8-letter words containing m, e, a, d
- dalesmen — Plural form of dalesman.
- damagers — Plural form of damager.
- damasked — a reversible fabric of linen, silk, cotton, or wool, woven with patterns.
- damasken — Alternative form of damascene.
- damastes — Procrustes.
- damehood — The fact or condition of being a dame.
- damewort — Hesperis matronalis, a herbaceous mustard.
- damietta — a town in NE Egypt, in the Nile delta: important medieval commercial centre
- damnable — You use damnable to emphasize that you dislike or disapprove of something a great deal.
- damndest — the damned, those condemned to suffer eternal punishment.
- damocles — a sycophant forced by Dionysius, tyrant of Syracuse, to sit under a sword suspended by a hair to demonstrate that being a king was not the happy state Damocles had said it was
- dampened — to make damp; moisten: to dampen a sponge.
- dampener — to make damp; moisten: to dampen a sponge.
- dampness — Dampness is moisture in the air, or on the surface of something.
- darksome — dark or darkish
- datepalm — Alternative spelling of date palm.
- day mode — phase
- day name — a name indicating a person's day of birth
- daydream — A daydream is a series of pleasant thoughts, usually about things that you would like to happen.
- daytimes — Plural form of daytime.
- de palma — Brian, born 1940, U.S. film director.
- dead arm — temporary loss of sensation in the arm, caused by a blow to a muscle
- dead man — Building Trades. a log, concrete block, etc., buried in the ground as an anchor.
- dead men — empty bottles
- decagram — dekagram
- decamped — Simple past tense and past participle of decamp.
- decigram — a unit of measurement that is equivalent to one tenth of a gram
- decimals — pertaining to tenths or to the number 10.
- decimate — To decimate something such as a group of people or animals means to destroy a very large number of them.
- declaims — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of declaim.
- deermeat — Alternative spelling of deer meat.
- defamers — Plural form of defamer.
- defaming — to attack the good name or reputation of, as by uttering or publishing maliciously or falsely anything injurious; slander or libel; calumniate: The newspaper editorial defamed the politician.
- defoamer — anything which removes foam or prevents foam from forming
- dekagram — ten grams, or one tenth of a hectogram (0.3527 ounce): abbrev. dag
- demagogy — You can refer to a method of political rule as demagogy if you disapprove of it because you think it involves appealing to people's emotions rather than using reasonable arguments.
- demanded — to ask for with proper authority; claim as a right: He demanded payment of the debt.
- demander — One who demands.
- demarche — move, step, or manoeuvre, esp in diplomatic affairs
- demarked — demarcate.
- demarket — to discourage consumers from buying (a particular product), either because it is faulty or because it could jeopardize the seller's reputation
- demavend — Damavand
- demeaned — Simple past tense and past participle of demean.
- demeaner — One who demeans.
- demeanor — Your demeanor is the way you behave, which gives people an impression of your character and feelings.
- dementia — Dementia is a serious illness of the mind.
- demerara — a former region of what is now Guyana, on the Demerara river
- demersal — living or occurring on the bottom of a sea or a lake
- democrat — A Democrat is a member or supporter of a particular political party which has the word 'democrat' or 'democratic' in its title, for example the Democratic Party in the United States.
- demoniac — of, like, or suggestive of a demon; demonic