7-letter words containing i, r
- dirties — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dirty.
- dirtily — soiled with dirt; foul; unclean: dirty laundry.
- 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.
- dissert — to discourse on a subject.
- distort — to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
- distrix — the splitting of the ends of hairs
- disturb — to interrupt the quiet, rest, peace, or order of; unsettle.
- disturn — (obsolete) To turn aside.
- diswarn — (obsolete) To dissuade from by previous warning.
- ditcher — a person who digs ditches.
- dithers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dither.
- dithery — a trembling; vibration.
- ditmars — Raymond Lee, 1876–1942, U.S. zoologist and author.
- ditsier — Comparative form of ditsy.
- ditzier — Comparative form of ditzy.
- diuerse — Obsolete spelling of diverse.
- diurnal — of or relating to a day or each day; daily.
- diverge — to move, lie, or extend in different directions from a common point; branch off.
- diverse — of a different kind, form, character, etc.; unlike: a wide range of diverse opinions.
- diverts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of divert.
- divider — a person or thing that divides.
- diviner — a theologian; scholar in religion.
- divisor — a number by which another number, the dividend, is divided.
- divorce — a divorced man.
- dizzard — (obsolete) A jester or fool.
- dizzier — Comparative form of dizzy.
- dnieper — a river rising in the W Russian Federation flowing S through Byelorussia (Belarus) and Ukraine to the Black Sea. 1400 miles (2250 km) long.
- do bird — Someone who is doing bird is in prison.
- dobrich — a city in NE Bulgaria.