6-letter words containing o, d, e
- donage — Misspelling of dunnage.
- donate — to present as a gift, grant, or contribution; make a donation of, as to a fund or cause: to donate used clothes to the Salvation Army.
- donder — to beat (someone) up
- donees — Plural form of donee.
- doners — Plural form of doner.
- donets — a river rising in the SW Russian Federation near Belgorod, flowing SE through Ukraine to the Don River. About 650 miles (1045 km) long.
- donged — Simple past tense and past participle of dong.
- dongen — Kees van [keys-van;; Dutch keys-vahn] /keɪs væn;; Dutch keɪs vɑn/ (Show IPA), van Dongen, Kees.
- dongle — a hardware device attached to a computer without which a particular software program will not run: used to prevent unauthorized use.
- donkey — the domestic ass, Equus asinus.
- donned — to put on or dress in: to don one's clothes.
- donnee — a set of artistic or literary premises or assumptions.
- donner — (South Africa, slang) To beat up, clobber, thrash.
- donsie — Midland U.S. somewhat sick, weak, or lacking in vitality; not completely well.
- donted — contraction of do not.
- donzel — a young gentleman not yet knighted; squire; page.
- doober — (US) A thingamajig; a whatchamacallit.
- doobie — a marijuana cigarette.
- dooced — (jargon) Losing your job because of something posted on a personal website. After http://dooce.com/ where Heather Armstrong posted details about her job.
- doodle — a small pile of hay; haystack.
- doofer — (slang) An object whose name the speaker or writer cannot remember.
- dooked — Simple past tense and past participle of dook.
- dooket — a dovecote
- dookie — (UK) Baptist.
- doolie — dooly.
- doomed — fate or destiny, especially adverse fate; unavoidable ill fortune: In exile and poverty, he met his doom.
- doored — Simple past tense and past participle of door.
- doover — thingumbob; thingumajig.
- doozer — Also, doozer [doo-zer] /ˈdu zər/ (Show IPA). something that is extraordinary or outstanding of its kind: The storm was a doozie, with winds of fifty miles an hour.
- doozie — Also, doozer [doo-zer] /ˈdu zər/ (Show IPA). something that is extraordinary or outstanding of its kind: The storm was a doozie, with winds of fifty miles an hour.
- dopers — Plural form of doper; users of dope.
- dopest — Superlative form of dope.
- dopier — Comparative form of dopy.
- dopper — (in South Africa) a member of the most conservative Afrikaner Church, which practises a strict Calvinism
- doppie — a cartridge case
- doreen — a female given name.
- dories — Plural form of dory.
- dorize — to become Doric in manner or style
- dormer — Also called dormer window. a vertical window in a projection built out from a sloping roof.
- dormie — (of a player or side in match play) being in the lead by as many holes as are still to be played.
- dorper — one of a breed of sheep having a black face and white body, developed in South Africa from the Dorset Horn and black-headed Persian breeds and raised for meat.
- dorser — dosser1 .
- dorset — an Eskimo culture that flourished from a.d. 100–1000 in the central and eastern regions of arctic North America.
- dorsey — Tommy, 1905–56, U.S. jazz trombonist and bandleader.
- dorter — a dormitory, especially in a monastery.
- dosage — the administration of medicine in doses.
- dossed — Simple past tense and past participle of doss.
- dossel — Also, dorsal. an ornamental hanging placed at the back of an altar or at the sides of the chancel.
- dosser — a person who sleeps in a doss house.
- dosses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of doss.