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10-letter words containing o, r, e, d, s

  • discoursed — communication of thought by words; talk; conversation: earnest and intelligent discourse.
  • discourser — One who discourses; a narrator or speaker.
  • discourses — communication of thought by words; talk; conversation: earnest and intelligent discourse.
  • discovered — to see, get knowledge of, learn of, find, or find out; gain sight or knowledge of (something previously unseen or unknown): to discover America; to discover electricity. Synonyms: detect, espy, descry, discern, ascertain, unearth, ferret out, notice.
  • discoverer — a person who discovers.
  • discretion — the power or right to decide or act according to one's own judgment; freedom of judgment or choice: It is entirely within my discretion whether I will go or stay.
  • discrowned — Simple past tense and past participle of discrown.
  • disembargo — to remove an embargo from.
  • disembroil — to free from embroilment, entanglement, or confusion.
  • disempower — to deprive of influence, importance, etc.: Voters feel they have become disempowered by recent political events.
  • disendorse — (transitive) To cease to endorse; to withdraw endorsement.
  • disendower — One who disendows.
  • disenviron — to set free from a specific environment
  • disfavored — unfavorable regard; displeasure; disesteem; dislike: The prime minister incurred the king's disfavor.
  • disfrocked — Simple past tense and past participle of disfrock.
  • disherison — disinheritance.
  • disheritor — someone who disinherits
  • dishonored — lack or loss of honor; disgraceful or dishonest character or conduct.
  • dishonorer — (American spelling) Alternative form of dishonourer.
  • disimprove — (transitive, rare) to make worse.
  • disordered — lacking organization or in confusion; disarranged.
  • disorderly — characterized by disorder; irregular; untidy; confused: a disorderly desk.
  • disorients — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disorient.
  • dispeopler — One who, or that which, dispeoples; a depopulator.
  • dispermous — having two seeds.
  • dispersion — Also, dispersal. an act, state, or instance of dispersing or of being dispersed.
  • dispersoid — the suspended particles in a dispersion.
  • disprofess — to renounce the profession of
  • disprovide — (obsolete, transitive) Not to provide; to fail to provide.
  • dissolvers — Plural form of dissolver.
  • distortive — to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
  • distrouble — to trouble; to interrupt
  • diversions — Plural form of diversion.
  • do wonders — have a transforming effect
  • dockmaster — a person who supervises the dry-docking of ships.
  • doctorates — Plural form of doctorate.
  • doctorless — Without a doctor or doctors.
  • dog-sitter — a person who looks after a dog while its owner is away
  • dogberries — Plural form of dogberry.
  • dogsledder — a person who uses a dogsled
  • dollarless — without dollars; having no money
  • dollarwise — as expressed in dollars; in dollars and cents: How much does a million francs amount to, dollarwise?
  • doomsayers — Plural form of doomsayer.
  • doomsdayer — a doomsayer.
  • doorbuster — Informal. a retail item that is heavily discounted for a very limited time in order to draw customers to the store. the price of such an item.
  • doorframes — Plural form of doorframe.
  • doorperson — A doorman or doorwoman.
  • doorplates — Plural form of doorplate.
  • dorbeetles — Plural form of dorbeetle.
  • dorchester — a town in S Dorsetshire, in S England, on the Frome River: named Casterbridge in Thomas Hardy's novels.
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