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7-letter words containing d, i, n, s

  • slidden — to move along in continuous contact with a smooth or slippery surface: to slide down a snow-covered hill.
  • sliding — rising or falling, increasing or decreasing, according to a standard or to a set of conditions.
  • slinked — to move or go in a furtive, abject manner, as from fear, cowardice, or shame.
  • smidgen — a very small amount: a smidgen of jam for your toast.
  • snidely — derogatory in a nasty, insinuating manner: snide remarks about his boss.
  • sniffed — an act of sniffing; a single, short, audible inhalation.
  • snipped — to cut with a small, quick stroke, or a succession of such strokes, with scissors or the like.
  • sodding — sodomite; homosexual.
  • sogdian — a native or inhabitant of Sogdiana.
  • sondeli — an Indian musk shrew
  • sordino — mute (def 10).
  • spading — a tool for digging, having an iron blade adapted for pressing into the ground with the foot and a long handle commonly with a grip or crosspiece at the top, and with the blade usually narrower and flatter than that of a shovel.
  • speldin — a fish that has been split and dried
  • spindle — a rounded rod, usually of wood, tapering toward each end, used in hand-spinning to twist into thread the fibers drawn from the mass on the distaff, and on which the thread is wound as it is spun.
  • spindly — long or tall, thin, and usually frail: The colt wobbled on its spindly legs.
  • spinode — cusp (def 3).
  • splined — a long, narrow, thin strip of wood, metal, etc.; slat.
  • stinted — to be frugal; get along on a scanty allowance: Don't stint on the food. They stinted for years in order to save money.
  • stipend — a periodic payment, especially a scholarship or fellowship allowance granted to a student.
  • sudanic — (especially in former systems of classification) of or relating to a residual category of African languages including most of the non-Bantu and non-Hamitic languages of northern and central Africa: most now reclassified as part of the Niger-Congo subfamily.
  • sudsing — soapy water.
  • sueding — kid or other leather finished with a soft, napped surface, on the flesh side or on the outer side after removal of a thin outer layer.
  • suidian — a pig or related animal, any member of the family Suidae
  • sunbird — any of various small, brilliantly colored Old World birds of the family Nectariniidae.
  • sundari — one of two varieties of mangrove tree, Heritiera fomes or Heritiera littoralis, native to India, particularly found in the Sudarban jungles
  • sundial — an instrument that indicates the time of day by means of the position, on a graduated plate or surface, of the shadow of the gnomon as it is cast by the sun.
  • swidden — a plot of land cleared for farming by burning away vegetation.
  • swindle — to cheat (a person, business, etc.) out of money or other assets.
  • swindon — a town and unitary authority in Wiltshire, in S England.
  • swinged — to singe.
  • synodic — Astronomy. pertaining to a conjunction, or to two successive conjunctions of the same bodies.
  • tidings — news, information, or intelligence: sad tidings.
  • tundish — (in a vacuum induction furnace) a trough through which molten metal flows under vacuum to a mold chamber.
  • unsized — having size as specified (often used in combination): middle-sized.
  • unsolid — having three dimensions (length, breadth, and thickness), as a geometrical body or figure.
  • unspied — unnoticed
  • unstaid — unrestrained
  • wendish — of or relating to the Wends or their language; Sorbian.
  • windaus — Adolf [ah-dawlf] /ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1876–1959, German chemist: Nobel prize 1928.
  • winders — Plural form of winder.
  • windies — Plural form of windy.
  • windows — an opening in the wall of a building, the side of a vehicle, etc., for the admission of air or light, or both, commonly fitted with a frame in which are set movable sashes containing panes of glass.
  • windsor — (since 1917) a member of the present British royal family. Compare Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (def 1).
  • windups — Plural form of windup.
  • wisened — Simple past tense and past participle of wisen.
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