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7-letter words containing p, i

  • donship — the state or position of being a don
  • dopiaza — (in Indian cookery) a dish of meat or fish cooked in an onion sauce
  • dopings — Plural form of doping.
  • doxepin — a tricyclic antidepressant, C 19 H 21 NO, used primarily to treat depression or anxiety.
  • drapier — a draper
  • draping — to cover or hang with cloth or other fabric, especially in graceful folds; adorn with drapery.
  • drappie — a little drop, esp a small amount of spirits
  • dripped — to let drops fall; shed drops: This faucet drips.
  • dripper — Agent noun of drip; one who drips.
  • drop in — Informal.. Also, dropper-in. a person who or thing that pays an unexpected or uninvited visit: a feeder for squirrels, raccoons, and other drop-ins.
  • drop it — stop talking about it
  • drop-in — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • duckpin — Bowling. a short pin of relatively large diameter, used in a game resembling tenpins, and bowled at with small balls.
  • dumpbin — a free-standing unit in a bookshop in which the books of a particular publisher are displayed
  • dumpier — Comparative form of dumpy.
  • dumping — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
  • dumpish — depressed; sad.
  • dupioni — a cocoon formed jointly by two silkworms.
  • dupleix — Joseph François [zhoh-zef frahn-swa] /ʒoʊˈzɛf frɑ̃ˈswa/ (Show IPA), Marquis, 1697–1763, French colonial governor of India 1724–54.
  • duppies — Plural form of duppy.
  • dupping — to open.
  • e-prime — a modification of the English language that avoids all forms of the verb be.
  • earpick — an implement for picking at the ear and removing earwax
  • ecap ii — Electronic Circuit Analysis Program. Simple language for analysing electrical networks. "Introduction to Computer Analysis: ECAP for Electronics Technicians and Engineers", H. Levin, P-H 1970.
  • eclipse — Astronomy. the obscuration of the light of the moon by the intervention of the earth between it and the sun (lunar eclipse) or the obscuration of the light of the sun by the intervention of the moon between it and a point on the earth (solar eclipse) a similar phenomenon with respect to any other planet and either its satellite or the sun. the partial or complete interception of the light of one component of a binary star by the other.
  • ectopia — the usually congenital displacement of an organ or part.
  • ectopic — occurring in an abnormal position or place; displaced.
  • edaphic — related to or caused by particular soil conditions, as of texture or drainage, rather than by physiographic or climatic factors.
  • elapids — Plural form of elapid.
  • elapine — relating to or resembling an elapid
  • ellipse — A regular oval shape, traced by a point moving in a plane so that the sum of its distances from two other points (the foci) is constant, or resulting when a cone is cut by an oblique plane that does not intersect the base.
  • eloping — Present participle of elope.
  • emperil — Dated form of imperil.
  • empight — to attach or position
  • empires — Plural form of empire.
  • empiric — A person who, in medicine or other branches of science, relies solely on observation and experiment.
  • emporia — Irregular plural form of emporium.
  • emprise — (archaic) An enterprise or endeavor, especially a quest or adventure.
  • emptied — Simple past tense and past participle of empty.
  • emptier — Comparative form of empty.
  • empties — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of empty.
  • emptily — In an empty manner.
  • emptins — ale yeast
  • emption — The act of buying.
  • emptive — (rare) Responding to or acting to counteract something when it happens (rather than beforehand).
  • end pin — the adjustable metal spike attached to the bottom of a cello, double bass, etc, that supports it while it is being played
  • endpins — Plural form of endpin.
  • endship — a small village
  • enprint — (photography) A moderately enlarged print made from a relatively small (e.g. 35 mm) negative.
  • enripen — (transitive, archaic) To ripen; develop from incipiency to maturity; bring to perfection.
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