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9-letter words containing d, a, s

  • data base — a comprehensive collection of related data organized for convenient access, generally in a computer.
  • databased — Simple past tense and past participle of database.
  • databases — Plural form of database.
  • datacomms — the transmission of data along communications systems
  • datasheet — A document summarizing the performance and other technical characteristics of a product.
  • datastage — (database, tool)   A tool set for designing, developing, and running applications that populate one or more tables in a data warehouse or data mart.
  • dataviews — Graphical user interface development software from V.I.Corporation, aimed at constructing platform-independent interactive views of dynamic data.
  • datebooks — Plural form of datebook.
  • datedness — the state of being old-fashioned
  • datelines — Plural form of dateline.
  • datepalms — Plural form of datepalm.
  • daughters — Plural form of daughter.
  • dauntless — A dauntless person is brave and confident and not easily frightened.
  • davis cup — an annual international lawn tennis championship for men's teams
  • dawsonite — a mineral that is made up of sodium and aluminium hydrous carbonate and occurs in crystalline form
  • day nurse — a nurse who is on duty during the daytime
  • day shift — a group of workers who work a shift during the daytime in an industry or occupation where a night shift or a back shift is also worked
  • day-lewis — C(ecil). 1904–72, British poet, critic, and (under the pen name Nicholas Blake) author of detective stories; poet laureate (1968–72)
  • daybreaks — Plural form of daybreak.
  • daydreams — Plural form of daydream.
  • daylights — consciousness or wits (esp in the phrases scare, knock, or beat the (living) daylights out of someone)
  • dayspring — the dawn
  • dazedness — the condition of being dazed
  • ddr-sdram — Double Data Rate Random Access Memory
  • de valois — Dame Ninette (niːˈnɛt). original name Edris Stannus. 1898–2001, British ballet dancer and choreographer, born in Ireland: a founder of the Vic-Wells Ballet Company (1931), which under her direction became the Royal Ballet (1956)
  • deaconess — (in the early church and in some modern Churches) a female member of the laity with duties similar to those of a deacon
  • dead loss — a person, thing, or situation that is completely useless or unprofitable
  • dead spot — Also called blind spot. an area in which radio or cell phone signals are weak and their reception poor.
  • dead-spot — Anatomy. a small area on the retina that is insensitive to light due to the interruption, where the optic nerve joins the retina, of the normal pattern of light-sensitive rods and cones.
  • deadbeats — Plural form of deadbeat.
  • deadfalls — Plural form of deadfall.
  • deadheads — Plural form of deadhead.
  • deadhouse — a mortuary
  • deadliest — causing or tending to cause death; fatal; lethal: a deadly poison.
  • deadlines — Plural form of deadline.
  • deadlocks — Plural form of deadlock.
  • deadstick — To land an aircraft without power.
  • deadstock — the merchandise or commodities of a shop, etc, that is unsold and generating no income
  • deadwoods — Plural form of deadwood.
  • deamidase — an enzyme that releases the amido group from a compound.
  • deaminase — an enzyme that breaks down and takes out the amino group from amino compounds
  • dean rusk — (David) Dean, 1909–94, U.S. statesman: secretary of state 1961–69.
  • deaneries — Plural form of deanery.
  • deathbeds — Plural form of deathbed.
  • deathless — immortal, esp because of greatness; everlasting
  • deathsman — an executioner
  • debarrass — to take from (a person) something that causes shame or embarrassment
  • debauches — to corrupt by sensuality, intemperance, etc.; seduce.
  • debt swap — A debt swap is a legal agreement where two people or companies exchange their debts, often where one has a fixed interest rate and one does not.
  • debutants — Plural form of debutant.
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