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9-letter words containing c, e, d, u, l

  • cultrated — Cultrate.
  • cum laude — If a college student graduates cum laude, they receive the third highest honor that is possible. The second-highest grade is known as magna cum laude, and the highest grade of all is known as summa cum laude.
  • cumulated — to heap up; amass; accumulate.
  • cupholder — a competitor who has won or successfully defended a specific cup, trophy, championship, etc.; champion.
  • cupolated — having a cupola or cupolas.
  • curlicued — Simple past tense and past participle of curlicue.
  • curlyhead — a person whose hair is curly.
  • curtailed — to cut short; cut off a part of; abridge; reduce; diminish.
  • d-glucose — a sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , having several optically different forms, the common dextrorotatory form (dextroglucose, or -glucose) occurring in many fruits, animal tissues and fluids, etc., and having a sweetness about one half that of ordinary sugar, and the rare levorotatory form (levoglucose, or -glucose) not naturally occurring.
  • de-couple — to cause to become separated, disconnected, or divergent; uncouple.
  • decalogue — Ten Commandments
  • deceitful — If you say that someone is deceitful, you mean that they behave in a dishonest way by making other people believe something that is not true.
  • declivous — having a declining slope or gradient
  • declutter — to simplify or get rid of mess, disorder, complications, etc, from
  • decoupled — Simple past tense and past participle of decouple.
  • decoupler — a person or device that disconnects parts that are joined
  • decouples — Separate, disengage, or dissociate (something) from something else.
  • decubital — any position assumed by a patient when lying in bed.
  • deculture — to deculturate.
  • decupling — Present participle of decuple.
  • deducible — to derive as a conclusion from something known or assumed; infer: From the evidence the detective deduced that the gardener had done it.
  • deducibly — in a deducible or conjecturable manner
  • delicious — very enjoyable; delightful
  • delictual — (legal) Derived from a delict (analogous to a tort).
  • demulcent — soothing; mollifying
  • deucalion — the son of Prometheus and, with his wife Pyrrha, the only survivor on earth of a flood sent by Zeus (Deucalion's flood). Together, they were allowed to repopulate the world by throwing stones over their shoulders, which became men and women
  • deviceful — full of devices; inventive; cunning
  • difluence — diffluence.
  • discluded — Simple past tense and past participle of disclude.
  • duct keel — box keel.
  • dudelsack — doodlesack.
  • dulcified — Sweetened; mollified.
  • dulcifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dulcify.
  • dulcimers — Plural form of dulcimer.
  • dulcitude — Sweetness.
  • dulcorate — (obsolete, transitive) To sweeten; to make less acrimonious.
  • duplicate — a copy exactly like an original.
  • dutch elm — a widely planted hybrid elm tree, Ulmus hollandica, with spreading branches and a short trunk
  • elucidate — Make (something) clear; explain.
  • enceladus — a giant who was punished for his rebellion against the gods by a fatal blow from a stone cast by Athena. He was believed to be buried under Mount Etna in Sicily
  • euclidean — (rare) alternative spelling of Euclidean.
  • excluders — Plural form of excluder.
  • excluding — Not taking someone or something into account; apart from; except.
  • glucoside — any of an extensive group of compounds that yield glucose and some other substance or substances when treated with a dilute acid or decomposed by a ferment or enzyme.
  • inducible — 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.
  • inductile — not ductile; not pliable or yielding.
  • judicable — capable of being or liable to be judged or tried.
  • klendusic — resistant to disease
  • lacquered — a protective coating consisting of a resin, cellulose ester, or both, dissolved in a volatile solvent, sometimes with pigment added.
  • lame duck — an elected official or group of officials, as a legislator, continuing in office during the period between an election defeat and a successor's assumption of office.
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