5-letter words that end in y
- decry — If someone decries an idea or action, they criticize it strongly.
- deedy — hard-working, busy, eager, and tireless
- defly — Obsolete form of deftly.
- deify — If someone is deified, they are considered to be a god or are regarded with very great respect.
- deity — A deity is a god or goddess.
- delay — If you delay doing something, you do not do it immediately or at the planned or expected time, but you leave it until later.
- delly — full of dells
- denay — a denial
- denny — a male given name, form of Dennis.
- deray — disorder; chaos; disarray
- derby — The Derby is the name of a race for three-year-old horses that takes place each year. In Britain, it refers to a race that takes place in Epsom. In the United States, it refers particularly to the Kentucky Derby.
- derny — (cycling) A motorized bicycle for paced cycling events such as keirin.
- derpy — (slang) Foolish, silly.
- derry — a derelict house, esp one used by tramps, drug addicts, etc
- devoy — Dame Susan (Elizabeth Anne). born 1964, New Zealand squash player; winner of the World Open Championship 1985, 1987, 1990, and 1992
- dewey — John. 1859–1952, US pragmatist philosopher and educator: an exponent of progressivism in education, he formulated an instrumentalist theory of learning through experience. His works include The School and Society (1899), Democracy and Education (1916), and Logic: the Theory of Inquiry (1938)
- diary — A diary is a book which has a separate space for each day of the year. You use a diary to write down things you plan to do, or to record what happens in your life day by day.
- dicey — Something that is dicey is slightly dangerous or uncertain.
- dicky — a woman's false blouse front, worn to fill in the neck of a jacket or low-cut dress
- dicty — snobbish and pretentious
- diddy — a female breast or nipple
- diety — Good for a diet.
- digby — Sir Kenelm, 1603–65, English writer, naval commander, and diplomat.
- dikey — dyke2 .
- dilly — something or someone regarded as remarkable, unusual, etc.: a dilly of a movie.
- dimly — not bright; obscure from lack of light or emitted light: a dim room; a dim flashlight.
- dingy — of a dark, dull, or dirty color or aspect; lacking brightness or freshness.
- dinky — Informal. small, unimportant, unimpressive, or shabby: We stayed in a dinky old hotel.
- dippy — somewhat mad or foolish: dippy with love.
- dirgy — Like a dirge; funereal.
- dirty — soiled with dirt; foul; unclean: dirty laundry.
- dishy — Chiefly British. very attractive; pretty or beautiful: a couple of dishy fashion models.
- ditsy — flighty and easily confused; mildly or harmlessly eccentric.
- ditty — a poem intended to be sung.
- ditzy — flighty and easily confused; mildly or harmlessly eccentric.
- divey — Having the character of a dive, a disreputable bar or nightclub.
- divvy — a distribution or sharing.
- dizzy — having a sensation of whirling and a tendency to fall; giddy; vertiginous.
- do by — Informal. a burst of frenzied activity; action; commotion.
- dobby — British Dialect. a fatuous person; fool.
- doddy — doddie.
- dodgy — inclined to dodge.
- dogey — dogie.
- doggy — a little dog or a puppy.
- dogly — Of, like, or pertaining to dogs or the dog family; canine.
- doily — any small, ornamental mat, as of embroidery or lace.
- doisy — Edward Adelbert [ad-l-bert,, uh-del-] /ˈæd l bərt,, əˈdɛl-/ (Show IPA), 1893–1986, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1943.
- dolby — Dolby is a system which reduces the background noise on electronic cassette players.
- dolly — Informal. a doll.
- doney — (colloquial) girl, sweetheart, darling, young woman, woman.