9-letter words containing d, t, m
- dynamites — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dynamite.
- dynamitic — relating to dynamite or those who use dynamite for illegal reasons
- dynamotor — an electrical machine having a single magnetic field and two independent armature windings of which one acts as a motor and the other a generator: used to convert direct current from a battery into alternating current
- dysmature — Exhibiting dysmaturity.
- dysmetria — the inability to conform muscular action to desired movements because of faulty judgment of distance.
- dysthymia — depression; despondency or a tendency to be despondent.
- dysthymic — A person diagnosed with dysthymia, or dysthymic depression.
- edematose — Alternative form of edematous.
- edematous — effusion of serous fluid into the interstices of cells in tissue spaces or into body cavities.
- educement — the action of educing
- edumacate — (humorous) deliberate misspelling of educate.
- emaciated — Abnormally thin or weak, especially because of illness or a lack of food.
- embattled — (of a place or people) involved in or prepared for war, especially because surrounded by enemy forces.
- embedment — The act of embedding or the state of being embedded.
- emendator — One who emends or critically edits.
- emigrated — Simple past tense and past participle of emigrate.
- endosteum — (biology) A membranous vascular layer of cells which line the medullary cavity of a bone.
- endotherm — An animal that is dependent on or capable of the internal generation of heat; a warm-blooded animal.
- endowment — The action of endowing something or someone.
- enduement — Enduing.
- estimated — Simple past tense and past participle of estimate.
- ethmoidal — Ethmoid.
- etomidate — (medicine) A short-acting intravenous anaesthetic, ethyl 3-[(1R)-1-phenylethyl]imidazole-4-carboxylate.
- fadometer — an instrument used to determine the resistance to fading of a pigment or dye
- farmstead — a farm together with its buildings.
- fermented — Also called organized ferment. any of a group of living organisms, as yeasts, molds, and certain bacteria, that cause fermentation.
- flamsteed — John, 1646–1719, English astronomer.
- formatted — the shape and size of a book as determined by the number of times the original sheet has been folded to form the leaves. Compare duodecimo, folio (def 2), octavo, quarto.
- fort drum — a military reservation in Watertown in N New York, approximately 10 miles (16 km) E of Lake Ontario.
- fumigated — Simple past tense and past participle of fumigate.
- fundament — the buttocks.
- garmented — (poetic) Wearing a garment; attired.
- geminated — Simple past tense and past participle of geminate.
- geometrid — belonging or pertaining to the family Geometridae, comprising slender-bodied, broad-winged moths, the larvae of which are called measuring worms.
- goddammit — Alternative form of goddamn.
- goddamnit — Alternative spelling of goddammit.
- godmother — a woman who serves as sponsor for a child at baptism.
- goldsmith — Oliver, 1730?–74, Irish poet, playwright, essayist, and novelist.
- good time — time deducted from an inmate's sentence for good behavior while in prison.
- good-time — time deducted from an inmate's sentence for good behavior while in prison.
- grommeted — Machinery. any of various rings or eyelets of metal or the like. an insulated washer of rubber or plastic, inserted in a hole in a metal part to prevent grounding of a wire passing through the hole.
- grummeted — grommeted, or having grommets
- haematoid — resembling blood
- hamfisted — clumsy, inept, or heavy-handed: a ham-handed approach to dealing with people that hurts a lot of feelings.
- hampstead — a former borough of London, England, now part of Camden.
- handstamp — an implement for stamping an impression
- hard time — a period of difficulties or hardship.
- hardiment — hardihood.
- head smut — a disease of cereals and other grasses, characterized by a dark-brown, powdery mass of spores replacing the affected seed heads, caused by any of several smut fungi of the genera Sorosporium, Sphacelotheca, and Ustilago.
- head them — to toss the coins in a game of two-up