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8-letter words containing t, i, r, e, d

  • dirtside — (science fiction) On the surface of a planet or moon (i.e. not in space).
  • disaster — a calamitous event, especially one occurring suddenly and causing great loss of life, damage, or hardship, as a flood, airplane crash, or business failure.
  • discreet — judicious in one's conduct or speech, especially with regard to respecting privacy or maintaining silence about something of a delicate nature; prudent; circumspect.
  • discrete — apart or detached from others; separate; distinct: six discrete parts.
  • disenter — Obsolete form of disinter.
  • disheart — Obsolete form of dishearten.
  • disherit — to disinherit.
  • disinter — to take out of the place of interment; exhume; unearth.
  • disputer — One who disputes.
  • disrated — Simple past tense and past participle of disrate.
  • distress — great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; acute physical or mental suffering; affliction; trouble.
  • distrest — Obsolete form of distressed.
  • dithered — Simple past tense and past participle of dither.
  • ditherer — a trembling; vibration.
  • diuretic — increasing the volume of the urine excreted, as by a medicinal substance.
  • diverted — to turn aside or from a path or course; deflect.
  • diverter — to turn aside or from a path or course; deflect.
  • dniester — a river in the SW Russian Federation in Europe, flowing SE from the Carpathian Mountains to the Black Sea. About 875 miles (1410 km) long.
  • doctrine — a particular principle, position, or policy taught or advocated, as of a religion or government: Catholic doctrines; the Monroe Doctrine.
  • dolerite — a coarse-grained variety of basalt.
  • dormient — sleeping; dormant.
  • driblets — Plural form of driblet.
  • driftage — the action or an amount of drifting.
  • drifters — Plural form of drifter.
  • driftnet — Alternative spelling of drift net.
  • drinketh — Archaic third-person singular form of drink.
  • drive at — to send, expel, or otherwise cause to move by force or compulsion: to drive away the flies; to drive back an attacking army; to drive a person to desperation.
  • durative — noting or pertaining to a verb aspect expressing incomplete or continued action. Beat and walk are durative in contrast to strike and step.
  • eat dirt — any foul or filthy substance, as mud, grime, dust, or excrement.
  • editress — a woman employed in the work of editing.
  • elaterid — any of the beetles constituting the widely distributed family Elateridae (click beetles). The group includes the wireworms and certain fireflies
  • eldritch — Weird and sinister or ghostly.
  • elytroid — like an elytron
  • eradiate — (botany) Said of several types of capitulum that do not have petal-like florets.
  • ergatoid — a wingless, worker-like ant with sexual capability
  • eupatrid — One well born, or of noble birth.
  • fidgeter — a person who fidgets
  • filtered — With a filter (e.g., a cigarette).
  • fixtured — Simple past tense and past participle of fixture.
  • frighted — Simple past tense and past participle of fright.
  • gaitered — wearing gaiters
  • gradient — the degree of inclination, or the rate of ascent or descent, in a highway, railroad, etc.
  • hardiest — capable of enduring fatigue, hardship, exposure, etc.; sturdy; strong: hardy explorers of northern Canada.
  • heredity — the transmission of genetic characters from parents to offspring: it is dependent upon the segregation and recombination of genes during meiosis and fertilization and results in the genesis of a new individual similar to others of its kind but exhibiting certain variations resulting from the particular mix of genes and their interactions with the environment.
  • hotwired — Simple past tense and past participle of hotwire.
  • idolater — Also, idolist [ahyd-l-ist] /ˈaɪd l ɪst/ (Show IPA). a worshiper of idols.
  • imparted — Simple past tense and past participle of impart.
  • imported — to bring in (merchandise, commodities, workers, etc.) from a foreign country for use, sale, processing, reexport, or services.
  • indenter — to form deep recesses in: The sea indents the coast.
  • indentor — to form deep recesses in: The sea indents the coast.
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