9-letter words containing l, a, d, e, n
- delavigne — (Jean François) Casiˈmir (kaziˈmɪʀ) ; kȧzēmirˈ) 1793-1843; Fr. poet & playwright
- delignate — (rare, transitive) To clear or strip of wood.
- delineate — If you delineate something such as an idea or situation, you describe it or define it, often in a lot of detail.
- delinkage — to make independent; dissociate; separate: The administration has delinked human rights from economic aid to underdeveloped nations.
- deliriant — involving or causing delirium.
- delphinia — an ancient Greek festival in honor of Apollo.
- demential — severe impairment or loss of intellectual capacity and personality integration, due to the loss of or damage to neurons in the brain.
- demilance — A light lance; a short spear.
- demonical — inspired as if by a demon, indwelling spirit, or genius.
- denialism — Describes the position of those who reject propositions that are strongly supported by scientific or historical evidence and seek to influence policy processes and outcomes accordingly.
- denialist — a person who refuses to accept something that is regarded as an established fact
- denominal — denominative (def 2).
- denotable — Capable of being denoted or marked.
- dentalgia — Toothache.
- dentality — the quality given to spoken words by the use of teeth
- dentalium — any scaphopod mollusc of the genus Dentalium
- dentalize — to change into or pronounce as a dental sound.
- dentalman — an enlisted person working as a dental assistant.
- deplanate — (botany) flattened; made level or even.
- deplaning — Present participle of deplane.
- derailing — Present participle of derail.
- desalting — Present participle of desalt.
- descaling — Present participle of descale.
- detailing — an individual or minute part; an item or particular.
- detangled — Simple past tense and past participle of detangle.
- detangler — a cosmetic product used to detangle hair
- detonable — able to be detonated
- deucalion — the son of Prometheus and, with his wife Pyrrha, the only survivor on earth of a flood sent by Zeus (Deucalion's flood). Together, they were allowed to repopulate the world by throwing stones over their shoulders, which became men and women
- devaluing — to deprive of value; reduce the value of.
- dew plant — sundew.
- dew snail — a slug
- dial tone — The dial tone is the same as the dialling tone.
- dilettant — Alternative form of dilettante.
- disenable — to deprive of ability; make unable; prevent.
- disentail — to free (an estate) from entail.
- dismantle — to deprive or strip of apparatus, furniture, equipment, defenses, etc.: to dismantle a ship; to dismantle a fortress.
- divalence — the state of being divalent
- dixieland — (sometimes lowercase) a style of jazz, originating in New Orleans, played by a small group of instruments, as trumpet, trombone, clarinet, piano, and drums, and marked by strongly accented four-four rhythm and vigorous, quasi-improvisational solos and ensembles.
- do a line — to associate (with a person of the opposite sex) regularly; go out (with)
- dodecanal — lauric aldehyde.
- donatello — (Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi) 1386?–1466, Italian sculptor.
- done deal — sth formally agreed
- downscale — located at, moving toward, or of or for the middle or lower end of a social or economic scale: The discount store caters mainly to downscale customers.
- draglines — Plural form of dragline.
- drainable — Capable of being drained.
- drainless — inexhaustible.
- dreamland — a pleasant, lovely land that exists only in dreams or the imagination; the region of reverie.
- drinkable — suitable for drinking.
- dry-clean — to clean (garments, draperies, rugs, etc.) with a liquid other than water, as benzine or gasoline.
- dunstable — John, c1390–1453, English composer.