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8-letter words containing e, d, i, r

  • credited — Something attributed to.
  • creditor — Your creditors are the people who you owe money to.
  • cressida — (in medieval adaptations of the story of Troy) a woman who deserts her Trojan lover Troilus for the Greek Diomedes
  • creviced — Having a crevice or crevices.
  • cricetid — any small rodent of the family Cricetidae
  • crinkled — marked with crenellations
  • crippled — physically incapacitated
  • criseyde — Cressida
  • crudites — Crudités are pieces of raw vegetable, often served before a meal.
  • cuddlier — suitable for or inviting cuddling: a cuddly teddy bear.
  • cudgerie — a large tropical rutaceous tree, Flindersia schottina, having light-coloured wood
  • curbside — at the curb or on the sidewalk adjacent to the street
  • curtsied — a respectful bow made by women and girls, consisting of bending the knees and lowering the body.
  • cylinder — A cylinder is an object with flat circular ends and long straight sides.
  • d region — the lowest region of the ionosphere, extending from a height of about 60 kilometres to about 90 kilometres: contains a low concentration of free electrons and reflects low-frequency radio waves
  • daintier — Comparative form of dainty.
  • dairymen — Plural form of dairyman.
  • daladier — Édouard (edwar). 1884–1970, French radical socialist statesman; premier of France (1933; 1934; 1938–40) and signatory of the Munich Pact (1938)
  • darbyite — a member of the Plymouth Brethren.
  • darioles — Plural form of dariole.
  • darraine — clear of guilt
  • daturine — a poisonous substance found in plants belonging to the Solanaceae family
  • de kruif — Paul (Henry)1890-1971; U.S. bacteriologist & writer
  • de vries — Hugo (ˈhyːxoː). 1848–1935, Dutch botanist, who rediscovered Mendel's laws and developed the mutation theory of evolution
  • de-orbit — the act of leaving orbit
  • dead air — the loss or suspension of the video or audio signal during a television or radio transmission.
  • deadlier — causing or tending to cause death; fatal; lethal: a deadly poison.
  • deadrise — the angle with the horizontal made by the outboard rise of the bottom of a vessel at the widest frame.
  • debitors — a debtor.
  • debonair — A man who is debonair is confident, charming, and well-dressed.
  • debriefs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of debrief.
  • debrises — the remains of anything broken down or destroyed; ruins; rubble: the debris of buildings after an air raid.
  • debruise — to overlay or partly cover with an ordinary
  • deceiver — to mislead by a false appearance or statement; delude: They deceived the enemy by disguising the destroyer as a freighter.
  • decemvir — (in ancient Rome) a member of a board of ten magistrates, esp either of the two commissions established in 451 and 450 bc to revise the laws
  • deciders — Plural form of decider.
  • decigram — a unit of measurement that is equivalent to one tenth of a gram
  • decipher — to determine the meaning of (something obscure or illegible)
  • decliner — One who declines.
  • decrepid — Obsolete spelling of decrepit (17th-20th c.).
  • decrepit — Something that is decrepit is old and in bad condition. Someone who is decrepit is old and weak.
  • decrying — Present participle of decry.
  • decurion — a local councillor
  • decwrite — DEC's CDA-based, WYSIWYG document processing application. It can generate and import SGML marked-up documents.
  • deerlike — resembling a deer
  • deerskin — the hide of a deer
  • definers — Plural form of definer.
  • defriend — to remove (a person) from the list of one's friends on a social networking website
  • deianira — a sister of Meleager and wife of Hercules. She unintentionally killed Hercules by dipping his tunic in the poisonous blood of the Centaur Nessus, thinking it to be a love charm
  • 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.
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