-
accede
0
v 1: yield to another's wish or opinion; "The government bowed
to the military pressure" [syn: submit, bow, defer,
accede, give in]
2: take on duties or office; "accede to the throne" [syn:
accede, enter]
3: to agree or express agreement; "The Maestro assented to the
request for an encore" [syn: assent, accede, acquiesce]
[ant: dissent]
-
agreed
0
adj 1: united by being of the same opinion; "agreed in their
distrust of authority" [syn: agreed, in agreement(p)]
-
bead
0
n 1: a small ball with a hole through the middle
2: a shape that is spherical and small; "he studied the shapes
of low-viscosity drops"; "beads of sweat on his forehead"
[syn: drop, bead, pearl]
3: a beaded molding for edging or decorating furniture [syn:
beading, bead, beadwork, astragal]
v 1: form into beads, as of water or sweat, for example
2: decorate by sewing beads onto; "bead the wedding gown"
3: string together like beads
-
bleed
0
v 1: lose blood from one's body [syn: shed blood, bleed,
hemorrhage]
2: draw blood; "In the old days, doctors routinely bled patients
as part of the treatment" [syn: bleed, leech,
phlebotomize, phlebotomise]
3: get or extort (money or other possessions) from someone;
"They bled me dry--I have nothing left!"
4: be diffused; "These dyes and colors are guaranteed not to
run" [syn: run, bleed]
5: drain of liquid or steam; "bleed the radiators"; "the
mechanic bled the engine"
-
bodied
0
adj 1: having a body or a body of a specified kind; often used
in combination; "strong-bodied"; "big-bodied" [ant:
unbodied]
2: possessing or existing in bodily form; "what seemed corporal
melted as breath into the wind"- Shakespeare; "an incarnate
spirit"; "`corporate' is an archaic term" [syn: bodied,
corporal, corporate, embodied, incarnate]
-
breed
0
n 1: a special variety of domesticated animals within a species;
"he experimented on a particular breed of white rats"; "he
created a new strain of sheep" [syn: breed, strain,
stock]
2: a special type; "Google represents a new breed of
entrepreneurs"
v 1: call forth [syn: engender, breed, spawn]
2: copulate with a female, used especially of horses; "The horse
covers the mare" [syn: breed, cover]
3: cause to procreate (animals); "She breeds dogs"
4: have young (animals) or reproduce (organisms); "pandas rarely
breed in captivity"; "These bacteria reproduce" [syn:
breed, multiply]
-
candied
0
adj 1: encrusted with sugar or syrup; "candied grapefruit peel"
[syn: candied, sugar-coated]
2: (used especially of fruits) preserved by coating with or
allowing to absorb sugar [syn: candied, crystalized,
crystalised, glace]
-
cede
0
v 1: give over; surrender or relinquish to the physical control
of another [syn: concede, yield, cede, grant]
2: relinquish possession or control over; "The squatters had to
surrender the building after the police moved in" [syn:
surrender, cede, deliver, give up]
-
concede
0
v 1: admit (to a wrongdoing); "She confessed that she had taken
the money" [syn: concede, profess, confess]
2: be willing to concede; "I grant you this much" [syn:
concede, yield, grant]
3: give over; surrender or relinquish to the physical control of
another [syn: concede, yield, cede, grant]
4: acknowledge defeat; "The candidate conceded after enough
votes had come in to show that he would lose"
-
creed
0
n 1: any system of principles or beliefs [syn: creed, credo]
2: the written body of teachings of a religious group that are
generally accepted by that group [syn: religious doctrine,
church doctrine, gospel, creed]
-
decreed
0
adj 1: fixed or established especially by order or command; "at
the time appointed (or the appointed time") [syn:
appointed, decreed, ordained, prescribed]
-
deed
0
n 1: a legal document signed and sealed and delivered to effect
a transfer of property and to show the legal right to
possess it; "he signed the deed"; "he kept the title to his
car in the glove compartment" [syn: deed, deed of
conveyance, title]
2: something that people do or cause to happen [syn: act,
deed, human action, human activity]
-
disembodied
0
adj 1: not having a material body; "bodiless ghosts" [syn:
discorporate, unembodied, bodiless, unbodied,
disembodied]
-
embodied
0
adj 1: possessing or existing in bodily form; "what seemed
corporal melted as breath into the wind"- Shakespeare;
"an incarnate spirit"; "`corporate' is an archaic term"
[syn: bodied, corporal, corporate, embodied,
incarnate]
-
exceed
0
v 1: be greater in scope or size than some standard; "Their
loyalty exceeds their national bonds" [syn: exceed,
transcend, surpass]
2: be superior or better than some standard; "She exceeded our
expectations"; "She topped her performance of last year"
[syn: exceed, transcend, overstep, pass, go past,
top]
3: be or do something to a greater degree; "her performance
surpasses that of any other student I know"; "She outdoes all
other athletes"; "This exceeds all my expectations"; "This
car outperforms all others in its class" [syn: surpass,
outstrip, outmatch, outgo, exceed, outdo,
surmount, outperform]
-
feed
0
n 1: food for domestic livestock [syn: feed, provender]
v 1: provide as food; "Feed the guests the nuts"
2: give food to; "Feed the starving children in India"; "don't
give the child this tough meat" [syn: feed, give] [ant:
famish, starve]
3: feed into; supply; "Her success feeds her vanity"
4: introduce continuously; "feed carrots into a food processor"
[syn: feed, feed in]
5: support or promote; "His admiration fed her vanity"
6: take in food; used of animals only; "This dog doesn't eat
certain kinds of meat"; "What do whales eat?" [syn: feed,
eat]
7: serve as food for; be the food for; "This dish feeds six"
8: move along, of liquids; "Water flowed into the cave"; "the
Missouri feeds into the Mississippi" [syn: run, flow,
feed, course]
9: profit from in an exploitatory manner; "He feeds on her
insecurity" [syn: prey, feed]
10: gratify; "feed one's eyes on a gorgeous view" [syn: feed,
feast]
11: provide with fertilizers or add nutrients to; "We should
fertilize soil if we want to grow healthy plants" [syn:
fertilize, fertilise, feed]
-
fried
0
adj 1: cooked by frying in fat [syn: fried, deep-fried]
-
greed
0
n 1: excessive desire to acquire or possess more (especially
more material wealth) than one needs or deserves
2: reprehensible acquisitiveness; insatiable desire for wealth
(personified as one of the deadly sins) [syn: avarice,
greed, covetousness, rapacity, avaritia]
-
heed
0
n 1: paying particular notice (as to children or helpless
people); "his attentiveness to her wishes"; "he spends
without heed to the consequences" [syn: attentiveness,
heed, regard, paying attention] [ant: heedlessness,
inattentiveness]
v 1: pay close attention to; give heed to; "Heed the advice of
the old men" [syn: heed, mind, listen]
-
impede
0
v 1: be a hindrance or obstacle to; "She is impeding the
progress of our project" [syn: impede, hinder]
2: block passage through; "obstruct the path" [syn: obstruct,
obturate, impede, occlude, jam, block, close up]
[ant: disengage, free]
-
indeed
0
adv 1: in truth (often tends to intensify); "they said the car
would break down and indeed it did"; "it is very cold
indeed"; "was indeed grateful"; "indeed, the rain may
still come"; "he did so do it!" [syn: indeed, so]
2: (used as an interjection) an expression of surprise or
skepticism or irony etc.; "Wants to marry the butler?
Indeed!"
-
intercede
0
v 1: act between parties with a view to reconciling differences;
"He interceded in the family dispute"; "He mediated a
settlement" [syn: intercede, mediate, intermediate,
liaise, arbitrate]
-
keyed
0
adj 1: fitted with or secured by a key; "a keyed instrument";
"the locks have not yet been keyed" [ant: keyless]
2: set to a key or tone
-
knead
0
v 1: make uniform; "knead dough"; "work the clay until it is
soft" [syn: knead, work]
2: manually manipulate (someone's body), usually for medicinal
or relaxation purposes; "She rubbed down her child with a
sponge" [syn: massage, rub down, knead]
-
lead
0
n 1: an advantage held by a competitor in a race; "he took the
lead at the last turn"
2: a soft heavy toxic malleable metallic element; bluish white
when freshly cut but tarnishes readily to dull grey; "the
children were playing with lead soldiers" [syn: lead, Pb,
atomic number 82]
3: evidence pointing to a possible solution; "the police are
following a promising lead"; "the trail led straight to the
perpetrator" [syn: lead, track, trail]
4: a position of leadership (especially in the phrase `take the
lead'); "he takes the lead in any group"; "we were just
waiting for someone to take the lead"; "they didn't follow
our lead"
5: the angle between the direction a gun is aimed and the
position of a moving target (correcting for the flight time
of the missile)
6: the introductory section of a story; "it was an amusing lead-
in to a very serious matter" [syn: lead, lead-in, lede]
7: (sports) the score by which a team or individual is winning
[ant: deficit]
8: an actor who plays a principal role [syn: star,
principal, lead]
9: (baseball) the position taken by a base runner preparing to
advance to the next base; "he took a long lead off first"
10: an indication of potential opportunity; "he got a tip on the
stock market"; "a good lead for a job" [syn: tip, lead,
steer, confidential information, wind, hint]
11: a news story of major importance [syn: lead, lead story]
12: the timing of ignition relative to the position of the
piston in an internal-combustion engine [syn: spark
advance, lead]
13: restraint consisting of a rope (or light chain) used to
restrain an animal [syn: leash, tether, lead]
14: thin strip of metal used to separate lines of type in
printing [syn: lead, leading]
15: mixture of graphite with clay in different degrees of
hardness; the marking substance in a pencil [syn: lead,
pencil lead]
16: a jumper that consists of a short piece of wire; "it was a
tangle of jumper cables and clip leads" [syn: jumper
cable, jumper lead, lead, booster cable]
17: the playing of a card to start a trick in bridge; "the lead
was in the dummy"
v 1: take somebody somewhere; "We lead him to our chief"; "can
you take me to the main entrance?"; "He conducted us to the
palace" [syn: lead, take, direct, conduct, guide]
2: have as a result or residue; "The water left a mark on the
silk dress"; "Her blood left a stain on the napkin" [syn:
leave, result, lead]
3: tend to or result in; "This remark lead to further arguments
among the guests"
4: travel in front of; go in advance of others; "The procession
was headed by John" [syn: lead, head]
5: cause to undertake a certain action; "Her greed led her to
forge the checks"
6: stretch out over a distance, space, time, or scope; run or
extend between two points or beyond a certain point; "Service
runs all the way to Cranbury"; "His knowledge doesn't go very
far"; "My memory extends back to my fourth year of life";
"The facts extend beyond a consideration of her personal
assets" [syn: run, go, pass, lead, extend]
7: be in charge of; "Who is heading this project?" [syn: head,
lead]
8: be ahead of others; be the first; "she topped her class every
year" [syn: lead, top]
9: be conducive to; "The use of computers in the classroom lead
to better writing" [syn: contribute, lead, conduce]
10: lead, as in the performance of a composition; "conduct an
orchestra; Barenboim conducted the Chicago symphony for
years" [syn: conduct, lead, direct]
11: lead, extend, or afford access; "This door goes to the
basement"; "The road runs South" [syn: go, lead]
12: move ahead (of others) in time or space [syn: precede,
lead] [ant: follow]
13: cause something to pass or lead somewhere; "Run the wire
behind the cabinet" [syn: run, lead]
14: preside over; "John moderated the discussion" [syn:
moderate, chair, lead]
-
mead
0
n 1: United States anthropologist noted for her claims about
adolescence and sexual behavior in Polynesian cultures
(1901-1978) [syn: Mead, Margaret Mead]
2: United States philosopher of pragmatism (1863-1931) [syn:
Mead, George Herbert Mead]
3: made of fermented honey and water
-
misdeed
0
n 1: improper or wicked or immoral behavior [syn: misbehavior,
misbehaviour, misdeed]
-
mislead
0
v 1: lead someone in the wrong direction or give someone wrong
directions; "The pedestrian misdirected the out-of-town
driver" [syn: mislead, misdirect, misguide, lead
astray]
2: give false or misleading information to [syn: misinform,
mislead]
-
misread
0
v 1: read or interpret wrongly; "He misread the data"
2: interpret wrongly; "I misread Hamlet all my life!" [syn:
misread, misinterpret]
-
muddied
0
adj 1: (of color) discolored by impurities; not bright and
clear; "dirty" is often used in combination; "a dirty (or
dingy) white"; "the muddied grey of the sea"; "muddy
colors"; "dirty-green walls"; "dirty-blonde hair" [syn:
dirty, dingy, muddied, muddy]
-
need
0
n 1: a condition requiring relief; "she satisfied his need for
affection"; "God has no need of men to accomplish His
work"; "there is a demand for jobs" [syn: need, demand]
2: anything that is necessary but lacking; "he had sufficient
means to meet his simple needs"; "I tried to supply his
wants" [syn: need, want]
3: the psychological feature that arouses an organism to action
toward a desired goal; the reason for the action; that which
gives purpose and direction to behavior; "we did not
understand his motivation"; "he acted with the best of
motives" [syn: motivation, motive, need]
4: a state of extreme poverty or destitution; "their indigence
appalled him"; "a general state of need exists among the
homeless" [syn: indigence, need, penury, pauperism,
pauperization]
v 1: require as useful, just, or proper; "It takes nerve to do
what she did"; "success usually requires hard work"; "This
job asks a lot of patience and skill"; "This position
demands a lot of personal sacrifice"; "This dinner calls
for a spectacular dessert"; "This intervention does not
postulate a patient's consent" [syn: necessitate, ask,
postulate, need, require, take, involve, call
for, demand] [ant: eliminate, obviate, rid of]
2: have need of; "This piano wants the attention of a competent
tuner" [syn: want, need, require]
3: have or feel a need for; "always needing friends and money"
-
overfeed
0
v 1: feed excessively
-
plead
0
v 1: appeal or request earnestly; "I pleaded with him to stop"
2: offer as an excuse or plea; "She was pleading insanity"
3: enter a plea, as in courts of law; "She pleaded not guilty"
4: make an allegation in an action or other legal proceeding,
especially answer the previous pleading of the other party by
denying facts therein stated or by alleging new facts
-
precede
0
v 1: be earlier in time; go back further; "Stone tools precede
bronze tools" [syn: predate, precede, forego,
forgo, antecede, antedate] [ant: follow,
postdate]
2: come before; "Most English adjectives precede the noun they
modify" [syn: precede, predate]
3: be the predecessor of; "Bill preceded John in the long line
of Susan's husbands" [syn: precede, come before] [ant:
come after, follow, succeed]
4: move ahead (of others) in time or space [syn: precede,
lead] [ant: follow]
5: furnish with a preface or introduction; "She always precedes
her lectures with a joke"; "He prefaced his lecture with a
critical remark about the institution" [syn: precede,
preface, premise, introduce]
-
proceed
0
v 1: continue talking; "I know it's hard," he continued, "but
there is no choice"; "carry on--pretend we are not in the
room" [syn: continue, go on, carry on, proceed]
2: move ahead; travel onward in time or space; "We proceeded
towards Washington"; "She continued in the direction of the
hills"; "We are moving ahead in time now" [syn: proceed,
go forward, continue]
3: follow a procedure or take a course; "We should go farther in
this matter"; "She went through a lot of trouble"; "go about
the world in a certain manner"; "Messages must go through
diplomatic channels" [syn: go, proceed, move]
4: follow a certain course; "The inauguration went well"; "how
did your interview go?" [syn: proceed, go]
5: continue a certain state, condition, or activity; "Keep on
working!"; "We continued to work into the night"; "Keep
smiling"; "We went on working until well past midnight" [syn:
continue, go on, proceed, go along, keep] [ant:
discontinue]
-
read
0
n 1: something that is read; "the article was a very good read"
v 1: interpret something that is written or printed; "read the
advertisement"; "Have you read Salman Rushdie?"
2: have or contain a certain wording or form; "The passage reads
as follows"; "What does the law say?" [syn: read, say]
3: look at, interpret, and say out loud something that is
written or printed; "The King will read the proclamation at
noon"
4: obtain data from magnetic tapes; "This dictionary can be read
by the computer" [syn: read, scan]
5: interpret the significance of, as of palms, tea leaves,
intestines, the sky; also of human behavior; "She read the
sky and predicted rain"; "I can't read his strange behavior";
"The fortune teller read his fate in the crystal ball"
6: interpret something in a certain way; convey a particular
meaning or impression; "I read this address as a satire";
"How should I take this message?"; "You can't take credit for
this!" [syn: take, read]
7: be a student of a certain subject; "She is reading for the
bar exam" [syn: learn, study, read, take]
8: indicate a certain reading; of gauges and instruments; "The
thermometer showed thirteen degrees below zero"; "The gauge
read `empty'" [syn: read, register, show, record]
9: audition for a stage role by reading parts of a role; "He is
auditioning for `Julius Caesar' at Stratford this year"
10: to hear and understand; "I read you loud and clear!"
11: make sense of a language; "She understands French"; "Can you
read Greek?" [syn: understand, read, interpret,
translate]
-
recede
0
v 1: pull back or move away or backward; "The enemy withdrew";
"The limo pulled away from the curb" [syn: withdraw,
retreat, pull away, draw back, recede, pull back,
retire, move back] [ant: advance, go on, march
on, move on, pass on, progress]
2: retreat [syn: fall back, lose, drop off, fall behind,
recede] [ant: advance, gain, gain ground, get
ahead, make headway, pull ahead, win]
3: become faint or more distant; "the unhappy memories of her
childhood receded as she grew older"
-
reed
0
n 1: tall woody perennial grasses with hollow slender stems
especially of the genera Arundo and Phragmites
2: United States journalist who reported on the October
Revolution from Petrograd in 1917; founded the Communist
Labor Party in America in 1919; is buried in the Kremlin in
Moscow (1887-1920) [syn: Reed, John Reed]
3: United States physician who proved that yellow fever is
transmitted by mosquitoes (1851-1902) [syn: Reed, Walter
Reed]
4: a vibrator consisting of a thin strip of stiff material that
vibrates to produce a tone when air streams over it; "the
clarinetist fitted a new reed onto his mouthpiece" [syn:
reed, vibrating reed]
5: a musical instrument that sounds by means of a vibrating reed
[syn: beating-reed instrument, reed instrument, reed]
-
reread
0
v 1: read anew; read again; "He re-read her letters to him"
-
reseed
0
v 1: seed again or anew
2: maintain by seeding without human intervention; "Some plants
reseed themselves indefinitely"
-
screed
0
n 1: a long monotonous harangue
2: a long piece of writing
3: an accurately levelled strip of material placed on a wall or
floor as guide for the even application of plaster or
concrete
-
secede
0
v 1: withdraw from an organization or communion; "After the
break up of the Soviet Union, many republics broke away"
[syn: secede, splinter, break away]
-
seed
0
n 1: a small hard fruit
2: a mature fertilized plant ovule consisting of an embryo and
its food source and having a protective coat or testa
3: one of the outstanding players in a tournament [syn: seeded
player, seed]
4: anything that provides inspiration for later work [syn:
source, seed, germ]
5: the thick white fluid containing spermatozoa that is
ejaculated by the male genital tract [syn: semen, seed,
seminal fluid, ejaculate, cum, come]
v 1: go to seed; shed seeds; "The dandelions went to seed"
2: help (an enterprise) in its early stages of development by
providing seed money
3: bear seeds
4: place (seeds) in or on the ground for future growth; "She
sowed sunflower seeds" [syn: sow, seed]
5: distribute (players or teams) so that outstanding teams or
players will not meet in the early rounds
6: sprinkle with silver iodide particles to disperse and cause
rain; "seed clouds"
7: inoculate with microorganisms
8: remove the seeds from; "seed grapes"
-
speed
0
n 1: distance travelled per unit time [syn: speed, velocity]
2: a rate (usually rapid) at which something happens; "the
project advanced with gratifying speed" [syn: speed,
swiftness, fastness]
3: changing location rapidly [syn: speed, speeding,
hurrying]
4: the ratio of the focal length to the diameter of a (camera)
lens system [syn: focal ratio, f number, stop number,
speed]
5: a central nervous system stimulant that increases energy and
decreases appetite; used to treat narcolepsy and some forms
of depression [syn: amphetamine, pep pill, upper,
speed]
v 1: move fast; "He rushed down the hall to receive his guests";
"The cars raced down the street" [syn: rush, hotfoot,
hasten, hie, speed, race, pelt along, rush
along, cannonball along, bucket along, belt along,
step on it] [ant: dawdle, linger]
2: move faster; "The car accelerated" [syn: accelerate, speed
up, speed, quicken] [ant: decelerate, retard,
slow, slow down, slow up]
3: move very fast; "The runner zipped past us at breakneck
speed" [syn: travel rapidly, speed, hurry, zip]
4: travel at an excessive or illegal velocity; "I got a ticket
for speeding"
5: cause to move faster; "He accelerated the car" [syn:
accelerate, speed, speed up] [ant: decelerate, slow
down]
-
stampede
0
n 1: a headlong rush of people on a common impulse; "when he
shouted `fire' there was a stampede to the exits"
2: a wild headlong rush of frightened animals (horses or cattle)
v 1: cause to run in panic; "Thunderbolts can stampede animals"
2: cause a group or mass of people to act on an impulse or
hurriedly and impulsively; "The tavern owners stampeded us
into overeating"
3: act, usually en masse, hurriedly or on an impulse; "Companies
will now stampede to release their latest software"
4: run away in a stampede
-
steadied
0
adj 1: made steady or constant; "the noise became a steadied
roaring"
-
steed
0
n 1: (literary) a spirited horse for state or war
-
studied
0
adj 1: produced or marked by conscious design or premeditation;
"a studied smile"; "a note of biting irony and studied
insult"- V.L.Parrington [ant: uncontrived, unstudied]
-
succeed
0
v 1: attain success or reach a desired goal; "The enterprise
succeeded"; "We succeeded in getting tickets to the show";
"she struggled to overcome her handicap and won" [syn:
succeed, win, come through, bring home the bacon,
deliver the goods] [ant: fail, go wrong, miscarry]
2: be the successor (of); "Carter followed Ford"; "Will Charles
succeed to the throne?" [syn: succeed, come after,
follow] [ant: come before, precede]
-
supersede
0
v 1: take the place or move into the position of; "Smith
replaced Miller as CEO after Miller left"; "the computer
has supplanted the slide rule"; "Mary replaced Susan as the
team's captain and the highest-ranked player in the school"
[syn: supplant, replace, supersede, supervene upon,
supercede]
-
treed
0
adj 1: forced to turn and face attackers; "a stag at bay"; "she
had me cornered between the porch and her car"; "like a
trapped animal" [syn: at bay(p), cornered, trapped,
treed]
-
tweed
0
n 1: thick woolen fabric used for clothing; originated in
Scotland
2: (usually in the plural) trousers made of flannel or gabardine
or tweed or white cloth [syn: flannel, gabardine,
tweed, white]
-
weed
0
n 1: any plant that crowds out cultivated plants [ant:
cultivated plant]
2: a black band worn by a man (on the arm or hat) as a sign of
mourning [syn: weed, mourning band]
3: street names for marijuana [syn: pot, grass, green
goddess, dope, weed, gage, sess, sens, smoke,
skunk, locoweed, Mary Jane]
v 1: clear of weeds; "weed the garden"
-
bede
0
n 1: (Roman Catholic Church) English monk and scholar (672-735)
[syn: Bede, Saint Bede, St. Bede, Baeda, Saint
Baeda, St. Baeda, Beda, Saint Beda, St. Beda, the
Venerable Bede]
-
meade
0
n 1: English economist noted for his studies of international
trade and finance (1907-1995) [syn: Meade, James Edward
Meade]
2: United States general in charge of the Union troops at the
Battle of Gettysburg (1815-1872) [syn: Meade, George
Gordon Meade]
-
reid
0
n 1: Scottish philosopher of common sense who opposed the ideas
of David Hume (1710-1796) [syn: Reid, Thomas Reid]
-
snead
0
n 1: United States golfer known for the graceful arc of his
swing (1912-2002) [syn: Snead, Sam Snead, Samuel
Jackson Snead]
-
swede
0
n 1: a native or inhabitant of Sweden
2: a cruciferous plant with a thick bulbous edible yellow root
[syn: rutabaga, turnip cabbage, swede, Swedish
turnip, rutabaga plant, Brassica napus napobrassica]
3: the large yellow root of a rutabaga plant used as food [syn:
rutabaga, swede, swedish turnip, yellow turnip]
-
lipide
0
n 1: an oily organic compound insoluble in water but soluble in
organic solvents; essential structural component of living
cells (along with proteins and carbohydrates) [syn:
lipid, lipide, lipoid]
-
shaheed
0
n 1: Arabic term for holy martyrs; applied by Palestinians to
suicide bombers
-
unbodied
0
adj 1: having no body [ant: bodied]
2: not having a material body; "bodiless ghosts" [syn:
discorporate, unembodied, bodiless, unbodied,
disembodied]
-
bandied
0
-
birdied
0
-
bloodied
0
-
brandied
0
-
disagreed
0
-
freed
0
-
guaranteed
0
-
kneed
0
-
parodied
0
-
readied
0
-
remedied
0
-
skied
0
-
we'd
0
-
beede
0
-
brede
0
-
diede
0
-
eade
0
-
ede
0
-
fede
0
-
frede
0
-
freid
0
-
friede
0
-
gaede
0
-
grede
0
-
leed
0
-
nead
0
-
nied
0
-
peed
0
-
ried
0
-
riede
0
-
schmead
0
-
schwede
0
-
smead
0
-
sneed
0
-
streed
0
-
teed
0
-
thede
0
-
thiede
0
-
tiede
0