5 letter words starting with sp

Looking for a clue for todays Wordle or another Word game? Look no further! We got you covered. We got alot (150 of them) plausible five letter words starting with sp.

  • SPACE
  • SPACK
  • SPACY
  • SPADE
  • SPADO
  • SPADS
  • SPAED
  • SPAER
  • SPAES
  • SPAGS
  • SPAHI
  • SPAIL
  • SPAIN
  • SPAIT
  • SPAKE
  • SPALD
  • SPALE
  • SPALL
  • SPALT
  • SPAMS
  • SPANE
  • SPANG
  • SPANK
  • SPANS
  • SPARD
  • SPARE
  • SPARK
  • SPARS
  • SPART
  • SPASM
  • SPATE
  • SPATS
  • SPAUL
  • SPAWL
  • SPAWN
  • SPAWS
  • SPAYD
  • SPAYS
  • SPAZA
  • SPAZZ
  • SPEAK
  • SPEAL
  • SPEAN
  • SPEAR
  • SPEAT
  • SPECK
  • SPECS
  • SPECT
  • SPEED
  • SPEEL
  • SPEER
  • SPEIL
  • SPEIR
  • SPEKS
  • SPELD
  • SPELK
  • SPELL
  • SPELT
  • SPEND
  • SPENT
  • SPEOS
  • SPERM
  • SPESH
  • SPETS
  • SPEUG
  • SPEWS
  • SPEWY
  • SPIAL
  • SPICA
  • SPICE
  • SPICK
  • SPICS
  • SPICY
  • SPIDE
  • SPIED
  • SPIEL
  • SPIER
  • SPIES
  • SPIFF
  • SPIFS
  • SPIKE
  • SPIKS
  • SPIKY
  • SPILE
  • SPILL
  • SPILT
  • SPIMS
  • SPINA
  • SPINE
  • SPINK
  • SPINS
  • SPINY
  • SPIRE
  • SPIRT
  • SPIRY
  • SPITE
  • SPITS
  • SPITZ
  • SPIVS
  • SPLAT
  • SPLAY
  • SPLIT
  • SPLOG
  • SPODE
  • SPODS
  • SPOIL
  • SPOKE
  • SPOOF
  • SPOOK
  • SPOOL
  • SPOOM
  • SPOON
  • SPOOR
  • SPOOT
  • SPORE
  • SPORK
  • SPORT
  • SPOSA
  • SPOSH
  • SPOSO
  • SPOTS
  • SPOUT
  • SPRAD
  • SPRAG
  • SPRAT
  • SPRAY
  • SPRED
  • SPREE
  • SPREW
  • SPRIG
  • SPRIT
  • SPROD
  • SPROG
  • SPRUE
  • SPRUG
  • SPUDS
  • SPUED
  • SPUER
  • SPUES
  • SPUGS
  • SPULE
  • SPUME
  • SPUMY
  • SPUNK
  • SPURN
  • SPURS
  • SPURT
  • SPUTA
  • SPYAL
  • SPYRE

Sometimes the solution is an uncommon word, then It’s time to learn something new. Here’s the definition of a few of these words:

Definition of spams

spams (noun)

  1. (rarely countable) Unsolicited bulk electronic messages.
  2. Any undesired electronic content automatically generated for commercial purposes.
  3. A type of tinned meat made mainly from ham.

spams (verb)

  1. To send spam (i.e. unsolicited electronic messages.)
  2. To send spam (i.e. unsolicited electronic messages) to a person or entity.
  3. (by extension) To use (a spell or ability) rapidly and repeatedly.
  4. To post the same text repeatedly with disruptive effect; to flood.

Definition of specs

specs (noun)

  1. Two similar or identical things taken together; often followed by of.
  2. Two people in a relationship, partnership or friendship.
  3. Used with binary nouns (often in the plural to indicate multiple instances, since such nouns are plural only, except in some technical contexts)
  4. A couple of working animals attached to work together, as by a yoke.
  5. A poker hand that contains two cards of identical rank, which cannot also count as a better hand.
  6. A score of zero runs (a duck) in both innings of a two-innings match.
  7. A double play, two outs recorded in one play.
  8. A doubleheader, two games played on the same day between the same teams
  9. A boat for two sweep rowers.
  10. A pair of breasts
  11. The exclusion of one member of a parliamentary party from a vote, if a member of the other party is absent for important personal reasons.
  12. Two members of opposite parties or opinion, as in a parliamentary body, who mutually agree not to vote on a given question, or on issues of a party nature during a specified time.
  13. A number of things resembling one another, or belonging together; a set.
  14. (kinematics) In a mechanism, two elements, or bodies, which are so applied to each other as to mutually constrain relative motion; named in accordance with the motion it permits, as in turning pair, sliding pair, twisting pair.

specs (noun)

  1. A special place (for hiding or viewing)
  2. A spectacular mark (catch) in Australian rules football.

specs (noun)

  1. A reduction in consumer cost (usually for a limited time) for items or services rendered.
  2. One of a rotation of meals systematically offered for a lower price at a restaurant.
  3. Unusual or exceptional episode of a series.
  4. A special constable.
  5. Anything that is not according to normal practice, plan, or schedule, as an unscheduled run of transportation that is normally scheduled.
  6. Any unlicensed medicine produced or obtained for a specific individual patient.
  7. A correspondent; a journalist sent to the scene of an event to report back.
  8. A dispatch sent back by a special correspondent.
  9. A light that illuminates a specific person or thing on the stage.

specs (noun)

  1. Someone who is an expert in, or devoted to, some specific branch of study or research.
  2. A physician whose practice is limited to a particular branch of medicine or surgery.
  3. Any of several non-commissioned ranks corresponding to that of corporal.
  4. An organism that is specialized for a particular environment.

specs (noun)

  1. The act or process of specializing.
  2. The area in which someone specializes.
  3. The adaptation of an organism to a specific environment, or adaptation of an organ to a particular function.
  4. A proof, axiom, problem, or definition whose cases are completely covered by another, broader concept.

specs (noun)

  1. An explicit set of requirements to be satisfied by a material, product, or service.
  2. An act of specifying.

specs (noun)

  1. A person or thing that specifies.
  2. A component of a phrase that is non-recursive and not found as a sister of the head of the phrase, but rather as a daughter of the maximal projection of the phrase.

specs (noun)

  1. A pair of lenses set in a frame worn on the nose and ears in order to correct deficiencies in eyesight or to ornament the face.

specs (noun)

  1. The process of thinking or meditating on a subject.
  2. The act or process of reasoning a priori from premises given or assumed.
  3. A conclusion to which the mind comes by speculating; mere theory; notion; conjecture.
  4. An investment involving higher-than-normal risk in order to obtain a higher-than-normal return.
  5. The act or practice of buying land, goods, shares, etc., in expectation of selling at a higher price, or of selling with the expectation of repurchasing at a lower price; a trading on anticipated fluctuations in price, as distinguished from trading in which the profit expected is the difference between the retail and wholesale prices, or the difference of price in different markets.
  6. Examination by the eye; view.
  7. Power of sight.
  8. A card game in which the players buy from one another trumps or whole hands, upon a chance of getting the highest trump dealt, which entitles the holder to the pool of stakes.
  9. The process of anticipating which branch of code will be chosen and executing it in advance.


Definition of spoil

spoil (noun)

  1. (Also in plural: spoils) Plunder taken from an enemy or victim.
  2. Material (such as rock or earth) removed in the course of an excavation, or in mining or dredging. Tailings.

spoil (verb)

  1. To strip (someone who has been killed or defeated) of their arms or armour.
  2. To strip or deprive (someone) of their possessions; to rob, despoil.
  3. To plunder, pillage (a city, country etc.).
  4. To carry off (goods) by force; to steal.
  5. To ruin; to damage (something) in some way making it unfit for use.
  6. To ruin the character of, by overindulgence; to coddle or pamper to excess.
  7. Of food, to become bad, sour or rancid; to decay.
  8. To render (a ballot paper) invalid by deliberately defacing it.
  9. To reveal the ending or major events of (a story etc.); to ruin (a surprise) by exposing it ahead of time.

Definition of spurs

spurs (verb)

  1. To ask, to inquire

spurs (noun)

  1. A rigid implement, often roughly y-shaped, that is fixed to one's heel for the purpose of prodding a horse. Often worn by, and emblematic of, the cowboy or the knight.
  2. A jab given with the spurs.
  3. Anything that inspires or motivates, as a spur does a horse.
  4. An appendage or spike pointing rearward, near the foot, for instance that of a rooster.
  5. Any protruding part connected at one end, for instance a highway that extends from another highway into a city.
  6. Roots, tree roots.
  7. A mountain that shoots from another mountain or range and extends some distance in a lateral direction, or at right angles.
  8. A spiked iron worn by seamen upon the bottom of the boot, to enable them to stand upon the carcass of a whale to strip off the blubber.
  9. A brace strengthening a post and some connected part, such as a rafter or crossbeam; a strut.
  10. The short wooden buttress of a post.
  11. A projection from the round base of a column, occupying the angle of a square plinth upon which the base rests, or bringing the bottom bed of the base to a nearly square form. It is generally carved in leafage.
  12. Ergotized rye or other grain.
  13. A wall in a fortification that crosses a part of a rampart and joins to an inner wall.
  14. A piece of timber fixed on the bilgeways before launching, having the upper ends bolted to the vessel's side.
  15. A curved piece of timber serving as a half to support the deck where a whole beam cannot be placed.
  16. A branch of a vein.
  17. A very short branch line of a railway line.
  18. A short thin side shoot from a branch, especially one that bears fruit or, in conifers, the shoots that bear the leaves.

spurs (verb)

  1. To prod (especially a horse) on the side or flank, with the intent to urge motion or haste, to gig.
  2. To urge or encourage to action, or to a more vigorous pursuit of an object
  3. To put spurs on.
  4. To press forward; to travel in great haste.

spurs (noun)

  1. A tern.

spurs (noun)

  1. A spurious tone, one that interferes with a signal in a circuit and is often masked underneath that signal.

spurs (noun)

  1. The track of an animal, such as an otter; a spoor.