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9-letter words containing l, o, a, d

  • dialation — Misspelling of dilation.
  • dialogism — a deduction with one premise and a disjunctive conclusion
  • dialogist — a person who writes or takes part in a dialogue
  • dialogite — rhodochrosite.
  • dialogize — to carry on a dialogue
  • dialogued — Simple past tense and past participle of dialogue.
  • dialogues — Plural form of dialogue.
  • diastolic — (of blood pressure) indicating the arterial pressure during the interval between heartbeats.
  • dictional — of or relating to diction
  • dicumarol — a white, crystalline powder, C19H12O6, originally extracted from spoiled sweet clover, used to retard blood clots
  • diglossia — the widespread existence within a society of sharply divergent formal and informal varieties of a language each used in different social contexts or for performing different functions, as the existence of Katharevusa and Demotic in modern Greece.
  • dilatator — (anatomy) A muscle that dilates any part; a dilator.
  • dilations — Plural form of dilation.
  • diplomacy — the conduct by government officials of negotiations and other relations between nations.
  • diplomaed — a document given by an educational institution conferring a degree on a person or certifying that the person has satisfactorily completed a course of study.
  • diplomata — Plural form of diploma.
  • diplomate — a person who has received a diploma, especially a doctor, engineer, etc., who has been certified as a specialist by a board within the appropriate profession.
  • diplomats — Plural form of diplomat.
  • disallows — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disallow.
  • disavowal — a disowning; repudiation; denial.
  • discoidal — Having the flat, circular shape of a disc or a quoit.
  • dishallow — to profane; desecrate.
  • dislocate — to put out of place; put out of proper relative position; displace: The glacier dislocated great stones. The earthquake dislocated several buildings.
  • disposals — Plural form of disposal.
  • disproval — The act of disproving; disproof.
  • dissocial — disinclined to or unsuitable for society; unsocial.
  • do a deal — to arrange or settle; conclude (a transaction)
  • do a line — to associate (with a person of the opposite sex) regularly; go out (with)
  • do battle — fight, struggle
  • doability — Feasibility; practicability.
  • docetaxel — A particular drug used in chemotherapy.
  • dock leaf — the typically broad leaf of any of various temperate weedy plants of the polygonaceous genus Rumex, having greenish or reddish flowers
  • docklands — An area of a town or city which contains, or used to contain, an industrial port.
  • doctorial — a person licensed to practice medicine, as a physician, surgeon, dentist, or veterinarian.
  • doctrinal — of, relating to, or concerned with doctrine: a doctrinal dispute.
  • dodecanal — lauric aldehyde.
  • dodgeball — a circle game in which players throw an inflated ball at opponents within the circle who try to avoid being hit, and therefore eliminated, the winner being the one who remains unhit.
  • dog latin — mongrel or spurious Latin.
  • dolgellau — a market town and tourist centre in NW Wales, in Gwynedd. Pop: 2407 (2001)
  • dollarize — to replace a country's currency with the US dollar
  • domically — in the manner or shape of a dome
  • dominical — of or relating to Jesus Christ as Lord.
  • domitable — Able to be tamed or bent to one's will; tamable, subduable.
  • donatello — (Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi) 1386?–1466, Italian sculptor.
  • done deal — sth formally agreed
  • doom palm — an African fan palm, Hyphaene thebaica, bearing an edible, gingerbread-flavored fruit.
  • doornails — Plural form of doornail.
  • doorplate — a small identification plate on the outside door of a house or room, bearing the occupant's name, the apartment or house number, or the like.
  • double ax — an ax with a double-edged blade, frequently depicted in prehistoric decorative designs of the eastern Mediterranean region, especially in Minoan religious sites.
  • doubledayAbner, 1819–93, U.S. army officer; sometimes credited with inventing the modern game of baseball.
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