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9-letter words containing e, p, a, s

  • compleats — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compleat.
  • copasetic — fine; completely satisfactory; OK.
  • copulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of copulate.
  • cosplayer — One who takes part in cosplay.
  • crappiest — Superlative form of crappy.
  • creamcups — a Californian papaveraceous plant, Platystemon californicus, with small cream-coloured or yellow flowers on long flower stalks
  • crease up — If someone or something makes you crease up or creases you up, they make you laugh a lot.
  • crispated — Crispate.
  • crisphead — a variety of lettuce with a dense cabbage-like head and mild crunchy leaves
  • cup shake — wind shake.
  • cuspidate — having a cusp or cusps
  • dassiepis — (South African English) hyraceum: The solidified urine of a dassie, used medicinally, inter-alia, for epilepsy.
  • datepalms — Plural form of datepalm.
  • dead spot — Also called blind spot. an area in which radio or cell phone signals are weak and their reception poor.
  • dead-spot — Anatomy. a small area on the retina that is insensitive to light due to the interruption, where the optic nerve joins the retina, of the normal pattern of light-sensitive rods and cones.
  • debt swap — A debt swap is a legal agreement where two people or companies exchange their debts, often where one has a fixed interest rate and one does not.
  • decapolis — a league of ten cities, including Damascus, in the northeast of ancient Palestine: established in 63 bc by Pompey and governed by Rome
  • deiparous — giving birth to a god
  • depascent — Consuming.
  • depasture — to graze or denude by grazing (a pasture, esp a meadow specially grown for the purpose)
  • deposable — Capable of being deposed, or deprived of office.
  • deschamps — Émile (French emil), full name Émile Deschamps de Saint-Armand. 1791–1871, French poet, dramatist, and librettist: a leading figure in the French romantic movement
  • despaired — loss of hope; hopelessness.
  • despairer — a person who despairs
  • desparate — Misspelling of desperate.
  • desperado — A desperado is someone who does illegal, violent things without worrying about the danger.
  • desperate — If you are desperate, you are in such a bad situation that you are willing to try anything to change it.
  • despotate — An area ruled by a despot (\u03b4\u03b5\u03c3\u03c0\u03cc\u03c4\u03b7\u03c2) in the late Byzantine Balkans (12th to 15th centuries).
  • despumate — to clarify or purify (a liquid) by skimming a scum from its surface
  • diapauses — Plural form of diapause.
  • diapensia — An evergreen arctic shrub, Diapensia lapponica.
  • diaphones — Plural form of diaphone.
  • diaphyses — Plural form of diaphysis.
  • diapyesis — the discharge of pus
  • diaspores — Plural form of diaspore.
  • die-stamp — to produce words or decoration on (a surface) by using a steel die so that the printed images stand in relief
  • dipterans — Plural form of dipteran.
  • dis pater — Dis.
  • disappear — to cease to be seen; vanish from sight.
  • disparage — to speak of or treat slightingly; depreciate; belittle: Do not disparage good manners.
  • disparate — distinct in kind; essentially different; dissimilar: disparate ideas.
  • disparted — Simple past tense and past participle of dispart.
  • dispauper — to divest of the status of a person having the privileges of a pauper, as of public support or of legal rights as a pauper.
  • dispersal — The action or process of distributing things or people over a wide area.
  • displaced — lacking a home, country, etc.
  • displacer — a person or thing that displaces.
  • displaces — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of displace.
  • displayed — (of a bird) represented with wings and legs spread: an eagle displayed.
  • displayer — One who, or that which, displays.
  • displease — to incur the dissatisfaction, dislike, or disapproval of; offend; annoy: His reply displeased the judge.
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