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9-letter words containing t, i, p, e

  • depletion — a depleting or being depleted
  • depletive — to decrease seriously or exhaust the abundance or supply of: The fire had depleted the game in the forest. Extravagant spending soon depleted his funds.
  • deporting — Present participle of deport.
  • deposited — to place for safekeeping or in trust, especially in a bank account: He deposited his paycheck every Friday.
  • depositor — A bank's depositors are the people who have accounts with that bank.
  • depositum — (finance, obsolete) A deposit.
  • depravity — Depravity is very dishonest or immoral behaviour.
  • depriment — Serving to depress.
  • desipient — silly; foolish
  • despiseth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of despise.
  • despiting — in spite of; notwithstanding.
  • despotism — Despotism is cruel and unfair government by a ruler or rulers who have a lot of power.
  • despotize — To behave like a despot.
  • dew point — the temperature at which water vapour in the air becomes saturated and water droplets begin to form
  • diapyetic — of or pertaining to diapyesis
  • diazotype — a print produced by the diazo process.
  • die-stamp — to produce words or decoration on (a surface) by using a steel die so that the printed images stand in relief
  • diet pill — a tablet or capsule containing chemical substances that aid in reducing or controlling body weight, usually by suppressing the appetite.
  • dioptrate — (of a compound eye) divided by a transverse line
  • dipeptide — a peptide that yields two amino acids on hydrolysis.
  • diphysite — a person who believes that in Christ two distinct natures, the human and the divine, existed together
  • diplomate — a person who has received a diploma, especially a doctor, engineer, etc., who has been certified as a specialist by a board within the appropriate profession.
  • diplotene — a late stage of prophase during meiosis, in which the chromatid pairs of the tetrads begin to separate and chiasmata can be seen.
  • dipterans — Plural form of dipteran.
  • dipterist — an expert on flies belonging to the order Diptera
  • dipterous — Entomology. belonging or pertaining to the order Diptera, comprising the houseflies, mosquitoes, and gnats, characterized by a single, anterior pair of membranous wings with the posterior pair reduced to small, knobbed structures.
  • dis pater — Dis.
  • disparate — distinct in kind; essentially different; dissimilar: disparate ideas.
  • disparted — Simple past tense and past participle of dispart.
  • dispeptic — Misspelling of dyspeptic.
  • disported — to divert or amuse (oneself).
  • disposest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of dispose.
  • disposeth — Archaic third-person singular form of dispose.
  • disputers — Plural form of disputer.
  • disrepute — bad repute; low regard; disfavor (usually preceded by in or into): Some literary theories have fallen into disrepute.
  • disrupted — Interrupt (an event, activity, or process) by causing a disturbance or problem.
  • disrupter — to cause disorder or turmoil in: The news disrupted their conference.
  • dissipate — to scatter in various directions; disperse; dispel.
  • distemper — Art. a technique of decorative painting in which glue or gum is used as a binder or medium to achieve a mat surface and rapid drying. (formerly) the tempera technique.
  • diterpene — (chemistry) any terpene formed from four isoprene units, and having twenty carbon atoms; includes vitamin A, the gibberellins, and various biologically active lactones such as quassin.
  • dolphinet — a female dolphin
  • dripstone — Architecture. a stone molding used as a drip.
  • duplexity — duplex apartment.
  • duplicate — a copy exactly like an original.
  • dyspeptic — pertaining to, subject to, or suffering from dyspepsia.
  • eclamptic — Of or pertaining to eclampsia.
  • ectropion — A condition, typically a consequence of advanced age, in which the eyelid is turned outward away from the eyeball.
  • ectropium — Ectropion.
  • empaestic — embossed
  • empathies — Plural form of empathy.
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