| ACICULATED | • aciculated adj. Alternative form of aciculate. • ACICULATED adj. marked as if with needle scratches, also ACICULATE. |
| ACIDULATED | • acidulated v. Simple past tense and past participle of acidulate. • ACIDULATE v. to make acidulous. |
| ACIDULATES | • acidulates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of acidulate. • ACIDULATE v. to make acidulous. |
| ACQUAINTED | • acquainted adj. Personally known; familiar. • acquainted v. Simple past tense and past participle of acquaint. • ACQUAINT v. to cause to know. |
| ACTUALISED | • actualised v. Simple past tense and past participle of actualise. • ACTUALISE v. to make actual, realise, also ACTUALIZE. |
| ACTUALIZED | • actualized v. Simple past tense and past participle of actualize. • actualized adj. Having become actual; having been realized or made real. • ACTUALIZE v. to make actual, realise, also ACTUALISE. |
| ACUMINATED | • acuminated v. Simple past tense and past participle of acuminate. • ACUMINATE v. to sharpen. |
| ADEQUACIES | • adequacies n. Plural of adequacy. • ADEQUACY n. the state of sufficiency. |
| ADJUDICATE | • adjudicate v. To settle a legal case or other dispute. • adjudicate v. To act as a judge. • adjudicate v. (Scotland, law) To seize, or convey, a debtor’s estate as security. |
| ADMIRAUNCE | • ADMIRAUNCE n. (Spenser) admiration, also ADMIRANCE, ADMIRATION. |
| AUDACITIES | • audacities n. Plural of audacity. • AUDACITY n. boldness. |
| AUDIENCIAS | • audiencias n. Plural of audiencia. • AUDIENCIA n. (Spanish) a court of government or justice in the Spanish American empire. |
| AUSPICATED | • auspicated v. Simple past tense and past participle of auspicate. • AUSPICATE v. to prognosticate, predict. |
| CASUALISED | • casualised v. Simple past tense and past participle of casualise. • CASUALISE v. to turn (regular workers) into casual workers, also CASUALIZE. |
| CASUALIZED | • casualized v. Simple past tense and past participle of casualize. • casualized adj. Having become or been made casual. • CASUALIZE v. to turn (regular workers) into casual workers, also CASUALISE. |
| DISAVAUNCE | • disavaunce v. (Obsolete) To retard; to repel; to do damage to. • DISAVAUNCE v. (Spenser) to retard; to repel, also DISADVANCE. |
| FRICANDEAU | • fricandeau n. Thinly sliced meat, especially veal, fried or stewed with a sauce; a fricassee. • FRICANDEAU n. (French) a thick slice of veal or similar meat, also FRICANDO. |
| INADEQUACY | • inadequacy n. The state of being inadequate. • inadequacy n. A shortage of required material. • inadequacy n. A lack of competence or ability. |
| UNACADEMIC | • unacademic adj. Not academic. • UNACADEMIC adj. not academic. |