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8-letter words containing lad

  • ladyhood — The quality or state of being a lady or ladylike.
  • ladylike — like a lady.
  • ladylove — a beloved woman; sweetheart or mistress.
  • ladypalm — a type of small palm of the genus Rhapis, popularly grown as an indoor plant
  • ladyship — (often initial capital letter) the form used in speaking of or to a woman having the title of Lady (usually preceded by her or your).
  • landlady — a woman who owns and leases an apartment, house, land, etc., to others.
  • mailclad — Protected by a coat of mail; clad in armour.
  • maladapt — To adapt badly; to exhibit maladaptation.
  • maladies — any disorder or disease of the body, especially one that is chronic or deepseated.
  • miladies — Plural form of milady.
  • newslady — A newswoman.
  • oeillade — an amorous glance; ogle.
  • old lady — a mother, usually one's own.
  • our lady — a title of the Virgin Mary.
  • overclad — wearing too many clothes
  • overglad — too glad
  • overlade — to overload (usually used in past participle overladen): a table overladen with rich food.
  • palladia — Also, Palladion [puh-ley-dee-on] /pəˈleɪ diˌɒn/ (Show IPA). a statue of Athena, especially one on the citadel of Troy on which the safety of the city was supposed to depend.
  • palladic — of or containing palladium, especially in the tetravalent state.
  • palladio — Andrea [ahn-dre-ah] /ɑnˈdrɛ ɑ/ (Show IPA), 1508–80, Italian architect famous for his widely translated Four Books of Architecture, 1570.
  • polyclad — any free-swimming, marine flatworm of the order Polycladida, having a broad, flat body and a many-branched gastrovascular cavity.
  • remolade — rémoulade.
  • salading — the ingredients for a salad
  • sawblade — the blade of a saw
  • seladang — the gaur.
  • silladar — an Indian irregular cavalryman
  • tea lady — a woman employed in a factory, office, etc to make tea during a tea break
  • thinclad — a runner on a track team
  • villadom — villas collectively.
  • vladimirSaint. Also, Vladimir I, Wladimir. (Vladimir the Great) a.d. c956–1015, first Christian grand prince of Russia 980–1015.
  • welladay — woe! alas!
  • wladimir — Vladimir.
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