6-letter words containing e, d, m
- damped — Simple past tense and past participle of damp.
- dampen — To dampen something such as someone's enthusiasm or excitement means to make it less lively or intense.
- damper — A damper is a small sheet of metal in a fire, boiler, or furnace that can be moved to increase or reduce the amount of air that enters.
- damsel — A damsel is a young, unmarried woman.
- de man — Paul, 1919–83, U.S. literary critic and theorist, born in Belgium.
- de-man — to reduce the workforce of (a plant, industry, etc)
- deamon — (spelling) It's spelled "daemon".
- decamp — If you decamp, you go away from somewhere secretly or suddenly.
- decime — a subdivision of an English county
- dedham — a town in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
- deemed — to form or have an opinion; judge; think: He did not deem lightly of the issue.
- deemer — A judge; an adjudicator.
- defame — If someone defames another person or thing, they say bad and untrue things about them.
- defoam — to remove foam from (something)
- deform — If something deforms a person's body or something else, it causes it to have an unnatural shape. In technical English, you can also say that the second thing deforms.
- degame — a deciduous tree of South and Central America, Calycophyllum candidissimum
- degerm — to remove the germ from (wheat)
- deimos — the smaller of the two satellites of Mars and the more distant from the planet. Approximate diameter: 13 km
- delime — to remove lime from (a substance)
- delium — an ancient seaport in Greece, in Boeotia: the Boeotians defeated the Athenians here 424 b.c.
- demain — (obsolete, British, legal) A demesne, especially the Ancient demesne claimed by William the Conqueror.
- demand — If one thing demands another, the first needs the second in order to happen or be dealt with successfully.
- demark — to remove all trace of (a person or thing)
- demask — (transitive) To clear etchant and maskant from a part being chemically etched or milled.
- demast — to remove the mast from (a boat)
- demate — (transitive, aerospace) To move (a space shuttle orbiter) off the back of an aircraft that can carry it.
- demean — If you demean yourself, you do something which makes people have less respect for you.
- dement — to deteriorate mentally, esp because of old age
- demies — a foundation scholar at Magdalen College, Oxford: so called because such a scholar originally received half the allowance of a fellow.
- demine — Remove explosive mines from.
- demise — The demise of something or someone is their end or death.
- demiss — submissive or humble
- demist — to free or become free of condensation through evaporation produced by a heater and/or blower
- demobs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demob.
- demode — out of fashion
- demoed — demonstration (defs 4, 6).
- demons — sources of worry or conflict which trouble a person or a group of people
- demoss — (transitive) To remove moss from.
- demote — If someone demotes you, they give you a lower rank or a less important position than you already have, often as a punishment.
- demure — If you describe someone, usually a young woman, as demure, you mean they are quiet and rather shy, usually in a way that you like and find appealing, and behave very correctly.
- demurs — Plural form of demur.
- demuth — Charles, 1883–1935, U.S. painter and illustrator.
- denham — Sir John, 1615–69, English poet and architect.
- denims — Denims are casual trousers made of denim.
- denom. — (religious) denomination
- deperm — to demagnetize (a ship or submarine) in order to protect it from magnetic detection
- dermal — of or relating to the skin
- dermas — beef or fowl intestine used as a casing in preparing certain savory dishes, especially kishke.
- dermic — dermal
- dermis — the layer of skin just below the epidermis