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8-letter words containing and

  • coupland — Douglas. born 1961, Canadian novelist and journalist; novels include Generation X (1991), Girlfriend in a Coma (1998), and City of Glass (2000)
  • courland — a region of Latvia, between the Gulf of Riga and the Lithuanian border
  • cournand — André (Frederic). 1895–1988, US physician, born in France: shared the 1956 Nobel prize for physiology or medicine for his work on heart catheterization
  • cowhands — Plural form of cowhand.
  • crandallPrudence, 1803–90, U.S. educator and civil-rights activist.
  • cropland — an area of land on which crops are grown
  • crosland — Anthony. 1918–77, British Labour politician and socialist theorist, author of The Future of Socialism (1957)
  • cryptand — (chemistry) any of a class of polycyclic compounds related to the crown ethers, having three chains attached at two nitrogen atoms.
  • dab hand — In British English, if you are a dab hand at something, you are very good at doing it.
  • damavand — highest peak of the Elburz Mountains, N Iran: 18,934 ft (5,771 m)
  • dandered — Simple past tense and past participle of dander.
  • dandling — Present participle of dandle.
  • dandriff — Archaic spelling of dandruff.
  • dandruff — Dandruff is small white pieces of dead skin in someone's hair, or fallen from someone's hair.
  • dandyish — a man who is excessively concerned about his clothes and appearance; a fop.
  • dandyism — a man who is excessively concerned about his clothes and appearance; a fop.
  • deckhand — A deckhand is a person who does the cleaning and other work on the deck of a ship.
  • demanded — to ask for with proper authority; claim as a right: He demanded payment of the debt.
  • demander — One who demands.
  • desander — A desander is a device at the surface which removes very small particles from the drilling mud.
  • disbands — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disband.
  • discandy — to melt or dissolve
  • dockhand — a dockworker.
  • dockland — the land or area surrounding a commercial port.
  • dorkland — an offensive name for Auckland
  • downland — An area of rolling downs, often grassy pasture over chalk or limestone.
  • dry land — terra firma, earth
  • duneland — a tract of land dominated by sand dunes, often bordering on a beach.
  • dvandvas — Plural form of dvandva.
  • ear band — a small ornament worn on the rim of the ear, shaped so as to grip the rim gently instead of piercing or squeezing it.
  • eastland — James O(liver) 1904–86, U.S. politician: senator 1941, 1943–78.
  • euroland — also Eurozone
  • expanded — Being or having been enlarged, extended, or broadened, in particular.
  • expander — One who expands; something that expands.
  • fahlband — (geology) A stratum in crystalline rock that contains metallic sulfides.
  • falkland — of or relating to the Falkland Islands
  • fandango — a lively Spanish or Spanish-American dance in triple time, performed by a man and woman playing castanets.
  • farmhand — a person who works on a farm, especially a hired worker; hired hand.
  • farmland — land under cultivation or capable of being cultivated: to protect valuable farmland from erosion.
  • fenlands — Plural form of fenland.
  • filander — a former name for the pademelon, a small wallaby of the genus Thylogale
  • filmland — filmdom.
  • fireband — A band or bond forged by fire.
  • flanders — a medieval country in W Europe, extending along the North Sea from the Strait of Dover to the Scheldt River: the corresponding modern regions include the provinces of East Flanders and West Flanders in W Belgium, and the adjacent parts of N France and SW Netherlands.
  • flatland — a region that lacks appreciable topographic relief.
  • folkland — a former type of land tenure
  • forehand — (in tennis, squash, etc.) of, relating to, or noting a stroke made from the same side of the body as that of the hand holding the racket, paddle, etc. Compare backhand (def 5).
  • foreland — a cape, headland, or promontory.
  • forstand — (transitive) To stand against; oppose; withstand.
  • forzando — sforzando
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