| SAIDEST | • saidest v. (Archaic) second-person singular simple past form of say. • SAIDEST v. (archaic) 2nd person past tense singular of say, also SAIDST.
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| SAIKEIS | • SAIKEI n. (Japanese) a miniature landscape of bonsai trees etc. | 
| SAILERS | • sailers n. Plural of sailer. • Sailers prop.n. Plural of Sailer.
 • SAILER n. a vessel that sails.
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| SAILING | • sailing v. Present participle of sail. • sailing adj. Travelling by ship.
 • sailing n. Motion across a body of water in a craft powered by the wind, as a sport or otherwise.
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| SAILORS | • sailors n. Plural of sailor. • Sailors prop.n. Plural of Sailor.
 • SAILOR n. a member of a ship's crew.
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| SAIMINS | • saimins n. Plural of saimin. • SAIMIN n. (Chinese) a Hawaiian noodle soup.
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| SAIMIRI | • saimiri n. Squirrel monkey. • saimiri n. Any member of Saimiri, a taxonomic genus of South American arboreal monkeys comprising the squirrel monkeys.
 • Saimiri prop.n. A taxonomic genus within the family Cebidae – the squirrel monkeys.
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| SAINING | • SAIN v. (archaic) to make the sign of the cross over. | 
| SAINTED | • sainted v. Simple past tense and past participle of saint. • sainted adj. Made a saint; saint-like, reverenced.
 • sainted adj. Used to mark a beloved person mentioned in conversation as being deceased.
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| SAINTLY | • saintly adj. Like or characteristic of a saint; befitting a holy person; saintlike. • SAINTLY adj. befitting a saint.
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| SAIQUES | • SAIQUE n. (Turkish) a Levantine vessel like a ketch, also SAIC, SAICK. | 
| SAIREST | • SAIR adj. (Scots) sore, very. | 
| SAIRING | • SAIR v. to savour, also SAR. | 
| SAITHES | • saithes n. Plural of saithe. • SAITHE n. the coalfish, also SAITH.
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| SAIYIDS | • SAIYID n. (Arabic) a descendant of Mohammed's daughter Fatima, also SAID, SAYED, SAYID, SAYYID. |