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9-letter words containing d, a, r, t

  • traceried — ornamented or decorated with tracery.
  • track rod — the rod connecting the two front wheels of a motor vehicle ensuring that they turn at the same angle
  • trackside — located next to a railroad track.
  • trad jazz — a kind of jazz based on the jazz that was played in the 1920s
  • trade gap — difference in value between nation's imports and exports
  • trade off — the act or process of buying, selling, or exchanging commodities, at either wholesale or retail, within a country or between countries: domestic trade; foreign trade.
  • trade rat — pack rat (def 1).
  • trade war — an economic conflict in which countries impose import restrictions on each other in order to harm each other's trade
  • trade-off — the exchange of one thing for another of more or less equal value, especially to effect a compromise.
  • tradeable — the act or process of buying, selling, or exchanging commodities, at either wholesale or retail, within a country or between countries: domestic trade; foreign trade.
  • trademark — any name, symbol, figure, letter, word, or mark adopted and used by a manufacturer or merchant in order to designate specific goods and to distinguish them from those manufactured or sold by others. A trademark is proprietary and is usually registered with the Patent and Trademark Office to assure its exclusive use by its owner or licensee.
  • tradename — the name used by a trade to refer to a commodity, service, etc
  • tradesman — a person engaged in trade.
  • tradition — the handing down of statements, beliefs, legends, customs, information, etc., from generation to generation, especially by word of mouth or by practice: a story that has come down to us by popular tradition.
  • traditive — traditional.
  • tragedian — an actor especially noted for performing tragic roles.
  • tragedies — a lamentable, dreadful, or fatal event or affair; calamity; disaster: stunned by the tragedy of so many deaths.
  • tragedize — to make tragic; imbue with the aspects of tragedy: a story tragedized by calamity and loss of hope.
  • trailhead — the point where a trail starts.
  • trailside — the side or border of a trail.
  • trainband — a company of trained militia organized in London and elsewhere in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries.
  • trainload — the cargo or passenger capacity of a train.
  • trainshed — (in a railroad station) a shelter completely covering railroad tracks and their adjoining platforms.
  • tramlined — having tramlines
  • trammeled — Usually, trammels. a hindrance or impediment to free action; restraint: the trammels of custom.
  • trancedly — in a trancelike manner
  • transcend — to rise above or go beyond; overpass; exceed: to transcend the limits of thought; kindness transcends courtesy.
  • transcode — (language)   An early system on the Ferut computer.
  • transduce — to convert (energy) from one form into another.
  • transited — the act or fact of passing across or through; passage from one place to another.
  • trap door — a door flush with the surface of a floor, ceiling, or roof.
  • trapezoid — Geometry. a quadrilateral plane figure having two parallel and two nonparallel sides. British. trapezium (def 1b).
  • trauchled — to fatigue; tire; wear out.
  • travelled — having traveled, especially to distant places; experienced in travel.
  • trazodone — a white crystalline powder, C 19 H 22 ClN 5 O, used in the treatment of major depression disorders.
  • treadless — (of a tyre etc) having no tread
  • treadmill — an apparatus for producing rotary motion by the weight of people or animals, treading on a succession of moving steps or a belt that forms a kind of continuous path, as around the periphery of a pair of horizontal cylinders.
  • treasured — wealth or riches stored or accumulated, especially in the form of precious metals, money, jewels, or plate.
  • tree toad — tree frog.
  • trematoda — the class comprising the trematodes.
  • trematode — any parasitic platyhelminth or flatworm of the class Trematoda, having one or more external suckers; fluke.
  • trematoid — relating to a trematode
  • trenchardHugh Montague, 1st Viscount, 1873–1956, British Royal Air Force marshal.
  • trepanned — a person who ensnares or entraps others.
  • trepidant — trepid.
  • tribadism — lesbianism.
  • tridactyl — having three fingers or toes, as certain reptiles.
  • trihedral — having, or formed by, three planes meeting in a point: a trihedral angle.
  • triparted — divided into three parts.
  • triradial — having or consisting of three rays or radiating branches
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