9-letter words containing r, o, d
- crowdedly — In a crowded manner.
- crowdfund — To fund (a project) by having many individuals pool their money together, usually via the Internet.
- crownland — a large administrative division of the former empire of Austria-Hungary
- crude oil — Crude oil is oil in its natural state before it has been processed or refined.
- crusadoes — Plural form of crusado.
- cuckoldry — the act of making someone's husband a cuckold.
- cupboards — Plural form of cupboard.
- cupboardy — (rare) Cupboardlike: for example small, fusty or poorly lit.
- cupholder — a competitor who has won or successfully defended a specific cup, trophy, championship, etc.; champion.
- curandero — a male healer or shaman in Hispanic-America
- cuspidors — Plural form of cuspidor.
- cusswords — Plural form of cussword.
- custodier — a custodian
- cyprinoid — of, relating to, or belonging to the Cyprinoidea, a large suborder of teleost fishes including the cyprinids, characins, electric eels, and loaches
- d-horizon — a stratum, as of rock, sometimes underlying the C-horizon
- dado rail — a moulding at about waist height on an interior wall, used for decoration and to protect the wall
- dairy cow — a cow which is used to produce milk
- damnatory — threatening or occasioning condemnation
- damourite — (mineral) A kind of muscovite, or potash mica, containing water.
- dampproof — resistant to dampness or the effects of dampness.
- dancegoer — a person who attends dances or dance performances.
- dangerous — If something is dangerous, it is able or likely to hurt or harm you.
- dankworth — Sir John (Philip William). 1927–2010, British jazz composer, bandleader, and saxophonist: married to Cleo Laine
- dannebrog — the Danish flag
- darkhorse — Having the character of a dark horse.
- darkrooms — Plural form of darkroom.
- darnation — Alternative form of tarnation.
- dartboard — A dartboard is a circular board with numbers on it which is used as the target in a game of darts.
- dartmouth — a port in SW England, in S Devon: Royal Naval College (1905). Pop: 5512 (2001)
- dashboard — The dashboard in a car is the panel facing the driver's seat where most of the instruments and switches are.
- data fork — Macintosh file system
- date from — If something dates from a particular time, it started or was made at that time.
- davenport — a tall narrow desk with a slanted writing surface and drawers at the side
- day labor — workers hired on a daily basis only, especially unskilled labor.
- dayflower — any of various tropical and subtropical plants of the genus Commelina, having jointed creeping stems, narrow pointed leaves, and blue or purplish flowers which wilt quickly: family Commelinaceae
- dayworker — a person who works during the daytime
- de forest — Lee. 1873–1961, US inventor of telegraphic, telephonic, and radio equipment: patented the first triode valve (1907)
- de moivre — Abraham [a-bra-am] /a braˈam/ (Show IPA), 1667–1754, French mathematician in England.
- de morgan — Augustus, 1806–71, English mathematician and logician.
- de varona — Donna, born 1947, U.S. swimmer.
- dead drop — a prearranged secret spot where one espionage agent leaves a message or material for another agent to pick up.
- deaerator — a piece of apparatus that extracts a gas from a liquid
- dear john — a letter from a woman informing her boyfriend or fiancé that she is ending their relationship or informing her husband that she wants a divorce: Nothing is worse for a soldier's morale than getting a Dear John.
- death row — If someone is on death row, they are in the part of a prison which contains the cells for criminals who have been sentenced to death.
- debonaire — charming and sophisticated
- decachord — a ten-stringed musical instrument
- decameron — a collection of a hundred tales by Boccaccio (published 1353), presented as stories told by a group of Florentines to while away ten days during a plague
- deceleron — (on a fixed-wing aircraft) a type of aileron that enables the aircraft to have a degree of control when it goes into a roll
- deceptory — inclined to deceive
- decimator — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.