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9-letter words containing s, i, d

  • crusading — campaigning
  • cuddlings — Plural form of cuddling.
  • cuirassed — Wearing a cuirass.
  • curbsides — Plural form of curbside.
  • cushioned — provided with cushions
  • cuspidate — having a cusp or cusps
  • cuspidors — Plural form of cuspidor.
  • custodial — Custodial means relating to keeping people in prison.
  • custodian — The custodian of an official building, a companies' assets, or something else valuable is the person who is officially in charge of it.
  • custodier — a custodian
  • custodies — Plural form of custody.
  • cylinders — Plural form of cylinder.
  • cystidean — any one of the order of fossil echinoderms Cystidea
  • cystidium — (in certain basidiomycetous fungi) one of the large, inflated, sterile cells growing between the basidia and usually projecting beyond them.
  • d'amboiseJacques [French zhahk] /French ʒɑk/ (Show IPA), (Joseph) born 1934, U.S. ballet dancer and choreographer.
  • dabchicks — Plural form of dabchick.
  • dacquoise — a cake with nut meringue layers and buttercream
  • dactylics — Plural form of dactylic.
  • dactylist — someone who writes poetry in dactyls
  • dadaistic — the style and techniques of a group of artists, writers, etc., of the early 20th century who exploited accidental and incongruous effects in their work and who programmatically challenged established canons of art, thought, morality, etc.
  • daffiness — silliness; craziness
  • daffodils — Plural form of daffodil.
  • dailiness — the quality or nature of being daily
  • daintiest — Superlative form of dainty.
  • daiquiris — Plural form of daiquiri.
  • daisy 201 — An early system on G-15.
  • daisy ham — a boned and smoked piece of pork from the pig's shoulder
  • dalhousie — 9th Earl of, title of George Ramsay. 1770–1838, British general; governor of the British colonies in Canada (1819–28)
  • daliesque — of, pertaining to, resembling, or characteristic of the surrealist art of Salvador Dali: giant advertising posters depicting Daliesque distortions of everyday objects.
  • dalmatics — Plural form of dalmatic.
  • daltonism — colour blindness, esp the confusion of red and green
  • damasking — Present participle of damask.
  • damasquin — decorate metal
  • damasus iSaint, pope a.d. 366–384.
  • dandifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dandify.
  • dandiness — Quality of being dandy.
  • darius ii — (Ochus) died 404 b.c, king of Persia 424–404 (son of Artaxerxes I).
  • darklings — in darkness
  • darkslide — Alternative form of dark slide.
  • darwinism — the theory of the origin of animal and plant species by evolution through a process of natural selection
  • darwinist — the Darwinian theory that species originate by descent, with variation, from parent forms, through the natural selection of those individuals best adapted for the reproductive success of their kind.
  • dashingly — In a dashing manner.
  • dashlight — a light illuminating the dashboard of an automobile, esp at night
  • dassiepis — (South African English) hyraceum: The solidified urine of a dassie, used medicinally, inter-alia, for epilepsy.
  • dataviews — Graphical user interface development software from V.I.Corporation, aimed at constructing platform-independent interactive views of dynamic data.
  • datelines — Plural form of dateline.
  • davis cup — an annual international lawn tennis championship for men's teams
  • dawsonite — a mineral that is made up of sodium and aluminium hydrous carbonate and occurs in crystalline form
  • day shift — a group of workers who work a shift during the daytime in an industry or occupation where a night shift or a back shift is also worked
  • day-lewis — C(ecil). 1904–72, British poet, critic, and (under the pen name Nicholas Blake) author of detective stories; poet laureate (1968–72)
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