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6-letter words containing t, d, i

  • 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.
  • demist — to free or become free of condensation through evaporation produced by a heater and/or blower
  • denti- — indicating a tooth
  • dentil — one of a set of small square or rectangular blocks evenly spaced to form an ornamental row, usually under a classical cornice on a building, piece of furniture, etc
  • dentin — the hard, dense, calcareous tissue forming the body of a tooth, under the enamel and surrounding the pulp canal
  • depict — To depict someone or something means to show or represent them in a work of art such as a drawing or painting.
  • desilt — To remove suspended silt from the water.
  • desist — If you desist from doing something, you stop doing it.
  • destin — Obsolete form of destiny.
  • detail — The details of something are its individual features or elements.
  • detain — When people such as the police detain someone, they keep them in a place under their control.
  • detick — to remove ticks from (an animal); free of ticks
  • dewitt — to hang unlawfully; to lynch
  • dhooti — a long loincloth worn by many Hindu men in India.
  • dhotis — Plural form of dhoti.
  • diatom — any microscopic unicellular alga of the phylum Bacillariophyta, occurring in marine or fresh water singly or in colonies, each cell having a cell wall made of two halves and impregnated with silica
  • dicast — (in ancient Athens) a juror in the popular courts chosen by lot from a list of citizens
  • dickty — high-class or stylish.
  • dicots — Plural form of dicot.
  • dictat — Misspelling of diktat.
  • dictum — A dictum is a formal statement made by someone who has authority.
  • didact — a person who is didactic
  • didn't — Didn't is the usual spoken form of 'did not'.
  • dieted — Simple past tense and past participle of diet.
  • dieter — food and drink considered in terms of its qualities, composition, and its effects on health: Milk is a wholesome article of diet.
  • digest — to convert (food) in the alimentary canal into absorbable form for assimilation into the system.
  • dights — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dight.
  • digits — a finger or toe.
  • diglot — bilingual.
  • diktat — a harsh, punitive settlement or decree imposed unilaterally on a defeated nation, political party, etc.
  • dilate — to make wider or larger; cause to expand.
  • dilute — to make (a liquid) thinner or weaker by the addition of water or the like.
  • dimate — (language)   Depot Installed Maintenance Automatic Test Equipment. A language for programming automatic test equipment. It Runs on the RCA 301.
  • dimity — a thin cotton fabric, white, dyed, or printed, woven with a stripe or check of heavier yarn.
  • dimout — a dimming or reduction of the night lighting, as in a city, to make it less easily visible, as to enemy aircraft
  • dimwit — a stupid or slow-thinking person.
  • dinant — a town in S Belgium, on the River Meuse below steep limestone cliffs: 11th-century citadel: famous in the Middle Ages for fine brassware, known as dinanderie: tourism, metalwork, biscuits. Pop: 12 719 (2004 est)
  • dinted — Simple past tense and past participle of dint.
  • diotic — pertaining to or affecting both ears; binaural.
  • dipmet — Diploma in Metallurgy
  • dipnet — Alt form dip net.
  • diquat — a yellow crystalline substance, C 12 H 12 Br 2 N 2 , used as a selective postemergence herbicide to control weeds on noncrop land and for aquatic weed control.
  • direct — to manage or guide by advice, helpful information, instruction, etc.: He directed the company through a difficult time.
  • direst — causing or involving great fear or suffering; dreadful; terrible: a dire calamity.
  • disect — Misspelling of dissect.
  • disert — (obsolete) eloquent.
  • distad — toward or at the distal end or part.
  • distal — situated away from the point of origin or attachment, as of a limb or bone; terminal. Compare proximal.
  • distil — (transitive) Subject a substance to distillation; .
  • distro — A distributor or distributed version, especially of Linux software or of webzines.
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