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7-letter words containing d, r, y

  • daymark — a marker or construction that is only visible by day and that is used by sailors to navigate
  • dayroom — A dayroom is a room in a hospital where patients can sit and relax during the day.
  • daystar — morning star
  • daywear — clothes for everyday or informal wear
  • daywork — a form of work that is calculated and paid for on a daily basis
  • deanery — the office or residence of dean
  • dearnly — in a solitary or unseen manner
  • decayer — a thing or a person that brings about decay
  • decrypt — to decode (a message) with or without previous knowledge of its key
  • deerfly — a fly of the order Diptera and the genus Chrysops
  • defrays — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of defray.
  • delayer — to prune the administrative structure of (a large organization) by reducing the number of tiers in its hierarchy
  • demonry — possession by a demon
  • dentary — a bone in the lower jaw of non-mammalian vertebrates, which holds the teeth
  • destroy — To destroy something means to cause so much damage to it that it is completely ruined or does not exist any more.
  • devilry — reckless or malicious fun or mischief
  • diandry — the phenomenon in which an egg is fertilized either by two sperm or by a diploid sperm, thus making the fertilized egg triploid, resulting in early miscarriage
  • diarchy — government by two states, individuals, etc
  • diary's — a daily record, usually private, especially of the writer's own experiences, observations, feelings, attitudes, etc.
  • dietary — of or relating to diet: a dietary cure.
  • dihydro — (chemistry, especially in combination) Two hydrogen atoms in a molecule.
  • dirtily — soiled with dirt; foul; unclean: dirty laundry.
  • dithery — a trembling; vibration.
  • doddery — shaky or trembling, as from old age; tottering: a doddering old man.
  • dodgery — the use of a dodge or dodges; trickery; duplicity.
  • doggery — doglike behavior or conduct, especially when surly.
  • domremy — a village in Lorraine, NE France, SW of Nancy: birthplace of Joan of Arc.
  • doorway — the passage or opening into a building, room, etc., commonly closed and opened by a door; portal.
  • dorothyDorothea Lynde [lind] /lɪnd/ (Show IPA), (Dorothy) 1802–87, U.S. educator and social reformer.
  • doryman — a person who uses a dory, especially a person who engages in fishing, lobstering, etc.
  • downcry — to denigrate or disparage
  • dramady — dramedy.
  • dramedy — a television program or series using both serious and comic subjects, usually without relying on conventional plots, laugh tracks, etc.
  • drapery — coverings, hangings, clothing, etc., of fabric, especially as arranged in loose, graceful folds.
  • drawboy — an apparatus for controlling and manipulating the harness cords on a power loom.
  • drayage — conveyance by dray.
  • draying — a low, strong cart without fixed sides, for carrying heavy loads.
  • drayman — a person who drives a dray.
  • draytonMichael, 1563–1631, English poet.
  • dreadly — dreadful
  • dreyfus — Alfred [al-frid;; French al-fred] /ˈæl frɪd;; French alˈfrɛd/ (Show IPA), 1859–1935, French army officer of Jewish descent: convicted of treason 1894, 1899; acquitted 1906.
  • dribbly — Prone to dribbling.
  • drizzly — to rain gently and steadily in fine drops; sprinkle: It drizzled throughout the night.
  • droichy — having the qualities of a dwarf; dwarfish
  • drop by — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • drop-by — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • dropfly — (in angling) an artificial fly usually used as an extra fly
  • droshky — A low four-wheeled open carriage of a kind formerly used in Russia.
  • drostdy — the office and residence of a landdrost
  • drouthy — droughty.
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