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9-letter words containing d, u, c, h

  • duckshove — to evade (responsibility or an issue)
  • duckwheat — India wheat.
  • duncishly — in a dullard-like manner
  • dustcloth — a soft, absorbent cloth used for dusting.
  • dutch 200 — a score of 200 in a game, made by bowling strikes and spares alternately.
  • dutch bob — a hair style consisting of bangs cut straight across the forehead and the rest of the hair cut to a uniform length just below the ears.
  • dutch cap — a woman's lace cap with triangular flaps, characteristic of Dutch national dress
  • dutch cut — Dutch bob.
  • dutch elm — a widely planted hybrid elm tree, Ulmus hollandica, with spreading branches and a short trunk
  • dutch hoe — a type of hoe in which the head consists of a two-edged cross-blade attached to two prongs or of a single pressing of this shape
  • dutch lap — a method of laying shingles, slates, or the like, in which each shingle or slate overlaps those below and to one side and is itself overlapped by those above and to the other side.
  • echiuroid — any wormlike invertebrate of the phylum Echiuroidea, found in sand and mud of tropical and subtropical seas, having at the mouth a ciliated, often elongated prostomium.
  • eunuchoid — Resembling a eunuch, typically in having reduced or indeterminate sexual characteristics.
  • fish duck — merganser.
  • hacked up — (jargon, programming)   Sufficiently patched, kluged, and tweaked that the surgical scars are beginning to crowd out normal tissue (compare critical mass). Not all programs that are hacked become "hacked up"; if modifications are done with some eye to coherence and continued maintainability, the software may emerge better for the experience. Contrast hack up.
  • hackitude — (jargon)   An even sillier word for hackishness.
  • handcuffs — a ring-shaped metal device that can be locked around a person's wrist, usually one of a pair connected by a short chain or linked bar; shackle: The police put handcuffs on the suspect.
  • hard luck — If you say that someone had some hard luck, or that a situation was hard luck on them, you mean that something bad happened to them and you are implying that it was not their fault.
  • hardcourt — relating to a type of tennis court that is made of hard material
  • headcount — The act of counting how many people are present in a group.
  • hiccupped — a quick, involuntary inhalation that follows a spasm of the diaphragm and is suddenly checked by closure of the glottis, producing a short, relatively sharp sound.
  • hydraulic — operated by, moved by, or employing water or other liquids in motion.
  • juicehead — a heavy drinker of alcoholic liquor.
  • kuchipudi — a form of S Indian classical dancing
  • launchpad — the platform on which a missile or launch vehicle undergoes final prelaunch checkout and countdown and from which it is launched from the surface of the earth.
  • mustached — Having a mustache.
  • old dutch — the Dutch language before c1100. Abbreviation: OD, OD., O.D.
  • purchased — to acquire by the payment of money or its equivalent; buy.
  • push-card — punchboard.
  • quidditch — Alternative form of Quidditch.
  • quoad hoc — as much as this; to this extent.
  • rockhound — a person who collects or who is interested in rocks and minerals
  • roundarch — having rounded arches
  • schaudinnFritz [frits] /frɪts/ (Show IPA), 1871–1906, German zoologist.
  • schedular — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
  • scheduled — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
  • scheduler — scheduling
  • scouthood — (sometimes initial capital letter) the state of being a scout, especially a Boy Scout or a Girl Scout.
  • scrunched — to crunch, crush, or crumple.
  • squinched — to contort (the features) or squint.
  • the deuce — used in such phrases as what the deuce, where the deuce, etc
  • the dutch — the natives, citizens, or inhabitants of the Netherlands
  • touchdown — Football. an act or instance of scoring six points by being in possession of the ball on or behind the opponent's goal line.
  • touchwood — wood converted into an easily ignitible substance by the action of certain fungi, and used as tinder; punk.
  • trauchled — to fatigue; tire; wear out.
  • unchained — to fasten or secure with a chain: to chain a dog to a post.
  • unchanged — to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc., of (something) different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone: to change one's name; to change one's opinion; to change the course of history.
  • unchanted — a short, simple melody, especially one characterized by single notes to which an indefinite number of syllables are intoned, used in singing psalms, canticles, etc., in church services.
  • uncharged — not charged, especially with electricity; electrically neutral: an uncharged battery; an uncharged particle.
  • uncharmed — marked by good fortune or privilege: a charmed life.
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