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10-letter words containing e, r, o, s, i

  • désorienté — having lost one's bearings; confused
  • desorption — the action or process of desorbing
  • despoilers — Plural form of despoiler.
  • destroying — Present participle of destroy.
  • detritions — Plural form of detrition.
  • detrivores — Plural form of detrivore.
  • devonshire — 8th Duke of, title of Spencer Compton Cavendish. 1833–1908, British politician, also known (1858–91) as Lord Hartington. He led the Liberal Party (1874–80) and left it to found the Liberal Unionist Party (1886)
  • dexterious — Misspelling of dextrous, alternative spelling to dexterous.
  • diaphorase — a flavoprotein enzyme operating in mitochondria, acting as a catalyst in the process of dye reduction or oxidation
  • dibromides — Plural form of dibromide.
  • digression — the act of digressing.
  • dime store — five-and-ten (def 1).
  • directions — the act or an instance of directing.
  • disapprove — to think (something) wrong or reprehensible; censure or condemn in opinion.
  • disclosers — Plural form of discloser.
  • disclosure — the act or an instance of disclosing; exposure; revelation.
  • discolored — Changed in color in a way that is less attractive.
  • disconcert — to disturb the self-possession of; perturb; ruffle: Her angry reply disconcerted me completely.
  • discounter — a person who discounts.
  • discourage — to deprive of courage, hope, or confidence; dishearten; dispirit.
  • discoursed — communication of thought by words; talk; conversation: earnest and intelligent discourse.
  • discourser — One who discourses; a narrator or speaker.
  • discourses — communication of thought by words; talk; conversation: earnest and intelligent discourse.
  • discovered — to see, get knowledge of, learn of, find, or find out; gain sight or knowledge of (something previously unseen or unknown): to discover America; to discover electricity. Synonyms: detect, espy, descry, discern, ascertain, unearth, ferret out, notice.
  • discoverer — a person who discovers.
  • discretion — the power or right to decide or act according to one's own judgment; freedom of judgment or choice: It is entirely within my discretion whether I will go or stay.
  • discrowned — Simple past tense and past participle of discrown.
  • disembargo — to remove an embargo from.
  • disembroil — to free from embroilment, entanglement, or confusion.
  • disempower — to deprive of influence, importance, etc.: Voters feel they have become disempowered by recent political events.
  • disendorse — (transitive) To cease to endorse; to withdraw endorsement.
  • disendower — One who disendows.
  • disenviron — to set free from a specific environment
  • disfavored — unfavorable regard; displeasure; disesteem; dislike: The prime minister incurred the king's disfavor.
  • disfrocked — Simple past tense and past participle of disfrock.
  • disherison — disinheritance.
  • disheritor — someone who disinherits
  • dishonored — lack or loss of honor; disgraceful or dishonest character or conduct.
  • dishonorer — (American spelling) Alternative form of dishonourer.
  • disimprove — (transitive, rare) to make worse.
  • disordered — lacking organization or in confusion; disarranged.
  • disorderly — characterized by disorder; irregular; untidy; confused: a disorderly desk.
  • disorients — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disorient.
  • dispeopler — One who, or that which, dispeoples; a depopulator.
  • dispermous — having two seeds.
  • dispersion — Also, dispersal. an act, state, or instance of dispersing or of being dispersed.
  • dispersoid — the suspended particles in a dispersion.
  • disprofess — to renounce the profession of
  • disprovide — (obsolete, transitive) Not to provide; to fail to provide.
  • dissolvers — Plural form of dissolver.
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