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9-letter words containing d, a, c, i, t, e

  • cogitated — Simple past tense and past participle of cogitate.
  • cohabited — to live together as if married, usually without legal or religious sanction.
  • contained — kept from going beyond certain limits; confined
  • crispated — Crispate.
  • curtailed — to cut short; cut off a part of; abridge; reduce; diminish.
  • curtained — A curtained window, door, or other opening has a curtain hanging across it.
  • cuspidate — having a cusp or cusps
  • cystidean — any one of the order of fossil echinoderms Cystidea
  • dacoitage — (in India and Myanmar) a robbery by an armed gang or dacoit
  • deadstick — To land an aircraft without power.
  • decaliter — dekaliter
  • decalitre — ten litres. One decalitre is equal to about 2.2 imperial gallons
  • decanting — to pour (wine or other liquid) gently so as not to disturb the sediment.
  • decastich — a poem that consists of ten lines
  • deciduate — having or characterized by a decidua.
  • decimated — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • decimates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decimate.
  • decimator — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • declinant — a person who is declining or diminishing in luck or wealth
  • declinate — (esp of plant parts) descending from the horizontal in a curve; drooping
  • decmate i — (computer)   The first in DEC's series of miniaturised PDP-8 computers based on the Intersil 6120 [Harris 6120?] microprocessor and dedicated to wordprocessing. The DECmate was DEC's original competition for the IBM PC. The DECmate I was introduced in 1980 as the successor to the WT78. The processor ran at 10 MHz, and was housed in a VT100 CRT terminal. It was a very limted model, no EAE option was available, memory was 32 Kwords. It used the RX02 8" dual floppy drive. Options were the DP278-A and -B communication ports and RL278: 1 to 4 RL02 cartridge disk drives.
  • decubital — any position assumed by a patient when lying in bed.
  • dedicated — You use dedicated to describe someone who enjoys a particular activity very much and spends a lot of time doing it.
  • dedicatee — a person to whom something is dedicated.
  • dedicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dedicate.
  • dedicator — to set apart and consecrate to a deity or to a sacred purpose: The ancient Greeks dedicated many shrines to Aphrodite.
  • deictical — Deictic.
  • deistical — a person who believes in deism.
  • delicates — Underwear or lingerie.
  • delictual — (legal) Derived from a delict (analogous to a tort).
  • desiccant — desiccating or drying
  • desiccate — to remove most of the water from (a substance or material); dehydrate
  • dessicate — Misspelling of desiccate.
  • detaching — Present participle of detach.
  • diabetics — Plural form of diabetic.
  • diacetate — (chemistry) Any salt or ester having two acetate groups.
  • diaconate — the office, sacramental status, or period of office of a deacon
  • diaeretic — dieresis.
  • dialectal — of a dialect.
  • dialectic — People refer to the dialectic or dialectics of a situation when they are referring to the way in which two very different forces or factors work together, and the way in which their differences are resolved.
  • diametric — of, relating to, or along a diameter
  • dianetics — A discipline devised by w L. Ron Hubbard designed to heal psychosomatic illnesses by cleansing the mind of engrams.
  • dianoetic — of or relating to thought, esp to discursive reasoning rather than intuition
  • diapyetic — of or pertaining to diapyesis
  • diastemic — a minor hiatus in an orderly succession of sedimentary rocks.
  • diathetic — Pathology. a constitutional predisposition or tendency, as to a particular disease or other abnormal state of the body or mind.
  • diazeutic — Alternative form of diazeuctic.
  • dicastery — A term used by the Vatican corresponding to ministry or department as subdivisions of the papal Curia, referring to the administrative departments of the Vatican City State, as well as strictly ecclesiastical departments; more often termed congregation.
  • dicentras — Plural form of dicentra.
  • dictature — dictatorship
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