0%

10-letter words containing r, i, p, e, d

  • dimorphite — a mineral, arsenic sulfide, As 4 S 3 , yellow-orange in color and similar in its properties to orpiment.
  • dip circle — an instrument for measuring dip, consisting of a dip needle with a vertical circular scale of angles
  • diphtheria — a febrile, infectious disease caused by the bacillus Corynebacterium diphtheriae, and characterized by the formation of a false membrane in the air passages, especially the throat.
  • diremption — a sharp division into two parts; disjunction; separation.
  • dirt cheap — very inexpensive: The house may need a lot of work, but it was dirt-cheap.
  • dirt-cheap — very inexpensive: The house may need a lot of work, but it was dirt-cheap.
  • disapparel — to remove the clothing from (a person)
  • disappears — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disappear.
  • disapprove — to think (something) wrong or reprehensible; censure or condemn in opinion.
  • discrepant — (usually of two or more objects, accounts, findings etc.) differing; disagreeing; inconsistent: discrepant accounts.
  • disempower — to deprive of influence, importance, etc.: Voters feel they have become disempowered by recent political events.
  • disimprove — (transitive, rare) to make worse.
  • disparaged — Simple past tense and past participle of disparage.
  • disparager — to speak of or treat slightingly; depreciate; belittle: Do not disparage good manners.
  • disparages — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disparage.
  • disparates — unlike things or people
  • disparency — (proscribed) A significant discrepancy.
  • disparlure — a pheromone, C 19 H 38 O, released by female gypsy moths.
  • dispatcher — a person who dispatches.
  • dispensary — a place where something is dispensed, especially medicines.
  • dispensers — Plural form of dispenser.
  • dispeopler — One who, or that which, dispeoples; a depopulator.
  • dispermous — having two seeds.
  • dispersals — Plural form of dispersal.
  • dispersant — something that disperses.
  • dispersing — to drive or send off in various directions; scatter: to disperse a crowd.
  • dispersion — Also, dispersal. an act, state, or instance of dispersing or of being dispersed.
  • dispersive — serving or tending to disperse.
  • dispersoid — the suspended particles in a dispersion.
  • dispirited — discouraged; dejected; disheartened; gloomy.
  • dispraised — Simple past tense and past participle of dispraise.
  • dispraiser — One who blames.
  • disprinced — rendered unprincely
  • disprofess — to renounce the profession of
  • disprovide — (obsolete, transitive) Not to provide; to fail to provide.
  • disreputed — Simple past tense and past participle of disrepute.
  • disrespect — Lack of respect or courtesy.
  • disrupters — Plural form of disrupter.
  • disruptive — causing, tending to cause, or caused by disruption; disrupting: the disruptive effect of their rioting.
  • disrupture — interruption; disruption.
  • dissipater — to scatter in various directions; disperse; dispel.
  • door prize — a prize awarded at a dance, party, or the like, either by chance through a drawing or as a reward, as for having the best costume.
  • dopplerite — an organic amorphous mineral of dark colour, found mainly in Austria and Switzerland
  • dove prion — a common petrel, Pachyptila desolata, of the southern seas, having a bluish back and white underparts
  • dove prism — a prism that inverts a beam of light, often used in a telescope to produce an erect image.
  • drainpipes — a large pipe that carries away the discharge of waste pipes, soil pipes, etc.
  • dress ship — to decorate a vessel by displaying all signal flags on lines run from the bow to the stern over the mast trucks
  • drill pipe — (in oil-well drilling or the like) any of several coupled tubes for rotating the bit and supplying drilling mud.
  • dripstones — Plural form of dripstone.
  • droopiness — The characteristic of being droopy.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?