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7-letter words containing d, p

  • powered — operated or driven by a motor or electricity: a power mower; power tools.
  • pradesh — a state, esp a state in the Union of India
  • praised — the act of expressing approval or admiration; commendation; laudation.
  • pranced — to spring from the hind legs; to move by springing, as a horse.
  • prandtl — Ludwig (ˈluːtvɪç). 1875–1953, German physicist, who made important contributions to aerodynamics and aeronautics
  • pranked — to dress or adorn in an ostentatious manner: They were all pranked out in their fanciest clothes.
  • pre-med — premedical
  • preaged — treated to appear older, usually prior to being used or purchased
  • prebend — a stipend allotted from the revenues of a cathedral or a collegiate church to a canon or member of the chapter.
  • prebind — to bind beforehand
  • precede — to go before, as in place, order, rank, importance, or time.
  • precode — a system for communication by telegraph, heliograph, etc., in which long and short sounds, light flashes, etc., are used to symbolize the content of a message: Morse code.
  • predata — a plural of datum.
  • predate — to date before the actual time; antedate: He predated the check by three days.
  • predawn — the period immediately preceding dawn.
  • predial — of, relating to, or consisting of land or its products; real; landed.
  • predict — to declare or tell in advance; prophesy; foretell: to predict the weather; to predict the fall of a civilization.
  • predive — happening or carried out before a dive
  • predoom — to pronounce or preordain (someone or something's) doom beforehand
  • predusk — the period before dusk
  • prefade — to play a recording before fading it for transmission
  • prefund — a supply of money or pecuniary resources, as for some purpose: a fund for his education; a retirement fund.
  • prehend — to take hold of
  • preload — If someone preloads, they drink a lot of alcohol before they go out for a social occasion.
  • prelude — a preliminary to an action, event, condition, or work of broader scope and higher importance.
  • premade — made in advance
  • preneed — arranged or made available in advance of eventual requirements
  • prepaid — to pay or arrange to pay beforehand or before due: to prepay the loan.
  • prepend — (jargon)   /pree'pend'/ (by analogy with "append") To prefix or add to the beginning.
  • prepped — preparatory school.
  • preside — to occupy the place of authority or control, as in an assembly or meeting; act as president or chairperson.
  • presold — to sell in advance, as before manufacture or construction: to presell a planned house.
  • pressed — fruit juice: squeezed
  • pretend — to cause or attempt to cause (what is not so) to seem so: to pretend illness; to pretend that nothing is wrong.
  • pridian — relating to yesterday
  • priding — a high or inordinate opinion of one's own dignity, importance, merit, or superiority, whether as cherished in the mind or as displayed in bearing, conduct, etc.
  • printed — produced by printing
  • privado — a close friend
  • proband — a patient who is the initial member of a family to come under study.
  • proceed — to move or go forward or onward, especially after stopping.
  • prodded — to poke or jab with or as if with something pointed: I prodded him with my elbow.
  • prodder — to poke or jab with or as if with something pointed: I prodded him with my elbow.
  • prodigy — a person, especially a child or young person, having extraordinary talent or ability: a musical prodigy.
  • prodrug — an inactive substance that is converted to a drug within the body by the action of enzymes or other chemicals.
  • produce — to bring into existence; give rise to; cause: to produce steam.
  • product — a thing produced by labor: products of farm and factory; the product of his thought.
  • progged — to search or prowl about, as for plunder or food; forage.
  • pronged — having prongs (often used in combination): a four-pronged fork.
  • propend — to incline or tend.
  • propped — to support, or prevent from falling, with or as if with a prop (often followed by up): to prop an old fence; to prop up an unpopular government.
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