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10-letter words containing d, e, a, s

  • desaturate — to cause (a substance) to unite with the greatest possible amount of another substance, through solution, chemical combination, or the like.
  • descendant — Someone's descendants are the people in later generations who are related to them.
  • descramble — to restore (a scrambled signal) to an intelligible form, esp automatically by the use of electronic devices
  • descriable — Capable of being descried (detected or perceived).
  • desecrated — to divest of sacred or hallowed character or office.
  • desecrater — One who desecrates.
  • desecrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of desecrate.
  • desecrator — to divest of sacred or hallowed character or office.
  • desert oak — a tree, Casuarina decaisneana, of Central and NW Australia, the timber of which is resistant to termite attack
  • desert pea — an Australian trailing leguminous plant, Clianthus formosus, with scarlet flowers
  • desert rat — a jerboa, Jaculus orientalis, inhabiting the deserts of N Africa
  • deshabille — the state of being partly or carelessly dressed
  • desiccants — Plural form of desiccant.
  • desiccated — Desiccated things have lost all the moisture that was in them.
  • desiccates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of desiccate.
  • desiccator — any apparatus for drying milk, fruit, etc
  • desiderata — something wanted or needed.
  • desiderate — to feel the lack of or need for; long for; miss
  • designated — (of a truth value) corresponding to truth in a two-valued logic, or having one of the analogous values in a many-valued logic
  • designates — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • designator — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • designatum — (semantics) That which is named or designated by a linguistic term.
  • desirables — Plural form of desirable.
  • desireable — Archaic form of desirable.
  • desistance — to cease, as from some action or proceeding; stop.
  • desmosomal — of or relating to desmosomes
  • desolately — barren or laid waste; devastated: a treeless, desolate landscape.
  • desolating — Present participle of desolate.
  • desolation — Desolation is a feeling of great unhappiness and hopelessness.
  • desolatory — tending to cause desolation
  • despairful — full of despair; hopeless; despairing
  • despairing — marked by or resulting from despair; hopeless or desperate
  • despatched — Simple past tense and past participle of despatch.
  • despatcher — Alternative form of dispatcher.
  • despatches — Plural form of despatch.
  • despawning — Present participle of despawn.
  • despecable — Misspelling of despicable.
  • desperados — Plural form of desperado.
  • despicable — If you say that a person or action is despicable, you are emphasizing that they are extremely nasty, cruel, or evil.
  • despicably — deserving to be despised, or regarded with distaste, disgust, or disdain; contemptible: He was a mean, despicable man, who treated his wife and children badly.
  • despisable — deserving of being despised; despicable
  • despotical — of, relating to, or of the nature of a despot or despotism; autocratic; tyrannical.
  • despumated — Simple past tense and past participle of despumate.
  • desquamate — (esp of the skin in certain diseases) to peel or come off in scales
  • dessalines — Jean-Jacques (ʒɑ̃ ʒɑk). ?1758–1806, emperor of Haiti (1804–06) after driving out the French; assassinated
  • dessiatina — A Russian measure of land, roughly 1.1 hectares.
  • dessiatine — a Russian unit of area equal to approximately 2.7 acres or 10 800 square metres
  • dessicated — Misspelling of desiccated.
  • dessyatine — a Russian measure of land, equivalent to 2.7 acres
  • destratify — to form or place in strata or layers.
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