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10-letter words containing d, a, r, t, l

  • circulated — to move in a circle or circuit; move or pass through a circuit back to the starting point: Blood circulates throughout the body.
  • clostridia — Plural form of clostridium.
  • cloth yard — a medieval unit of measure for cloth, fixed at 37 inches by Edward VI of England: also used as a length for longbow arrows
  • codetalker — A military communications specialist using codes based on an obscure language.
  • cold start — the reloading of a program or operating system
  • cold-water — designating a room, apartment, etc. that is not provided with hot water or, sometimes, a bathroom
  • coldstream — a town in SE Scotland, in Scottish Borders on the English border: the Coldstream Guards were formed here (1660). Pop: 1813 (2001)
  • collarstud — a stud that is used to attach a removable collar to a shirt
  • condylarth — any of the primitive ungulate mammals of the extinct order Condylarthra, from the Paleocene and Eocene epochs, having a slender body, low-crowned teeth, and five-toed feet, each toe ending in a small hoof.
  • cordiality — warmth of feeling
  • correlated — to place in or bring into mutual or reciprocal relation; establish in orderly connection: to correlate expenses and income.
  • credential — something that entitles a person to confidence, authority, etc
  • creditable — A creditable performance or achievement is of a reasonably high standard.
  • creditably — bringing or deserving credit, honor, reputation, or esteem.
  • crenelated — In a castle, a crenelated wall has gaps in the top or openings through which to fire at attackers.
  • crenulated — minutely crenate, as the margin of certain leaves.
  • crithidial — relating to a developmental stage in protozoan parasites of the trypanosome group, now more commonly referred to as the epimastigote stage
  • d particle — D meson.
  • d'alembert — Jean Le Rond (ʒɑ̃ lə rɔ̃). 1717–83, French mathematician, physicist, and rationalist philosopher, noted for his contribution to Newtonian physics in Traité de dynamique (1743) and for his collaboration with Diderot in editing the Encyclopédie
  • dantrolene — a toxic orange powder, C 14 H 10 N 4 O 5 , used to control muscle spasms, as in the treatment of local trauma, multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, or other neurological disorders.
  • darlington — an industrial town in NE England in Darlington unitary authority, S Durham: developed mainly with the opening of the Stockton-Darlington railway (1825). Pop: 86 082 (2001)
  • daughterly — of, like, or proper to a daughter
  • day letter — a telegram sent during the day at a slightly cheaper rate
  • death roll — a list of the people killed in a war or disaster
  • decaliters — Plural form of decaliter.
  • decelerate — When a vehicle or machine decelerates or when someone in a vehicle decelerates, the speed of the vehicle or machine is reduced.
  • declarants — Plural form of declarant.
  • 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
  • defalcator — A defaulter or embezzler.
  • defaulters — Plural form of defaulter.
  • deflagrate — to burn or cause to burn with great heat and light
  • defoliator — An adult or larval insect that strips all the leaves from a tree or shrub.
  • delegators — Plural form of delegator.
  • delegatory — of or relating to the delegation or assignment of authority, power, or responsibility.
  • deliberate — If you do something that is deliberate, you planned or decided to do it beforehand, and so it happens on purpose rather than by chance.
  • delineator — a tailor's pattern, adjustable for different sizes
  • deliration — delirium; madness
  • delsartian — of, relating to, or characteristic of François Delsarte or the Delsarte method.
  • delta iron — an allotrope of iron that exists between 1400°C and the melting point of iron and has the same structure as alpha iron
  • delustrant — an agent which removes lustre from something
  • depilatory — Depilatory substances and processes remove unwanted hair from your body.
  • deportable — liable to deportation
  • derailment — A derailment is an accident in which a train comes off the track on which it is running.
  • deregulate — To deregulate something means to remove controls and regulations from it.
  • dermatomal — Anatomy. an area of skin that is supplied with the nerve fibers of a single, posterior, spinal root.
  • desolatory — tending to cause desolation
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