or to avoid some other unwanted situation. FULFILLED (16) [verb] To satisfy, carry out, bring to completion (an obligation, a requirement, etc.). | [verb] To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest. | [verb] To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.). FULFILLER (15) FULGENTLY (16) FULGURANT (13) FULGURATE (13) [verb] To flash or emit flashes like lightning. | [verb] To cauterize with electricity; to carry out electrofulguration or to electrocauterize. FULGURITE (13) [noun] Glass formed by a lightning strike melting sand or other material FULGUROUS (13) FULLBACKS (20) [noun] A player who plays on the left or right side of defence. | [noun] The player who wears the number 15 jersey at the start of play. The last line of defence responsible for catching punts. | [noun] An offensive back whose primary jobs are to block in advance of the halfback on running plays and for the quarterback on passing plays. FULLERENE (12) [noun] Any of a class of allotropes of carbon having hollow molecules whose atoms lie at the vertices of a polyhedron having 12 pentagonal and 2 or more hexagonal faces. | [noun] Any closed-cage compound having twenty or more carbon atoms consisting entirely of 3-coordinate carbon atoms. | [noun] (by extension) The class of carbon allotropes consisting of tubular carbon molecules (carbon nanotubes) and spheroidal carbon molecules (traditional fullerenes). FULLERIES (12) FULLERING (13) [verb] To form a groove or channel in, by a fuller or set hammer. FULLFACES (17) FULMINANT (14) [noun] A thunderbolt. | [noun] An explosive. | [adjective] That fulminates. FULMINATE (14) [noun] Any salt or ester of fulminic acid, mostly explosive. | [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. FULMINING (15) FULNESSES (12) FULSOMELY (17) FUMARASES (14) FUMARATES (14) [noun] Any salt or ester of fumaric acid; they are produced in the body as part of the urea cycle. FUMAROLES (14) [noun] An opening in the ground that emits steam and gases due to volcanic activity. FUMAROLIC (16) FUMIGANTS (15) [noun] Any substance used, in the gaseous state, to fumigate or disinfect. FUMIGATED (16) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMIGATES (15) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMIGATOR (15) FUNCTIONS (14) [noun] What something does or is used for. | [noun] A professional or official position. | [noun] An official or social occasion. FUNDAMENT (15) [noun] Foundation. | [noun] The bottom; the buttocks or anus. | [noun] The underlying basis or principle for a theoretical or mathematical system. FUNGIBLES (15) FUNGICIDE (16) [noun] A substance used to kill fungus FUNGIFORM (18) [adjective] Having the shape of a mushroom. FUNICULAR (14) [noun] A particular type of rail transit system which ascends a steep urban or mountain incline, having usually two cars sharing a single track, with the cars linked by a cable and an arrangement of pulleys such that the descending car assists in the hoisting of the ascending car, i.e. the two cars serve as counterweights for each other. | [adjective] Of, pertaining to, resembling, or powered by a rope or cable | [adjective] Of or pertaining to the umbilical cord. FUNICULUS (14) [noun] Any of several cordlike structures, especially the umbilical cord, or a bundle of nerve fibres in the spinal cord | [noun] A stalk that connects the seed (or ovule) with the placenta FUNKINESS (16) FUNNELING (13) [verb] To use a funnel. | [verb] To proceed through a narrow gap or passageway akin to a funnel; to condense or narrow. | [verb] To channel, direct, or focus (emotions, money, resources, etc.). FUNNELLED (13) [verb] To use a funnel. | [verb] To proceed through a narrow gap or passageway akin to a funnel; to condense or narrow. | [verb] To channel, direct, or focus (emotions, money, resources, etc.). FUNNINESS (12) FURANOSES (12) FURBEARER (14) FURBELOWS (17) [noun] A frill, flounce, or ruffle, as on clothing; a decorative piece of fabric, especially one gathered or pleated as into a ruffle, etc. | [noun] A small, showy ornamentation. FURBISHED (18) [verb] To polish or burnish. | [verb] To renovate or recondition. | [adjective] Polished, burnished. FURBISHER (17) FURBISHES (17) [verb] To polish or burnish. | [verb] To renovate or recondition. FURCATING (15) [verb] To fork or branch out. FURCATION (14) FURCRAEAS (14) FURFURALS (15) [noun] A heterocyclic aldehyde derivative of furan; it is obtained commercially from bran, and has several industrial uses. FURFURANS (15) FURIOUSLY (15) [adverb] In a furious manner; angrily. | [adverb] Quickly; frantically; with great effort or speed. | [adverb] Intensely, as with embarrassment. FURLOUGHS (16) [noun] A leave of absence or vacation. | [noun] The documents authorizing such leave. | [noun] A period of unpaid time off, used by an employer to reduce costs. FURMETIES (14) FURMITIES (14) FURNACING (15) FURNISHED (16) [verb] To provide a place with furniture, or other equipment. | [verb] To supply or give (something). | [verb] To supply (somebody) with something. FURNISHER (15) [noun] One who furnishes FURNISHES (15) [verb] To provide a place with furniture, or other equipment. | [verb] To supply or give (something). | [verb] To supply (somebody) with something. FURNITURE (12) [noun] Large movable item(s), usually in a room, which enhance(s) the room's characteristics, functionally or decoratively. | [noun] The harness, trappings etc. of a horse, hawk, or other animal. | [noun] Fittings, such as handles, of a door, coffin, or other wooden item. FURRINERS (12) FURROWERS (15) FURROWING (16) [verb] To cut one or more grooves in (the ground, etc.). | [verb] To wrinkle. | [verb] To pull one's brows or eyebrows together due to concentration, worry, etc. FURTHERED (16) [verb] To help forward; to assist. | [verb] To encourage growth; to support progress or growth of something; to promote. FURTHERER (15) FURTIVELY (18) [adverb] In a furtive manner. FURUNCLES (14) [noun] A boil or infected, inflamed, pus-filled sore. FUSELAGES (13) [noun] (aeronautical) The main body of an aerospace vehicle; the long central structure of an aircraft to which the wings (or rotors), tail, and engines are attached, and which accommodates crew and cargo. FUSILEERS (12) [noun] An infantryman armed with a form of flintlock musket | [noun] A soldier in any of several regiments that once fought with such weapons | [noun] A fish in family Caesionidae, related to snappers FUSILIERS (12) [noun] An infantryman armed with a form of flintlock musket | [noun] A soldier in any of several regiments that once fought with such weapons | [noun] A fish in family Caesionidae, related to snappers FUSILLADE (13) [noun] The simultaneous firing of a number of firearms | [noun] (by extension) a rapid outburst | [verb] To fire, or attack with, a fusillade FUSIONIST (12) [noun] An adherent of fusionism or a participant in a political fusion. FUSSINESS (12) FUSTIGATE (13) FUSTINESS (12) FUSULINID (13) FUTURISMS (14) FUTURISTS (12) [noun] An adherent to the principles of the artistic movement of futurism. | [noun] One who studies and predicts possible futures. FUZZINESS (30)

10-Letter Words (750)

FABRICANTS (17) [noun] Plural of fabricant; manufacturers or makers of goods, particularly in the textile and clothing industries. FABRICATED (18) [verb] To form into a whole by uniting its parts; to construct; to build. | [verb] To form by art and labor; to manufacture; to produce. | [verb] To invent and form; to forge; to devise falsely. FABRICATES (17) [verb] To form into a whole by uniting its parts; to construct; to build. | [verb] To form by art and labor; to manufacture; to produce. | [verb] To invent and form; to forge; to devise falsely. FABRICATOR (17) [noun] A person who fabricates or manufactures something. | [noun] A person who tells lies or invents false stories; a liar. FABULISTIC (17) FABULOUSLY (18) [adverb] In a fabulous manner. | [adverb] In fables. FACECLOTHS (20) [noun] A flannel for washing the face. | [noun] A cloth laid over the face of a corpse. FACEPLATES (17) [noun] A removable protective shield separating the inner workings of a machine from operator and observer. | [noun] A rigid flat surface that has an active role in the interaction of a device with an operator or user. FACILENESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being facile; superficiality or lack of depth. | [noun] Ease or effortlessness in performance. FACILITATE (15) [verb] To make easy or easier. | [verb] To help bring about. | [verb] To preside over (a meeting, a seminar). FACILITIES (15) [noun] Facilities for urination and defecation: a toilet; a lavatory. | [noun] The fact of being easy, or easily done; absence of difficulty, simplicity. | [noun] Dexterity of speech or action; skill, talent. FACSIMILES (17) [noun] A copy or reproduction. | [noun] A fax, a machine for making and sending copies of printed material and images via radio or telephone network. | [noun] The image sent by the machine itself. FACTIOUSLY (18) [adverb] In a manner characterized by or relating to factions; in a way that promotes division or discord within a group. FACTITIOUS (15) [adjective] Created by humans; artificial. | [adjective] Counterfeit, fabricated, fake. FACTORABLE (17) [adjective] Capable of being factored or separated into factors. FACTORAGES (16) [noun] The commission paid to a factor | [noun] The business of a factor. FACTORIALS (15) [noun] The result of multiplying a given number of consecutive integers from 1 to the given number. In equations, it is symbolized by an exclamation mark (!). For example, 5! = 1 × 2 × 3 × 4 × 5 = 120. FACTORIZED (25) [verb] To create a list of the factors of. | [verb] To divide an expression into a list of items that, when multiplied together, will produce the original quantity. | [verb] To warn not to pay or give up goods. FACTORIZES (24) [verb] To create a list of the factors of. | [verb] To divide an expression into a list of items that, when multiplied together, will produce the original quantity. | [verb] To warn not to pay or give up goods. FACTORSHIP (20) [noun] The business or position of a factor (an agent who buys and sells goods on commission). FACTUALISM (17) FACTUALIST (15) FACTUALITY (18) [noun] The quality or state of being factual; the condition of being based on or concerned with facts. FAGGOTINGS (16) [noun] Bundles of sticks or twigs bound together, especially as used for fuel. | [noun] A decorative openwork pattern in sewing or embroidery created by gathering and binding threads. FAGGOTRIES (15) [noun] Plural of faggotry, meaning a bundle of sticks bound together, or the action of binding sticks into bundles. | [noun] Plural of faggotry, a British culinary dish made from offal (organ meats). FAIRGROUND (15) [noun] An area where a fair (an event for public entertainment) or other public event is held; a showground. | [noun] A commercially-operated collection of rides, games and other entertainment attractions; an amusement park. FAIRLEADER (14) [noun] A ring or block on a ship's rail that guides a rope or cable and prevents it from chafing or changing direction abruptly. FAIRNESSES (13) [noun] The plural of fairness; the quality of being just, impartial, or free from bias. | [noun] Multiple instances or degrees of fair treatment or equitable conduct. FAIRYLANDS (17) [noun] The imaginary land or abode of fairies. FAITHFULLY (22) [adverb] In a faithful manner. | [adverb] A conventional formula for ending a letter, used when the salutation addresses the person for whom the letter is intended using an honorific. FALCONRIES (15) [noun] The sport or practice of hunting with falcons; the breeding and training of falcons for hunting. FALDSTOOLS (14) [noun] A portable, folding chair used by a bishop when away from his throne. | [noun] Any similar stool used in a divine service (such as the coronation of a British monarch). FALLACIOUS (15) [adjective] Characterized by fallacy; false or mistaken. | [adjective] Deceptive or misleading. FALLFISHES (19) [noun] A small silvery freshwater fish (Semotilus corporalis) found in North America. FALLOWNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being fallow; the condition of land left unplanted or uncultivated. | [noun] Paleness or lack of color. FALSEHOODS (17) [noun] The property of being false. | [noun] A false statement, especially an intentional one; a lie. | [noun] Mendacity, deceitfulness; the trait of a person who is mendacious and deceitful. FALSEWORKS (20) [noun] Temporary structures or frameworks erected to support a structure during construction, such as scaffolding or bracing used to hold formwork in place until concrete sets. FALSIFIERS (16) [noun] One that falsifies. FALSIFYING (20) [verb] To alter so as to make false; to make incorrect. | [verb] To misrepresent. | [verb] To prove to be false. FAMILIARLY (18) [adverb] In a manner showing close acquaintance or intimate knowledge. | [adverb] In a casual or informal manner; without formality. FAMILISTIC (17) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by strong family ties and emphasis on family loyalty and togetherness. FAMISHMENT (20) [noun] The state of being famished; extreme hunger or starvation. FAMOUSNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being famous; widespread reputation or renown. FANATICISM (17) [noun] The characteristic or practice of being a fanatic. FANATICIZE (24) [verb] To make into a fanatic. | [verb] To become fanatical. FANCIFULLY (21) [adverb] In a fanciful manner; imaginatively, whimsically, or with playful creativity. | [adverb] In a way that is not based on reality or practical considerations; fantastically. FANCIFYING (22) [verb] Present participle of "fancify," meaning to make fancy or more elaborate in appearance or style. FANCYWORKS (25) FANFOLDING (18) [verb] The act of folding paper back and forth in a zigzag pattern, typically used for continuous computer paper or forms. | [noun] Paper folded in a zigzag or accordion pattern. FANTASISED (14) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASISES (13) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASISTS (13) [noun] One who creates fantasies. | [noun] One living in a fantasy world. | [noun] A writer who writes in the fantasy style. FANTASIZED (23) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASIZER (22) [noun] Someone who indulges in fantasies FANTASIZES (22) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASTICO (15) FANTASTICS (15) FANTASYING (17) [verb] To fantasize (about). | [verb] To have a fancy for; to be pleased with; to like. | [verb] To imagine; to conceive mentally. FANTOCCINI (17) [noun] Small puppets or marionettes manipulated by strings or wires, or a theatrical performance featuring such puppets. FARADISING (15) [verb] To treat with or subject to faradism, a form of electrical therapy using induced currents. FARADIZING (24) [verb] Treating or stimulating (body tissue) with a faradic current, an interrupted electric current used in medical therapy. FARANDOLES (14) [noun] A lively chain dance in 6/8 time, of Provençal origin. FARCICALLY (20) [adverb] In a manner that is absurdly ridiculous, comical, or involving exaggerated humor. FAREWELLED (17) [verb] To bid farewell or say goodbye. FARMERETTE (15) [noun] A woman who works on a farm or is engaged in farming. FARMHOUSES (18) [noun] A farmer's residence. FARMSTEADS (16) [noun] The main building of a farm. | [noun] A farm, including its buildings. FARMWORKER (22) [noun] A person hired to work on the farm or in the agricultural industry. FARRIERIES (13) [noun] The plural of farriery; the craft or practice of shoeing horses and treating their feet and legs. | [noun] Shops or workplaces where farriers work. FARSIGHTED (18) [adjective] Unable to focus with one's eyes on near objects; presbyopic. | [adjective] Considering the future with respect to one's own plans or deeds; showing anticipation. FASCIATION (15) [noun] An abnormal flattening and fusion of plant stems, making them ribbon-like instead of cylindrical. | [noun] A bundle of fibers or tissue strands in anatomy. FASCICULAR (17) [adjective] Relating to or arranged in fascicles (small bundles or clusters, especially of nerve fibers or plant structures). | [adjective] Occurring in or characterized by fasciculations (involuntary contractions of muscle fibers). FASCICULES (17) [noun] A bundle or cluster. | [noun] A bundle of skeletal muscle fibers surrounded by connective tissue. | [noun] A cluster of flowers or leaves, such as the bundles of the thin leaves (or needles) of pines. FASCICULUS (17) [noun] A small bundle of nerve, muscle or tendon fibers. | [noun] One of the divisions of a book published in separate parts; a fascicle. FASCINATED (16) [verb] To evoke an intense interest or attraction in someone. | [verb] To make someone hold motionless; to spellbind. | [verb] To be irresistibly charming or attractive to. FASCINATES (15) [verb] To evoke an intense interest or attraction in someone. | [verb] To make someone hold motionless; to spellbind. | [verb] To be irresistibly charming or attractive to. FASCINATOR (15) [noun] A fascinating person | [noun] A delicate, often frivolous head decoration worn on the hair, primarily by women | [noun] A type of wool or lace headscarf FASHIONERS (16) [noun] People who make, create, or design fashions or clothing. | [noun] People who shape or form something into a particular style or form. FASHIONING (17) [verb] To make, build or construct, especially in a crude or improvised way. | [verb] To make in a standard manner; to work. | [verb] To fit, adapt, or accommodate to. FASTBALLER (15) [noun] A baseball pitcher who throws fastballs as their primary pitch. FASTENINGS (14) [noun] A hook or similar restraint used to fasten things together; fastener. FASTIDIOUS (14) [adjective] Excessively particular, demanding, or fussy about details, especially about tidiness and cleanliness. | [adjective] Overly concerned about tidiness and cleanliness. | [adjective] Difficult to please; quick to find fault. FASTIGIATE (14) [noun] A tree or shrub with erect, parallel branches. | [adjective] Erect and parallel | [adjective] Having closely-bunched erect parallel branches FASTNESSES (13) [noun] A secure or fortified place; a stronghold, a fortress. | [noun] The state of being fast. | [noun] The ability of a dye to withstand fading. FATALISTIC (15) [adjective] Of or pertaining to fatalism. | [adjective] Submissive to fate. FATALITIES (13) [noun] The state proceeding from destiny; invincible necessity, superior to, and independent of, free and rational control. | [noun] Tendency to death, destruction or danger, as if by decree of fate. | [noun] That which is decreed by fate or which is fatal; a fatal event. FATHERHOOD (20) [noun] The state of being a father. FATHERLAND (17) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth, origin. FATHERLESS (16) [adjective] Without a (living) father. | [adjective] Without a known author or inventor. FATHERLIKE (20) [adjective] Resembling or characteristic of a father; paternal in nature or manner. FATHOMABLE (20) [adjective] Capable of being fathomed or understood; comprehensible. | [adjective] Capable of being measured in depth. FATHOMLESS (18) [adjective] Very deep (especially of water deeper than a lead line can measure); bottomless. | [adjective] (by extension) unfathomable or incomprehensible. FATSHEDERA (17) [noun] A hybrid climbing plant that is a cross between Fatsia japonica and Hedera helix, grown as an ornamental houseplant. FAULTINESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being faulty; the condition of having faults or defects. FAVORITISM (18) [noun] The unfair favouring of one person or group at the expense of another. FEARFULLER (16) FEARLESSLY (16) [adverb] In a fearless manner; without fear. FEARSOMELY (18) [adverb] In a manner that inspires fear or dread; terrifyingly or intimidatingly. FEATHERBED (19) [noun] A mattress stuffed with feathers. | [noun] (Dartmoor) A bog covered by a layer of moss, presenting a hazard to walkers. | [verb] To treat someone with excessive indulgence; to pamper, cosset or mollycoddle. FEATHERIER (16) [adjective] More feathery; having more feathers or a more feather-like quality. FEATHERING (17) [verb] To cover or furnish with feathers. | [verb] To arrange in the manner or appearance of feathers. | [verb] To rotate the oars while they are out of the water to reduce wind resistance. FEATURETTE (13) [noun] A relatively short feature film. | [noun] A short film of bonus material, companion to the main feature, frequently part of additional material in a home video release on LaserDisc, DVD, Blu-Ray. FEBRIFUGES (19) [noun] An antipyretic (fever-reducing) medication. FECKLESSLY (22) [adverb] In a manner lacking responsibility, care, or seriousness; recklessly or carelessly. FECULENCES (17) [noun] The plural of feculence; feculent matter or sediment, such as dregs or lees. | [noun] The quality or state of being feculent; foulness or muddiness. FECUNDATED (17) [verb] To make fertile. | [verb] To inseminate. FECUNDATES (16) [verb] To make fertile. | [verb] To inseminate. FEDERACIES (16) [noun] A form of government where one or several substate units enjoy considerably more independence than the majority. FEDERALESE (14) [noun] The characteristic language and jargon used by federal government agencies and officials, often marked by bureaucratic terminology and complex phrasing. FEDERALISM (16) [noun] A system of national government in which power is divided between a central authority and a number of regions with delimited self-governing authority. | [noun] Advocacy of such a system. | [noun] Covenantalism. FEDERALIST (14) [noun] Advocate of federalism. | [noun] Supporter of the view that the province of Québec should remain within the Canadian federal system; an opponent of Québec‐based separatism or sovereigns. | [noun] A covenantalist. FEDERALIZE (23) [verb] To unite into a federation. | [verb] To bring under federal control. | [verb] To change (a unitary state) into a federation. FEDERATING (15) [verb] To unite in a federation. FEDERATION (14) [noun] Act of joining together into a single political entity. | [noun] Array of nations or states that are unified under one central authority which is elected by its members. | [noun] Any society or organisation formed from separate groups or bodies. FEDERATIVE (17) [adjective] Relating to or denoting the central authority in a federal system of government. | [adjective] Characterized by the union of several states or groups under a central authority while retaining some individual powers. FEEBLENESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being feeble; weakness in body or mind. FEEDSTOCKS (20) [noun] Any bulk raw material constituting the principal input for an industrial process. FEEDSTUFFS (20) [noun] Feed for animals; fodder | [noun] Any particular form of such feed FEISTINESS (13) [noun] The quality of being feisty; liveliness, spiritedness, or pugnacious behavior. FELICITATE (15) [verb] To congratulate. | [adjective] Made very happy. FELICITIES (15) [noun] Happiness. | [noun] An apt and pleasing style in speech, writing, etc. | [noun] (semiology) Reproduction of a sign with fidelity. FELICITOUS (15) [adjective] Characterized by felicity. | [adjective] Of a sentence or utterance: semantically and pragmatically coherent; fitting in the context. FELINITIES (13) [noun] The plural of felinities; qualities or characteristics typical of cats or felines, such as grace, stealth, or independence. FELLATIONS (13) [noun] Plural of fellatio, the act of oral stimulation of the penis. FELLMONGER (16) [noun] Someone who sells or works with animal hides and skins. | [verb] To prepare animal skin for tanning. FELLNESSES (13) [noun] Plural of fellness; the quality or state of being fell (fierce, cruel, or evil). FELLOWSHIP (21) [noun] A company of people that share the same interest or aim. | [noun] Company, companions; a group of people or things following another. | [noun] A feeling of friendship, relatedness or connection between people. FEMALENESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being female; the characteristics associated with women or the female sex. FEMINACIES (17) [noun] Plural of feminacy; the quality or state of being effeminate or unmanly. FEMININELY (18) [adverb] In a manner characterized by qualities traditionally associated with women, such as grace, delicacy, or softness. FEMININITY (18) [noun] The sum of all attributes that are feminine or convey womanhood. FEMINISING (16) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Tending to make more feminine. FEMINISTIC (17) FEMINITIES (15) [noun] Plural of femininity; qualities, characteristics, or expressions associated with being feminine. FEMINIZING (25) [verb] To make (more) feminine. | [verb] To become (more) feminine. | [adjective] Tending to make more feminine. FENDERLESS (14) FENESTRATE (13) [noun] Any extinct bryozoan in the order Fenestrida (also known as Fenestrata). | [verb] To cut an opening into. | [adjective] Fenestrated FENUGREEKS (18) [noun] Plural of fenugreek, a leguminous plant with seeds used as a spice and in traditional medicine. FEOFFMENTS (21) [noun] The grant of a feud or fee. | [noun] A gift or conveyance in fee of land or other corporeal hereditaments, accompanied by actual delivery of possession. | [noun] The instrument or deed by which corporeal hereditaments are conveyed. FERACITIES (15) [noun] Plural of feracity; the quality of being fierce, wild, or ferocious in nature. FERETORIES (13) [noun] A receptacle that houses relics of saints. | [noun] An area of a church where relics are kept. FERMENTERS (15) [noun] Any organism, such as a yeast, that causes fermentation. | [noun] A fermentor; a vessel in which fermentation takes place. FERMENTING (16) [verb] To react, using fermentation; especially to produce alcohol by aging or by allowing yeast to act on sugars; to brew. | [verb] To stir up, agitate, cause unrest or excitement in. FERMENTORS (15) [noun] The vessel in which fermentation takes place FEROCITIES (15) [noun] The condition of being ferocious. FERREDOXIN (21) [noun] An iron-sulfur protein that acts as an electron carrier in photosynthesis and other metabolic processes. FERRELLING (14) [verb] Present participle of ferrel, meaning to fit or furnish with a ferrule (a metal ring or band). | [verb] To search or rummage through something (variant of ferret). FERRETINGS (14) [verb] Third person singular present tense of ferret, meaning to search or hunt out something, typically by rummaging or investigating persistently. | [verb] Plural gerunds of ferret, meaning instances of searching or hunting out something. FERROCENES (15) [noun] Any of a class of metallocenes containing an iron atom between two cyclopentadienyl rings; especially the simplest of the class bis-cyclopentadienyl iron. FERROTYPES (18) [noun] A photograph produced by coating a thin sheet of iron with a dark enamel and creating a positive image on it, popular in the 19th century. | [noun] Plural of ferrotype, referring to multiple such photographs. FERRYBOATS (18) [noun] A boat used to ferry passengers, vehicles, or goods across open water, especially one that runs to a regular schedule FERTILIZED (23) [verb] To make (the soil) more fertile by adding nutrients to it. | [verb] To make more creative or intellectually productive. | [verb] To cause to produce offspring through insemination; to inseminate. FERTILIZER (22) [noun] A natural substance that is used to make the ground more suitable for growing plants. | [noun] A chemical compound created to have the same effect. FERTILIZES (22) [verb] To make (the soil) more fertile by adding nutrients to it. | [verb] To make more creative or intellectually productive. | [verb] To cause to produce offspring through insemination; to inseminate. FERVENCIES (18) [noun] Plural of fervency; intense heat, passion, or zeal. FERVIDNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fervid; intense passion, zeal, or enthusiasm. FESCENNINE (15) [adjective] Obscene or scurrilous. FESTINATED (14) [verb] To move or walk with quick, involuntary steps, often as a symptom of certain neurological conditions. | [verb] To hasten or hurry. FESTINATES (13) [verb] To hurry or move with haste; to rush. FESTOONERY (16) FESTOONING (14) [verb] To decorate with ornaments, such as garlands or chains, which hang loosely from two tacked spots. | [verb] To make festoons. | [verb] To decorate or bedeck abundantly. FETCHINGLY (22) [adverb] In a manner that is attractive, appealing, or charming. FETICHISMS (20) [noun] Plural of fetichism, an excessive and irrational commitment to or preoccupation with something. | [noun] Plural of fetichism, the practice of religious rites and ceremonies, especially among certain African peoples. FETISHISMS (18) [noun] The belief that natural objects have supernatural powers, or that something created by people has power over people. | [noun] A form of paraphilia where the object of attraction is an inanimate object or a part of a person's body. FETISHISTS (16) [noun] One who has a sexual fetish. | [noun] A believer in magical fetishes or talismans. FETOLOGIES (14) FETOLOGIST (14) FETOSCOPES (17) [noun] Plural of fetoscope, a stethoscope-like instrument used to listen to the fetal heartbeat during pregnancy. FETTUCCINE (17) [noun] Long, flat ribbons of pasta, cut from a rolled-out sheet; identical in form to tagliatelle. FETTUCCINI (17) [noun] A type of flat, ribbon-like pasta, typically served with cream or butter-based sauces. FEUDALISMS (16) [noun] Plural of feudalism; systems or instances of feudal organization and social structures based on the relationship between lords and vassals. FEUDALISTS (14) [noun] Plural of feudalist; people who practice, support, or advocate feudalism as a social or political system. FEUDALIZED (24) [verb] To make something feudal. FEUDALIZES (23) [verb] To make something feudal. FEUILLETON (13) [noun] A section of a European newspaper typically dedicated to arts, culture, criticism and light literature. | [noun] An article published in this section. FEVERISHLY (22) [adverb] With excitement and determination. | [adverb] With speed; rapidly. FEVERWORTS (19) [noun] Plural of feverwort, a plant of the genus Triosteum, used traditionally in herbal medicine to treat fevers and other ailments. FIANCHETTO (18) [noun] The development of a bishop by moving it one square to a long diagonal; specifically, a set of opening moves where a bishop is developed to the second rank of the adjacent knight file. | [verb] To play a fianchetto. FIBERBOARD (18) [noun] A material made from wood chips or shavings, which are compressed and bonded with resin and formed into stiff sheets, and used in building or making furniture. FIBERFILLS (18) [noun] A synthetic or natural material used for stuffing pillows, quilts, jackets, and other products to provide insulation and cushioning. FIBERGLASS (16) [noun] Silica based glass extruded into fibers that possess a length at least 1000 times greater than their width. | [noun] Ellipsis of fibreglass wool | [noun] A composite material made from fine fibres of spun glass held together with resin. FIBERIZING (25) FIBERSCOPE (19) [noun] A flexible fibreoptic device for viewing otherwise inaccessible areas FIBREBOARD (18) [noun] A material made from wood chips or shavings, which are compressed and bonded with resin and formed into stiff sheets; often laminated with melamine and used in building or making furniture. FIBREFILLS (18) FIBREGLASS (16) [noun] Silica based glass extruded into fibers that possess a length at least 1000 times greater than their width. | [noun] Ellipsis of fibreglass wool | [noun] A composite material made from fine fibres of spun glass held together with resin. FIBRILLATE (15) [verb] To make rapid irregular movements. FIBRINOGEN (16) [noun] A protein that in humans plays a part in the forming of clots. FIBRINOIDS (16) [noun] Plural of fibrinoid, a substance composed of fibrin and other proteins that forms in tissues during certain pathological conditions, particularly in cases of fibrinoid necrosis. FIBROBLAST (17) [noun] A cell found in connective tissue that produces fibers, such as collagen. FIBROSITIS (15) [noun] Fibromyalgia FICKLENESS (19) [noun] The quality of being fickle. FICTIONEER (15) [noun] A writer of fiction, especially one who produces many publications. FICTIONIST (15) [noun] A person who writes fiction or novels. FICTIONIZE (24) [verb] To convert into fiction or treat as fictional; to write or compose as fiction. FICTITIOUS (15) [adjective] Invented; contrived. FIDDLEBACK (23) [noun] The brown recluse spider. | [noun] A feature of maple wood where the fibers are distorted in an undulating chatoyant pattern. | [noun] A kind of chasuble with the front cut away. FIDDLEHEAD (19) [noun] The scroll-shaped decoration at the tip of a fiddle. | [noun] A similar scroll-shaped ornament on a ship's bow. | [noun] The furled fronds of a young fern harvested for food consumption. FIDELITIES (14) [noun] The plural of fidelity; qualities of faithfulness, loyalty, or accuracy in reproduction of sound or image. FIDUCIALLY (19) [adverb] In a manner relating to or based on a fiducial point or reference mark, especially in surveying or scientific measurement. FIELDFARES (17) [noun] A large thrush, Turdus pilaris, a bird of Eurasia. FIELDPIECE (18) [noun] A cannon or artillery piece used in field warfare. | [noun] In sports, a player positioned in the field rather than as a pitcher or catcher. FIELDSTONE (14) [noun] A stone found in fields and used for building. FIELDSTRIP (16) [verb] To disassemble a firearm into its component parts for cleaning, inspection, or maintenance. FIELDWORKS (21) [noun] Work done out in the fields as opposed to that done elsewhere on the farm (e.g., barn, house, outbuildings, office). | [noun] Work done out in the real world rather than in controlled conditions | [noun] (in scientific research) The collection of raw data in the field, field research, field study, field studies. FIENDISHLY (20) [adverb] In a wicked, cruel, or diabolical manner. | [adverb] In a devilishly clever or cunning way. FIERCENESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being fierce; intense ferocity, violence, or aggression. | [noun] Passionate intensity or vehemence in manner or expression. FIFTEENTHS (19) [noun] The person or thing in the fifteenth position. | [noun] One of fifteen equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The interval comprising two octaves. FIGURATION (14) [noun] The act of giving figure or determinate form. | [noun] The form of something, its outline or boundaries. | [noun] Ornamentation or decoration, especially by the addition of figures. FIGURATIVE (17) [adjective] Of use as a metaphor, simile, or metonym, as opposed to literal; using figures; as when saying that someone who eats more than they should is a pig or like a pig. | [adjective] Metaphorically so called. | [adjective] With many figures of speech. FIGUREHEAD (18) [noun] A carved figure on the prow of a sailing ship. | [noun] (by extension) Someone in a nominal position of leadership who has no actual power; a front or front man. FILARIASES (13) [noun] Plural of filariasis, a disease caused by parasitic filarial worms transmitted by insects, characterized by inflammation and obstruction of lymphatic vessels. FILARIASIS (13) [noun] Any disease common in tropical and subtropical countries resulting from infestation of the lymphatic system with nematode worms of the superfamily Filarioidea, transmitted by mosquitoes: characterised by inflammation. FILEFISHES (19) [noun] Any fish of the family Monacanthidae, with very slender bodies. FILIATIONS (13) [noun] The act of determining or establishing the paternity of a child. | [noun] A line of descent or genealogical connection between generations. FILIBUSTER (15) [noun] A mercenary soldier; a freebooter; specifically, a mercenary who travelled illegally in an organized group from the United States to a country in Central America or the Spanish West Indies in the mid-19th century seeking economic and political benefits through armed force. | [noun] (US politics) A tactic (such as giving long, often irrelevant speeches) employed to delay the proceedings of, or the making of a decision by, a legislative body, particularly the United States Senate. | [noun] (US politics) A member of a legislative body causing such an obstruction; a filibusterer. FILMICALLY (20) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of film or cinema; in terms of visual or cinematic technique. FILMMAKERS (21) [noun] A producer or director of films/movies. FILMMAKING (22) [noun] The activity of preparing edited video works, formerly principally films, whether for entertainment or other purposes. FILMSETTER (15) [noun] A person or machine that sets type for photographic reproduction in printing. FILMSTRIPS (17) [noun] A length of film containing individual photographs or diagrams intended to be shown in sequence as instruction or as a visual aid. | [noun] A file containing a sequence of images or video frames. FILTERABLE (15) [adjective] Able to be separated by filtration | [adjective] That can pass through a specified filter FILTHINESS (16) [noun] The state or quality of being filthy; extreme dirtiness or obscenity. FILTRATING (14) [verb] To filter. FILTRATION (13) [noun] The act or process of filtering; the mechanical separation of a liquid from the undissolved particles floating in it. | [noun] A totally ordered collection of subsets. FIMBRIATED (18) [adjective] Having a fringed border. | [adjective] Bordered with hair or hair-like material. | [adjective] Having a narrow borderline of another tincture. FINALISING (14) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINALITIES (13) [noun] The state of being final; the condition from which no further changes occur. FINALIZING (23) [verb] To make final or firm; to finish or complete. | [verb] To prepare (an object) for garbage collection by calling its finalizer. FINANCIERS (15) [noun] A person who, as a profession, profits from large financial transactions. | [noun] A company that does the same. | [noun] One charged with the administration of finance; an officer who administers the public revenue; a treasurer. FINANCINGS (16) [noun] Plural of financing; the provision of funds or credit for a purchase or project. | [noun] Multiple instances of arranging or managing financial resources or loans. FINENESSES (13) [noun] The plural of fineness; the quality or state of being fine, delicate, or of high quality. | [noun] Subtle distinctions or nuances in meaning or behavior. FINGERHOLD (18) [noun] A grip with the fingers. FINGERINGS (15) [noun] The act of using one's fingers in the playing of a musical instrument. | [noun] A specific method of using the fingers to play an instrument. | [noun] The act of using the fingers to penetrate and sexually stimulate one's own or another person's vagina or anus. FINGERLIKE (18) [adjective] Resembling or shaped like a finger; having finger-like projections or extensions. FINGERLING (15) [noun] A young salmon or trout. | [noun] A type of small potato grown primarily in North America. | [noun] Any finger-sized version of something typically larger. FINGERNAIL (14) [noun] The hard, flat translucent covering near the tip of a human finger, useful for scratching and fine manipulation. FINGERPICK (22) [noun] A type of plectrum that clips on to, or wraps around the end of the fingers and thumb. | [verb] To pluck of the individual strings of a stringed instrument with the fingers FINGERPOST (16) [noun] A board that shows the direction (and often distance) to a named place; especially one of several attached to a milepost | [noun] The milepost itself. FINGERTIPS (16) [noun] The tip of the human finger. FINICKIEST (19) [adjective] (of a person) Fastidious and fussy; difficult to please; exacting, especially about details. | [adjective] Demanding; requiring above-normal care. FINITENESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being finite; having limits or bounds. FINNICKIER (19) [adjective] More finicky; more particular, fussy, or hard to please than something else. FIREBALLER (15) [noun] A pitcher who throws very fast balls. FIREBOMBED (20) [verb] To attack with a firebomb. FIREBRANDS (16) [noun] An argumentative troublemaker or revolutionary; one who agitates against the current situation. | [noun] A torch or other burning stick with a flame at one end. FIREBREAKS (19) [noun] An area cleared of all flammable material to prevent a fire from spreading across it. FIREBRICKS (21) [noun] A brick capable of withstanding high temperatures without deforming. FIREDRAKES (18) [noun] A fire-breathing dragon. | [noun] A fiery meteor, an ignis fatuus, a rocket | [noun] A kind of firework FIREFANGED (18) FIREFIGHTS (20) [noun] A skirmish involving an exchange of gunfire. FIREGUARDS (15) [noun] A mesh screen around a fire to prevent sparks or falling embers. FIREHOUSES (16) [noun] A house containing a fire to heat it; a dwelling-house, as opposed to a barn, a stable, or other outhouse. | [noun] A fire station FIRELIGHTS (17) FIREPLACED (18) FIREPLACES (17) [noun] An open hearth for holding a fire at the base of a chimney. FIREPOWERS (18) [noun] The military capacity or capability to deliver fire or weapons upon a target or enemy. FIREPROOFS (18) [verb] To make resistant to damage from fire. FIRESTONES (13) [noun] Plural of firestone, a type of flint or other stone that produces sparks when struck with steel, historically used to start fires. | [noun] Plural of firestone, a reddish-brown iron oxide mineral. FIRESTORMS (15) [noun] A fire whose intensity is greatly increased by inrushing winds. | [noun] An intense or violent altercation. FIRETHORNS (16) [noun] A plant of the genus Pyracantha; the pyracantha. FIREWATERS (16) [noun] Alcoholic liquor, especially whiskey or other distilled spirits, often used colloquially or humorously. FIRMAMENTS (17) [noun] (usually uncountable) The vault of the heavens, where the clouds, sun, moon, and stars can be seen; the heavens, the sky. | [noun] The field or sphere of an activity or interest. | [noun] In the geocentric Ptolemaic system, the eighth celestial sphere which carried the fixed stars; (by extension) any celestial sphere. FIRMNESSES (15) [noun] The plural of firmness; the quality or state of being firm, solid, or stable. | [noun] Instances or degrees of being resolute or unwavering in purpose. FIRSTBORNS (15) [noun] The first child to be born to a parent or family. FIRSTLINGS (14) [noun] The first produce or result, notably firstborn offspring. | [noun] The first of a class or kind. | [noun] The thing first thought or done. FISHERFOLK (23) [noun] People who fish for a living. | [noun] Members of a culture that is dominated by fishing. FISHMONGER (19) [noun] A person who sells fish. | [noun] A fishmonger's, a fishmonger's shop: a shop that sells fish. | [noun] A pimp. FISHPLATES (18) [noun] A metal bar that is bolted to the ends of two rails to join them together in a track. FISHTAILED (17) [verb] To swing the back of a vehicle (originally an aircraft) from side to side. | [verb] To cause the back of (a vehicle) to swing from side to side. | [verb] To move with the tail swinging from side to side in this way. FISSIONING (14) [verb] To cause to undergo fission. | [verb] To undergo fission. | [noun] The act of splitting into two separate parts FISTFIGHTS (20) [noun] A fight using bare fists. | [verb] To fight using bare fists. FISTICUFFS (21) [noun] A fistfight. | [noun] A cuff or blow administered with the fist. | [noun] An impromptu fight with the fists, usually between only two people. FITFULNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being fitful; occurring in irregular or intermittent bursts. | [noun] A tendency to be characterized by sudden changes or unpredictable variations. FLABBINESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being flabby; loose or soft flesh lacking firmness or muscle tone. FLABELLATE (15) [adjective] Fan-shaped or having the form of a fan; shaped like a folding fan. FLACCIDITY (21) [noun] The state or quality of being flaccid; lack of firmness or muscle tone. | [noun] In medicine, a condition of weakness or paralysis characterized by loss of muscle tone. FLACKERIES (19) FLAGELLANT (14) [noun] A person who whips themselves or others either as part of a religious penance or for sexual gratification. FLAGELLATE (14) [noun] Any organism that has flagella. | [verb] To whip or scourge. | [adjective] Resembling a whip. FLAGELLINS (14) [noun] Plural of flagellin, a protein that is the main component of bacterial flagella. FLAGELLUMS (16) [noun] Plural of flagellum; long, whip-like appendages used by certain cells or microorganisms for movement. | [noun] Whip-like structures found in bacteria, protozoans, and sperm cells that enable locomotion. FLAGEOLETS (14) [noun] A type of small flute of the fipple family. | [noun] A type of kidney bean, common in France. FLAGGINGLY (19) FLAGITIOUS (14) [adjective] (of people) Guilty of terrible crimes; wicked, criminal. | [adjective] Extremely brutal or wicked; heinous, monstrous. FLAGRANCES (16) [noun] Plural of flagrance; the quality of being flagrant or glaringly offensive. FLAGRANTLY (17) [adverb] In a flagrant manner. FLAGSTAFFS (20) [noun] A pole on which a flag is raised. FLAGSTAVES (17) [noun] Plural of flagstaff, which is a pole or staff on which a flag is hoisted. FLAGSTICKS (20) [noun] Pins with flags attached that mark the holes on a golf course. FLAGSTONES (14) [noun] A flat, rectangular piece of rock or stone used for paving or roofing. | [noun] One of several types of rock easily split and suitable for making flagstones. FLAMBOYANT (20) [noun] The royal poinciana (Delonix regia), a showy tropical tree. | [adjective] Showy, bold or audacious in behaviour, appearance, etc. | [adjective] Referring to the final stage of French Gothic architecture from the 14th to the 16th centuries. FLAMEPROOF (20) [verb] To make flameproof. | [adjective] Resistant to catching fire. FLAMINGOES (16) [noun] A wading bird of the family Phoenicopteridae. | [noun] A deep pink color tinged with orange, like that of a flamingo. FLAMMABLES (19) [noun] Materials or substances that are easily ignited and burn readily. | [adjective] Capable of being easily set on fire or ignited. FLANNELING (14) [verb] To rub with a flannel. | [verb] To wrap in flannel. | [verb] To flatter; to suck up to. FLANNELLED (14) [adjective] Wearing clothes made of flannel; especially wearing cricket whites. FLAPDOODLE (17) [noun] Nonsense | [noun] Thingamabob. | [noun] A speaker or writer of nonsense. FLASHBACKS (24) [noun] (authorship) A dramatic device in which an earlier event is inserted into the normal chronological flow of a narrative. | [noun] A vivid mental image of a past trauma, especially one that recurs. | [noun] A similar recurrence of the effects of a hallucinogenic drug. FLASHBOARD (19) [noun] A board placed temporarily upon a milldam, to raise the water in the pond above its usual level. FLASHBULBS (20) [noun] A glass bulb that made a single bright flash for illumination during a photograph. FLASHCUBES (20) [noun] A rotating cube containing a flashbulb in each of four sides FLASHINESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being flashy; ostentatious or showy display. FLASHLAMPS (20) [noun] A kind of lamp that uses an electric current to start powder burning and produce a brief sudden burst of bright light. It was formerly used in flash photography. FLASHLIGHT (20) [noun] A battery-powered hand-held light source. | [noun] A flashgun (device used to create flashes of light for photography). | [verb] To illuminate with a flashlight. FLASHOVERS (19) [noun] The near simultaneous ignition of all combustible material in an enclosed area. | [noun] An unintended electric discharge or arc over or around an insulator FLASHTUBES (18) [noun] Plural of flashtube; tubes filled with xenon gas that produce bright flashes of light when electrically discharged, used in photography and stroboscopic equipment. FLATFISHES (19) [noun] A fish of the order Pleuronectiformes, the adults of which have both eyes on one side and usually swim with the other side down, such as a flounder, a halibut, or a sole. FLATFOOTED (17) [verb] To walk around in the course of work, especially when investigating. | [verb] To dance in the style of Appalachian clogging. | [verb] To gulp an entire drink (bottle, glass, can, etc.) without pausing between swallows. FLATLANDER (14) [noun] A resident of a flat or level region, particularly someone from the American Midwest or Great Plains. | [noun] A character from Edwin Abbott Abbott's novella "Flatland," a two-dimensional being living in a flat world. FLATNESSES (13) [noun] The plural of flatness; the quality or state of being flat or level. | [noun] Areas or surfaces that are flat or without variation in elevation. FLATTENERS (13) [noun] Things or people that flatten; devices or tools used to make something flat or level. | [noun] In cricket, balls that are bowled with minimal spin or deviation. FLATTENING (14) [verb] To make something flat or flatter. | [verb] To press one's body tightly against a surface, such as a wall or floor, especially in order to avoid being seen or harmed. | [verb] To knock down or lay low. FLATTERERS (13) [noun] One who flatters. FLATTERIES (13) [noun] Excessive praise or approval, which is often insincere and sometimes contrived to win favour. | [noun] An instance of excessive praise. FLATTERING (14) [verb] To compliment someone, often insincerely and sometimes to win favour. | [verb] To enhance someone's vanity by praising them. | [verb] To portray someone to advantage. FLATULENCE (15) [noun] The state of having gas, often smelly, trapped (and when released, frequently with noise) in the digestive system of a human and some other animals; wind; and when released, a flatus, a fart. | [noun] The release of such gas; breaking wind. FLATULENCY (18) [noun] The quality or state of being flatulent; a tendency to generate or suffer from gas in the digestive system. FLATWASHES (19) FLAUNTIEST (13) [adjective] Superlative form of flaunt; most prone to displaying or showing off something ostentatiously. FLAVANONES (16) [noun] A class of flavonoid compounds found in plants, consisting of colorless to yellow crystalline substances with antioxidant properties. FLAVONOIDS (17) [noun] Any of many compounds that are plant metabolites, being formally derived from flavone; they have antioxidant properties, and sometimes contribute to flavor. FLAVORINGS (17) [noun] Something that gives flavor, usually a food ingredient. FLAVORISTS (16) [noun] Chemists or specialists who create and develop artificial or natural flavors for food and beverage products. FLAVORLESS (16) [adjective] Lacking taste or flavor; without seasoning, spice, or discernible qualities of taste. | [adjective] Flat; lacking character or definition. | [adjective] Without flavor. FLAVORSOME (18) [adjective] Characterised or marked by flavor(s); flavorful. FLAVOURING (17) [verb] To add flavoring to something. | [noun] Something that gives flavor, usually a food ingredient. FLAWLESSLY (19) [adverb] In a flawless manner. FLEAHOPPER (20) [noun] A small jumping insect that feeds on cotton plants, particularly a young leafhopper or flea beetle that damages crops. FLECHETTES (18) [noun] A small sharp antipersonnel projectile, used as shrapnel, fired from a shotgun, or scattered from an aircraft. | [noun] The game of lawn darts. FLEDGLINGS (16) [noun] A young bird which has just developed its flight feathers (notably wings). | [noun] An insect that has just fledged, i.e. undergone its final moult to become an adult or imago. | [noun] An immature, naïve or inexperienced person. FLEERINGLY (17) [adverb] In a manner showing contempt or derision through mocking laughter or smiles. FLEETINGLY (17) [adverb] In a fleeting manner; transiently FLEMISHING (19) FLESHINESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being fleshy; abundance of flesh or soft tissue. FLESHLIEST (16) [adjective] Of or relating to the body. | [adjective] Of, relating to or resembling flesh; composed of flesh; having a lot of flesh. | [adjective] Of or relating to pleasurable (often sexual) sensations. FLESHMENTS (18) FLETCHINGS (19) [noun] The process of attaching fins, such as halved feathers, to a projectile in order to stabilize its flight. | [noun] The fins or feathers so attached. FLEXITIMES (22) [noun] Plural of flexitime; a system of flexible working hours that allows employees to vary their start and end times within certain limits. FLICHTERED (19) FLICKERING (20) [verb] To burn or shine unsteadily, or with a wavering light. | [verb] To keep going on and off; to appear and disappear for short moments; to flutter. | [verb] To flutter; to flap the wings without flying. FLIGHTIEST (17) [adjective] Given to unplanned and silly ideas or actions. | [adjective] (of a bird) That flies easily or often. | [adjective] Swift. FLIGHTLESS (17) [adjective] Unable to fly. Usually used with birds such as the penguin, ostrich, and emu. FLIMSINESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being flimsy; lacking strength, substance, or durability. | [noun] Something that is insubstantial, weak, or unconvincing. FLINTINESS (13) [noun] The quality or state of being flint-like; hardness, unyieldingness, or coldness of character or demeanor. FLINTLOCKS (19) [noun] An early type of firearm, using a spring-loaded flint to strike sparks into the firing pan. FLIPPANTLY (20) [adverb] In a manner that treats something serious with inappropriate lack of respect or seriousness; with a casual or dismissive attitude. FLIRTATION (13) [noun] Playing at courtship; coquetry. | [noun] An instance of flirting. FLITTERING (14) [verb] To scatter in pieces. | [verb] To move about rapidly and nimbly. | [verb] To move quickly from one condition or location to another. FLOATATION (13) [noun] A state of floating, or being afloat. | [noun] The ability (as of a tire or snowshoes) to stay on the surface of soft ground or snow. | [noun] (chemical engineering) A process of separating minerals by agitating a mixture with water and detergents etc; selected substances being carried to the surface in air bubbles. FLOATPLANE (15) [noun] A seaplane that has floats for landing or taking off from the water FLOCCULANT (17) [noun] A flocculating agent | [adjective] That flocculates FLOCCULATE (17) [noun] A mass that has suffered flocculation. | [verb] To collect together in a loose aggregation like flocks (tufts) of wool. | [adjective] Having flock form or forms. FLOCCULENT (17) [noun] Diminutive of flocculent spiral galaxy | [adjective] Flocculated, resembling bits of wool; woolly. | [adjective] Covered in a woolly substance; downy. FLOODGATES (15) [noun] An adjustable gate or valve used to control the flow of water through a sluice. | [noun] (by extension) Anything that controls or limits an outpouring of people, emotion etc. FLOODLIGHT (18) [noun] A projector of a bright beam of light for use in theatres and studios; a flood | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Powerful artificial illumination with a broad beam, especially in a series of units on pylons used to illuminate a sports ground. | [verb] To enlighten or illuminate with floodlight(s). FLOODPLAIN (16) [noun] An alluvial plain that may or may not experience occasional or periodic flooding. FLOODWATER (17) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) The water of a flood. FLOORBOARD (16) [noun] Any of the long boards laid over joists to make a floor. | [noun] The floor of a car. | [verb] To sink the gas pedal into the floorboard of the car, in order to bring the car to the highest possible speed. FLOORCLOTH (18) [noun] A cloth, normally of flannel, used for cleaning floors. | [noun] Material used in place of carpeting for covering floors, such as linoleum or oilcloth. FLOPHOUSES (18) [noun] A cheap hotel or boarding house where many people sleep in large rooms. | [verb] To stay in a flophouse. FLOPPINESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being floppy; lacking firmness or stiffness. FLORESCENT (15) [adjective] Producing light by fluorescence; glowing or shining with a bright light, especially when exposed to ultraviolet radiation. FLORIATION (13) FLORIBUNDA (16) [noun] A rose cultivar, having large sprays of small flowers, made by crossing polyantha and hybrid tea rose varieties. FLORIDNESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being florid; excessive ornamentation or elaborateness, especially in language or style. | [noun] A ruddy or flushed complexion. FLORIGENIC (16) [adjective] Promoting or inducing the formation of flowers in plants. FLORILEGIA (14) [noun] A collection of flowers | [noun] A patristic anthology FLOTATIONS (13) [noun] A state of floating, or being afloat. | [noun] The ability (as of a tire or snowshoes) to stay on the surface of soft ground or snow. | [noun] (chemical engineering) A process of separating minerals by agitating a mixture with water and detergents etc; selected substances being carried to the surface in air bubbles. FLOUNCIEST (15) [adjective] Superlative form of flouncy; characterized by the most amount of flouncing, bouncing, or showy movement, especially in fabric or garments. FLOUNCINGS (16) [noun] Plural of flouncing; the act of moving with exaggerated jerky or bouncy motions, often expressing annoyance or indignation. | [noun] Strips of decorative fabric gathered or pleated and attached to a garment as trim. FLOUNDERED (15) [verb] To flop around as a fish out of water. | [verb] To make clumsy attempts to move or regain one's balance. | [verb] To act clumsily or confused; to struggle or be flustered. FLOURISHED (17) [verb] To thrive or grow well. | [verb] To prosper or fare well. | [verb] To be in a period of greatest influence. FLOURISHER (16) [noun] One who flourishes; a person or thing that thrives or prospers. | [noun] A decorative curve or embellishment in handwriting or artistic design. FLOURISHES (16) [noun] A dramatic gesture such as the waving of a flag. | [noun] An ornamentation. | [noun] A ceremonious passage such as a fanfare. FLOWCHARTS (21) [noun] A schematic representation of how the different stages in a process are interconnected. FLOWERAGES (17) FLOWERETTE (16) FLOWERIEST (16) [adjective] Pertaining to flowers. | [adjective] Decorated with or abundant in flowers. | [adjective] (of a speech or piece of writing) overly complicated or elaborate; with grandiloquent expressions FLOWERLESS (16) [adjective] Without flowers; not bearing or producing flowers. FLOWERLIKE (20) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of a flower in appearance or form. FLOWERPOTS (18) [noun] A pot filled with soil in which plants are grown. FLOWMETERS (18) [noun] Any of various devices used to measure the flow of a fluid through a pipe, etc. FLOWSTONES (16) [noun] Mineral formations created by flowing water in caves, typically consisting of calcite or other minerals deposited in sheets or cascades on cave walls and floors. FLUCTUATED (16) [verb] To vary irregularly; to swing. | [verb] To undulate. | [verb] To be irresolute; to waver. FLUCTUATES (15) [verb] To vary irregularly; to swing. | [verb] To undulate. | [verb] To be irresolute; to waver. FLUFFINESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being fluffy; softness and lightness. FLUGELHORN (17) [noun] A brass instrument resembling a cornet but with a wider, conical bore, and usually with three valves, in the same B-flat pitch as many trumpets and cornets but with a more deeply conical mouthpiece than those. A bugle with valves. FLUIDISING (15) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUIDITIES (14) [noun] The plural of fluidity; the quality or state of being fluid, smooth, or flowing. | The ability to move smoothly and easily between different states, forms, or conditions. FLUIDIZERS (23) [noun] Substances or devices that cause a fluid or gas to flow more freely through a material, or that suspend solid particles in a fluid state. | [noun] In chemical engineering, materials added to powders or granules to improve their flow properties and prevent clumping. FLUIDIZING (24) [verb] To give particles of solid the properties of a fluid, either by shaking or by injecting gas FLUMMERIES (17) [noun] A custard; any of several bland, gelatinous foodstuffs, usually made from stewed fruit and thickened with oatmeal, cornstarch or flour. | [noun] Empty or meaningless talk, especially when used to flatter. | [noun] Pretentious trappings, useless ornaments used to impress. FLUMMOXING (25) [verb] To confuse; to fluster; to flabbergast. FLUORESCED (16) [verb] To emit electromagnetic radiation, especially visible light, when absorbing radiation of some other wavelength. | [verb] Of colours, to be very bright; to be so bright as to appear to radiate as a light source. FLUORESCER (15) [noun] A substance that fluoresces; something that emits light when exposed to radiation. FLUORESCES (15) [verb] To emit electromagnetic radiation, especially visible light, when absorbing radiation of some other wavelength. | [verb] Of colours, to be very bright; to be so bright as to appear to radiate as a light source. FLUORIDATE (14) [verb] To add fluoride to something, especially to drinking water in order to reduce tooth decay. FLUORINATE (13) [verb] To introduce fluorine into a compound. FLUORSPARS (15) [noun] Plural of fluorspar, a mineral form of calcium fluoride used in metallurgy and glass-making. FLUOXETINE (20) [noun] A synthetic compound which inhibits the uptake of serotonin in the brain and is taken to treat depression. FLUSTERING (14) [verb] To make hot and rosy, as with drinking. | [verb] (by extension) To confuse; befuddle; throw into panic by making overwrought with confusion. | [verb] To be in a heat or bustle; to be agitated and confused. FLUTTERERS (13) [noun] Plural of flutterer; things or creatures that flutter. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of flutter; moves with quick, light movements. FLUTTERING (14) [verb] To flap or wave quickly but irregularly. | [verb] Of a winged animal: to flap the wings without flying; to fly with a light flapping of the wings. | [verb] To cause something to flap. FLUVIATILE (16) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, or produced by rivers; fluvial FLYBLOWING (22) [verb] The act of a blowfly laying eggs on meat or a carcass, causing it to become infested with maggots. | [noun] The infestation of meat or flesh by blowfly larvae. FLYBRIDGES (20) [noun] A flying bridge FLYCATCHER (23) [noun] Any of many kinds of birds, of the families Muscicapidae (in Europe and Asia) and Tyrannidae (in the Americas), that catch insects in flight. FLYSPECKED (25) [adjective] Spotted or marked with small flecks, as if by fly specks; having small dark marks or stains. FLYSWATTER (19) [noun] A hand-held device for swatting flies or other insects, to kill or shoo them. FLYWEIGHTS (23) [noun] A weight that moves outward depending on centrifugal force. | [noun] A weight class in many combat sports; e.g. in professional boxing of a maximum of 112 pounds or 50.8 kilograms. | [noun] (adjectival use) Small, light or unimportant. FOAMFLOWER (21) [noun] A North American plant of the saxifrage family with white or pink flowers and foam-like clusters of stamens. FOCALISING (16) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOCALIZING (25) [verb] To focus, or to adjust a focus | [verb] To sharpen an image by focusing | [verb] To concentrate on a particular location; to localize FOLIACEOUS (15) [adjective] Resembling a leaf or leaves. | [adjective] Bearing leaves. FOLIATIONS (13) [noun] The process of forming into a leaf or leaves. | [noun] The process of forming into pages; pagination. | [noun] The manner in which the young leaves are disposed within the bud. FOLKLORISH (20) FOLKLORIST (17) [noun] A person who studies or collects folklore, traditional beliefs, stories, and customs of a culture or group. FOLKSINESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being folksy; a friendly, informal, and unpretentious manner or style. | [noun] Something that is characteristic of or appeals to ordinary people; folk-like quality. FOLKSINGER (18) [noun] A person who sings folk songs. FOLLICULAR (15) [adjective] Of, pertaining to, having or resembling follicles. FOLLOWINGS (17) [noun] A group of followers, attendants or admirers; an entourage. | [noun] Vocation; business; profession. | [noun] (with definite article, treated as singular or plural) A thing or things to be mentioned immediately after. FONDNESSES (14) [noun] Plural of fondness; the quality of being fond or having affection for someone or something. FONTANELLE (13) [noun] A soft membraneous spot on the head of a baby due to incomplete fusion of the cranial bones. FOODSTUFFS (20) [noun] A material that may be used as food. FOOLFISHES (19) FOOLISHEST (16) [adjective] The superlative form of foolish, meaning most lacking in good sense or judgment. FOOTBALLER (15) [noun] One who plays association football. FOOTBOARDS (16) [noun] An upright board across the foot of a bedstead. | [noun] A board or small raised platform on which to support or rest the feet, such as that found in a carriage. | [noun] A place to stand on a scooter or skateboard. FOOTBRIDGE (17) [noun] A bridge over a road, railway, river, etc for pedestrians. FOOTCLOTHS (18) [noun] Cloths worn around the feet, typically as wrappings or coverings instead of shoes. | [noun] In some contexts, cloth strips used to wrap around the feet for warmth or protection. FOOTFAULTS (16) [noun] Plural of footfault, a violation in tennis or volleyball where a player's foot crosses the baseline or service line during a serve. FOOTLESSLY (16) [adverb] In a manner lacking purpose, direction, or effectiveness; without accomplishment or result. FOOTLIGHTS (17) [noun] A stage light located at the front edge of the stage that illuminates the actors from foot level up. FOOTLOCKER (19) [noun] A long, rectangular trunk or similar container that lies flat on the floor, especially one used for personal belongings and kept at the foot of a bed, commonly used in barracks and dormitories. FOOTNOTING (14) [verb] To add footnotes to a text. FOOTPRINTS (15) [noun] The impression of the foot in a soft substance such as sand or snow. | [noun] Space required by a piece of equipment. | [noun] The amount of hard drive space required for a program. FOOTSTONES (13) FOOTSTOOLS (13) [noun] A low stool for supporting the feet while seated. | [noun] Anything trodden upon or treated as subservient. FORAMINOUS (15) [adjective] Covered with holes or foramina. FORBEARERS (15) [noun] Plural of forbearers; those who forbear or refrain from doing something. | [noun] Ancestors or forebears. FORBEARING (16) [noun] Forbearance; restraint | [verb] To keep away from; to avoid; to abstain from. | [verb] To refrain from proceeding; to pause; to delay. FORBIDDERS (17) [noun] Plural of forbidder; those who forbid or prohibit something. FORBIDDING (18) [verb] To disallow; to proscribe. | [verb] (ditransitive) To deny, exclude from, or warn off, by express command. | [verb] To oppose, hinder, or prevent, as if by an effectual command. FORCEFULLY (21) [adverb] With either physical of coercive force; in a forceful manner; vigorously; powerfully. FORCEMEATS (17) [noun] A mixture of finely chopped or ground meat, herbs, and other ingredients used as a stuffing or garnish in cooking, or a dish made from such a mixture. FOREARMING (16) [verb] (sometimes figurative) To arm in preparation. FOREBODERS (16) [noun] Plural of foreboder; one who forebodes or predicts something, especially something bad or ominous. | [noun] Those who give warning signs or omens of future events. FOREBODIES (16) [noun] The front or forward part of a ship's hull. | [noun] The front portions of an animal's body. FOREBODING (17) [verb] To predict a future event; to hint at something that will happen (especially as a literary device). | [verb] To be prescient of (some ill or misfortune); to have an inward conviction of, as of a calamity which is about to happen; to augur despondingly. | [noun] A sense of evil to come. FOREBRAINS (15) [noun] The anterior part of the brain, including the cerebrum, thalamus, and hypothalamus. FORECADDIE (17) [noun] A caddie who does not carry clubs, but locates balls and gets groups of players to move around the course. | [verb] To act as a forecaddie. FORECASTED (16) [verb] To estimate how something will be in the future. | [verb] To foreshadow; to suggest something in advance. | [verb] To contrive or plan beforehand. FORECASTER (15) [noun] A person who forecasts. | [noun] A software program or algorithm that forecasts. FORECASTLE (15) [noun] A raised part of the upper deck at the front of a ship. | [noun] Crew's quarters located at the forward part of a ship. FORECHECKS (24) [verb] To pressure the puck carrier for the opposing team FORECLOSED (16) [verb] To repossess a mortgaged property whose owner has failed to make the necessary payments; used with on. | [verb] To cut off (a mortgager) by a judgment of court from the power of redeeming the mortgaged premises. | [verb] To shut up or out; to prevent from doing something. FORECLOSES (15) [verb] To repossess a mortgaged property whose owner has failed to make the necessary payments; used with on. | [verb] To cut off (a mortgager) by a judgment of court from the power of redeeming the mortgaged premises. | [verb] To shut up or out; to prevent from doing something. FORECOURTS (15) [noun] The area in front of a petrol station where the petrol pumps are situated. | [noun] Any open area in front of a building. FOREDATING (15) [verb] To date (a document) with a date earlier than the actual date of writing or execution. | [verb] To occur or exist before in time; to predate. FOREDOOMED (17) [verb] To predestine to a doom. FOREFATHER (19) [noun] Ancestor.Wp | [noun] Cultural ancestor; one who originated an idea or tradition. FOREFENDED (18) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FOREFINGER (17) [noun] The index finger: the first finger next to the thumb. FOREFRONTS (16) [noun] The foremost parts or positions of something. | [verb] Third-person singular present tense of "forefront," meaning to place something in a prominent or leading position. FOREGATHER (17) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FOREGROUND (15) [noun] The elements of an image which lie closest to the picture plane. | [noun] The subject of an image, often depicted at the bottom in a two-dimensional work. | [noun] The application the user is currently interacting with; the application window that appears in front of all others. FOREHANDED (18) [adjective] Looking to the future; displaying foresight; prudent. | [adjective] Wealthy. | [adjective] Executed with a forehand stroke. FOREHOOVES (19) [noun] The front hooves of a four-legged animal, such as a horse or deer. FOREIGNERS (14) [noun] A person from a foreign country. | [noun] A private job run by an employee at a trade factory rather than going through the business. FOREIGNISM (16) FOREJUDGED (23) [verb] To judge beforehand; prejudge. | [verb] To exclude, oust, or dispossess by a judgment; prohibit (from). | [verb] To condemn judicially (to a penalty). FOREJUDGES (22) [verb] To judge beforehand; prejudge. | [verb] To exclude, oust, or dispossess by a judgment; prohibit (from). | [verb] To condemn judicially (to a penalty). FORELADIES (14) [noun] The female equivalent of a foreman FORELOCKED (20) FOREMOTHER (18) [noun] A female ancestor. FOREORDAIN (14) [verb] To predestine or preordain. FOREPASSED (16) [adjective] (timewise) That has previously passed; past, bygone FORERUNNER (13) [noun] A runner at the front or ahead. | [noun] By extension, a non-competitor who leads out the competitors on to the circuit, or who runs/rides the course prior to competitor trials, usually testing or checking the way. | [noun] A precursor or harbinger, a warning ahead. FORESEEING (14) [verb] To be able to see beforehand: to anticipate; predict. | [verb] To provide. | [noun] The act by which something is foreseen; a prophetic vision. FORESHADOW (20) [verb] To presage, or suggest something in advance. FORESHANKS (20) [noun] The front legs or lower front portions of a quadruped animal, especially a horse or other livestock, used in cooking. FORESHEETS (16) [noun] One of the sheets (ropes) that controls the foresail FORESHOCKS (22) [noun] A small earth tremor which precedes the mainshock in an earthquake sequence. Not all mainshocks have foreshocks. | [noun] Any shock or disturbance which precedes an event FORESHORES (16) [noun] The part of a shore between high water and low water, especially the beach exposed at maximum ebb spring tides. FORESHOWED (20) [verb] To show in advance; to foretell, predict. | [verb] To foreshadow or prefigure. FORESIGHTS (17) [noun] The ability to foresee or prepare wisely for the future. | [noun] The front sight on a rifle or similar weapon | [noun] A bearing taken forwards towards a new object FORESPEAKS (19) [verb] Third person singular present tense of "forespeak," meaning to speak beforehand or predict. | [verb] To arrange or order in advance. FORESPOKEN (19) [verb] Past tense of forespeak; to speak beforehand or predict. | [adjective] Spoken of or mentioned in advance. FORESTAGES (14) FORESTALLS (13) [verb] To prevent, delay or hinder something by taking precautionary or anticipatory measures; to avert. | [verb] To preclude or bar from happening, render impossible. | [verb] To purchase the complete supply of a good, particularly foodstuffs, in order to charge a monopoly price. FORESTLAND (14) [noun] Land covered with forest or trees; forested land. FORESTRIES (13) [noun] The plural of forestry, referring to multiple instances or branches of the science and practice of managing forests and woodland areas. FORESWEARS (16) [verb] To renounce, reject, or swear off something; to promise to abstain from something. | [verb] To deny under oath or perjure oneself. FORETASTED (14) [verb] Past tense of foretaste; to taste or experience something beforehand or in anticipation. | [verb] To have a preliminary or premonitory taste of something future. FORETASTES (13) [noun] A taste beforehand. | [noun] A sample taken in anticipation; an experience undergone in advance. FORETELLER (13) [noun] One who foretells; a person who predicts or prophesies future events. FORETOKENS (17) [noun] A prognostic; a premonitory sign; warning or presentment. | [verb] To betoken beforehand; prognosticate; foreshadow; give warning of; presage. FORETOPMAN (17) [noun] A sailor who works in the foretop, the platform at the head of the foremast on a ship. FORETOPMEN (17) [noun] Sailors who work in the foretop, the platform at the head of a ship's foremast. FOREWARNED (17) [verb] To warn in advance. FORFEITERS (16) [noun] Plural of forfeiter; people who lose or surrender something as a penalty or consequence. FORFEITING (17) [verb] To suffer the loss of something by wrongdoing or non-compliance | [verb] To lose a contest, game, match, or other form of competition by voluntary withdrawal, by failing to attend or participate, or by violation of the rules | [verb] To be guilty of a misdeed; to be criminal; to transgress. FORFEITURE (16) [noun] A legal action whereby a person loses all interest in the forfeit property. | [noun] The loss of forfeit property. | [noun] The property lost as a forfeit. FORFENDING (18) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FORGATHERS (17) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FORGETTERS (14) [noun] People who forget or fail to remember things. | [noun] People who neglect or fail to do something they should do. FORGETTING (15) [verb] To lose remembrance of. | [verb] To unintentionally not do, neglect. | [verb] To unintentionally leave something behind. FORGIVABLE (19) [adjective] Able to be forgiven; excusable. | [adjective] Of a loan, or a portion of it: such that repayment may be deferred for a period if the lender meets certain obligations. FORGIVABLY (22) [adverb] In a manner that is capable of being forgiven or excused; understandably or pardonably. FORJUDGING (23) [verb] To judge or condemn beforehand; to prejudge. FORKLIFTED (21) [verb] To move or stack with, or as if with, such a vehicle. FORLORNEST (13) [adjective] The superlative form of forlorn, meaning most pitifully sad, lonely, or abandoned. FORMALISED (16) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISES (15) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISMS (17) [noun] Strict adherence to a given form of conduct, practice etc. | [noun] One of several alternative computational paradigms for a given theory. | [noun] An approach to interpretation and/or evaluation focused on the (usually linguistic) structure of a literary work rather than on the contexts of its origin or reception. FORMALISTS (15) [noun] An overly formal person, especially one who adheres to current forms; a stickler | [noun] An advocate of formalism FORMALIZED (25) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALIZER (24) [noun] One who formalizes or makes formal. | [noun] In logic and mathematics, a person or system that converts informal concepts into formal notation or structure. FORMALIZES (24) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being formal in manner, dress, or procedure. FORMAMIDES (18) [noun] The amide of formic acid HCO-NH2 or any N-substituted derivative; they are used in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals FORMATIONS (15) [noun] Something possessing structure or form. | [noun] The act of assembling a group or structure. | [noun] The process during which something comes into being and gains its characteristics. FORMATIVES (18) [noun] (grammar) A language unit that has morphological function. FORMATTERS (15) [noun] People or tools that arrange or organize text, data, or other content into a specific layout or structure. | [noun] Devices or software that prepare storage media for use by organizing it into a file system. FORMATTING (16) [verb] To create or edit the layout of a document. | [verb] Change a document so it will fit onto a different type of page. | [verb] To prepare a mass storage medium for initial use, erasing any existing data in the process. FORMIDABLE (18) [adjective] Causing fear, dread, awe, or discouragement as a result of size, strength, or some other impressive feature; commanding respect; causing wonder or astonishment. | [adjective] Difficult to defeat or overcome. FORMIDABLY (21) [adverb] In a way that inspires fear or respect through being impressively large, powerful, or capable. FORMLESSLY (18) [adverb] In a manner lacking a distinct or defined shape or structure. FORMULATED (16) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULATES (15) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULATOR (15) [noun] A person who formulates or devises something, such as a plan, theory, or product. FORMULIZED (25) FORMULIZES (24) [verb] To reduce to or express in the form of a formula. | [verb] To create or devise a formula for something. FORNICATED (16) [verb] To engage in fornication; to have sex, especially illicit sex. | [adjective] Fornicate; shaped like an arch FORNICATES (15) [verb] To engage in fornication; to have sex, especially illicit sex. FORNICATOR (15) [noun] A person who engages in fornication; one who commits sexual relations outside of marriage. FORSYTHIAS (19) [noun] Any of several shrubs, of the genus Forsythia, native to Asia and Eastern Europe, that are cultivated for their yellow flowers, which bloom in early spring. FORTALICES (15) [noun] A small fortress. FORTEPIANO (15) [noun] A keyboard instrument; the smaller, quieter, precursor to the pianoforte. FORTHRIGHT (20) [noun] A straight path. | [adjective] Straightforward, not evasive, candid and direct. | [adjective] Frank, outspoken. | [adverb] Expressly, frankly, unhesitatingly. FORTIFIERS (16) [noun] Plural of fortifier; things or substances that strengthen or reinforce something. | [noun] In nutrition, agents added to food to increase its nutritional value. FORTIFYING (20) [verb] To increase the defenses of; to strengthen and secure by military works; to render defensible against an attack by hostile forces. | [verb] To impart strength or vigor to. | [verb] To add spirits to wine to increase the alcohol content. FORTISSIMI (15) [noun] The dynamic sign indicating that the piece should be played fortissimo. Abbreviation: ff. FORTISSIMO (15) [noun] The dynamic sign indicating that the piece should be played fortissimo. Abbreviation: ff. | [adverb] Indicating that the piece is played very loud. FORTITUDES (14) [noun] Plural of fortitude; mental or moral strength in facing difficulty, danger, or pain. FORTNIGHTS (17) [noun] A period of 2 weeks. FORTRESSED (14) [verb] Past tense of fortress; to protect or secure with a fortress or fortifications. | [adjective] Protected or secured like a fortress; strongly fortified. FORTRESSES (13) [noun] A fortified place; a large and permanent fortification, sometimes including a town; for example a fort, a castle; a stronghold; a place of defense or security. | [noun] A position that, if obtained by the weaker side, will prevent penetration by the opposing side, generally achieving a draw. FORTUITIES (13) [noun] The state of being fortuitous. | [noun] A fortuitous event; an accident. FORTUITOUS (13) [adjective] Happening by chance; coincidental, accidental. | [adjective] Happening by a lucky chance; lucky or fortunate. | [adjective] Happening independently of human will. FORWARDERS (17) [noun] One who, or that which, forwards something to another destination. FORWARDEST (17) [adjective] Most forward; superlative form of forward, indicating the greatest degree of advancement, boldness, or position ahead. FORWARDING (18) [verb] To advance, promote. | [verb] To send (a letter, email etc.) to a third party. | [verb] To assemble (a book) by sewing sections, attaching cover boards, and so on. FOSSICKERS (19) [noun] People who search through soil, gravel, or streams for gemstones, gold, or other valuable minerals, typically on a small scale. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of "fossick," meaning to search or rummage through something, especially looking for gemstones or valuables. FOSSICKING (20) [verb] To search for something; to rummage. | [verb] (British dialect) To be troublesome. | [noun] The act of one who fossicks; a search for gold, gems, etc. or information. FOSSILISED (14) [adjective] In a state of fossilization; preserved in rock | [adjective] Outmoded | [adjective] Having become a fossil: no longer productive FOSSILISES (13) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOSSILIZED (23) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOSSILIZES (22) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOSTERAGES (14) [noun] The act of fostering another's child as if it were one's own. | [noun] The act of caring for another human being or animal. | [noun] The condition of being the foster child. FOSTERLING (14) [noun] A foster child FOULBROODS (16) [noun] Plural of foulbrood, a bacterial disease affecting honeybee larvae, characterized by the decay of infected brood in the hive. FOULNESSES (13) [noun] Plural of foulness; the quality or state of being foul, offensive, or morally corrupt. FOUNDATION (14) [noun] The act of founding, fixing, establishing, or beginning to erect. | [noun] That upon which anything is founded; that on which anything stands, and by which it is supported; the lowest and supporting layer of a superstructure; underbuilding. | [noun] The result of the work to begin something; that which stabilizes and allows an enterprise or system to develop. FOUNDERING (15) [verb] Of a ship, to fill with water and sink. | [verb] To fall; to stumble and go lame, as a horse. | [verb] To fail; to miscarry. FOUNDLINGS (15) [noun] An abandoned child, left by its parent(s), often a baby left at a convent or similar safe place. FOUNTAINED (14) [verb] To flow or gush as if from a fountain. FOURPLEXES (22) [noun] Plural of fourplex; a residential building divided into four separate units or apartments. FOURRAGERE (14) [noun] A decorative braided cord or lanyard worn on a military uniform, typically awarded as a unit honor. FOURSQUARE (22) [noun] A sport played by four players where players have to hit a ball into other people's squares, and attempt to make a return hit. | [noun] A four-square cipher | [adjective] Having four equal sides; square. FOURTEENER (13) [noun] A mountain peak that rises 14,000 feet or more above sea level. FOURTEENTH (16) [noun] The person or thing in the fourteenth position. | [noun] One of fourteen equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The interval comprising an octave and a seventh. FOXHUNTERS (23) [noun] People who hunt foxes, typically on horseback with hounds as a sport or for pest control. FOXHUNTING (24) [verb] To hunt foxes, usually with dogs. FOXINESSES (20) [noun] The plural of foxiness; the quality or state of being foxy, crafty, or cunning. | [noun] The quality of being sexually attractive or appealing. FOXTROTTED (21) [verb] To dance the foxtrot. FOZINESSES (22) [noun] The plural of foziness, referring to instances or qualities of being fozzy (stuffy, warm, or close in atmosphere). FRACTIONAL (15) [noun] (grammar) An expression of a fractional number. | [noun] Partial ownership of a property, such as real estate or a chartered airplane, such that each partial owner has use of the property for only a portion of the time. | [noun] Relating to a fraction in a material distillation or separation process. FRACTIONED (16) [verb] Divided into fractions or smaller parts. | [verb] Separated into components by fractional distillation or similar chemical processes. FRACTURING (16) [verb] To break, or cause something to break. | [verb] To amuse (a person) greatly; to split someone's sides. | [noun] The act by which something is fractured. FRAGMENTAL (16) [noun] A fragmentary rock. | [adjective] Consisting of fragments FRAGMENTED (17) [verb] To break apart. | [verb] To cause to be broken into pieces. | [verb] To break up and disperse (a file) into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRAGRANCES (16) [noun] A pleasant smell or odour. FRAGRANTLY (17) [adverb] In a manner that has a pleasant or sweet smell; with a noticeable fragrance. FRAMBESIAS (17) [noun] Plural of frambesia, a tropical infection caused by the spirochete bacterium Treponema pallidum pertenue, characterized by raspberry-like lesions on the skin. FRAMBOISES (17) [noun] Plural of framboise, a type of raspberry liqueur or brandy, typically made from raspberries. FRAMESHIFT (21) [noun] A mutation caused by the insertion or deletion of nucleotides in DNA that alters the reading frame of codons during translation. | [noun] In word games, a shift in the arrangement of letters within a word or phrase. FRAMEWORKS (22) [noun] A support structure comprising joined parts or conglomerated particles and intervening open spaces of similar or larger size. | [noun] The arrangement of support beams that represent a building's general shape and size. | [noun] The larger branches of a tree that determine its shape. FRANCHISED (19) [verb] To confer certain powers on; grant a franchise to; authorize. | [verb] To set free; invest with a franchise or privilege; enfranchise. FRANCHISEE (18) [noun] A holder of a franchise; a person who is granted a franchise. FRANCHISER (18) [noun] A franchisor, a company which or person who grants franchises. | [noun] A person who has the right to vote. FRANCHISES (18) [noun] The right to vote at a public election or referendum; see: suffrage, suffragette. | [noun] A right or privilege officially granted to a person, a group of people, or a company by a government. | [noun] An acknowledgment of a corporation's existence and ownership. FRANCHISOR (18) [noun] A company which, or person who, grants franchises. FRANCOLINS (15) [noun] Any of various terrestrial partridges of the genera Francolinus, Peliperidix, and Scleroptila in tribe Gallini, and genus Pternistis in tribe Tetraogallini, all in family Phasianidae. FRANGIPANE (16) [noun] A cream made from ground almonds used in confectionery | [noun] A pastry filled with this cream | [noun] Any of several tropical American trees, of the genus Plumeria, having fragrant, showy, funnel-shaped flowers of a wide range of colours from creamy to red. FRANGIPANI (16) [noun] Any of several tropical American trees, of the genus Plumeria, having fragrant, showy, funnel-shaped flowers of a wide range of colours from creamy to red. | [noun] A perfume originally obtained from these flowers FRANKFURTS (20) [noun] Plural of frankfurter; seasoned sausages, typically made of beef or pork, often served in a bread roll. FRATERNITY (16) [noun] The quality of being brothers or brotherly; brotherhood. | [noun] A group of people associated for a common purpose. | [noun] A social organization of male students at a college or university; usually identified by Greek letters. FRATERNIZE (22) [verb] To associate with others in a brotherly or friendly manner. | [verb] To associate as friends with an enemy, in violation of duty. | [verb] To have an intimate or sexual relationship with a forbidden member of the opposite sex; as, in some cases, football players with cheerleaders. FRATRICIDE (16) [noun] The killing of one's brother (or sister). | [noun] A person who commits this crime. | [noun] (by extension) The intentional or unintentional killing of a comrade in arms. FRAUDULENT (14) [adjective] Dishonest; based on fraud or deception. | [adjective] False, phony. FRAUGHTING (18) FRAXINELLA (20) [noun] A fragrant herb in the rue family, Dictamnus albus FREAKINESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being freaky; weirdness or strangeness. FREAKISHLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that is strange, unusual, or abnormal to a shocking or extreme degree. FRECKLIEST (19) [adjective] Having the most freckles; marked by freckles to the greatest degree. FREEBASERS (15) [noun] Plural of freebase; people who use or prepare freebase cocaine. | [verb] Third person singular of freebase; to convert cocaine into its base form for smoking. FREEBASING (16) [verb] To purify a drug by crystallization. | [verb] To use a purified drug, especially cocaine, by heating it and inhaling the fumes produced. FREEBOARDS (16) [noun] The vertical distance between the waterline and the uppermost watertight deck of a vessel. | [noun] The distance between a water level and the top of something that contains or restrains it (such as a dam). | [noun] The distance between the top of sea ice and the water level. FREEBOOTED (16) [verb] To pillage or plunder. | [verb] To rehost (online media) without legal authorization. FREEBOOTER (15) [noun] An adventurer who pillages, plunders or wages ad-hoc war on other nations. | [noun] One who rehosts online media without authorization; one who freeboots. FREEDWOMAN (19) [noun] A woman who has been freed from slavery. | [noun] A woman who has gained freedom or liberty from bondage or oppression. FREEDWOMEN (19) [noun] Plural of freedwoman; women who were formerly enslaved and have been freed. FREEHANDED (18) [verb] To conduct a procedure involving use of the hands without any helping device or guide. | [adjective] Openhanded; generous. | [adjective] Freehand, unassisted. FREEHOLDER (17) [noun] A person who owns land or property in fee simple, holding it free and clear of any superior landlord or claim. | [noun] In historical context, a person who held a freehold estate and had the right to vote in certain elections. FREELANCED (16) [verb] To work as a freelance. | [verb] To produce or sell services as a freelance. FREELANCER (15) [noun] One who freelances FREELANCES (15) [noun] Someone who sells their services to clients without a long-term employment contract. | [noun] A medieval mercenary. FREELOADED (15) [verb] To live off the generosity or hospitality of others FREELOADER (14) [noun] One who does not contribute or pay appropriately; one who gets a free ride, etc. without paying a fair share. | [noun] An individual who takes expired unsold merchandise from the back of supermarket premises. FREEMARTIN (15) [noun] A female calf, born as twin with a bull calf, but sexually imperfect (often infertile). | [noun] Any female animal born sterile or otherwise infertile. FREENESSES (13) [noun] The plural form of freeness; the quality or state of being free; multiple instances or degrees of freedom or liberty. FREESTONES (13) [noun] Sedimentary rock: a type of stone that is composed of small particles and easily shaped, most commonly sandstone or limestone. | [noun] A stone fruit having a stone (pit) that is relatively free of the flesh. FREESTYLER (16) [noun] A person who performs freestyle swimming or another freestyle sport or artistic activity. | [noun] A person who works independently without long-term commitment to a single employer or organization. FREESTYLES (16) [noun] A sports event where competitors can choose their own method of participation. | [noun] A form of rapping in which the emcee makes up lyrics while rapping. | [noun] Modifying programming code in production and quality assurance environments, violating the existing procedures for deploying it. FREEWHEELS (19) [noun] A device in a transmission that disengages the driveshaft from the driven shaft when the driven shaft rotates faster than the driveshaft. FREEZINGLY (26) [adverb] In a freezing or extremely cold manner; so as to freeze. | [adverb] In a way that causes fear or terror; chillingly. FREIGHTAGE (18) [noun] The transportation of goods. | [noun] The price of transporting goods. FREIGHTERS (17) [noun] One who loads a ship, or one who charters and loads a ship. | [noun] One employed in receiving and forwarding freight. | [noun] One for whom freight is transported. FREIGHTING (18) [verb] To transport (goods). | [verb] To load with freight. Also figurative. FREMITUSES (15) [noun] Plural of fremitus; a vibration felt through the body, especially through the chest wall, caused by speech, coughing, or other vibrations. | [noun] In medical contexts, abnormal vibrations detected during physical examination. FRENZIEDLY (26) FREQUENCES (24) FREQUENTED (23) [verb] To visit often. FREQUENTER (22) [noun] A person who frequents; a regular visitor. | [adjective] Done or occurring often; common. | [adjective] Occurring at short intervals. FREQUENTLY (25) [adverb] At frequent intervals. | [adverb] (of a sequence) For infinitely many terms of the sequence. FRESHENERS (16) [noun] (often in combination) Something that freshens | [noun] Air freshener FRESHENING (17) [verb] To become fresh. | [verb] (of wind) To become stronger. | [verb] (of a cow) To begin or resume giving milk, especially after calving; to cause to resume giving milk. FRESHWATER (19) [noun] Water with a very low content of dissolved salt, as opposed to brackish water or salt water. | [noun] A body of fresh water | [adjective] Living in fresh water. FRIABILITY (18) FRICANDEAU (16) [noun] A French dish consisting of thinly sliced veal, braised with various vegetables and white wine FRICANDOES (16) FRICASSEED (16) [verb] To cook meat or poultry in this manner. FRICASSEES (15) [noun] Meat or poultry cut into small pieces, stewed or fried and served in its own gravy. | [verb] To cook meat or poultry in this manner. FRICATIVES (18) [noun] Any of several sounds produced by air flowing through a constriction in the oral cavity and typically producing a sibilant, hissing, or buzzing quality; a fricative consonant. FRICTIONAL (15) [adjective] Relating to, or caused by, friction. FRIEDCAKES (20) FRIENDLESS (14) [adjective] Without friends (without a friend). FRIENDLIER (14) [adjective] Generally warm, approachable and easy to relate with in character. | [adjective] Inviting, characteristic of friendliness. | [adjective] Having an easy or accepting relationship with something. FRIENDLIES (14) [noun] A game which is of no consequence in terms of ranking, betting etc. | [noun] A person or entity on the same side in a conflict. FRIENDLILY (17) [adverb] In a friendly manner; like a friend; warmly; kindly. FRIENDSHIP (19) [noun] The condition of being friends. | [noun] A friendly relationship, or a relationship as friends. | [noun] Good will. FRIEZELIKE (26) FRIGHTENED (18) [verb] To cause to feel fear; to scare; to cause to feel alarm or fright. | [adjective] Afraid; suffering from fear. FRIGIDNESS (15) FRIGORIFIC (19) FRIPPERIES (17) [noun] Ostentation, as in fancy clothing. | [noun] Useless things; trifles. | [noun] Cast-off clothes. FRISKINESS (17) FRITILLARY (16) [noun] Any of several bulbous perennial plants, of the genus Fritillaria, having flowers with a spotted or chequered pattern. | [noun] Any of several butterflies, of the family Nymphalidae, having wings with black or silvery spots. FRITTERERS (13) FRITTERING (14) [verb] (often with about, around, or away) To squander or waste time, money, or other resources; e.g. occupy oneself idly or without clear purpose, to tinker with an unimportant part of a project, to dally, sometimes as a form of procrastination. | [verb] To sinter. | [verb] To cut (meat etc.) into small pieces for frying. FRIVOLLERS (16) FRIVOLLING (17) [verb] To behave frivolously. | [verb] To trifle. FRIZZINESS (31) FRIZZLIEST (31) FROGFISHES (20) [noun] Any of several benthic anglerfish, of the family Antennariidae, having a frog-like mouth with a lure. | [noun] Any of the benthic ray-finned fish of the family Batrachoididae (the sole family of order Batrachoidiformes), which are ambush predators and have a toad-like appearance. | [noun] Any fish of genus Lophius. FROGHOPPER (21) [noun] Any of various small insects of the superfamily Cercopoidea that feed on plant sap and whose larvae produce cuckoo spit. FROLICKING (20) [verb] To make merry; to have fun; to romp; to behave playfully and uninhibitedly. | [verb] To cause to be merry. | [noun] The act of one who frolics. FROLICSOME (17) [adjective] Characterised or marked by frolicking; playful. FROMENTIES (15) FRONTALITY (16) FRONTCOURT (15) FRONTWARDS (17) [adjective] Oriented towards the front. | [adverb] Towards the front. FROSTBITES (15) FROSTINESS (13) FROSTWORKS (20) FROTHINESS (16) FROWNINGLY (20) FROWSTIEST (16) [adjective] Musty; stuffy (atmosphere) FROZENNESS (22) FRUCTIFIED (19) [verb] To bear fruit; to generate useful products or ideas. | [verb] To make productive or fruitful. | [verb] To be satisfied sexually. FRUCTIFIES (18) [verb] To bear fruit; to generate useful products or ideas. | [verb] To make productive or fruitful. | [verb] To be satisfied sexually. FRUGIVORES (17) [noun] An animal whose diet is mostly fruit. FRUITARIAN (13) [noun] A variant of vegetarian who intends to be limited to eating only such parts of plants whose consumption does not kill the plant (such as fruits, vegetables that can be compared to fruit, nuts and grain, but not for example tubers). The purest fruitarians do not want to destroy even the seeds. FRUITCAKES (19) [noun] A cake containing dried fruits and, optionally, nuts, citrus peel and spice. | [noun] A crazy or eccentric person. | [noun] A homosexual male. FRUITERERS (13) [noun] One who sells fruit. FRUITFULLY (19) FRUITINESS (13) FRUITWOODS (17) [noun] The wood of any fruit tree, particularly hardwood from species such as pear and cherry, that is valued for furniture, woodcuts and other applications. | [noun] In orchard culture, the woody growth of the scion of any grafted fruit tree above the graft, as opposed to the rootstock, which is the part of the plant below the graft. | [noun] Particular branches or twigs in particular positions, or of particular types or ages, that may be expected to bear fruit in most types of orchard trees, since fruit is not borne randomly all over the tree. FRUMENTIES (15) FRUSTRATED (14) [verb] To disappoint or defeat; to vex by depriving of something expected or desired. | [verb] To hinder or thwart. | [verb] To cause stress or annoyance. FRUSTRATES (13) [verb] To disappoint or defeat; to vex by depriving of something expected or desired. | [verb] To hinder or thwart. | [verb] To cause stress or annoyance. FRUTESCENT (15) FUGACITIES (16) FUGITIVELY (20) FULFILLERS (16) FULFILLING (17) [verb] To satisfy, carry out, bring to completion (an obligation, a requirement, etc.). | [verb] To emotionally or artistically satisfy; to develop one's gifts to the fullest. | [verb] To obey, follow, comply with (a rule, requirement etc.). FULFILMENT (18) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULGURATED (15) [verb] To flash or emit flashes like lightning. | [verb] To cauterize with electricity; to carry out electrofulguration or to electrocauterize. FULGURATES (14) [verb] To flash or emit flashes like lightning. | [verb] To cauterize with electricity; to carry out electrofulguration or to electrocauterize. FULGURITES (14) [noun] Glass formed by a lightning strike melting sand or other material FULIGINOUS (14) [adjective] Pertaining to or resembling soot in such features as colour, texture or taste; sooty, dusky. FULLERENES (13) [noun] Any of a class of allotropes of carbon having hollow molecules whose atoms lie at the vertices of a polyhedron having 12 pentagonal and 2 or more hexagonal faces. | [noun] Any closed-cage compound having twenty or more carbon atoms consisting entirely of 3-coordinate carbon atoms. | [noun] (by extension) The class of carbon allotropes consisting of tubular carbon molecules (carbon nanotubes) and spheroidal carbon molecules (traditional fullerenes). FULLNESSES (13) FULMINATED (16) [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. | [verb] To thunder or make a loud noise. FULMINATES (15) [noun] Any salt or ester of fulminic acid, mostly explosive. | [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. FUMATORIES (15) FUMBLINGLY (21) FUMIGATING (17) [verb] To disinfect, purify, or rid of vermin with the fumes of certain chemicals. FUMIGATION (16) [noun] The act of fumigating, or applying smoke or vapor, as for disinfection. | [noun] Vapor raised in the process of fumigating. FUMIGATORS (16) FUMITORIES (15) [noun] A plant of the taxonomic genus Fumaria, which are annual herbaceous flowering plants in the family Papaveraceae, native to temperate Europe and Asia. FUNCTIONAL (15) [noun] A function that takes a function as its argument; More precisely: A function y=f(x) whose argument x varies in a space of (real valued, complex valued) functions and whose value belongs to a monodimensional space. An example: the definite integration of integrable real functions in a real interval. | [noun] A scalar-valued linear function on a vector space. | [noun] An object encapsulating a function pointer (or equivalent). FUNCTIONED (16) [verb] To have a function. | [verb] To carry out a function; to be in action. FUNDAMENTS (16) [noun] Foundation. | [noun] The bottom; the buttocks or anus. | [noun] The underlying basis or principle for a theoretical or mathematical system. FUNEREALLY (16) FUNGICIDAL (17) FUNGICIDES (17) [noun] A substance used to kill fungus FUNICULARS (15) [noun] A particular type of rail transit system which ascends a steep urban or mountain incline, having usually two cars sharing a single track, with the cars linked by a cable and an arrangement of pulleys such that the descending car assists in the hoisting of the ascending car, i.e. the two cars serve as counterweights for each other. FUNNELFORM (18) FUNNELLING (14) [verb] To use a funnel. | [verb] To proceed through a narrow gap or passageway akin to a funnel; to condense or narrow. | [verb] To channel, direct, or focus (emotions, money, resources, etc.). FURANOSIDE (14) FURBEARERS (15) FURBELOWED (19) [verb] To adorn with a furbelow; to ornament. FURBISHERS (18) FURBISHING (19) [verb] To polish or burnish. | [verb] To renovate or recondition. | [noun] The act by which something is furbished. FURCATIONS (15) FURLOUGHED (18) [verb] To grant a furlough to (someone). | [verb] To have (an employee) not work in order to reduce costs; to send (someone) on furlough. FURMENTIES (15) FURNISHERS (16) [noun] One who furnishes FURNISHING (17) [verb] To provide a place with furniture, or other equipment. | [verb] To supply or give (something). | [verb] To supply (somebody) with something. FURNITURES (13) FUROSEMIDE (16) [noun] A diuretic used in the treatment of congestive heart failure and edema. FURRIERIES (13) FURTHERERS (16) FURTHERING (17) [verb] To help forward; to assist. | [verb] To encourage growth; to support progress or growth of something; to promote. | [noun] The act by which something is furthered; furtherance. FUSIBILITY (18) FUSILLADES (14) [noun] The simultaneous firing of a number of firearms | [noun] (by extension) a rapid outburst | [verb] To fire, or attack with, a fusillade FUSIONISTS (13) [noun] An adherent of fusionism or a participant in a political fusion. FUSSBUDGET (17) [noun] One who complains or fusses a great deal, especially about unimportant matters; a fusspot. FUSTIGATED (15) FUSTIGATES (14) FUSULINIDS (14) FUTILENESS (13) FUTILITIES (13) FUTURELESS (13) FUTURISTIC (15) [adjective] Of technology, a concept, etc, so far advanced as to appear to be from the future. FUTURITIES (13) [noun] The future. | [noun] The state of being in the future. | [noun] A future event. FUTUROLOGY (17) [noun] The scientific forecasting of future trends in science, technology or society

11-Letter Words (515)

FABRICATING (19) [verb] To form into a whole by uniting its parts; to construct; to build. | [verb] To form by art and labor; to manufacture; to produce. | [verb] To invent and form; to forge; to devise falsely. FABRICATION (18) [noun] The act of fabricating, framing, or constructing; construction; manufacture | [noun] That which is fabricated; a falsehood | [noun] The act of cutting up an animal carcass as preparation for cooking; butchery. FABRICATORS (18) [noun] People who make or construct something, especially structures or items. | [noun] People who invent or create false information or lies. FACETIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a manner that is joking, humorous, or not serious; with levity or wit. FACILITATED (17) [verb] To make easy or easier. | [verb] To help bring about. | [verb] To preside over (a meeting, a seminar). FACILITATES (16) [verb] To make easy or easier. | [verb] To help bring about. | [verb] To preside over (a meeting, a seminar). FACILITATOR (16) [noun] A person who helps a group to have an effective dialog without taking any side of the argument, especially in order to reach a consensus. FACTICITIES (18) [noun] The plural of facticity; the quality of being a brute fact or given condition that cannot be changed, particularly in existentialist philosophy referring to the circumstances into which one is born. FACTIONALLY (19) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of a faction or factions; in a way that divides into opposing groups or interests. FACTITIVELY (22) FACTORIZING (26) [verb] To create a list of the factors of. | [verb] To divide an expression into a list of items that, when multiplied together, will produce the original quantity. | [verb] To warn not to pay or give up goods. FACTORSHIPS (21) [noun] The plural of factorship, which is the position, office, or business of a factor (a merchant or agent who buys and sells goods on commission for others). FACTORYLIKE (23) FACTUALISMS (18) FACTUALISTS (16) [noun] Plural of factualist; people who emphasize or prioritize facts and factual accuracy. FACTUALNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being factual; adherence to facts. FACULTATIVE (19) [adjective] Of or relating to faculty, especially to mental faculty | [adjective] Not obligate; optional, discretionary or elective | [adjective] That grants permission or power to do something FADDISHNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being inclined to follow fads; a tendency to adopt temporary fashions or trends enthusiastically. FAINTNESSES (14) [noun] The plural of faintness; instances or qualities of being faint, such as dizziness, weakness, or lack of brightness or distinctness. FAIRGROUNDS (16) [noun] An area where a fair (an event for public entertainment) or other public event is held; a showground. | [noun] A commercially-operated collection of rides, games and other entertainment attractions; an amusement park. | [noun] An area where a fair (an event for public entertainment) or other public event is held; a showground. FAIRLEADERS (15) [noun] Devices on a ship that guide ropes or cables in a desired direction, typically consisting of a block or ring mounted on the rail or structure of a vessel. FAITHLESSLY (20) [adverb] In a manner that lacks faith, trust, or loyalty; disloyally or without fidelity. FALLALERIES (14) [noun] Showy or elaborate decorative ornaments and embellishments, typically of a frivolous or insubstantial nature. | [noun] Nonsensical or pretentious speech or writing. FALLIBILITY (19) [noun] The state of being prone to error. | [noun] An error-generating characteristic. FALSENESSES (14) [noun] The plural of falseness; instances or qualities of being false, untrue, or deceptive. | [noun] States of dishonesty or lack of authenticity. FALSIFIABLE (19) [adjective] Capable of being proven false or refuted by evidence or experiment. FALTERINGLY (18) [adverb] In a hesitant, stumbling, or unsteady manner. | [adverb] With a tendency to lose strength, confidence, or momentum. FAMILIARISE (16) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARITY (19) [noun] The state of being extremely friendly; intimacy. | [noun] Undue intimacy; inappropriate informality, impertinence. | [noun] An instance of familiar behaviour. FAMILIARIZE (25) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMISHMENTS (21) [noun] Plural of famishment; instances or states of extreme hunger or starvation. FANATICALLY (19) [adverb] In a manner showing extreme, uncritical enthusiasm or devotion to a cause, belief, or person. FANATICISMS (18) [noun] The characteristic or practice of being a fanatic. FANATICIZED (26) [verb] To make into a fanatic. | [verb] To become fanatical. FANATICIZES (25) [verb] To make into a fanatic. | [verb] To become fanatical. FANCINESSES (16) [noun] The plural of fanciness; the quality or state of being fancy, elaborate, or ornamental. FANFARONADE (18) [noun] Empty, self-assertive boasting. | [verb] To engage in empty, self-assertive boasting. FANTABULOUS (16) [adjective] Combined form of fantastic and fabulous used for emphatic purposes FANTASISING (15) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASIZERS (23) [noun] Someone who indulges in fantasies FANTASIZING (24) [verb] To indulge in fantasy; to imagine things only possible in fantasy. | [verb] To portray in the mind, using fantasy. FANTASTICAL (16) [adjective] Extraordinarily fanciful, imaginative, or unrealistic; resembling or suggestive of fantasy. | [adjective] Extravagantly or absurdly ornate or elaborate in design. FANTASYLAND (18) [noun] An ideal place that does not exist in reality. FARCICALITY (21) [noun] The quality or state of being farcical; absurdity or ridiculous nature. FAREWELLING (18) [verb] To bid farewell or say goodbye. FARINACEOUS (16) [adjective] Made from, or rich in, starch or flour. | [adjective] Having a floury texture; grainy. FARKLEBERRY (23) [noun] A species of Vaccinium (Vaccinium arboreum) native to the southeastern United States, from southern Virginia west to southeastern Missouri, and south to Florida and eastern Texas, and taking the form of a shrub (rarely a small tree) growing to 3-5 m (rarely 9 m) tall. | [noun] A berry from a shrub of this species. FARMERETTES (16) [noun] Female farmers or women who work on farms, especially during wartime when men were serving in the military. FARMWORKERS (23) [noun] A person hired to work on the farm or in the agricultural industry. FARRAGINOUS (15) [adjective] Consisting of a confused mixture of things; jumbled or chaotic in nature. FARTHERMOST (19) [adjective] Distant; remote in space. | [adjective] Remote in time. | [adjective] Long. FARTHINGALE (18) [noun] A hooped structure in cloth worn to extend the skirt of women's dresses; a hooped petticoat. FASCIATIONS (16) [noun] Plural of fasciation, an abnormal flattening or ribbon-like broadening of plant stems. | [noun] The state of being fascinated or intensely interested in something. FASCICULATE (18) [adjective] Arranged in or forming small bundles or clusters. | [verb] To arrange or bundle into fascicles. FASCINATING (17) [verb] To evoke an intense interest or attraction in someone. | [verb] To make someone hold motionless; to spellbind. | [verb] To be irresistibly charming or attractive to. FASCINATION (16) [noun] The act of bewitching, or enchanting | [noun] The state or condition of being fascinated. | [noun] Something which fascinates. FASCINATORS (16) [noun] A fascinating person | [noun] A delicate, often frivolous head decoration worn on the hair, primarily by women | [noun] A type of wool or lace headscarf FASHIONABLE (19) [noun] A fashionable person; a fop | [adjective] Characteristic of or influenced by a current popular trend or style. | [adjective] Established or favoured by custom or use; current; prevailing at a particular time. FASHIONABLY (22) [adverb] In a fashionable manner. FASHIONISTA (17) [noun] A person who creates or promotes high fashion, i.e. a fashion designer or fashion editor. | [noun] A person who dresses according to the trends of fashion, or one who closely follows those trends. FASTBALLERS (16) [noun] Plural of fastballer; baseball pitchers who specialize in throwing fastballs. FATEFULNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fateful; the condition of having important or far-reaching consequences. FATHEADEDLY (22) FATHERHOODS (21) [noun] The plural of fatherhood; the state, condition, or experience of being a father. FATHERLANDS (18) [noun] The country of one's ancestors. | [noun] The country of one's birth, origin. FATIGUINGLY (19) [adverb] In a manner that causes fatigue or weariness; exhaustingly. FATSHEDERAS (18) FATTINESSES (14) [noun] The plural of fattiness; the quality or state of being fatty or containing fat. FATUOUSNESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being fatuous; foolishness or lack of intelligence. | [noun] Something that is fatuous or absurd. FAULTFINDER (18) [noun] A person who habitually finds fault or complains about things; a chronic critic. FAULTLESSLY (17) [adverb] In a manner that is free from faults, errors, or defects; perfectly or flawlessly. FAVORITISMS (19) [noun] Plural of favoritism; the practice of showing unfair support or preference for particular people or things. FEARFULLEST (17) [adjective] Superlative form of fearful; most full of fear or showing the greatest degree of fear and anxiety. FEARFULNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fearful; timidity or apprehension. | [noun] Something that causes fear or dread. FEASIBILITY (19) [noun] The state of being feasible or possible. FEATHERBEDS (20) [noun] A mattress stuffed with feathers. | [noun] (Dartmoor) A bog covered by a layer of moss, presenting a hazard to walkers. | [verb] To treat someone with excessive indulgence; to pamper, cosset or mollycoddle. FEATHEREDGE (19) [noun] A thin edge that tapers to a point, as on a tool or board. | [verb] To thin down to a sharp edge; to merge gradually into a surface. FEATHERHEAD (21) [noun] A foolish person. FEATHERIEST (17) [adjective] Superlative form of feathery; most resembling, containing, or covered with feathers; lightest and most delicate. FEATHERINGS (18) [noun] Plural of feathering; the arrangement or structure of feathers on a bird, or decorative edging made to resemble feathers. | [verb] Third person singular present of feather; the act of arranging feathers or creating feather-like patterns, or gradually reducing the pitch of a propeller blade. FEATHERLESS (17) [adjective] Having no feathers or lacking feathers. FEATURELESS (14) [adjective] Without distinguishing features. FEATURETTES (14) [noun] A relatively short feature film. | [noun] A short film of bonus material, companion to the main feature, frequently part of additional material in a home video release on LaserDisc, DVD, Blu-Ray. FECUNDATING (18) [verb] To make fertile. | [verb] To inseminate. FECUNDATION (17) [noun] The action or process of fertilizing or impregnating, especially the fertilization of a plant ovule by pollen or of an animal ovum by sperm. FECUNDITIES (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fecund; the ability to produce offspring or vegetation in abundance. | [noun] The number of offspring produced by an organism or population. FEDERALESES (15) FEDERALISMS (17) [noun] Plural of federalism; systems of government in which power is divided between a central authority and constituent political units. FEDERALISTS (15) [noun] Advocate of federalism. | [noun] Supporter of the view that the province of Québec should remain within the Canadian federal system; an opponent of Québec‐based separatism or sovereigns. | [noun] A covenantalist. FEDERALIZED (25) [verb] To unite into a federation. | [verb] To bring under federal control. | [verb] To change (a unitary state) into a federation. FEDERALIZES (24) [verb] To unite into a federation. | [verb] To bring under federal control. | [verb] To change (a unitary state) into a federation. FEDERATIONS (15) [noun] Act of joining together into a single political entity. | [noun] Array of nations or states that are unified under one central authority which is elected by its members. | [noun] Any society or organisation formed from separate groups or bodies. FEELINGNESS (15) FELDSPATHIC (22) [adjective] Containing feldspar. FELICITATED (17) [verb] To congratulate. FELICITATES (16) [verb] To congratulate. FELICITATOR (16) FELLMONGERS (17) [noun] Someone who sells or works with animal hides and skins. FELLMONGERY (20) [noun] The trade of a fellmonger. | [noun] A fellmonger's place of work. FELLOWSHIPS (22) [noun] A company of people that share the same interest or aim. | [noun] Company, companions; a group of people or things following another. | [noun] A feeling of friendship, relatedness or connection between people. FELONIOUSLY (17) [adverb] In a manner involving or pertaining to a serious crime; done with criminal intent or in a way that constitutes a felony. FEMTOSECOND (19) [noun] A unit of time equal to 0.000 000 000 000 001 seconds (i.e. 1x10-15 seconds) and with symbol fs. FENESTRATED (15) [verb] To cut an opening into. | [adjective] Having windows | [adjective] Having evolved perforations through the leaves or fistulate/hollow/tubular stems/trunks FERMENTABLE (18) [adjective] Capable of undergoing fermentation; able to be fermented. FEROCIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a ferocious manner, particularly violent and aggressive. | [adverb] Intensely or extremely. FERREDOXINS (22) [noun] Iron-sulfur proteins that function as electron carriers in photosynthesis and cellular respiration. FERRIFEROUS (17) [adjective] Containing or yielding iron; iron-bearing. FERRIMAGNET (17) [noun] A material exhibiting ferrimagnetism, in which unequal magnetic moments of different atoms or sublattices result in a net magnetic moment. FERROMAGNET (17) [noun] A material or substance that exhibits strong permanent magnetic properties and can be magnetized easily. | [noun] An object or device made from ferromagnetic material. FERRUGINOUS (15) [adjective] Containing iron. | [adjective] Rusty. | [adjective] Rust-coloured. FERTILENESS (14) [noun] The quality or state of being fertile; fruitfulness or productiveness. FERTILITIES (14) [noun] The plural of fertility; the quality or state of being fertile, capable of producing offspring or crops abundantly. | [noun] The ability or capacity to conceive or reproduce. FERTILIZERS (23) [noun] A natural substance that is used to make the ground more suitable for growing plants. | [noun] A chemical compound created to have the same effect. FERTILIZING (24) [verb] To make (the soil) more fertile by adding nutrients to it. | [verb] To make more creative or intellectually productive. | [verb] To cause to produce offspring through insemination; to inseminate. FESTINATELY (17) FESTINATING (15) [verb] Moving with increasing speed, particularly referring to an involuntary gait disorder where steps become progressively faster. | [verb] Hastening or hurrying forward in an accelerating manner. FESTIVENESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being festive; a festive atmosphere or celebration. FESTIVITIES (17) [noun] (often pluralized) A festival or similar celebration. | [noun] An experience or expression of celebratory feeling, merriment, gaiety. FETIDNESSES (15) [noun] The plural of fetidness; the quality or state of being fetid or having a foul smell. FETISHISTIC (19) [adjective] Of or pertaining to fetishism or fetishists. FETOLOGISTS (15) [noun] Plural of fetologist; medical doctors who specialize in the study and treatment of the fetus during pregnancy. FETOPROTEIN (16) [noun] A protein produced during fetal development that is sometimes found in elevated levels in certain cancers and medical conditions in adults. FETOSCOPIES (18) [noun] Plural of fetoscopy, a medical procedure in which a thin, fiber-optic instrument is inserted into the uterus to visualize a fetus for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes. FEUDALISTIC (17) [adjective] Of, relating to, or characteristic of feudalism or a feudal system of government and society. FEUDALITIES (15) [noun] Plural of feudality; the conditions, systems, or relationships characteristic of feudalism. FEUDALIZING (25) [verb] To make something feudal. FEUDATORIES (15) [noun] A feudal vassal. | [noun] A feudal territory, a fief. | [noun] A fee paid by such a vassal to hold land. FEUILLETONS (14) [noun] A section of a European newspaper typically dedicated to arts, culture, criticism and light literature. | [noun] An article published in this section. FIANCHETTOS (19) [noun] Plural of fianchetto, a chess opening move in which a bishop is developed to the long diagonal by advancing the b-pawn (or g-pawn) and placing the bishop on b2 (or g2). FIBERBOARDS (19) [noun] A composite building material made from wood fibers compressed and bound together, used in construction and furniture making. FIBERSCOPES (20) [noun] A flexible fibreoptic device for viewing otherwise inaccessible areas FIBREBOARDS (19) [noun] Rigid boards made from compressed wood fibers, used in construction and furniture manufacturing. FIBRILLATED (17) [verb] To make rapid irregular movements. | [adjective] Having fibrils FIBRILLATES (16) [verb] To make rapid irregular movements. FIBRINOGENS (17) [noun] Plural of fibrinogen, a soluble blood protein that is converted to fibrin during blood clotting. FIBROBLASTS (18) [noun] A cell found in connective tissue that produces fibers, such as collagen. FIBROCYSTIC (23) [adjective] Having increased fibrosis together with increased cystic spaces. FIBROMATOUS (18) [adjective] Relating to or characterized by fibroma, a benign tumor composed of fibrous tissue. FIBRONECTIN (18) [noun] A glycoprotein found in blood plasma and connective tissue that aids in cell adhesion and wound healing. FICTIONALLY (19) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of fiction; in an imaginary or made-up way. FICTIONEERS (16) [noun] A writer of fiction, especially one who produces many publications. FICTIONISTS (16) [noun] Writers or creators of fiction; people who write fictional narratives or stories. FICTIONIZED (26) [verb] Past tense of fictionize; to convert into fiction or present as a fictional narrative. FICTIONIZES (25) [verb] To convert into or treat as fiction; to compose or narrate as a fictional work. FICTIVENESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being fictive; the characteristic of being invented or imaginary rather than real. FIDDLEBACKS (24) [noun] The brown recluse spider. | [noun] A feature of maple wood where the fibers are distorted in an undulating chatoyant pattern. | [noun] A kind of chasuble with the front cut away. FIDDLEHEADS (20) [noun] The scroll-shaped decoration at the tip of a fiddle. | [noun] A similar scroll-shaped ornament on a ship's bow. | [noun] The furled fronds of a young fern harvested for food consumption. FIDDLESTICK (22) [noun] A bow used to play the fiddle. FIDGETINESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being fidgety; restlessness or inability to remain still. FIDUCIARIES (17) [noun] One who holds a thing in trust for another; a trustee. | [noun] One who depends for salvation on faith, without works; an antinomian. FIELDPIECES (19) [noun] Portable artillery pieces or cannons used in field warfare. FIELDSTONES (15) [noun] Stones found naturally in fields, often used for building walls or construction. | [noun] Plural of fieldstone, a type of stone used in construction that is gathered from fields rather than quarried. FIELDSTRIPS (17) [verb] To disassemble a firearm or other device into its component parts for cleaning, inspection, or maintenance. | [noun] The plural of fieldstrip, referring to instances or parts involved in disassembling equipment. FIERINESSES (14) [noun] The plural of fieriness; the quality or state of being fiery, intense, or passionate. FIGURATIONS (15) [noun] The act of giving figure or determinate form. | [noun] The form of something, its outline or boundaries. | [noun] Ornamentation or decoration, especially by the addition of figures. FIGUREHEADS (19) [noun] A carved figure on the prow of a sailing ship. | [noun] (by extension) Someone in a nominal position of leadership who has no actual power; a front or front man. FILAGREEING (16) FILAMENTARY (19) [adjective] Of, relating to, or resembling a filament; consisting of or containing filaments. FILAMENTOUS (16) [adjective] Composed of or resembling thin threads or fibers; having a threadlike structure. FILIBUSTERS (16) [noun] A mercenary soldier; a freebooter; specifically, a mercenary who travelled illegally in an organized group from the United States to a country in Central America or the Spanish West Indies in the mid-19th century seeking economic and political benefits through armed force. | [noun] (US politics) A tactic (such as giving long, often irrelevant speeches) employed to delay the proceedings of, or the making of a decision by, a legislative body, particularly the United States Senate. | [noun] (US politics) A member of a legislative body causing such an obstruction; a filibusterer. FILIGREEING (16) [verb] The present participle of filigree, meaning to decorate with or as if with delicate ornamental work of fine wires or threads. FILMINESSES (16) [noun] The plural of filminess; the quality or state of being filmy, thin, or translucent. FILMMAKINGS (23) [noun] The plural of filmmaking; the process or art of making films or movies. FILMOGRAPHY (25) [noun] A selective list of movie titles that share a similar characteristic such as the same genre, the same director, the same actor etc. FILMSETTERS (16) [noun] Machines or operators that set type for printing, or devices used in the filmmaking process to position film or create film separations for printing. FILMSETTING (17) [verb] To typeset by exposing type characters onto photographic film, which is then used to generate printing plates. | [noun] Photocomposition of type. FILTRATIONS (14) [noun] The act or process of filtering; the mechanical separation of a liquid from the undissolved particles floating in it. | [noun] A totally ordered collection of subsets. FIMBRIATION (18) [noun] A narrow border or edge, especially a decorative band or fringe-like structure. FINANCIALLY (19) [adverb] In terms of finance or money. FINGERBOARD (18) [noun] A flat or roughly flat strip on the neck of a stringed instrument, against which the strings are pressed to shorten the vibrating length and produce notes of higher pitches. | [noun] A miniature skateboard that is driven with the fingers. FINGERHOLDS (19) [noun] A grip with the fingers. FINGERLINGS (16) [noun] A young salmon or trout. | [noun] A type of small potato grown primarily in North America. | [noun] Any finger-sized version of something typically larger. FINGERNAILS (15) [noun] The hard, flat translucent covering near the tip of a human finger, useful for scratching and fine manipulation. FINGERPICKS (23) [noun] A type of plectrum that clips on to, or wraps around the end of the fingers and thumb. | [verb] To pluck of the individual strings of a stringed instrument with the fingers FINGERPOSTS (17) [noun] A board that shows the direction (and often distance) to a named place; especially one of several attached to a milepost | [noun] The milepost itself. FINGERPRINT (17) [noun] The natural pattern of ridges on the tips of human fingers, unique to each individual. | [noun] The patterns left on surfaces where uncovered fingertips have touched, especially as used to identify the person who touched the surface. | [noun] Unique identification for public key in asymmetric cryptosystem. FINICALNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being finical; excessive fussiness or particular care about details. FINICKINESS (20) [noun] The quality or state of being finicky; the tendency to be fussy, particular, or hard to please about details. FINNICKIEST (20) [adjective] Superlative form of finicky; most fussy, particular, or hard to please about details. FIREBALLERS (16) [noun] A pitcher who throws very fast balls. FIREBALLING (17) [verb] The act of throwing or moving with great speed and force, or in gaming contexts, executing a rapid offensive strategy or attack. FIREBOMBING (21) [verb] To attack with a firebomb. | [noun] An attack with a firebomb. FIRECRACKER (22) [noun] A small explosive device, typically containing a small amount of gunpowder in a tightly-wound roll of paper, primarily designed to produce a large bang. | [noun] A peanut butter cracker baked with marijuana, similar in concept to an Alice B. Toklas brownie. | [noun] A person who is exciting and/or unpredictable. FIREFANGING (19) FIREFIGHTER (21) [noun] A person who puts out fires. FIREPROOFED (20) [verb] To make resistant to damage from fire. FIRMAMENTAL (18) [adjective] Relating to or belonging to the firmament; of or pertaining to the sky or heavens. FIRSTFRUITS (17) [noun] An offering of the first of the harvest; firstfruits. | [noun] The first growth, allegory for the first people to receive the message. | [noun] Ceremony in Southern Africa, notably among the Zulu and Swazi peoples, in which the paramount chief is the first to eat from the new harvest. FISHABILITY (22) FISHERWOMAN (22) [noun] A woman who fishes. | [noun] A woman whose profession is catching fish. FISHERWOMEN (22) [noun] A woman who fishes. | [noun] A woman whose profession is catching fish. FISHMONGERS (20) [noun] A person who sells fish. | [noun] A fishmonger's, a fishmonger's shop: a shop that sells fish. | [noun] A pimp. FISHTAILING (18) [verb] To swing the back of a vehicle (originally an aircraft) from side to side. | [verb] To cause the back of (a vehicle) to swing from side to side. | [verb] To move with the tail swinging from side to side in this way. FISSILITIES (14) [noun] The quality or state of being fissile; the ability of a material to be split or cleft along natural lines or grain. | [noun] In geology, the tendency of rock or mineral to break into thin layers. FISSIONABLE (16) [noun] Any fissile or fissionable substance. | [adjective] Capable of undergoing nuclear fission; fissile. FISSIPAROUS (16) [adjective] Factious, tending to break into pieces | [adjective] Causing division or fragmenting something (often appearing in the collocation "fissiparous tendencies"). | [adjective] Of cells that reproduce through fission, splitting into two. FITTINGNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being fitting; appropriateness or suitability. FIXEDNESSES (22) [noun] The plural of fixedness; the quality or state of being fixed, stable, or permanent. FLABBERGAST (19) [noun] An awkward person. | [noun] Overwhelming confusion, shock, or surprise. | [verb] To overwhelm with bewilderment; to amaze, confound, or stun, especially in a ludicrous manner. FLAGELLANTS (15) [noun] A person who whips themselves or others either as part of a religious penance or for sexual gratification. FLAGELLATED (16) [verb] To whip or scourge. FLAGELLATES (15) [verb] To whip or scourge. FLAGRANCIES (17) [noun] Plural of flagrancy; instances of something that is glaringly or obviously wrong, evil, or reprehensible. FLAKINESSES (18) [noun] The plural of flakiness; the quality or state of being flaky, such as tending to break into flakes or being unreliable or inconsistent. FLAMBOYANCE (23) [noun] The condition of being flamboyant. FLAMBOYANCY (26) [noun] The quality or state of being flamboyant; ostentatious or extravagant display in style or manner. FLAMBOYANTS (21) [noun] The royal poinciana (Delonix regia), a showy tropical tree. FLAMEPROOFS (21) [verb] To make flameproof. FLANNELETTE (14) [noun] A type of soft, woven fabric, made to imitate flannel by raising or brushing the fibers in the weft. Frequently used in sleepwear, pillows, and bedding. | [noun] Something made from this fabric. FLANNELLING (15) [verb] To rub with a flannel. | [verb] To wrap in flannel. | [verb] To flatter; to suck up to. FLAPDOODLES (18) [noun] Nonsense | [noun] Thingamabob. | [noun] A speaker or writer of nonsense. FLASHBOARDS (20) [noun] A board placed temporarily upon a milldam, to raise the water in the pond above its usual level. FLASHLIGHTS (21) [noun] A battery-powered hand-held light source. | [noun] A flashgun (device used to create flashes of light for photography). FLATFOOTING (18) [verb] The present participle of flatfoot, meaning to work as a police officer or detective, or to move about heavily and clumsily. FLATLANDERS (15) [noun] Residents of a flat or apartment building. | [noun] In the context of Edwin Abbott's "Flatland," fictional two-dimensional beings living in a flat plane. FLATULENCES (16) [noun] Plural of flatulence; the condition of having excessive gas in the intestinal tract, or instances of passing gas. FLATULENTLY (17) [adverb] In a flatulent manner; characterized by or accompanied by intestinal gas or excessive wind. FLAUNTINGLY (18) [adverb] In a manner that displays or shows off something ostentatiously or with deliberate conspicuousness. FLAVORFULLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that has a pleasant or distinctive taste; with flavor. FLEAHOPPERS (21) [noun] Small jumping insects of the family Halticidae that feed on plants and are known for their ability to leap considerable distances. FLEETNESSES (14) [noun] The plural of fleetness; the quality or state of being fleet, swift, or quick in movement. FLEXIBILITY (26) [noun] The quality of being flexible; suppleness; pliability. | [noun] The quality of having options. FLEXOGRAPHY (30) [noun] A method of printing using a rubber or polymer rotating printing plate, most commonly used for packaging (labels, tape etc.). FLICHTERING (20) FLIGHTINESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being flighty; lack of seriousness or stability in behavior or attention. FLIMFLAMMED (24) [verb] To swindle or cheat. FLIMFLAMMER (23) [noun] A swindler; a con artist. FLIPPANCIES (20) [noun] A disrespectful levity or pertness especially in respect to grave or sacred matters. FLIRTATIONS (14) [noun] Playing at courtship; coquetry. | [noun] An instance of flirting. FLIRTATIOUS (14) [adjective] Of or pertaining to flirtation. | [adjective] (of a person) Having a tendency to flirt often. FLOATATIONS (14) [noun] A state of floating, or being afloat. | [noun] The ability (as of a tire or snowshoes) to stay on the surface of soft ground or snow. | [noun] (chemical engineering) A process of separating minerals by agitating a mixture with water and detergents etc; selected substances being carried to the surface in air bubbles. FLOATPLANES (16) [noun] A seaplane that has floats for landing or taking off from the water FLOCCULANTS (18) [noun] A flocculating agent FLOCCULATED (19) [adjective] Collected together in a loose aggregation like flocks (tufts) of wool, or coagulated in this way. FLOCCULATES (18) [noun] A mass that has suffered flocculation. | [verb] To collect together in a loose aggregation like flocks (tufts) of wool. FLOCCULATOR (18) [noun] A device or tank used in water treatment to gently mix water and promote the aggregation of fine particles into larger flocs that can be more easily settled or filtered. FLOODLIGHTS (19) [noun] A projector of a bright beam of light for use in theatres and studios; a flood | [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Powerful artificial illumination with a broad beam, especially in a series of units on pylons used to illuminate a sports ground. | [verb] To enlighten or illuminate with floodlight(s). FLOODPLAINS (17) [noun] An alluvial plain that may or may not experience occasional or periodic flooding. FLOODWATERS (18) [noun] The waters of a flood FLOORBOARDS (17) [noun] Any of the long boards laid over joists to make a floor. | [noun] The floor of a car. FLOORCLOTHS (19) [noun] A cloth, normally of flannel, used for cleaning floors. | [noun] Material used in place of carpeting for covering floors, such as linoleum or oilcloth. FLOORWALKER (21) [noun] An employee in a large shop (especially a department store) who supervises sales staff and assists customers. FLORESCENCE (18) [noun] The time, or the condition, of budding or flowering. FLORIATIONS (14) FLORIBUNDAS (17) [noun] A rose cultivar, having large sprays of small flowers, made by crossing polyantha and hybrid tea rose varieties. FLORIDITIES (15) [noun] Plural of floridity; the quality of being florid, ornate, or flowery in style or appearance, particularly regarding excessive ornamentation in language or design. | [noun] The state of having a ruddy or flushed complexion. FLORIFEROUS (17) [adjective] That bears flowers (especially lots of flowers). FLORILEGIUM (17) [noun] A collection of flowers | [noun] A patristic anthology FLORISTRIES (14) [noun] The plural of floristry, the art and business of arranging and selling flowers. FLOUNDERING (16) [verb] To flop around as a fish out of water. | [verb] To make clumsy attempts to move or regain one's balance. | [verb] To act clumsily or confused; to struggle or be flustered. FLOURISHERS (17) [noun] Plural of flourisher; people or things that flourish or thrive. | [noun] In calligraphy and penmanship, decorative strokes or embellishments added to letters. FLOURISHING (18) [verb] To thrive or grow well. | [verb] To prosper or fare well. | [verb] To be in a period of greatest influence. FLOWERETTES (17) [noun] Small or diminutive flowers. | [noun] Plural of flowerette, a decorative element resembling a small flower. FLOWERINESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being flowery; excessive use of ornate or elaborate language or style. FLUCTUATING (17) [verb] To vary irregularly; to swing. | [verb] To undulate. | [verb] To be irresolute; to waver. FLUCTUATION (16) [noun] A motion like that of waves; a moving in this and that direction. | [noun] A wavering; unsteadiness. | [noun] In medicine, a wave-like motion or undulation of a fluid in a natural or abnormal cavity (e.g. pus in an abscess), which is felt during palpation or percussion. FLUEGELHORN (18) [noun] A brass instrument resembling a cornet but with a wider, conical bore, and usually with three valves, in the same B-flat pitch as many trumpets and cornets but with a more deeply conical mouthpiece than those. A bugle with valves. FLUGELHORNS (18) [noun] A brass instrument resembling a cornet but with a wider, conical bore, and usually with three valves, in the same B-flat pitch as many trumpets and cornets but with a more deeply conical mouthpiece than those. A bugle with valves. FLUIDNESSES (15) [noun] The plural of fluidness; the quality or state of being fluid, smooth, or flowing in manner or movement. FLUORESCEIN (16) [noun] Any of a class of yellow xanthene dyes which are visible when highly diluted; used forensically to detect traces of blood, and in analytical chemistry as an indicator in silver nitrate titrations FLUORESCENT (16) [noun] A fluorescent light. | [adjective] Of or relating to fluorescence. | [adjective] Exhibiting or produced by fluorescence. FLUORESCERS (16) [noun] Plural of fluorescer; substances or materials that emit light when exposed to ultraviolet radiation or other energy sources. FLUORESCING (17) [verb] To emit electromagnetic radiation, especially visible light, when absorbing radiation of some other wavelength. | [verb] Of colours, to be very bright; to be so bright as to appear to radiate as a light source. FLUORIDATED (16) [verb] To add fluoride to something, especially to drinking water in order to reduce tooth decay. FLUORIDATES (15) [verb] To add fluoride to something, especially to drinking water in order to reduce tooth decay. FLUORIMETER (16) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUORIMETRY (19) [noun] A method of chemical analysis that measures the intensity of fluorescence emitted by a substance when exposed to light. FLUORINATED (15) [verb] To introduce fluorine into a compound. | [adjective] Treated or reacted with fluorine or hydrofluoric acid. | [adjective] Formally derived from another compound by the replacement of one or more atoms of hydrogen with fluorine. FLUORINATES (14) [verb] To introduce fluorine into a compound. FLUOROMETER (16) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUOROMETRY (19) [noun] The measurement and analysis of fluorescence emitted by substances, used in analytical chemistry and scientific research. FLUOROSCOPE (18) [noun] A device used to measure the fluorescence of a solution. | [noun] A device used to view continuous live X-ray images on a fluorescent screen. | [verb] To examine with a fluoroscope. FLUOROSCOPY (21) [noun] A medical imaging technique using X-rays to obtain real-time moving images of internal body structures. | [noun] The examination or procedure performed using fluoroscopy equipment. FLUOXETINES (21) [noun] Plural of fluoxetine, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant medication commonly known by the brand name Prozac. FLUSHNESSES (17) [noun] The plural of flushness, referring to instances or states of being flush (level, even, or abundant). FLUSTEREDLY (18) [adverb] In a confused or flustered manner; with agitation or bewilderment. FLYCATCHERS (24) [noun] Any of many kinds of birds, of the families Muscicapidae (in Europe and Asia) and Tyrannidae (in the Americas), that catch insects in flight. FLYSPECKING (26) [verb] To scrutinize or find fault with minor details; to engage in petty criticism or nitpicking. FLYSWATTERS (20) [noun] A hand-held device for swatting flies or other insects, to kill or shoo them. FOAMFLOWERS (22) [noun] Plural of foamflower, a North American plant of the saxifrage family with delicate white or pink flowers and foamy appearance. FOAMINESSES (16) [noun] The plural of foaminess; the quality or state of being foamy or full of foam. FOGGINESSES (16) [noun] The plural of fogginess; the quality or state of being foggy, unclear, or obscured by fog. FOLKISHNESS (21) [noun] The quality or characteristic of being folkish; resemblance to or affinity with folk culture, traditions, or the common people. | [noun] A style or manner that emphasizes folk elements, authenticity, or appeals to ordinary people. FOLKLORISTS (18) [noun] Scholars who study folklore, the traditional beliefs, stories, and customs of a group of people. FOLKSINGERS (19) [noun] A person who sings folk songs. FOLKSINGING (20) [noun] The singing of folk songs, typically traditional songs of a particular culture or community. | [verb] Present participle of folksing; engaging in the practice of singing folk songs. FOMENTATION (16) [noun] The act of fomenting; the application of warm, soft, medicinal substances, as for the purpose of easing pain by relaxing the skin, or of discussing (dispersing) tumours. | [noun] A lotion or poultice applied to a diseased or injured part of the body. | [noun] Encouragement; excitation; instigation. FONTANELLES (14) [noun] A soft membraneous spot on the head of a baby due to incomplete fusion of the cranial bones. FOOLHARDILY (21) [adverb] In a foolhardy manner; with reckless disregard for danger or consequences. FOOLISHNESS (17) [noun] The state of being foolish. | [noun] A thing or event that is foolish, or an absurdity. FOOTBALLERS (16) [noun] One who plays association football. FOOTBRIDGES (18) [noun] A bridge over a road, railway, river, etc for pedestrians. FOOTDRAGGER (17) [noun] A person who is reluctant to act or move forward; someone who delays or procrastinates. | [noun] A horse that drags its feet while walking. FOOTFAULTED (18) [verb] Committed a foot fault in tennis or similar sports by stepping over the baseline while serving. | [verb] In general usage, made an error or violation of rules. FOOTLAMBERT (18) [noun] A unit of luminance equal to one lumen per square foot, used to measure the brightness of a surface. FOOTLOCKERS (20) [noun] A long, rectangular trunk or similar container that lies flat on the floor, especially one used for personal belongings and kept at the foot of a bed, commonly used in barracks and dormitories. FOOTSLOGGED (17) [verb] To walk heavily over a long distance or in a weary manner; to trudge FOOTSLOGGER (16) [noun] A soldier or person who marches or travels on foot. | [noun] A person who does tedious or routine work. FOPPISHNESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being a fop; excessive concern with appearance and trivial matters; foolish affectation of style or manner. FORAMINIFER (19) [noun] Any of several large aquatic amoeboid protists, of the subphylum Foraminifera, characterized by streaming granular ectoplasm that among other things is used for catching food, often with a calcareous shell with many holes through which pseudopodia protrude. FORBEARANCE (18) [noun] Patient self-control; restraint and tolerance under provocation. | [noun] A refraining from the enforcement of something (as a debt, right, or obligation) that is due. FORBIDDANCE (20) [noun] The act of forbidding or prohibiting; an instance of something being forbidden. FORCEPSLIKE (22) FOREBODINGS (18) [noun] A sense of evil to come. | [noun] An evil omen. FORECADDIES (18) [noun] A caddie who does not carry clubs, but locates balls and gets groups of players to move around the course. | [verb] To act as a forecaddie. FORECASTERS (16) [noun] A person who forecasts. | [noun] A software program or algorithm that forecasts. FORECASTING (17) [verb] To estimate how something will be in the future. | [verb] To foreshadow; to suggest something in advance. | [verb] To contrive or plan beforehand. | [noun] A forecast or prediction. FORECASTLES (16) [noun] A raised part of the upper deck at the front of a ship. | [noun] Crew's quarters located at the forward part of a ship. FORECHECKED (26) [verb] To pressure the puck carrier for the opposing team FORECHECKER (25) [noun] A player who checks or pressures opposing players in their defensive zone before they can establish offensive plays, particularly in ice hockey. FORECLOSING (17) [verb] To repossess a mortgaged property whose owner has failed to make the necessary payments; used with on. | [verb] To cut off (a mortgager) by a judgment of court from the power of redeeming the mortgaged premises. | [verb] To shut up or out; to prevent from doing something. FORECLOSURE (16) [noun] The proceeding, by a creditor, to regain property or other collateral following a default on mortgage payments | [noun] The absence of a symbolic father for a fatherless child, as a cause for psychosis. FOREDOOMING (18) [verb] To predestine to a doom. FOREFATHERS (20) [noun] Ancestor.Wp | [noun] Cultural ancestor; one who originated an idea or tradition. FOREFEELING (18) FOREFENDING (19) [verb] To prohibit; to forbid; to avert. FOREFINGERS (18) [noun] The index finger: the first finger next to the thumb. FOREGATHERS (18) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FOREGROUNDS (16) [noun] The elements of an image which lie closest to the picture plane. | [noun] The subject of an image, often depicted at the bottom in a two-dimensional work. | [noun] The application the user is currently interacting with; the application window that appears in front of all others. FOREIGNISMS (17) [noun] Words, phrases, or expressions adopted from foreign languages and used in English. | [noun] The practice or tendency to use foreign words or expressions in speech or writing. FOREIGNNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being foreign; the condition of originating from, belonging to, or characteristic of another country or place. FOREJUDGING (24) [verb] To judge beforehand; prejudge. | [verb] To exclude, oust, or dispossess by a judgment; prohibit (from). | [verb] To condemn judicially (to a penalty). FOREKNOWING (22) [noun] Foreknowledge | [verb] To have knowledge of beforehand. FORELOCKING (21) FOREMANSHIP (21) [noun] The position, office, or skill of a foreman; the supervision and management of workers or a work gang. FOREMOTHERS (19) [noun] A female ancestor. FOREORDAINS (15) [verb] To predestine or preordain. FOREQUARTER (23) [noun] The front quarter of a carcass of meat, such as beef or lamb, including the leg, shoulder, and adjacent parts. FOREREACHED (20) [verb] Past tense of forreach, a nautical term meaning to sail ahead of or gain ground on another vessel, or to reach too far forward. FOREREACHES (19) [verb] To sail a ship closer to the wind than another ship, or to gain the windward position over another vessel in sailing. FORERUNNERS (14) [noun] A runner at the front or ahead. | [noun] By extension, a non-competitor who leads out the competitors on to the circuit, or who runs/rides the course prior to competitor trials, usually testing or checking the way. | [noun] A precursor or harbinger, a warning ahead. FORERUNNING (15) [verb] To run in front. | [verb] To precede; to forecast or foreshadow. FORESEEABLE (16) [adjective] Able to be foreseen or anticipated FORESHADOWS (21) [verb] To presage, or suggest something in advance. FORESHORTEN (17) [verb] To render the image of an object such that it appears to be receding in space as it is perceived visually. | [verb] To abridge, reduce, contract. | [verb] To make shorter. FORESHOWING (21) [verb] To show in advance; to foretell, predict. | [verb] To foreshadow or prefigure. | [noun] The act or an instance of showing something, usually an event, ahead of time; a prognostication FORESIGHTED (19) [adjective] Having foresight; foreseeing; provident. FORESTALLED (15) [verb] To prevent, delay or hinder something by taking precautionary or anticipatory measures; to avert. | [verb] To preclude or bar from happening, render impossible. | [verb] To purchase the complete supply of a good, particularly foodstuffs, in order to charge a monopoly price. FORESTALLER (14) [noun] One who forestalls; a person who prevents something from happening or intercepts something before it reaches its destination. | [noun] Historically, a merchant who buys goods before they reach market to resell them at a profit. FORESTATION (14) [noun] The action or process of planting trees and creating forests in an area that was not previously forested. FORESTLANDS (15) [noun] Land covered with forests; areas predominantly covered by trees and woody vegetation. FORETASTING (15) [verb] To taste beforehand or in advance; to have a preliminary taste of something. FORETELLERS (14) [noun] People who predict or prophesy future events. | [noun] People who tell fortunes or practice divination. FORETELLING (15) [verb] To predict; to tell (the future) before it occurs; to prophesy. | [verb] To tell (a person) of the future. | [noun] Prediction FORETHOUGHT (21) [verb] To plan (something) in advance; think, consider, or contrive beforehand; prognosticate. | [verb] To think about beforehand; to anticipate. | [noun] Thinking beforehand or in advance, planning; prior or previous consideration; premeditation. FORETOKENED (19) [verb] To betoken beforehand; prognosticate; foreshadow; give warning of; presage. FOREVERMORE (19) [adverb] At any or all times in the future; forever FOREVERNESS (17) FOREWARNING (18) [verb] To warn in advance. | [noun] An advance warning; an omen. FORFEITABLE (19) [adjective] Capable of being forfeited or lost as a penalty. FORFEITURES (17) [noun] A legal action whereby a person loses all interest in the forfeit property. | [noun] The loss of forfeit property. | [noun] The property lost as a forfeit. FORGATHERED (19) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FORGETFULLY (21) [adverb] In a manner characterized by lack of memory or attention; without remembering or paying attention to something. FORGETTABLE (17) [adjective] Easily forgotten FORGIVENESS (18) [noun] The action of forgiving. | [noun] Readiness to forgive. FORGIVINGLY (22) [adverb] In a manner showing willingness to forgive or pardon; with leniency or compassion. FORKLIFTING (22) [verb] To move or stack with, or as if with, such a vehicle. FORLORNNESS (14) [noun] The state or quality of being forlorn; a feeling of sadness, loneliness, or abandonment. FORMABILITY (21) [noun] The quality or capacity of being able to be formed or shaped into a desired form. FORMALISING (17) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMALISTIC (18) [adjective] Excessively concerned with or dependent on forms, rules, or procedures rather than substance or practical considerations. FORMALITIES (16) [noun] The state of being formal. | [noun] Something said or done as a matter of form. | [noun] A customary ritual without new or unique meaning. FORMALIZERS (25) [noun] Plural of formalizer; people or things that formalize or make something formal. | [noun] In logic and mathematics, procedures or systems that convert informal statements into formal logical notation. FORMALIZING (26) [verb] To give something a definite form; to shape. | [verb] To give something a formal or official standing. | [verb] To act with formality. FORMATIVELY (22) [adverb] In a manner relating to the formation or development of something, especially in education or character development. FORMFITTING (20) [adjective] (of clothing) That follows the contours of the body FORMICARIES (18) [noun] An ant colony, a pile of earth built by ants in which they nest. FORMULARIES (16) [noun] A list of formulas; a collection of set forms to be followed, especially in religious belief. | [noun] A pharmacopoeia or list of available drugs, particularly prescription drugs | [noun] A list of drugs, created by health insurers, hospitals, or prescription drug plans, that defines how costs for any drug are shared between patient and health care provider, typically broken down by tiers such as preferred generics with lowest copay, or preferred brand with higher copay, or non-preferred brand and not covered tiers with the highest cost to the patient. FORMULARIZE (25) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FORMULATING (17) [verb] To reduce to, or express in, a formula; to put in a clear and definite form of statement or expression. FORMULATION (16) [noun] The act, process, or result of formulating or reducing to a formula. | [noun] A medicinal preparation. FORMULATORS (16) [noun] People who create or devise formulas, plans, or strategies. | [noun] People who prepare or mix chemical formulations. FORMULIZING (26) [verb] Present participle of formulize; to reduce to or express in a formula or set form. FORNICATING (17) [verb] To engage in fornication; to have sex, especially illicit sex. FORNICATION (16) [noun] Sexual intercourse by people who are not married, or which is considered illicit in another way. | [noun] Sexual intercourse in general; sex. FORNICATORS (16) [noun] Plural of fornicator; people who engage in fornication (sexual intercourse outside of marriage). FORSWEARING (18) [verb] To renounce or deny something, especially under oath. | [verb] To commit perjury; to break an oath. | [noun] The act of one who forswears. FORTEPIANOS (16) [noun] A keyboard instrument; the smaller, quieter, precursor to the pianoforte. FORTHCOMING (22) [noun] An act of coming forth. | [noun] Something that is yet to come. | [adjective] Approaching or about to take place. | [verb] To come forth. FORTHRIGHTS (21) [noun] Plural of forthright; straight or direct paths or courses. | [noun] Straightforward or honest statements or declarations. FORTISSIMOS (16) [noun] The dynamic sign indicating that the piece should be played fortissimo. Abbreviation: ff. FORTNIGHTLY (21) [noun] A publication issued fortnightly (once every two weeks). | [adjective] Occurring once in a fortnight; once every two weeks | [adverb] Once in a fortnight; once every two weeks FORTRESSING (15) FORTUNATELY (17) [adverb] In a fortunate manner. | [adverb] It is (or was, etc) fortunate that. FORWARDNESS (18) [noun] The quality of being forward. FOSSILISING (15) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOSSILIZING (24) [verb] To make into a fossil | [verb] To become a fossil | [verb] (by extension) to become inflexible or outmoded FOSTERLINGS (15) [noun] A foster child FOULMOUTHED (20) [adjective] Tending to use obscene or offensive language FOUNDATIONS (15) [noun] The act of founding, fixing, establishing, or beginning to erect. | [noun] That upon which anything is founded; that on which anything stands, and by which it is supported; the lowest and supporting layer of a superstructure; underbuilding. | [noun] The result of the work to begin something; that which stabilizes and allows an enterprise or system to develop. FOUNTAINING (15) [verb] To flow or gush as if from a fountain. FOURDRINIER (15) [noun] A papermaking machine with an endless screen that forms paper from pulp suspension. | [noun] The screen or wire cloth used in such a machine. FOURRAGERES (15) [noun] Ornamental braided cords worn on a military uniform, typically awarded for bravery or service. FOURTEENERS (14) [noun] Mountains or peaks that are 14,000 feet or higher in elevation. | [noun] People who climb mountains of 14,000 feet or higher in elevation. FOURTEENTHS (17) [noun] The person or thing in the fourteenth position. | [noun] One of fourteen equal parts of a whole. | [noun] The interval comprising an octave and a seventh. FOXHUNTINGS (25) [noun] The plural of foxhunting, the sport of hunting foxes with a pack of hounds and mounted hunters on horseback. FOXTROTTING (22) [verb] To dance the foxtrot. FRACTIONATE (16) [verb] To separate (a mixture) into its individual constituents by exploiting differences in some chemical or physical property, such as boiling point, particle size, solubility etc. | [verb] To divide each plaintext symbol into several ciphertext symbols as a preliminary stage of encryption. | [verb] To use the technique of fractionation in hypnosis. FRACTIONING (17) [verb] The process of separating or dividing something into fractions or smaller parts. | [verb] In chemistry, the separation of a mixture into components based on differences in physical or chemical properties. FRACTIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a fractious manner; quarrelsome, irritable, or bad-tempered way. FRAGILITIES (15) [noun] Plural of fragility; the quality of being easily broken, damaged, or harmed. | [noun] Instances or examples of delicate or vulnerable conditions. FRAGMENTARY (20) [adjective] Consisting of fragments; disconnected; scattered. | [adjective] Composed of the fragments of other rocks. FRAGMENTATE (17) FRAGMENTING (18) [verb] To break apart. | [verb] To cause to be broken into pieces. | [verb] To break up and disperse (a file) into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRAGMENTIZE (26) FRAGRANCIES (17) [noun] Fragrance FRAILNESSES (14) [noun] The plural of frailness; the quality or state of being frail, weak, or delicate. FRAMESHIFTS (22) [noun] Mutations caused by insertion or deletion of nucleotides in DNA that alter the reading frame of genetic sequences. | [noun] In animation or film, shifts in the position or alignment of frames during production or editing. FRANCHISEES (19) [noun] A holder of a franchise; a person who is granted a franchise. FRANCHISERS (19) [noun] A franchisor, a company which or person who grants franchises. | [noun] A person who has the right to vote. FRANCHISING (20) [verb] To confer certain powers on; grant a franchise to; authorize. | [verb] To set free; invest with a franchise or privilege; enfranchise. | [noun] The establishment, granting, or use of a franchise. FRANCHISORS (19) [noun] A company which, or person who, grants franchises. FRANCOPHONE (21) [noun] A person who speaks French, especially as their mother tongue. | [adjective] French-speaking. FRANGIPANES (17) [noun] A cream made from ground almonds used in confectionery | [noun] A pastry filled with this cream | [noun] Any of several tropical American trees, of the genus Plumeria, having fragrant, showy, funnel-shaped flowers of a wide range of colours from creamy to red. FRANGIPANNI (17) [noun] A tropical tree (Plumeria) with fragrant flowers, or the flower itself; also called plumeria. | [noun] A perfume or fragrance derived from or imitating the scent of this flower. FRANKFURTER (21) [noun] A moist sausage of soft, even texture and flavor, often made from mechanically recovered meat or meat slurry. FRANKLINITE (18) [noun] A mineral of iron, zinc, and manganese oxide, typically black in color, found chiefly in New Jersey. FRANKNESSES (18) [noun] The plural of frankness; the quality of being frank, honest, or candid in speech or manner. FRANKPLEDGE (22) [noun] A system of collective responsibility for law and order in medieval England where ten householders were mutually responsible for each other's behavior and conduct. FRANTICALLY (19) [adverb] In a frantic way. FRANTICNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being frantic; wild or frenzied behavior or excitement. FRATERNALLY (17) [adverb] In a manner characteristic of or befitting brothers; with brotherly affection or loyalty. | [adverb] In a way that relates to or is shared by members of a fraternity or brotherhood. FRATERNIZED (24) [verb] To associate with others in a brotherly or friendly manner. | [verb] To associate as friends with an enemy, in violation of duty. | [verb] To have an intimate or sexual relationship with a forbidden member of the opposite sex; as, in some cases, football players with cheerleaders. FRATERNIZER (23) [noun] One who fraternizes; a person who associates or socializes with others, especially in a friendly or familiar manner. | [noun] A person who engages in fraternization, particularly with members of an enemy group or opposing faction. FRATERNIZES (23) [verb] To associate with others in a brotherly or friendly manner. | [verb] To associate as friends with an enemy, in violation of duty. | [verb] To have an intimate or sexual relationship with a forbidden member of the opposite sex; as, in some cases, football players with cheerleaders. FRATRICIDAL (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to fratricide FRATRICIDES (17) [noun] The killing of one's brother (or sister). | [noun] A person who commits this crime. | [noun] (by extension) The intentional or unintentional killing of a comrade in arms. FRAUDULENCE (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fraudulent; deceit or dishonesty in obtaining something of value. FRAXINELLAS (21) [noun] A fragrant herb in the rue family, Dictamnus albus FREEBOOTERS (16) [noun] An adventurer who pillages, plunders or wages ad-hoc war on other nations. | [noun] One who rehosts online media without authorization; one who freeboots. FREEBOOTING (17) [verb] To pillage or plunder. | [verb] To rehost (online media) without legal authorization. | [noun] Piracy or plundering. FREEHEARTED (18) FREEHOLDERS (18) [noun] Plural of freeholder; persons who own land or property free and clear of any encumbrance or mortgage. | [noun] In medieval and early modern England, landowners of sufficient property to qualify as voters in county elections. FREELANCERS (16) [noun] One who freelances FREELANCING (17) [verb] To work as a freelance. | [verb] To produce or sell services as a freelance. | [noun] (EMS, fire service, law enforcement) The act of performing one's duties outside of the chain of command and SOPs. FREELOADERS (15) [noun] One who does not contribute or pay appropriately; one who gets a free ride, etc. without paying a fair share. | [noun] An individual who takes expired unsold merchandise from the back of supermarket premises. FREELOADING (16) [verb] To live off the generosity or hospitality of others FREEMARTINS (16) [noun] A female calf, born as twin with a bull calf, but sexually imperfect (often infertile). | [noun] Any female animal born sterile or otherwise infertile. FREEMASONRY (19) [noun] Fellowship and sympathy among a number of people. | [noun] The institutions, precepts, and rites of the Freemasons. | [noun] Strange customs which resemble those of Freemasons. FREESTYLERS (17) [noun] People who perform freestyle acts, such as rapping, dancing, or skiing without predetermined choreography or routes. | [noun] In skateboarding or snowboarding, athletes who compete in freestyle events involving tricks and stunts. FREETHINKER (21) [noun] A person who has formed their opinions using reason and rational enquiry; somebody who has rejected dogma, especially with regard to religion. FREEWHEELED (21) [verb] (of a gear) To continue spinning after disengagement. | [verb] (of a cyclist) To ride a bicycle without pedalling, e.g. downhill. | [verb] (of a motorist) To operate a motor vehicle which is coasting without power, e.g. downhill. FREEWHEELER (20) [noun] A vehicle that can freewheel. | [noun] Someone acting freely or even irresponsibly. | [noun] A person who is primarily concerned with having a good time. FREEWRITING (18) FREIGHTAGES (19) [noun] The charges or costs for transporting goods by freight. | [noun] Plural of freightage, meaning multiple instances or types of freight transportation costs. FRENCHIFIED (23) [adjective] Made French or more French-like | [adjective] Having contracted a venereal disease. FRENCHIFIES (22) [verb] To make French in character, style, or manner; to adopt French customs or language. FRENETICISM (18) FREQUENCIES (25) [noun] The rate of occurrence of anything; the relationship between incidence and time period. | [noun] The property of occurring often rather than infrequently. | [noun] The quotient of the number of times n a periodic phenomenon occurs over the time t in which it occurs: f = n / t. FREQUENTERS (23) [noun] A person who frequents; a regular visitor. FREQUENTEST (23) FREQUENTING (24) [verb] To visit often. FRESHNESSES (17) FRESHWATERS (20) FRETFULNESS (17) FRICANDEAUS (17) FRIENDLIEST (15) [adjective] Generally warm, approachable and easy to relate with in character. | [adjective] Inviting, characteristic of friendliness. | [adjective] Having an easy or accepting relationship with something. FRIENDSHIPS (20) [noun] The condition of being friends. | [noun] A friendly relationship, or a relationship as friends. | [noun] Good will. FRIGHTENING (19) [verb] To cause to feel fear; to scare; to cause to feel alarm or fright. | [adjective] Causing fear; of capable of causing fear; scary. | [adjective] Awful, terrible, very bad. FRIGHTFULLY (24) [adverb] In a frightful manner. | [adverb] Very, extremely. FRIGIDITIES (16) FRITILLARIA (14) FRIVOLITIES (17) [noun] Frivolous act | [noun] State of being frivolous FRIVOLOUSLY (20) FROGHOPPERS (22) [noun] Any of various small insects of the superfamily Cercopoidea that feed on plant sap and whose larvae produce cuckoo spit. FRONTCOURTS (16) FRONTOLYSES (17) FRONTOLYSIS (17) FROSTBITING (17) FROSTBITTEN (16) [adjective] Affected by frostbite. FROWARDNESS (18) FRUCTIFYING (23) [verb] To bear fruit; to generate useful products or ideas. | [verb] To make productive or fruitful. | [verb] To be satisfied sexually. FRUGALITIES (15) FRUGIVOROUS (18) [adjective] Having a diet that consists mostly of fruit; fruit-eating. FRUITARIANS (14) [noun] A variant of vegetarian who intends to be limited to eating only such parts of plants whose consumption does not kill the plant (such as fruits, vegetables that can be compared to fruit, nuts and grain, but not for example tubers). The purest fruitarians do not want to destroy even the seeds. FRUITFULLER (17) FRUITLESSLY (17) FRUSTRATING (15) [verb] To disappoint or defeat; to vex by depriving of something expected or desired. | [verb] To hinder or thwart. | [verb] To cause stress or annoyance. FRUSTRATION (14) [noun] The feeling of annoyance when one's actions are criticized or hindered | [noun] The act of frustrating, or the state, or an instance of being frustrated | [noun] A thing that frustrates FUCOXANTHIN (26) [noun] A carotenoid pigment found in the chloroplasts of brown algae. FULFILLMENT (19) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULFILMENTS (19) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULGURATING (16) [verb] To flash or emit flashes like lightning. | [verb] To cauterize with electricity; to carry out electrofulguration or to electrocauterize. FULGURATION (15) [noun] A flash of lightning | [noun] Cauterization with electricity; electrocautery | [noun] The sudden brightening of a fused globule of gold or silver, when the last film of the oxide of lead or copper leaves its surface FULLMOUTHED (20) FULMINATING (17) [verb] To make a verbal attack. | [verb] To issue as a denunciation. | [verb] To thunder or make a loud noise. FULMINATION (16) [noun] The act of fulminating or exploding; detonation. | [noun] The act of thundering forth threats or censures, as with authority. | [noun] That which is fulminated or thundered forth; vehement menace or censure. FULSOMENESS (16) FUMIGATIONS (17) [noun] The act of fumigating, or applying smoke or vapor, as for disinfection. | [noun] Vapor raised in the process of fumigating. FUNAMBULISM (20) FUNAMBULIST (18) [noun] A tightrope walker or a similar performer on a slack rope. FUNCTIONARY (19) [noun] A person employed as an official in a bureaucracy (usually corporate or governmental) who holds limited authority and primarily serves to carry out a simple function for which discretion is not required. | [noun] A paper-pusher, bean counter. FUNCTIONING (17) [verb] To have a function. | [verb] To carry out a function; to be in action. | [noun] Action of the verb function. FUNDAMENTAL (17) [noun] (usually in the plural) A leading or primary principle, rule, law, or article, which serves as the groundwork of a system; an essential part | [noun] The lowest frequency of a periodic waveform. | [noun] The lowest partial of a complex tone. FUNGIBILITY (20) FUNGISTATIC (17) [adjective] That inhibits the growth and reproduction of fungi FUNKINESSES (18) FUNNINESSES (14) FURANOSIDES (15) FURBELOWING (20) [verb] To adorn with a furbelow; to ornament. FURLOUGHING (19) [verb] To grant a furlough to (someone). | [verb] To have (an employee) not work in order to reduce costs; to send (someone) on furlough. FURNISHINGS (18) [noun] (chiefly in the plural) Furniture, fittings, and other detachable accessories. | [noun] (of an animal, in the plural) A portion of longer hair within the coat of a dog, rabbit, etc. | [noun] Furniture generally. FUROSEMIDES (17) FURTHERANCE (19) [noun] The act of furthering or helping forward | [noun] Promotion. | [noun] Advancement or progress. FURTHERMORE (19) [adverb] In addition; besides; what's more; used to denote additional information. FURTHERMOST (19) [adjective] Distant; remote in space. | [adjective] Remote in time. | [adjective] Long. FURTIVENESS (17) FUSSBUDGETS (18) [noun] One who complains or fusses a great deal, especially about unimportant matters; a fusspot. FUSSBUDGETY (21) FUSSINESSES (14) FUSTIGATING (16) FUSTIGATION (15) FUSTINESSES (14) FUTURISTICS (16) FUZZINESSES (32)

12-Letter Words (330)

FABRICATIONS (19) [noun] The act of fabricating, framing, or constructing; construction; manufacture | [noun] That which is fabricated; a falsehood | [noun] The act of cutting up an animal carcass as preparation for cooking; butchery. FABULOUSNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fabulous; extraordinary excellence or wonderfulness. FACELESSNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being faceless; lacking a distinctive identity or character. | [noun] The condition of being anonymous or without a recognizable face or presence. FACILENESSES (17) [noun] The plural of facilenesses; the quality or state of being facile, characterized by ease, fluency, or superficiality in performance or understanding. FACILITATING (18) [verb] To make easy or easier. | [verb] To help bring about. | [verb] To preside over (a meeting, a seminar). FACILITATION (17) [noun] The act of facilitating or making easy. | [noun] The process of synapses becoming more capable of transmitting the same type of signal each time certain types of sensory signals pass through sequences of these synapses. FACILITATIVE (20) [adjective] Serving to make something easier or more likely to happen; providing assistance or support. FACILITATORS (17) [noun] A person who helps a group to have an effective dialog without taking any side of the argument, especially in order to reach a consensus. FACILITATORY (20) [adjective] Tending to make something easier or less difficult; promoting or assisting the progress of something. FACTIONALISM (19) [noun] The tendency to form or engage in factions; division into opposing groups or cliques within a larger organization or society. FACTIOUSNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being factious; the tendency to form cliques or factions, especially in a disruptive manner. | [noun] Discord or dissension arising from the formation of factions within a group. FACTITIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a manner that is artificially created, contrived, or produced rather than occurring naturally. FACTUALITIES (17) [noun] Plural of factuality; the quality or state of being factual or based on facts. FAINTHEARTED (19) [adjective] Faint of heart; irresolute; fearful. FAINTISHNESS (18) FAITHFULNESS (21) [noun] The state of being faithful FALLACIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a manner containing a fallacy or false reasoning; in a deceptive or misleading way. FALLOWNESSES (18) [noun] The plural of fallowness, referring to the state or quality of being fallow (land left unplanted or in a resting state). FAMILIARISED (18) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARISES (17) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARIZED (27) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARIZES (26) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being familiar; close acquaintance or intimate knowledge. | [noun] A spirit or demon supposed to attend and aid a witch or magician. FAMOUSNESSES (17) [noun] The plural form of famousness; the quality or state of being famous in multiple instances or contexts. FANATICIZING (27) [verb] To make into a fanatic. | [verb] To become fanatical. FANCIFULNESS (20) [noun] The quality or state of being fanciful; imaginative or whimsical creativity. | [noun] Something that is fanciful or produced by fancy; a whimsical creation. FANFARONADES (19) [noun] Empty, self-assertive boasting. FANTASTICATE (17) [verb] To make fantastical. | [verb] To behave fantastically. FANTASTICOES (17) FANTASYLANDS (19) [noun] An ideal place that does not exist in reality. FARSIGHTEDLY (23) [adverb] In a manner showing the ability to anticipate future events or consequences; with foresight and prudent planning. FARTHINGALES (19) [noun] A hooped structure in cloth worn to extend the skirt of women's dresses; a hooped petticoat. FASCICULARLY (22) [adverb] In a manner relating to or arranged in fascicles (small bundles or clusters). FASCICULATED (20) [adjective] Arranged or grouped in fascicles; clustered or bundled together in small bundles or bunches. | [verb] Past tense of fasciculate; formed into or arranged in fascicles. FASCINATIONS (17) [noun] The act of bewitching, or enchanting | [noun] The state or condition of being fascinated. | [noun] Something which fascinates. FASCIOLIASES (17) [noun] Plural of fascioliasis, an infectious disease caused by parasitic flatworms of the genus Fasciola, typically transmitted through contaminated water or vegetation. FASCIOLIASIS (17) [noun] Infestation with liver flukes (of genus Fasciola) FASHIONABLES (20) [noun] People who follow or set fashion trends; fashionable people or those considered stylish and socially prominent. FASHIONISTAS (18) [noun] A person who creates or promotes high fashion, i.e. a fashion designer or fashion editor. | [noun] A person who dresses according to the trends of fashion, or one who closely follows those trends. FASTIDIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a manner showing great attention to detail and high standards of cleanliness or correctness; meticulously. FATHERLINESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being fatherly; paternal affection or care. FATHOMLESSLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that is impossible to understand or measure; to an incomprehensibly deep or profound degree. FATIGABILITY (21) [noun] The quality or state of being easily fatigued; susceptibility to fatigue. FAULTFINDERS (19) [noun] People who find fault or criticize others, especially those who point out flaws or defects. | [noun] Plural of faultfinder, referring to multiple persons who habitually find fault. FAULTFINDING (20) [noun] Excessive or petty criticism | [adjective] Tending to find fault FAULTINESSES (15) [noun] The plural of faultiness; the quality or state of being faulty or defective. FEARLESSNESS (15) [noun] The quality of being fearless. FEARSOMENESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fearsome; the characteristic of inspiring fear or dread. FEATHERBRAIN (20) [noun] A feather-brained or stupid person, especially a woman FEATHEREDGED (21) [adjective] Having an edge that tapers to a very thin or sharp point, or gradually diminishing in thickness toward the edge. | [verb] Past tense of feather edge; to create a feathered edge on something. FEATHEREDGES (20) [noun] Edges that are thin and irregular, tapering to a fine point. | [verb] To create or trim edges to a thin, feathered appearance. FEATHERHEADS (22) [noun] A foolish person. FEATHERLIGHT (22) [adjective] Extremely light; light as a feather. FECKLESSNESS (21) [noun] The quality of being irresponsible, reckless, or lacking purpose and seriousness. FECUNDATIONS (18) [noun] The plural of fecundation, which is the act of fertilizing or making fertile, especially the impregnation of an ovum by a sperm cell. | [noun] The process of producing offspring or reproduction in plants and animals. FEDERALIZING (26) [verb] To unite into a federation. | [verb] To bring under federal control. | [verb] To change (a unitary state) into a federation. FEDERATIVELY (22) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of a federal system or federation; by means of federal union or alliance. FEEBLEMINDED (21) [adjective] Weak in intellectual power; lacking firmness or constancy; lacking intelligence FEEBLENESSES (17) [noun] The plural of feebleness; the quality or state of being weak, infirm, or lacking in strength or effectiveness. FEISTINESSES (15) [noun] The plural of feistiness; the quality or state of being feisty, characterized by liveliness, courage, or irritability. FELICITATING (18) [verb] To congratulate. FELICITATION (17) [noun] The act of felicitating; a wishing of joy or happiness; congratulation. FELICITATORS (17) [noun] People who offer congratulations or express pleasure at someone's success or good fortune. FELICITOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a manner that is well-suited, appropriate, or pleasing; in a way that is felicitous or apt. FELLMONGERED (19) [verb] To prepare animal skin for tanning. FELLOWSHIPED (24) [verb] Past tense of fellowship; to associate or participate together in fellowship with others. FEMALENESSES (17) [noun] The plural of femaleness; the quality or state of being female. FEMININENESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being feminine; the possession of characteristics traditionally associated with women. FEMININITIES (17) [noun] The sum of all attributes that are feminine or convey womanhood. FEMINIZATION (26) [noun] The process of making something feminine in appearance, character, or quality. | [noun] In medical contexts, the development or acquisition of female characteristics. FEMTOSECONDS (20) [noun] A unit of time equal to 0.000 000 000 000 001 seconds (i.e. 1x10-15 seconds) and with symbol fs. FENESTRATION (15) [noun] The arrangement of windows and similar openings in a building. | [noun] An opening in the surface of an organ etc; the surgical creation of such an opening, especially one in the bony part of the inner ear made to improve hearing. | [noun] An opening that occurs naturally or is created surgically, as through a biological membrane. FERMENTATION (17) [noun] Any of many anaerobic biochemical reactions in which an enzyme (or several enzymes produced by a microorganism) catalyses the conversion of one substance into another; especially the conversion (using yeast) of sugars to alcohol or acetic acid with the evolution of carbon dioxide | [noun] A state of agitation or excitement; a ferment. FERMENTATIVE (20) [adjective] Relating to or produced by fermentation. | [adjective] Capable of undergoing fermentation. FERRICYANIDE (21) [noun] Any of various salts containing the trivalent anion Fe(CN)63-; used in making blue pigments. | [noun] A complex ion in which a central ferric iron atom is surrounded by six cyanide ions. FERRIMAGNETS (18) [noun] Magnetic materials with two unequal magnetic sublattices that result in a net magnetic moment, exhibiting properties between ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic materials. FERROCYANIDE (21) [noun] The complex ion Fe(CN)64-; any salt containing this ion; they are used in making blue pigments FERROMAGNETS (18) [noun] Materials that are strongly attracted to magnetic fields and retain magnetism, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt. FERROSILICON (17) [noun] An alloy of iron and silicon used in the production of steel and cast iron. FERTILIZABLE (26) [adjective] Capable of being fertilized or made fertile. FERVIDNESSES (19) [noun] The plural of fervidness; the quality or state of being fervid, characterized by intense passion, zeal, or enthusiasm. FESTIVALGOER (19) [noun] A person attending a festival FESTOONERIES (15) FETOPROTEINS (17) [noun] Proteins produced during fetal development, particularly alpha-fetoprotein, used as markers for certain medical conditions and fetal abnormalities. FEVERISHNESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being feverish; intensity of excitement or activity accompanied by restlessness and agitation. FIANCHETTOED (21) [verb] To play a fianchetto. FIBERGLASSED (19) [verb] Past tense of fiberglass; to cover, reinforce, or repair something with fiberglass material. FIBERGLASSES (18) [noun] Plural of fiberglass; a composite material made from glass fibers embedded in a resin matrix, used for insulation, reinforcement, and construction. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of the verb "to fiberglass"; to cover, insulate, or reinforce something with fiberglass. FIBERIZATION (26) FIBREGLASSES (18) [noun] Plural of fibreglass, a composite material made of glass fibers embedded in a resin matrix, used for insulation, reinforcement, and various manufactured products. FIBRILLATING (18) [verb] To make rapid irregular movements. | [adjective] Splitting into fibrils or fibres. | [adjective] Of a muscle, especially in the heart: undergoing fibrillation; quivering. FIBRILLATION (17) [noun] A rapid, irregular twitching of muscle fibers, especially in the heart, that prevents normal contractions. | [noun] A quivering or trembling motion. FIBRINOLYSES (20) [noun] The plural of fibrinolysis, which is the enzymatic breakdown of fibrin in blood clots. FIBRINOLYSIN (20) [noun] An enzyme that breaks down fibrin, a protein involved in blood clotting, thereby dissolving blood clots. FIBRINOLYSIS (20) [noun] The process wherein a fibrin clot, the product of coagulation, is broken down. FIBRINOLYTIC (22) [adjective] Relating to or promoting the breakdown and dissolution of fibrin, a protein involved in blood clotting. FIBROBLASTIC (21) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of fibroblasts, the cells that produce collagen and connective tissue in the body. FIBROMYALGIA (23) [noun] A condition characterised by chronic pain, stiffness, and tenderness of the muscles, tendons, and joints. FIBRONECTINS (19) [noun] Proteins found in blood plasma and extracellular matrices that promote cell adhesion and wound healing. FIBROSARCOMA (21) [noun] A fibroblastic sarcoma: a malignant tumor derived from fibrous connective tissue FIBROSITISES (17) [noun] Plural of fibrosis, a condition characterized by the formation of excess fibrous connective tissue in organs or body parts. FICKLENESSES (21) [noun] The plural form of fickleness; the quality of being fickle, inconsistent, or prone to changing one's mind or loyalty. FICTIONALISE (17) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONALITY (20) [noun] The quality or state of being fictional; the characteristic of being invented or imaginary rather than real or factual. FICTIONALIZE (26) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONIZING (27) [verb] Present tense third-person singular or present participle of "fictionize," meaning to convert into fiction or give a fictional character or quality to something. FICTITIOUSLY (20) [adverb] In a fictitious manner; in a way that is invented, imaginary, or not real. FIDDLESTICKS (23) [noun] A bow used to play the fiddle. | [interjection] Nonsense! Expresses dismissal or disdain. | [interjection] Darn! Expresses mild dismay or annoyance. FIENDISHNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being fiendish; extreme wickedness, cruelty, or malevolence. | [noun] Something that is fiendishly difficult or ingeniously evil in design. FIERCENESSES (17) [noun] The plural form of fierceness; the quality of being fierce, intense, or violent. FIGURATIVELY (22) [adverb] (manner) In a figurative manner. | [adverb] Used to indicate that what follows is to be taken as a figure of speech, not literally. FILIBUSTERED (18) [verb] To take part in a private military action in a foreign country. | [verb] To use obstructionist tactics in a legislative body. FILIBUSTERER (17) [noun] One who engages in filibustering; a person who obstructs legislative proceedings through prolonged debate or dilatory tactics. FILMSETTINGS (18) FILTHINESSES (18) [noun] The plural form of filthiness; the quality or state of being filthy, dirty, or obscene. FIMBRIATIONS (19) [noun] Plural of fimbriation; narrow ornamental borders or edgings, particularly in heraldry or on biological structures like the edges of certain organs. FINALIZATION (24) [noun] The act or process of finalising. FINGERBOARDS (19) [noun] A flat or roughly flat strip on the neck of a stringed instrument, against which the strings are pressed to shorten the vibrating length and produce notes of higher pitches. | [noun] A miniature skateboard that is driven with the fingers. FINGERPICKED (25) [verb] To pluck of the individual strings of a stringed instrument with the fingers FINGERPRINTS (18) [noun] The natural pattern of ridges on the tips of human fingers, unique to each individual. | [noun] The patterns left on surfaces where uncovered fingertips have touched, especially as used to identify the person who touched the surface. | [noun] Unique identification for public key in asymmetric cryptosystem. FINITENESSES (15) [noun] The plural of finiteness; the quality or state of being finite or having limits. FIRECRACKERS (23) [noun] A small explosive device, typically containing a small amount of gunpowder in a tightly-wound roll of paper, primarily designed to produce a large bang. | [noun] A peanut butter cracker baked with marijuana, similar in concept to an Alice B. Toklas brownie. | [noun] A person who is exciting and/or unpredictable. FIREFIGHTERS (22) [noun] A person who puts out fires. FIREPROOFING (21) [verb] To make resistant to damage from fire. | [noun] The process of making something resistant to fire. | [noun] A fire-resistant coating or substance. FISSIONABLES (17) [noun] Materials or substances capable of undergoing nuclear fission, such as uranium-235 or plutonium-239. | [adjective] Capable of being split or divided into parts. FITFULNESSES (18) [noun] The plural of fitfulness; instances or qualities of being fitful, characterized by irregular or sporadic occurrence. FLABBERGASTS (20) [noun] An awkward person. | [noun] Overwhelming confusion, shock, or surprise. | [verb] To overwhelm with bewilderment; to amaze, confound, or stun, especially in a ludicrous manner. FLABBINESSES (19) [noun] The plural of flabbiness; the quality or state of being flabby or soft and loose in flesh. FLABELLIFORM (22) [adjective] Shaped like a fan; having a fan-like form. FLACCIDITIES (20) [noun] The plural of flaccidity; the quality or state of being flaccid or lacking firmness. FLAGELLATING (17) [verb] To whip or scourge. FLAGELLATION (16) [noun] A beating consisting of lashes, notably as corporal punishment or mortification, such as a whipping or scourging. | [noun] (botany) The formation by plants of flagella, or their arrangement. FLAGITIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a flagitious manner; shamefully, scandalously, or wickedly. FLAMBOYANCES (24) [noun] The condition of being flamboyant. FLAMBOYANTLY (25) [adverb] In a showy, ostentatious, or extravagantly colorful manner. FLAMEPROOFED (23) [verb] To make flameproof. FLAMEPROOFER (22) FLAMETHROWER (23) [noun] A device that projects a flame for starting fires, and sometimes also additional fuel to help ignition. Used either as a weapon or a tool. FLAMMABILITY (24) [noun] The quality or state of being flammable; the degree to which a substance is capable of igniting and burning. FLANNELETTES (15) [noun] Plural of flannelette, a soft cotton fabric with a brushed nap on one or both sides, resembling flannel. FLASHINESSES (18) [noun] The plural of flashiness; the quality or state of being flashy, ostentatious, or showy in appearance or manner. FLATTERINGLY (19) [adverb] In a manner that praises or compliments someone excessively or insincerely. | [adverb] In a way that is flattering or enhances someone's appearance or qualities. FLATULENCIES (17) [noun] Plural of flatulency; the quality or state of being flatulent, or the condition of having excessive gas in the digestive system. FLAVOPROTEIN (20) [noun] Any of a group of enzymes, containing flavin, that act as dehydrogenases FLAWLESSNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being flawless; absence of defects or imperfections. FLEETINGNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being fleeting; the characteristic of lasting only a brief time or being transitory. FLESHINESSES (18) [noun] The plural of fleshiness; the quality or state of being fleshy or having abundant flesh. FLEXOGRAPHIC (30) [adjective] Relating to or denoting a printing method using flexible relief plates, typically made of rubber or plastic, for high-speed printing on various materials. FLICKERINGLY (25) [adverb] In a flickering manner; with a wavering or unsteady light or flame. FLIMFLAMMERS (24) [noun] A swindler; a con artist. FLIMFLAMMERY (27) [noun] Nonsense | [noun] A deception or swindle FLIMFLAMMING (25) [verb] To swindle or cheat. FLIMSINESSES (17) [noun] The plural of flimsiness; the quality or state of being flimsy, insubstantial, or lacking in strength or durability. FLINTINESSES (15) [noun] The plural of flintiness; the quality or state of being flinty, hard, or unyielding in nature or character. FLOCCULATING (20) [verb] To collect together in a loose aggregation like flocks (tufts) of wool. FLOCCULATION (19) [noun] The process of forming small clumps or aggregates from a suspension of fine particles, typically in a liquid. | [noun] In chemistry, the aggregation of colloidal particles into larger clusters. FLOCCULATORS (19) [noun] Devices or substances used to cause flocculation, the process of forming small clumps or aggregates in a liquid solution, commonly used in water treatment and industrial processes. FLOODLIGHTED (21) [verb] Illuminated with floodlights; past tense of floodlight. FLOORWALKERS (22) [noun] An employee in a large shop (especially a department store) who supervises sales staff and assists customers. FLOPPINESSES (19) [noun] The plural of floppiness; the quality or state of being floppy or limp. FLORESCENCES (19) [noun] The time, or the condition, of budding or flowering. FLORICULTURE (17) [noun] The farming of flowers FLORIDNESSES (16) [noun] The plural of floridness, referring to multiple instances or qualities of being florid (elaborate, flowery, or ruddy in appearance). FLOWCHARTING (24) [noun] The process of creating a flowchart, which is a diagram that represents a sequence of steps or decisions in a process or algorithm. | [verb] Present participle of flowchart; the act of diagramming a workflow or procedure using standardized symbols and connectors. FLUCTUATIONS (17) [noun] A motion like that of waves; a moving in this and that direction. | [noun] A wavering; unsteadiness. | [noun] In medicine, a wave-like motion or undulation of a fluid in a natural or abnormal cavity (e.g. pus in an abscess), which is felt during palpation or percussion. FLUEGELHORNS (19) [noun] Plural of flugelhorn, a brass instrument similar to a cornet with a conical bore, used in classical and jazz music. FLUFFINESSES (21) [noun] The plural of fluffiness; the quality or state of being fluffy, soft, and light in texture. FLUIDEXTRACT (25) [noun] A concentrated liquid preparation of a medicinal substance, made by dissolving the active constituents of a drug in alcohol or another solvent. FLUIDIZATION (25) [noun] The process of converting a solid into a fluid-like state by passing a gas or liquid through it. | [noun] In chemistry and engineering, the suspension of solid particles in a moving fluid stream to create a fluid-like behavior. FLUORESCEINS (17) [noun] Plural of fluorescein, a synthetic organic compound that fluoresces and is used as a dye in various applications including medical diagnostics and biological imaging. FLUORESCENCE (19) [noun] The emission of light (or other electromagnetic radiation) by a material when stimulated by the absorption of radiation or of a subatomic particle. | [noun] The light so emitted. FLUORESCENTS (17) [noun] A fluorescent light. FLUORIDATING (17) [verb] To add fluoride to something, especially to drinking water in order to reduce tooth decay. FLUORIDATION (16) [noun] The process of adding fluoride to water supplies or other substances to prevent tooth decay. FLUORIMETERS (17) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUORIMETRIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or involving fluorimetry, the measurement of fluorescence or the intensity of fluorescent light emitted by a substance. FLUORINATING (16) [verb] To introduce fluorine into a compound. FLUORINATION (15) [noun] The process of introducing fluorine into a chemical compound or material. | [noun] In chemistry, the replacement of hydrogen atoms with fluorine atoms in a molecule. FLUOROCARBON (19) [noun] Any derivative of a hydrocarbon in which every hydrogen atom has been replaced by fluorine. FLUOROCHROME (22) [noun] Any of various fluorescent dyes used to stain biological material before microscopic examination FLUOROGRAPHY (24) [noun] Photofluorography | [noun] Visualisation of radiolabelled material FLUOROMETERS (17) [noun] An instrument used to detect and measure fluorescence. FLUOROMETRIC (19) [adjective] Relating to or involving fluorometry, the measurement of fluorescence emitted by a substance. FLUOROSCOPED (20) [verb] Past tense of fluoroscope; to examine using a fluoroscope, a device that produces real-time X-ray images for medical diagnosis or inspection. FLUOROSCOPES (19) [noun] A device used to measure the fluorescence of a solution. | [noun] A device used to view continuous live X-ray images on a fluorescent screen. FLUOROSCOPIC (21) [adjective] Relating to or produced by fluoroscopy, a technique using X-rays to obtain real-time images of the interior of an object or body. FLUOROURACIL (17) [noun] A chemotherapy drug used to treat cancer, particularly colorectal and breast cancer. FLUPHENAZINE (29) [noun] A tranquilizer drug used to treat psychotic disorders and schizophrenia. FLUTTERBOARD (18) FOCALIZATION (26) [noun] The technique in narrative where the reader's perception is limited to a character's point of view or consciousness. | [noun] The act of concentrating or focusing on a particular point or center. FOLKLORISTIC (21) [adjective] Of or relating to folklore; characteristic of or based on folklore traditions and practices. FOLKSINESSES (19) [noun] The plural of folksiness; the quality or state of being folksy, informal, or having a simple, unpretentious character. FOLKSINGINGS (21) [noun] Plural of folksinging; informal gatherings or events where folk music is sung, typically in a communal or participatory setting. FOLLICULITIS (17) [noun] Inflammation of one or more hair follicles. FOLLOWERSHIP (23) [noun] The practice of being a follower or supporter of a leader, movement, or cause. | [noun] The ability and willingness to follow effectively in a leadership context. FOMENTATIONS (17) [noun] The act of fomenting; the application of warm, soft, medicinal substances, as for the purpose of easing pain by relaxing the skin, or of discussing (dispersing) tumours. | [noun] A lotion or poultice applied to a diseased or injured part of the body. | [noun] Encouragement; excitation; instigation. FOODLESSNESS (16) FOOTDRAGGERS (18) [noun] People who deliberately delay or avoid taking action; those who procrastinate or resist moving forward. FOOTFAULTING (19) [noun] A violation in tennis or other sports where a player's foot crosses the baseline or service line during a serve or play. | [verb] The act of committing a footfault. FOOTLAMBERTS (19) [noun] A unit of luminance equal to one lumen per square foot, used to measure the brightness of a surface. FOOTLESSNESS (15) [noun] The quality or state of being footless; lack of feet or a foundation. | [noun] Lack of basis or validity in an argument or claim. FOOTSLOGGERS (17) [noun] Soldiers or military personnel who march or travel on foot. | [noun] People who walk or travel on foot, especially laborers or hikers. FOOTSLOGGING (18) [verb] To walk heavily over a long distance or in a weary manner; to trudge FOOTSORENESS (15) FORAMINIFERA (20) [noun] Any of a large group of amoeboid protists, of the order Foraminifera, that are mostly marine. FORAMINIFERS (20) [noun] Any of several large aquatic amoeboid protists, of the subphylum Foraminifera, characterized by streaming granular ectoplasm that among other things is used for catching food, often with a calcareous shell with many holes through which pseudopodia protrude. FORBEARANCES (19) [noun] The plural of forbearance; instances of refraining from exercising a right or power, or the practice of patience and restraint. | [noun] Legal suspensions or delays in enforcing debt collection or loan payments. FORBIDDANCES (21) [noun] The plural of forbiddance; instances or acts of forbidding or prohibiting something. FORBIDDINGLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that discourages approach or interaction; in a way that appears threatening or uninviting. FORCEFULNESS (20) [noun] The quality of being forceful; the state of exerting force, strength, or vigorous power. | [noun] The ability to compel attention or conviction through strength of expression or personality. FORCIBLENESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being forcible; the characteristic of being done by force or compelling in effect. FOREBODINGLY (22) [adverb] In a manner that suggests something bad or harmful will happen; ominously. FORECASTABLE (19) [adjective] Able to be predicted or estimated in advance based on available information or trends. FORECHECKERS (26) [noun] Players in ice hockey who apply aggressive pressure to opponents in the opposing team's defensive zone to regain possession of the puck. FORECHECKING (27) [verb] To pressure the puck carrier for the opposing team FORECLOSURES (17) [noun] The proceeding, by a creditor, to regain property or other collateral following a default on mortgage payments | [noun] The absence of a symbolic father for a fatherless child, as a cause for psychosis. FOREGATHERED (20) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FOREGROUNDED (18) [verb] To place in the foreground (physically or metaphorically). FOREHANDEDLY (23) FOREMANSHIPS (22) [noun] The plural of foremanship; the position, rank, or authority of a foreman. | [noun] The collective skills and responsibilities associated with managing workers or a crew. FORENSICALLY (20) [adverb] In a manner relating to the application of scientific methods and techniques to investigate crimes or legal matters. FOREORDAINED (17) [verb] To predestine or preordain. FOREQUARTERS (24) [noun] The foreleg, shoulder and surrounding area of the body of a quadruped. | [noun] The front half of a side of meat. FOREREACHING (21) [verb] The act of a sailing vessel moving forward while tacking, gaining distance to windward. | [verb] In sailing, advancing forward on a course while changing direction. FORESHADOWED (23) [verb] To presage, or suggest something in advance. FORESHADOWER (22) [noun] One who foreshadows or gives an indication of something to come. | [noun] Something that foreshadows or serves as a sign of what is to follow. FORESHORTENS (18) [verb] To render the image of an object such that it appears to be receding in space as it is perceived visually. | [verb] To abridge, reduce, contract. | [verb] To make shorter. FORESIGHTFUL (22) FORESPEAKING (22) FORESTALLERS (15) [noun] Persons who buy goods before they reach the market in order to sell them at a profit; those who intercept commodities in transit to resell them at inflated prices. | [noun] Those who prevent or hinder something from happening. FORESTALLING (16) [verb] To prevent, delay or hinder something by taking precautionary or anticipatory measures; to avert. | [verb] To preclude or bar from happening, render impossible. | [verb] To purchase the complete supply of a good, particularly foodstuffs, in order to charge a monopoly price. | [noun] The act of one who forestalls. FORESTATIONS (15) [noun] The process or practice of planting trees and establishing forests on land; instances of afforestation or reforestation. FORESTAYSAIL (18) [noun] A triangular sail set on the forestay of a sailing vessel, positioned forward of the mast. FORESWEARING (19) [verb] Renouncing or rejecting something solemnly or earnestly. | [verb] Swearing falsely; committing perjury. FORETHOUGHTS (22) [noun] Plural of forethought; thoughts or considerations about the future; advance planning or premeditation. FORETOKENING (20) [noun] Indication in advance. | [verb] To betoken beforehand; prognosticate; foreshadow; give warning of; presage. FORGATHERING (20) [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. | [noun] A gathering together; an assembly. FORGEABILITY (21) [noun] The quality or capacity of being able to be forged or shaped, especially referring to metals that can be worked without breaking. | [noun] The quality of being capable of being forged or counterfeited. FORMALDEHYDE (25) [noun] The simplest aldehyde, HCHO, a colourless gas that has many industrial applications; it dissolves in water to give formol (10%) and formalin. FORMALIZABLE (28) [adjective] Capable of being formalized or converted into a formal system or structure. FORMALNESSES (17) [noun] The plural of formalness; the quality or state of being formal in manner, dress, or procedure. FORMLESSNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of lacking a definite shape, form, or structure. FORMULARIZED (27) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FORMULARIZER (26) FORMULARIZES (26) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FORMULATIONS (17) [noun] The act, process, or result of formulating or reducing to a formula. | [noun] A medicinal preparation. FORNICATIONS (17) [noun] Sexual intercourse by people who are not married, or which is considered illicit in another way. | [noun] Sexual intercourse in general; sex. FORTHRIGHTLY (25) [adverb] In a direct, honest, and straightforward manner; frankly and without evasion. FORTRESSLIKE (19) [adjective] Resembling or having the characteristics of a fortress; strongly built and difficult to breach or penetrate. FORTUITOUSLY (18) [adverb] In a fortuitous manner. FOUNDATIONAL (16) [adjective] Of, or relating to a foundation or foundations | [adjective] Fundamental or underlying FOUNTAINHEAD (19) [noun] A spring that is the source of a river. | [noun] An abundant source of knowledge, etc. FOURDRINIERS (16) [noun] Plural of Fourdrinier, a type of papermaking machine with an endless wire screen that allows water to drain and fibers to bond into paper. FRACTIONALLY (20) [adverb] In a fractional manner; by a small amount or degree. | [adverb] Into fractions or fractional parts. FRACTIONATED (18) [verb] To separate (a mixture) into its individual constituents by exploiting differences in some chemical or physical property, such as boiling point, particle size, solubility etc. | [verb] To divide each plaintext symbol into several ciphertext symbols as a preliminary stage of encryption. | [verb] To use the technique of fractionation in hypnosis. FRACTIONATES (17) [verb] To separate (a mixture) into its individual constituents by exploiting differences in some chemical or physical property, such as boiling point, particle size, solubility etc. | [verb] To divide each plaintext symbol into several ciphertext symbols as a preliminary stage of encryption. | [verb] To use the technique of fractionation in hypnosis. FRACTIONATOR (17) [noun] A device or apparatus that separates a mixture into its component parts or fractions, commonly used in petroleum refining to separate crude oil into products of different boiling points. | [noun] In chemistry, equipment used to separate substances based on their physical or chemical properties. FRAGMENTALLY (21) [adverb] In a fragmented or disconnected manner; in separate or incomplete parts. FRAGMENTATED (19) FRAGMENTATES (18) FRAGMENTIZED (28) FRAGMENTIZES (27) [verb] To break or split something into fragments or smaller pieces. FRANGIBILITY (21) [noun] The quality or state of being fragile; the tendency to break easily. FRANKFURTERS (22) [noun] A moist sausage of soft, even texture and flavor, often made from mechanically recovered meat or meat slurry. FRANKINCENSE (21) [noun] A type of incense obtained from the Boswellia thurifera tree. FRANKLINITES (19) FRANKPLEDGES (23) [noun] A medieval system of mutual responsibility where a group of ten men were jointly liable for the conduct of any member of their group. | [noun] The members of such a group who pledged mutual responsibility. FRATERNALISM (17) FRATERNITIES (15) [noun] The quality of being brothers or brotherly; brotherhood. | [noun] A group of people associated for a common purpose. | [noun] A social organization of male students at a college or university; usually identified by Greek letters. FRATERNIZERS (24) [noun] Plural of fraternizer; people who associate or socialize with others, especially those from an opposing group or military enemy. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of fraternize; associates or socializes with others in a friendly manner. FRATERNIZING (25) [verb] To associate with others in a brotherly or friendly manner. | [verb] To associate as friends with an enemy, in violation of duty. | [verb] To have an intimate or sexual relationship with a forbidden member of the opposite sex; as, in some cases, football players with cheerleaders. FRAUDULENCES (18) [noun] Plural of fraudulence; the quality or instance of being fraudulent or deceptive. FRAUDULENTLY (19) [adverb] In a fraudulent manner. FREAKINESSES (19) [noun] The plural of freakiness; the quality or state of being freaky or strange. FREAKISHNESS (22) [noun] The quality or state of being freakish; abnormality or strangeness in appearance or behavior. FREEHANDEDLY (23) FREESTANDING (17) [adjective] Standing or set apart. | [adjective] Not attached to anything. | [adjective] Not supported by or on anything. FREETHINKERS (22) [noun] A person who has formed their opinions using reason and rational enquiry; somebody who has rejected dogma, especially with regard to religion. FREETHINKING (23) [noun] The practice of forming opinions based on reason and evidence rather than authority, tradition, or dogma. | [adjective] Characterized by independent thought and rejection of established beliefs or conventions. FREEWHEELERS (21) [noun] A vehicle that can freewheel. | [noun] Someone acting freely or even irresponsibly. | [noun] A person who is primarily concerned with having a good time. FREEWHEELING (22) [verb] (of a gear) To continue spinning after disengagement. | [verb] (of a cyclist) To ride a bicycle without pedalling, e.g. downhill. | [verb] (of a motorist) To operate a motor vehicle which is coasting without power, e.g. downhill. FREEWRITINGS (19) FRENCHIFYING (27) [verb] The present participle of "frenchify," meaning to make something French in character, style, or language, or to give something a French appearance or quality. FRENETICALLY (20) [adverb] In a frantic, frenzied, or wildly excited manner; with excessive haste or nervous energy. FRENETICISMS (19) FREQUENTNESS (24) FRIABILITIES (17) FRICASSEEING (18) [verb] To cook meat or poultry in this manner. FRICTIONALLY (20) FRICTIONLESS (17) [adjective] Of or pertaining to lack of friction. FRIENDLINESS (16) [noun] The quality of being friendly FRIGIDNESSES (17) FRISKINESSES (19) FRITILLARIAS (15) FRITILLARIES (15) [noun] Any of several bulbous perennial plants, of the genus Fritillaria, having flowers with a spotted or chequered pattern. | [noun] Any of several butterflies, of the family Nymphalidae, having wings with black or silvery spots. FRIZZINESSES (33) FRONTALITIES (15) FRONTIERSMAN (17) [noun] A person who lives on the borders of a country, or in a wild and undeveloped area on the fringes of civilization. FRONTIERSMEN (17) [noun] A person who lives on the borders of a country, or in a wild and undeveloped area on the fringes of civilization. FRONTISPIECE (19) [noun] An illustration that is on the page before the title page of a book, a section of one, or a magazine. | [noun] The title page of a book. | [noun] A façade, especially an ornamental one. FROSTBITINGS (18) FROSTINESSES (15) FROTHINESSES (18) FROZENNESSES (24) FRUITFULLEST (18) FRUITFULNESS (18) FRUITINESSES (15) FRUSTRATIONS (15) [noun] The feeling of annoyance when one's actions are criticized or hindered | [noun] The act of frustrating, or the state, or an instance of being frustrated | [noun] A thing that frustrates FUCOXANTHINS (27) FUGITIVENESS (19) FULFILLMENTS (20) [noun] The act of fulfilling. | [noun] The state or quality of being fulfilled; completion; realization. | [noun] The act of consummating a desire or promise. FULGURATIONS (16) [noun] A flash of lightning | [noun] Cauterization with electricity; electrocautery | [noun] The sudden brightening of a fused globule of gold or silver, when the last film of the oxide of lead or copper leaves its surface FULIGINOUSLY (19) FULMINATIONS (17) [noun] The act of fulminating or exploding; detonation. | [noun] The act of thundering forth threats or censures, as with authority. | [noun] That which is fulminated or thundered forth; vehement menace or censure. FUNAMBULISMS (21) FUNAMBULISTS (19) [noun] A tightrope walker or a similar performer on a slack rope. FUNCTIONALLY (20) [adverb] In a functional manner. FUNCTIONLESS (17) FUNDAMENTALS (18) [noun] (usually in the plural) A leading or primary principle, rule, law, or article, which serves as the groundwork of a system; an essential part | [noun] The lowest frequency of a periodic waveform. | [noun] The lowest partial of a complex tone. FUNGICIDALLY (22) FURAZOLIDONE (25) FURTHERANCES (20) FURUNCULOSES (17) FURUNCULOSIS (17) [noun] The presence of furuncles or boils. FUSIBILITIES (17) FUSTIGATIONS (16) FUTILENESSES (15) FUTILITARIAN (15) [noun] A person believing that all human activity is futile | [noun] A person devoted to profitless pursuits | [adjective] Having the opinion that all human activity is futile FUTUROLOGIES (16) FUTUROLOGIST (16)

13-Letter Words (206)

FACETIOUSNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being facetious; the tendency to treat serious matters with inappropriate humor or levity. FACILITATIONS (18) [noun] Plural of facilitation; the act of making something easier or the process of helping to bring about an outcome. | [noun] In group settings, instances of guiding or moderating discussions to help participants reach consensus or goals. FACTIONALISMS (20) [noun] The plural of factionalism; the tendency to form or operate in competing factions or groups within an organization or society. FACTORIZATION (27) [noun] The breaking down of a number or expression into its constituent factors or divisors. | [noun] The process of resolving something into its component parts or elements. FACTUALNESSES (18) [noun] The plural of factualness; the quality or state of being factual or based on facts. FACULTATIVELY (24) [adverb] In a manner that is optional or not obligatory; capable of functioning under different conditions or circumstances. FADDISHNESSES (21) [noun] The plural of faddishness; the quality or state of being inclined to follow fads or temporary fashions. FAITHLESSNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being unfaithful, disloyal, or lacking faith. | [noun] Breach of trust or confidence in a relationship or commitment. FALLIBILITIES (18) [noun] The state of being prone to error. | [noun] An error-generating characteristic. FALSIFICATION (21) [noun] The act of falsifying, or making false; a counterfeiting; the giving to a thing an appearance of something which it is not | [noun] Knowingly false statement or wilful misrepresentation | [noun] Showing an item of charge in an account to be wrong FAMILIARISING (19) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FAMILIARITIES (18) [noun] The state of being extremely friendly; intimacy. | [noun] Undue intimacy; inappropriate informality, impertinence. | [noun] An instance of familiar behaviour. FAMILIARIZING (28) [verb] To make or become familiar with something or someone. FANATICALNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being fanatical; extreme or obsessive dedication to a cause or belief. FANTASTICALLY (21) [adverb] In a fantastic manner. | [adverb] To an extent only in fantasy; outrageously; ridiculously. FANTASTICATED (19) [verb] To make fantastical. | [verb] To behave fantastically. FANTASTICATES (18) [verb] To make fantastical. | [verb] To behave fantastically. FARCICALITIES (20) [noun] Plural of farcicality; absurd or ridiculous qualities or instances of behavior or situations. FARKLEBERRIES (22) [noun] A species of Vaccinium (Vaccinium arboreum) native to the southeastern United States, from southern Virginia west to southeastern Missouri, and south to Florida and eastern Texas, and taking the form of a shrub (rarely a small tree) growing to 3-5 m (rarely 9 m) tall. | [noun] A berry from a shrub of this species. FASCICULATION (20) [noun] (muscles) (venoms) An involuntary muscle twitch, usually localised and temporary, but that may be intensified and prolonged fatally by particular poisons and venoms such as acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. | [noun] A cluster of fascicules FASCINATINGLY (22) [adverb] In a fascinating manner FASCISTICALLY (23) [adverb] In a manner characteristic of or relating to fascism; in an authoritarian or dictatorial way. FASHIONMONGER (22) FATEFULNESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of fatefulnesses; the quality or state of being fateful, occurring multiple times or in multiple instances. FATHEADEDNESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being a fathead; stupidity or foolishness. FATUOUSNESSES (16) [noun] The plural of fatuousness; the quality or state of being fatuous, silly, or foolish. FAULTFINDINGS (21) [noun] The act of finding or pointing out faults or defects; criticism or disapproval. FAULTLESSNESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being without fault or defect; perfection or flawlessness. FAUNISTICALLY (21) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characteristic of fauna; from the perspective of animal life or animal populations. FAVORABLENESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being favorable; approval or support. | [noun] Advantageousness or beneficial nature of circumstances. FEARFULNESSES (19) [noun] The plural of fearfulness; the state or quality of being fearful or full of fear. FEASIBILITIES (18) [noun] The plural of feasibility; the quality or degree to which something is possible or practicable to accomplish. | [noun] Studies or analyses that examine whether a proposed project or plan is viable and achievable. FEATHERBEDDED (24) [verb] To treat someone with excessive indulgence; to pamper, cosset or mollycoddle. FEATHERBRAINS (21) [noun] A feather-brained or stupid person, especially a woman FEATHEREDGING (22) [verb] The act of creating a thin, tapered edge by gradually reducing thickness, typically in painting, plastering, or woodworking. | [verb] In digital imaging, the process of blending or softening the edges of a selection or layer to create a smooth transition. FEATHERHEADED (24) [adjective] Giddy; frivolous; foolish FEATHERSTITCH (24) [noun] A kind of embroidery stitch made of open, looped stitches worked alternately to the right and left of a central rib. | [verb] To make stitches of this kind. FEATHERWEIGHT (26) [noun] A weight class in many combat sports; e.g. in professional boxing of a maximum of 126 pounds or 57.2 kilograms. | [noun] A sportsman who fights in this division. | [noun] The lightest weight that may be carried by a racehorse. FEELINGNESSES (17) [noun] The plural of feelingness; the quality or state of being characterized by feeling or emotion. FELICITATIONS (18) [noun] The act of felicitating; a wishing of joy or happiness; congratulation. | [interjection] Congratulations! Well done! FELLMONGERIES (19) [noun] Plural of fellmongery; businesses or workshops where animal hides and furs are processed and sold. FELLMONGERING (20) [verb] To prepare animal skin for tanning. FELLOWSHIPING (25) [verb] Present participle of fellowship; engaging in friendly association or communion with others, or participating in a fellowship or community. FELLOWSHIPPED (27) [verb] Past tense of fellowship; to associate or be in fellowship with someone; to share a common experience or bond with others. FELONIOUSNESS (16) FEMINIZATIONS (27) [noun] Plural of feminization; the process or result of making something feminine or more characteristic of women. | [noun] In biology, the development of female characteristics in an organism. FENCELESSNESS (18) FENESTRATIONS (16) [noun] Openings or windows in a structure, particularly in anatomy referring to small openings in bones or membranes. | [noun] In architecture, the arrangement and design of windows in a building. FERMENTATIONS (18) [noun] The plural of fermentation, referring to multiple instances or types of chemical processes in which microorganisms break down organic substances, typically producing alcohol, carbon dioxide, or acids. | [noun] Multiple occurrences of the process of undergoing fermentation or the state of being fermented. FEROCIOUSNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being ferocious; extreme fierceness or savagery. FERRICYANIDES (22) [noun] Any of various salts containing the trivalent anion Fe(CN)63-; used in making blue pigments. | [noun] A complex ion in which a central ferric iron atom is surrounded by six cyanide ions. FERRIMAGNETIC (21) [adjective] Exhibiting ferrimagnetism FERROCONCRETE (20) [noun] A building material made from Portland cement concrete with a matrix of steel bars or wires (rebars) to increase its tensile strength. FERROCYANIDES (22) [noun] The complex ion Fe(CN)64-; any salt containing this ion; they are used in making blue pigments FERROELECTRIC (20) [noun] A ferroelectric material | [adjective] Of, or relating to the permanent electrical polarization of a crystalline dielectric in an electric field FERROMAGNETIC (21) [adjective] Of a material, such as iron or nickel, that is easily magnetized FERROSILICONS (18) [noun] Alloys of iron and silicon used to deoxidize steel and improve its properties. FERTILENESSES (16) [noun] The plural of fertilenesses; the quality or state of being fertile or capable of producing abundant vegetation, crops, or offspring. FERTILIZATION (25) [noun] The act or process of rendering fertile. | [noun] The act of fecundating or impregnating animal or vegetable gametes; especially, the process by which in flowers the pollen renders the ovule fertile, or an analogous process in flowerless plants | [noun] The act of applying fertilizer to soil. FESTIVALGOERS (20) [noun] A person attending a festival FESTIVENESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of festiveness; the quality or state of being festive, celebratory, or joyful. FEUDALIZATION (26) [noun] The process of converting a social or political system into a feudal structure, or the state of being organized according to feudal principles. FEUILLETONISM (18) FEUILLETONIST (16) [noun] A writer of feuilletons, which are serialized stories or literary pieces published in newspapers or magazines. FIANCHETTOING (22) [verb] To play a fianchetto. FIBERGLASSING (20) [verb] The process of covering or reinforcing something with fiberglass material. | [verb] In surfing, the act of applying fiberglass resin to a surfboard during manufacturing or repair. FIBERIZATIONS (27) [noun] The plural of fiberization, the process of converting a material into fibers or fiber form. | [noun] Instances or acts of breaking down or separating something into fibers. FIBRILLATIONS (18) [noun] Rapid, irregular, and ineffective contractions of the heart or other muscles. | [noun] In electronics, the rapid oscillations or vibrations of a component or system. FIBRINOLYSINS (21) [noun] Enzymes that break down fibrin, a protein involved in blood clotting, thereby dissolving blood clots. FIBROMYALGIAS (24) [noun] Plural of fibromyalgia, a chronic disorder characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue, and other symptoms. FIBROSARCOMAS (22) [noun] A fibroblastic sarcoma: a malignant tumor derived from fibrous connective tissue FIBROVASCULAR (23) [adjective] Relating to or composed of both fibrous tissue and blood vessels, especially in botanical contexts referring to vascular bundles surrounded by fibrous tissue. FICTIONALISED (19) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONALISES (18) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONALIZED (28) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONALIZES (27) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONEERING (19) FICTIVENESSES (21) [noun] The plural of fictiveness; the quality or state of being fictive or imaginary. FIDGETINESSES (18) [noun] The plural of fidgetiness; the quality or state of being fidgety or restless. FIELDSTRIPPED (22) [verb] Past tense of fieldstrip; to disassemble a firearm or other device into its basic components for cleaning or maintenance. FILIBUSTERERS (18) [noun] People who engage in filibustering, the practice of obstructing legislative action by prolonged debate or other delaying tactics. | [noun] Pirates or adventurers who engage in unauthorized military action in foreign countries. FILIBUSTERING (19) [verb] To take part in a private military action in a foreign country. | [verb] To use obstructionist tactics in a legislative body. FILMOGRAPHIES (24) [noun] A selective list of movie titles that share a similar characteristic such as the same genre, the same director, the same actor etc. FILTERABILITY (21) [noun] The quality or state of being able to be filtered; the capacity of a substance to pass through a filter or be separated by filtration. FINALIZATIONS (25) [noun] The act or process of finalising. FINGERPICKING (26) [verb] To pluck of the individual strings of a stringed instrument with the fingers | [noun] The plucking of the individual strings of a stringed instrument with the fingers FINGERPRINTED (20) [verb] To take somebody's fingerprints. | [verb] To identify something uniquely by a combination of measurements. FINICALNESSES (18) [noun] The plural of finicalness; the quality or state of being finical (fussy, particular, or hard to please about details). FINICKINESSES (22) [noun] The quality or state of being finicky; the characteristic of being fussy, particular, or difficult to please. FISHABILITIES (21) FITTINGNESSES (17) [noun] The plural of fittingness; the quality or state of being fitting, appropriate, or suitable. FLABBERGASTED (22) [verb] To overwhelm with bewilderment; to amaze, confound, or stun, especially in a ludicrous manner. | [adjective] Appalled, annoyed, exhausted or disgusted. | [adjective] Damned. FLAGELLANTISM (19) [noun] The practice of self-flagellation or whipping oneself as a form of religious penance or discipline. | [noun] A movement of extreme self-mortification practiced by some religious groups, particularly in medieval times. FLAGELLATIONS (17) [noun] A beating consisting of lashes, notably as corporal punishment or mortification, such as a whipping or scourging. | [noun] (botany) The formation by plants of flagella, or their arrangement. FLAMBOYANCIES (25) [noun] Plural of flamboyancy; the quality of being flamboyant, ostentatious, or extravagantly showy in appearance or manner. FLAMEPROOFERS (23) [noun] Plural of flameproofer; substances or treatments applied to materials to make them resistant to fire or flames. FLAMEPROOFING (24) [verb] To make flameproof. FLAMETHROWERS (24) [noun] A device that projects a flame for starting fires, and sometimes also additional fuel to help ignition. Used either as a weapon or a tool. FLAVOPROTEINS (21) [noun] Any of a group of enzymes, containing flavin, that act as dehydrogenases FLEXIBILITIES (25) [noun] The quality or state of being flexible; the ability to bend or adapt without breaking. | [noun] The capacity to adjust to new conditions or circumstances with ease. FLEXOGRAPHIES (29) [noun] Plural of flexography; a printing process using flexible relief plates and fast-drying inks, commonly used for packaging and labels. FLIGHTINESSES (20) [noun] The plural of flightiness; the quality or state of being flighty, characterized by frivolousness, instability, or lack of seriousness. FLIRTATIOUSLY (19) [adverb] In a playful or coquettish manner; in a way that suggests flirtation or light romantic interest. FLOCCULATIONS (20) [noun] The process of forming or the formation of flocculent precipitates or aggregates, particularly in chemistry and biology when particles clump together in a fluid. FLOODLIGHTING (22) [verb] To enlighten or illuminate with floodlight(s). FLORICULTURAL (18) [adjective] Relating to the cultivation and management of flowering plants and ornamental gardens. FLORICULTURES (18) [noun] The cultivation and breeding of flowers and ornamental plants, or the businesses and practices involved in growing flowers for sale. FLORISTICALLY (21) [adverb] In a manner relating to the flora or plant life of a region or area. FLOURISHINGLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that is flourishing; thriving, prosperous, or successful in a showy or ostentatious way. FLOWCHARTINGS (25) FLOWERINESSES (19) [noun] The plural of floweriness; the quality or state of being flowery in speech, writing, or appearance. FLUCTUATIONAL (18) FLUGELHORNIST (20) [noun] A person who plays the flugelhorn, a brass instrument similar to a trumpet but with a more conical bore and mellow tone. FLUIDEXTRACTS (26) [noun] Concentrated liquid preparations of medicinal substances made by extracting active ingredients from plants or other materials, typically using solvents. FLUIDIZATIONS (26) [noun] The plural form of fluidization, which is the process of converting a solid into a fluid-like state by suspending it in a gas or liquid stream. | [noun] Instances or occurrences of the fluidization process in industrial or scientific contexts. FLUORESCENCES (20) [noun] Plural of fluorescence; the emission of light by a substance that has absorbed light or other electromagnetic radiation. FLUORIDATIONS (17) [noun] The plural of fluoridation, the process of adding fluoride to water supplies or other substances to prevent tooth decay. FLUORIMETRIES (18) [noun] Plural of fluorimetry; the analytical technique of measuring fluorescence emitted by a substance to determine its concentration or properties. FLUORINATIONS (16) [noun] Plural of fluorination; the process of introducing fluorine atoms into a chemical compound or substance. FLUOROCARBONS (20) [noun] Any derivative of a hydrocarbon in which every hydrogen atom has been replaced by fluorine. FLUOROCHROMES (23) [noun] Any of various fluorescent dyes used to stain biological material before microscopic examination FLUOROGRAPHIC (24) [adjective] Relating to or produced by fluorography, a radiographic technique using fluorescent screens to visualize internal structures. FLUOROMETRIES (18) [noun] Plural of fluorometry, the measurement of fluorescence emitted by a substance. FLUOROSCOPIES (20) [noun] Plural of fluoroscopy, a medical imaging technique that uses X-rays to obtain real-time moving images of the internal structures of a patient. FLUOROSCOPING (21) [verb] The present participle of fluoroscope, meaning to examine or observe using a fluoroscope (an X-ray imaging device that produces real-time images). FLUOROSCOPIST (20) [noun] A medical professional who operates or specializes in fluoroscopy, a radiological imaging technique using X-rays to visualize internal body structures in real-time. FLUOROURACILS (18) [noun] Plural of fluorouracil, a pyrimidine analog used as an anticancer medication in chemotherapy. FLUPHENAZINES (30) [noun] Plural of fluphenazine, a typical antipsychotic medication used to treat schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. FLUTTERBOARDS (19) FOCALIZATIONS (27) [noun] The plural of focalization, referring to instances of focusing attention or narrative perspective on a particular point or character in literary analysis. | [noun] Technical instances in photography or optics where light is focused onto a specific point or surface. FOLKISHNESSES (23) [noun] The plural form of folkishness, referring to the quality or state of being folkish; characteristics of or relating to folk culture, traditions, or common people. FOLLOWERSHIPS (24) [noun] The plural of followership, referring to the practice, quality, or instances of being a follower or the relationship between followers and leaders. FOOLHARDINESS (20) [noun] Foolish and reckless boldness; a lack of proper caution or prudence in the face of danger. FOOLISHNESSES (19) [noun] The plural of foolishness; instances or qualities of being foolish or lacking good sense and judgment. FOPPISHNESSES (23) [noun] The plural of foppishness; the quality or state of being a fop, characterized by excessive concern with appearance and trivial matters. FORAMINIFERAL (21) [adjective] Relating to or characteristic of foraminifera, a group of microscopic marine organisms with shells containing small openings or chambers. FORAMINIFERAN (21) [noun] A microscopic marine organism with a shell containing small holes through which protoplasm extends, commonly found in sedimentary rocks and ocean sediments. FOREGATHERING (21) [noun] A gathering together; an assembly. | [verb] To assemble or gather together in one place, to gather up; to congregate. FOREGROUNDING (19) [verb] To place in the foreground (physically or metaphorically). FOREIGNNESSES (17) [noun] The quality or state of being foreign; the characteristic of being from another country or place. | [noun] The plural of foreignness, referring to multiple instances or aspects of foreign nature or quality. FOREKNOWLEDGE (25) [noun] Knowing beforehand, prescience, foresight, precognition FOREORDAINING (18) [verb] To predestine or preordain. FORESHADOWERS (23) [noun] Plural of foreshadower, one who or that which foreshadows or hints at something to come. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of foreshadow, meaning to indicate or suggest beforehand. FORESHADOWING (24) [verb] To presage, or suggest something in advance. | [noun] (authorship, usually uncountable) A literary device whereby an author drops hints or symbolic representations of plot developments to come later in the story. FORESHORTENED (20) [verb] To render the image of an object such that it appears to be receding in space as it is perceived visually. | [verb] To abridge, reduce, contract. | [verb] To make shorter. FORESIGHTEDLY (24) [adverb] In a manner that shows care and consideration for the future; with foresight. FORESTALLMENT (18) FORESTAYSAILS (19) [noun] Plural of forestaysail, a triangular sail set on the forestay of a sailing vessel, positioned forward of the mast. FOREVERNESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of foreverness, meaning the quality or state of being forever or eternal; endless duration. FORGETFULNESS (20) [noun] The quality of being forgetful; proneness to let slip from the mind. | [noun] Loss of remembrance or recollection; a ceasing to remember; oblivion. | [noun] Failure to bear in mind; careless omission; inattention. FORGIVENESSES (20) [noun] The action of forgiving. | [noun] Readiness to forgive. FORGIVINGNESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being forgiving; the tendency to forgive others for their wrongdoings. FORLORNNESSES (16) [noun] The plural of forlornness; the state or quality of being forlorn, lonely, or abandoned. FORMABILITIES (20) [noun] The plural of formability; the quality or capacity of being able to be formed or shaped into a particular form. FORMALDEHYDES (26) [noun] Plural of formaldehyde, a colorless gaseous compound used as a disinfectant and in the production of resins and plastics. FORMALIZATION (27) [noun] The process of making something formal or official. | [noun] In mathematics and logic, the process of expressing something in formal notation or symbolic language. FORMIDABILITY (24) [noun] The quality or state of being formidable; the characteristic of being impressively large, powerful, or capable of inspiring fear or respect. FORMULAICALLY (23) [adverb] In a manner that follows a formula or set pattern; mechanically or according to a prescribed method. FORMULARIZERS (27) FORMULARIZING (28) [verb] To express as a formula, to formulate. FORTIFICATION (21) [noun] The act of fortifying; the art or science of fortifying places to strengthen defence against an enemy. | [noun] That which fortifies; especially, a work or works erected to defend a place against attack; a fortified place; a fortress; a fort; a castle. | [noun] An increase in effectiveness, as by adding ingredients. FORTNIGHTLIES (20) [noun] A publication issued fortnightly (once every two weeks). FORTUNATENESS (16) [noun] The quality or state of being fortunate; good luck or favorable circumstances. FORWARDNESSES (20) [noun] The plural of forwardness; the quality of being forward in manner or behavior, such as boldness or presumption. | [noun] The state or quality of being advanced or developed. FOSSILIFEROUS (19) [adjective] Containing fossils. FOSSILIZATION (25) [noun] The process by which organic remains are preserved in rock or sediment, becoming hardened into stone. | [noun] The process of becoming rigid, fixed, or unable to change; stagnation or ossification of ideas or systems. FOUNTAINHEADS (20) [noun] A spring that is the source of a river. | [noun] An abundant source of knowledge, etc. FRACTIONALIZE (27) [verb] To separate into parts or fractions; to fractionate FRACTIONATING (19) [verb] To separate (a mixture) into its individual constituents by exploiting differences in some chemical or physical property, such as boiling point, particle size, solubility etc. | [verb] To divide each plaintext symbol into several ciphertext symbols as a preliminary stage of encryption. | [verb] To use the technique of fractionation in hypnosis. FRACTIONATION (18) [noun] The process of separating a mixture into its component parts or fractions. | [noun] In chemistry, the separation of crude oil into different products based on boiling point. FRACTIONATORS (18) [noun] Devices or apparatus used to separate mixtures into component parts through fractionation, typically in industrial or laboratory settings such as oil refining or distillation. | [noun] In chemistry and petroleum processing, columns or systems that separate liquid mixtures into fractions based on boiling point differences. FRACTIOUSNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being fractious; a tendency to be quarrelsome, irritable, or difficult to manage. FRAGMENTARILY (22) [adverb] In a fragmentary manner; consisting of or occurring in fragments or disconnected pieces. FRAGMENTATING (20) FRAGMENTATION (19) [noun] The act of fragmenting or something fragmented; disintegration. | [noun] The process by which fragments of an exploding bomb scatter. | [noun] The breaking up and dispersal of a file into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRAGMENTIZING (29) FRANKINCENSES (22) [noun] Plural of frankincense; aromatic resin obtained from trees of the genus Boswellia, used in incense and perfume. FRANTICNESSES (18) [noun] The plural of franticness; the quality or state of being frantic or wild with excitement, fear, or worry. FRATERNALISMS (18) [noun] The plural of fraternalism, referring to the principles, practices, or systems of fraternal organizations and brotherly association. | [noun] Fraternal societies or organizations collectively, or the movement emphasizing brotherhood and mutual aid. FREEHEARTEDLY (23) FREEMASONRIES (18) [noun] The plural of freemasonry; organizations or practices of freemasons, or the principles and practices of freemasonry. | [noun] Secret or exclusive associations or practices; cliques or networks of mutual assistance among members. FREETHINKINGS (24) FREQUENTATION (25) FREQUENTATIVE (28) [noun] (grammar) Any of a subclass of imperfective verbs that denote a repeated action, no longer productive in English, but found in e.g. Finnish, Latin, Russian, and Turkish. | [adjective] (grammar) Serving to express repetition of an action. FRETFULNESSES (19) FRIGHTENINGLY (24) [adverb] In a frightening or terrifying manner. | [adverb] Very; beyond usual expectation so as to cause surprise or concern. FRIGHTFULNESS (23) FRIVOLOUSNESS (19) FRONTISPIECES (20) [noun] An illustration that is on the page before the title page of a book, a section of one, or a magazine. | [noun] The title page of a book. | [noun] A façade, especially an ornamental one. FRONTOGENESES (17) FRONTOGENESIS (17) FROWARDNESSES (20) FRUITLESSNESS (16) FRUSTRATINGLY (20) [adverb] In a frustrating manner; in a manner that causes frustration. FULSOMENESSES (18) FUNCTIONALISM (20) [noun] A doctrine, in several fields, that the function of something should be reflected in its design and the materials used in its construction | [noun] The definition of mental states in terms of their causes and effects | [noun] The idea that social and cultural cohesion are a function of the interdependence and interactions of the institutions of a society FUNCTIONALIST (18) FUNCTIONALITY (21) [noun] The ability to perform a task or function; that set of functions that something is able or equipped to perform. | [noun] In United States trademark law, the tendency of a product design to serve a function other than identification of the product, preventing that design from being protected as a trademark. | [noun] The presence of a functional group. FUNCTIONARIES (18) [noun] A person employed as an official in a bureaucracy (usually corporate or governmental) who holds limited authority and primarily serves to carry out a simple function for which discretion is not required. | [noun] A paper-pusher, bean counter. FUNDAMENTALLY (22) [adverb] In a fundamental or basic sense; reaching the very core of the matter. FUNGIBILITIES (19) FURAZOLIDONES (26) FURTIVENESSES (19) FUTILITARIANS (16) [noun] A person believing that all human activity is futile | [noun] A person devoted to profitless pursuits FUTUROLOGICAL (19) FUTUROLOGISTS (17)

14-Letter Words (126)

FABULOUSNESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of fabulousness; the quality or state of being fabulous or extraordinarily remarkable. FACELESSNESSES (19) [noun] The plural of facelessness; the quality or state of being faceless, lacking identity, or being anonymous. FACTIOUSNESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of factiousness, referring to multiple instances or aspects of the quality of being factious (characterized by discord, dissension, or clique-like divisions within a group). | [noun] Plural of factiousness; the state or instances of being inclined to form factions or cause conflict. FACTITIOUSNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being factitious; the character of being artificially made or contrived rather than natural or genuine. FACTORIZATIONS (28) [noun] The process of breaking down a number or expression into its component factors. | [noun] Plural of factorization, referring to multiple instances of expressing numbers or algebraic expressions as products of their factors. FAINTHEARTEDLY (24) [adverb] In a manner lacking courage, confidence, or determination; timidly or without conviction. FAINTISHNESSES (20) FAITHFULNESSES (23) [noun] The plural of faithfulness; the quality or state of being faithful, loyal, or reliable in multiple instances or contexts. FALLACIOUSNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being fallacious; the characteristic of containing or based on a fallacy or false reasoning. FALSIFIABILITY (25) [noun] The quality or characteristic of being capable of being proven false or refuted by empirical evidence. FALSIFICATIONS (22) [noun] The act of falsifying, or making false; a counterfeiting; the giving to a thing an appearance of something which it is not | [noun] Knowingly false statement or wilful misrepresentation | [noun] Showing an item of charge in an account to be wrong FAMILIARNESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of familiarness, meaning the quality or state of being familiar; the condition of being well-known or closely acquainted. FANCIFULNESSES (22) [noun] The plural of fancifulnesses; instances or qualities of being fanciful, imaginative, or whimsical in nature. FANTASTICALITY (22) FANTASTICATING (20) [verb] To make fantastical. | [verb] To behave fantastically. FANTASTICATION (19) FARFETCHEDNESS (26) [noun] The quality or state of being far-fetched; the characteristic of being unlikely, implausible, or difficult to believe. FARSIGHTEDNESS (22) [noun] The quality of being able to see or plan for the future; foresight. | [noun] A refractive condition of the eye in which distant objects are seen more clearly than near objects; hyperopia. FASCICULATIONS (21) [noun] (muscles) (venoms) An involuntary muscle twitch, usually localised and temporary, but that may be intensified and prolonged fatally by particular poisons and venoms such as acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. | [noun] A cluster of fascicules FASHIONABILITY (25) FASHIONMONGERS (23) FASTIDIOUSNESS (18) [noun] The quality of being fastidious; extreme care, attention to detail, or difficulty to please, especially regarding cleanliness or standards. FATALISTICALLY (22) [adverb] In a manner accepting that events are predetermined and inevitable, without attempting to resist or change them. FATHERLINESSES (20) [noun] The plural of fatherliness; the quality or state of being fatherly or showing paternal affection and care. FATHOMLESSNESS (22) [noun] The quality or state of being impossible to fathom or understand; inscrutability. | [noun] The quality of being immeasurably deep or profound. FATIGABILITIES (20) [noun] The plural of fatigability; the quality or state of being susceptible to fatigue or becoming tired. FEARLESSNESSES (17) [noun] The plural of fearlessness; the quality or state of being without fear, as exhibited in multiple instances or by multiple entities. FEARSOMENESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of fearsomeness; the quality or state of being fearsome or inspiring fear. FEATHERBEDDING (25) [verb] To treat someone with excessive indulgence; to pamper, cosset or mollycoddle. | [noun] The employment of more workers than is necessary because of union rules, especially upon the introduction of new technology FEATHERBRAINED (23) [adjective] Silly, frivolous, or lacking intelligence; scatterbrained. FEATHERWEIGHTS (27) [noun] A weight class in many combat sports; e.g. in professional boxing of a maximum of 126 pounds or 57.2 kilograms. | [noun] A sportsman who fights in this division. | [noun] The lightest weight that may be carried by a racehorse. FECKLESSNESSES (23) [noun] The plural of fecklessness; the quality or state of being irresponsible, reckless, or lacking in purpose or direction. FEDERALIZATION (27) [noun] The process of organizing or uniting separate entities into a federal system or federation. | [noun] The act of bringing something under federal control or authority. FEEBLEMINDEDLY (26) [adverb] In a manner lacking mental sharpness or intelligence; stupidly or weakly in mind. FELICITOUSNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being felicitous; appropriateness or suitability. | [noun] Happiness or good fortune. FELLMONGERINGS (21) [noun] The plural of fellmongering, the business or trade of dealing in animal skins or hides, particularly the processing and sale of sheepskins and similar materials. FELLOWSHIPPING (28) [verb] Present participle of fellowship; engaging in friendly association or communion with others. | [verb] The act of sharing a common interest or purpose with a group. FEMININENESSES (19) [noun] The plural form of feminineness; the quality or state of being feminine. FERRIMAGNETISM (22) [noun] A type of magnetism exhibited by materials with unequal magnetic moments that are antiparallel, resulting in a net magnetic moment. FERROCONCRETES (21) [noun] Reinforced concrete containing iron or steel reinforcement for increased strength and durability. | [noun] Plural of ferroconcrete, a composite building material combining concrete with embedded metal elements. FERROELECTRICS (21) [noun] A ferroelectric material FERROMAGNESIAN (20) [adjective] That contains both iron and magnesium FERROMAGNETISM (22) [noun] The property of certain materials, such as iron, to be attracted to magnets and to become magnetized themselves. FERROMANGANESE (20) [noun] An alloy of iron and manganese used in steelmaking to increase hardness and wear resistance. FERTILIZATIONS (26) [noun] The plural of fertilization; the process of introducing fertilizer to soil or the union of gametes in reproduction. FEUDALIZATIONS (27) [noun] Plural forms of feudalization, referring to the processes or instances of converting a society or system into a feudal structure or organizing according to feudal principles. FEUILLETONISMS (19) [noun] Plural of feuilletonism; the practice of writing or publishing feuilletons, which are serialized stories or installments of fiction published in newspapers or periodicals, typically characterized by light entertainment or romance. | [noun] The style, manner, or characteristics typical of feuilleton literature. FEUILLETONISTS (17) [noun] Writers or contributors of feuilletons, which are serialized stories or literary pieces published in newspapers or magazines. FEVERISHNESSES (23) [noun] The plural of feverishness; the state or quality of being feverish, characterized by fever or feverlike symptoms, or marked by intense nervous excitement or activity. FIBRINOPEPTIDE (24) [noun] A small peptide released from fibrinogen during the formation of fibrin in blood clotting. FIBROSARCOMATA (23) [noun] A fibroblastic sarcoma: a malignant tumor derived from fibrous connective tissue FICTIONALISING (20) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONALITIES (19) [noun] The quality or state of being fictional; the characteristic of being imaginary or made up rather than real. | [noun] Fictional elements or aspects; things that are invented or created in fiction. FICTIONALIZING (29) [verb] To retell something real as if it were fiction, especially by fabricating falsehoods | [verb] To convert something into a novel or other dramatic work FICTIONEERINGS (20) FICTIONIZATION (28) FICTITIOUSNESS (19) [noun] The quality or state of being fictitious; the characteristic of being invented, imaginary, or not genuine. FIELDSTRIPPING (23) [verb] The act of disassembling a firearm into its component parts for cleaning, maintenance, or inspection. | [verb] To completely disassemble or strip down something into its basic components. FIENDISHNESSES (21) [noun] The plural of fiendishness; the quality or state of being fiendish, cruel, or wickedly malicious. FIGURATIVENESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being figurative; the use of figures of speech or non-literal language. FILIOPIETISTIC (21) FINGERPICKINGS (27) [noun] The technique or act of plucking the strings of a musical instrument (such as a guitar) with the fingers rather than with a pick or plectrum. FINGERPRINTING (21) [verb] To take somebody's fingerprints. | [verb] To identify something uniquely by a combination of measurements. | [noun] An act of recording somebody's fingerprints. FISSIONABILITY (22) FLABBERGASTING (23) [verb] To overwhelm with bewilderment; to amaze, confound, or stun, especially in a ludicrous manner. | [adjective] Overwhelming in a bewildering way; amazing, confounding, stunning, especially in a ludicrous manner. FLAGELLANTISMS (20) [noun] The plural of flagellantism, referring to religious practices or movements involving self-flagellation as a form of penance or devotion. FLAGITIOUSNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being flagitious; extreme wickedness or shamelessness. FLAMMABILITIES (23) [noun] The plural of flammability; the qualities or degrees to which different substances are capable of catching fire and burning. FLANNELMOUTHED (23) FLAWLESSNESSES (20) [noun] The plural form of flawlessness; the quality or state of being without any defects, imperfections, or errors. FLEETINGNESSES (18) [noun] The plural of fleetingness; the quality or state of being fleeting or transitory, occurring multiple times or in multiple instances. FLIMFLAMMERIES (26) [noun] Plural of flimflammery; deceptive or dishonest behavior; confidence tricks or fraud. | [noun] Nonsensical or trivial talk; rubbish or nonsense. FLORICULTURIST (19) [noun] A person who cultivates and grows flowers commercially or as a profession. FLUGELHORNISTS (21) [noun] Plural of flugelhornist; musicians who play the flugelhorn, a brass instrument similar to a cornet. FLUOROGRAPHIES (23) [noun] Plural of fluorography; radiographic images produced using fluoroscopy, a technique that uses X-rays to create real-time images of the internal structures of the body. FLUOROSCOPISTS (21) [noun] Plural of fluoroscopist; medical professionals who operate fluoroscopes to obtain X-ray images of internal body structures in real time. FOLLICULITISES (19) [noun] Plural of folliculitis, an inflammation of hair follicles in the skin. FOODLESSNESSES (18) FOOTLESSNESSES (17) [noun] The plural of footlessness, referring to multiple instances or aspects of lacking a sound basis, foundation, or feet. FOOTSORENESSES (17) [noun] The plural of footsoreness; the state or condition of having sore or aching feet. FORAMINIFERANS (22) [noun] Marine protozoans with shells containing small holes through which pseudopodia extend, commonly found in ocean sediments and used as indicators in paleontology and geology. FORCEFULNESSES (22) [noun] The plural of forcefulness; instances or qualities of being forceful, powerful, or vigorous in manner or expression. FORCIBLENESSES (21) [noun] The plural of forcibleness; the quality or state of being forcible, powerful, or compelling. FOREBODINGNESS (21) FOREHANDEDNESS (22) FOREKNOWLEDGES (26) [noun] Plural of foreknowledge; advance knowledge or awareness of something before it happens. | [verb] Third person singular present tense of foreknowledge; to have advance knowledge of something. FOREORDINATION (18) [noun] The act of ordaining or appointing beforehand; predestination or predetermined fate. | [noun] In theology, God's predetermination of all events that will occur. FORESEEABILITY (22) [noun] The quality or state of being able to be foreseen or anticipated; the reasonable anticipation that harm or injury is a likely result of an action. FORESHORTENING (21) [verb] To render the image of an object such that it appears to be receding in space as it is perceived visually. | [verb] To abridge, reduce, contract. | [verb] To make shorter. FORESTALLMENTS (19) [noun] The plural of forestallment, which refers to the act of preventing or hindering something from happening, or the act of buying up goods before they reach the market to control prices. FORETHOUGHTFUL (27) FORGEABILITIES (20) [noun] The plural of forgeability; the quality or state of being capable of being forged or shaped by heating and hammering. FORMALIZATIONS (28) [noun] The plural of formalization; instances of making something formal or converting something into a formal system or structure. | [noun] In mathematics and logic, the processes of expressing concepts in formal notation or rigorous mathematical frameworks. FORMIDABLENESS (22) [noun] The quality or state of being formidable; the characteristic of being impressive, powerful, or difficult to deal with. FORMLESSNESSES (19) [noun] The plural of formlessness; the quality or state of lacking a definite shape, structure, or form. FORTHRIGHTNESS (24) [noun] The quality of being direct, honest, and straightforward in speech or behavior. FORTIFICATIONS (22) [noun] The act of fortifying; the art or science of fortifying places to strengthen defence against an enemy. | [noun] That which fortifies; especially, a work or works erected to defend a place against attack; a fortified place; a fortress; a fort; a castle. | [noun] An increase in effectiveness, as by adding ingredients. FORTUITOUSNESS (17) [noun] The quality or state of being fortuitous; the occurrence of events by chance or accident in a happy or beneficial way. FOSSILIZATIONS (26) [noun] The plural of fossilization, the process by which organic remains become preserved as fossils, or the state of being fossilized. | [noun] The process of becoming outdated or rigid, as if turned to stone. FOUNDATIONALLY (21) [adverb] In a way that relates to or serves as a foundation or base; fundamentally or essentially. FOUNDATIONLESS (18) [adjective] Lacking a foundation or basis; without fundamental support or justification. FRACTIONALIZED (29) [verb] To separate into parts or fractions; to fractionate FRACTIONALIZES (28) [verb] To separate into parts or fractions; to fractionate FRACTIONATIONS (19) [noun] The process of separating a mixture into its constituent parts or fractions, typically through techniques like distillation or chromatography. | [noun] The action of dividing something into smaller parts or fractions. FRAGMENTATIONS (20) [noun] The act of fragmenting or something fragmented; disintegration. | [noun] The process by which fragments of an exploding bomb scatter. | [noun] The breaking up and dispersal of a file into non-contiguous areas of a disk. FRANGIBILITIES (20) [noun] The plural of frangibility; the quality or state of being easily broken or fragile. FRATERNIZATION (26) [noun] The act of associating or mingling on friendly terms, especially between members of different groups or ranks. | [noun] Informal or friendly association between soldiers of opposing armies during a conflict. FRAUDULENTNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of being fraudulent; deceitfulness or dishonesty in action or speech. FREAKISHNESSES (24) [noun] The plural of freakishness; the quality or state of being freakish or abnormal in appearance or behavior. FREEHANDEDNESS (22) FREEWHEELINGLY (27) [adverb] In a manner that is free from restraint or constraint; without being bound by rules or limitations. FREQUENTATIONS (26) FREQUENTATIVES (29) [noun] (grammar) Any of a subclass of imperfective verbs that denote a repeated action, no longer productive in English, but found in e.g. Finnish, Latin, Russian, and Turkish. FREQUENTNESSES (26) FRICTIONLESSLY (22) FRIENDLESSNESS (18) FRIENDLINESSES (18) FRUCTIFICATION (24) [noun] The act of forming or producing fruit; the act of fructifying, or rendering productive of fruit; fecundation. | [noun] The collective organs by which a plant produces its fruit, or seeds, or reproductive spores. FRUITFULNESSES (20) FUGITIVENESSES (21) FUNCTIONALISMS (21) FUNCTIONALISTS (19) FUNDAMENTALISM (22) [noun] The tendency to reduce a religion to its most fundamental tenets, based on strict interpretation of core texts. | [noun] (by extension) A rigid conformity to any set of basic tenets. | [noun] The belief that fundamental financial quantities are the best predictor of the price of a financial instrument. FUNDAMENTALIST (20) [noun] One who reduces religion to strict interpretation of core or original texts. | [noun] A trader who trades on the financial fundamentals of the companies involved, as opposed to a chartist or technician. | [noun] Originally referred to an adherent of an American Christian movement that began as a response to the rejection of the accuracy of the Bible, the alleged deity of Christ, Christ's atonement for humanity, the virgin birth, and miracles. FUTURELESSNESS (17) FUTURISTICALLY (22)

15-Letter Words (52)

FACETIOUSNESSES (20) [noun] The plural of facetiousness; the quality or state of being facetious, characterized by joking or humorous treatment of serious matters. FAITHLESSNESSES (21) [noun] The plural of faithlessness; the quality or state of being unfaithful, disloyal, or lacking faith. FAMILIARIZATION (29) [noun] The act, process or result of familiarizing. FANATICALNESSES (20) [noun] The plural form of fanaticalness; the quality or state of being fanatical in multiple instances or contexts. FANTASTICALNESS (20) FANTASTICATIONS (20) FASHIONABLENESS (23) [noun] The quality or state of being fashionable; adherence to current styles or trends. FATHEADEDNESSES (23) [noun] The plural of fatheadedness; the quality or state of being foolish or stupid. FAULTLESSNESSES (18) [noun] The plural form of faultlessness; the quality or state of being without fault, defect, or error. FAVORABLENESSES (23) [noun] The plural of favorableness; the quality or state of being favorable or advantageous. FEATHERBEDDINGS (26) [noun] The practice of creating unnecessary work or maintaining redundant positions, especially to avoid layoffs or preserve jobs; excessive staffing or work creation. FEATHERSTITCHED (27) [verb] To make stitches of this kind. FEATHERSTITCHES (26) [noun] A kind of embroidery stitch made of open, looped stitches worked alternately to the right and left of a central rib. | [verb] To make stitches of this kind. FEDERALIZATIONS (28) [noun] The plural of federalization, referring to multiple instances or processes of organizing a political system into a federal structure where power is shared between a central government and constituent regions or states. FELONIOUSNESSES (18) FENCELESSNESSES (20) FEROCIOUSNESSES (20) [noun] The plural of ferociousness; the quality or state of being ferocious, fierce, or savage. FERRIMAGNETISMS (23) [noun] The plural form of ferrimagnetism, referring to the magnetic properties of materials where unequal magnetic moments of different atoms or sublattices are antiparallel, resulting in a net magnetic moment. FERROMAGNETISMS (23) [noun] The plural of ferromagnetism, referring to the phenomenon where certain materials become permanently magnetized and attract iron and other ferromagnetic materials. FERROMANGANESES (21) [noun] Plural of ferromanganeses; iron-manganese alloys or compounds used in metallurgy and steel production. FETISHISTICALLY (26) [adverb] In a manner relating to or characterized by an excessive and irrational commitment to or reverence for something, particularly non-sexual objects or practices. FIBRINOPEPTIDES (25) [noun] Small peptides released from fibrinogen during the formation of fibrin in blood clotting. FICTIONIZATIONS (29) [noun] The plural of fictionization; instances of converting something into fictional form or adapting something into a work of fiction. FILTERABILITIES (20) FINGERPRINTINGS (22) [noun] The process or act of taking fingerprints for identification purposes, or multiple instances of such identification procedures. FISSIPAROUSNESS (20) FLIBBERTIGIBBET (27) [noun] An offbeat, skittish person; especially said of a young woman. | [noun] A flighty person; someone regarded as silly, irresponsible, or scatterbrained, especially someone who chatters or gossips. | [noun] An imp, a fiend. FLIRTATIOUSNESS (18) [noun] The quality or state of behaving amorously without serious intent; playful or coquettish behavior. FLORICULTURISTS (20) [noun] People who cultivate and grow flowers commercially or as a profession. FLORIFEROUSNESS (21) FOOLHARDINESSES (22) [noun] The plural form of foolhardiness; instances or qualities of reckless lack of caution or prudent fear. FOREORDINATIONS (19) [noun] The plural of foreordination; instances of predetermining or predestining something in advance, particularly in theological contexts referring to God's predetermined plan. FORESIGHTEDNESS (23) [noun] The quality of being foresighted; the ability to anticipate future events or needs and plan accordingly. | [noun] In vision, the condition of being farsighted or hyperopic. FORGETFULNESSES (22) [noun] The plural form of forgetfulness; instances or qualities of being prone to forgetting or lacking memory. FORGIVINGNESSES (23) [noun] The plural of forgivingness; the quality or state of being forgiving or merciful toward others. FORMIDABILITIES (23) [noun] The plural of formidability; the quality or state of being formidable, impressive, or inspiring fear or respect. FORMULARIZATION (29) FORTUNATENESSES (18) [noun] The plural form of fortunateness; the quality or state of being fortunate or lucky. FRACTIONALIZING (30) [verb] To separate into parts or fractions; to fractionate FRACTIOUSNESSES (20) [noun] The plural of fractiousness; the quality or state of being fractious, irritable, or quarrelsome. FRAGMENTARINESS (21) [noun] The quality or state of being fragmentary; the condition of consisting of disconnected or incomplete pieces. FRATERNIZATIONS (27) [noun] The plural of fraternization, referring to instances of associating or socializing together, especially between members of different groups or ranks. | [verb] Third-person singular present tense of fraternize, meaning to associate or interact socially with others, particularly those from different groups or military ranks. FRENCHIFICATION (28) FRIGHTFULNESSES (25) FRIVOLOUSNESSES (21) FRUCTIFICATIONS (25) [noun] The act of forming or producing fruit; the act of fructifying, or rendering productive of fruit; fecundation. | [noun] The collective organs by which a plant produces its fruit, or seeds, or reproductive spores. FRUITLESSNESSES (18) FUNCTIONALISTIC (22) FUNCTIONALITIES (20) [noun] The ability to perform a task or function; that set of functions that something is able or equipped to perform. | [noun] In United States trademark law, the tendency of a product design to serve a function other than identification of the product, preventing that design from being protected as a trademark. | [noun] The presence of a functional group. FUNDAMENTALISMS (23) [noun] The tendency to reduce a religion to its most fundamental tenets, based on strict interpretation of core texts. | [noun] (by extension) A rigid conformity to any set of basic tenets. | [noun] The belief that fundamental financial quantities are the best predictor of the price of a financial instrument. FUNDAMENTALISTS (21) [noun] One who reduces religion to strict interpretation of core or original texts. | [noun] A trader who trades on the financial fundamentals of the companies involved, as opposed to a chartist or technician. | [noun] Originally referred to an adherent of an American Christian movement that began as a response to the rejection of the accuracy of the Bible, the alleged deity of Christ, Christ's atonement for humanity, the virgin birth, and miracles. FUTILITARIANISM (20)

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This page lists all 9 letter 9 letter 5 letter spelltower words starting with the letter F. Whether you're playing 9 Letter 9 Letter 5 Letter Spelltower, looking for crossword answers, or solving a word puzzle, this list gives you every valid word to choose from. Click any word to use our word unscrambler and see all possible words from those letters.

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