| CARRECT | • CARRECT n. (historical) a large ship of burden, also CARACK, CARRACK, CARRACT. |
| COERECT | • COERECT v. to erect together. |
| CORRECT | • correct adj. Free from error; true; accurate. • correct adj. With good manners; well behaved; conforming with accepted standards of behaviour. • correct interj. Used to indicate acknowledgement or acceptance. |
| DIRECTS | • directs v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of direct. • DIRECT v. to control or conduct the affairs of. |
| ERECTED | • erected v. Simple past tense and past participle of erect. • erected adj. (Nonstandard, physiology) erect. • ERECT v. to build or raise up. |
| ERECTER | • erecter n. Alternative form of erector (one who raises or builds). • ERECTER n. one that erects, also ERECTOR. |
| ERECTLY | • erectly adv. In an erect manner. • ERECT adv. upright. |
| ERECTOR | • erector n. A person who, or a device which erects. • erector n. (Anatomy) Any of several muscles that make parts of the body erect. • erector n. An attachment to a microscope, telescope, etc. for making the image erect instead of inverted. |
| ORECTIC | • orectic adj. Of or pertaining to desire or appetite. • ORECTIC adj. pertaining to desires and their satisfaction, also ORECTIVE. |
| PORRECT | • porrect adj. (Entomology, botany) stretched out or forward. • porrect v. To stretch out or forward. • porrect v. (Law) To proffer (a document) for inspection. |
| RECTIFY | • rectify v. (Obsolete, transitive) To heal (an organ or part of the body). • rectify v. (Transitive) To restore (someone or something) to its proper condition; to straighten out, to set right. • rectify v. (Transitive) To remedy or fix (An undesirable state of affairs, situation etc.). |
| RECTION | • rection n. (Grammar, archaic) regimen; government; the rules governing the syntax, rules of agreement of a language. • RECTION n. syntactical government, i.e. the influence of one word over another in determining the case of a noun, the mood of a verb, etc. |
| RECTORS | • rectors n. Plural of rector. • Rectors prop.n. Plural of Rector. • RECTOR n. in the Church of England, a clergyman of a parish where the tithes were formerly paid to the incumbent. |
| RECTORY | • rectory n. The residence of Roman Catholic priest(s) associated with a parish church. • rectory n. The residence of an Anglican rector. • RECTORY n. a rector's dwelling. |
| RECTRIX | • rectrix n. A governess; a rectoress. • rectrix n. A flight feather on the tails of birds, used for directional control. • RECTRIX n. (Latin) a feather of a bird's tail. |
| RECTUMS | • rectums n. Plural of rectum. • RECTUM n. (Latin) the terminal portion of the large intestine. |
| REERECT | • reerect v. (Transitive) To erect again. • re-erect v. Alternative form of reerect. • REERECT v. to erect again. |