7-letter words containing l, a, d
- datedly — in a dated or unfashionable manner
- datival — (in certain inflected languages, as Latin, Greek, and German) noting a case having as a distinctive function indication of the indirect object of a verb or the object of certain prepositions.
- dawdled — to waste time; idle; trifle; loiter: Stop dawdling and help me with these packages!
- dawdler — to waste time; idle; trifle; loiter: Stop dawdling and help me with these packages!
- dawdles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dawdle.
- day-glo — Day-Glo colours are shades of orange, pink, green, and yellow which are so bright that they seem to glow.
- day-old — having been in existence or alive for one day
- daygirl — a girl who attends a boarding school daily, but returns home each evening
- dayglow — the light given off by the atmosphere of the Earth as seen during daytime
- daylily — any lily of the genus Hemerocallis, having yellow, orange, or red flowers that commonly last only for a day.
- daylong — Daylong is used to describe an event or activity that lasts for the whole of one day.
- daysail — to go boating in a day sailer.
- daytale — the calculation of work or earnings on a daily basis
- dazedly — to stun or stupefy with a blow, shock, etc.: He was dazed by a blow on the head.
- dazzled — to overpower or dim the vision of by intense light: He was dazzled by the sudden sunlight.
- dazzler — to overpower or dim the vision of by intense light: He was dazzled by the sudden sunlight.
- dazzles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dazzle.
- dcalgol — Data Communications ALGOL. A superset of Burroughs Extended ALGOL used for writing Message Control Systems.
- de kalb — ˈJo‧hann (ˈjoʊhɑn ) ; yōˈhän) (born Johann Kalb) 1721-80; Fr. general, born in Germany, who served in the Am. Revolutionary army
- de land — a city in E Florida.
- de-lead — to remove lead adhering to (a metal object) after cold-drawing through a die in which the lead served as a lubricant.
- deal in — to occupy oneself or itself (usually followed by with or in): Botany deals with the study of plants. He deals in generalities.
- dealate — (of ants and other insects) having lost their wings, esp by biting or rubbing them off after mating
- dealers — Plural form of dealer.
- dealign — To put, or to become, out of alignment.
- dealing — selling or doing business in a particular commodity
- dearnly — in a solitary or unseen manner
- deasoil — deasil
- deathly — If you say that someone is deathly pale or deathly still, you are emphasizing that they are very pale or still, like a dead person.
- debacle — A debacle is an event or attempt that is a complete failure.
- decadal — of or relating to a decade.
- decaled — a specially prepared paper bearing a picture or design for transfer to wood, metal, glass, etc.
- decanal — of or relating to a dean or deanery
- decanol — a colorless liquid, C 10 H 22 O, insoluble in water and soluble in alcohol: used as a plasticizer, detergent, and in perfumes and flavorings.
- decimal — A decimal is a fraction that is written in the form of a dot followed by one or more numbers which represent tenths, hundredths, and so on: for example .5, .51, .517.
- declaim — If you declaim, you speak dramatically, as if you were acting in a theatre.
- declare — If you declare that something is true, you say that it is true in a firm, deliberate way. You can also declare an attitude or intention.
- declass — to lower in social status or position; degrade
- decrial — the act of decrying; noisy censure.
- default — If a person, company, or country defaults on something that they have legally agreed to do, such as paying some money or doing a piece of work before a particular time, they fail to do it.
- deflate — If you deflate someone or something, you take away their confidence or make them seem less important.
- deglaze — to dilute meat sediments in (a pan) in order to make a sauce or gravy
- deiseal — Motion towards the right, in the direction of the hands of a clock or of the apparent motion of the sun; a turning in this direction.
- del mar — Norman. 1919–94, British conductor, associated esp with 20th- century British music
- delaine — a sheer wool or wool and cotton fabric
- delaney — Shelagh [shee-luh] /ˈʃi lə/ (Show IPA), 1939–2011, English playwright.
- delapse — a falling or sinking down
- delated — Chiefly Scot. to inform against; denounce or accuse.
- delater — Chiefly Scot. to inform against; denounce or accuse.
- delator — An accuser; an informer.