10-letter words containing i, d, o, n, t, s
- desolating — Present participle of desolate.
- desolation — Desolation is a feeling of great unhappiness and hopelessness.
- désorienté — having lost one's bearings; confused
- desorption — the action or process of desorbing
- destocking — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
- destroying — Present participle of destroy.
- detections — Plural form of detection.
- detentions — Plural form of detention.
- detritions — Plural form of detrition.
- deviations — Plural form of deviation.
- di stéfano — Alfredo (ɑlˈfredo). 1926–2014, Argentinian-born football player, who played for Argentina, Colombia, Spain, and Real Madrid
- diaconates — Plural form of diaconate.
- diagnostic — Diagnostic equipment, methods, or systems are used for discovering what is wrong with people who are ill or with things that do not work properly.
- dictations — Plural form of dictation.
- digestions — Plural form of digestion.
- diophantus — 3rd century ad, Greek mathematician, noted for his treatise on the theory of numbers, Arithmetica
- diphthongs — Phonetics. an unsegmentable, gliding speech sound varying continuously in phonetic quality but held to be a single sound or phoneme and identified by its apparent beginning and ending sound, as the oi- sound of toy or boil.
- directions — the act or an instance of directing.
- disappoint — to fail to fulfill the expectations or wishes of: His gross ingratitude disappointed us.
- disconcert — to disturb the self-possession of; perturb; ruffle: Her angry reply disconcerted me completely.
- disconnect — SCSI reconnect
- disconsent — a lack of consent
- discontent — not content; dissatisfied; discontented.
- discordant — being at variance; disagreeing; incongruous: discordant opinions.
- discounted — to deduct a certain amount from (a bill, charge, etc.): All bills that are paid promptly will be discounted at two percent.
- discounter — a person who discounts.
- 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.
- dishonesty — lack of honesty; a disposition to lie, cheat, or steal.
- disjection — the act of dispersion
- disjointed — Mathematics. (of two sets) having no common elements. (of a system of sets) having the property that every pair of sets is disjoint.
- disjointly — In a disjointed state.
- disjunctor — a small body found in the spores of some fungi
- dismounted — Pertaining to a horseman who has gotten off his horse, or to something which has been removed from its usual mounting, as with a statue off its pedestal, a framed picture from a wall, or a chandelier hanging from a ceiling.
- disorients — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disorient.
- disownment — to refuse to acknowledge as belonging or pertaining to oneself; deny the ownership of or responsibility for; repudiate; renounce: to disown one's heirs; to disown a published statement.
- disporting — Present participle of disport.
- disrooting — Present participle of disroot.
- disruption — forcible separation or division into parts.
- dissection — the act of dissecting.
- dissention — Misspelling of dissension.
- dissolvent — capable of dissolving another substance.
- distension — the act of distending or the state of being distended.
- distention — the act of distending or the state of being distended.
- distorting — to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
- distortion — an act or instance of distorting.
- distrainor — (legal) One who distrains; the party distraining goods or chattels.
- disulfoton — a pale-yellow, highly toxic liquid, C 8 H 19 O 2 PS 3 , used as an insecticide and miticide.
- dithionous — as in dithionous acid
- docentship — privatdocent.
- dominators — Plural form of dominator.