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11-letter words containing e, r, d, o

  • doorbusters — Plural form of doorbuster.
  • doorkeepers — Plural form of doorkeeper.
  • doorknocker — A knocker mounted on a door.
  • doorpersons — Plural form of doorperson.
  • doorstepper — a person who goes from door-to-door in order to canvass or interview
  • doorstopper — A doorstop: a device for halting the motion of a door.
  • dope pusher — pusher (def 2).
  • dorian mode — an authentic church mode represented on the white keys of a keyboard instrument by an ascending scale from D to D.
  • dormitories — Plural form of dormitory.
  • dorset down — a breed of stocky hornless sheep having a broad head, dark face, and a dense fleece: kept for lamb production
  • dorset horn — one of an English breed of sheep having a close-textured, medium-length wool.
  • dorset naga — a British-grown variety of the Naga Jolokia chilli pepper, noted for its extreme heat
  • dorsetshire — a county in S England. 1024 sq. mi. (2650 sq. km).
  • dorsiferous — borne on the back, as the sori on most ferns.
  • dorsiflexor — a muscle causing dorsiflexion.
  • dot address — An Internet address in dot notation.
  • dot leaders — (text)   A row of full stops intended to guide the reader's eye across the page from a column of variable length items on the left to the corresponding items in a column on the right. Used, for example, in the contents page of a book to tie a heading on the left to its page number on the right.
  • dotted pair — (programming)   The usual LISP syntax for representing a cons cell that is not a list. For example, the expression (cons 'foo 42) returns a cons cell that is output as (foo . 42) which represents a cons cell whose car is the symbol "foo" and whose cdr is the integer 42.
  • double room — double (def 13).
  • double star — two stars that appear as one if not viewed through a telescope with adequate magnification, such as two stars that are separated by a great distance but are nearly in line with each other and an observer (optical double star) or those that are relatively close together and comprise a single physical system (physical double star)
  • double-crop — to raise two consecutive crops on the same land within a single growing season.
  • double-park — If someone double-parks their car or their car double-parks, they park in a road by the side of another parked car.
  • double-reed — of or relating to wind instruments producing sounds through two reeds fastened and beating together, as the oboe.
  • double-ring — being or pertaining to a marriage ceremony in which the partners give rings to one another.
  • doublecross — To betray someone by leading them into trap after having gained their trust and led them to believe that they were actually being aided.
  • doubletrees — Plural form of doubletree.
  • dower chest — a Pennsylvania Dutch hope chest bearing the initials of the owner.
  • dower house — the dwelling that is intended for or occupied by the widowed mother of the owner of an ancestral estate.
  • down-easter — a full-rigged ship built in New England in the late 19th century, usually of wood and relatively fast.
  • down-market — appealing or catering to lower-income consumers; widely affordable or accessible.
  • downhearted — dejected; depressed; discouraged.
  • downlighter — Downlight.
  • downloaders — Plural form of downloader.
  • downriggers — Plural form of downrigger.
  • downstrokes — Plural form of downstroke.
  • downtrodden — tyrannized over; oppressed: the downtrodden plebeians of ancient Rome.
  • doxographer — a person who collects the opinions and conjectures of ancient Greek philosophers
  • draftswomen — Plural form of draftswoman.
  • dragon beam — dragging piece.
  • dragon tree — a tall, treelike plant, Dracaena draco, of the Canary Islands, scarce in the wild but common in cultivation, yielding a variety of dragon's blood.
  • dragon-head — dragonhead.
  • dragonflies — Plural form of dragonfly.
  • dreadlocked — Wearing dreadlocks.
  • dreadnought — a type of battleship armed with heavy-caliber guns in turrets: so called from the British battleship Dreadnought, launched in 1906, the first of its type.
  • dream world — the world of imagination or illusion rather than of objective reality.
  • dress goods — cloth or material for dresses.
  • dress shoes — formal shoes for wearing with evening dress
  • drill tower — a structure, usually of concrete and steel, that resembles a building and is used by firefighters for practicing and improving firefighting techniques.
  • drip coffee — a beverage prepared in a vessel in which boiling water filters from a top compartment through the coffee into a pot below.
  • dromaeosaur — Any bird-like theropod dinosaur of the family Dromaeosauridae.
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