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9-letter words containing d, e, u, c, r

  • crudeness — in a raw or unprepared state; unrefined or natural: crude sugar.
  • crudities — the state or quality of being crude.
  • crusaders — (often initial capital letter) any of the military expeditions undertaken by the Christians of Europe in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries for the recovery of the Holy Land from the Muslims.
  • crusadoes — Plural form of crusado.
  • cuirassed — Wearing a cuirass.
  • cullender — colander
  • cultrated — Cultrate.
  • cupholder — a competitor who has won or successfully defended a specific cup, trophy, championship, etc.; champion.
  • curandera — (in Hispanic America) a female healer or shaman
  • curandero — a male healer or shaman in Hispanic-America
  • curarized — Simple past tense and past participle of curarize.
  • curbsides — Plural form of curbside.
  • curlicued — Simple past tense and past participle of curlicue.
  • curlyhead — a person whose hair is curly.
  • curtailed — to cut short; cut off a part of; abridge; reduce; diminish.
  • curtained — A curtained window, door, or other opening has a curtain hanging across it.
  • curtseyed — Simple past tense and past participle of curtsey.
  • curvetted — Simple past tense and past participle of curvet.
  • custodier — a custodian
  • cybercrud — (jargon)   /si:'ber-kruhd/ 1. (Coined by Ted Nelson) Obfuscatory tech-talk. Verbiage with a high MEGO factor. The computer equivalent of bureaucratese. 2. Incomprehensible stuff embedded in e-mail. First there were the "Received" headers that show how mail flows through systems, then MIME (Multi-purpose Internet Mail Extensions) headers and part boundaries, and now huge blocks of hex for PEM (Privacy Enhanced Mail) or PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) digital signatures and certificates of authenticity. This stuff all has a purpose and good user interfaces should hide it, but all too often users are forced to wade through it.
  • debaucher — to corrupt by sensuality, intemperance, etc.; seduce.
  • dechunker — chunker
  • declutter — to simplify or get rid of mess, disorder, complications, etc, from
  • decocture — the essence or liquor resulting from decoction
  • decoupler — a person or device that disconnects parts that are joined
  • decourous — Misspelling of decorous.
  • deculture — to deculturate.
  • decurions — Plural form of decurion.
  • decurrent — extending down the stem, esp (of a leaf) having the base of the blade extending down the stem as two wings
  • decursion — a military exercise performed by men bearing arms
  • decurtate — Shortened, curtailed.
  • demiurgic — Philosophy. Platonism. the artificer of the world. (in the Gnostic and certain other systems) a supernatural being imagined as creating or fashioning the world in subordination to the Supreme Being, and sometimes regarded as the originator of evil.
  • denouncer — One who, or that which, denounces.
  • depicture — (transitive) To make a picture of; to paint or depict.
  • destructo — a person who causes havoc or destruction
  • destructs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of destruct.
  • deutscherIsaac, 1907–1967, English journalist and author, born in Poland.
  • dictature — dictatorship
  • dimercury — (chemistry, especially in combination) Two mercury atoms in a molecule.
  • discoured — Simple past tense and past participle of discoure.
  • discoures — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discoure.
  • discourse — communication of thought by words; talk; conversation: earnest and intelligent discourse.
  • discumber — (archaic, transitive) To free from that which cumbers or impedes; to disencumber.
  • discusser — A person who discusses.
  • diuretics — Plural form of diuretic.
  • dulcimers — Plural form of dulcimer.
  • dulcorate — (obsolete, transitive) To sweeten; to make less acrimonious.
  • echiuroid — any wormlike invertebrate of the phylum Echiuroidea, found in sand and mud of tropical and subtropical seas, having at the mouth a ciliated, often elongated prostomium.
  • ecuadoran — a republic in NW South America. 109,483 sq. mi. (283,561 sq. km). Capital: Quito.
  • educators — Plural form of educator.
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