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10-letter words containing i, s, o, e

  • depot ship — a ship providing supplies and facilities for other vessels or naval bases
  • depression — A depression is a time when there is very little economic activity, which causes a lot of unemployment and poverty.
  • derisorily — In a derisory manner.
  • dermatosis — any skin disease
  • des moines — a city in S central Iowa: state capital. Pop: 196 093 (2003 est)
  • descension — the action of descending; descent
  • desciption — Misspelling of description.
  • descriptor — a word or phrase which constitutes the descriptive element of a sentence
  • desertions — Plural form of desertion.
  • desiccator — any apparatus for drying milk, fruit, etc
  • designator — to mark or point out; indicate; show; specify.
  • desirously — With desire; eagerly.
  • desmoulins — (Lucie Simplice) Camille (Benoît) (kamij). 1760–94, French revolutionary leader, pamphleteer, and orator
  • 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
  • despiteous — malicious; spiteful.
  • despoilers — Plural form of despoiler.
  • despoiling — plundering by force
  • desponding — to be depressed by loss of hope, confidence, or courage.
  • despotical — of, relating to, or of the nature of a despot or despotism; autocratic; tyrannical.
  • despotisms — Plural form of despotism.
  • 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.
  • detoxifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of detoxify.
  • detritions — Plural form of detrition.
  • detrivores — Plural form of detrivore.
  • deviations — Plural form of deviation.
  • devilwoods — Plural form of devilwood.
  • devonshire — 8th Duke of, title of Spencer Compton Cavendish. 1833–1908, British politician, also known (1858–91) as Lord Hartington. He led the Liberal Party (1874–80) and left it to found the Liberal Unionist Party (1886)
  • dexterious — Misspelling of dextrous, alternative spelling to dexterous.
  • di stéfano — Alfredo (ɑlˈfredo). 1926–2014, Argentinian-born football player, who played for Argentina, Colombia, Spain, and Real Madrid
  • diaconates — Plural form of diaconate.
  • diaphorase — a flavoprotein enzyme operating in mitochondria, acting as a catalyst in the process of dye reduction or oxidation
  • dibromides — Plural form of dibromide.
  • dictyosome — a Golgi body, esp in a plant cell
  • didanosine — 2',3'-dideoxyinosine, a reverse transcriptase inhibitor effective against HIV.
  • diesel oil — a combustible petroleum distillate used as fuel for diesel engines.
  • digestions — Plural form of digestion.
  • digression — the act of digressing.
  • dime store — five-and-ten (def 1).
  • dimensions — Mathematics. a property of space; extension in a given direction: A straight line has one dimension, a parallelogram has two dimensions, and a parallelepiped has three dimensions. the generalization of this property to spaces with curvilinear extension, as the surface of a sphere. the generalization of this property to vector spaces and to Hilbert space. the generalization of this property to fractals, which can have dimensions that are noninteger real numbers. extension in time: Space-time has three dimensions of space and one of time.
  • diothelism — the doctrine that Christ on earth had two wills, human and divine
  • dipetalous — bipetalous.
  • diphosgene — a colorless liquid, C 2 Cl 4 O 2 , usually derived from methyl formate or methyl chloroformate by chlorination: a World War I poison gas now used chiefly in organic synthesis.
  • diplomates — Plural form of diplomate.
  • diplophase — the diploid part of an organism's life cycle.
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