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6-letter words containing o, p

  • cu-bop — music of the 1940s in which Cuban rhythms are combined with bop
  • cupola — A cupola is a roof or part of a roof that is shaped like a dome.
  • cupro- — indicating copper
  • d-post — A D-post is part of the bodywork of a vehicle that supports the roof and against which the rear door closes.
  • dacapo — Broad-range hardware specification language. "Mixed Level Modelling and Simulation of VLSI Systems", F.J. Rammig in Logic Design and Simulation, E. Horbst ed, N-H 1986.
  • dayhop — a day's journey; a distance that can be traveled in one day.
  • delope — to shoot into the air during a duel, in order deliberately to miss one's opponent
  • deploy — To deploy troops or military resources means to organize or position them so that they are ready to be used.
  • depone — to declare (something) under oath; testify; depose
  • deport — If a government deports someone, usually someone who is not a citizen of that country, it sends them out of the country because they have committed a crime or because it believes they do not have the right to be there.
  • depose — If a ruler or political leader is deposed, they are forced to give up their position.
  • depots — Plural form of depot.
  • despot — A despot is a ruler or other person who has a lot of power and who uses it unfairly or cruelly.
  • dikkop — (South Africa) A bird of the family Burhinidae.
  • dipcom — Diploma of Commerce
  • diplo- — double
  • diploe — the cancellate bony tissue between the hard inner and outer walls of the bones of the cranium.
  • dipody — a group of two feet in English poetry, in which one of the two accented syllables bears primary stress and the other bears secondary stress, used as a prosodic measurement in iambic, trochaic, and anapestic verse.
  • dipole — Physics, Electricity. a pair of electric point charges or magnetic poles of equal magnitude and opposite signs, separated by an infinitesimal distance.
  • dognap — to steal (a dog), especially for the purpose of selling it for profit.
  • dollop — a lump or blob of some substance: dollops of mud.
  • dolphyEric Allan, 1928–64, U.S. jazz musician.
  • dopant — an impurity added intentionally in a very small, controlled amount to a pure semiconductor to change its electrical properties: Arsenic is a dopant for silicon.
  • dopers — Plural form of doper; users of dope.
  • dopest — Superlative form of dope.
  • dopier — Comparative form of dopy.
  • dopily — In a dopy way.
  • doping — any thick liquid or pasty preparation, as a lubricant, used in preparing a surface.
  • dopper — (in South Africa) a member of the most conservative Afrikaner Church, which practises a strict Calvinism
  • doppie — a cartridge case
  • doppio — Having two shots of espresso.
  • dorpat — German name of Tartu.
  • 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.
  • droops — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of droop.
  • droopy — hanging down; sagging.
  • dropsy — (formerly) edema.
  • dunlopJohn Boyd, 1840–1921, Scottish inventor of the pneumatic tire.
  • dupion — a cocoon formed jointly by two silkworms.
  • dupont — Eleuthère Irénée [e-lœ-ter ee-rey-ney] /ɛ lœˈtɛr i reɪˈneɪ/ (Show IPA), 1771–1834, U.S. industrialist, born in France.
  • e postCharles William, 1854–1914, U.S. businessman: developed breakfast foods.
  • eaprom — Electrically Alterable Programmable Read-Only Memory
  • ecomap — a diagram showing the links between an individual and his or her community
  • eeprom — A read-only memory whose contents can be erased and reprogrammed using a pulsed voltage.
  • eftpos — Electronic Funds Transfer Point of Sale
  • eloped — Simple past tense and past participle of elope.
  • eloper — Agent noun of elope; one who elopes.
  • elopes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elope.
  • employ — Give work to (someone) and pay them for it.
  • empose — Alternative form of impose.
  • empson — Sir William. 1906–84, English poet and critic; author of Seven Types of Ambiguity (1930)
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