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

  • disclose — to make known; reveal or uncover: to disclose a secret.
  • discoure — Obsolete form of discover.
  • discover — to see, get knowledge of, learn of, find, or find out; gain sight or knowledge of (something previously unseen or unknown): to discover America; to discover electricity. Synonyms: detect, espy, descry, discern, ascertain, unearth, ferret out, notice.
  • disendow — to deprive (a church, school, etc.) of endowment.
  • disenrol — to remove from a register
  • disgorge — to eject or throw out from the throat, mouth, or stomach; vomit forth.
  • dishorse — (archaic, intransitive) To dismount from a horse.
  • dishouse — to deprive of a home
  • dislodge — to remove or force out of a particular place: to dislodge a stone with one's foot.
  • dismoded — no longer fashionable
  • disobeys — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disobey.
  • disorbed — thrown out of orbit
  • disorder — lack of order or regular arrangement; confusion: Your room is in utter disorder.
  • disowned — Simple past tense and past participle of disown.
  • disponee — the person whom something is disponed to
  • disponer — someone who dispones
  • disposed — having a certain inclination or disposition; inclined (usually followed by to or an infinitive): a man disposed to like others.
  • disposer — a person or thing that disposes.
  • disposes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dispose.
  • disprove — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • disrobed — Simple past tense and past participle of disrobe.
  • disrobes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disrobe.
  • dissolve — to make a solution of, as by mixing with a liquid; pass into solution: to dissolve salt in water.
  • divorces — Plural form of divorce.
  • docetism — an early Christian doctrine that the sufferings of Christ were apparent and not real and that after the crucifixion he appeared in a spiritual body.
  • docetist — One who believes in docetism.
  • dockside — land or area adjoining a dock: We were at the dockside to greet them.
  • dogeship — the chief magistrate in the former republics of Venice and Genoa.
  • domestic — of or relating to the home, the household, household affairs, or the family: domestic pleasures.
  • dominoes — a flat, thumbsized, rectangular block, the face of which is divided into two parts, each either blank or bearing from one to six pips or dots: 28 such pieces form a complete set.
  • dopiness — The characteristic of being dopey.
  • dossiers — Plural form of dossier.
  • dovekies — Plural form of dovekie.
  • dowdiest — Superlative form of dowdy.
  • downiest — Superlative form of downy.
  • downside — the lower side or part.
  • downsize — company: make redundancies
  • doziness — The state of being dozy.
  • dressoir — a cabinet of the 18th century, having a number of shallow shelves for dishes over a base with drawers and closed cupboards.
  • dropwise — in the form of a drop
  • drowsier — Comparative form of drowsy.
  • ebionism — the teaching upheld by the Ebionites that said that Jesus was a mortal human being, that Christians should adhere to Jewish law and that absence of wealth was a preferred religious quality
  • eclosion — the emergence of an adult insect from its pupal case.
  • edacious — devouring; voracious; consuming.
  • editions — Plural form of edition.
  • edulious — (obsolete) edible.
  • eeyorish — Alternative capitalization of Eeyorish.
  • effusion — the act of effusing or pouring forth.
  • egestion — the process of egesting; the voiding of the refuse of digestion.
  • eglomise — the technique of gilding the back of a sheet of glass
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