9-letter words containing t, i, d, n
- indicated — to be a sign of; betoken; evidence; show: His hesitation really indicates his doubt about the venture.
- indicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of indicate.
- indicator — a person or thing that indicates.
- indicting — (of a grand jury) to bring a formal accusation against, as a means of bringing to trial: The grand jury indicted him for murder.
- indiction — a proclamation made every 15 years in the later Roman Empire, fixing the valuation of property to be used as a basis for taxation.
- indictive — Proclaimed; declared; public.
- indigents — Plural form of indigent.
- indignant — feeling, characterized by, or expressing strong displeasure at something considered unjust, offensive, insulting, or base: indignant remarks; an indignant expression on his face.
- indignity — an injury to a person's dignity; slighting or contemptuous treatment; humiliating affront, insult, or injury.
- indigotic — indigo (def 5).
- indigotin — indigo blue (def 2).
- indraught — an inward flow or current, as of air or water.
- inductees — Plural form of inductee.
- inductile — not ductile; not pliable or yielding.
- inducting — to install in an office, benefice, position, etc., especially with formal ceremonies: The committee inducted her as president.
- induction — the act of inducing, bringing about, or causing: induction of the hypnotic state.
- inductive — of, relating to, or involving electrical induction or magnetic induction.
- inductors — Plural form of inductor.
- induement — The act of induing, or state of being indued; investment; endowment.
- indulgent — characterized by or showing indulgence; benignly lenient or permissive: an indulgent parent.
- indurated — to make hard; harden, as rock, tissue, etc.: Cold indurates the soil.
- indusiate — having an indusium.
- induviate — covered by induviae
- inerudite — Not erudite; unlearned; ignorant.
- inevident — Not evident; obscure.
- infarcted — a localized area of tissue, as in the heart or kidney, that is dying or dead, having been deprived of its blood supply because of an obstruction by embolism or thrombosis.
- inflected — to modulate (the voice).
- inflicted — to impose as something that must be borne or suffered: to inflict punishment.
- infracted — to break, violate, or infringe (a law, commitment, etc.).
- ingrafted — engraft.
- inhabited — having inhabitants; occupied; lived in or on: an inhabited island.
- inherited — to take or receive (property, a right, a title, etc.) by succession or will, as an heir: to inherit the family business.
- inhibited — overly restrained.
- initialed — of, relating to, or occurring at the beginning; first: the initial step in a process.
- initiated — to begin, set going, or originate: to initiate major social reforms.
- inkstands — Plural form of inkstand.
- inlighted — Lit up or lighted; illuminated.
- innovated — to introduce something new; make changes in anything established.
- insectoid — Insect-like.
- insolated — to expose to the sun's rays; treat by exposure to the sun's rays.
- inspected — Simple past tense and past participle of inspect.
- installed — Simple past tense and past participle of install.
- instanced — Simple past tense and past participle of instance.
- instarred — to set with or as if with stars.
- instilled — to infuse slowly or gradually into the mind or feelings; insinuate; inject: to instill courtesy in a child.
- insuetude — (archaic) The state or quality of being unaccustomed; absence of habit.
- insulated — to cover, line, or separate with a material that prevents or reduces the passage, transfer, or leakage of heat, electricity, or sound: to insulate an electric wire with a rubber sheath; to insulate a coat with down.
- intangled — Simple past tense and past participle of intangle.
- intefadeh — Alternative spelling of intifada.
- integrand — the expression to be integrated.