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8-letter words containing d, e, n, s

  • sunderer — to separate; part; divide; sever.
  • sundress — a dress with a bodice styled to expose the arms, shoulders, and back, for wear during hot weather.
  • sundries — miscellaneous items
  • sunshade — something used as a protection from the rays of the sun, as an awning or a parasol.
  • swanherd — a person who tends swans.
  • swindled — (of a gem) cut so as to retain the maximum weight of the original stone or to give a false impression of size, especially by having the table too large.
  • swindler — to cheat (a person, business, etc.) out of money or other assets.
  • swounded — swoon.
  • syndesis — synapsis (def 1).
  • syndetic — serving to unite or connect; connective; copulative.
  • syndeton — a syndetic construction
  • syndrome — Pathology, Psychiatry. a group of symptoms that together are characteristic of a specific disorder, disease, or the like.
  • synergid — one of two small cells that lie inside the embryo sac of a flowering plant and nourish the ovum.
  • syphoned — a tube or conduit bent into legs of unequal length, for use in drawing a liquid from one container into another on a lower level by placing the shorter leg into the container above and the longer leg into the one below, the liquid being forced up the shorter leg and into the longer one by the pressure of the atmosphere.
  • tendrils — a threadlike, leafless organ of climbing plants, often growing in spiral form, which attaches itself to or twines round some other body, so as to support the plant.
  • tidesman — a Customs official at a port
  • tidiness — neat, orderly, or trim, as in appearance or dress: a tidy room; a tidy person.
  • townsendFrancis Everett, 1867–1960, U.S. physician and proposer of the Townsend plan.
  • transude — to pass or ooze through pores or interstices, as a fluid.
  • tyneside — the conurbation on the banks of the Tyne from Newcastle to the coast
  • unabased — (of a charge) lower on an escutcheon than is usual: a bend abased.
  • unabused — not abused or mistreated physically or verbally
  • unamused — pleasurably entertained, occupied, or diverted.
  • unbasted — (of a garment) not basted; not sewn loosely together
  • unbiased — not biased or prejudiced; fair; impartial.
  • unbusted — not busted; unbroken
  • uncashed — money in the form of coins or banknotes, especially that issued by a government.
  • uncasked — removed from a cask; brought out of a cask
  • uncaused — not resulting from some antecedent cause.
  • unceased — to stop; discontinue: Not all medieval beliefs have ceased to exist.
  • unclosed — not closed: an unclosed door.
  • undashed — lacking a dash or dashes
  • undersay — to state in the form of an answer
  • undersea — located, carried on, or used under the surface of the sea: undersea life.
  • underset — a current of water below the surface and flowing in a direction contrary to the water on the surface.
  • undersky — lower sky
  • underuse — to employ for some purpose; put into service; make use of: to use a knife.
  • undesert — a lack of merit or worth
  • unerased — to rub or scrape out, as letters or characters written, engraved, etc.; efface.
  • unespied — unnoticed; not seen
  • unfished — not used for fishing
  • unhalsed — not hailed or greeted
  • unissued — the act of sending out or putting forth; promulgation; distribution: the issue of food and blankets to flood victims.
  • unkissed — not kissed
  • unlapsed — no longer committed to or following the tenets of a particular belief, obligation, position, etc.: a lapsed Catholic.
  • unleased — (of a shop, office, property, etc) not leased
  • unlisted — not listed; not entered in a list or directory: an unlisted telephone number.
  • unmasked — to strip a mask or disguise from.
  • unmissed — to fail to hit or strike: to miss a target.
  • unparsed — to analyze (a sentence) in terms of grammatical constituents, identifying the parts of speech, syntactic relations, etc.
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