| ADS | • ads n. Plural of ad. • ads sym. (International standards) ISO 639-3 language code for Adamorobe Sign Language. • Ads prop.n. A nickname for Adam. |
| DAS | • das n. Plural of da (“father”). • das cont. (AAVE) That is; that’s. • daS sym. (Metrology) Symbol for decasiemens, an SI unit of electrical conductance equal to 101 siemens. |
| DIS | • dis v. (Informal) Alternative spelling of diss. • dis n. Alternative form of diss. • dis n. (Norse mythology) Any of a group of minor female deities in Scandinavian folklore. |
| DOS | • dos n. Plural of do. • dos n. (Music) plural of do. • DoS n. (Computing, Internet) A denial-of-service attack. |
| DSO | • dso n. Alternative spelling of dzo. • DSO n. (Astronomy) Initialism of deep sky object. • DSO n. (Computing) Initialism of dynamic shared object. |
| EDS | • eds n. Plural of ed. • Eds prop.n. Plural of Ed. • EDs n. Plural of ED. |
| IDS | • ids n. Plural of id. • IDs n. Plural of ID. • IDs v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ID. |
| ODS | • ods n. Plural of od. • ods interj. (Obsolete, used in oaths etc.) God’s. • ODs n. Plural of OD. |
| SAD | • sad adj. (Heading) Emotionally negative. • sad adj. (Obsolete) Sated, having had one’s fill; satisfied, weary. • sad adj. (Obsolete) Steadfast, valiant. |
| SED | • sed prop.n. (Computing) A noninteractive text editor (originally developed in Unix), intended for making systematic… • sed v. (Neologism, slang) To edit a file or stream of text using sed. • sed n. (Fishing) A line fastening a fish-hook. |
| SOD | • sod n. (Uncountable) That stratum of the surface of the soil which is filled with the roots of grass, or any… • sod n. (Uncountable) Turf grown and cut specifically for the establishment of lawns. • sod n. (Countable) A piece of this. |
| SUD | • sud n. (Informal) A bubble of lather or foam (the singular of suds). • SUD n. Acronym of subjective unit of disturbance. • SUD n. a froth of soapy water. |
| UDS | • UDS n. Initialism of unscheduled DNA synthesis. • 'uds n. Plural of ’ud. • UDS interj. (archaic) an old interjection meaning 'God Save'. |