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9-letter words containing o, d, e, u

  • doubleton — a set of only two cards of the same suit in a hand as dealt: The other player held a doubleton.
  • doubtable — (uncommon) Capable of being doubted; doubtful; dubious; dubitable. See usage notes below.
  • doubtless — without doubt; certainly; surely; unquestionably.
  • douceness — the quality or characteristic of being douce
  • douchebag — a small syringe having detachable nozzles for fluid injections, used chiefly for vaginal lavage and for enemas.
  • doughface — a Northerner who sympathized with the South during the controversies over new territories and slavery before the Civil War.
  • doughlike — Resembling dough.
  • doughtier — Comparative form of doughty.
  • doumergue — Gaston [gas-tawn] /gasˈtɔ̃/ (Show IPA), 1863–1937, French statesman: president of France 1924–31.
  • douzepers — the 12 great peers of the realm, seen as the symbolic heirs of Charlemagne's 12 chosen peers
  • dovehouse — A dovecote.
  • dried out — recovered; detoxified
  • drive out — To drive out something means to make it disappear or stop operating.
  • drugstore — the place of business of a druggist, usually also selling cosmetics, stationery, toothpaste, mouthwash, cigarettes, etc., and sometimes soft drinks and light meals.
  • dubersome — (archaic) Doubtful.
  • duckshove — to evade (responsibility or an issue)
  • dude food — food such as hot dogs, burgers, etc, considered particularly appealing to men
  • dufferdom — the state of being or the characteristic appearance or behaviour of a duffer (in the sense of a useless and incompetent person)
  • duikerbok — duiker.
  • dulcorate — (obsolete, transitive) To sweeten; to make less acrimonious.
  • dungeoner — a thing which or a jailer who confines in, or as if in, a dungeon
  • duodecimo — Also called twelvemo. a book size of about 5 × 7½ inches (13 × 19 cm), determined by printing on sheets folded to form 12 leaves or 24 pages. Symbol: 12 mo, 12°.
  • duodenary — duodecimal.
  • duologues — Plural form of duologue.
  • duopolies — Plural form of duopoly.
  • duotheism — Belief in and worship in two deities, usually framed as a god and goddess of roughly equal power.
  • duotheist — A person who adheres to duotheism.
  • durometer — a device for measuring the hardness of materials, especially metals.
  • dutch hoe — a type of hoe in which the head consists of a two-edged cross-blade attached to two prongs or of a single pressing of this shape
  • duteously — In a duteous manner.
  • eastbound — traveling, proceeding, or headed east: an eastbound train.
  • echiuroid — any wormlike invertebrate of the phylum Echiuroidea, found in sand and mud of tropical and subtropical seas, having at the mouth a ciliated, often elongated prostomium.
  • ecuadoran — a republic in NW South America. 109,483 sq. mi. (283,561 sq. km). Capital: Quito.
  • edematous — effusion of serous fluid into the interstices of cells in tissue spaces or into body cavities.
  • education — the act or process of imparting or acquiring general knowledge, developing the powers of reasoning and judgment, and generally of preparing oneself or others intellectually for mature life.
  • educators — Plural form of educator.
  • educatory — educative.
  • eductions — Plural form of eduction.
  • egg-bound — describing egg-bearing animals and birds that have difficulty passing their eggs
  • elkhounds — Plural form of elkhound.
  • enamoured — Alternative spelling of enamored.
  • end house — the last house in a row, terrace, or street, from the viewpoint of the speaker
  • endeavour — Standard spelling of endeavor.
  • endosteum — (biology) A membranous vascular layer of cells which line the medullary cavity of a bone.
  • endungeon — to put in a dungeon
  • enshrouds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enshroud.
  • epilogued — followed by an epilogue
  • erudition — The quality of having or showing great knowledge or learning; scholarship.
  • eudemonia — Happiness, well-being.
  • euglenoid — A flagellated single-celled organism of a group that comprises euglena and its relatives.
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