| ADDRESS | • address n. Direction. • address n. Preparation. • address v. (Intransitive, obsolete) To prepare oneself. |
| ADDREST | • addrest v. (Obsolete) simple past tense and past participle of address. • ADDRESS v. to speak to. |
| ADREADS | • adreads v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of adread. • ADREAD v. (obsolete) to dread. |
| DANDERS | • danders n. Plural of dander. • danders v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dander. • DANDER v. (dialect) to stroll, saunter, also DAUNDER, DAUNER, DAWNER. |
| DEADERS | • deaders n. Plural of deader. • DEADER n. a dead person. |
| DEODARS | • deodars n. Plural of deodar. • DEODAR n. (Sanskrit) an East Indian cedar, also DEODARA. |
| DRYADES | • dryades n. Plural of dryade. • DRYAD n. (Greek) a nymph of the woods. |
| GADDERS | • gadders n. Plural of gadder. • GADDER n. one that gads about. |
| LADDERS | • ladders n. Plural of ladder. • ladders n. A pair of ladders. • ladders v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ladder. |
| MADDERS | • madders n. Plural of madder. • madders v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of madder. • MADDER n. a herbaceous plant whose root produces a red dye. |
| PADDERS | • padders n. Plural of padder. • PADDER n. a highwayman who steals on foot. |
| RADDEST | • raddest adj. Superlative form of rad: most rad. • RAD adj. afraid. |
| RADDLES | • raddles n. Plural of raddle. • RADDLE v. to redden with red ochre, also REDDLE. |
| SADDLER | • saddler n. Someone who makes, repairs and sells saddles, harnesses etc. • saddler n. The harp seal. • Saddler n. Someone from Walsall. |
| SHARDED | • sharded v. Simple past tense and past participle of shard. • SHARDED adj. (archaic) sheltered under dung. |
| SWARDED | • swarded adj. Covered with sward. • SWARD v. to cover with turf. |
| WADDERS | • wadders n. Plural of wadder. • WADDER n. an implement for wadding a gun. |