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10-letter words containing c, o, r, d, e, t

  • corticated — having a cortex.
  • coruscated — Simple past tense and past participle of coruscate.
  • cotehardie — (in the Middle Ages) a close-fitting outer garment with long sleeves, hip-length for men and full-length for women, often laced or buttoned down the front or back.
  • counterbid — A counterbid is a bid that is made in response to a bid from another person or group, offering the seller more advantages.
  • crookedest — Superlative form of crooked.
  • cropduster — an aeroplane used to spray crops with fertilizer or insecticide
  • crotcheted — short-tempered
  • croustades — Plural form of croustade.
  • declarator — an action seeking to have some right, status, etc, judicially ascertained
  • declinator — a piece of apparatus that establishes the measure of a plane's deviation from the prime vertical or the meridian
  • decollator — (computing) a machine that decollates (separates) the parts of multipart computer printout and discards the carbon paper.
  • decolorant — able to decolour or bleach
  • decolorate — to change or fade in colour
  • decontract — (ambitransitive) To expand from a contracted state.
  • decorating — the painting or wallpapering of a room, house, etc
  • decoration — The decoration of a room is its furniture, wallpaper, and ornaments.
  • decorative — Something that is decorative is intended to look pretty or attractive.
  • decorators — Plural form of decorator.
  • decreation — Destruction.
  • decryption — to decode or decipher.
  • dedecorate — (obsolete, transitive) To bring to shame; to disgrace.
  • dedicatory — of or as a dedication
  • defalcator — A defaulter or embezzler.
  • deflectors — Plural form of deflector.
  • deforciant — a person who wrongfully withholds something from someone by force
  • demarcator — to determine or mark off the boundaries or limits of: to demarcate a piece of property.
  • democratic — A democratic country, government, or political system is governed by representatives who are elected by the people.
  • democritus — ?460–?370 bc, Greek philosopher who developed the atomist theory of matter of his teacher, Leucippus
  • deprecator — to express earnest disapproval of.
  • descriptor — a word or phrase which constitutes the descriptive element of a sentence
  • desecrator — to divest of sacred or hallowed character or office.
  • desiccator — any apparatus for drying milk, fruit, etc
  • destructor — a furnace or incinerator for the disposal of refuse, esp one that uses the resulting heat to generate power
  • detraction — a person, thing, circumstance, etc, that detracts
  • detractors — to take away a part, as from quality, value, or reputation (usually followed by from).
  • detractory — (now rare) That detracts from something; disparaging, depreciatory.
  • dichromate — any salt or ester of dichromic acid. Dichromate salts contain the ion Cr2O72–
  • directions — the act or an instance of directing.
  • directoire — noting or pertaining to the style of French furnishings and decoration of the mid-1790s, characterized by an increasing use of Greco-Roman forms along with an introduction, toward the end, of Egyptian motifs: usually includes the Consulate period.
  • disconcert — to disturb the self-possession of; perturb; ruffle: Her angry reply disconcerted me completely.
  • discounter — a person who discounts.
  • discretion — the power or right to decide or act according to one's own judgment; freedom of judgment or choice: It is entirely within my discretion whether I will go or stay.
  • ditrochean — consisting of two trochees
  • dockmaster — a person who supervises the dry-docking of ships.
  • doctorates — Plural form of doctorate.
  • doctorless — Without a doctor or doctors.
  • documenter — a written or printed paper furnishing information or evidence, as a passport, deed, bill of sale, or bill of lading; a legal or official paper.
  • dog tucker — the meat of a sheep killed on a farm and used as dog food
  • dogcatcher — a person employed by a municipal pound, humane society, or the like, to find and impound stray or homeless dogs, cats, etc.
  • dorchester — a town in S Dorsetshire, in S England, on the Frome River: named Casterbridge in Thomas Hardy's novels.
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