0%

6-letter words that end in id

  • nanoid — dwarfish.
  • navaid — an electronic aid to navigation.
  • nekkid — (of a person) naked.
  • nereid — (sometimes lowercase) Classical Mythology. any of the 50 daughters of Nereus; a sea nymph.
  • nevoid — any congenital anomaly of the skin, including moles and various types of birthmarks.
  • niobid — any of the children of Niobe.
  • noraid — an American organization that supports the Republicans in Northern Ireland
  • opioid — any opiumlike substance.
  • orchid — any terrestrial or epiphytic plant of the family Orchidaceae, of temperate and tropical regions, having usually showy flowers. Compare orchid family.
  • outbid — to outdo in bidding; make a higher bid than (another bidder).
  • outdid — to surpass in execution or performance: The cook outdid himself last night.
  • ozalid — (sometimes lowercase) a reproduction made by this process.
  • pallid — pale; faint or deficient in color; wan: a pallid countenance.
  • peloid — mud used therapeutically.
  • pierid — belonging or pertaining to the Pieridae, a family of butterflies comprising the whites, sulfurs, etc.
  • placid — pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled; tranquil; serenely quiet or undisturbed: placid waters.
  • pongid — any anthropoid primate of the family Pongidae, comprising the gorilla, chimpanzee, and orangutan; a great ape.
  • prebid — occurring prior to a bid
  • psocid — any of numerous minute winged insects of the family Psocidae (order Psocoptera), including most of the common barklice, having mouth parts adapted for chewing and feeding on fungi, lichens, algae, decaying plant material, etc., and occurring on the bark of trees and the leaves of plants.
  • putrid — in a state of foul decay or decomposition, as animal or vegetable matter; rotten.
  • rancid — having a rank, unpleasant, stale smell or taste, as through decomposition, especially of fats or oils: rancid butter.
  • rashid — a town in N Egypt, on the Nile delta
  • raucid — raucous
  • re-bid — to bid again, for example in a card game such as bridge
  • repaid — to pay back or refund, as money.
  • roscid — dewy
  • sayyid — (in Islamic countries) a supposed descendant of Muhammad through his grandson Hussein, the second son of his daughter Fatima.
  • sexfid — split into six lobes or clefts
  • sialid — any neuropterous insect of the family Sialidae, comprising the alderflies.
  • sigrid — a female given name: from a Scandinavian word meaning “victory.”.
  • sordid — morally ignoble or base; vile: sordid methods.
  • sparid — any of numerous fishes of the family Sparidae, chiefly inhabiting tropical and subtropical seas, comprising the porgies, the scups, etc.
  • spraid — chapped
  • stolid — not easily stirred or moved mentally; unemotional; impassive.
  • stupid — lacking ordinary quickness and keenness of mind; dull.
  • taqlid — the acceptance of authority in religious matters.
  • tineid — a moth of the family Tineidae, comprising the clothes moths.
  • toluid — a white crystalline derivative of glycocoll
  • toroid — a surface generated by the revolution of any closed plane curve or contour about an axis lying in its plane.
  • torpid — inactive or sluggish.
  • torrid — subject to parching or burning heat, especially of the sun, as a geographical area: the torrid sands of the Sahara.
  • toxoid — a toxin rendered nontoxic by treatment with chemical agents or by physical means and used for administration into the body in order to produce specific immunity by stimulating the production of antibodies.
  • trepid — fearful or apprehensive, especially trembling from fear.
  • trifid — cleft into three parts or lobes.
  • tuboid — having or approximating a tubular form.
  • turbid — not clear or transparent because of stirred-up sediment or the like; clouded; opaque; obscured: the turbid waters near the waterfall.
  • turgid — swollen; distended; tumid.
  • unlaid — not laid or placed: The table is still unlaid.
  • unpaid — a simple past tense and past participle of pay1 .
  • unsaid — simple past tense and past participle of unsay.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?