7-letter words containing d, i, l
- claudia — a feminine name
- cliched — If you describe something as clichéd, you mean that it has been said, done, or used many times before, and is boring or untrue.
- clicked — Past participle of click.
- clinged — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of cling.
- clinked — Simple past tense and past participle of clink.
- clinoid — (anatomy) Like a bed.
- clipped — Clipped means neatly cut.
- cliqued — a small, exclusive group of people; coterie; set.
- cludgie — a toilet
- clupeid — any widely distributed soft-finned teleost fish of the family Clupeidae, typically having oily flesh, and including the herrings, sardines, shad, etc
- codical — Of or pertaining to a code or codex.
- codicil — A codicil is an instruction that is added to a will after the main part of it has been written.
- codilla — the coarse parts of flax and hemp
- codille — (in the game of ombre) a term indicating that the game is won
- codline — an untarred cord of hemp or cotton, used for fishing and for various purposes aboard a ship.
- codling — any of several varieties of long tapering apples used for cooking
- codlins — Plural form of codlin.
- coldish — Somewhat cold.
- colditz — a town in E Germany, on the River Mulde: during World War II its castle was used as a top-security camp for Allied prisoners of war; many daring escape attempts, some successful, were made
- collide — If two or more moving people or objects collide, they crash into one another. If a moving person or object collides with a person or object that is not moving, they crash into them.
- collied — to blacken as with coal dust; begrime.
- collodi — Carlo [kahr-loh;; Italian kahr-law] /ˈkɑr loʊ;; Italian ˈkɑr lɔ/ (Show IPA), (Carlo Lorenzini) 1826–90, Italian writer: creator of the story of Pinocchio.
- colloid — a mixture having particles of one component, with diameters between 10–7 and 10–9 metres, suspended in a continuous phase of another component. The mixture has properties between those of a solution and a fine suspension
- colobid — a type of African monkey of the family Cercopithecidae
- cordial — Cordial means friendly.
- cotidal — (of a line on a tidal chart) joining points at which high tide occurs simultaneously
- cudlipp — Hugh, Baron. 1913–98, British newspaper editor, a pioneer of tabloid journalism: editorial director of the Daily Mirror (1952–63)
- culicid — any dipterous insect of the family Culicidae, which comprises the mosquitos
- cycloid — resembling a circle
- dactyli — an enlarged portion of the leg after the first joint in some insects, as the pollen-carrying segment in the hind leg of certain bees.
- daffily — In a daffy manner.
- dahlias — Plural form of dahlia.
- dahling — (as a term of address) darling (imitating a posh or pretentious person).
- dailies — of, done, occurring, or issued each day or each weekday: daily attendance; a daily newspaper.
- daimler — Gottlieb (Wilhelm) (German ˈɡɔtliːp ˈvɪlhɛlm). 1834–1900, German engineer and car manufacturer, who collaborated with Nikolaus Otto in inventing the first internal-combustion engine (1876)
- dalasis — Plural form of dalasi.
- dalgite — (Western Australia) A rabbit-eared bandicoot; a bilby.
- dallied — to waste time; loiter; delay.
- dallier — One who dallies; a procrastinator.
- dallies — Plural form of dally.
- danakil — Afar.
- dandily — In a dandy way.
- daniels — Josephus1862-1948; U.S. statesman & journalist: secretary of the navy (1913-21)
- dariole — a small cup-shaped mould used for making individual sweet or savoury dishes
- darling — You call someone darling if you love them or like them very much.
- datival — (in certain inflected languages, as Latin, Greek, and German) noting a case having as a distinctive function indication of the indirect object of a verb or the object of certain prepositions.
- daygirl — a girl who attends a boarding school daily, but returns home each evening
- daylily — any lily of the genus Hemerocallis, having yellow, orange, or red flowers that commonly last only for a day.
- daysail — to go boating in a day sailer.
- de-link — to make independent; dissociate; separate: The administration has delinked human rights from economic aid to underdeveloped nations.