9-letter words containing p, e, d
- depletory — Serving to deplete.
- deploring — Present participle of deplore.
- deploying — Present participle of deploy.
- depluming — Present participle of deplume.
- depollute — to eliminate, clean up, or decrease pollution in (an area).
- deponents — Plural form of deponent.
- deportees — to expel (an alien) from a country; banish.
- deporting — Present participle of deport.
- deposable — Capable of being deposed, or deprived of office.
- deposited — to place for safekeeping or in trust, especially in a bank account: He deposited his paycheck every Friday.
- depositor — A bank's depositors are the people who have accounts with that bank.
- depositum — (finance, obsolete) A deposit.
- depraving — Present participle of deprave.
- depravity — Depravity is very dishonest or immoral behaviour.
- deprecate — If you deprecate something, you criticize it.
- depredate — to plunder or destroy; pillage
- deprehend — to apprehend (a person)
- depressed — If you are depressed, you are sad and feel that you cannot enjoy anything, because your situation is so difficult and unpleasant.
- depresses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of depress.
- depressor — a person or thing that depresses
- depriment — Serving to depress.
- depriving — Present participle of deprive.
- deprogram — to cause to abandon a rigid commitment to certain beliefs, values, etc., as those of a religious cult, by undoing the effects of indoctrination
- depthless — immeasurably deep; fathomless
- depulping — Also called dental pulp. the inner substance of the tooth, containing arteries, veins, and lymphatic and nerve tissue that communicate with their respective vascular, lymph, and nerve systems.
- depurated — Simple past tense and past participle of depurate.
- deputable — able to be deputed
- derepress — to cause (a gene) to cease to be repressed, by deactivating its depressor
- deschamps — Émile (French emil), full name Émile Deschamps de Saint-Armand. 1791–1871, French poet, dramatist, and librettist: a leading figure in the French romantic movement
- desipient — silly; foolish
- despaired — loss of hope; hopelessness.
- despairer — a person who despairs
- desparate — Misspelling of desperate.
- despeckle — (computer graphics) To remove speckles from.
- despenser — Hugh le, Earl of Winchester. 1262–1326, English statesman, a favourite of Edward II. Together with his son Hugh, the Younger (?1290–1326), he was executed by the king's enemies
- desperado — A desperado is someone who does illegal, violent things without worrying about the danger.
- desperate — If you are desperate, you are in such a bad situation that you are willing to try anything to change it.
- despiseth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of despise.
- despising — Present participle of despise.
- despiting — in spite of; notwithstanding.
- despoiled — to strip of possessions, things of value, etc.; rob; plunder; pillage.
- despoiler — to strip of possessions, things of value, etc.; rob; plunder; pillage.
- desponded — Simple past tense and past participle of despond.
- despotate — An area ruled by a despot (\u03b4\u03b5\u03c3\u03c0\u03cc\u03c4\u03b7\u03c2) in the late Byzantine Balkans (12th to 15th centuries).
- despotism — Despotism is cruel and unfair government by a ruler or rulers who have a lot of power.
- despotize — To behave like a despot.
- despumate — to clarify or purify (a liquid) by skimming a scum from its surface
- developed — If you talk about developed countries or the developed world, you mean the countries or the parts of the world that are wealthy and have many industries.
- developer — A developer is a person or a company that buys land and builds houses, offices, shops, or factories on it, or buys existing buildings and makes them more modern.
- developes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of develope.