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10-letter words containing p, c, e

  • deprecated — to express earnest disapproval of.
  • deprecates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deprecate.
  • deprecator — to express earnest disapproval of.
  • depreciate — If something such as a currency depreciates or if something depreciates it, it loses some of its original value.
  • depucelage — The loss of a girl or woman's virginity.
  • desciption — Misspelling of description.
  • descriptor — a word or phrase which constitutes the descriptive element of a sentence
  • desipience — folly; silliness
  • despatched — Simple past tense and past participle of despatch.
  • despatcher — Alternative form of dispatcher.
  • despatches — Plural form of despatch.
  • despecable — Misspelling of despicable.
  • despective — Disparaging, derogatory; looking down upon.
  • despicable — If you say that a person or action is despicable, you are emphasizing that they are extremely nasty, cruel, or evil.
  • despicably — deserving to be despised, or regarded with distaste, disgust, or disdain; contemptible: He was a mean, despicable man, who treated his wife and children badly.
  • despotical — of, relating to, or of the nature of a despot or despotism; autocratic; tyrannical.
  • dictaphone — a tape recorder designed for recording dictation and later reproducing it for typing
  • dip circle — an instrument for measuring dip, consisting of a dip needle with a vertical circular scale of angles
  • dipchemeng — Diploma in Chemical Engineering
  • diphyletic — of or relating to a taxonomic group of organisms derived from two separate ancestral lines.
  • dirt cheap — very inexpensive: The house may need a lot of work, but it was dirt-cheap.
  • dirt-cheap — very inexpensive: The house may need a lot of work, but it was dirt-cheap.
  • discipline — training to act in accordance with rules; drill: military discipline.
  • discompose — to upset the order of; disarrange; disorder; unsettle: The breeze discomposed the bouquet.
  • discophile — a person who studies and collects phonograph records, especially those of a rare or specialized nature.
  • discrepant — (usually of two or more objects, accounts, findings etc.) differing; disagreeing; inconsistent: discrepant accounts.
  • disculpate — (transitive) To free from blame or the imputation of a fault; to exculpate.
  • disk space — a number of bytes on a disk for the storage of data
  • disparency — (proscribed) A significant discrepancy.
  • dispatched — to send off or away with speed, as a messenger, telegram, body of troops, etc.
  • dispatcher — a person who dispatches.
  • dispatches — Plural form of dispatch.
  • dispencing — Present participle of dispence.
  • displacive — That involves or causes displacement.
  • disprinced — rendered unprincely
  • disrespect — Lack of respect or courtesy.
  • do penance — make amends for sth
  • docentship — privatdocent.
  • double cup — (in Renaissance art) a matched pair of metal cups, made so that one can be placed inverted on top of the other.
  • dreamscape — a dreamlike, often surrealistic scene.
  • drop cable — Wiring between a computer and its Ethernet transceiver. Maximum length if full-spec is 47m.
  • drop scene — a drop curtain, often of painted or dyed canvas, located downstage and used as the backdrop for a scene played while the set upstage is being changed.
  • drop scone — a flat spongy cake made by dropping a spoonful of batter on a griddle
  • dropkicked — Simple past tense and past participle of dropkick.
  • dropkicker — One who dropkicks.
  • drupaceous — resembling or relating to a drupe; consisting of drupes.
  • dual space — the set of all linear functionals whose domain is a given vector space.
  • duck press — a cooked duck sprinkled with red wine and then pressed in a device (duck press) so that the juices can be collected and served as a sauce over the breast meat and legs.
  • duplicable — capable of being duplicated.
  • duplicated — a copy exactly like an original.
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