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11-letter words containing o, r, d, e, i

  • disenamored — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
  • disendorsed — Simple past tense and past participle of disendorse.
  • disenrolled — to dismiss or cause to become removed from a program of training, care, etc.: The academy disenrolled a dozen cadets.
  • disenshroud — to free from a shroud
  • disenthrone — to dethrone.
  • disfavoured — Simple past tense and past participle of disfavour.
  • disfavourer — one who does not favour
  • dishonoured — Simple past tense and past participle of dishonour.
  • dishonourer — One who dishonours.
  • disinformed — Simple past tense and past participle of disinform.
  • disk flower — one of a number of small tubular flowers composing the disk of certain composite plants.
  • disordering — The removal of order.
  • disordinate — opposed to or violating moral or legal order
  • disorganise — To make less organised; to reduce to chaos.
  • disorganize — to destroy the organization, systematic arrangement, or orderly connection of; throw into confusion or disorder.
  • disoriented — confused as to time or place; out of touch: therapy for disoriented patients.
  • dispensator — a person who dispenses; distributor; administrator.
  • dispersions — Plural form of dispersion.
  • disportment — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • disproperty — to deprive of property
  • disprovable — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • disprovided — Simple past tense and past participle of disprovide.
  • disrelation — the absence of relation
  • disthronize — to dethrone
  • distortedly — In a distorted way.
  • diterpenoid — (chemistry) a terpenoid having a C20 skeleton.
  • dittersdorf — Karl Ditters von [kahrl dit-uh rs fuh n] /kɑrl ˈdɪt ərs fən/ (Show IPA), 1739–99, Austrian violinist and composer.
  • ditto drive — (hardware, storage)   The Ditto tape drives range in capacity from 120 megabytes to 1.6 gigabytes (data compression can roughly double these figures). The newer devices are designed for special tapes, though they will read standard tape types. The largest of tape stores up 3.2 GB. Using an enhanced floppy drive card the transfer rate approaches the claimed 19 MB/minute. External parallel port versions are also available.
  • dive bomber — an airplane of the fighter-bomber type that drops its bombs while diving at the enemy.
  • diversiform — differing in form; of various forms.
  • diversional — offering diversion or recreation; diverting.
  • divorcement — divorce; separation.
  • do a perish — to die or come near to dying of thirst or starvation
  • dock strike — an industrial dispute involving dock workers
  • doctrinaire — a person who tries to apply some doctrine or theory without sufficient regard for practical considerations; an impractical theorist.
  • dog fancier — a person with a special interest in dogs
  • dog officer — dogcatcher.
  • dolorimeter — an instrument used in dolorimetry.
  • dolorimetry — a technique for measuring the sensitivity to pain produced by heat rays focused on an area of skin and recorded in dols.
  • domineering — inclined to rule arbitrarily or despotically; overbearing; tyrannical: domineering parents.
  • donkey ride — a ride on the back of a donkey, esp for recreation
  • dorian mode — an authentic church mode represented on the white keys of a keyboard instrument by an ascending scale from D to D.
  • dormitories — Plural form of dormitory.
  • dorsetshire — a county in S England. 1024 sq. mi. (2650 sq. km).
  • dorsiferous — borne on the back, as the sori on most ferns.
  • dorsiflexor — a muscle causing dorsiflexion.
  • dotted pair — (programming)   The usual LISP syntax for representing a cons cell that is not a list. For example, the expression (cons 'foo 42) returns a cons cell that is output as (foo . 42) which represents a cons cell whose car is the symbol "foo" and whose cdr is the integer 42.
  • double-ring — being or pertaining to a marriage ceremony in which the partners give rings to one another.
  • downlighter — Downlight.
  • downriggers — Plural form of downrigger.
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