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8-letter words containing d, e, h, i

  • deanship — Education. the head of a faculty, school, or administrative division in a university or college: the dean of admissions. an official in an American college or secondary school having charge of student personnel services, such as counseling or discipline: the dean of men. the official in charge of undergraduate students at an English university.
  • decipher — to determine the meaning of (something obscure or illegible)
  • dehisced — Simple past tense and past participle of dehisce.
  • dehisces — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dehisce.
  • deighton — Len. born 1929, British thriller writer. His books include The Ipcress File (1962), Bomber (1970), and the trilogy Berlin Game, Mexico Set, and London Match (1983–85)
  • delhiite — a native or inhabitant of Delhi
  • delights — Plural form of delight.
  • delphian — a native or inhabitant of Delphi.
  • delphine — Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of dolphins.
  • demijohn — a large bottle with a short narrow neck, often with small handles at the neck and encased in wickerwork
  • deminish — Obsolete form of diminish.
  • demolish — To demolish something such as a building means to destroy it completely.
  • demonish — Like or characterisic of a demon; demonic.
  • demyship — a type of scholarship awarded at Magdalen College, Oxford
  • denglish — a variety of German containing a high proportion of English words
  • depolish — to remove the polish from (an object)
  • desireth — Archaic third-person singular form of desire.
  • devilish — A devilish idea or action is cruel or unpleasant.
  • dhurries — Plural form of dhurrie.
  • diaphane — Something transparent or diaphanous.
  • diaphone — the set of all realizations of a given phoneme in a language
  • diarrhea — If someone has diarrhea, a lot of liquid feces comes out of their body because they are ill.
  • dickhead — If someone calls a man a dickhead, they are saying that they think he is very stupid.
  • die hard — If you say that habits or attitudes die hard, you mean that they take a very long time to disappear or change, so that it may not be possible to get rid of them completely.
  • die-hard — a person who vigorously maintains or defends a seemingly hopeless position, outdated attitude, lost cause, or the like.
  • diehards — Plural form of diehard.
  • dietrich — Marlene [mahr-ley-nuh] /mɑrˈleɪ nə/ (Show IPA), 1904–92, U.S. actress and singer, born in Germany.
  • dihedral — having or formed by two planes.
  • dihedron — a figure formed by two intersecting planes.
  • dimethyl — ethane.
  • dinghies — Plural form of dinghy.
  • diphenyl — biphenyl.
  • disbench — to remove (a barrister or judge) from the membership of the governing body of one of the Inns of Court
  • disflesh — (obsolete, transitive) To reduce the flesh or obesity of.
  • disheart — Obsolete form of dishearten.
  • disherit — to disinherit.
  • dishevel — to let down, as hair, or wear or let hang in loose disorder, as clothing.
  • dishorse — (archaic, intransitive) To dismount from a horse.
  • dishouse — to deprive of a home
  • dishware — dishes used for food; tableware.
  • disthene — (mineral) Kyanite.
  • dithecal — having two thecae or receptacles
  • ditheism — the doctrine of or belief in two equally powerful gods.
  • ditheist — One who holds the doctrine of ditheism; a dualist.
  • dithered — Simple past tense and past participle of dither.
  • ditherer — a trembling; vibration.
  • dogeship — the chief magistrate in the former republics of Venice and Genoa.
  • dohickey — Alternative spelling of doohickey.
  • dreggish — resembling or containing dregs
  • drinketh — Archaic third-person singular form of drink.
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