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9-letter words containing d, i, e, l

  • unimplied — involved, indicated, or suggested without being directly or explicitly stated; tacitly understood: an implied rebuke; an implied compliment.
  • uniondale — a town on W Long Island, in SE New York.
  • unkindled — not set alight or made to burn or shine
  • unlighted — not made to start burning; unlit; unignited
  • unlimited — not limited; unrestricted; unconfined: unlimited trade.
  • unmixedly — in an unmixed manner, without being mixed
  • unobliged — to require or constrain, as by law, command, conscience, or force of necessity.
  • unpalsied — not affected by paralysis
  • unpiloted — without a pilot; unguided
  • unplained — unlamented
  • unpoliced — Also called police force. an organized civil force for maintaining order, preventing and detecting crime, and enforcing the laws.
  • unreplied — to make answer in words or writing; answer; respond: to reply to a question.
  • unrivaled — having no rival or competitor; having no equal; incomparable; supreme: His work is unrivaled for the beauty of its prose.
  • unsickled — not cut with a sickle
  • unskilled — of or relating to workers who lack technical training or skill.
  • unspoiled — to damage severely or harm (something), especially with reference to its excellence, value, usefulness, etc.: The water stain spoiled the painting. Drought spoiled the corn crop.
  • unstifled — to quell, crush, or end by force: to stifle a revolt; to stifle free expression.
  • unstilled — not quieted or stilled; not calmed or appeased
  • unsullied — not soiled, untarnished: an unsullied public persona.
  • untallied — an account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, or the like.
  • untwilled — (of fabric) not twilled
  • unwieldly — not wieldy; wielded with difficulty; not readily handled or managed in use or action, as from size, shape, or weight; awkward; ungainly.
  • uptrilled — trilled high (used in Samuel Coleridge's poems)
  • validated — to make valid; substantiate; confirm: Time validated our suspicions.
  • vandalise — to destroy or deface by vandalism: Someone vandalized the museum during the night.
  • vandalize — to destroy or deface by vandalism: Someone vandalized the museum during the night.
  • velarized — pronounced with velar coarticulation.
  • veridical — truthful; veracious.
  • vermilled — coloured vermilion
  • videlicet — that is to say; namely (used especially to introduce examples, details, etc.). Abbreviation: viz.
  • videoland — the world of television and televised images
  • videoplay — teleplay.
  • vindemial — relating to a grape harvest
  • vocalised — to make vocal; utter; articulate; sing.
  • volkslied — a folk song.
  • vulpicide — the act of killing a fox other than by hunting it with hounds.
  • wakefield — a city in West Yorkshire, in N England: battle 1460.
  • wassailed — Simple past tense and past participle of wassail.
  • weariedly — In an wearied manner; wearily.
  • wedgelike — Shaped like a wedge.
  • weevilled — infested with weevils.
  • well-paid — a simple past tense and past participle of pay1 .
  • welldoing — good conduct or action.
  • westfield — a city in S Massachusetts.
  • wheedling — to endeavor to influence (a person) by smooth, flattering, or beguiling words or acts: We wheedled him incessantly, but he would not consent.
  • wieldable — Capable of being wielded.
  • wieldless — not capable of being handled; unwieldy
  • wild bean — groundnut (def 1).
  • wild date — a feather palm, Phoenix sylvestris, of India, having drooping, bluish-green or grayish leaves and small, orange-yellow fruit.
  • wild pear — a wild variety of pear, especially Pyrus pyraster or Pyrus caucasica
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