4-letter words containing d
- daut — to stroke, pet, or cuddle
- dave — David Warren ("Dave") 1920–2012, U.S. jazz pianist and composer.
- davy — Sir Humphry. 1778–1829, English chemist who isolated sodium, magnesium, chlorine, and other elements and suggested the electrical nature of chemical combination. He invented the Davy lamp
- dawd — a reverberating blow or punch
- dawg — Eye dialect of dog8; also 'hound dawg'.
- dawk — transportation by relays of people or horses, especially in the East Indies.
- dawn — Dawn is the time of day when light first appears in the sky, just before the sun rises.
- daws — jackdaw.
- dawt — (Scottish) To fondle or caress.
- daye — Archaic spelling of day.
- days — during the day, esp regularly
- daze — If someone is in a daze, they are feeling confused and unable to think clearly, often because they have had a shock or surprise.
- dazy — In a dazed condition.
- dbcp — a pesticide, CH2BrCHBrCH2Cl, thought to cause sterility
- dbcs — (character) (IBM) double-byte character set. A character set that uses 16 bits to represent a character.
- dbib — Douay Bible
- dbms — database management system
- dbpl — (language, database) A procedural language with relational database constructs. A successor to Pascal/R and Modula/R.
- dbst — Direct Broadcast Satellite Television
- dbst — Direct Broadcast Satellite Television
- dbxl — A dBASE-like interpreter/language for MS-DOS from WordTech, Orinda, CA.
- dcac — Domestic Communications Assistance Center
- dcdl — Digital Control Design Language. A language for simulating computer systems.
- dcis — ductal carcinoma in situ
- dcmg — Dame Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
- dcms — Department for Culture, Media, and Sport
- dcom — Distributed Component Object Model
- dcvo — Dame Commander of the Royal Victorian Order
- ddif — Digital Document Interchange Format. A CDA specification for representing compound documents in revisable format; a DEC standard for document encoding.
- ddos — distributed denial of service: a method of attacking a computer system by flooding it with so many messages that it is obliged to shut down
- ddsc — Doctor of Dental Science
- de-9 — (hardware) The standard 9-pin D-shell connector used for EIA-232 serial communication. DE-9 is a common alternative to DB-25, especially on personal computers.
- dead — A person, animal, or plant that is dead is no longer living.
- deaf — Someone who is deaf is unable to hear anything or is unable to hear very well.
- deak — Ferenc (ˈferents). 1803–76, Hungarian statesman: minister of justice following the 1848 Hungarian uprising. The Austro-Hungarian dual monarchy was largely his creation
- deal — If you say that you need or have a great deal of or a good deal of a particular thing, you are emphasizing that you need or have a lot of it.
- dean — A dean is an important official at a university or college.
- dear — You use dear to describe someone or something that you feel affection for.
- deas — (Scotland) Alternative form of dais.
- debe — a tin
- debs — Eugene Victor. 1855–1926, US labour leader; five times Socialist presidential candidate (1900–20)
- debt — A debt is a sum of money that you owe someone.
- dec. — Dec. is a written abbreviation for December.
- decd — deceased
- dece — great, wonderful.
- deck — A deck on a vehicle such as a bus or ship is a lower or upper area of it.
- deco — of or having to do with art deco
- dect — Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications
- deed — A deed is something that is done, especially something that is very good or very bad.
- deef — (obsolete, or, dialectal) deaf.