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7-letter words containing i, d, e

  • discage — to release (an animal or bird) from a cage
  • discase — to take the case or covering from; uncase.
  • discept — To debate; to discuss.
  • discern — to perceive by the sight or some other sense or by the intellect; see, recognize, or apprehend: They discerned a sail on the horizon.
  • discerp — To tear into pieces; to rend.
  • discide — (obsolete) To cut apart; to cut into pieces.
  • discoed — Simple past tense and past participle of disco.
  • discoer — a person who attends discos
  • discure — (obsolete) To discover; to reveal.
  • disease — a disordered or incorrectly functioning organ, part, structure, or system of the body resulting from the effect of genetic or developmental errors, infection, poisons, nutritional deficiency or imbalance, toxicity, or unfavorable environmental factors; illness; sickness; ailment.
  • disedge — to render (an object) blunt
  • disegno — drawing or design: a term used during the 16th and 17th centuries to designate the formal discipline required for the representation of the ideal form of an object in the visual arts, especially as expressed in the linear structure of a work of art.
  • diserve — Misspelling of deserve.
  • diseuse — a female professional entertainer who performs monologues.
  • disfame — disrepute
  • disgest — Obsolete form of digest.
  • dishelm — to deprive of a helmet.
  • dishome — to deprive of a home
  • disiple — (language, DSP)   A DSP language.
  • disject — to scatter; disperse.
  • disjune — breakfast.
  • disleaf — to remove the leaf or leaves from
  • dislike — to regard with displeasure, antipathy, or aversion: I dislike working. I dislike oysters.
  • disnest — to remove from the nest
  • disobey — Fail to obey (rules, a command, or someone in authority).
  • dispace — to move or travel about
  • dispell — Alternative form of dispel.
  • dispels — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dispel.
  • dispend — to pay out; expend; spend.
  • dispise — Obsolete spelling of despise.
  • dispone — to arrange
  • dispose — to give a tendency or inclination to; incline: His temperament disposed him to argue readily with people.
  • dispute — to engage in argument or debate.
  • disrate — to reduce to a lower rating or rank.
  • disrobe — Take off one's clothes.
  • dissave — to withdraw or spend savings, especially to meet increased living expenses.
  • disseat — to unseat.
  • dissect — to cut apart (an animal body, plant, etc.) to examine the structure, relation of parts, or the like.
  • dissent — to differ in sentiment or opinion, especially from the majority; withhold assent; disagree (often followed by from): Two of the justices dissented from the majority decision.
  • dissert — to discourse on a subject.
  • distend — Swell or cause to swell by pressure from inside.
  • distent — distended.
  • distome — a genus of digenetic parasitic flatworms having two suckers, one ventral and the other oral
  • distune — to cause (an instrument) to be out of tune
  • distyle — having two columns.
  • disused — discontinuance of use or practice: Traditional customs are falling into disuse.
  • disyoke — to free from or as from a yoke.
  • ditched — a long, narrow excavation made in the ground by digging, as for draining or irrigating land; trench.
  • ditcher — a person who digs ditches.
  • ditches — Plural form of ditch.
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