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9-letter words containing e, c, d

  • deciliter — one tenth of a liter (3.376 fluid ounces or 6.1024 cubic inches)
  • decilitre — one tenth of a litre
  • decillion — (in Britain, France, and Germany) the number represented as one followed by 60 zeros (1060)
  • decimally — by tens
  • decimated — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • decimates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decimate.
  • decimator — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • decimeter — one tenth of a meter (3.937 inches)
  • decimetre — one tenth of a metre
  • deciphers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decipher.
  • decisions — A conclusion or resolution reached after consideration.
  • decistere — a measure equivalent to one tenth of a stere
  • deck beam — a stiffening deck member supported at its extremities by knee connections to frames or bulkheads
  • deck bolt — a flat-headed bolt for fastening down deck planking.
  • deck gang — (on a ship) the sailors who are on duty but not on watch.
  • deck hand — a seaman assigned various duties, such as mooring and cargo handling, on the deck of a ship
  • deck hook — hook1 (def 16).
  • deck load — cargo carried on an open deck of a ship.
  • deck over — to complete the construction of the upper deck between the bulwarks of (a vessel)
  • deck shoe — Deck shoes are flat casual shoes made of canvas or leather.
  • deckchair — A deckchair is a simple chair with a folding frame, and a piece of canvas as the seat and back. Deckchairs are usually used on the beach, on a ship, or in the garden.
  • deckhouse — a houselike cabin on the deck of a ship
  • declaimed — Simple past tense and past participle of declaim.
  • declaimer — to speak aloud in an oratorical manner; make a formal speech: Brutus declaimed from the steps of the Roman senate building.
  • declarant — a person who makes a declaration
  • declareth — (archaic) Third-person singular present simple form of 'declare'.
  • declaring — Present participle of declare.
  • declassee — (of a woman) having lost social standing or status
  • declinant — a person who is declining or diminishing in luck or wealth
  • declinate — (esp of plant parts) descending from the horizontal in a curve; drooping
  • decliners — Plural form of decliner.
  • declining — deteriorating gradually, as in quality, health, or character
  • declinist — a person who believes that something is in decline
  • declivity — a downward slope, esp of the ground
  • declivous — having a declining slope or gradient
  • declutter — to simplify or get rid of mess, disorder, complications, etc, from
  • decmate i — (computer)   The first in DEC's series of miniaturised PDP-8 computers based on the Intersil 6120 [Harris 6120?] microprocessor and dedicated to wordprocessing. The DECmate was DEC's original competition for the IBM PC. The DECmate I was introduced in 1980 as the successor to the WT78. The processor ran at 10 MHz, and was housed in a VT100 CRT terminal. It was a very limted model, no EAE option was available, memory was 32 Kwords. It used the RX02 8" dual floppy drive. Options were the DP278-A and -B communication ports and RL278: 1 to 4 RL02 cartridge disk drives.
  • decocting — Present participle of decoct.
  • decoction — the extraction of the water-soluble substances of a drug or medicinal plants by boiling
  • decoctive — of or relating to decoction
  • decocture — the essence or liquor resulting from decoction
  • decodable — Able to be read using a certain set of reading knowledge.
  • decodings — Plural form of decoding.
  • decoherer — a device that re-establishes a coherer to usual levels of receptiveness
  • decollate — to separate (continuous stationery, etc) into individual forms
  • decollete — (on a piece of women's clothing) a bodice that has a very low neckline
  • decolored — to remove the color from; deprive of color; bleach.
  • decompile — Produce source code from (compiled code).
  • decomplex — having or composed of parts that are complex in themselves
  • decompose — When things such as dead plants or animals decompose, or when something decomposes them, they change chemically and begin to decay.
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