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10-letter words containing d, e, n, r

  • dracontine — Belonging to a dragon.
  • draegerman — a miner, usually a member of a special crew, trained in underground rescue work and other emergency procedures.
  • draftiness — The characteristic of being drafty.
  • drag queen — Slang. a male transvestite, especially a performer who dresses as a woman to entertain the public.
  • dragonette — A small or female dragon.
  • dragonhead — any of several mints of the genus Dracocephalum having spikes of double-lipped flowers.
  • dragonlike — a mythical monster generally represented as a huge, winged reptile with crested head and enormous claws and teeth, and often spouting fire.
  • dragonnade — one of a series of persecutions of French Protestants, under Louis XIV, by dragoons quartered upon them.
  • dragoonade — Alternative form of dragonnade.
  • drainfield — an open area, the soil of which absorbs the contents of a septic tank.
  • drainlayer — a person trained to build or repair drains
  • drainpipes — a large pipe that carries away the discharge of waste pipes, soil pipes, etc.
  • drakestone — a flat stone thrown across the surface of water so as to make it skim or skip before sinking
  • drawknives — Plural form of drawknife.
  • dreadingly — With dread.
  • dreaminess — of the nature of or characteristic of dreams; visionary.
  • dreamingly — In a dreamy manner.
  • dreariment — (obsolete) dreariness.
  • dreariness — causing sadness or gloom.
  • dregginess — the condition or quality of dregs
  • dreikanter — a pebble or boulder having three faces formed by the action of windblown sand.
  • dress down — of or for a dress or dresses.
  • dress-down — pertaining to or being a policy that allows employees to dress less formally than usual: dress-down days during the summer.
  • dressiness — The characteristic of being dressy.
  • drift mine — a mine the opening of which is dug into an outcrop of coal or ore.
  • drinkwaterJohn, 1882–1937, English poet, playwright, and critic.
  • dripstones — Plural form of dripstone.
  • drivelines — Plural form of driveline.
  • drivelling — saliva flowing from the mouth, or mucus from the nose; slaver.
  • drivenness — past participle of drive.
  • driver ant — army ant.
  • drivetrain — the power train of an automotive vehicle consisting of all the components between the engine and driving wheels and including the clutch and axle, as well as the components of the driveline.
  • droop nose — Aeronautics. a downward-sloping, adjustable aircraft nose, which increases visibility for the pilot during takeoff and landing. an aircraft with this type of nose. an adjustable flap at the leading edge of an aircraft wing.
  • droopiness — The characteristic of being droopy.
  • drop scene — a drop curtain, often of painted or dyed canvas, located downstage and used as the backdrop for a scene played while the set upstage is being changed.
  • drop scone — a flat spongy cake made by dropping a spoonful of batter on a griddle
  • drop-panel — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • dropper-in — drop-in (def 1).
  • drowsiness — half-asleep; sleepy.
  • drunk text — a text message sent by someone who is intoxicated.
  • drury lane — a street in London, England, formerly notable for its theaters, named after the house Sir William Drury built there in the reign of Henry VIII.
  • dry ginger — ginger ale
  • dude ranch — a ranch operated primarily as a vacation resort.
  • duisenberg — Willem Frederik, known as Wim. 1935–2005, Dutch economist; president of the European Central Bank (1998–2003)
  • dukkeripen — fortune-telling
  • dumfounder — To dumbfound; to confound.
  • dunderfunk — a combination of ship's biscuit and molasses that is baked
  • dunderhead — a dunce; blockhead; numbskull.
  • dunderpate — a dunce; blockhead; numbskull.
  • dune grass — a stout grass, Elymus arenarius, of Eurasia, used as a binder for shifting sand.
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