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9-letter words containing d, i, h

  • deathlike — resembling or suggestive of death
  • decastich — a poem that consists of ten lines
  • deciphers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decipher.
  • deckchair — A deckchair is a simple chair with a folding frame, and a piece of canvas as the seat and back. Deckchairs are usually used on the beach, on a ship, or in the garden.
  • deep-dish — prepared and served in a deep pan or dish
  • degarnish — to remove ornamentation from (something)
  • dehiscent — (of fruits, anthers, etc) opening spontaneously to release seeds or pollen
  • dehorning — Present participle of dehorn.
  • dehulling — to remove the hulls from (beans, seeds, etc.); hull.
  • delighted — If you are delighted, you are extremely pleased and excited about something.
  • delighter — a high degree of pleasure or enjoyment; joy; rapture: She takes great delight in her job.
  • delphinia — an ancient Greek festival in honor of Apollo.
  • delphinin — a violet anthocyanin, C 41 H 38 O 21 , found in the flowers of the larkspur, Delphinium consolida.
  • delphinus — a small constellation in the N hemisphere, between Pegasus and Sagitta
  • demijohns — Plural form of demijohn.
  • demophile — A friend of the people.
  • demythify — to remove the mythical characteristics from (a person)
  • den chief — (in the Boy Scouts) a boy scout who supervises a cub scout den in cooperation with a den mother or den father.
  • deplenish — to deprive of contents, such as furniture, stock, etc
  • dervishes — Plural form of dervish.
  • derzhavinGavril Romanovich [gah-vril roh-mah-nuh-vich;; Russian guh-vryil ruh-mah-nuh-vyich] /gɑˈvrɪl roʊˈmɑ nə vɪtʃ;; Russian gəˈvryɪl rəˈmɑ nə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1743–1816, Russian poet.
  • despiseth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of despise.
  • detaching — Present participle of detach.
  • devilfish — any manta
  • devilship — the office, character, or person of the devil
  • diachrony — a change over time, esp in languages
  • diachylon — a type of adhesive plaster, formerly made of various plant juices, but later containing lead oxide and glycerin
  • diaghilev — Sergei (Pavlovich) (sɪrˈɡjej ˈpavləvitʃ). 1872–1929, Russian ballet impresario. He founded (1909) and directed (1909–29) the Ballets Russes in Paris, introducing Russian ballet to the West
  • diagraphs — Plural form of diagraph.
  • diaphones — Plural form of diaphone.
  • diaphonic — Of or pertaining to diaphony.
  • diaphragm — Your diaphragm is a muscle between your lungs and your stomach. It is used when you breathe.
  • diaphyses — Plural form of diaphysis.
  • diaphysis — the shaft of a long bone
  • diarrheal — an intestinal disorder characterized by abnormal frequency and fluidity of fecal evacuations.
  • diarrheas — Plural form of diarrhea.
  • diarrheic — Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of diarrhea.
  • diarrhoea — If someone has diarrhoea, a lot of liquid faeces comes out of their body because they are ill.
  • diathermy — local heating of the body tissues with an electric current for medical or surgical purposes
  • diatheses — Plural form of diathesis.
  • diathesis — a hereditary or acquired susceptibility of the body to one or more diseases
  • diathetic — Pathology. a constitutional predisposition or tendency, as to a particular disease or other abnormal state of the body or mind.
  • dichasium — a cymose inflorescence in which each branch bearing a flower gives rise to two other flowering branches, as in the stitchwort
  • dichogamy — the maturation of male and female parts of a flower at different times, preventing automatic self-pollination
  • dichondra — any of a genus of creeping perennial herbs of the Convolvulaceae family, with white, pale yellow, or green flowers
  • dichoptic — having the eyes distinctly separate
  • dichotomy — If there is a dichotomy between two things, there is a very great difference or opposition between them.
  • dichroism — a property of a uniaxial crystal, such as tourmaline, of showing a perceptible difference in colour when viewed along two different axes in transmitted white light
  • dichroite — cordierite.
  • dichromat — a person whose vision can only distinguish two colours
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