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7-letter words containing i, l, d

  • dollier — a person who operates a dolly
  • dollies — Plural form of dolly.
  • dollish — a small figure representing a baby or other human being, especially for use as a child's toy.
  • dolphin — any of several chiefly marine, cetacean mammals of the family Delphinidae, having a fishlike body, numerous teeth, and the front of the head elongated into a beaklike projection.
  • doltish — a dull, stupid person; blockhead.
  • domical — domelike.
  • domicil — Archaic form of domicile.
  • doolies — dooly.
  • doomily — In a doomy manner.
  • dottily — In a dotty manner.
  • dowdily — In a dowdy manner.
  • dreidel — a four-sided top bearing the Hebrew letters nun, gimel, he, and shin, one on each side, used chiefly in a children's game traditionally played on the Jewish festival of Hanukkah.
  • drevill — an offensive person
  • dribble — to fall or flow in drops or small quantities; trickle.
  • dribbly — Prone to dribbling.
  • driblet — a small portion or part.
  • drilled — Simple past tense and past participle of drill.
  • driller — One who drills.
  • drizzle — to rain gently and steadily in fine drops; sprinkle: It drizzled throughout the night.
  • drizzly — to rain gently and steadily in fine drops; sprinkle: It drizzled throughout the night.
  • drumlin — a long, narrow or oval, smoothly rounded hill of unstratified glacial drift.
  • dualise — Alternative spelling of dualize.
  • dualism — the state of being dual or consisting of two parts; division into two.
  • dualist — Of or supporting dualism.
  • duality — a dual state or quality.
  • dualize — to make dual.
  • ductile — (of a metal) able to be drawn out into a thin wire.
  • dueling — Present participle of duel.
  • duelist — a person who participates in a duel.
  • dulcian — an organ-stop consisting of pipes made of reeds
  • dulcify — to make more agreeable; mollify; appease.
  • dulcite — a sweet substance, called Madagascar manna in its unrefined condition and resembling mannite, that comes from several plants
  • dulling — not sharp; blunt: a dull knife.
  • dullish — somewhat dull; tending to be dull.
  • dulosis — the enslavement of an ant colony or its members by ants of a different species.
  • dulwich — a residential district in the Greater London borough of Southwark: site of an art gallery and the public school, Dulwich College
  • dumezilGeorges [zhawrzh] /ʒɔrʒ/ (Show IPA), 1898–1986, French philologist and historian.
  • dunlins — Plural form of dunlin.
  • dupleix — Joseph François [zhoh-zef frahn-swa] /ʒoʊˈzɛf frɑ̃ˈswa/ (Show IPA), Marquis, 1697–1763, French colonial governor of India 1724–54.
  • duskily — In a dusky manner.
  • dustily — In a dusty way.
  • dutiful — performing the duties expected or required of one; characterized by doing one's duty: a dutiful citizen; a dutiful child.
  • dwindle — to become smaller and smaller; shrink; waste away: His vast fortune has dwindled away.
  • dyeline — a contact print of a line drawing, giving brown lines on an off-white background.
  • dyingly — in a dying manner
  • dysodil — a yellow or green mineral that is a form of bitumen and is present in limestone
  • edibles — fit to be eaten as food; eatable; esculent.
  • edictal — Of, pertaining to, or derived from edicts.
  • edicule — aedicule.
  • eidolic — relating to an eidolon
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