11-letter words containing a, i, r, o
- discophoran — a member of the Discophora group
- discordance — a discordant state; disagreement; discord.
- discordancy — discordance (defs 1–3).
- discouraged — to deprive of courage, hope, or confidence; dishearten; dispirit.
- discourager — One who discourages.
- discourages — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discourage.
- discreation — to reduce to nothing; annihilate.
- disenamored — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
- disfavoring — Present participle of disfavor.
- disfavoured — Simple past tense and past participle of disfavour.
- disfavourer — one who does not favour
- disgarrison — To deprive of a garrison.
- disgracious — Lacking grace; not pleasing; disagreeable.
- disharmonic — lacking harmony; disharmonious; discordant.
- dishonorary — tending to dishonour or disgrace
- disk harrow — a harrow having a number of sharp-edged, concave disks set at such an angle that as the harrow is drawn along the ground they turn the soil, pulverize it, and destroy weeds.
- diskography — discography.
- disordinate — opposed to or violating moral or legal order
- disorganise — To make less organised; to reduce to chaos.
- disorganize — to destroy the organization, systematic arrangement, or orderly connection of; throw into confusion or disorder.
- dispensator — a person who dispenses; distributor; administrator.
- disprovable — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
- disrelation — the absence of relation
- disrotatory — (organic chemistry) Describing an electrocyclic reaction in which the substituents at the interacting termini of the conjugated system rotate in opposite senses.
- distraction — the act of distracting.
- distractors — Plural form of distractor.
- dittography — reduplication of letters or syllables in writing, printing, etc., usually through error.
- divaricator — to spread apart; branch; diverge.
- diversional — offering diversion or recreation; diverting.
- divisionary — the act or process of dividing; state of being divided.
- divulgatory — to make publicly known; publish.
- do a perish — to die or come near to dying of thirst or starvation
- doctrinaire — a person who tries to apply some doctrine or theory without sufficient regard for practical considerations; an impractical theorist.
- doctrinally — of, relating to, or concerned with doctrine: a doctrinal dispute.
- dog curtain — a flap on a canvas cover for a binnacle, affording a view of the compass when raised.
- dog fancier — a person with a special interest in dogs
- dolabriform — shaped like an ax or a cleaver.
- dollar bill — a piece of paper money worth one dollar
- dollar sign — the symbol $ before a number indicating that the number represents dollars.
- domiciliary — of or relating to a domicile, or place of residence.
- dorian mode — an authentic church mode represented on the white keys of a keyboard instrument by an ascending scale from D to D.
- dorsispinal — of or relating to the back and the spine.
- dotted pair — (programming) The usual LISP syntax for representing a cons cell that is not a list. For example, the expression (cons 'foo 42) returns a cons cell that is output as (foo . 42) which represents a cons cell whose car is the symbol "foo" and whose cdr is the integer 42.
- douglas fir — a coniferous tree, Pseudotsuga menziesii, of western North America, often more than 200 feet (60 meters) high, having reddish-brown bark, flattened needles, and narrow, light-brown cones, and yielding a strong, durable timber: the state tree of Oregon.
- downgrading — Present participle of downgrade.
- downpatrick — a market town in Northern Ireland: reputedly the burial place of Saint Patrick. Pop: 10 316 (2001)
- dr. zhivago — a novel (1958) by Boris Pasternak.
- dragonflies — Plural form of dragonfly.
- drainboards — Plural form of drainboard.
- dromedaries — Plural form of dromedary.