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6-letter words containing s, e, i

  • cruise — A cruise is a holiday during which you travel on a ship or boat and visit a number of places.
  • cueist — a person skilled in cue sports; a snooker, billiards, or pool player
  • cuisse — a piece of armour for the thigh
  • curies — Plural form of curie.
  • cuties — Informal. a charmingly attractive or cute person, especially a girl or a young woman (often used as a form of address): Hi, cutie.
  • cyesis — pregnancy.
  • daises — a raised platform, as at the front of a room, for a lectern, throne, seats of honor, etc.
  • dasein — (philosophy) Being; especially the nature of being; existence, presence, hereness, suchness, essence.
  • dassie — another name for a hyrax, esp the rock hyrax
  • davies — Sir John. 1569–1626, English poet, author of Orchestra or a Poem of Dancing (1596) and the philosophical poem Nosce Teipsum (1599)
  • deasil — in the direction of the apparent course of the sun; clockwise
  • debits — Plural form of debit.
  • debris — Debris is pieces from something that has been destroyed or pieces of rubbish or unwanted material that are spread around.
  • decius — (Gaius Messius Quintus Trajanus Decius) a.d. c201–251, emperor of Rome 249–251.
  • deesis — a representation in Byzantine art of Christ enthroned and flanked by the Virgin Mary and St. John the Baptist, often found on an iconostasis.
  • defies — to challenge the power of; resist boldly or openly: to defy parental authority.
  • deices — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deice.
  • deigns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deign.
  • deimos — the smaller of the two satellites of Mars and the more distant from the planet. Approximate diameter: 13 km
  • deists — Plural form of deist.
  • deixis — the use or reference of a deictic word
  • delish — delicious
  • delist — If a company delists or if its shares are delisted, its shares are removed from the official list of shares that can be traded on the stock market.
  • delius — Frederick. 1862–1934, English composer, who drew inspiration from folk tunes and the sounds of nature. His works include the opera A Village Romeo and Juliet (1901), A Mass of Life (1905), and the orchestral variations Brigg Fair (1907)
  • demies — a foundation scholar at Magdalen College, Oxford: so called because such a scholar originally received half the allowance of a fellow.
  • demise — The demise of something or someone is their end or death.
  • demiss — submissive or humble
  • demist — to free or become free of condensation through evaporation produced by a heater and/or blower
  • denies — Refuse to admit the truth or existence of (something).
  • denims — Denims are casual trousers made of denim.
  • denise — a feminine name
  • dennis — C(larence) J(ames). 1876–1938, the poet of the Australian larrikin, esp in The Songs of a Sentimental Bloke (1915) and The Moods of Ginger Mick (1916)
  • dermis — the layer of skin just below the epidermis
  • derris — any East Indian leguminous woody climbing plant of the genus Derris, esp D. elliptica, whose roots yield the compound rotenone
  • desier — Eye dialect of desire.
  • design — When someone designs a garment, building, machine, or other object, they plan it and make a detailed drawing of it from which it can be built or made.
  • desilt — To remove suspended silt from the water.
  • desire — A desire is a strong wish to do or have something.
  • desist — If you desist from doing something, you stop doing it.
  • desmid — any freshwater green alga of the mainly unicellular family Desmidioideae, typically constricted into two symmetrical halves
  • dessin — (math) dessin d'enfant.
  • destin — Obsolete form of destiny.
  • devils — Plural form of devil.
  • devise — If you devise a plan, system, or machine, you have the idea for it and design it.
  • didies — diaper (def 1).
  • didoes — a mischievous trick; prank; antic.
  • dienes — Plural form of diene.
  • diesel — noting a machine or vehicle powered by a diesel engine: diesel locomotive.
  • diesis — double dagger.
  • digest — to convert (food) in the alimentary canal into absorbable form for assimilation into the system.
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