8-letter words containing d, u, l
- colludes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collude.
- coloured — Something that is coloured a particular colour is that colour.
- colubrid — any snake of the family Colubridae, including many harmless snakes, such as the grass snake and whip snakes, and some venomous types
- columned — Having columns.
- conclude — If you conclude that something is true, you decide that it is true using the facts you know as a basis.
- could be — It's possible
- could've — Could've is the usual spoken form of 'could have', when 'have' is an auxiliary verb.
- couldest — Alternative form of couldst.
- couldn't — Couldn't is the usual spoken form of 'could not'.
- coupland — Douglas. born 1961, Canadian novelist and journalist; novels include Generation X (1991), Girlfriend in a Coma (1998), and City of Glass (2000)
- courland — a region of Latvia, between the Gulf of Riga and the Lithuanian border
- cruelled — Simple past tense and past participle of cruel.
- crumbled — Simple past tense and past participle of crumble.
- crumpled — creased
- crunodal — of or relating to a crunode
- cuboidal — Also, cuboidal. resembling a cube in form.
- cuckolds — Plural form of cuckold.
- cuddlier — suitable for or inviting cuddling: a cuddly teddy bear.
- cuddling — Present participle of cuddle.
- cudgeled — a short, thick stick used as a weapon; club.
- cudgeler — One who beats with a cudgel.
- culdesac — Alternative spelling of cul-de-sac.
- culloden — a moor near Inverness in N Scotland: site of a battle in 1746 in which government troops under the Duke of Cumberland defeated the Jacobites under Prince Charles Edward Stuart
- cultured — If you describe someone as cultured, you mean that they have good manners, are well educated, and know a lot about the arts.
- cupolaed — having a cupola
- curdling — Present participle of curdle.
- cursedly — In a cursed manner; miserably.
- cuspidal — of, like, or having a cusp; cuspidate.
- dactylus — the tip of a cephalopod's tentacular club
- daedalus — an Athenian architect and inventor who built the labyrinth for Minos on Crete and fashioned wings for himself and his son Icarus to flee the island
- deal out — If someone deals out a punishment or harmful action, they punish or harm someone.
- dearnful — gloomy or heavy-hearted
- deathful — characterized by or causing death
- decidual — the endometrium of a pregnant uterus that in many of the higher mammals is cast off at parturition.
- declutch — to disengage the clutch of a motor vehicle
- decolour — to deprive of colour, as by bleaching
- decouple — If two countries, organizations, or ideas that were connected in some way are decoupled, the connection between them is ended.
- decupled — Simple past tense and past participle of decuple.
- decuples — Plural form of decuple.
- decuplet — (physics) A collection of spin-3/2 baryons described in the eightfold way.
- defaults — Plural form of default.
- defluent — running downwards
- dehulled — to remove the hulls from (beans, seeds, etc.); hull.
- delaunay — Robert (rɔbɛr). 1885–1941, French painter, whose abstract use of colour characterized Orphism, an attempt to introduce more colour into austere forms of Cubism
- delbruck — Max. 1906–81, US molecular biologist, born in Germany. Noted for his work on bacteriophages, he shared the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine in 1969
- delectus — (obsolete) An elementary book for learners of Latin or Greek.
- delirium — If someone is suffering from delirium, they are not able to think or speak in a sensible and reasonable way because they are very ill and have a fever.
- deloused — Simple past tense and past participle of delouse.
- delouser — a substance or device which removes lice from something
- delouses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of delouse.