7-letter words containing i, d, r, s
- despair — Despair is the feeling that everything is wrong and that nothing will improve.
- deviser — A person who devises; a planner.
- devisor — a person who devises property, esp realty, by will
- devoirs — compliments or respects; courteous attentions
- diapers — Plural form of diaper.
- diaries — Plural form of diary.
- diarise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of diarize.
- diarist — A diarist is a person who records things in a diary which is later published.
- diary's — a daily record, usually private, especially of the writer's own experiences, observations, feelings, attitudes, etc.
- diaster — the stage in cell division at which the chromosomes are in two groups at the poles of the spindle before forming daughter nuclei
- dibbers — Plural form of dibber.
- dickers — Plural form of dicker.
- diester — an organic compound that contains two ester groups.
- dieters — Plural form of dieter.
- differs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of differ.
- diggers — a person or an animal that digs.
- digrams — Plural form of digram.
- digress — to deviate or wander away from the main topic or purpose in speaking or writing; depart from the principal line of argument, plot, study, etc.
- dimmers — Plural form of dimmer.
- dingers — Plural form of dinger.
- dinners — Plural form of dinner.
- diorism — definition; clarity
- dippers — Plural form of dipper.
- directs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of direct.
- dirhams — Plural form of dirham.
- dirksen — Everett McKinley, 1896–1969, U.S. politician.
- dirndls — Plural form of dirndl.
- dirties — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dirty.
- disarms — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disarm.
- disbark — (transitive) To strip of bark.
- disbars — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disbar.
- discard — to cast aside or dispose of; get rid of: to discard an old hat.
- 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.
- discoer — a person who attends discos
- discord — lack of concord or harmony between persons or things: marital discord.
- discure — (obsolete) To discover; to reveal.
- diserve — Misspelling of deserve.
- disform — (transitive, archaic) To deform or disfigure.
- dishorn — (transitive) To deprive of horns.
- dishrag — a dishcloth.
- dispair — (transitive) To separate (a pair).
- dispark — to release from confinement
- dispart — (now rare) To part, separate.
- disport — to divert or amuse (oneself).
- disrank — to deprive (oneself or another) of rank, to demote
- disrate — to reduce to a lower rating or rank.
- disrobe — Take off one's clothes.
- disroot — to uproot; dislodge.
- disrupt — to cause disorder or turmoil in: The news disrupted their conference.