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9-letter words containing a, c, e, i, t

  • dedicatee — a person to whom something is dedicated.
  • dedicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dedicate.
  • dedicator — to set apart and consecrate to a deity or to a sacred purpose: The ancient Greeks dedicated many shrines to Aphrodite.
  • deictical — Deictic.
  • deistical — a person who believes in deism.
  • delicates — Underwear or lingerie.
  • delictual — (legal) Derived from a delict (analogous to a tort).
  • desiccant — desiccating or drying
  • desiccate — to remove most of the water from (a substance or material); dehydrate
  • dessicate — Misspelling of desiccate.
  • detaching — Present participle of detach.
  • diabetics — Plural form of diabetic.
  • diacetate — (chemistry) Any salt or ester having two acetate groups.
  • diaconate — the office, sacramental status, or period of office of a deacon
  • diaeretic — dieresis.
  • dialectal — of a dialect.
  • dialectic — People refer to the dialectic or dialectics of a situation when they are referring to the way in which two very different forces or factors work together, and the way in which their differences are resolved.
  • diametric — of, relating to, or along a diameter
  • dianetics — A discipline devised by w L. Ron Hubbard designed to heal psychosomatic illnesses by cleansing the mind of engrams.
  • dianoetic — of or relating to thought, esp to discursive reasoning rather than intuition
  • diapyetic — of or pertaining to diapyesis
  • diastemic — a minor hiatus in an orderly succession of sedimentary rocks.
  • diathetic — Pathology. a constitutional predisposition or tendency, as to a particular disease or other abnormal state of the body or mind.
  • diazeutic — Alternative form of diazeuctic.
  • dicastery — A term used by the Vatican corresponding to ministry or department as subdivisions of the papal Curia, referring to the administrative departments of the Vatican City State, as well as strictly ecclesiastical departments; more often termed congregation.
  • dicentras — Plural form of dicentra.
  • dictature — dictatorship
  • dietician — a person who is an expert in nutrition or dietetics.
  • disaffect — to alienate the affection, sympathy, or support of; make discontented or disloyal: The dictator's policies had soon disaffected the people.
  • discreate — to reduce to nothing; annihilate.
  • dislocate — to put out of place; put out of proper relative position; displace: The glacier dislocated great stones. The earthquake dislocated several buildings.
  • distanced — the extent or amount of space between two things, points, lines, etc.
  • distances — Plural form of distance.
  • dixiecrat — a member of a faction of southern Democrats stressing states' rights and opposed to the civil-rights programs of the Democratic Party, especially a southern Democrat who bolted the party in 1948 and voted for the candidates of the States' Rights Democratic Party.
  • duplicate — a copy exactly like an original.
  • ecarinate — having no carina or keel.
  • ecdysiast — stripper (def 3).
  • eclamptic — Of or pertaining to eclampsia.
  • ecotarian — An ecotarian is a person who eats only food that has been produced in a way that does not harm the environment.
  • ecstacies — Plural form of ecstacy.
  • ecstasies — rapturous delight.
  • ecstasize — to make or become ecstatic
  • ecstatics — of, relating to, or characterized by ecstasy or a state of sudden, intense, overpowering emotion: an ecstatic frenzy; ecstatic cheering for the winning team.
  • edificant — Building; constructing.
  • educating — Present participle of educate.
  • education — the act or process of imparting or acquiring general knowledge, developing the powers of reasoning and judgment, and generally of preparing oneself or others intellectually for mature life.
  • educative — serving to educate: educative knowledge.
  • elicitate — (obsolete) To elicit.
  • elocation — (obsolete) A removal from the usual place of residence.
  • elucidate — Make (something) clear; explain.
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