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9-letter words containing d, e, c, o, y

  • acesodyne — mitigating pain; anodyne.
  • acronymed — a word formed from the initial letters or groups of letters of words in a set phrase or series of words and pronounced as a separate word, as Wac from Women's Army Corps, OPEC from Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or loran from long-range navigation.
  • adipocyte — a fat cell that accumulates and stores fats
  • azoic dye — any of a group of brilliant, long-lasting azo dyes, formed on the fiber by coupling diazotized materials, used chiefly for printing on cotton.
  • body cell — somatic cell.
  • bodycheck — obstruction of another player
  • botchedly — in a botched or clumsy manner
  • byte-code — (file format, software)   A binary file containing an executable program, consisting of a sequence of (op code, data) pairs. Byte-code op codes are most often fixed size bit patterns, but can be variable size. The data portion consists of zero or more bits whose format typically depends on the op code. A byte-code program is interpreted by a byte-code interpreter. The advantage of this technique compared with outputing machine code for some particular processor is that the same byte-code can be executed on any processor on which the byte-code interpreter runs. The byte-code may be compiled to machine code ("native code") for speed of execution but this usually requires significantly greater effort for each new taraget architecture than simply porting the interpreter. For example, Java is compiled to byte-code which runs on the Java Virtual Machine.
  • calcedony — Alt form chalcedony.
  • cell body — the compact area of a nerve cell that constitutes the nucleus and surrounding cytoplasm, excluding the axons and dendrites.
  • chudskoye — Lakelake on the Estonian-Russian border: with its S extension, Lake Pskov, c. 1,400 sq mi (3,626 sq km)
  • city code — (in Britain) short for City Code on Takeovers and Mergers: a code laid down in 1968 (later modified) to control takeover bids and mergers
  • cold type — typesetting done by a method other than the casting of molten type
  • comradely — If you do something in a comradely way, you are being pleasant and friendly to other people.
  • comradery — camaraderie or comradeship
  • congo dye — any of certain azo dyes, derived mainly from benzidine
  • copy desk — a desk where copy is edited
  • copy-edit — to prepare (copy) for printing by styling, correcting, etc
  • copy-read — to work on (copy) as a copyreader.
  • copyedits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of copyedit.
  • cordately — In a cordate form.
  • cordyline — any of various trees or shrubs of the genus Cordyline that are native to eastern Asia, Australasia, and Polynesia
  • cotyledon — a simple embryonic leaf in seed-bearing plants, which, in some species, forms the first green leaf after germination
  • crookedly — not straight; bending; curved: a crooked path.
  • crowdedly — In a crowded manner.
  • cycadeoid — a member of an order of plants with woody stems and tough leaves that became extinct during the Cretaceous period
  • daybeacon — an unlighted navigational beacon used as a daymark.
  • deceptory — inclined to deceive
  • decretory — characterized by making an absolute and final decision
  • dejectory — tending to cast down
  • democracy — A democracy is a country in which the people choose their government by voting for it.
  • democraty — Obsolete form of democracy.
  • democrazy — A democratic system or state considered to be inauthentic or inherently flawed; democracy that has descended into corruption, injustice, or absurdity.
  • demonymic — Having characteristics of a demonym.
  • dictyogen — a monocotyledon with reticulated leaves
  • directory — a book containing an alphabetical index of the names and addresses of persons in a city, district, organization, etc., or of a particular category of people.
  • discovery — the act or an instance of discovering.
  • do nicely — If someone or something is doing nicely, they are being successful.
  • doohickey — a gadget; dingus; thingumbob.
  • downcycle — a downward course in the business cycle.
  • dyspnoeic — Alternative spelling of dyspneic.
  • educatory — educative.
  • endocytic — (cytology) Of or pertaining to endocytosis.
  • endoscopy — (medicine) the examination of a bodily orifice, canal or organ using an endoscope.
  • forecaddy — caddy who goes ahead of the golfer to point out the ball's location
  • glycoside — any of the class of compounds that yield a sugar and an aglycon upon hydrolysis.
  • gray code — (hardware)   A binary sequence with the property that only one bit changes between any two consecutive elements (the two codes have a Hamming distance of one). The Gray code originated when digital logic circuits were built from vacuum tubes and electromechanical relays. Counters generated tremendous power demands and noise spikes when many bits changed at once. E.g. when incrementing a register containing 11111111, the back-EMF from the relays' collapsing magnetic fields required copious noise suppression. Using Gray code counters, any increment or decrement changed only one bit, regardless of the size of the number. Gray code can also be used to convert the angular position of a disk to digital form. A radial line of sensors reads the code off the surface of the disk and if the disk is half-way between two positions each sensor might read its bit from both positions at once but since only one bit differs between the two, the value read is guaranteed to be one of the two valid values rather than some third (invalid) combination (a glitch). One possible algorithm for generating a Gray code sequence is to toggle the lowest numbered bit that results in a new code each time. Here is a four bit Gray code sequence generated in this way: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 The codes were patented in 1953 by Frank Gray, a Bell Labs researcher.
  • gynaecoid — Characteristic of a woman.
  • hydrocele — an accumulation of serous fluid, usually about the testis.
  • indolency — (obsolete) The lack of pain; absence of pain.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with D-E-C-O-Y. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in D-E-C-O-Y to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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