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9-letter words containing d, i, o, p

  • disemploy — to put out of work; cause to become unemployed.
  • dish soap — a detergent added to dishwater in order to clean dishes
  • dispeople — to deprive of people; depopulate.
  • dispondee — a double spondee
  • disported — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • disposals — Plural form of disposal.
  • disposest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of dispose.
  • disposeth — Archaic third-person singular form of dispose.
  • disposing — Present participle of dispose.
  • disposure — disposal; disposition.
  • disprison — to release from prison
  • disprofit — to (cause to) fail to profit
  • disproove — Obsolete form of disprove.
  • disproval — The act of disproving; disproof.
  • disproved — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • disproven — Alternative irregular form of the Past participle of disprove.
  • disprover — One who disproves.
  • disproves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disprove.
  • disruptor — to cause disorder or turmoil in: The news disrupted their conference.
  • dolphinet — a female dolphin
  • donepezil — a drug used to treat dementia
  • donorship — a person who gives or donates.
  • doorpiece — an architecturally treated doorframe.
  • dot pitch — (hardware)   The distance between a dot and the closest dot of the same colour (red, green or blue) on a color CRT. Dot pitch is typically from 0.28 to 0.51 mm but large presentation monitors may go up to 1.0 mm. The smaller the dot pitch, the crisper the image, 0.31 or less provides a sharp image, especially when displaying text. Dot pitch measurements between conventional tubes and Sony's Trinitron tubes are roughly, but not exactly comparable. Sony's CRTs use vertical stripes, not dots, and its measurement is the distance between stripes, not the diagonal distance between dots.
  • douppioni — an irregular silk thread reeled from two or more entangled cocoons and producing a coarse yarn generally used in fabrics such as shantung or pongee.
  • downpipes — Plural form of downpipe.
  • dripstone — Architecture. a stone molding used as a drip.
  • drop girt — a girt running beneath the ends of joists and at right angles to them.
  • drop kick — In sports such as football and rugby, a drop kick is a kick in which the ball is dropped to the ground and kicked at the moment that it bounces.
  • drop-kick — to score (a field goal or point after touchdown) by a drop kick.
  • drop-ship — to ship (goods) as a drop shipment: The books will be drop-shipped by the publisher to your home.
  • dropkicks — Plural form of dropkick.
  • droplight — an electric or gas lamp suspended from the ceiling or wall by a flexible cord or tube.
  • droppings — the act of a person or thing that drops.
  • dropsical — of, like, or affected with dropsy.
  • dry point — a technique of engraving, especially on copper, in which a sharp-pointed needle is used for producing furrows having a burr that is often retained in order to produce a print characterized by soft, velvety black lines.
  • duopolies — Plural form of duopoly.
  • duplation — multiplication by two; doubling.
  • dupondius — a coin of ancient Rome, equal to two asses.
  • dynorphin — (biochemistry) Any of a class of opioid peptides that arise from the precursor protein prodynorphin.
  • dysphonia — any disturbance of normal vocal function.
  • dysphonic — any disturbance of normal vocal function.
  • dysphoria — a state of dissatisfaction, anxiety, restlessness, or fidgeting.
  • dysphoric — a state of dissatisfaction, anxiety, restlessness, or fidgeting.
  • dyspnoeic — Alternative spelling of dyspneic.
  • dystopian — a society characterized by human misery, as squalor, oppression, disease, and overcrowding.
  • dystopias — Plural form of dystopia.
  • eidograph — a type of pantograph that was invented by the Scottish mathematician William Wallace in 1821 and which was more accurate than other pantographs
  • ellipsoid — A three-dimensional figure whose plane sections are ellipses or circles.
  • end point — extremity
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