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7-letter words containing p, r, e

  • deports — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deport.
  • deposer — One who deposes.
  • depower — ability to do or act; capability of doing or accomplishing something.
  • deprave — Something that depraves someone makes them morally bad or evil.
  • depress — If someone or something depresses you, they make you feel sad and disappointed.
  • deprive — If you deprive someone of something that they want or need, you take it away from them, or you prevent them from having it.
  • derping — Present participle of derp.
  • despair — Despair is the feeling that everything is wrong and that nothing will improve.
  • desport — To disport.
  • dewdrop — a drop of dew
  • diapers — Plural form of diaper.
  • diopter — Optics. a unit of measure of the refractive power of a lens, having the dimension of the reciprocal of length and a unit equal to the reciprocal of one meter. Abbreviation: D.
  • dioptre — Optics. a unit of measure of the refractive power of a lens, having the dimension of the reciprocal of length and a unit equal to the reciprocal of one meter. Abbreviation: D.
  • dippers — Plural form of dipper.
  • diptera — the order comprising the dipterous insects.
  • dirempt — to separate (something) forcefully or violently
  • discerp — To tear into pieces; to rend.
  • dnieper — a river rising in the W Russian Federation flowing S through Byelorussia (Belarus) and Ukraine to the Black Sea. 1400 miles (2250 km) long.
  • dom rep — Dominican Republic
  • dopplerChristian Johann, 1803–53, Austrian physicist: discovered the Doppler effect.
  • drapeauJean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1916–1999, Canadian lawyer and politician: mayor of Montreal 1954–57 and 1960–86.
  • drapers — Plural form of draper.
  • drapery — coverings, hangings, clothing, etc., of fabric, especially as arranged in loose, graceful folds.
  • drapier — a draper
  • 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.
  • drooped — to sag, sink, bend, or hang down, as from weakness, exhaustion, or lack of support.
  • droplet — a little drop.
  • dropped — Let or make (something) fall vertically.
  • dropper — a person or thing that drops.
  • dropple — a trickle
  • dumpers — Plural form of dumper.
  • dumpier — Comparative form of dumpy.
  • dylperl — A dynamic linking package for Perl by Roberto Salama <[email protected]>. Dynamically loaded functions are accessed as if they were user-defined functions. This code is based on Oliver Sharp's May 1993 article in Dr. Dobbs Journal ("Dynamic Linking under Berkeley Unix"). Posted to news:comp.lang.perl on 1993-08-11.
  • e-prime — a modification of the English language that avoids all forms of the verb be.
  • eardrop — an earring with a pendant.
  • earflap — either of a pair of flaps attached to a cap, for covering the ears in cold weather.
  • earpick — an implement for picking at the ear and removing earwax
  • earplug — a plug of soft, pliable material inserted into the opening of the outer ear, especially to keep out water or noise.
  • ectropy — (thermodynamics) The overall increase in the organization of a system.
  • eggdrop — (communications)   The world's most popular open source IRC bot, designed for flexibility and ease of use. Eggdrop is freely distributable under the GPL. It was originally developed by Robey Pointer but he no longer works on it. Eggdrop is designed to run on Linux, *BSD, SunOs, Windows, Mac OS X and other platforms. It is extendable with Tcl scripts and/or C modules. It supports Undernet, DALnet, EFnet, IRCnet, and QuakeNet. It can form botnets and share partylines and userfiles between bots.
  • elopers — Plural form of eloper.
  • emparks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of empark.
  • emperil — Dated form of imperil.
  • emperor — A sovereign ruler of great power and rank, especially one ruling an empire.
  • empires — Plural form of empire.
  • empiric — A person who, in medicine or other branches of science, relies solely on observation and experiment.
  • emplore — Obsolete form of implore.
  • emporia — Irregular plural form of emporium.
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