9-letter words containing o, l, d, e, n
- colanders — Plural form of colander.
- cold tone — a bluish or greenish tinge in a black-and-white print.
- collonade — Alternative spelling of colonnade.
- colonised — to establish a colony in; settle: England colonized Australia.
- colonized — (of a territory) settled as a colony
- colonnade — A colonnade is a row of evenly-spaced columns.
- comingled — Simple past tense and past participle of comingle.
- concealed — to hide; withdraw or remove from observation; cover or keep from sight: He concealed the gun under his coat.
- concluded — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
- concluder — A person who, or thing which concludes (in any sense).
- concludes — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
- condiddle — to steal
- condolent — expressing sympathy to a bereaved person
- conflated — Simple past tense and past participle of conflate.
- confuddle — (transitive) To thoroughly confuse.
- congealed — Simple past tense and past participle of congeal.
- consulted — to seek advice or information from; ask guidance from: Consult your lawyer before signing the contract.
- controled — Misspelling of controlled.
- convolved — Simple past tense and past participle of convolve.
- convulsed — to shake violently; agitate.
- cordyline — any of various trees or shrubs of the genus Cordyline that are native to eastern Asia, Australasia, and Polynesia
- cornfield — A cornfield is a field in which corn is being grown.
- cotyledon — a simple embryonic leaf in seed-bearing plants, which, in some species, forms the first green leaf after germination
- counseled — advice; opinion or instruction given in directing the judgment or conduct of another.
- daedalion — a son of Lucifer who, despondent over the death of his daughter Chione, leaped off Parnassus: Apollo changed him into a hawk.
- dal segno — (of a piece of music) to be repeated from the point marked with a sign to the word fine
- 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.
- dandelion — A dandelion is a wild plant which has yellow flowers with lots of thin petals. When the petals of each flower drop off, a fluffy white ball of seeds grows.
- de molina — Tirso (ˈtirso). Pen name of Gabriel Téllez. ?1571–1648, Spanish dramatist; author of the first dramatic treatment of the Don Juan legend El Burlador de Sevilla (1630)
- decagonal — Shaped like a decagon.
- decathlon — The decathlon is a competition in which athletes compete in 10 different sporting events.
- deceleron — (on a fixed-wing aircraft) a type of aileron that enables the aircraft to have a degree of control when it goes into a roll
- decillion — (in Britain, France, and Germany) the number represented as one followed by 60 zeros (1060)
- decontrol — When governments decontrol an activity, they remove controls from it so that companies or organizations have more freedom.
- deflation — Deflation is a reduction in economic activity that leads to lower levels of industrial output, employment, investment, trade, profits, and prices.
- deflexion — deflection
- defluxion — anything that flows downwards
- defoliant — A defoliant is a chemical used on trees and plants to make all their leaves fall off. Defoliants are especially used in war to remove protection from an enemy.
- degloving — Present participle of deglove.
- deletions — Plural form of deletion.
- delmonico — club steak.
- delousing — Present participle of delouse.
- delusions — Plural form of delusion.
- demonical — inspired as if by a demon, indwelling spirit, or genius.
- demonlike — Resembling a demon in form or action.
- dene hole — a hole or shaft excavated in the chalk of southern England or northern France, of uncertain origin and purpose
- denominal — denominative (def 2).
- denotable — Capable of being denoted or marked.
- dentulous — having teeth
- depletion — a depleting or being depleted