| BOOKBINDER | • bookbinder n. A person whose profession is binding pages together to form books. • book␣binder n. Alternative form of bookbinder. • BOOKBINDER n. one who binds books. |
| BOOKENDING | • bookending v. Present participle of bookend. • book-ending v. Alternative spelling of bookending. • BOOKEND v. to place something at either end of. |
| BOOTLICKED | • bootlicked v. Simple past tense and past participle of bootlick. • BOOTLICK v. to toady. |
| DOOHICKEYS | • doohickeys n. Plural of doohickey. • doo-hickeys n. Plural of doo-hickey. • DOOHICKEY n. a doodad, a thingy. |
| DOOHICKIES | • doohickies n. Plural of doohicky (alternative form of doohickeys). • DOOHICKEY n. a doodad, a thingy. |
| GRIMLOOKED | • GRIMLOOKED adj. (Shakespeare) having a grim or dismal aspect. |
| GUIDEBOOKS | • guidebooks n. Plural of guidebook. • guide␣books n. Plural of guide book. • GUIDEBOOK n. a book of information for tourists. |
| HOODWINKED | • hoodwinked v. Simple past tense and past participle of hoodwink. • hood-winked v. Simple past tense and past participle of hood-wink. • HOODWINK v. to deceive. |
| HOODWINKER | • hoodwinker n. One who hoodwinks. • HOODWINKER n. one who hoodwinks. |
| KIDOLOGIES | • KIDOLOGY n. the art of kidding. |
| LIKELIHOOD | • likelihood n. The probability of a specified outcome; the chance of something happening; probability; the state or… • likelihood n. (Statistics, probability theory) The probability that some fixed outcome was generated by a random distribution… • likelihood n. Likeness, resemblance. |
| MOTORBIKED | • motorbiked v. Simple past tense and past participle of motorbike. • MOTORBIKE v. to travel by motorbike, also MOTORBICYCLE, MOTORCYCLE. |
| OBELISKOID | • obeliskoid adj. Resembling an obelisk. • OBELISKOID adj. shaped like an obelisk, also OBELISCOID. |
| PONDOKKIES | • pondokkies n. Plural of pondokkie. • PONDOKKIE n. (Hottentot) in South Africa, a small hut, a shack, also PONDOK. |
| WOODSHRIKE | • woodshrike n. Any bird of the genus Tephrodornis. • WOODSHRIKE n. a species of shrike, with black-and-white plumage but a red-brown crown, also WOODCHAT. |