| ALCAIDE | • alcaide n. The governor or commander of a Spanish or Portuguese fortress or prison. • alcaide n. A caid. • Alcaide prop.n. A surname from Spanish. |
| CAMELID | • camelid n. (Zoology) Any of a family of mammals including the camel, llama, alpaca, guanaco, and vicuña. • CAMELID n. an animal of the camel family. |
| CAVILED | • caviled v. Simple past tense and past participle of cavil. • CAVIL v. to raise trivial and frivolous objections. |
| CEDILLA | • cedilla n. (Orthography) In the spelling of Catalan, French, Portuguese and some other languages, a mark ⟨¸⟩ sometimes… • CEDILLA n. (Spanish) a mark placed under the letter c, to show that it is to be sounded like s, as in facade. |
| CITADEL | • citadel n. A strong fortress that sits high above a city. • citadel n. (Sometimes figurative) A stronghold or fortified place. • citadel n. An armoured portion of a warship, housing important equipment. |
| CLADDIE | • CLADDIE n. a native New Zealand flax plant, aka korari. |
| CLAIMED | • claimed v. Simple past tense and past participle of claim. • CLAIM v. to demand as one's due. |
| DECIMAL | • decimal n. (Countable) A number expressed in the base-ten system, (particularly) a fractional numeral written in this system. • decimal n. (Informal, uncountable) The decimal system itself. • decimal n. (Informal) A decimal place. |
| DECLAIM | • declaim v. To object to something vociferously; to rail against in speech. • declaim v. To recite, e.g., poetry, in a theatrical way; to speak for rhetorical display; to speak pompously, noisily… • declaim v. To speak rhetorically; to make a formal speech or oration; specifically, to recite a speech, poem, etc… |
| DECRIAL | • decrial n. A crying down. • decrial n. Clamorous condemnation. • DECRIAL n. a crying down; a clamorous censure. |
| DELTAIC | • deltaic adj. Of or pertaining to a river delta. • deltaic adj. Shaped like the letter delta (Δ), or like an equiangular or equilateral triangle. • DELTAIC adj. pertaining to a delta, also DELTIC. |
| DIALECT | • dialect n. (Linguistics, strict sense) A lect (often a regional or minority language) as part of a group or family… • dialect n. (Linguistics, broad sense) A variety of a language that is characteristic of a particular area, community… • dialect n. (Derogatory) Language that is perceived as substandard or wrong. |
| EDICTAL | • edictal adj. Of, pertaining to, or derived from edicts. • EDICTAL adj. relating to an edict. |
| INLACED | • inlaced v. Simple past tense and past participle of inlace. • INLACE v. to entwine or entangle, also ENLACE. |
| MALICED | • maliced v. Simple past tense and past participle of malice. • MALICE v. to have ill-will towards another. |
| MEDICAL | • medical adj. Of or pertaining to the practice of medicine. • medical adj. Intended to have a therapeutic effect; medicinal. • medical adj. Requiring medical treatment. |
| RADICEL | • radicel n. (Botany) A small branch of a root; a rootlet. • RADICEL n. a rootlike organ or part, also RADICLE, RADICULE. |
| RADICLE | • radicle n. (Botany) The rudimentary shoot of a plant which supports the cotyledons in the seed, and from which… • radicle n. (Botany) A rootlet. • radicle n. (Chemistry) Archaic form of radical. |
| SCAILED | • SCAIL v. (Scots) to scatter, disperse, also SKAIL. |