| AFFORDS | • affords v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of afford. • AFFORD v. to have sufficient means for. |
| CAFARDS | • cafards n. Plural of cafard. • CAFARD n. (French) severe depression or apathy. |
| DAFTARS | • daftars n. Plural of daftar. • DAFTAR n. (Urdu) in India, an office, esp. a military orderly room. |
| DEFRAGS | • defrags v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of defrag. • DEFRAG v. to defragment (to reorganize computer files into contiguous blocks). |
| DEFRAYS | • defrays v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of defray. • DEFRAY v. to pay or settle. |
| FADEURS | • FADEUR n. (French) dullness, insipidity. |
| FARDELS | • fardels n. Plural of fardel. • FARDEL n. (obsolete) a burden. |
| FARDENS | • fardens n. Plural of farden. • FARDEN n. (dialect) a farthing, also FARDING. |
| FARSIDE | • farside n. (Astronomy) The side of a moon that faces away from the planet that it orbits. • FARSIDE n. the farther side. |
| FEDORAS | • fedoras n. Plural of fedora. • FEDORA n. a felt hat with a brim and a crease. |
| FORRADS | • forrads adv. (Representing dialect pronunciation) Forwards. • forrads n. Plural of forrad. • FORRAD n. a forward. |
| FORSAID | • forsaid v. Simple past tense and past participle of forsay. • FORSAY v. to forbid, to renounce. |
| FRAISED | • fraised adj. Fortified with a fraise. • FRAISE v. (French) to fortify with a horizontal palisade. |
| FRIANDS | • friands n. Plural of friand. • FRIAND n. (French) a (male) epicure. |
| SCARFED | • scarfed v. Simple past tense and past participle of scarf. • scarfed adj. Alternative form of scarved (“wearing a scarf”). • SCARF v. to cover with a scarf. |
| SNARFED | • snarfed v. Simple past tense and past participle of snarf. • SNARF v. (colloquial) to eat or drink greedily. |
| STRAFED | • strafed v. Simple past tense and past participle of strafe. • STRAFE v. (German) to rake with machinegun fire from a low-flying aeroplane. |
| SWARFED | • swarfed v. Simple past tense and past participle of swarf. • SWARF v. to faint, also SWERF. |