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9-letter words containing o, n, e, s, r

  • dangerous — If something is dangerous, it is able or likely to hurt or harm you.
  • decurions — Plural form of decurion.
  • decursion — a military exercise performed by men bearing arms
  • defensory — (archaic) Tending to defend; defensive.
  • demeanors — Plural form of demeanor.
  • demersion — immersion in a fluid
  • desertion — the act of deserting or abandoning or the state of being deserted or abandoned
  • detersion — the act of cleansing or deterging, esp of sores
  • dethrones — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dethrone.
  • detorsion — the act of, or the state of having undergone, detorting; a twisting, perversion, or distortion
  • detrusion — the act of detruding.
  • deuterons — Plural form of deuteron.
  • dhrystone — (benchmark)   A short synthetic benchmark program by Reinhold Weicker <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>, intended to be representative of system (integer) programming. It is available in ADA, Pascal and C. The current version is Dhrystone 2.1. The author says, "Relying on MIPS V1.1 (the result of V1.1) numbers can be hazardous to your professional health." Due to its small size, the memory system outside the cache is not tested. Compilers can too easily optimise for Dhrystone. String operations are somewhat over-represented.
  • dickerson — Eric Demetric [dih-me-trik] /dɪˈmɛ trɪk/ (Show IPA), born 1960, U.S. football player.
  • disenamor — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
  • disenroll — to dismiss or cause to become removed from a program of training, care, etc.: The academy disenrolled a dozen cadets.
  • disorient — to cause to lose one's way: The strange streets disoriented him.
  • disproven — Alternative irregular form of the Past participle of disprove.
  • disthrone — (obsolete, transitive) To dethrone; to remove from the throne.
  • diversion — the act of diverting or turning aside, as from a course or purpose: a diversion of industry into the war effort.
  • doctrines — Plural form of doctrine.
  • domineers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of domineer.
  • doncaster — a city in South Yorkshire, in N England.
  • doorstone — a stone serving as the sill of a doorway.
  • dorkiness — The state or quality of being dorky.
  • dragonets — Plural form of dragonet.
  • dripstone — Architecture. a stone molding used as a drip.
  • drollness — The quality of being odd or comical.
  • dropsonde — an instrument similar to a radiosonde that is attached to a parachute and released from an aircraft.
  • dropstone — an old name for stalactites
  • dry-stone — (of a wall) made without mortar
  • ear stone — an otolith.
  • ear-stone — a calcium carbonate crystal in the ear of vertebrates
  • earphones — (countable) Plural form of earphone.
  • egression — The act of going; egress.
  • electrons — Plural form of electron.
  • en brosse — (of the hair) cut very short so that the hair stands up stiffly
  • enclosure — An area that is sealed off with an artificial or natural barrier.
  • encrimson — (transitive) To make crimson or redden.
  • endeavors — Try hard to do or achieve something.
  • endocarps — Plural form of endocarp.
  • endoderms — Plural form of endoderm.
  • endorsees — Plural form of endorsee.
  • endorsers — Plural form of endorser.
  • endorsing — Present participle of endorse.
  • endorsive — pertaining to endorsement
  • endosperm — The part of a seed that acts as a food store for the developing plant embryo, usually containing starch with protein and other nutrients.
  • endospore — A resistant asexual spore that develops inside some bacteria cells.
  • enforcers — Plural form of enforcer.
  • engrossed — Having all one's attention or interest absorbed by someone or something.
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