| CONDENSES | • condenses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of condense. • CONDENSE v. to compress. |
| DICKENSES | • DICKENS n. (colloquial) the devil. |
| DISPENSES | • dispenses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dispense. • DISPENSE v. to distribute, also DISPENCE. |
| ELEVENSES | • elevenses n. (Britain, informal) A short mid-morning break taken around eleven o’clock for a drink or light snack. • ELEVENSES n. a light meal or coffee break at around 11 a.m. |
| MISSENSES | • missenses n. Plural of missense. • MISSENSE v. to sense wrongly. |
| NONSENSES | • nonsenses n. Plural of nonsense. • nonsenses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of nonsense. • NONSENSE n. anything which makes no sense. |
| PREPENSES | • prepenses v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of prepense. • PREPENSE v. (Spenser) to consider. |
| PRETENSES | • pretenses n. Plural of pretense. • PRETENSE n. the act of pretending, also PRETENCE. |
| PROTENSES | • PROTENSE n. (Spenser) an extension in time, a duration. |
| SIEMENSES | • SIEMENS n. a unit of electrical conductance equivalent to one ampere per volt. |
| SUBSENSES | • subsenses n. Plural of subsense. • SUBSENSE n. a subdivision of a sense. |
| SUBTENSES | • subtenses n. Plural of subtense. • SUBTENSE n. a line subtending, or stretching across; a chord; as, the subtense of an arc. |
| SUSPENSES | • suspenses n. Plural of suspense. • SUSPENSE n. a state of mental uncertainty or excitement. |