9-letter words containing p, e, r, n, d
- harpooned — Simple past tense and past participle of harpoon.
- horsepond — A pond for watering horses.
- impounder — One who impounds.
- imprinted — Simple past tense and past participle of imprint.
- imprudent — not prudent; lacking discretion; incautious; rash.
- interpled — having instituted interpleader proceedings
- iprindole — a tricyclic antidepressant drug. Formula: C19H28N2
- kidnapers — Plural form of kidnaper.
- kidnapper — to steal, carry off, or abduct by force or fraud, especially for use as a hostage or to extract ransom.
- knee drop — a wrestling attack in which a wrestler lifts his or her opponent and drops him or her onto his or her bent knee
- landloper — a wanderer, vagrant, or adventurer.
- laplander — Also called Laplander [lap-lan-der, -luh n-] /ˈlæpˌlæn dər, -lən-/ (Show IPA). a member of a Finnic people of northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and adjacent regions.
- line drop — the decrease in voltage between two points on an electric line, often caused by resistance or leakage along the line.
- madperson — (gender-neutral) A madman or madwoman.
- manspread — (of a man) to sit with one's legs far apart, taking up too much space on a seat shared with other people: guys who manspread on the subway.
- meropidan — any insectivorous bird of the family Meropidae
- name-drop — mention famous person to impress
- nephridia — the excretory organ of many invertebrates, consisting of a tubule with one end opening into the body cavity and the other opening into a pore at the body surface.
- on parade — on display
- open door — the policy of admitting people of all nationalities or ethnic groups to a country upon equal terms, as for immigration.
- open-door — If a country or organization has an open-door policy towards people or goods, it allows them to come there freely, without any restrictions.
- overspend — to spend more than one can afford: Receiving a small inheritance, she began to overspend alarmingly.
- paderborn — a city in North Rhine–Westphalia, in NW Germany.
- paludrine — proguanil hydrochloride, a synthetic antimalarial drug first produced in 1944
- pan-fried — Pan-fried food is food that has been cooked in hot fat or oil in a frying pan.
- panderess — a female panderer
- pandering — a person who furnishes clients for a prostitute or supplies persons for illicit sexual intercourse; procurer; pimp.
- panderism — the work of a pander
- panderous — resembling a pander
- pandurate — shaped like a fiddle, as a leaf.
- pangender — Also, pangendered. noting or relating to a person whose gender identity is not limited to one gender and who may feel like a member of all genders at the same time.
- pantdress — a dress with a divided skirt
- partnered — a person who shares or is associated with another in some action or endeavor; sharer; associate.
- patterned — a decorative design, as for wallpaper, china, or textile fabrics, etc.
- pendicler — the holder or renter of a pendicle
- pendragon — either of two kings of ancient Britain. Compare Arthur (def 2), Uther.
- penholder — a holder in which a penpoint is placed.
- perdition — a state of final spiritual ruin; loss of the soul; damnation.
- perendale — a Romney-Cheviot crossbreed of sheep
- periander — died 585 b.c, tyrant of Corinth.
- peridinia — genus of flagellate organisms
- pertained — to have reference or relation; relate: documents pertaining to the lawsuit.
- pervading — omnipresent; felt everywhere
- philander — (of a man) to make love with a woman one cannot or will not marry; carry on flirtations.
- phonecard — calling card (def 3).
- pied noir — an Algerian-born French person.
- pieridine — belonging or pertaining to the Pieridae, a family of butterflies comprising the whites, sulfurs, etc.
- pinedrops — a slender, leafless, parasitic North American plant, Pterospora andromedea, having nodding white to red flowers, found growing under pines.
- pintadera — a decorative stamp, usually made of clay, found in the Neolithic of the E Mediterranean and in many American cultures
- pioneered — a person who is among those who first enter or settle a region, thus opening it for occupation and development by others.