| CHANGEFUL | • changeful adj. (Rare) Changing frequently; very susceptible to change. • CHANGEFUL adj. full of change. |
| CHARGEFUL | • chargeful adj. (Obsolete) costly; expensive. • CHARGEFUL adj. (archaic) costly; expensive. |
| CLAUGHTED | • CLAUGHT v. (Scots) to snatch, also CLAUCHT. |
| FLAUGHTED | • FLAUGHT v. (Scots) to cut, pare. |
| FLAUGHTER | • flaughter n. A flat spade used in peat cutting. • FLAUGHTER v. (Scots) to cut turfs. |
| GALUMPHED | • galumphed v. Simple past tense and past participle of galumph. • GALUMPH v. to move with a clumsy heavy tread, also GALLUMPH. |
| GALUMPHER | • galumpher n. Someone who galumphs. • GALUMPHER n. one who galumphs, moves with a clumsy heavy tread. |
| GOULASHES | • goulashes n. Plural of goulash. • GOULASH n. (Hungarian) a stew or ragout of meat and vegetables highly seasoned. |
| LAUGHABLE | • laughable adj. (Now rare) Fitted to excite laughter; humorous. • laughable adj. Worthless; worthy of contempt or derision. • LAUGHABLE adj. ridiculous. |
| LAUGHIEST | • laughiest adj. Superlative form of laughy: most laughy. • LAUGHY adj. inclined to laugh. |
| LAUGHLINE | • laughline n. Alternative form of laugh line. • laugh␣line n. (Usually in the plural) Either of the two skin folds that run from each side of the nose to the corners of the mouth. • LAUGHLINE n. a funny line in a dialogue. |
| LAUGHSOME | • laughsome adj. (Rare) Marked by or arousing laughter; also, addicted to laughter; merry. • LAUGHSOME adj. (archaic) exciting laughter; inclined to laugh. |
| LAUGHTERS | • laughters n. Plural of laughter. • Laughters prop.n. Plural of Laughter. • LAUGHTER n. the act or sound of one who laughs. |
| NARGUILEH | • NARGUILEH n. (Persian) a hookah, an Oriental tobacco pipe in which smoke is drawn through water by a long tube, also NARGHILE, NARGHILLY, NARGHILY, NARGILE, NARGILEH, NARGILY. |
| RUGELACHS | • RUGELACH n. (Yiddish) in Jewish cooking, a small crescent-shaped pastry filled with fruit, nuts etc., also RUGALACH, RUGGELACH. |
| RUGGELACH | • RUGGELACH n. (Yiddish) in Jewish cooking, small crescent-shaped pastries filled with fruit, nuts etc., also RUGALACH, RUGELACH. |
| SLAUGHTER | • slaughter n. (Uncountable) The killing of animals, generally for food. • slaughter n. A massacre; the killing of a large number of people. • slaughter n. (Rare) A mass destruction of non-living things. |
| UNHEALING | • unhealing adj. That does not heal. • unhealing v. Present participle of unheal. • UNHEAL v. (Spenser) to discover, disclose, also UNHELE. |