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10-letter words containing d, i, s

  • desirously — With desire; eagerly.
  • desistance — to cease, as from some action or proceeding; stop.
  • desistence — to cease, as from some action or proceeding; stop.
  • deskilling — Present participle of deskill.
  • desludging — mud, mire, or ooze; slush.
  • desmoulins — (Lucie Simplice) Camille (Benoît) (kamij). 1760–94, French revolutionary leader, pamphleteer, and orator
  • desolating — Present participle of desolate.
  • desolation — Desolation is a feeling of great unhappiness and hopelessness.
  • désorienté — having lost one's bearings; confused
  • desorption — the action or process of desorbing
  • despairful — full of despair; hopeless; despairing
  • despairing — marked by or resulting from despair; hopeless or desperate
  • despawning — Present participle of despawn.
  • despective — Disparaging, derogatory; looking down upon.
  • despicable — If you say that a person or action is despicable, you are emphasizing that they are extremely nasty, cruel, or evil.
  • despicably — deserving to be despised, or regarded with distaste, disgust, or disdain; contemptible: He was a mean, despicable man, who treated his wife and children badly.
  • despisable — deserving of being despised; despicable
  • despiteful — spiteful; malicious
  • despiteous — malicious; spiteful.
  • despoilers — Plural form of despoiler.
  • despoiling — plundering by force
  • desponding — to be depressed by loss of hope, confidence, or courage.
  • despotical — of, relating to, or of the nature of a despot or despotism; autocratic; tyrannical.
  • despotisms — Plural form of despotism.
  • dessalines — Jean-Jacques (ʒɑ̃ ʒɑk). ?1758–1806, emperor of Haiti (1804–06) after driving out the French; assassinated
  • dessiatina — A Russian measure of land, roughly 1.1 hectares.
  • dessiatine — a Russian unit of area equal to approximately 2.7 acres or 10 800 square metres
  • dessicated — Misspelling of desiccated.
  • dessyatine — a Russian measure of land, equivalent to 2.7 acres
  • destemming — to remove the stem from (a fruit or vegetable); stem.
  • destituted — without means of subsistence; lacking food, clothing, and shelter.
  • destitutes — without means of subsistence; lacking food, clothing, and shelter.
  • destocking — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
  • destratify — to form or place in strata or layers.
  • destroying — Present participle of destroy.
  • detections — Plural form of detection.
  • detectives — Plural form of detective.
  • detentions — Plural form of detention.
  • determines — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of determine.
  • detoxifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of detoxify.
  • detriments — Plural form of detriment.
  • detritions — Plural form of detrition.
  • detrivores — Plural form of detrivore.
  • deuterides — Plural form of deuteride.
  • devastavit — the waste or mismanagement, whether wilful or by neglect, of a deceased person's estate by the executor of his or her will or another trustee of the estate
  • deviations — Plural form of deviation.
  • devilishly — of, like, or befitting a devil; diabolical; fiendish.
  • deviltries — Plural form of deviltry.
  • devilwoods — Plural form of devilwood.
  • devonshire — 8th Duke of, title of Spencer Compton Cavendish. 1833–1908, British politician, also known (1858–91) as Lord Hartington. He led the Liberal Party (1874–80) and left it to found the Liberal Unionist Party (1886)
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