High School Vocabulary
353,744 words and 27,916 expressions at the high school level.
Alternative spelling of sechach.
plural of s'chach
Alternative form of sketti.
Abbreviation of shareholder.
Alternative form of shouse.
plural of s'house
Synonym of Klallam.
plural of s'more
Abbreviation of Singaporean.
plural of S'porean
simple past and past participle of s'pose
third-person singular simple present indicative of s'pose
present participle and gerund of s'pose
Pronunciation spelling of surprise
present participle and gerund of s***
Censored spelling of shithole.
present participle and gerund of s***
Censored spelling of shithead.
plural of s**thead
Censored spelling of shithole.
simple past and past participle of s**t
present participle and gerund of s**t
present participle and gerund of s*ck
Censored spelling of suicide.
Censored spelling of shithole.
Censored spelling of shithole.
simple past and past participle of s--t
present participle and gerund of s--t
An aorist stem of an Old Latin verb which has been formed by adding an s to the end of the present stem; the ancestor of the Classical s-perfect.
plural of s-aorist
plural of s-band
plural of S-bend
A set of elements in the periodic table having azimuthal quantum number 0.
plural of S-bomb
plural of S-box
Alternative form of S'bucks (“Starbucks”).
Logistic growth, or a graph detailing it.
plural of S-curve
A rescaling of a nuclear reaction's total cross section to account for the Coulomb repulsion between the charged reactants. It determines the rates of nuclear fusion reactions that occur in the cores of stars.
plural of S-factor
plural of s-hole
Abbreviation of scattering matrix.
A phenomenon where a Proto-Indo-European root begins with an *s- which is sometimes but not always present in the daughter languages.
A perfect stem of a Latin verb which has been formed by adding an s to the end of the present stem.
A surgical technique to repair skin defects by means of a long, approximately S-shaped incision.
plural of S-pole
the relatively slow nucleosynthesis process, in giant stars, in which neutron capture synthesizes elements up to atomic mass number 210 (at which point alpha decay becomes a deterrent to further building).
Abbreviation of spike protein.
Shaped like the letter S or its mirror image.
A commuter rail/metro system (generally overground) serving a metropolitan area; a train in such a system.
plural of S-train
transoid
A compact cassette version of the S-VHS video format, developed by JVC in 1987 for use in camcorders.
An analog video signal format that encodes luma and chrominance on two separate channels, achieving higher image quality than composite video.
plural of S-wave
plural of s-word
peace be upon him
Abbreviation of Southern District of New York (The federal jurisdiction (district) containing the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York).
Abbreviation of United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, as used in case citations.
without place, year, and name of publisher or printer
plural of S.O.P.
Abbreviation of Doctor of Social Science.
plural of S.T.D. Alternative form of STDs (sexually transmitted diseases)
plural of S.T.I.
plural of S.U.V.
plural of S.U.V.
Alternative form of SWAT.
plural of su'luk
plural of Saadat
plural of Saadeh
plural of Saadhu
A member of a dynasty of sharifs of Arab descent who ruled Morocco between 1550 and 1688.
plural of Saadian
Synonym of Saadian.
plural of Saadite
An Indian curry made with spinach and lamb or mutton.
An age from 0.238 to 0.128 million years ago, a subdivision of the Pleistocene.
Alternative spelling of samlaw.
plural of Saanen
A member of a Native American people from British Columbia.
plural of Saanich
A city in Trier-Saarburg district, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
The largest island of Estonia, and Saare County which contains it.
A state of modern Germany.
A locality (Ortsteil) in Nuthetal municipality, Potsdam-Mittelmark district, Brandenburg, Germany.
A genre of drama fiction concerning the relationship between the controlling evil mother of a husband (mother-in-law) and her dominated, downtrodden, meek daughter-in-law.
A surname.
A surname.
plural of Saathoff
A surname.
plural of Saavedra
Any member of the family Sabaconidae of harvestmen.
A city in Catalonia, Spain.
A Mexican and Central American plant of the family Melanthiaceae (Schoenocaulon officinale, syn. Sabadilla officinalis).
A crystalline alkaloid which is found in sabadilla seeds
An extinct Semitic language spoken in Sheba (Saba).
plural of Sabaean
Alternative form of Sabaean.
Sabianism
Of or relating to Sabah.
plural of Sabahan
Synonym of Sabahan (“of or relating to Sabah”).
plural of Sabahian
The religion of the Sabians; Sabianism
Alternative form of sabkha.
plural of sabakha
plural of Sabala
Belonging or relating to the palms of the subfamily Sabaloideae, now considered to be the tribe Sabaleae.
plural of sabalo
The split or hollowed trunk of a bonsai tree, for example to suggest a lightning strike.
A municipality of Mountain Province, Philippines.
A barangay of Mexico, Pampanga, Philippines.
An epithet of God in His role as protector of the Israelite army, usually translated (alongside YHWH or Elohim) as "Lord of Hosts".; compare the archaic title Drighten.
An Indian river that originates in the Aravalli Range of the Udaipur District of Rajasthan and meets the Gulf of Khambhat of Arabian Sea.
A surname from Catalan.
plural of Sabater
Alternative spelling of sabbatia.
plural of sabatia
A surname from French
A kind of metal shoe, worn as part of a suit of armor.
plural of sabatine
A surname from Italian.
plural of Sabatini
A surname.
plural of Sabatino
A medieval armour covering for the foot, typically made of steel; a flexible armour shoe.
plural of sabaton
A surname from French
A town and census-designated place therein, in Androscoggin County, Maine, United States, formerly named Webster.
A Yemeni pastry baked in layers and typically served with honey.
Synonym of zabaglione.
plural of sabayon
Of or relating to Sabazios.
A god of the Phrygians and Thracians, depicted on horseback wielding a staff of power.
the Sabbath
Short form of Sabbath day
plural of Sabbaday
A surname.
plural of Sabbagh
Relating to the Sabbath.
Alternative form of Sabbatian.
Saturday, observed in Judaism as a day of rest and worship.
Every Sabbath.
plural of sabbath
A plant of Sabatia, a genus of smooth slender North American herbs (family Gentianaceae) with opposite leaves and showy white or rose-pink cymose flowers.
Pertaining to the mystical ideas of Sabbatai Zevi and his followers.
plural of sabbatia
Alternative form of sabbatical.
Relating to the Sabbath.
plural of sabbatic
Of or relating to an indulgence granted to the Carmelite order in 1322 which promised liberation from purgatory on the Saturday after death.
Alternative form of sabbatize.
Strict observance of the Sabbath.
One who exhibits Sabbatism; a strict observer of the Sabbath.
To sanctify, keep or observe the Sabbath.
Alternative spelling of sabaton.
plural of sabbaton
plural of Sabbat
The trigon.
present participle and gerund of sab
plural of Sabbs
plural of Sabean
A surname from Galician.
plural of Sabedra
Sabianism.
Relating to the sable.
plural of sabeline
A seaworm of the genus Sabella, around 25 cm long, which lives in tubes that it builds itself.
plural of sabella
plural of sabella
The Sabellians.
A certain language once spoken in Umbria, Italy.
Synonym of Sabellian.
A worm of the genus Sabella or the family Sabellidae.
plural of sabellid
Of, like, or relating to the genus Sabella or any worm of this genus.
Alternative form of sabrage.
Alternative spelling of sabrebill.
Alternative form of sabrecat.
plural of sabercat
simple past and past participle of saber
present participle and gerund of saber
Alternative form of saber leg.
plural of saberleg
Without a saber.
Alternative spelling of sabrelike.
Alternative form of sabrewing.
A surname from Punjabi.
the worship of the sun, moon and stars
plural of Sabian
plural of sabicu
A trigonal-trapezohedral white mineral containing hydrogen, iron, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur.
A surname.
plural of Sabillon
A monoclinic-prismatic mineral containing calcium, carbon, oxygen, sodium, titanium, and zirconium.
A liquid bicyclic unsaturated terpene hydrocarbon which is found usually in savin oil. It is the isomer of thujene containing a double bond outside the rings.
plural of sabinene
plural of Sabine
Of or relating to the Sabines.
plural of Sabinian.
An acrid oil, obtained from the plant savin (Juniperus sabina), once used in folk medicine and perfumery.
plural of sabinol
plural of sabino
A city and district of Azerbaijan.
Alternative form of sabkha.
plural of sabkhah
Relating to sabkhas.
plural of sabkha
Alternative form of sabkha.
plural of sabkhat
plural of Sablan
A dark-coloured marine fish of species Anoplopoma fimbria, of North American Pacific waters.
The quality or state of being sable
superlative form of sable: most sable
That makes sable or black.
A surname.
plural of Sablone
present participle and gerund of sabo
Of or relating to the Saboraim.
plural of Sabora
A municipality of Croatia.
simple past and past participle of sabotage
One who sabotages.
plural of sabotage
Of a projectile: held in place by a sabot (carrier).
A person who intentionally causes the destruction of property in order to hinder the efforts of their enemy.
plural of saboteur
Female equivalent of saboteur.
A maker of sabots (in the sense of wooden shoes), clog maker, clogger.
The inner of two buckets used in the production of ice cream; the bucket which contained the ice cream and sat inside the larger bucket of ice which froze the ice cream.
plural of sabotier
present participle and gerund of sabot
Of a projectile: held in place by a sabot (carrier).
A surname from French.
A surname.
plural of Sabourin
The usually ceremonial technique of opening a bottle, typically of champagne, by slicing off the bottle's neck with a sabre.
A former city in Libya, the westernmost of the three cities of Tripoli.
A Brazilian woodcreeper (Campylorhamphus procurvoides, syn. Xiphorhynchus procurvus)
sabre-toothed cat
plural of sabrecat
plural of Sabree
The fish Pelecus cultratus.
Alternative form of saber leg.
plural of sabreleg
Without a sabre.
resembling a sabre
Alternative form of sabretache.
A fencer who fights with a sabre.
plural of sabreur
A large neotropical hummingbird of the genus Campylopterus.
A legendary Celtic princess who gave her name to the river Severn.
present participle and gerund of sabre
A bromine preparation used to treat epilepsy.
An explosive containing ammonium nitrate, calcium silicide and trinitrotoluene.
Alternative form of sabulous.
Sandy or gritty.
Foul granular matter deposited in the alimentary canal by the decomposition of food
Of or pertaining to saburra.
The leaves of the thatch screwpine, Pandanus tectorius, used in making hats.
plural of Sabæan
Synonym of gastrovascular cavity.
plural of sac-gut
A town in La Libertad department, El Salvador.
The Native American girl who led explorers Lewis and Clark across the United States.
Alternative form of Sacagawea.
Alternative form of Sacagawea.
Alternative spelling of sac-a-lait.
plural of sacalait
A coarse herb (Fallopia sachalinensis) that is cultivated in the U.S. for forage and for decorative purposes.
A tufted perennial grass, Sporobolus airoides, grown in the southwestern United States and Mexico and used for hay and pasture in dry alkaline areas.
plural of sacaton
A person having one black and one griffe parent; a person whose ancestry is seven-eighths black and one-eighth white.
plural of sacatra
A small wooden trimaran used as a transport and fishing boat in the Philippines.
plural of sacayan
plural of sacbe
A viral disease in honey bees which affects the larvae, causing them to shrivel up and become scalelike.
plural of sacbut
A sudden jerking movement.
simple past and past participle of saccade
plural of saccade
Relating to saccade.
present participle and gerund of saccade
Alternative form of Saqqara.
Shaped like a pouch or sac.
Alternative form of saccate.
In a saccate manner.
A surname from Italian.
A form of caramel produced by heating sugar (sucrose)
Of, relating to, or derived from saccharine substances
Of or relating to sugar; sugary.
sugar
Invert sugar.
A surname from Italian.
Resembling a pouch
present participle and gerund of sac
A surname.
plural of Saccone
Relating to a saccule.
sacculated.
A small sac, pouch, or cyst.
plural of saccule
plural of sacculus
A parasite of the genus Sacculina.
sacculus
A small bag of herbs or medicinal substances, applied to the body.
plural of sacellum
A small chapel, as a monument within a church.
the priesthood
plural of SACEUR
Alternative spelling of sacaline.
A surname from Hindi.
A from Hindi surname.
plural of Sachdeva
plural of Sachdev
plural of sachel
The government or jurisdiction of a sachem.
Of or relating to a sachem.
plural of sachem
plural of Sacher
Scented with a sachet or sachets (of potpourri or other fragrant material).
plural of sachet
A female given name from Japanese.
A Chinese snack of fried batter bound together with a stiff sugar syrup, similar in structure to the Rice Krispie square.
Any member of the Sachitidae.
plural of sachitid
Synonym of Manuelgate.
Of or relating to Hans Sachs (1494–1576), German mastersinger, poet, and playwright.
plural of Sacian
Obsolete form of satiety.
A kind of fashionable gown worn by women in the 18th century, having fabric at the back arranged in box pleats which fell loose from the shoulder to the floor with a slight train.
third-person singular simple present indicative of sack-tap
An alcoholic drink of sherry with whey (weak milk) and sugar.
Sufficiently severe to warrant the perpetrator being sacked.
An act or instance of sacking, pillaging or looting.
simple past and past participle of sackage
plural of sackage
present participle and gerund of sackage
A brass instrument from the Renaissance and Baroque Eras, and an ancestor of the modern trombone. It was derived from the medieval slide trumpet.
plural of sackbut
Alternative spelling of sackbut.
plural of sackbutt
plural of sackee
plural of sacker
plural of sacket
A surname.
plural of Sackett
plural of Sackey
The amount a sack will contain.
plural of sackful
A borehole, bored into sea ice, that collects surface brine
plural of sackhole
Cheap rough cloth such as would be used to make bags (sacks).
plural of sacking
A surname.
plural of Sackler
Without a sack.
Resembling a sack.
A sackful.
plural of sackload
A manufacturer of sacks.
A surname.
plural of Sackman
plural of Sacks
plural of sackful
Of or pertaining to Harvey Sacks (1935–1975), American sociologist.
Alternative form of sack time.
Alternative form of sack truck.
A large-scale landslide with a scarp that may be mistaken for a fault. More specifically- a deep fracture with uphill facing scarps induced by gravitational sliding. Often found near the top of some mountain ranges.
plural of sackung
plural of sackung
A surname from Norman.
In the manner of a sack.
Without a sac.
Resembling or characteristic of a sac.
An analogue of baclofen
plural of sacque
Of the sacrum.
Pain in the sacral region.
Alternative form of sacralize.
The property of being sacral; sacredness.
to make sacred
With regard to the sacrum.
plural of sacral
plural of sacrarium
plural of sacrary
In Ancient Rome, a place where sacred objects were kept, either in a temple (the adytum) or in a house (holding the penates)
A sacred building, or store for sacred objects; a shrine.
To consecrate or dedicate
third-person singular simple present indicative of sacrate
present participle and gerund of sacrate
A coronation or consecration.
Alternative spelling of sacré bleu.
comparative form of sacred: more sacred
superlative form of sacred: most sacred
Alternative form of sacredize.
To make sacred.
In a sacred manner.
Misspelling of sacrilege.
sacrificial
simple past and past participle of sacrify
The individual or group that is to receive the practical benefits of the sacrifice.
third-person singular simple present indicative of sacrify
Obsolete form of sacrifice.
Consecration of the Eucharist.
plural of sacring
A sacristan.
The person who maintains the sacristy and the sacred objects it contains.
Synonym of sacristanry.
plural of sacrist
A room in a church where sacred vessels, books, vestments, etc. are kept. Sometimes also used by clergy to prepare for worship or for meetings.
Relating to the sacrum and ilium, or to the region of the lower back where they are located.
Beyond alteration, criticism, or interference, especially due to religious sanction; inviolable.
A large triangular bone at the base of the spine, located between the two ilia (wings of the pelvis) and formed from vertebrae that fuse in adulthood.
plural of sacrum
The feeling of being sad and excited at the same time, especially at the transition from an ending to a beginning.
Alternative form of sadcom.
plural of sad-com
Having a sad facial expression.
Having a sad facial expression
To use a sadiron.
Gamma Aquarii, a suspected binary star system in the constellation of Aquarius.
A surname from Persian.
A village in Georgia, near the border of Armenia.
Beta Aquarii, a star in the constellation of Aquarius.
A municipality of Mountain Province, Philippines.
plural of sadass
plural of sadboi
plural of sadcase
Alternative form of sad-cited.
plural of sadcom
A form of alternative rock characterised by bleak lyrics, downbeat melodies and slow tempos.
Support for Saddam Hussein or his government or policies.
A follower of Saddam Hussein or an advocate of his policies.
simple past and past participle of sadden
simple past and past participle of sadden
That which saddens.
plural of saddener
second-person singular simple present indicative of sadden
third-person singular simple present indicative of sadden
present participle and gerund of sadden
third-person singular simple present indicative of sadden
superlative form of sad: most sad
plural of saddhu
plural of saddie
plural of saddik
plural of saddik
present participle and gerund of sad
Alternative form of saddle bow.
Synonym of saddle tramp.
Wearing a saddle.
plural of saddler
The trade or craft of a saddler.
plural of saddle
second-person singular simple present indicative of saddle
third-person singular simple present indicative of saddle
The act of placing a saddle on an animal.
plural of saddling
plural of saddo
Sadducean.
Of, like, or pertaining to the Sadducees.
A member of an ancient Jewish sect possibly formed as a political party in the 2nd century BCE and existing until around the 1st century CE.
plural of Sadducee
Alternative form of Sadduceeism.
to make a Sadducee; to conform to Sadduceeism.
Obsolete spelling of Sadducean.
A surname from Persian.
plural of Sadeghi
Alternative form of Sadean.
plural of sadfic
simple past and past participle of sadfish
third-person singular simple present indicative of sadfish
plural of sadfuck
Alternative form of satguru.
plural of sadguru
A person who follows a particular sadhana, or goal-directed spiritual practice.
plural of sadhaka
plural of sadhak
A spiritual practice or discipline leading to a goal.
plural of sadhana
plural of Sadian
Alternative form of saditty.
A flatiron which has a removable handle and is pointed at both ends.
plural of sadiron
The enjoyment of inflicting pain or humiliation without pity.
plural of sadism
plural of sadist
plural of Sadite
plural of Sadker
A suburb of Sydney in the Liverpool council area, New South Wales, Australia.
plural of Sadler
Without sadness.
comparative form of sadly: more sadly
superlative form of sadly: most sadly
A surname from Polish.
plural of sadness
A Meitei surname from Manipuri
Of or relating to sadomasochism or sadomasochists.
plural of Sadoun