0%

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

  • flock dot — a pattern of dots or figures that are not woven but attached to cloth with adhesive.
  • flood out — If people, places, or things are flooded out, the water from a flood makes it impossible for people to stay in that place or to use that thing.
  • floodgate — Civil Engineering. a gate designed to regulate the flow of water.
  • floodtide — the tide when it has risen from low to high water
  • floriated — made of or decorated with floral ornamentation: floriated design; floriated china.
  • floridity — reddish; ruddy; rosy: a florid complexion.
  • fluorated — (chemistry) Combined with fluorine; subjected to the action of fluoride.
  • foldboats — Plural form of foldboat.
  • footholds — Plural form of foothold.
  • frontload — Alternative form of front-load.
  • galactoid — resembling milk; milky.
  • gatefolds — Plural form of gatefold.
  • geraldton — a seaport in W Australia.
  • gladiator — (in ancient Rome) a person, often a slave or captive, who was armed with a sword or other weapon and compelled to fight to the death in a public arena against another person or a wild animal, for the entertainment of the spectators.
  • gladstone — William Ewart [yoo-ert] /ˈyu ərt/ (Show IPA), 1809–98, British statesman: prime minister four times between 1868 and 1894.
  • glaucodot — a mineral, iron and cobalt sulfarsenide, (Co,Fe)AsS, occurring in grayish-white crystals.
  • gluttoned — Simple past tense and past participle of glutton.
  • gold dust — gold in fine particles.
  • gold note — a former U.S. bank note payable in gold coin.
  • gold star — a gold-colored star displayed, as on a service flag, to indicate that a member of one's family, organization, or the like, was killed in war as a member of the armed forces.
  • goldcrest — a Eurasian kinglet, Regulus regulus, having a bright yellow patch on the top of the head.
  • goldsmithOliver, 1730?–74, Irish poet, playwright, essayist, and novelist.
  • goldstick — a gilt rod carried by the colonel of the Life Guards or the captain of the gentlemen-at-arms
  • goldstone — aventurine.
  • goldwaterBarry Morris, 1909–1998, U.S. politician: U.S senator 1953–64 and 1968–87.
  • hand tool — handheld instrument
  • hand-tool — tool (defs 8, 9).
  • handtowel — a small piece of thick soft cloth used to dry the hands
  • headcloth — any cloth for covering the head, as a turban or wimple.
  • hold true — If a general statement holds true in particular circumstances, or if your previous statement holds true in different circumstances, it is true or valid in those circumstances.
  • hold with — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
  • holderbat — a bracket that supports a pipe and fastens it to a wall or surface
  • holdfasts — Plural form of holdfast.
  • holstered — a sheathlike carrying case for a firearm, attached to a belt, shoulder sling, or saddle.
  • holy tide — a time or season for special religious observance
  • hydrolant — an urgent warning of navigational dangers in the Atlantic Ocean, issued by the U.S. Navy Hydrographic Office.
  • hydrolyte — a substance subjected to hydrolysis.
  • hydropult — a type of water pump or machine that expels water by means of hand power, as, for example, a fire extinguisher
  • hyolithid — any invertebrate of the extinct genus Hyolithes, most common in the Cambrian Period, having a limy, univalve shell, and thought to be related to the pteropods.
  • idioblast — a cell that differs greatly from the surrounding cells or tissue.
  • idiolatry — Autolatry, or self worship.
  • idiolects — Plural form of idiolect.
  • idiotical — of, relating to, or characteristic of an idiot.
  • idolaters — Plural form of idolater.
  • idolators — Plural form of idolator.
  • idolatory — Misspelling of idolatry.
  • immolated — Simple past tense and past participle of immolate.
  • insolated — to expose to the sun's rays; treat by exposure to the sun's rays.
  • interfold — to fold one within another; fold together.
  • involuted — intricate; complex.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?