6-letter words containing d, n, r
- diuron — a white crystalline substance, C 9 H 10 Cl 2 N 2 O, used as a weed-killer.
- dnestr — Russian name of Dniester.
- donair — (Canada) A Nova Scotian variant of the doner kebab, including breadcrumbs and spices, and served with a sweet sauce made from evaporated milk, sugar, vinegar, and garlic.
- donary — a thing given for holy use
- donder — to beat (someone) up
- doners — Plural form of doner.
- donner — (South Africa, slang) To beat up, clobber, thrash.
- donors — A person who donates something, esp. money to a fund or charity.
- donour — Obsolete form of donor.
- doreen — a female given name.
- dorgon — 1612–50, Manchurian prince, who ruled China as regent (1643–50) and helped to establish the Ching dynasty
- dorian — of or relating to the ancient Greek region of Doris or to the Dorians.
- dormin — abscisic acid.
- downer — Informal. a depressant or sedative drug, especially a barbiturate. a depressing experience, person, or situation.
- dracon — a late 7th-century b.c. Athenian statesman noted for the severity of his code of laws.
- dragon — a mythical monster generally represented as a huge, winged reptile with crested head and enormous claws and teeth, and often spouting fire.
- draine — (obsolete) The missel thrush.
- draino — Any drain cleaner.
- drains — Plural form of drain.
- dralon — an acrylic fibre fabric used esp for upholstery
- drancy — a residential suburb of NE Paris. Pop: 66 454 (2006)
- drawne — Past participle of draw; obsolete spelling of drawn.
- drench — to wet thoroughly; soak.
- drinck — Obsolete form of drink.
- drinks — Plural form of drink.
- driuen — Obsolete spelling of driven.
- driven — past participle of drive.
- drobny — Jaroslav (ˈjærəʊˌslɑːv; Czech ˈjarɔslaf). 1921–2001, British tennis and ice-hockey player, born in Czechoslovakia: Wimbledon champion 1954: a member of the Czech ice-hockey team in the 1948 Olympic Games
- dromon — (historical, nautical) a Byzantine bireme, similar to the chelandion, but used primarily for naval combat.
- droned — to make a dull, continued, low, monotonous sound; hum; buzz.
- droner — to make a dull, continued, low, monotonous sound; hum; buzz.
- drones — Plural form of drone.
- droney — Characterized by droning.
- drongo — any passerine bird of the family Dicruridae, of Africa, Asia, and Australia, the several species usually having black plumage and long, forked tails.
- droven — (obsolete) Past participle of drive.
- drownd — (dialectal) drown.
- drowns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of drown.
- drunke — Obsolete spelling of drunk.
- drunks — Plural form of drunk.
- drusen — Plural form of druse.
- dryden — John, 1631–1700, English poet, dramatist, and critic.
- drying — free from moisture or excess moisture; not moist; not wet: a dry towel; dry air.
- dunbar — Paul Laurence, 1872–1906, U.S. poet.
- dunder — the thick lees from boiled sugar-cane juice used in the distillation of rum.
- dunger — an old decrepit car
- dunker — a member of the Church of the Brethren, a denomination of Christians founded in Germany in 1708 and later reorganized in the U.S., characterized by the practice of trine immersion, the celebration of a love feast accompanying the Lord's Supper, and opposition to the taking of oaths and to military service.
- durain — the coal forming the dull layers in banded bituminous coal.
- durand — Asher Brown, 1796–1886, U.S. engraver and landscape painter of the Hudson River School.
- durant — Ariel, 1898–1981, U.S. author and historian (wife of Will).
- durban — a seaport in SE Natal, in the E Republic of South Africa.