| ARRAUGHT | • arraught adj. (Obsolete, poetic) obtained; seized. • AREACH v. (Spenser) to reach. |
| CLAUGHTS | • CLAUGHT v. (Scots) to snatch, also CLAUCHT. |
| DAUGHTER | • daughter n. One’s female offspring. • daughter n. A female descendant. • daughter n. A daughter language. |
| DRAUGHTS | • draughts n. Plural of draught. • draughts n. (Board games, Britain, Australia, uncountable) A board game for two players in which the players each… • draughts n. A mild vesicatory. |
| DRAUGHTY | • draughty adj. (British spelling) Standard spelling of drafty. • DRAUGHTY adj. exposed to currents of air, also DRAFTY. |
| FLAUGHTS | • FLAUGHT v. (Scots) to cut, pare. |
| FRAUGHTS | • fraughts n. Plural of fraught. • fraughts v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fraught. • FRAUGHT v. to load with tension. |
| LAUGHTER | • laughter n. The sound of laughing, produced by air so expelled; any similar sound. • laughter n. A movement (usually involuntary) of the muscles of the laughing face, particularly of the lips, and… • laughter n. (Archaic) A reason for merriment. |
| RECAUGHT | • recaught v. Simple past tense and past participle of recatch. • RECATCH v. to catch again. |
| RETAUGHT | • retaught v. Simple past tense and past participle of reteach. • RETEACH v. to teach again. |
| STRAUGHT | • straught v. (Obsolete) Alternative form of stretched. • straught v. (Dialectal, chiefly Scotland) To stretch; make straight. • straught adj. (Scotland) straight. |
| UNCAUGHT | • uncaught adj. Not caught. • UNCAUGHT adj. not caught. |
| UNTAUGHT | • untaught adj. Not taught; uneducated. • untaught adj. (Not comparable) Not taught; not conveyed by means of instruction. • UNTEACH v. to cause to unlearn something. |
| UPCAUGHT | • upcaught adj. (Archaic) Seized or caught up. • UPCATCH v. to catch up. |
| WAUGHTED | • waughted v. Simple past tense and past participle of waught. • WAUGHT v. (Scots) to drink in large draughts, also WAUCHT. |