8-letter words containing d, s, n
- inserted — Botany. (especially of the parts of a flower) attached to or growing out of some part.
- insiders — Plural form of insider.
- insisted — to be emphatic, firm, or resolute on some matter of desire, demand, intention, etc.: He insists on checking every shipment.
- inspired — aroused, animated, or imbued with the spirit to do something, by or as if by supernatural or divine influence: an inspired poet.
- instated — to put or place in a certain state or position, as in an office; install.
- insulted — to treat or speak to insolently or with contemptuous rudeness; affront.
- insureds — the person, group, or organization whose life or property is covered by an insurance policy.
- intrados — the interior curve or surface of an arch or vault.
- intrudes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of intrude.
- invaders — Plural form of invader.
- invalids — Plural form of invalid.
- inversed — reversed in position, order, direction, or tendency.
- invested — to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.
- inviscid — (of a fluid) having no viscosity.
- iodopsin — a photosensitive violet pigment that occurs in the cones of the retina and is transformed by light into retinal and an opsin protein.
- ironside — ("Ironside") a.d. c980–1016, English king 1016: defeated by Canute.
- isenland — (in the Nibelungenlied) the country of Brunhild, usually identified with Iceland.
- islanded — Simple past tense and past participle of island.
- islander — a native or inhabitant of an island.
- isodicon — (in the Greek Orthodox Church) a short anthem performed while the Gospel is being carried into a church
- isodomon — (in Greek history) masonry formed of uniform blocks, with courses of equal height
- isopedin — the underlying layer of a ganoid scale, composed of connective tissue embedded with bone.
- joinders — Plural form of joinder.
- jordaens — Jacob [yah-kawp] /ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), 1593–1678, Flemish painter.
- keeshond — one of a Dutch breed of small dogs having thick, silver-gray hair tipped with black and a tail carried over the back.
- kindless — lacking kindness; unkind; unsympathetic.
- kindness — the state or quality of being kind: kindness to animals.
- kindreds — a person's relatives collectively; kinfolk; kin.
- kindship — The state, condition, or essence of being kind; kindness.
- kingdoms — Plural form of kingdom.
- kingside — the side of the board on which the king is positioned at the start of the game, left for black and right for white.
- kneepads — Plural form of kneepad.
- ladrones — a group of 15 small islands in the Pacific, E of the Philippines: divided into Guam, a possession of the U.S., and the North Marianas, formally under U.S. trusteeship. 453 sq. mi. (1127 sq. km).
- landfast — attached to or grounded on shore or land: landfast ice.
- landings — Plural form of landing.
- landless — without landed property; not owning land: a landless noble.
- landmass — a part of the continental crust above sea level having a distinct identity, as a continent or large island.
- landseer — Sir Edwin Henry, 1802–73, English painter, especially of animals.
- landshut — a city in SE Germany, in Bavaria: Trausnitz castle (13th century); manufacturing centre for machinery and chemicals. Pop: 60 282 (2003 est)
- landside — the part of a plow consisting of a sidepiece opposite the moldboard, for guiding the plow and resisting the side pressure caused by the turning of the furrow.
- landskip — landscape.
- landslip — the downward falling or sliding of a mass of soil, detritus, or rock on or from a steep slope.
- landsmal — Nynorsk.
- landsman — Also, landman. a person who lives or works on land.
- landwash — the foreshore, especially that part between high and low tidemarks.
- laniards — Plural form of laniard.
- lansdale — a city in SE Pennsylvania.
- lanyards — Plural form of lanyard.
- launders — Plural form of launder.
- leadings — Plural form of leading.