10-letter words containing d, i, r, g
- discarding — Get rid of (someone or something) as no longer useful or desirable.
- discerning — showing good or outstanding judgment and understanding: a discerning critic of French poetry.
- discharged — to relieve of a charge or load; unload: to discharge a ship.
- dischargee — a person who has been discharged, as from military service.
- discharger — Someone or something that discharges something, such as pollution or a firearm.
- discharges — Plural form of discharge.
- discording — Present participle of discord.
- discourage — to deprive of courage, hope, or confidence; dishearten; dispirit.
- disembargo — to remove an embargo from.
- disfigured — Simple past tense and past participle of disfigure.
- disgarnish — to remove garnish or furnishings from
- disglorify — to remove from glory
- disgorging — Present participle of disgorge.
- disgracing — the loss of respect, honor, or esteem; ignominy; shame: the disgrace of criminals.
- disgruntle — to put into a state of sulky dissatisfaction; make discontent.
- dish gravy — meat juices, as from a roast, served as a gravy without seasoning or thickening.
- dishorning — Present participle of dishorn.
- disorganic — Not organic; having no organization.
- dispairing — Present participle of dispair.
- disparaged — Simple past tense and past participle of disparage.
- disparager — to speak of or treat slightingly; depreciate; belittle: Do not disparage good manners.
- disparages — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disparage.
- disparting — Present participle of dispart.
- dispersing — to drive or send off in various directions; scatter: to disperse a crowd.
- disporting — Present participle of disport.
- disproving — Present participle of disprove.
- disregards — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disregard.
- disrooting — Present participle of disroot.
- disrupting — Present participle of disrupt.
- disserting — to discourse on a subject.
- distorting — to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
- distraught — distracted; deeply agitated.
- distringas — (legal) A writ commanding the sheriff to distrain a person by his goods or chattels, to compel a compliance with something required of him.
- disturbing — upsetting or disquieting; dismaying: a disturbing increase in the crime rate.
- ditherings — Plural form of dithering.
- ditriglyph — the distance, on centers, between a metope and the second one distant.
- dittograph — an instance of dittography; a passage containing reduplicated syllables, letters, etc.
- divergence — the act, fact, or amount of diverging: a divergence in opinion.
- divergency — divergence; deviation.
- dog-sitter — a person who looks after a dog while its owner is away
- dogberries — Plural form of dogberry.
- dogfighter — Person who competes in dogfighting.
- dogmatizer — One who dogmatizes; a bold asserter; a magisterial teacher.
- dorsigrade — (of animals such as certain armadillos) walking on the backs of the toes
- dough bird — the Eskimo curlew.
- downrigger — a fishing line used in trolling that is attached to a weighted cable in order to put lures or bait at a specific depth under a boat, usually near the floor.
- drag chain — one of a number of chains attached to a hull about to be launched in restricted waters in order to slow its motion by dragging along the bottom.
- drag strip — a straight, paved area or course where drag races are held, as a section of road or airplane runway.
- draggingly — In a way that drags; with a dragging motion.
- dragonfish — any marine fish of the family Bathydraconidae, of Antarctic seas, having an elongated body and flattened head and being biochemically adapted to extremely low temperatures.