5-letter words containing d, r
- dorks — Plural form of dork.
- dorky — stupid, inept, or unfashionable.
- dorms — Plural form of dorm.
- dormy — (golf) alt form dormie.
- dorns — Plural form of dorn.
- dorps — Plural form of dorp.
- dorrs — Also, dorbeetle [dawr-beet-l] /ˈdɔrˌbit l/ (Show IPA). a common European dung beetle, Geotrupes stercorarius.
- dorsa — the back, as of the body.
- dorse — the back of a book or folded document.
- dorty — sullen; sulky.
- dorum — Draft Once ReUse Many
- doser — a quantity of medicine prescribed to be taken at one time.
- doter — to bestow or express excessive love or fondness habitually (usually followed by on or upon): They dote on their youngest daughter.
- doura — a type of grain sorghum with slender stalks, cultivated in Asia and Africa and introduced into the U.S.
- douro — a river in SW Europe, flowing W from N Spain through N Portugal to the Atlantic. About 475 miles (765 km) long.
- dover — a seaport in E Kent, in SE England: point nearest the coast of France.
- dower — Law. the portion of a deceased husband's real property allowed to his widow for her lifetime.
- dowry — Also, dower. the money, goods, or estate that a wife brings to her husband at marriage.
- dozer — bulldozer (def 1).
- drabs — Plural form of drab.
- drack — (esp of a woman) unattractive
- draco — a late 7th-century b.c. Athenian statesman noted for the severity of his code of laws.
- draff — dregs, as in a brewing process; lees; refuse.
- draft — a drawing, sketch, or design.
- drago — Luis María [loo-is muh-ree-uh;; Spanish loo-ees mah-ree-ah] /ˈlu ɪs məˈri ə;; Spanish luˈis mɑˈri ɑ/ (Show IPA), 1859–1921, Argentine jurist and statesman.
- drags — Plural form of drag.
- drail — a hook with a lead-covered shank used in trolling.
- drain — to withdraw or draw off (a liquid) gradually; remove slowly or by degrees, as by filtration: to drain oil from a crankcase.
- drake — Sir Francis, c1540–96, English admiral and buccaneer: sailed around the world 1577–80.
- drama — a composition in prose or verse presenting in dialogue or pantomime a story involving conflict or contrast of character, especially one intended to be acted on the stage; a play.
- drams — Plural form of dram.
- drang — a narrow lane or alleyway.
- drank — a simple past tense and past participle of drink.
- drant — to drone or drawl
- drape — to cover or hang with cloth or other fabric, especially in graceful folds; adorn with drapery.
- drate — Simple past form of drite.
- drats — to damn; confound: Drat your interference.
- drava — a river in S central Europe, flowing E and SE from the Alps in S Austria, through NE Slovenia, along a part of the border between Hungary and Croatia into the Danube in Croatia. 450 miles (725 km) long.
- drave — a simple past tense of drive.
- drawe — Obsolete spelling of draw.
- drawl — an act or utterance of a person who drawls.
- drawn — past participle of draw.
- draws — Plural form of draw.
- drays — Plural form of dray.
- dread — to fear greatly; be in extreme apprehension of: to dread death.
- dream — a succession of images, thoughts, or emotions passing through the mind during sleep.
- drear — dreary.
- dreck — excrement; dung.
- dreed — tedious; dreary.
- drees — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dree.