7-letter words containing d, p
- impedor — a component, such as an inductor or resistor, that offers impedance
- impeeds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impeed.
- impends — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impend.
- implead — to sue in a court of law.
- implied — involved, indicated, or suggested without being directly or explicitly stated; tacitly understood: an implied rebuke; an implied compliment.
- implode — to burst inward (opposed to explode).
- imposed — to lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc.: to impose taxes.
- impound — to shut up in a pound or other enclosure, as a stray animal.
- impured — Simple past tense and past participle of impure.
- imputed — estimated to have a certain cash value, although no money has been received or credited.
- in deep — extending far down from the top or surface: a deep well; a deep valley.
- inadept — Not adept.
- indepth — extensive, thorough, or profound: an in-depth analysis of the problem.
- ink pad — block saturated with ink
- insipid — without distinctive, interesting, or stimulating qualities; vapid: an insipid personality.
- isopods — Plural form of isopod.
- japygid — any eyeless, wingless, primitive insect of the family Japygidae, having a pair of pincers at the rear of its abdomen.
- jeopard — to jeopardize.
- jodhpur — Also called Marwar. a former state in NW India, now in Rajasthan.
- joypads — Plural form of joypad.
- keypads — Plural form of keypad.
- kidnaps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of kidnap.
- kidporn — child pornography.
- klipdas — a rock hyrax, Procavia capensis
- knapped — Simple past tense and past participle of knap.
- kneepad — a pad of leather, foam rubber, etc., as one worn by football or basketball players to protect the knee.
- knopped — (obsolete) Having knops or knobs; fastened as with buttons.
- laid up — to put or place in a horizontal position or position of rest; set down: to lay a book on a desk.
- land up — any part of the earth's surface not covered by a body of water; the part of the earth's surface occupied by continents and islands: Land was sighted from the crow's nest.
- lap dog — a small pet dog that can easily be held in the lap.
- lapdogs — Plural form of lapdog.
- lapheld — (esp of a personal computer) small enough to be used on one's lap; portable
- lapland — a region in N Norway, N Sweden, N Finland, and the Kola Peninsula of the NW Russian Federation in Europe: inhabited by Lapps.
- lead-up — something that provides an approach to or preparation for an event or situation.
- leopard — a large, spotted Asian or African carnivore, Panthera pardus, of the cat family, usually tawny with black markings; the Old World panther: all leopard populations are threatened or endangered.
- leopold — 1901–83, king of Belgium 1934–51 (son of Albert I).
- lepido- — scale or scaly
- lepidus — Marcus Aemilius [ee-mil-ee-uh s] /iˈmɪl i əs/ (Show IPA), died 13 b.c, Roman politician: member of the second triumvirate.
- leporid — an animal of the family Leporidae, comprising the rabbits and hares.
- leppard — Raymond. born 1927, British conductor and musicologist, in the US from 1977: noted esp for his revivals of early opera
- lilypad — Alternative spelling of lily pad.
- lipides — any of a group of organic compounds that are greasy to the touch, insoluble in water, and soluble in alcohol and ether: lipids comprise the fats and other esters with analogous properties and constitute, with proteins and carbohydrates, the chief structural components of living cells.
- lipidic — Of or pertaining to the lipids.
- lippold — Richard, 1915–2002, U.S. sculptor.
- lipread — to understand spoken words by interpreting the movements of a speaker's lips without hearing the sounds made.
- load up — charge, fill
- lobiped — (of birds) having lobed toes
- lobopod — The lobopodium of an onychophoran.
- lopseed — a weedy plant, Phryma leptostachya, of Asia and North America, having spikes of whitish paired flowers.
- ludship — a humorous or hurried form of 'lordship'