| CHILDED | • childed adj. (Obsolete) Having a child. • childed v. Simple past tense and past participle of child.
 • CHILD v. to bring forth.
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| DALEDHS | • daledhs n. Plural of daledh. • DALEDH n. (Hebrew) the fourth letter of the Hebrew alphabet, also DALED, DALETH.
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| HANDLED | • handled v. Simple past tense and past participle of handle. • handled adj. Having a specified number or kind of handles.
 • HANDLE v. to touch with the hands.
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| HEALDED | • healded v. Simple past tense and past participle of heald. • HEALD v. (obsolete) to heel, incline on one side.
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| HEDDLED | • heddled adj. (Of a loom, usually in combination) That uses heddles. • heddled v. Simple past tense and past participle of heddle.
 • HEDDLE v. to draw thread through eyes of a loom.
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| HEDDLES | • heddles n. Plural of heddle. • HEDDLE v. to draw thread through eyes of a loom.
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| HODDLED | • hoddled v. Simple past tense and past participle of hoddle. • HODDLE v. (Scots) to waddle.
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| HODDLES | • hoddles v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hoddle. • HODDLE v. (Scots) to waddle.
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| HONDLED | • HONDLE v. to haggle. | 
| HUDDLED | • huddled v. Simple past tense and past participle of huddle. • huddled adj. Crowded together in a huddle.
 • huddled adj. Crouched.
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| HUDDLER | • huddler n. One who huddles. • HUDDLER n. one who huddles things together.
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| HUDDLES | • huddles n. Plural of huddle. • huddles v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of huddle.
 • HUDDLE v. to press closely together.
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| HURDLED | • hurdled v. Simple past tense and past participle of hurdle. • HURDLE v. to jump over.
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| LADDISH | • laddish adj. (Britain) Like a stereotypical Jack the lad: boorish, reckless, inclined to binge drinking, etc. • LADDISH adj. of young men, boisterous or aggressive.
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| LADHOOD | • ladhood n. The state or condition of being a lad. • LADHOOD n. the state of being a lad.
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