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9-letter words containing s, i, d, e, b

  • derisible — subject to or deserving of derision; ridiculous
  • described — to tell or depict in written or spoken words; give an account of: He described the accident very carefully.
  • describer — A person who describes.
  • describes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of describe.
  • desirable — Something that is desirable is worth having or doing because it is useful, necessary, or popular.
  • desirably — worth having or wanting; pleasing, excellent, or fine: a desirable apartment.
  • devisable — (of property, esp realty) capable of being transferred by will
  • diabesity — Used to refer to a form of diabetes that typically develops in later life and is associated with being obese.
  • diabetics — Plural form of diabetic.
  • diatribes — Plural form of diatribe.
  • disableds — physically or mentally impaired, injured, or incapacitated.
  • disablers — Plural form of disabler.
  • disabused — Simple past tense and past participle of disabuse.
  • disabuses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disabuse.
  • disbanded — to break up or dissolve (an organization): They disbanded the corporation.
  • disbarred — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
  • disbelief — the inability or refusal to believe or to accept something as true.
  • disbodied — (archaic) disembodied.
  • disbudded — Simple past tense and past participle of disbud.
  • disburden — to remove a burden from; rid of a burden.
  • disbursed — Pay out (money from a fund).
  • disburser — One who disburses money.
  • disburses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disburse.
  • discumber — (archaic, transitive) To free from that which cumbers or impedes; to disencumber.
  • disembark — to go ashore from a ship.
  • disembody — to divest (a soul, spirit, etc.) of a body.
  • disenable — to deprive of ability; make unable; prevent.
  • disentomb — to remove from the tomb; disinter.
  • dismember — to deprive of limbs; divide limb from limb: The ogre dismembered his victims before he ate them.
  • disobeyed — Simple past tense and past participle of disobey.
  • disobeyer — One who disobeys.
  • disoblige — to refuse or neglect to oblige; act contrary to the desire or convenience of; fail to accommodate.
  • dissemble — to give a false or misleading appearance to; conceal the truth or real nature of: to dissemble one's incompetence in business.
  • dissembly — the dismantling or separation of an assembly
  • disturbed — marked by symptoms of mental illness: a disturbed personality.
  • disturber — Someone or something that disturbs; a disrupter.
  • divisable — Misspelling of divisible.
  • divisible — capable of being divided.
  • dubieties — Plural form of dubiety.
  • dubliners — a collection of short stories (1914) by James Joyce.
  • firebirds — Plural form of firebird.
  • furbished — to restore to freshness of appearance or good condition (often followed by up): to furbish a run-down neighborhood; to furbish up one's command of a foreign language.
  • hybridise — to cause to produce hybrids; cross.
  • inscribed — to address or dedicate (a book, photograph, etc.) informally to a person, especially by writing a brief personal note in or on it.
  • leafbirds — Plural form of leafbird.
  • libeskind — Daniel. born 1946, US architect, born in Poland. Based in Berlin, he designed the Jewish Museum there (1999), the Imperial War Museum in Manchester (2000), and the "Freedom Tower" that will replace the World Trade Center in New York
  • lovebirds — any of various small parrots, especially of the genus Agapornis, of Africa, noted for the affection shown one another and often kept as pets.
  • lyrebirds — Plural form of lyrebird.
  • mandibles — Plural form of mandible.
  • mobilised — Simple past tense and past participle of mobilise.
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