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7-letter words containing r, o, d, e

  • croodle — to coo
  • crooked — If you describe something as crooked, especially something that is usually straight, you mean that it is bent or twisted.
  • crooned — to sing or hum in a soft, soothing voice: to croon to a baby.
  • cropped — Cropped items of clothing are shorter than normal.
  • crossed — angry and annoyed; ill-humored; snappish: Don't be cross with me. Synonyms: petulant, fractious, irascible, waspish, crabbed, churlish, sulky, cantankerous, cranky, ill-tempered, impatient, irritable, fretful, touchy, testy. Antonyms: good-natured, good-humored; agreeable.
  • crowded — If a place is crowded, it is full of people.
  • crowder — One who crowds or pushes.
  • crowdie — a porridge of meal and water; brose
  • crowned — characterized by or having a crown (often used in combination): a crowned signet ring; a low-crowned fedora.
  • crunode — a point at which two branches of a curve intersect, each branch having a distinct tangent; node
  • dariole — a small cup-shaped mould used for making individual sweet or savoury dishes
  • de niro — Robert. born 1943, US film actor. His films include Taxi Driver (1976), Raging Bull (1980), GoodFellas (1990), Casino (1995), and Meet the Parents (2000)
  • de trop — not wanted; in the way; superfluous
  • debbora — Deborah (def 1).
  • debitor — the heading written at the top of the debit column in an accounts book
  • deboard — To exit a form of transportation such as a boat, ship, airplane, trolley, streetcar or spaceship.
  • deboner — a person or a device that debones a piece of meat or fish
  • deborah — a prophetess and judge of Israel who fought the Canaanites (Judges 4, 5)
  • debtors — Plural form of debtor.
  • decoder — A decoder is a device used to decode messages or signals sent in code, for example the television signals from a satellite.
  • decolor — to remove the color from; deprive of color; bleach.
  • decorum — Decorum is behaviour that people consider to be correct, polite, and respectable.
  • decrown — to divest (a person) of the role of monarch
  • deforce — to withhold (property, esp land) wrongfully or by force from the rightful owner
  • defrock — If a priest is defrocked, he is forced to stop being a priest because of bad behaviour.
  • defrost — When you defrost frozen food or when it defrosts, you allow or cause it to become unfrozen so that you can eat it or cook it.
  • defroze — to become hardened into ice or into a solid body; change from the liquid to the solid state by loss of heat.
  • dehorns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dehorn.
  • deiform — having the form or appearance of a god; sacred or divine
  • del rio — a city in S Texas, on the Rio Grande.
  • delator — An accuser; an informer.
  • delores — a female given name.
  • deloria — Vine, (Jr.) [vahyn] /vaɪn/ (Show IPA), 1933–2005, U.S. writer.
  • delorme — Philibert (filibɛr). ?1510–70, French Renaissance architect of the Tuileries, Paris
  • demarco — Tom DeMarco proposed a form of structured analysis.
  • demerol — meperidine
  • demonry — possession by a demon
  • dendro- — tree
  • dendron — a dendrite.
  • deodars — Plural form of deodar.
  • deorbit — to depart deliberately from orbit, usually to enter a descent phase.
  • deplore — If you say that you deplore something, you think it is very wrong or immoral.
  • 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.
  • derecho — a widespread and severe windstorm that moves rapidly along a fairly straight path and is associated with bands of rapidly moving thunderstorms.
  • dermoid — of or resembling skin
  • desport — To disport.
  • destroy — To destroy something means to cause so much damage to it that it is completely ruined or does not exist any more.
  • detours — Plural form of detour.
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