7-letter words containing a, m, d
- caromed — Billiards, Pool. a shot in which the cue ball hits two balls in succession.
- chamade — (formerly) a signal by drum or trumpet inviting an enemy to a parley
- champed — Simple past tense and past participle of champ.
- charmed — A charmed place, time, or situation is one that is very beautiful or pleasant, and seems slightly separate from the real world or real life.
- cladism — the cladistic method of classification.
- claimed — to demand by or as by virtue of a right; demand as a right or as due: to claim an estate by inheritance.
- clammed — any of various bivalve mollusks, especially certain edible species. Compare quahog, soft-shell clam.
- clamped — Simple past tense and past participle of clamp.
- coadmit — to admit together
- command — If someone in authority commands you to do something, they tell you that you must do it.
- compand — to compress (a transmitter signal) before transmission and then expand it after transmission
- comrade — Your comrades are your friends, especially friends that you share a difficult or dangerous situation with.
- crammed — If a place is crammed with things or people, it is full of them, so that there is hardly room for anything or anyone else.
- cramped — A cramped room or building is not big enough for the people or things in it.
- creamed — the fatty part of milk, which rises to the surface when the liquid is allowed to stand unless homogenized.
- czardom — the domain of a czar.
- da gama — ˈVasco1460-1524; Port. navigator: discovered the sea route around Africa to India
- dadaism — the style and techniques of a group of artists, writers, etc., of the early 20th century who exploited accidental and incongruous effects in their work and who programmatically challenged established canons of art, thought, morality, etc.
- daemons — Plural form of daemon.
- dahomey — Benin
- daimler — Gottlieb (Wilhelm) (German ˈɡɔtliːp ˈvɪlhɛlm). 1834–1900, German engineer and car manufacturer, who collaborated with Nikolaus Otto in inventing the first internal-combustion engine (1876)
- daimoku — (in Nichiren Buddhism) the words nam myoho renge kyo ('devotion to the Lotus Sutra') chanted to the Gohonzon
- daimons — Plural form of daimon.
- daimyos — Plural form of daimyo.
- dalmane — a yellow, crystalline hypnotic drug, C21H25Cl3FN3O, prescribed for insomnia
- damaged — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
- damager — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
- damages — money to be paid as compensation to a person for injury, loss, etc
- damasks — Plural form of damask.
- damasus — died 1048, pope 1048.
- dambrod — a draughtboard
- damfool — stupid or foolish
- damiana — a small shrub native to Central and South America as well as the Caribbean: the leaves are commonly prepared in tea and consumed as an aphrodisiac
- dammara — A large tree of the order Coniferae, indigenous to the East Indies and Australasia.
- damming — a barrier to obstruct the flow of water, especially one of earth, masonry, etc., built across a stream or river.
- damnify — to cause loss or damage to (a person); injure
- damning — If you describe evidence or a report as damning, you mean that it suggests very strongly that someone is guilty of a crime or has made a serious mistake.
- damodar — a river in NE India, rising in Jharkhand and flowing east through West Bengal to the Hooghly River: the Damodar Valley is an important centre of heavy industry
- damosel — damsel.
- damozel — damsel.
- dampens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dampen.
- dampers — Plural form of damper.
- dampest — Superlative form of damp Most damp.
- dampier — William. 1652–1715, English navigator, pirate, and writer: sailed around the world twice
- damping — moistening or wetting
- dampish — (obsolete) Characterised by noxious vapours; misty, smoky.
- damsels — Plural form of damsel.
- damsons — Plural form of damson.
- danmark — Denmark
- dashcam — a small video camera situated on the dashboard of a vehicle, used to record the view through the windscreen