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6-letter words containing d, e, a

  • dances — Plural form of dance.
  • dancey — of, relating to, or resembling dance music
  • dander — small particles or scales of hair or feathers
  • dandle — to move (a young child, etc) up and down (on the knee or in the arms)
  • danged — damn (used euphemistically).
  • danger — Danger is the possibility that someone may be harmed or killed.
  • dangle — If something dangles from somewhere or if you dangle it somewhere, it hangs or swings loosely.
  • daniel — a youth who was taken into the household of Nebuchadnezzar, received guidance and apocalyptic visions from God, and was given divine protection when thrown into the lions' den
  • danite — of the Hebrew tribe of Dan
  • danker — Comparative form of dank.
  • danube — a river in central and SE Europe, rising in the Black Forest in Germany and flowing to the Black Sea. Length: 2859 km (1776 miles)
  • daphne — any shrub of the Eurasian thymelaeaceous genus Daphne, such as the mezereon and spurge laurel: ornamentals with shiny evergreen leaves and clusters of small bell-shaped flowers
  • daplex — ["The Functional Data Model and the Data Language DAPLEX", D.W. Shipman, ACM Trans Database Sys, 6(1):140-173 (Mar 1981)].
  • dapped — to fish by letting the bait fall lightly on the water.
  • dapper — A man who is dapper has a very neat and clean appearance, and is often also small and thin.
  • dapple — to mark or become marked with spots or patches of a different colour; mottle
  • darers — Plural form of darer.
  • darest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of dare.
  • dargle — a wooded hollow
  • darien — the E part of the Isthmus of Panama, between the Gulf of Darien on the Caribbean coast and the Gulf of San Miguel on the Pacific coast; chiefly within the republic of Panama but extending also into Colombia: site of a disastrous attempt to establish a Scottish colony in 1698
  • darked — having very little or no light: a dark room.
  • darken — If something darkens or if a person or thing darkens it, it becomes darker.
  • darker — having very little or no light: a dark room.
  • darkey — (slang, offensive, ethnic slur) A person with dark skin.
  • darkie — darky.
  • darkle — to grow dark; darken
  • darned — (intensifier)
  • darnel — any of several grasses of the genus Lolium, esp L. temulentum, that grow as weeds in grain fields in Europe and Asia
  • darner — a person or thing that darns.
  • darren — a male given name.
  • darted — a small, slender missile that is pointed at one end and usually feathered at the other and is propelled by hand, as in the game of darts, or by a blowgun when used as a weapon.
  • darter — any aquatic bird of the genus Anhinga and family Anhingidae, of tropical and subtropical inland waters, having a long slender neck and bill: order Pelecaniformes (pelicans, cormorants, etc)
  • dartle — to move swiftly and repeatedly
  • dartre — any skin disease characterized by scabby or flaky skin, such as herpes or eczema
  • dasein — (philosophy) Being; especially the nature of being; existence, presence, hereness, suchness, essence.
  • dashed — made up of dashes: a dashed line down the middle of the road.
  • dasher — someone or something that dashes
  • dashes — Plural form of dash.
  • dassie — another name for a hyrax, esp the rock hyrax
  • daters — Plural form of dater.
  • dative — In the grammar of some languages, for example Latin, the dative, or the dative case, is the case used for a noun when it is the indirect object of a verb, or when it comes after some prepositions.
  • daubed — to cover or coat with soft, adhesive matter, as plaster or mud: to daub a canvas with paint; to daub stone walls with mud.
  • dauber — to cover or coat with soft, adhesive matter, as plaster or mud: to daub a canvas with paint; to daub stone walls with mud.
  • daubes — Plural form of daube.
  • daudet — Alphonse (alfɔ̃s). 1840–97, French novelist, short-story writer, and dramatist: noted particularly for his humorous sketches of Provençal life, as in Lettres de mon moulin (1866)
  • dauner — an amble or walk
  • dauted — to caress.
  • dautie — a beloved person who is petted or pampered
  • davies — Sir John. 1569–1626, English poet, author of Orchestra or a Poem of Dancing (1596) and the philosophical poem Nosce Teipsum (1599)
  • dawdle — If you dawdle, you spend more time than is necessary going somewhere.
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