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9-letter words containing d, e, t, a, i

  • deadliest — causing or tending to cause death; fatal; lethal: a deadly poison.
  • deadlight — a bull's-eye let into the deck or hull of a vessel to admit light to a cabin
  • deadstick — To land an aircraft without power.
  • deal with — When you deal with something or someone that needs attention, you give your attention to them, and often solve a problem or make a decision concerning them.
  • deamidate — (organic chemistry) To remove an amide functional group from a compound.
  • deaminate — to remove one or more amino groups from (a molecule)
  • deathlike — resembling or suggestive of death
  • decaliter — dekaliter
  • decalitre — ten litres. One decalitre is equal to about 2.2 imperial gallons
  • decanting — to pour (wine or other liquid) gently so as not to disturb the sediment.
  • decastich — a poem that consists of ten lines
  • deciduate — having or characterized by a decidua.
  • decimated — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • decimates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decimate.
  • decimator — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • declinant — a person who is declining or diminishing in luck or wealth
  • declinate — (esp of plant parts) descending from the horizontal in a curve; drooping
  • decmate i — (computer)   The first in DEC's series of miniaturised PDP-8 computers based on the Intersil 6120 [Harris 6120?] microprocessor and dedicated to wordprocessing. The DECmate was DEC's original competition for the IBM PC. The DECmate I was introduced in 1980 as the successor to the WT78. The processor ran at 10 MHz, and was housed in a VT100 CRT terminal. It was a very limted model, no EAE option was available, memory was 32 Kwords. It used the RX02 8" dual floppy drive. Options were the DP278-A and -B communication ports and RL278: 1 to 4 RL02 cartridge disk drives.
  • decubital — any position assumed by a patient when lying in bed.
  • dedicated — You use dedicated to describe someone who enjoys a particular activity very much and spends a lot of time doing it.
  • dedicatee — a person to whom something is dedicated.
  • dedicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dedicate.
  • dedicator — to set apart and consecrate to a deity or to a sacred purpose: The ancient Greeks dedicated many shrines to Aphrodite.
  • defeating — Present participle of defeat.
  • defeatism — Defeatism is a way of thinking or talking which suggests that you expect to be unsuccessful.
  • defeatist — A defeatist is someone who thinks or talks in a way that suggests that they expect to be unsuccessful.
  • defiantly — characterized by defiance; boldly resistant or challenging: a defiant attitude.
  • defibrate — to break (wood, paper, garbage, etc.) into fibrous components; reduce to fibers.
  • definatly — Misspelling of definitely.
  • deflating — to release the air or gas from (something inflated, as a balloon): They deflated the tires slightly to allow the truck to drive under the overpass.
  • deflation — Deflation is a reduction in economic activity that leads to lower levels of industrial output, employment, investment, trade, profits, and prices.
  • defoliant — A defoliant is a chemical used on trees and plants to make all their leaves fall off. Defoliants are especially used in war to remove protection from an enemy.
  • defoliate — To defoliate an area or the plants in it means to cause the leaves on the plants to fall off or be destroyed. This is done especially in war to remove protection from an enemy.
  • degrative — (chemistry) of something causing a cell or organism to degrade.
  • deictical — Deictic.
  • deinstall — Uninstall.
  • deisolate — to remove from isolation.
  • deistical — a person who believes in deism.
  • dekaliter — ten liters, or one tenth of a hectoliter (2.6418 gallons liquid measure or 1.135 pecks dry measure): abbrev. dal
  • delibrate — (obsolete) To strip off the bark; to peel.
  • delicates — Underwear or lingerie.
  • delictual — (legal) Derived from a delict (analogous to a tort).
  • deligated — Simple past tense and past participle of deligate.
  • delignate — (rare, transitive) To clear or strip of wood.
  • delineate — If you delineate something such as an idea or situation, you describe it or define it, often in a lot of detail.
  • deliriant — involving or causing delirium.
  • deltoidal — of or relating to a river delta.
  • demantoid — a bright green variety of andradite garnet
  • demential — severe impairment or loss of intellectual capacity and personality integration, due to the loss of or damage to neurons in the brain.
  • demetrias — an ancient city in NE Greece, in Thessaly.
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