10-letter words containing d, i, r, t
- dirty bomb — a nuclear warhead designed to produce a great amount of radioactive debris by use of a fusion core, fission trigger, and casing of uranium-238.
- dirty joke — vulgar piece of humour
- dirty look — face: resentful expression
- dirty pool — unethical, unfair, or unsportsmanlike conduct.
- dirty rice — a Cajun dish of rice cooked with herbs and often chicken livers.
- dirty word — a vulgar or taboo word; obscenity.
- dirty work — disagreeable, often tedious tasks.
- disastrous — causing great distress or injury; ruinous; very unfortunate; calamitous: The rain and cold proved disastrous to his health.
- disbarment — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
- disburthen — (obsolete) disburden.
- discarnate — without a physical body; incorporeal.
- discomfort — an absence of comfort or ease; uneasiness, hardship, or mild pain.
- disconcert — to disturb the self-possession of; perturb; ruffle: Her angry reply disconcerted me completely.
- discordant — being at variance; disagreeing; incongruous: discordant opinions.
- discounter — a person who discounts.
- discreated — to reduce to nothing; annihilate.
- discredits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discredit.
- discreeter — Comparative form of discreet.
- discreetly — judicious in one's conduct or speech, especially with regard to respecting privacy or maintaining silence about something of a delicate nature; prudent; circumspect.
- discrepant — (usually of two or more objects, accounts, findings etc.) differing; disagreeing; inconsistent: discrepant accounts.
- discretely — apart or detached from others; separate; distinct: six discrete parts.
- discretion — the power or right to decide or act according to one's own judgment; freedom of judgment or choice: It is entirely within my discretion whether I will go or stay.
- discretive — Marking distinction or separation; disjunctive.
- discretize — Represent or approximate (a quantity or series) using a discrete quantity or quantities.
- discursist — a person who engages in discourse
- disenthral — disenthrall.
- disentrail — to remove the entrails from
- disentrain — to go or set down from a train
- disfeature — to mar the features of; disfigure.
- disgruntle — to put into a state of sulky dissatisfaction; make discontent.
- dishearted — Simple past tense and past participle of disheart.
- dishearten — to depress the hope, courage, or spirits of; discourage.
- disheritor — someone who disinherits
- disinherit — Law. to exclude from inheritance (an heir or a next of kin).
- disintered — Misspelling of disinterred.
- disinthral — (transitive) To set free from thraldom or oppression.
- disjunctor — a small body found in the spores of some fungi
- dismantler — One who dismantles.
- disnatured — deprived or destitute of natural feelings; unnatural
- disorients — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disorient.
- disparates — unlike things or people
- disparting — Present participle of dispart.
- dispatcher — a person who dispatches.
- dispersant — something that disperses.
- dispirited — discouraged; dejected; disheartened; gloomy.
- disporting — Present participle of disport.
- dispositor — a planet that controls the star sign in which another planet is located
- disrelated — lacking relation or connection; unrelated.
- disreputed — Simple past tense and past participle of disrepute.
- disrespect — Lack of respect or courtesy.