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9-letter words containing d, o, l, t

  • cataloged — a list or record, as of items for sale or courses at a university, systematically arranged and often including descriptive material: a stamp catalog.
  • clodpated — stupid
  • clothyard — (historical) An old unit of measure for cloth, 36 or 37 inches.
  • clottered — Simple past tense and past participle of clotter.
  • cloudiest — Superlative form of cloudy.
  • coastland — the land fringing a coast
  • cold boot — (operating system)   A boot from power off. Contrast warm boot.
  • cold cuts — Cold cuts are thin slices of cooked meat which are served cold.
  • cold feet — loss or lack of courage or confidence
  • cold meat — a form of meat that has been cooked and allowed to become cold
  • cold shut — A cold shut is a fault in the surface of a piece of metal caused by two streams of molten metal not joining properly when the piece is being cast.
  • cold spot — an area where house prices are stable and properties are slow to sell
  • cold tone — a bluish or greenish tinge in a black-and-white print.
  • cold type — typesetting done by a method other than the casting of molten type
  • coldwater — a river in NW Mississippi, flowing S to the Tallahatchie River. 220 miles (354 km) long.
  • collected — An author's collected works or letters are all their works or letters published in one book or in a set of books.
  • colletids — Plural form of colletid.
  • colocated — Simple past tense and past participle of colocate.
  • comatulid — any of a group of crinoid echinoderms, including the feather stars, in which the adults are free-swimming
  • completed — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • condolent — expressing sympathy to a bereaved person
  • conflated — Simple past tense and past participle of conflate.
  • consulted — to seek advice or information from; ask guidance from: Consult your lawyer before signing the contract.
  • controled — Misspelling of controlled.
  • copiloted — Simple past tense and past participle of copilot.
  • copulated — Simple past tense and past participle of copulate.
  • cordately — In a cordate form.
  • corelated — to correlate.
  • cotswolds — a range of low hills in SW England, mainly in Gloucestershire: formerly a centre of the wool industry
  • cotyledon — a simple embryonic leaf in seed-bearing plants, which, in some species, forms the first green leaf after germination
  • cupolated — having a cupola or cupolas.
  • custodial — Custodial means relating to keeping people in prison.
  • cytocidal — capable of killing cells.
  • daltonian — relating to John Dalton or his atomic theory
  • daltonism — colour blindness, esp the confusion of red and green
  • 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.
  • dataglove — a glove connected to a computer and equipped with sensors allowing the actual movements of a person's hand to manipulate virtual objects
  • deathblow — a thing or event that destroys life or hope, esp suddenly
  • decathlon — The decathlon is a competition in which athletes compete in 10 different sporting events.
  • deck bolt — a flat-headed bolt for fastening down deck planking.
  • decollate — to separate (continuous stationery, etc) into individual forms
  • decollete — (on a piece of women's clothing) a bodice that has a very low neckline
  • decontrol — When governments decontrol an activity, they remove controls from it so that companies or organizations have more freedom.
  • 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.
  • deflorate — (of a plant) having lost its flowers
  • defoliant — A defoliant is a chemical used on trees and plants to make all their leaves fall off. Defoliants are especially used in war to remove protection from an enemy.
  • defoliate — To defoliate an area or the plants in it means to cause the leaves on the plants to fall off or be destroyed. This is done especially in war to remove protection from an enemy.
  • deisolate — to remove from isolation.
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