English Words: F
18,613 words · Page 133 of 373
Fastidious and fussy; difficult to please; exacting, especially about details; meticulous and particular.
Averse to something ending (e.g. a TV series) out of a desire for it to continue on forever.
Something that is of top quality; something that does not require any work or adjustments.
A private school intended to furnish young women with the social skills and cultural education needed in order to fulfill successfully a woman's traditional role in polite society.
A shipper of Fox Mulder and Dana Scully who only wanted the pair to become romantically involved at the end of the series.
Having an end or limit; (of a quantity) constrained by bounds; (of a set) whose number of elements is a natural number.
A verb inflected for person and tense that can stand on its own as a complete sentence.
In any of several specific senses, such that all its elements can be created using (or described by reference to) a finite set of elements, usually called generators:
An extreme form of constructivism, according to which a mathematical object does not exist unless it can be constructed from natural numbers in a finite number of steps.
Spelling & Dictionary Insight
The English alphabetical index for the letter F contains 18,613 headwords drawn from our Wiktionary-derived dictionary table. At 50 entries per page the browse splits into 373 pages, and you are currently viewing page 133. Every row above is a dictionary-backed entry with a canonical slug, and each links through to a full definition page with pronunciation, senses, etymology, and related-word data where available.
On this page 50 of 50 entries carry a part-of-speech tag and 50 carry at least one stored definition. Coverage varies across letters because Wiktionary volunteers build entries at different speeds for different parts of the alphabet, letters with common starting sounds (S, C, T, P) usually have the densest coverage, while less frequent starters (X, Q, Z) tend to have shorter but more specialised lists. PlainSpell surfaces whatever data is present and links back to the source when a definition is not yet recorded.
For readers using this index as a spelling reference, the guarantee is that every form you see on the list is a documented English headword, not a guess, not a derived inflection lacking a lemma row. If a word you expected to find is absent from the "F" list, it usually means the form exists only as an inflection of another lemma (e.g. a past participle stored under the infinitive) or the entry has not yet been imported from Wiktionary. Use the search bar or the misspelling lookup to resolve these cases.