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9-letter words containing d, o, f

  • codifying — Present participle of codify.
  • cofferdam — a watertight structure, usually of sheet piling, that encloses an area under water, pumped dry to enable construction work to be carried out. Below a certain depth a caisson is required
  • cofounded — to establish (an organization) with another or others.
  • cofounder — a joint founder
  • coiffured — Coiffured means the same as coiffed.
  • cold feet — loss or lack of courage or confidence
  • cold fish — If you say that someone is a cold fish, you think that they are unfriendly and unemotional.
  • comforted — to soothe, console, or reassure; bring cheer to: They tried to comfort her after her loss.
  • commodify — to treat (something) inappropriately as if it can be acquired or marketed like other commodities
  • confabbed — Simple past tense and past participle of confab.
  • confected — Simple past tense and past participle of confect.
  • conferred — to consult together; compare opinions; carry on a discussion or deliberation.
  • confessed — You use confessed to describe someone who openly admits that they have a particular fault or have done something wrong.
  • confidant — Someone's confidant is a man who they are able to discuss their private problems with.
  • confident — If you are confident about something, you are certain that it will happen in the way you want it to.
  • confiding — unsuspicious; trustful
  • confirmed — You use confirmed to describe someone who has a particular habit or belief that they are very unlikely to change.
  • conflated — Simple past tense and past participle of conflate.
  • conformed — to act in accordance or harmony; comply (usually followed by to): to conform to rules.
  • confounds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of confound.
  • confuddle — (transitive) To thoroughly confuse.
  • cord foot — a quantity of wood 4 feet high, 4 feet wide, and 1 foot long (1.2 m × 1.2 m × 0.3 meters), or 16 cu. ft. (0.5 cu. m).
  • cordiform — heart-shaped
  • cornfield — A cornfield is a field in which corn is being grown.
  • cornified — Converted into horn; horny.
  • cowfeeder — a tenant of a small dairy farm
  • crockford — short for Crockford's Clerical Directory, the standard directory of living Anglican clergy
  • crowdfund — To fund (a project) by having many individuals pool their money together, usually via the Internet.
  • daffodils — Plural form of daffodil.
  • damn fool — Damn fool means 'very stupid'.
  • dampproof — resistant to dampness or the effects of dampness.
  • data flow — (architecture)   A data flow architecture or language performs a computation when all the operands are available. Data flow is one kind of data driven architecture, the other is demand driven. It is a technique for specifying fine-grain concurrency, usually in the form of two-dimensional graphs in which instructions that are available for concurrent execution are written alongside each other while those that must be executed in sequence are written one under the other. Data dependencies between instructions are indicated by directed arcs. Instructions do not reference memory since the data dependence arcs allow data to be transmitted directly from the producing instruction to the consuming one. Data flow schemes differ chiefly in the way that they handle re-entrant code. Static schemes disallow it, dynamic schemes use either "code copying" or "tagging" at every point of reentry. An example of a data flow architecture is MIT's VAL machine.
  • data fork — Macintosh file system
  • date from — If something dates from a particular time, it started or was made at that time.
  • dayflower — any of various tropical and subtropical plants of the genus Commelina, having jointed creeping stems, narrow pointed leaves, and blue or purplish flowers which wilt quickly: family Commelinaceae
  • de forest — Lee. 1873–1961, US inventor of telegraphic, telephonic, and radio equipment: patented the first triode valve (1907)
  • defecator — One who defecates.
  • defection — the act or an instance of defecting
  • defectors — Plural form of defector.
  • defensory — (archaic) Tending to defend; defensive.
  • definiton — Misspelling of definition.
  • deflation — Deflation is a reduction in economic activity that leads to lower levels of industrial output, employment, investment, trade, profits, and prices.
  • deflators — Plural form of deflator.
  • deflector — A device that deflects something, in particular.
  • deflexion — deflection
  • deflorate — (of a plant) having lost its flowers
  • defluxion — anything that flows downwards
  • defocused — Simple past tense and past participle of defocus.
  • defoggers — Plural form of defogger.
  • defogging — to remove the fog or moisture from (a car window, mirror, etc.).
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