| DESPISALS | • despisals n. Plural of despisal. • DESPISAL n. the act of despising. |
| MISSPELLS | • misspells v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misspell. • MISSPELL v. to spell incorrectly. |
| PISSHOLES | • pissholes n. Plural of pisshole. • PISSHOLE n. a hole made in soluble matter, such as snow, by urinating. |
| POSSIBLES | • possibles n. Plural of possible. • possibles n. The essential personal equipment carried by an American frontiersman. • POSSIBLE n. something that is possible. |
| PSELLISMS | • PSELLISM n. a defect in articulation or pronunciation, also PSELLISMUS. |
| SAPIDLESS | • sapidless adj. (Archaic) Lacking sapidity; tasteless; flavorless. • SAPIDLESS adj. tasteless. |
| SIDESLIPS | • sideslips n. Plural of sideslip. • side-slips v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of side-slip. • SIDESLIP v. to slip to one side. |
| SIMPLESSE | • SIMPLESSE n. (Spenser) simplicity. |
| SLIPCASES | • slipcases n. Plural of slipcase. • slip-cases n. Plural of slip-case. • slip␣cases n. Plural of slip case. |
| SLIPDRESS | • slipdress n. A nightdress. • slip␣dress n. Alternative form of slipdress. • SLIPDRESS n. a silky sleeveless dress. |
| SLIPSOLES | • slipsoles n. Plural of slipsole. • SLIPSOLE n. a thin insole. |
| SPICELESS | • spiceless adj. Devoid of spice. • SPICELESS adj. without spices. |
| SPINELESS | • spineless adj. Having no spines, prickles, or thorns. • spineless adj. Having no spinal column. • spineless adj. Cowardly, uncourageous; lacking character. |
| SPIRELESS | • spireless adj. Without a spire. • SPIRELESS adj. without a spire. |
| SYLLEPSIS | • syllepsis n. (Rhetoric) A figure of speech in which one word simultaneously modifies two or more other words such… • syllepsis n. (Botany) Growth in which lateral branches develop from a lateral meristem, without the formation of… • SYLLEPSIS n. (Greek) a construction in which a word governs two or more other words but agrees in number, gender, or case with only one, or has a different meaning when applied to each of the words, as in 'He lost his coat and his temper'. |