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9-letter words containing o, l, d, f

  • -flavored — -flavored is used after nouns such as strawberry and chocolate to indicate that a food or drink is flavored with strawberry or chocolate.
  • a load of — You can use a load of to refer to people or things which you do not like. For example, if you say that something is a load of rubbish, you are emphasizing that you think it is no good at all or not true at all.
  • afterload — (physiology) The load on a working muscle from a constant opposing force.
  • all found — with everything provided, such as food, electricity, heating and laundry, at no additional cost
  • altdorfer — Albrecht (ˈalbrɛçt). ?1480–?1538, German painter and engraver: one of the earliest landscape painters
  • badly off — If you are badly off, you are in a bad situation.
  • bedfellow — You refer to two things or people as bedfellows when they have become associated or related in some way.
  • bifocaled — wearing bifocals
  • biofueled — running on biofuel
  • blindfold — A blindfold is a strip of cloth that is tied over someone's eyes so that they cannot see.
  • bold face — a weight of type characterized by thick heavy lines, as the entry words in this dictionary
  • bold-face — type or print that has thick, heavy lines, used for emphasis, headings, etc. This is a sample of boldface.
  • boldfaced — impudent or forward in manner
  • broadleaf — any tobacco plant having broad leaves, used esp in making cigars
  • bromfieldLouis, 1896–1956, U.S. novelist.
  • buffaloed — any of several large wild oxen of the family Bovidae. Compare bison, Cape buffalo, water buffalo.
  • calfdozer — a small bulldozer
  • coalfield — A coalfield is a region where there is coal under the ground.
  • code flag — a flag forming part of a signal code.
  • cold feet — loss or lack of courage or confidence
  • cold fish — If you say that someone is a cold fish, you think that they are unfriendly and unemotional.
  • conflated — Simple past tense and past participle of conflate.
  • confuddle — (transitive) To thoroughly confuse.
  • cornfield — A cornfield is a field in which corn is being grown.
  • daffodils — Plural form of daffodil.
  • damn fool — Damn fool means 'very stupid'.
  • data flow — (architecture)   A data flow architecture or language performs a computation when all the operands are available. Data flow is one kind of data driven architecture, the other is demand driven. It is a technique for specifying fine-grain concurrency, usually in the form of two-dimensional graphs in which instructions that are available for concurrent execution are written alongside each other while those that must be executed in sequence are written one under the other. Data dependencies between instructions are indicated by directed arcs. Instructions do not reference memory since the data dependence arcs allow data to be transmitted directly from the producing instruction to the consuming one. Data flow schemes differ chiefly in the way that they handle re-entrant code. Static schemes disallow it, dynamic schemes use either "code copying" or "tagging" at every point of reentry. An example of a data flow architecture is MIT's VAL machine.
  • dayflower — any of various tropical and subtropical plants of the genus Commelina, having jointed creeping stems, narrow pointed leaves, and blue or purplish flowers which wilt quickly: family Commelinaceae
  • deflation — Deflation is a reduction in economic activity that leads to lower levels of industrial output, employment, investment, trade, profits, and prices.
  • deflators — Plural form of deflator.
  • deflector — A device that deflects something, in particular.
  • deflexion — deflection
  • deflorate — (of a plant) having lost its flowers
  • 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.
  • defoliate — To defoliate an area or the plants in it means to cause the leaves on the plants to fall off or be destroyed. This is done especially in war to remove protection from an enemy.
  • deglorify — to cause to be or treat as being more splendid, excellent, etc., than would normally be considered.
  • diabolify — (transitive) To ascribe diabolical qualities to; to change into, or represent as, a devil.
  • dire wolf — an extinct wolf, Canis dirus, widespread in North America during the Pleistocene Epoch, having a larger body and a smaller brain than the modern wolf.
  • dobsonfly — a large, soft-bodied insect, Corydalus cornutus, having four distinctly veined membranous wings, biting mouthparts, and, in the male, huge mandibles that jut out from the head.
  • dock leaf — the typically broad leaf of any of various temperate weedy plants of the polygonaceous genus Rumex, having greenish or reddish flowers
  • dolefully — sorrowful; mournful; melancholy: a doleful look on her face.
  • dolorific — Of or relating to pain.
  • doomfully — in a doomful manner
  • dorsiflex — Bend (something, typically the hand or foot ) dorsally or toward its upper surface.
  • doubtfull — Archaic form of doubtful.
  • downfalls — Plural form of downfall.
  • downfield — In or to a position nearer to the opponents' end of a field.
  • dragonfly — any of numerous stout-bodied, nonstinging insects of the order Odonata (suborder Anisoptera), the species of which prey on mosquitoes and other insects and are distinguished from the damselflies by having the wings outstretched rather than folded when at rest.
  • driftbolt — Also called driftpin. a spike having a round shank and used for fastening heavy timbers together.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with O-L-D-F. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in O-L-D-F to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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