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6-letter words containing c, e, d, i

  • deiced — Simple past tense and past participle of deice.
  • deicer — a device or a chemical substance for preventing or removing ice.
  • deices — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deice.
  • deific — making divine or exalting to the position of a god
  • delice — a delicacy; a pleasure
  • delict — a wrongful act for which the person injured has the right to a civil remedy
  • depict — To depict someone or something means to show or represent them in a work of art such as a drawing or painting.
  • dermic — dermal
  • detick — to remove ticks from (an animal); free of ticks
  • device — A device is an object that has been invented for a particular purpose, for example for recording or measuring something.
  • dezinc — to remove zinc from
  • dicier — unpredictable; risky; uncertain.
  • dicker — If you say that people are dickering about something, you mean that they are arguing or disagreeing about it, often in a way that you think is foolish or unnecessary.
  • dickey — a man's detachable, or false, shirt front
  • dickie — an article of clothing made to look like the front or collar of a shirt, blouse, vest, etc., worn as a separate piece under another garment, as a jacket or dress. Compare vest (def 2), vestee.
  • dioecy — The condition of being dioecious.
  • direct — to manage or guide by advice, helpful information, instruction, etc.: He directed the company through a difficult time.
  • disced — any thin, flat, circular plate or object.
  • disect — Misspelling of dissect.
  • docile — easily managed or handled; tractable: a docile horse.
  • dreich — (Scotland, Northern Ireland) Bleak, miserable, dismal, cheerless, dreary.
  • driech — dree.
  • duckie — ducky1 .
  • ebcdic — Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code
  • eddaic — either of two old Icelandic literary works, one a collection of poems on mythical and religious subjects (or) erroneously attributed to Saemund Sigfusson (c1055–1133), the other a collection of ancient Scandinavian myths and legends, rules and theories of versification, poems, etc. (or) compiled and written in part by Snorri Sturluson (1179–1241).
  • edenic — the place where Adam and Eve lived before the Fall. Gen. 2:8–24.
  • edicts — Plural form of edict.
  • epodic — Pertaining to or resembling an epode.
  • euclid — (language)   (Named after the Greek geometer, fl ca 300 BC.) A Pascal descendant for development of verifiable system software. No goto, no side effects, no global assignments, no functional arguments, no nested procedures, no floats, no enumeration types. Pointers are treated as indices of special arrays called collections. To prevent aliasing, Euclid forbids any overlap in the list of actual parameters of a procedure. Each procedure gives an imports list, and the compiler determines the identifiers that are implicitly imported. Iterators. Ottawa Euclid is a variant.
  • excide — To cut off.
  • exodic — (biology) Conducting influences from the spinal cord outward; said of the motor or efferent nerves.
  • heiduc — one of a class of mercenary soldiers in 16th-century Hungary.
  • herdic — a low-hung carriage with two or four wheels, having the entrance at the back and the seats at the sides.
  • incede — to advance or march onwards in a stately or measured fashion
  • inched — Simple past tense and past participle of inch.
  • incide — (obsolete) To cut; to separate and remove.
  • indice — (obsolete) index.
  • induce — to lead or move by persuasion or influence, as to some action or state of mind: to induce a person to buy a raffle ticket.
  • itched — Simple past tense and past participle of itch.
  • juiced — intoxicated from alcohol; drunk: When arrested he was definitely juiced.
  • kicked — Simple past tense and past participle of kick.
  • le cidThe ("El Cid Campeador"; Rodrigo Díaz de Bivar) c1040–99, Spanish soldier: hero of the wars against the Moors.
  • licked — Simple past tense and past participle of lick.
  • lidice — a village in the W Czech Republic: suffered a ruthless reprisal by the Nazis in 1942 for the assassination of a high Nazi official.
  • medici — Catherine de', Catherine de Médicis.
  • medick — any plant belonging to the genus Medicago, of the legume family, having trifoliate leaves and grown as a forage crop.
  • medico — a physician or surgeon; doctor.
  • medics — Plural form of medic.
  • minced — Simple past tense and past participle of mince.
  • niched — an ornamental recess in a wall or the like, usually semicircular in plan and arched, as for a statue or other decorative object.
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