0%

9-letter words containing f, o

  • diabolify — (transitive) To ascribe diabolical qualities to; to change into, or represent as, a devil.
  • diet food — a type of food intended to help people slim
  • diffusion — act of diffusing; state of being diffused.
  • dire wolf — an extinct wolf, Canis dirus, widespread in North America during the Pleistocene Epoch, having a larger body and a smaller brain than the modern wolf.
  • disciform — resembling the shape of a disc
  • discomfit — to confuse and deject; disconcert: to be discomfited by a question.
  • disfavors — Plural form of disfavor.
  • disfavour — unfavorable regard; displeasure; disesteem; dislike: The prime minister incurred the king's disfavor.
  • disforest — To disafforest.
  • disformed — Simple past tense and past participle of disform.
  • disfrocks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disfrock.
  • disinform — to give or supply disinformation to.
  • disprofit — to (cause to) fail to profit
  • do out of — Informal. a burst of frenzied activity; action; commotion.
  • dobsonfly — a large, soft-bodied insect, Corydalus cornutus, having four distinctly veined membranous wings, biting mouthparts, and, in the male, huge mandibles that jut out from the head.
  • dock leaf — the typically broad leaf of any of various temperate weedy plants of the polygonaceous genus Rumex, having greenish or reddish flowers
  • dog shift — graveyard shift.
  • dogfights — Plural form of dogfight.
  • dogfishes — Plural form of dogfish.
  • dolefully — sorrowful; mournful; melancholy: a doleful look on her face.
  • dolorific — Of or relating to pain.
  • doomfully — in a doomful manner
  • doorframe — the frame of a doorway, including two jambs and a lintel, or head.
  • dorsiflex — Bend (something, typically the hand or foot ) dorsally or toward its upper surface.
  • doubtfull — Archaic form of doubtful.
  • doughface — a Northerner who sympathized with the South during the controversies over new territories and slavery before the Civil War.
  • doughfoot — an infantryman in the U.S. Army, especially in World War II.
  • downdraft — a downward current, as of air: a downdraft in a mine shaft.
  • downfalls — Plural form of downfall.
  • downfield — In or to a position nearer to the opponents' end of a field.
  • downforce — a force produced by air resistance plus gravity that increases the stability of an aircraft or motor vehicle by pressing it downwards
  • downshift — to shift an automotive transmission or vehicle into a lower gear.
  • dragonfly — any of numerous stout-bodied, nonstinging insects of the order Odonata (suborder Anisoptera), the species of which prey on mosquitoes and other insects and are distinguished from the damselflies by having the wings outstretched rather than folded when at rest.
  • drain off — liquid: remove
  • drift off — fall asleep
  • driftbolt — Also called driftpin. a spike having a round shank and used for fastening heavy timbers together.
  • driftwood — wood floating on a body of water or cast ashore by it.
  • drive off — vehicle: pull out, move off
  • drop leaf — a hinged leaf attached to the end or side of a table that can be raised to extend the tabletop or folded vertically downward when not in use.
  • dude food — food such as hot dogs, burgers, etc, considered particularly appealing to men
  • dufferdom — the state of being or the characteristic appearance or behaviour of a duffer (in the sense of a useless and incompetent person)
  • dumbfound — to make speechless with amazement; astonish.
  • dummkopfs — Plural form of dummkopf.
  • dustproof — impervious to or free of dust.
  • ecofallow — a method of farming that diminishes weeds and conserves water by rotating crops and reducing or eliminating tillage.
  • ecofreaks — Plural form of ecofreak.
  • effection — Creation; a doing.
  • effectors — Plural form of effector.
  • effluxion — outward flow, as of water.
  • effortful — marked by effort or exertion; labored.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?