| APPLAUD | • applaud n. (Obsolete) Applause; applauding. • applaud n. (Obsolete) Plaudit. • applaud v. (Transitive, intransitive) To express approval (of something) by clapping the hands. | 
| APPLETS | • applets n. Plural of applet. • APPLET n. a small single-purpose add-on computer program. | 
| APPLIED | • applied adj. Put into practical use. • applied adj. Of a branch of science, serving another branch of science or engineering. • applied v. Simple past tense and past participle of apply. | 
| APPLIER | • applier n. A person or device that applies something. • APPLIER n. one who applies. | 
| APPLIES | • applies v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of apply. • APPLY v. to bring to bear. | 
| DAPPLED | • dappled adj. Having a mottled or spotted skin or coat, dapple. • dappled v. Simple past tense and past participle of dapple. • DAPPLE v. to mark with spots. | 
| DAPPLES | • dapples n. Plural of dapple. • dapples v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dapple. • DAPPLE v. to mark with spots. | 
| GRAPPLE | • grapple v. (Transitive) To seize something and hold it firmly. • grapple v. (Intransitive) To wrestle or tussle. • grapple v. (Figuratively, with with) To ponder and intensely evaluate a problem; to struggle to deal with. | 
| KNAPPLE | • KNAPPLE v. to break off with an abrupt, sharp noise. | 
| REAPPLY | • reapply v. To apply again. • REAPPLY v. to apply again. | 
| SAPPLED | • SAPPLE v. (Scots) to wash clothes by hand in soapy water. | 
| SAPPLES | • sapples n. (Scotland) soapsuds. • SAPPLE v. (Scots) to wash clothes by hand in soapy water. | 
| SCAPPLE | • scapple v. (Transitive) To work roughly, or shape without finishing, as stone before leaving the quarry. • scapple v. (Transitive) To dress (e.g. stone) in any way short of fine tooling or rubbing. • SCAPPLE v. to work stone smoothly, without smoothing to a finish, also SCABBLE. | 
| STAPPLE | • STAPPLE n. the stem of a tobacco pipe. |