| DEEPEST | • deepest adj. Superlative form of deep: most deep. • DEEP adj. extending far down from the surface. |
| DEPLETE | • deplete v. To empty or unload, as the vessels of the human system, by bloodletting or by medicine. • deplete v. To reduce by destroying or consuming the vital powers of; to exhaust, as a country of its strength or… • DEPLETE v. to lessen the supply of. |
| ENSTEEP | • ensteep v. (Obsolete) To steep or submerge. • ENSTEEP v. (Shakespeare) to steep; to place under water. |
| EPEEIST | • epeeist n. (Fencing) Somebody who fences with an epee. • épéeist n. (Fencing) A fencer who competes with an épée sword. • EPEEIST n. one who fences with an epee. |
| ESTREPE | • ESTREPE v. to create waste as a tenant e.g. by cutting down trees. |
| KEEPNET | • keepnet n. (Nautical) A net strung on wire hoops and sealed at one end, suspended in water by anglers to keep alive… • KEEPNET n. a net for holding fish alive in a river. |
| PEEPTOE | • peep-toe adj. (Of shoes, chiefly for women) Having a small aperture at the front where the toes are visible. • PEEPTOE adj. denoting a shoe or sandal in which the toe is not covered. |
| PENTENE | • pentene n. (Organic chemistry) Any of several isomeric alkenes having five carbon atoms and one double bond. • PENTENE n. an unsaturated hydrocarbon of the olefine series, also PENTYLENE. |
| PETERED | • petered v. Simple past tense and past participle of peter. • PETER v. to diminish gradually. |
| PREMEET | • premeet adj. Before a meet, as for example a track meet or swim meet. • PREMEET adj. taking place before a meet. |
| PRETEEN | • preteen adj. Of, relating to, or designed for, or being children between the ages of approximately 10 and 12. • preteen n. A child between approximately 10 and 12 years of age, at the onset of adolescence. • pre-teen n. Alternative form of preteen. |
| REPLETE | • replete adj. Abounding. • replete adj. Gorged, filled to near the point of bursting, especially with food or drink. • replete n. A honeypot ant. |
| STEEPED | • steeped v. Simple past tense and past participle of steep. • STEEP v. to soak in a liquid. |
| STEEPEN | • steepen v. (Transitive) To make steeper. • steepen v. (Intransitive) To become steeper. • STEEPEN v. to become steep. |
| STEEPER | • steeper adj. Comparative form of steep: more steep. • steeper n. A vessel, vat, or cistern in which things are steeped. • steeper n. The stem of a shrub or small tree in a hedgerow, often laid by being partially cut through at the base… |
| STEEPLE | • steeple n. A tall tower, often on a church, normally topped with a spire. • steeple n. A spire. • steeple n. (Historical) A high headdress of the 14th century. |
| TEEPEES | • teepees n. Plural of teepee. • TEEPEE n. (Native American) a conical tent of the North American Indians, also TEPEE, TIPI. |
| TERPENE | • terpene n. (Organic chemistry) Any of a very large class of naturally occurring and synthetic organic compounds… • TERPENE n. any of a class of volatile aromatic hydrocarbons, many of which occur in essential plant oils, esp. of conifers and citrus trees. |
| TWEEPLE | • tweeple n. Plural of tweep (“a Twitter user”). • TWEEPLE n. people who communicate via the Twitter website. |