Assorted:
- KULTUR – (German) culture
- VEHM – (German) a mediaeval German court, also FEHM, FEHME
- JEHAD – (Arabic) in Islam, a holy war, also JIHAD
- BIRK – (Scots) birch
- MYNA – (Hindi) an Asiatic bird of the starling family, MYNAH
- LUZ – a supposedly indestructible bone in the sacrum
- PUBCO – a company that operates a chain of pubs
- BOYAR – (Russian) a member of the old Russian aristocracy, also BOYARD
- JOWAR – (Hindi) Indian millet, aka durra, also JAWARI, JOWARI
- WILJA – (Native Australian) an Aboriginal shelter or hut, also WILTJA
- PIONY – (obsolete) a peony, also PAEONY, PINEY, PINY, PIONEY, PEONY
- CLIFT – a cliff
- ERICK – (Irish) a murderer’s fine in old Irish law, also ERIC, ERIACH
- ABRAM – (Shakespeare) auburn
- CYLIX – a shallow two-handled Greek drinking cup, also KYLIX
- XYLOL – a flammable hydrocarbon, also XYLENE
- YOGH – the Middle English letter representing a velar or partial fricative
- UNAU – (Tupi) a two-toed sloth, also UNAI
- OTAKU – in Japan, a young computer nerd
- DAMAN – (Arabic) a small herbivorous mammal, the rock hyrax
- WHEAR – (obsolete) where, also WHAUR, WHEARE
- KHAZI – (slang) a lavatory, also KAZI, CARSEY, KARZY, KARSY, KARSEY
Threes to fours (Part 1):
- W-AAH – an interjection expressing wailing
- B-AAL – (Hebrew) a false god
- D-AAL – the pigeon pea, also DAL, DAHL, DHAL, DHOLL
- K-AAL – (South African) naked
- P-AAL – (Dutch) in the Caribbean, a stake driven into the ground
- T-AAL – (South African) the Afrikaans language
- K-AAS – a large cupboard
- B-ABA – (Polish) a kind of coffee-cake, also BABKA
- C-ABA – (French) a woman’s work basket
- Y-ABA – (colloquial) yet another bloody acronym
- ABA-C – a nomogram
- ABB-A – a Syrian cloth of goat’s or camel’s hair, also ABA, ABAYA
- ABB-E – (French) a courtesy title given in France to every one vested with the ecclesiastical habit or dress
- G-ABY – (dialect) a simpleton
- ABY-E – (archaic) to pay the penalty for, also ABY
- D-ACE – a small river fish of the carp family and chub genus
- T-ACE – one of a series of overlapping pieces forming a kind of skirt, also TASLET, TASSE, TASSET
- B-ACH – a Welsh term of address
- G-ACH – to behave boastfully, also GATCH, GAUCH
- N-ACH – (Hindi) an entertainment in India consisting chiefly of dancing by professional dancing girls, also NAUCH, NAUTCH
- R-ACH – (archaic) a dog that hunts by scent, also RACHE
- TACH – (short for) tachometer
- ACH-Y – aching
- ACT-A – (Latin) official minutes of proceedings
- W-ADD – an earthy ore of manganese, also WADT
- ADD-Y – (slang) an email address
- D-ADO – to set into a groove
- F-ADO – (Portuguese) a Portuguese folk song
- S-ADO – (Japanese) a Japanese tea ceremony, also CHADO, CHANOYO, CHANOYU
- ADZ-E – to dress timber with a cutting tool, also ADZ
- B-AFF – in golf, to strike the ground with the sole of the club
- C-AFF – (slang) cafe, also CAF
- D-AFF – to play the fool
- F-AFF – (colloquial) to mess around
- G-AFF – to catch a fish with a sharp hook
- H-AFF – (German) a lagoon separated from the see by a long sandbar
- N-AFF – to go away
- R-AFF – (archaic) rubbish
- W-AFF – (dialect) to bark, also WAUGH
- Y-AFF – (Scots) to bark, scold, nag, also NYAFF
- AFF-Y – (obsolete) to trust
- B-AFT – (Urdu) a kind of coarse fabric
- D-AFT – insane
- H-AFT – a handle, especially of an axe or knife
- S-AFT – (Scots) soft
- W-AFT – to carry lightly in the air
- G-AGA – (French) in senile dotage
- J-AGA – (Malay) to guard
- N-AGA – (Sanskrit) a divine snake in Hindu mythology
- R-AGA – (Sanskrit) an Indian musical form
- AGA-R – (Malay) a jelly prepared from seaweed
- G-AGE – to pledge as security
- Y-AGE – a tropical vine of the Amazon region
- AGE-E – (Scots) off the straight; ajar, also AJEE
- D-AGO – (offensive) a man of Italian, Spanish or Portuguese origin
- K-AGO – (Japanese) a basketwork passenger litter
- AGO-G – in excited eagerness
- AGO-N – the dramatic conflict between the chief characters in a literary work
- M-AHA – a form of yoga
- T-AHA – (Zulu) the South African weaverbird
- R-AIA – (Arabic) a non-Muslim subject of Turkey, also RAYA, RAYAH
- C-AID – (Arabic) a North African chief, also CADI, KADI, KAID, QADI, QAID
- G-AID – a miner’s wedge, also GADE
- K-AID – (Arabic) a North African chief, also CAID, CADI, KADI, QADI, QAID
- Q-AID – (Arabic) a North African chief, also CAID, CADI , KAID, KADI, QADI
- W-AID – (obsolete) weighed, also WAIDE
- AID-A – a finely-meshed cotton fabric used for cross-stitch embroidery
- K-AIL – a ninepin, also KAYLE
- K-AIM – (Scots) a comb; a ridge of gravel or sand left by a glacier, also KAME
- M-AIM – to injure or mutilate
- S-AIM – (Scots) a seam
- C-AIN – (Gaelic) a tenanted farm rent paid in kind, also KAIN, KANE
- F-AIN – happy; pleased, also FAINE, FAYNE
- H-AIN – (Scots) to save, preserve
- K-AIN – (Gaelic) a tenanted farm rent paid in kind, also CAIN, KANE
- N-AIN – (Scots) one’s own
- S-AIN – (archaic) to make the sign of the cross over
- T-AIN – a vegetable gratin baked in an earthenware dish
- W-AIN – (obsolete) to carry, convey
- AIN-E – (French) of a male elder, senior