| DEARER | • dearer adj. Comparative form of dear: more dear. • dearer adv. Comparative form of dearly: more dearly. • DEAR adj. costly. |
| DREARE | • DREARE n. (Spenser) dreariness, gloom, also DRERE. |
| DRERES | • DRERE n. (Spenser) dreariness, gloom, also DREARE. |
| HERDER | • herder n. One who herds. • HERDER n. one who tends a herd. |
| READER | • reader n. A person who reads. • reader n. A person who reads a publication. • reader n. A person who recites literary works, usually to an audience. |
| REARED | • reared v. Simple past tense and past participle of rear. • REAR v. to lift upright. |
| REBRED | • rebred v. Simple past tense and past participle of rebreed. • REBREED v. to breed again. |
| REDDER | • redder adj. Comparative form of red: more red. • Redder prop.n. A surname from German. • REDDER n. one who redds, tidies up. |
| REDEAR | • REDEAR n. the common sunfish. |
| REDREW | • redrew v. Simple past tense of redraw. • REDRAW v. to draw again. |
| REEDER | • reeder n. One who thatches with reeds. • reeder n. A thatched frame covering blocks or tiles of dried china clay, to protect them from the rain while permitting… • Reeder prop.n. A surname. |
| RENDER | • render v. (Ditransitive) To cause to become. • render v. (Transitive) To interpret, give an interpretation or rendition of. • render v. (Transitive) To translate into another language. |
| REREAD | • reread v. To read again. • reread n. The act of reading something again. • re-read v. Alternative form of reread. |
| SERRED | • SERR v. to press close, also SERRE. |