0%

9-letter words containing d, e

  • academies — Plural form of academy.
  • academise — to reduce (a subject) to a rigid set of rules, principles, precepts, etc.: futile attempts to academize the visual arts.
  • academism — academicism.
  • academist — a person belonging to an academy or society, usually of science, art or literature
  • academize — to reduce (a subject) to a rigid set of rules, principles, precepts, etc.: futile attempts to academize the visual arts.
  • acaricide — any drug or formulation for killing acarids
  • accademia — an art gallery in Venice housing a collection of paintings by Venetian masters from the 13th to 18th centuries
  • accedence — to give consent, approval, or adherence; agree; assent; to accede to a request; to accede to the terms of a contract.
  • accending — Present participle of accend.
  • accidence — inflectional morphology; the part of grammar concerned with changes in the form of words by internal modification or by affixation, for the expression of tense, person, case, number, etc
  • accidents — Plural form of accident.
  • acclaimed — publicly acknowledged as excellent
  • accoladed — any award, honor, or laudatory notice: The play received accolades from the press.
  • accolades — Plural form of accolade.
  • accolated — (of portraits on a coin, medal, or escutcheon) overlapping and facing in the same direction; conjoined.
  • accorders — Plural form of accorder.
  • accounted — an oral or written description of particular events or situations; narrative: an account of the meetings; an account of the trip.
  • accoutred — equipped or dressed in a particular way
  • accredits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accredit.
  • accresced — Simple past tense and past participle of accresce.
  • accroides — an alcohol-soluble resin, obtained from Australian trees, used in paper manufacturing and as a component of varnishes
  • accurized — to improve the accuracy of (a firearm).
  • acerbated — Simple past tense and past participle of acerbate.
  • acesodyne — mitigating pain; anodyne.
  • acetaldol — aldol (def 1).
  • acetamide — a white or colourless soluble deliquescent crystalline compound, used in the manufacture of organic chemicals. Formula: CH3CONH2
  • acetified — Simple past tense and past participle of acetify.
  • acetylide — any of a class of carbides in which the carbon is present as a diatomic divalent ion (C22–). They are formally derivatives of acetylene
  • acid cell — Electricity. a cell using an acid electrolyte.
  • acid test — The acid test of something is an important aspect or result that it might have, which allows you to decide whether it is true or successful.
  • acid-head — a person who habitually takes the drug LSD.
  • acidaemia — (medicine) a medical condition marked by an abnormally high concentration of hydrogen ions in a person's blood.
  • acidaemic — Pertaining to, or afflicted with, acidaemia.
  • acidified — Simple past tense and past participle of acidify.
  • acidifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of acidify.
  • acidities — Plural form of acidity.
  • acidulate — to make slightly acid or sour
  • acidulent — an acidulating substance.
  • acquitted — to relieve from a charge of fault or crime; declare not guilty: They acquitted him of the crime. The jury acquitted her, but I still think she's guilty.
  • acridness — Bitterness or acerbity.
  • acrodrome — (of the veins of a leaf) running parallel to the edges of the leaf and fusing at the tip
  • acronymed — a word formed from the initial letters or groups of letters of words in a set phrase or series of words and pronounced as a separate word, as Wac from Women's Army Corps, OPEC from Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or loran from long-range navigation.
  • actinides — Plural form of actinide.
  • activated — to make active; cause to function or act.
  • ad agency — An ad agency is a company whose business is to create advertisements for other companies or organizations.
  • ad patres — dead.
  • ad verbum — word for word; verbatim
  • adam bede — a novel (1859) by George Eliot.
  • adamently — Misspelling of adamantly.
  • adaptable — If you describe a person or animal as adaptable, you mean that they are able to change their ideas or behaviour in order to deal with new situations.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?