10-letter words containing i, d, o, t
- confidants — a close friend or associate to whom secrets are confided or with whom private matters and problems are discussed.
- confidente — a sofa or settee, especially of the 18th century, having a triangular seat at each end divided from the greater part of the seat by an armrest.
- confidents — having strong belief or full assurance; sure: confident of fulfillment.
- conflicted — unable to decide between opposing feelings or views
- conjointed — Conjoint.
- contending — competing; opposed
- contradict — If you contradict someone, you say that what they have just said is wrong, or suggest that it is wrong by saying something different.
- coordinate — If you coordinate an activity, you organize the various people and things involved in it.
- copyedited — Simple past tense and past participle of copyedit.
- copyeditor — a person who edits a manuscript, text, etc., for publication, especially to find and correct errors in style, punctuation, and grammar.
- coradicate — (of multiple words) derived from the same root
- cordiality — warmth of feeling
- cordierite — a grey or violet-blue dichroic mineral that consists of magnesium aluminium iron silicate in orthorhombic crystalline form and is found in metamorphic rocks. Formula: (Mg,Fe)2AL4Si5O18.nH2O
- coresident — one of two or more computer programs stored in a computer memory simultaneously
- corticated — having a cortex.
- corticoids — any of a class of steroids, as aldosterone, hydrocortisone, or cortisone, occurring in nature, especially as a product of the adrenal cortex, or synthesized.
- cosmetized — to cosmeticize.
- cotehardie — (in the Middle Ages) a close-fitting outer garment with long sleeves, hip-length for men and full-length for women, often laced or buttoned down the front or back.
- counterbid — A counterbid is a bid that is made in response to a bid from another person or group, offering the seller more advantages.
- countywide — Occurring or extending throughout a county.
- custodians — Plural form of custodian.
- customised — to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference: to customize an automobile.
- customized — modified according to a customer's individual requirements
- dagobert i — a.d. 602?–639, Merovingian king of the Franks 628–639.
- damnations — Plural form of damnation.
- darlington — an industrial town in NE England in Darlington unitary authority, S Durham: developed mainly with the opening of the Stockton-Darlington railway (1825). Pop: 86 082 (2001)
- data point — a single fact or piece of information; a datum: Other data points, such as crime statistics, are available from the state government.
- datacode i — (language) An early system used on the Datatron 200 series.
- datamation — the processing of data by computers
- datapoints — Plural form of datapoint.
- de-isolate — to remove from isolation.
- dead point — dead center
- deaeration — the act of extracting a gas from a liquid
- dealbation — the process of bleaching or making white
- decalogist — a person who interprets and expounds on the Ten Commandments
- deceptions — Plural form of deception.
- deceptious — relating to deception or inclined to deceive
- decimation — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
- declinator — a piece of apparatus that establishes the measure of a plane's deviation from the prime vertical or the meridian
- declotting — a mass or lump.
- decoctible — capable of being decocted
- decoctions — Plural form of decoction.
- deconflict — Military. to avoid a potential clash or accident involving (nonenemy military operations, weaponry, etc.) in a particular combat area: to deconflict coalition forces from three nations. to avoid such conflict in (a combat area): to deconflict airspace.
- decorating — the painting or wallpapering of a room, house, etc
- decoration — The decoration of a room is its furniture, wallpaper, and ornaments.
- decorative — Something that is decorative is intended to look pretty or attractive.
- decreation — Destruction.
- decryption — to decode or decipher.
- decstation — (computer) A range of RISC based workstations manufactured by DEC.
- dedication — A dedication is a message which is written at the beginning of a book, or a short announcement which is sometimes made before a play or piece of music is performed, as a sign of affection or respect for someone.