| DELOPING | • deloping v. Present participle of delope. • DELOPE v. to fire one's gun into the air during a duel. |
| DIPLOGEN | • diplogen n. (Dated) deuterium. • DIPLOGEN n. an alternative name for deuterium or heavy hydrogen. |
| DIPLONTS | • diplonts n. Plural of diplont. • DIPLONT n. an organism with a particular chromosomal structure. |
| DOLPHINS | • dolphins n. Plural of dolphin. • Dolphins prop.n. Plural of Dolphin. • DOLPHIN n. any of a group of small toothed whales belonging to the family Delphinidae. |
| KILOPOND | • kilopond n. A gravitational metric unit of force equal to the magnitude of the force exerted by a mass off one kilogram… • KILOPOND n. a unit of measurement equal to the gravitational force on a mass of one kilogram. |
| LISPOUND | • lispound n. (Historical) A unit of weight formerly used in the Baltic countries, varying between 17 and 19 pounds. • LISPOUND n. (Dutch) a varying weight, 12 to 34 pounds, used in Orkney and Shetland, also LISPUND. |
| MILLPOND | • millpond n. A pond or reservoir produced by damming a river or stream in order to provide a steady source of water for a millrace. • MILLPOND n. a pool formed by damming a stream to provide water to turn a millwheel. |
| PALINODE | • palinode n. An ode or other poem in which the author retracts something said in an earlier poem; (loosely) a recantation. • PALINODE n. a poem which retracts an earlier poem, also PALINODY. |
| PALINODY | • palinody n. Obsolete form of palinode. • PALINODY n. a poem which retracts an earlier poem, also PALINODE. |
| PINFOLDS | • pinfolds n. Plural of pinfold. • pinfolds v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of pinfold. • PINFOLD v. to impound, also PENFOLD. |
| PLODDING | • plodding v. Present participle of plod. • plodding adj. Progressing slowly and laboriously. • plodding n. Slow, laborious progress. |
| PLODGING | • plodging v. Present participle of plodge. • PLODGE v. (dialect) to wade in water. |
| PODDLING | • PODDLE v. (dialect) to amble at leisure. |
| TOPLINED | • toplined v. Simple past tense and past participle of topline. • TOPLINE v. to feature in a headline. |