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9-letter words containing u, d, c

  • debauches — to corrupt by sensuality, intemperance, etc.; seduce.
  • debouched — Simple past tense and past participle of debouche.
  • debouches — to march out from a narrow or confined place into open country, as a body of troops: The platoon debouched from the defile into the plain.
  • decalogue — Ten Commandments
  • decaudate — to take off the tail of (an animal)
  • deceitful — If you say that someone is deceitful, you mean that they behave in a dishonest way by making other people believe something that is not true.
  • decennium — decade (sense 2)
  • dechunker — chunker
  • deciduate — having or characterized by a decidua.
  • deciduous — A deciduous tree or bush is one that loses its leaves in the autumn every year.
  • deckhouse — a houselike cabin on the deck of a ship
  • declivous — having a declining slope or gradient
  • declutter — to simplify or get rid of mess, disorder, complications, etc, from
  • decocture — the essence or liquor resulting from decoction
  • decoupage — the art or process of decorating a surface with shapes or illustrations cut from paper, card, etc
  • decoupled — Simple past tense and past participle of decouple.
  • decoupler — a person or device that disconnects parts that are joined
  • decouples — Separate, disengage, or dissociate (something) from something else.
  • decourous — Misspelling of decorous.
  • decubital — any position assumed by a patient when lying in bed.
  • decubitis — (medical) Inflammations cause by a reclined position of the body; it often refers to the complications of bed-ridden patients such as bed sores.
  • decubitus — the posture adopted when lying down
  • deculture — to deculturate.
  • decumbent — lying down or lying flat
  • decupling — Present participle of decuple.
  • decurions — Plural form of decurion.
  • decurrent — extending down the stem, esp (of a leaf) having the base of the blade extending down the stem as two wings
  • decursion — a military exercise performed by men bearing arms
  • decurtate — Shortened, curtailed.
  • decus cpp — An almost-ANSI C preprocessor by Martin Minow. It is shipped with X11R5 (contrib/util/cpp) because some systems don't have a working cpp. It runs on VMS (Vax C, Decus C), RSX-11M, RSTS/E, P/OS, RT11, A/UX and Apollo Domain/IX 9.6 and is highly portable.
  • decussate — to cross or cause to cross in the form of the letter X; intersect
  • deducible — to derive as a conclusion from something known or assumed; infer: From the evidence the detective deduced that the gardener had done it.
  • deducibly — in a deducible or conjecturable manner
  • deducting — Present participle of deduct.
  • deduction — A deduction is a conclusion that you have reached about something because of other things that you know to be true.
  • deductive — Deductive reasoning involves drawing conclusions logically from other things that are already known.
  • defocused — Simple past tense and past participle of defocus.
  • delicious — very enjoyable; delightful
  • delictual — (legal) Derived from a delict (analogous to a tort).
  • demiurgic — Philosophy. Platonism. the artificer of the world. (in the Gnostic and certain other systems) a supernatural being imagined as creating or fashioning the world in subordination to the Supreme Being, and sometimes regarded as the originator of evil.
  • demulcent — soothing; mollifying
  • denounced — Simple past tense and past participle of denounce.
  • denouncer — One who, or that which, denounces.
  • denounces — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of denounce.
  • depicture — (transitive) To make a picture of; to paint or depict.
  • deschutes — river in central and N Oreg., flowing from the Cascade Range north into the Columbia River: c. 250 mi (402 km)
  • destructo — a person who causes havoc or destruction
  • destructs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of destruct.
  • detumesce — (intransitive, of sexual organs) To leave the erect, sexually aroused state.
  • deucalion — the son of Prometheus and, with his wife Pyrrha, the only survivor on earth of a flood sent by Zeus (Deucalion's flood). Together, they were allowed to repopulate the world by throwing stones over their shoulders, which became men and women
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