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9-letter words containing n, e, d, a

  • codenamed — Simple past tense and past participle of codename.
  • codenames — Plural form of codename.
  • colanders — Plural form of colander.
  • collonade — Alternative spelling of colonnade.
  • colonnade — A colonnade is a row of evenly-spaced columns.
  • comedians — Plural form of comedian.
  • commanded — to direct with specific authority or prerogative; order: The captain commanded his men to attack.
  • commander — A commander is an officer in charge of a military operation or organization.
  • commendam — the temporary holding of an ecclesiastical benefice
  • compander — a system for improving the signal-to-noise ratio of a signal at a transmitter or recorder by first compressing the volume range of the signal and then restoring it to its original amplitude level at the receiving or reproducing apparatus
  • companied — Simple past tense and past participle of company.
  • compendia — a brief treatment or account of a subject, especially an extensive subject; concise treatise: a compendium of medicine.
  • concealed — to hide; withdraw or remove from observation; cover or keep from sight: He concealed the gun under his coat.
  • confabbed — Simple past tense and past participle of confab.
  • conflated — Simple past tense and past participle of conflate.
  • congealed — Simple past tense and past participle of congeal.
  • consarned — confounded; damned.
  • contacted — the act or state of touching; a touching or meeting, as of two things or people.
  • contained — kept from going beyond certain limits; confined
  • coriander — Coriander is a plant with seeds that are used as a spice and leaves that are used as a herb.
  • cornbread — Cornbread is bread made from ground maize or corn. It is popular in the United States.
  • coronated — having or wearing a crown, coronet, or the like.
  • cottonade — a coarse fabric of cotton or mixed fibres, used for work clothes, etc
  • credenzas — Plural form of credenza.
  • curandera — (in Hispanic America) a female healer or shaman
  • curandero — a male healer or shaman in Hispanic-America
  • curtained — A curtained window, door, or other opening has a curtain hanging across it.
  • cyanamide — a white or colourless crystalline soluble weak dibasic acid, which can be hydrolysed to urea. Formula: H2NCN
  • cyberwand — (hardware, virtual reality)   A virtual reality controller. The CyberWand costs $99, or $765 with optional Polhemus sensor. It is basically the handle of a flight control system without the base. The controller's four buttons and 2-D hat sensor track six degrees of movement.
  • cystidean — any one of the order of fossil echinoderms Cystidea
  • d'avenantSir William, 1606–68, English dramatist and producer: poet laureate 1638–68.
  • daedalean — an Athenian architect who built the labyrinth for Minos and made wings for himself and his son Icarus to escape from Crete.
  • daedalian — of Daedalus
  • daedalion — a son of Lucifer who, despondent over the death of his daughter Chione, leaped off Parnassus: Apollo changed him into a hawk.
  • daemonian — demonian.
  • daemonize — Demonize.
  • daffiness — silliness; craziness
  • daggering — A type of dance associated with dancehall, where dancer simulate dry sex to the musical beat.
  • daghestan — a constituent republic of S Russia, on the Caspian Sea: annexed from Persia in 1813; rich mineral resources. Capital: Makhachkala. Pop: 2 584 200 (2002). Area: 50 278 sq km (19 416 sq miles)
  • dailiness — the quality or nature of being daily
  • daintiest — Superlative form of dainty.
  • dal segno — (of a piece of music) to be repeated from the point marked with a sign to the word fine
  • dalliance — If two people have a brief romantic relationship, you can say that they have a dalliance with each other, especially if they do not take it seriously.
  • damascene — to ornament (metal, esp steel) by etching or by inlaying, usually with gold or silver
  • damaskeen — Alternative form of damascene.
  • damn near — People use damn near to emphasize that what they are saying is not actually true, but is very close to being true.
  • damn wellthe damned, those condemned to suffer eternal punishment.
  • damnedest — If you say that something is the damnedest thing, you are emphasizing that it is surprising or odd.
  • damnified — Simple past tense and past participle of damnify.
  • damoclean — a flatterer who, having extolled the happiness of Dionysius, tyrant of Syracuse, was seated at a banquet with a sword suspended over his head by a single hair to show him the perilous nature of that happiness.
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