0%

9-letter words containing s, c, o, l, d, i

  • acid soil — a soil that gives a pH reaction of below about 6, found esp in cool moist areas where soluble bases are leached away
  • acidulous — rather sour
  • caudillos — Plural form of caudillo.
  • chilidogs — Plural form of chilidog.
  • chilopods — Plural form of chilopod.
  • chlorides — Plural form of chloride.
  • cloudiest — Superlative form of cloudy.
  • cnidocils — Plural form of cnidocil.
  • cold fish — If you say that someone is a cold fish, you think that they are unfriendly and unemotional.
  • colletids — Plural form of colletid.
  • colliders — Plural form of collider.
  • colonised — to establish a colony in; settle: England colonized Australia.
  • corydalis — any erect or climbing plant of the N temperate genus Corydalis, having finely-lobed leaves and spurred yellow or pinkish flowers: family Fumariaceae
  • custodial — Custodial means relating to keeping people in prison.
  • decapolis — a league of ten cities, including Damascus, in the northeast of ancient Palestine: established in 63 bc by Pompey and governed by Rome
  • declivous — having a declining slope or gradient
  • delicious — very enjoyable; delightful
  • diastolic — (of blood pressure) indicating the arterial pressure during the interval between heartbeats.
  • diclinous — (of flowering plants) bearing unisexual flowers
  • diglossic — the widespread existence within a society of sharply divergent formal and informal varieties of a language each used in different social contexts or for performing different functions, as the existence of Katharevusa and Demotic in modern Greece.
  • disclosed — Simple past tense and past participle of disclose.
  • discloser — to make known; reveal or uncover: to disclose a secret.
  • discloses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disclose.
  • discoboli — Plural form of discobolus.
  • discoidal — Having the flat, circular shape of a disc or a quoit.
  • discology — the study of gramophone records
  • discolors — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of discolor.
  • discolour — Alternative spelling of discolor.
  • dishcloth — a cloth for use in washing dishes; dishrag.
  • dishclout — a cloth for use in washing dishes; dishrag.
  • dislocate — to put out of place; put out of proper relative position; displace: The glacier dislocated great stones. The earthquake dislocated several buildings.
  • dissocial — disinclined to or unsuitable for society; unsocial.
  • domiciles — Plural form of domicile.
  • dropsical — of, like, or affected with dropsy.
  • glucoside — any of an extensive group of compounds that yield glucose and some other substance or substances when treated with a dilute acid or decomposed by a ferment or enzyme.
  • glycoside — any of the class of compounds that yield a sugar and an aglycon upon hydrolysis.
  • gold disc — (in Britain) an album certified to have sold 250 000 copies or a single certified to have sold 500 000 copies
  • goldstick — a gilt rod carried by the colonel of the Life Guards or the captain of the gentlemen-at-arms
  • helicoids — Plural form of helicoid.
  • idiolects — Plural form of idiolect.
  • ironclads — Plural form of ironclad.
  • localised — localisation
  • lodicules — Plural form of lodicule.
  • ludicrous — causing laughter because of absurdity; provoking or deserving derision; ridiculous; laughable: a ludicrous lack of efficiency.
  • lycopsids — Plural form of lycopsid.
  • nucleoids — Plural form of nucleoid.
  • rockslide — a fall of rocks down a hillside
  • schofield — John McAllister [muh-kal-i-ster] /məˈkæl ɪ stər/ (Show IPA), 1831–1906, U.S. general.
  • schoolkid — a child who attends school
  • scoldings — the action of a person who scolds; a rebuke; reproof: I got a scolding for being late again.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with S-C-O-L-D-I. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in S-C-O-L-D-I to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?