Adgno, cydwybod, remorse Adgnoi, v. to chew the cud Adgodi, v. to raise again Adgof, n. m. remembrance Adgofio, v. to recollet Adgofiol, a. recollective Adgoffa, n. m. a recalling to mind Adgoffau, v. to recall to mind Adgryfhau, v. to reinvigorate Adgrynhoi, v. to collect again Adguddio, v. to reconceal, to hide again Adgur, n. m. a repulse, a rebut Adguriad, a. repulsion Adguro, v. to repel, re-conquer Adgwymp, n. m. a fall back Adgwympo, v. to relapse Adgydiedig, a. rejoined Adgydio, v. to rejoin Adgyfansoddi, v. recompose Adgyfanu, v. to reintegrate Adgyfarch, v. to resalute Adgyfhau, v. to make whole again Adgyflawni, v. to complete anew Adgyfleu, v. to replace Adgyfnerthu, v. to reinforce Adgyfodi, v. to rise again Adgyfodiad, n. m. resurrection Adgyffroad, n. m. resuscitation Adgyffroi, v. to resuscitate Adgylchiad, n. m. revolution Adgymeriad, n. m. reassumption Adgymodi, v. to reconciliate Adgyneu, v. to rekindle Adgynrychioli, v. to represent another Adgynrychu, v. to represent Adgynull, v. to collect again Adgynulledig, v. a. recollected Adgynull, v. to collect again Adgynulledig, v. a. recollected Adgynulliad, n. a reassembling Adgynyrchiad, n. reproduction Adgyrch, n. m. a recourse Adgyswllt, n. m. rejunction Adgysylltu, v. to reunite Adgywain, v. to carry back Adgyweirio, v. to refit Adgyweiriol, a. reparative Adgyweiriolion, n. restoratives Adgyweiriwr, n. m. a repairer Adgywreinio, v. to make exact again Adhaeriad, n. reassertion Adheddychu, v. to repacify Adholi, v. to re-examine, to question again Adhoni, v. to reassert Adladd, n. m. second crop: v. to kill again Adlaes, a. trailing, draggling Adlais, n. m. reverberation; echo Adlam, n. a back step; a home Adlamiad, n. m. a stepping back Adlamu, v. to step back; to rebound Adlef, n. m. resonance, echo Adlefariad, n. m. peroration Adlefaru, v. to perorate, to speak again, to recite Adleau, v. to replace Adleisio, v. to resound Adlenwi, v. to fill again Adles, n. m. that is not a benefit Adlif, n. m. ebb tide, a reflux Adlifeirlant, n. m. refluence Adlifeirio, v. to reflow Adlifiant, n. m. a reflowing Adlifo, v. to flow back Adlithrad, n. m. a sliding back Adlithro, v. to slide back Adliw, n. m. a varnish, a retint Adliwio, v. to recolour Adloddi, v. to grow after cutting Adloes, n. m. a reiterated pang Adloewi, v. to brighten again Adlog, n. m. compound interest Adloni, v. to cherish again Adlonyddu, v. to assuage or quiet again Adlosgi, v. to burn again Adlunio, v. to reform, to copy Adlusgo, v. to drag back Adlyfnhau, v. to repolish Adlythyr, n. m. a rescript Adnabod, n. m. recognition: v. to recognize, to know, to be acquainted with Adnabyddedig, a. acquainted Adnabyddiad, n. m. recognition Adnabyddiaeth, n. f. knowledge cognizance Adnabyddol, a. recognizing Adnabyddus, a. knowing, known Adnabyddwr, n. m. a recognizer Adnaid, n. f. a rebound Adnawdd, n. m. a resource Adnawf, n. m. a swimming back Adne, n. m. custody, safe keeping Adnerth, n. m. a second power Adnerthedig, a. reinforced Adnerthu, v. to reinforce Adneu, n. m. a deposit, a pledge Adneuad, n. m. a pledging Adnewid, v. to rechange Adnewyddiad, n. m. renovation Abnewyddu, v. to renovate, to renew Adnewyddwr, n. m. a renovator Adnod, n. f. a sentence, a verse Adnodi, v. to divide into verses Adnofiad, n. a swimming back Adnofio, v. to swim back Adnydd, n. m. a gate post Adoew, a. m. a spur Adofidio, v. to grieve again Adofidiol, a. reafflicting Adofwyad, n. m. a revisiting Adofwywr, n. m. a revisitor Adofyn, v. to ask again, to reclaim Adohebu, v. to recommunicate, to respond Adolrhain, v. to follow after, to retrace Adolwch, n. m. intreaty, prayer Adolwg, n. retrospect Adolygu, v. to review Adolygwr, n. m. a reviewer Adran, n. f. — from A Pocket Dictionary: Welsh-English by William Richards
admiralty rear admiral vice
[Naval authorities] admiral, admiralty; rear admiral, vice admiral, port admiral; commodore, captain, commander, lieutenant, ensign, skipper, mate, master, officer of the day, OD; navarch[obs3]. — from Roget's Thesaurus by Peter Mark Roget
[65-2] a cuidar a Risas al verlo caer en su presencia atacado de una fiebre cerebral...—Llegados a casa de la buena mujer, y cuando ésta ayudaba a desnudar al enfermo, Juan la vió palidecer de pronto 15 y apoderarse convulsivamente de cierto medallón de plata, con una efigie o retrato en miniatura, que Risas llevaba siempre al pecho, bajo la ropa, a modo de talismán o conjuro contra los polacos, — from Novelas Cortas by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón
a right and valuable
When a man leads a right and valuable life under it he is not deceived as to the real chief motive which impels him to it—in those other cases he is. — from What Is Man? and Other Essays by Mark Twain
But there was a calm, a rest, a virtuous hush, consequent on these examinations of our affairs that gave me, for the time, an admirable opinion of myself. — from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
Inside it was all black and red and violet, with their reverences' stockings, and they stared at me from head to foot, because I had run out of my studio without thinking of taking off my old working-jacket. — from Four Phases of Love by Paul Heyse
And can we rightly speak of a beauty which is always passing away, and is first this and then that; must not the same thing be born and retire and vanish while the word is in our mouths? CRATYLUS: Undoubtedly. SOCRATES: Then how can that be a real thing which is never in the same state? — from Cratylus by Plato
Frances reposed in security on the assurance of Dunwoodie; believing her lover able to accomplish everything that man could do and retaining a vivid recollection of the manner and benevolent appearance of Harper, she abandoned herself to all the felicity of renovated hope. — from The Spy: Condensed for use in schools by James Fenimore Cooper
This tab, called Hiding in Plain Sight,
shows you passages from notable books where your word is accidentally (or perhaps deliberately?)
spelled out by the first letters of consecutive words.
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