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9-letter words containing s, i, e, r, a

  • disagreed — to fail to agree; differ: The conclusions disagree with the facts. The theories disagree in their basic premises.
  • disagreer — One who disagrees.
  • disagrees — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disagree.
  • disappear — to cease to be seen; vanish from sight.
  • disasters — Plural form of disaster.
  • disattire — (transitive) To undress.
  • disbarred — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
  • discarded — to cast aside or dispose of; get rid of: to discard an old hat.
  • discarder — One who, or that which, discards.
  • discharge — to relieve of a charge or load; unload: to discharge a ship.
  • discreate — to reduce to nothing; annihilate.
  • disembark — to go ashore from a ship.
  • disenamor — to disillusion; disenchant (usually used in the passive and followed by of or with): He was disenamored of working in the city.
  • disgraced — the loss of respect, honor, or esteem; ignominy; shame: the disgrace of criminals.
  • disgracer — One who disgraces.
  • disgraces — Plural form of disgrace.
  • dishwater — water in which dishes are, or have been, washed.
  • disnature — to deprive (something) of its proper nature or appearance; make unnatural.
  • disparage — to speak of or treat slightingly; depreciate; belittle: Do not disparage good manners.
  • disparate — distinct in kind; essentially different; dissimilar: disparate ideas.
  • disparted — Simple past tense and past participle of dispart.
  • dispauper — to divest of the status of a person having the privileges of a pauper, as of public support or of legal rights as a pauper.
  • dispersal — The action or process of distributing things or people over a wide area.
  • displacer — a person or thing that displaces.
  • displayer — One who, or that which, displays.
  • dispraise — to speak of as undeserving or unworthy; censure; disparage.
  • disranged — Simple past tense and past participle of disrange.
  • disregard — to pay no attention to; leave out of consideration; ignore: Disregard the footnotes.
  • disrepair — the condition of needing repair; an impaired or neglected state.
  • dissuader — One who dissuades.
  • distaffer — a woman, especially in a field or place usually or generally dominated by men: the first distaffer to have a seat on the stock exchange.
  • distraite — (of a woman) inattentive because of distracting worries, fears, etc.; absent-minded.
  • draglines — Plural form of dragline.
  • drainages — Plural form of drainage.
  • drainless — inexhaustible.
  • dramatise — to put into a form suitable for acting on a stage.
  • draperies — coverings, hangings, clothing, etc., of fabric, especially as arranged in loose, graceful folds.
  • dreamiest — of the nature of or characteristic of dreams; visionary.
  • dreariest — Superlative form of dreary.
  • driveways — Plural form of driveway.
  • dysmetria — the inability to conform muscular action to desired movements because of faulty judgment of distance.
  • earliness — in or during the first part of a period of time, a course of action, a series of events, etc.: early in the year.
  • earpieces — Plural form of earpiece.
  • earthrise — the rising of the earth above the horizon of the moon or other celestial body, viewed from that body's surface or from a spacecraft orbiting it.
  • eavesdrip — the falling or dripping of rainwater from the eaves of a building
  • ekphrasis — (rhetoric) A clear, intense, self-contained argument or pictorial description of an object, especially of an artwork.
  • emigrants — Plural form of emigrant.
  • emigrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of emigrate.
  • ensnaring — Present participle of ensnare.
  • eparchies — Plural form of eparchy.
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