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6-letter words containing l, u, d

  • dolour — sorrow; grief.
  • douala — a seaport in W Cameroon.
  • double — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
  • doubly — to a double measure or degree: to be doubly cautious.
  • doulas — Plural form of doula.
  • dourly — sullen; gloomy: The captain's dour look depressed us all.
  • drumly — troubled; gloomy.
  • drupal — (botany) drupaceous.
  • dualer — of, relating to, or noting two.
  • dualin — an explosive substance consisting of sawdust, nitre, and nitroglycerine
  • dually — of, relating to, or noting two.
  • dublet — Obsolete form of doublet.
  • dublinJohn, 1838–1918, U.S. Roman Catholic clergyman and social reformer, born in Ireland: archbishop of St. Paul, Minn., 1888–1918.
  • ductal — (anatomy) Of, relating to, or originating in a duct.
  • dudleyRobert, 1st Earl of Leicester, 1532?–88, British statesman and favorite of Queen Elizabeth.
  • dueful — fitting, due, or suitable
  • dueled — Simple past tense and past participle of duel.
  • dueler — A person who fights a duel.
  • duello — the practice or art of dueling.
  • duffel — a camper's clothing and equipment.
  • duffle — a camper's clothing and equipment.
  • dulcet — pleasant to the ear; melodious: the dulcet tones of the cello.
  • dulled — Simple past tense and past participle of dull.
  • dullen — (transitive, nonstandard) To make dull or duller; to dull.
  • duller — not sharp; blunt: a dull knife.
  • dullesAllen Welsh, 1893–1969, U.S. public official: CIA director 1953–61.
  • dulses — Plural form of dulse.
  • duluth — Daniel Greysolon [da-nyel gre-saw-lawn] /daˈnyɛl grɛ sɔˈlɔ̃/ (Show IPA), Sieur, 1636–1710, French trader and explorer in Canada and Great Lakes region.
  • dumble — (UK, dialectal) A dale with a stream.
  • dumbly — lacking intelligence or good judgment; stupid; dull-witted.
  • dumela — hello; good morning
  • dumple — (transitive) To make dumpy; to fold, or bend, as one part over another.
  • dunlapWilliam, 1766–1839, U.S. dramatist, theatrical producer, and historian.
  • dunlin — a common sandpiper, Calidris alpina, that breeds in the northern parts of the Northern Hemisphere.
  • dunlopJohn Boyd, 1840–1921, Scottish inventor of the pneumatic tire.
  • duplet — Chemistry. two electrons occupying the same orbital in an atom or molecule; two electrons working together, especially forming a nonpolar covalent bond between atoms.
  • duplex — duplex apartment.
  • Éluard — Paul (pɔl), real name Eugène-Émile-Paul Grindel. 1895–1952, French surrealist poet, noted for his political and love poems
  • eluded — Simple past tense and past participle of elude.
  • eluder — Agent noun of elude; one who eludes.
  • eludes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elude.
  • eluted — Simple past tense and past participle of elute.
  • euclid — (language)   (Named after the Greek geometer, fl ca 300 BC.) A Pascal descendant for development of verifiable system software. No goto, no side effects, no global assignments, no functional arguments, no nested procedures, no floats, no enumeration types. Pointers are treated as indices of special arrays called collections. To prevent aliasing, Euclid forbids any overlap in the list of actual parameters of a procedure. Each procedure gives an imports list, and the compiler determines the identifiers that are implicitly imported. Iterators. Ottawa Euclid is a variant.
  • faulds — Plural form of fauld.
  • feudal — of, relating to, or like the feudal system, or its political, military, social, and economic structure.
  • fluids — Plural form of fluid.
  • fluked — Having flukes.
  • flumed — a deep narrow defile containing a mountain stream or torrent.
  • fluted — fine, clear, and mellow; flutelike: fluted notes.
  • fluxed — Simple past tense and past participle of flux.
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