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9-letter words containing s, a, c, d

  • misplaced — to put in a wrong place.
  • mosaicked — a picture or decoration made of small, usually colored pieces of inlaid stone, glass, etc.
  • muscadine — a grape, Vitis rotundifolia, of the southern U.S., having dull purple, thick-skinned musky fruit and being the origin of many grape varieties.
  • muscavado — muscovado.
  • muscovado — raw or unrefined sugar, obtained from the juice of the sugar cane by evaporating and draining off the molasses.
  • mustached — Having a mustache.
  • neckbands — Plural form of neckband.
  • nonsacred — Not sacred.
  • notecards — An ambitious hypertext system developed at Xerox PARC, "designed to support the task of transforming a chaotic collection of unrelated thoughts into an integrated, orderly interpretation of ideas and their interconnections".
  • oceanside — a city in SW California.
  • oldcastle — Sir John (Lord Cobham) 1377–1417, English martyr: leader of a Lollard conspiracy; executed for treason and heresy; model for Shakespeare's Falstaff.
  • opalesced — Simple past tense and past participle of opalesce.
  • osculated — Simple past tense and past participle of osculate.
  • ostracods — Plural form of ostracod.
  • outcasted — Simple past tense and past participle of outcaste.
  • podcaster — a digital audio or video file or recording, usually part of a themed series, that can be downloaded from a website to a media player or computer: Download or subscribe to daily, one-hour podcasts of our radio show.
  • practised — skilled or expert; proficient through practice or experience: a practiced hand at politics.
  • purchased — to acquire by the payment of money or its equivalent; buy.
  • push-card — punchboard.
  • quicksand — a bed of soft or loose sand saturated with water and having considerable depth, yielding under weight and therefore tending to suck down any object resting on its surface.
  • racecards — Plural form of racecard.
  • radiocast — a radiobroadcast.
  • radionics — a dowsing technique using a pendulum to detect the energy fields that are emitted by all forms of matter
  • rascaldom — the domain of rascals, a group of rascals
  • reclassed — a number of persons or things regarded as forming a group by reason of common attributes, characteristics, qualities, or traits; kind; sort: a class of objects used in daily living.
  • reductase — any enzyme acting as a reducing agent.
  • rhapsodic — extravagantly enthusiastic; ecstatic.
  • rickstand — a platform on which to put or make a rick or haystack
  • rudaceous — (of conglomerate, breccia, and similar rocks) composed of coarse-grained material
  • sachemdom — the office of a sachem
  • sad-faced — having a face characterized by or expressing sorrow.
  • samoyedic — of or relating to the Samoyed people or languages.
  • sand crab — any of several crabs that live on sandy beaches, as the ghost crab or mole crab.
  • sand jack — any of a number of containers of sand driven beneath a hull about to be launched as a temporary support and then drained of sand so as to let the hull down onto the launching cradle.
  • sand-cast — to produce (a casting) by pouring molten metal into sand molds.
  • sandcrack — a perpendicular fissure in some part of the wall of an animal's hoof, esp. of a horse, often caused by sandy soil
  • sarcodine — belonging or pertaining to the protist phylum Sarcodina, comprising protozoa that move and capture food by forming pseudopodia.
  • sash cord — a cord for connecting a vertically sliding window sash with a counterweight.
  • scabicide — Also, scabicidal. destructive to the organisms causing scabies.
  • scablands — rough, barren, volcanic topography with thin soils and little vegetation.
  • scaldfish — a small European flatfish, Arnoglossus laterna, covered with large fragile scales: family Bothidae
  • scaldhead — a person's scalp that is diseased with ringworm or another similar affliction
  • scaldship — the office of a scald or an ancient Scandinavian poet or bard
  • scaledown — a reduction in size, quantity, or activity according to a fixed scale or proportion: a scaledown of military expenditures.
  • scalloped — Scalloped objects are decorated with a series of small curves along the edges.
  • scamander — ancient name of the river Menderes.
  • scampered — to run or go hastily or quickly.
  • scaphopod — any mollusk of the class Scaphopoda, comprising the tooth shells.
  • scaraboid — of, relating to, or resembling a scarabaeid
  • scarehead — a headline in exceptionally large type. Compare screamer (def 4).
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