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

  • discovery — the act or an instance of discovering.
  • disenamor — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
  • disenroll — to dismiss or cause to become removed from a program of training, care, etc.: The academy disenrolled a dozen cadets.
  • disforest — To disafforest.
  • disformed — Simple past tense and past participle of disform.
  • disgorged — Simple past tense and past participle of disgorge.
  • disgorger — to eject or throw out from the throat, mouth, or stomach; vomit forth.
  • disgorges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disgorge.
  • disobeyer — One who disobeys.
  • disorders — Plural form of disorder.
  • disorient — to cause to lose one's way: The strange streets disoriented him.
  • disported — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • disposure — disposal; disposition.
  • disproove — Obsolete form of disprove.
  • disproved — to prove (an assertion, claim, etc.) to be false or wrong; refute; invalidate: I disproved his claim.
  • disproven — Alternative irregular form of the Past participle of disprove.
  • disprover — One who disproves.
  • disproves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disprove.
  • disrooted — Simple past tense and past participle of disroot.
  • dissector — to cut apart (an animal body, plant, etc.) to examine the structure, relation of parts, or the like.
  • disseizor — a person who disseizes
  • dissolver — One who, or that which, dissolves or dissipates.
  • disthrone — (obsolete, transitive) To dethrone; to remove from the throne.
  • distorted — not truly or completely representing the facts or reality; misrepresented; false: She has a distorted view of life.
  • distorter — One that distorts.
  • ditrochee — a form of poetic meter in which two trochees constitute one metrical unit.
  • diversion — the act of diverting or turning aside, as from a course or purpose: a diversion of industry into the war effort.
  • dna probe — a technique for identifying a segment of DNA, using a known sequence of nucleotide bases from a DNA strand to detect a complementary sequence in the sample by means of base pairing.
  • do or die — reflecting or characterized by an irrevocable decision to succeed at all costs; desperate; all-out: a do-or-die attempt to halt the invaders.
  • do-gooder — a well-intentioned but naive and often ineffectual social or political reformer.
  • do-or-die — reflecting or characterized by an irrevocable decision to succeed at all costs; desperate; all-out: a do-or-die attempt to halt the invaders.
  • dobber-in — an informant or traitor
  • doctorate — Doctor of Philosophy (def 1).
  • doctoress — a female doctor
  • doctrines — Plural form of doctrine.
  • dodderers — Plural form of dodderer.
  • doddering — shaky or trembling, as from old age; tottering: a doddering old man.
  • dog's-ear — dog-ear.
  • dog-eared — having dog-ears: a dog-eared book.
  • dog-tired — utterly exhausted; worn out.
  • dogaressa — the wife of a doge
  • dogberrys — a foolish constable in Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing.
  • doggerman — a sailor on a dogger
  • dognapper — Agent noun of dognap; one who dognaps.
  • dogrobber — an orderly of a navy or army officer
  • dogshores — the pieces of timber used to prop up a boat prior to its launch
  • doleritic — Of the nature of dolerite.
  • dollarize — to replace a country's currency with the US dollar
  • domineers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of domineer.
  • don river — a river flowing generally S from Tula in the Russian Federation in Europe, to the Sea of Azov. About 1200 miles (1930 km) long.
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