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6-letter words that end in d

  • chafed — to wear or abrade by rubbing: He chafed his shoes on the rocks.
  • chared — Simple past tense and past participle of chare.
  • chased — Pursue in order to catch or catch up with.
  • chasid — Hasid.
  • chawed — Simple past tense and past participle of chaw, i.e. nonstandard variant of chewed.
  • chesed — The Jewish attribute of grace, kindness or love; one of the sephiroth.
  • chewed — to crush or grind with the teeth; masticate.
  • chided — Simple past form of chide.
  • chield — a young man; fellow.
  • chimed — an apparatus for striking a bell so as to produce a musical sound, as one at the front door of a house by which visitors announce their presence.
  • chined — Pertaining to, or having, a chine, or backbone; used in composition.
  • choked — If you say something in a choked voice or if your voice is choked with emotion, your voice does not have its full sound, because you are upset or frightened.
  • chored — Simple past tense and past participle of chore.
  • chowed — Simple past tense and past participle of chow.
  • citied — having cities
  • clawed — having claws (sometimes used in combination): sharp-clawed.
  • clayed — a natural earthy material that is plastic when wet, consisting essentially of hydrated silicates of aluminum: used for making bricks, pottery, etc.
  • cleoid — a claw-shaped dental instrument used to remove carious material from a cavity.
  • cleped — to call; name (now chiefly in the past participle as ycleped or yclept).
  • clerid — a beetle that preys on other insects
  • clewed — Simple past tense and past participle of clew.
  • clinid — any of the blennioid fishes of the family Clinidae, of tropical and subtropical seas.
  • cloned — Simple past tense and past participle of clone.
  • closed — A closed group of people does not welcome new people or ideas from outside.
  • cloyed — to weary by an excess of food, sweetness, pleasure, etc.; surfeit; satiate.
  • coaled — Simple past tense and past participle of coal.
  • coated — covered with an outer layer, film, etc
  • coaxed — to attempt to influence by gentle persuasion, flattery, etc.; cajole: He coaxed her to sing, but she refused.
  • coccid — any homopterous insect of the superfamily Coccoidea, esp any of the family Coccidae, which includes the scale insects
  • cocked — a conical pile of hay, dung, etc.
  • cogged — having cogs.
  • cohead — a fellow principal or leader
  • coifed — wearing a coif
  • coiled — Coiled means in the form of a series of loops.
  • coined — a piece of metal stamped and issued by the authority of a government for use as money.
  • colead — to lead together
  • colled — Simple past tense and past participle of coll.
  • combed — Simple past tense and past participle of comb.
  • comped — a ticket, book, service, etc., provided free of charge to specially chosen recipients.
  • conked — a method of chemically straightening the hair.
  • conned — to strike, hit, or rap (something or someone).
  • conoid — a geometric surface formed by rotating a parabola, ellipse, or hyperbola about one axis
  • conrad — Joseph. real name Teodor Josef Konrad Korzeniowski. 1857–1924, British novelist born in Poland, noted for sea stories such as The Nigger of the Narcissus (1897) and Lord Jim (1900) and novels of politics and revolution such as Nostromo (1904) and Under Western Eyes (1911)
  • cooeed — Simple past tense and past participle of cooee.
  • cooked — to prepare (food) by the use of heat, as by boiling, baking, or roasting.
  • cooled — At a lower temperature.
  • cooned — Simple past tense and past participle of coon.
  • cooped — an enclosure, cage, or pen, usually with bars or wires, in which fowls or other small animals are confined for fattening, transportation, etc.
  • copied — an imitation, reproduction, or transcript of an original: a copy of a famous painting.
  • copped — to catch; nab.
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