browse search

Word Explorer
Children's
Dictionary Suite
Help
Help
Help
 
A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z
scatter to cause to separate in all directions; disperse. [6 definitions]
scavenger a person or thing that scavenges, esp. an animal that eats decaying flesh.
scene the place where any event occurs. [8 definitions]
scenery surrounding land as it appears to a viewer; landscape. [2 definitions]
scenic of, pertaining to, or showing natural, beautiful scenery. [3 definitions]
scent a characteristic odor, esp. a pleasant one. [7 definitions]
scepter a ceremonial staff that symbolizes a monarch's power. [3 definitions]
schedule a plan of activity organized by units of time. [5 definitions]
scheme a devious plan; plot. [5 definitions]
scholar a learned person, esp. one who is engaged in research or study. [3 definitions]
scholarship money given to a student by a school or organization to help pay for the cost of schooling. [2 definitions]
school1 an institution where instruction is given, esp. to young people. [8 definitions]
school2 a large group of the same kind of fish or sea mammals. [2 definitions]
schoolhouse a building used for a school.
schoolwork study or practice assigned and done at school or as homework.
schooner a sailing ship with at least two masts, all rigged with fore-and-aft sails.
schwa an indistinct vowel sound that occurs in most unstressed syllables in English, such as the first "a" in "away". [2 definitions]
science systematic observation and testing of natural phenomena in a search for general laws and conclusive evidence. [3 definitions]
science fiction fiction in which scientific findings, capabilities, or speculations provide an essential basis for the imagined events.
scientific requiring or demonstrating systematic knowledge and skills, exactness in observation and testing, and keen but dispassionate interest in the truths of nature. [2 definitions]
scientist one who uses scientific procedures and is involved in science, esp. the physical or natural sciences.