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7-letter words containing c, d

  • dictier — high-class or stylish.
  • diction — Someone's diction is how clearly they speak or sing.
  • dictums — Plural form of dictum.
  • dicycly — the state or condition of being dicyclic
  • didache — a treatise, perhaps of the 1st or early 2nd century ad, on Christian morality and practices
  • didicoy — (in Britain) one of a group of caravan-dwelling roadside people who live like Gypsies but are not true Romanies
  • dieback — a condition in a plant in which the branches or shoots die from the tip inward, caused by any of several bacteria, fungi, or viruses or by certain environmental conditions.
  • digicam — A digital camera.
  • digicom — ftp://ftp.whnet.com/pub/wolfgang, ftp://softmodem.whnet.com/pub/wolfgang, ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/wolfgang. http://ftp.whnet.com/wolfgang/.
  • dimeric — a molecule composed of two identical, simpler molecules.
  • dinaric — of or relating to the Alpine region of the Balkan Peninsula, from Slovenia to N Albania and extending across W Coatia, and most of Bosnia and Herzegovna, and Montenegro.
  • dineric — of or relating to the face of separation of two immiscible liquid phases.
  • diocese — an ecclesiastical district under the jurisdiction of a bishop.
  • dioscin — a saponin, found in Mexican yams, that on hydrolysis produces diosgenin, glucose, and rhamnose.
  • diploic — of or relating to diploë
  • dipodic — a group of two feet in English poetry, in which one of the two accented syllables bears primary stress and the other bears secondary stress, used as a prosodic measurement in iambic, trochaic, and anapestic verse.
  • diptych — a hinged two-leaved tablet used in ancient times for writing on with a stylus.
  • directs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of direct.
  • directx — (programming, hardware)   A Microsoft programming interface standard, first included with Windows 95. DirectX gives (games) programmers a standard way to gain direct access to enhanced hardware features under Windows 95 instead of going via the Windows 95 GDI. Some DirectX code runs faster than the equivalent under MS DOS. DirectX promises performance improvements for graphics, sound, video, 3D, and network capabilites of games, but only where both hardware and software support DirectX. DirectX 2 introduced the Direct3D interface. Version 5 was current at 1998-02-01. Version 8.1 is included in Windows XP.
  • discage — to release (an animal or bird) from a cage
  • discant — Also, discantus [dis-kan-tuh s] /dɪsˈkæn təs/ (Show IPA). Music. a 13th-century polyphonic style with strict mensural meter in all the voice parts, in contrast to the metrically free organum of the period.
  • discard — to cast aside or dispose of; get rid of: to discard an old hat.
  • discase — to take the case or covering from; uncase.
  • discept — To debate; to discuss.
  • discern — to perceive by the sight or some other sense or by the intellect; see, recognize, or apprehend: They discerned a sail on the horizon.
  • discerp — To tear into pieces; to rend.
  • discide — (obsolete) To cut apart; to cut into pieces.
  • discing — any thin, flat, circular plate or object.
  • discman — a small portable CD player with light headphones
  • discoed — Simple past tense and past participle of disco.
  • discoer — a person who attends discos
  • discoid — having the form of a discus or disk; flat and circular.
  • discord — lack of concord or harmony between persons or things: marital discord.
  • discure — (obsolete) To discover; to reveal.
  • discuss — to consider or examine by argument, comment, etc.; talk over or write about, especially to explore solutions; debate: to discuss the proposed law on taxes.
  • disject — to scatter; disperse.
  • disomic — having an extra chromosome in the haploid state that is homologous to an existing chromosome in this set
  • dispace — to move or travel about
  • dissect — to cut apart (an animal body, plant, etc.) to examine the structure, relation of parts, or the like.
  • distich — a unit of two lines of verse, usually a self-contained statement; couplet.
  • ditched — a long, narrow excavation made in the ground by digging, as for draining or irrigating land; trench.
  • ditcher — a person who digs ditches.
  • ditches — Plural form of ditch.
  • divorce — a divorced man.
  • dobrich — a city in NE Bulgaria.
  • docents — Plural form of docent.
  • docetic — an early Christian doctrine that the sufferings of Christ were apparent and not real and that after the crucifixion he appeared in a spiritual body.
  • docible — Easily taught or managed; teachable.
  • dockage — a curtailment; deduction, as from wages.
  • dockers — Plural form of docker.
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