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9-letter words containing u, l, e

  • dentulous — having teeth
  • depluming — Present participle of deplume.
  • depollute — to eliminate, clean up, or decrease pollution in (an area).
  • depulping — Also called dental pulp. the inner substance of the tooth, containing arteries, veins, and lymphatic and nerve tissue that communicate with their respective vascular, lymph, and nerve systems.
  • deputable — able to be deputed
  • deshuffle — (signal processing) To restore shuffled data to its original ordered state.
  • designful — full of design or intention
  • desireful — Filled with desire; eager.
  • desultory — Something that is desultory is done in an unplanned and disorganized way, and without enthusiasm.
  • 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
  • devaluate — (transitive) To reduce in value.
  • devaluing — to deprive of value; reduce the value of.
  • deviceful — full of devices; inventive; cunning
  • deviously — departing from the most direct way; circuitous; indirect: a devious course.
  • dialogued — Simple past tense and past participle of dialogue.
  • dialogues — Plural form of dialogue.
  • diffluent — tending to flow off or away.
  • diffusely — to pour out and spread, as a fluid.
  • difluence — diffluence.
  • dilutable — capable of being diluted
  • dipperful — (US) As much as a dipper will hold; a cupful.
  • direfully — In a direful manner.
  • discluded — Simple past tense and past participle of disclude.
  • disfluent — lacking fluency in speech
  • disillude — to remove illusions from
  • dislustre — to lose or remove lustre
  • displumed — Simple past tense and past participle of displume.
  • dissolute — indifferent to moral restraints; given to immoral or improper conduct; licentious; dissipated.
  • disulfate — a salt of pyrosulfuric acid, as sodium disulfate, Na 2 S 2 O 7 .
  • disulfide — (in inorganic chemistry) a sulfide containing two atoms of sulfur, as carbon disulfide, CS 2 .
  • disvalued — Simple past tense and past participle of disvalue.
  • divulgate — to make publicly known; publish.
  • divulsive — Tending to tear or pull apart.
  • dolefully — sorrowful; mournful; melancholy: a doleful look on her face.
  • dolgellau — a market town and tourist centre in NW Wales, in Gwynedd. Pop: 2407 (2001)
  • dolled up — a small figure representing a baby or other human being, especially for use as a child's toy.
  • dollhouse — a miniature house the scale of children's dolls.
  • doodlebug — any of various small, squat vehicles.
  • double ax — an ax with a double-edged blade, frequently depicted in prehistoric decorative designs of the eastern Mediterranean region, especially in Minoan religious sites.
  • double up — twice as large, heavy, strong, etc.; twofold in size, amount, number, extent, etc.: a double portion; a new house double the size of the old one.
  • doubledayAbner, 1819–93, U.S. army officer; sometimes credited with inventing the modern game of baseball.
  • doubleton — a set of only two cards of the same suit in a hand as dealt: The other player held a doubleton.
  • doubtable — (uncommon) Capable of being doubted; doubtful; dubious; dubitable. See usage notes below.
  • doubtless — without doubt; certainly; surely; unquestionably.
  • doughlike — Resembling dough.
  • drawerful — an amount sufficient to fill a drawer: a drawerful of socks.
  • dreadfull — Archaic spelling of dreadful.
  • drunkenly — intoxicated; drunk.
  • drupelets — Plural form of drupelet.
  • du bellay — Joachim [French zhaw-a-keem] /French ʒɔ aˈkim/ (Show IPA), Bellay, Joachim du.
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