5 1 noun n noun
• a partly sheltered anchorage
Example sentence • The roads were congested with traffic during rush hour.
10 2 noun n noun
• a community of people smaller than a village
Example sentence • I'm standing at a crossroads and don't know which path to take.
6 1 noun n adjective
• having great (or a certain) extent from one side to the other
adjective satellite
• broad in scope or content
Example sentence • He docked his boat in the calm broads of Norfolk.
7 2 verb v verb
• remove (cargo, people, etc.) from and leave
Example sentence • He unloads the groceries from the car.
10 3 noun n noun
• a conductor used to make electrical contact with some part of a circuit
Example sentence • The electrodes are used in the process of electroplating.
6 2 verb v verb
• become ground down or deteriorate
Example sentence • The constant exposure to water erodes the rocks along the riverbank.
8 2 verb v verb
• cause to burst with a violent release of energy
Example sentence • The firework explodes in a burst of color.
5 1 noun n noun
• how something is done or how it happens
Example sentence • There are different modes of traveling, such as by car, train, or plane.
8 2 noun n noun
• A quantity of things approaching the maximum that could be held or carried with one arm.
Example sentence • She carried armloads of books to her study table.
9 2 verb, noun v, n noun
• A load carried on the return journey of a delivery vehicle.
verb
• To load toward the back, or towards the end of a period.
Example sentence • The company decided to use backloads to reduce shipping costs.
9 2 noun n noun
• the amount of cargo that can be held by a boat or ship or a freight car
Example sentence • They caught boatloads of fish during their fishing trip.
5 1 verb v noun
• a pointed instrument that is used to prod into a state of motion
verb
• give heart or courage to
Example sentence • He goads his teammates to give their best performance.
9 2 noun n Example sentence • The scenic highroads in the countryside attract many tourists.
7 2 noun n noun
• an encroachment or intrusion
Example sentence • The company has made significant inroads in the European market.
8 2 verb v verb
• transfer to a peripheral device, of computer data
Example sentence • He offloads his responsibilities onto others.
9 3
No meanings yet for this word...
8 2 verb, noun v, n verb
• To load in advance (used especially in reference to software installed on a computer prior to sale).
Example sentence • The preloads on the bridge are carefully calculated to ensure its stability.
9 2 noun n noun
• line that is the commercial organization responsible for operating a system of transportation for trains that pull passengers or freight
verb
• compel by coercion, threats, or crude means
Example sentence • The construction of railroads in the 19th century revolutionized transportation.
7 2 verb v Example sentence • He reloads his gun before heading into battle.
9 2 noun n noun
• the amount of cargo that can be held by a boat or ship or a freight car
Example sentence • The port is busy with shiploads of cargo being unloaded.
10 3 noun n
No meanings yet for this word...
Example sentence • The new superroads are designed to reduce congestion and improve traffic flow.
5 1 noun n noun
• any of various tailless stout-bodied amphibians with long hind limbs for leaping; semiaquatic and terrestrial species
Example sentence • Many people find toads fascinating and keep them as pets.
10 2 noun n noun
• quantity that can be carried by a train
Example sentence • There were trainloads of supplies delivered to the disaster-stricken area.
9 2 noun n noun
• A road designed for use by trams or wagons.
Example sentence • The construction of tramroads revolutionized the transportation industry.
7 2 verb, noun v, n verb
• To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet.
Example sentence • The website allows users to make uploads of their own videos.
8 2 noun n noun
• The load carried by a van.
Example sentence • The store received multiple vanloads of new merchandise.
5 1 noun n noun
• a blue dyestuff obtained from the woad plant
Example sentence • The woads are cultivated for their coloring properties.
9 2 noun n noun
• work that a person is expected to do in a specified time
Example sentence • Due to the increase in workloads , the company has decided to hire additional employees.
12 2 noun n noun
• garments designed to be worn in bed
Example sentence • She changed into her nightclothes and climbed into bed.
6 2 noun n noun
• any address at which you dwell more than temporarily
Example sentence • Their old abodes were damaged in the storm.
6 2 noun n noun
• a positively charged electrode by which electrons leave an electrical device
Example sentence • The anodes in the battery need to be replaced.
9 3 noun n noun
• (physics) the point of maximum displacement in a periodic system
Example sentence • When a string is plucked, it vibrates and creates antinodes at certain points.
9 3 noun n
No meanings yet for this word...
Example sentence • The arillodes of the seeds help with dispersal.
5 1 verb v verb
• indicate, as with a sign or an omen
Example sentence • The sudden silence in the room bodes ill for the upcoming announcement.
7 2 verb v verb
• convert code into ordinary language
Example sentence • He decodes encrypted messages for the government.
10 3 noun n
No meanings yet for this word...
Example sentence • The system's eigenmodes determine its vibration properties.
7 2 verb v verb
• convert information into code
Example sentence • The computer program encodes the data into a binary format.
6 2 noun n noun
• The after song; the part of a lyric ode which follows the strophe and antistrophe.
Example sentence • He studied the epodes of Horace in his literature class.
9 2 verb v verb
• make a prediction about; tell in advance
Example sentence • The eerie silence forebodes something sinister.
6 2 noun n noun
• (mineralogy) a hollow rock or nodule with the cavity usually lined with crystals
Example sentence • I love collecting geodes from different parts of the world.
8 2 verb v Example sentence • The grenade implodes upon impact, causing less damage but creating a powerful vacuum effect.
10 3 noun n noun
• a segment of a stem between two nodes
Example sentence • The plant's internodes were unusually short, causing it to have a compact growth habit.
8 2 noun n noun
• An electrode, of a cell or other electrically polarized device, through which a positive current of electricity flows outwards (and thus, electrons flow inwards). It usually, but not always, has a positive voltage.
9 3 noun n noun
• large-footed short-winged birds of Australasia; build mounds of decaying vegetation to incubate eggs
Example sentence • The female megapodes lay their eggs in mounds of vegetation or volcanic ash.
10 3 noun n noun
• (computer science) coded instructions that are stored permanently in read-only memory
Example sentence • The microcodes in the BIOS determine how hardware components interact with each other.
9 3 noun n noun
• unsegmented worms with elongated rounded body pointed at both ends; mostly free-living but some are parasitic
Example sentence • Some nematodes are parasitic and can cause diseases in humans and animals.
5 1 noun n noun
• a connecting point at which several lines come together
Example sentence • The computer network consists of several nodes connected together.
4 1 noun n noun
• a lyric poem with complex stanza forms
Example sentence • I enjoy reading odes because they capture the essence of a person or thing.
10 3 noun n noun
• Any of many small crustaceans, of the class Ostracoda, that resemble a shrimp enclosed in a bivalve shell.
Example sentence • Scientists use ostracodes as bioindicators to study past environments.
8 2 verb v
No meanings yet for this word...
Example sentence • New technology often outmodes old technology.
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