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10-letter words containing r, a, d, i, o, l

  • demoralize — If something demoralizes someone, it makes them lose so much confidence in what they are doing that they want to give up.
  • dendroidal — Dendroid; resembling a shrub or tree.
  • depilatory — Depilatory substances and processes remove unwanted hair from your body.
  • depolarize — to undergo or cause to undergo a loss of polarity or polarization
  • devalorize — Devalue.
  • diarrhoeal — Standard spelling of diarrheal.
  • dicoumarol — a substance obtained naturally from sweet clover or produced synthetically as a drug, used as an anticoagulant
  • dilatorily — tending to delay or procrastinate; slow; tardy.
  • discoursal — of or relating to discourse
  • divisorial — Lb maths Related to a divisor.
  • dollarbird — a common roller, Eurystomus orientalis, of Asia and Australia, having on its wings a silvery spot the size of a dollar.
  • dollarfish — butterfish.
  • dollarship — the fact of being denominated in dollars
  • dollarwise — as expressed in dollars; in dollars and cents: How much does a million francs amount to, dollarwise?
  • domiciliar — a canon of a minor order.
  • dorsal fin — the fin or finlike integumentary expansion generally developed on the back of aquatic vertebrates.
  • dorsal lip — the dorsal marginal region of the blastopore, which acts as a center of differentiation: as cells move through this region to the interior of the embryo during gastrulation, they acquire the ability to induce the overlying ectoderm to develop into a variety of tissues.
  • dragonlike — a mythical monster generally represented as a huge, winged reptile with crested head and enormous claws and teeth, and often spouting fire.
  • dragonling — (fantasy) A baby dragon.
  • dronabinol — Synthetic tetrahydrocannabinol.
  • drosophila — a fly of the genus Drosophila, especially D. melanogaster, used in laboratory studies of genetics and development.
  • duplicator — a machine for making duplicates, as a mimeograph.
  • durational — the length of time something continues or exists (often used with the).
  • editorials — Plural form of editorial.
  • elucidator — One who elucidates.
  • endocrinal — Endocrine.
  • endorhizal — (of an embryo) having the radical covered by the cotyledon
  • faldistory — a bishop's seat or throne
  • floribunda — any of a class of roses characterized by a long blooming period and the production of large flowers often in thick clusters.
  • fluoridate — to introduce a fluoride into: to fluoridate drinking water.
  • foreladies — Plural form of forelady.
  • formalised — Simple past tense and past participle of formalise.
  • formalized — Simple past tense and past participle of formalize.
  • formidable — causing fear, apprehension, or dread: a formidable opponent.
  • formidably — causing fear, apprehension, or dread: a formidable opponent.
  • girandoles — Plural form of girandole.
  • gladiators — Plural form of gladiator.
  • glamorised — Simple past tense and past participle of glamorise.
  • glamorized — Simple past tense and past participle of glamorize.
  • glandiform — (anatomy) Shaped like, resembling, or characteristic of glands.
  • gold braid — a gold-coloured braid which is used to decorate uniforms
  • golda meir — Golda [gohl-duh] /ˈgoʊl də/ (Show IPA), (Goldie Mabovitch; Goldie Myerson) 1898–1978, Israeli political leader, born in Russia: prime minister 1969–74.
  • goliardery — one of a class of wandering scholar-poets in Germany, France, and England, chiefly in the 12th and 13th centuries, noted as the authors of satirical Latin verse written in celebration of conviviality, sensual pleasures, etc.
  • hardboiled — Alternative spelling of hard-boiled.
  • harold iii — (Harold Hardrada) 1015–66, king of Norway 1045–66.
  • idolatress — A female idolater.
  • idolatries — Plural form of idolatry.
  • idolatrize — (transitive) To make an idol of; to idolize.
  • idolatrous — worshiping idols.
  • intermodal — pertaining to or suitable for transportation involving more than one form of carrier, as truck and rail, or truck, ship, and rail.
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