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13-letter words containing c, e, d

  • dimmer switch — A dimmer switch is an electrical switch which turns off the full beam of a headlamp and turns on the low beam.
  • dimmer-switch — a person or thing that dims.
  • dinner jacket — tuxedo (def 1).
  • diotheletical — relating to ditheletism, the doctrine that Christ had two wills
  • dipleidoscope — an instrument that uses a telescope and a hollow prism to see when the sun crosses the meridian
  • dipstick test — a test for detecting the presence of sugar in the urine, as in diabetes.
  • direct access — pertaining to the ability to obtain data from, or place data in, external storage without the need to sequentially scan other data contained there.
  • direct action — any action seeking to achieve an immediate or direct result, especially an action against an established authority or powerful institution, as a strike or picketing.
  • direct cinema — a rigorous form of cinéma vérité, especially as practiced by some American cinematographers in the late 1950s, in which only indigenous sound is used.
  • direct labour — work that is an essential part of a production process or the provision of a service
  • direct method — a technique of foreign-language teaching in which only the target language is used, little instruction is given concerning formal rules of grammar, and language use is often elicited in situational contexts.
  • direct motion — the movement of a celestial body (as seen from the earth) from east to west across the sky
  • direct object — a word or group of words representing the person or thing upon which the action of a verb is performed or toward which it is directed: in English, generally coming after the verb, without a preposition. In He saw it the pronoun it is the direct object of saw.
  • direct speech — actual words spoken, not quoted or reported
  • direct-access — pertaining to the ability to obtain data from, or place data in, external storage without the need to sequentially scan other data contained there.
  • direct-acting — (of a steam pump) having the steam pistons connected directly to the pump pistons without a crankshaft or flywheel.
  • direct-mailer — a person or firm engaged in direct-mail advertising.
  • directionally — of, relating to, or indicating direction in space.
  • directionless — the act or an instance of directing.
  • directorially — In terms of film direction.
  • directorships — Plural form of directorship.
  • disaccharides — Plural form of disaccharide.
  • disaccustomed — Simple past tense and past participle of disaccustom.
  • disaffirmance — to deny; contradict.
  • disallowances — Plural form of disallowance.
  • disappearance — the act or an instance of disappearing; a ceasing to be seen or to exist.
  • disarticulate — Separate (bones) at the joints.
  • disassociated — to dissociate.
  • disassociates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disassociate.
  • discapacitate — to incapacitate (a person)
  • disceptatious — disputable
  • dischargeable — to relieve of a charge or load; unload: to discharge a ship.
  • disciplinable — subject to or meriting disciplinary action: a disciplinable breach of rules.
  • discographies — Plural form of discography.
  • discomycetous — of or relating to the subclass of fungus Discomycetes
  • disconcerting — disturbing to one's composure or self-possession; upsetting, discomfiting.
  • disconcertion — to disturb the self-possession of; perturb; ruffle: Her angry reply disconcerted me completely.
  • disconnecting — Present participle of disconnect.
  • disconnection — the act of disconnecting.
  • disconsolated — Obsolete form of disconsolate.
  • discontentful — exhibiting a lack of contentment
  • discounselled — lacking support or counsel
  • discount rate — the rate of interest charged in discounting commercial paper.
  • discourtesies — Plural form of discourtesy.
  • discovery bay — an inlet of the Indian Ocean in SE Australia
  • discovery day — Columbus Day.
  • discreditable — bringing or liable to bring discredit.
  • discreditably — In a discreditable manner.
  • discrepancies — the state or quality of being discrepant or in disagreement, as by displaying an unexpected or unacceptable difference; inconsistency: The discrepancy between the evidence and his account of what happened led to his arrest.
  • discretionary — subject or left to one's own discretion.
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