| SEEL | • seel adj. (Obsolete) Good; fortunate; opportune; happy. • seel n. (UK, dialectal) Good fortune; happiness; bliss. • seel n. (UK, dialectal) Opportunity; time; season. |
| SEELD | • SEELD adj. (Spenser) rare, unusual, also SELD. |
| SEELED | • seeled v. Simple past tense and past participle of seel. • SEEL v. to stitch closed the eyes of, as a falcon. |
| SEELIE | • Seelie n. (Fantasy, folklore) A benevolent or beneficially-inclined fairy. • Seelie adj. (Fantasy, folklore) Of or pertaining to the Seelie; benevolent (as a fairy, etc). • SEELIE n. good benevolent fairies. |
| SEELIER | • seelier adj. Comparative form of seely: more seely. • SEELY adj. fortunate; innocent. |
| SEELIEST | • seeliest adj. Superlative form of seely: most seely. • SEELY adj. fortunate; innocent. |
| SEELING | • seeling v. Present participle of seel. • SEELING n. (Spenser) a ceiling. |
| SEELINGS | • SEELING n. (Spenser) a ceiling. |
| SEELS | • seels v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of seel. • SEEL v. to stitch closed the eyes of, as a falcon. |
| SEELY | • seely adj. (Obsolete) Alternative form of sely or silly. • Seely prop.n. A surname. • SEELY adj. fortunate; innocent. |
| UNSEEL | • unseel v. (Obsolete) To open, as the eyes of a hawk that have been seeled. • unseel v. (Obsolete, by extension) To give light to; to enlighten. • UNSEEL v. to unstitch a hawk's eyelids. |
| UNSEELED | • unseeled v. Simple past tense and past participle of unseel. • UNSEEL v. to unstitch a hawk's eyelids. |
| UNSEELIE | • unseelie n. Alternative letter-case form of Unseelie. • unseelie adj. Alternative letter-case form of Unseelie. • Unseelie n. (Fantasy, folklore) A malevolent or malicious fairy. |
| UNSEELING | • unseeling v. Present participle of unseel. • UNSEEL v. to unstitch a hawk's eyelids. |
| UNSEELS | • unseels v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of unseel. • UNSEEL v. to unstitch a hawk's eyelids. |