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9-letter words containing e, l, i, d

  • data file — a file containing data that is used by a computer program
  • date line — international date line
  • datelined — Simple past tense and past participle of dateline.
  • datelines — Plural form of dateline.
  • day-lewis — C(ecil). 1904–72, British poet, critic, and (under the pen name Nicholas Blake) author of detective stories; poet laureate (1968–72)
  • day-liner — a train, boat, etc., having a regularly scheduled route during daylight hours.
  • de molina — Tirso (ˈtirso). Pen name of Gabriel Téllez. ?1571–1648, Spanish dramatist; author of the first dramatic treatment of the Don Juan legend El Burlador de Sevilla (1630)
  • de valois — Dame Ninette (niːˈnɛt). original name Edris Stannus. 1898–2001, British ballet dancer and choreographer, born in Ireland: a founder of the Vic-Wells Ballet Company (1931), which under her direction became the Royal Ballet (1956)
  • dead lift — a direct lifting without any mechanical assistance, as of a dead weight
  • dead mail — undeliverable and unreturnable mail that is handled in the dead-letter office of the general post office.
  • deadliest — causing or tending to cause death; fatal; lethal: a deadly poison.
  • deadlight — a bull's-eye let into the deck or hull of a vessel to admit light to a cabin
  • deadlined — Simple past tense and past participle of deadline.
  • deadlines — Plural form of deadline.
  • deafblind — unable to hear or see
  • deal with — When you deal with something or someone that needs attention, you give your attention to them, and often solve a problem or make a decision concerning them.
  • dealigned — Simple past tense and past participle of dealign.
  • deathlike — resembling or suggestive of death
  • deauville — a town and resort in NW France: casino. Pop: 3968 (2008)
  • debulking — Present participle of debulk.
  • decalcify — to remove calcium or lime from (bones, teeth, etc)
  • decaliter — dekaliter
  • decalitre — ten litres. One decalitre is equal to about 2.2 imperial gallons
  • decapolis — a league of ten cities, including Damascus, in the northeast of ancient Palestine: established in 63 bc by Pompey and governed by Rome
  • deceitful — If you say that someone is deceitful, you mean that they behave in a dishonest way by making other people believe something that is not true.
  • decennial — lasting for ten years
  • decidable — able to be decided
  • decidedly — Decidedly means to a great extent and in a way that is very obvious.
  • 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
  • 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.
  • declaring — Present participle of declare.
  • 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
  • decompile — Produce source code from (compiled code).
  • decubital — any position assumed by a patient when lying in bed.
  • decupling — Present participle of decuple.
  • deducible — to derive as a conclusion from something known or assumed; infer: From the evidence the detective deduced that the gardener had done it.
  • deducibly — in a deducible or conjecturable manner
  • deep-laid — (of a plot or plan) carefully worked out and kept secret
  • deep-link — Digital Technology. a link that sends traffic to an internal web page with more relevant or specific content, rather than to the website's home page, as to increase user engagement.
  • deer lick — a naturally or artificially salty area of ground where deer come to lick the salt
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