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7-letter words containing da

  • qlambda — (language)   A LISP by Richard Gabriel and John McCarthy.
  • querida — Darling.
  • quondam — former; onetime: his quondam partner.
  • ramadan — the ninth month of the Muslim calendar. Compare Muslim calendar.
  • randall — a male given name.
  • rapidan — a river in N Virginia, flowing E from the Blue Ridge Mountains into the Rappahannock River: Civil War battle 1862.
  • rashida — a female given name: from a Swahili word meaning “righteous.”.
  • readapt — to adapt (a person or thing) again or (of a person or thing) to adapt again
  • rhondda — a city in Mid Glamorgan, in S Wales.
  • ridable — capable of being ridden, as a horse.
  • rigsdag — the former parliament of Denmark, consisting of an upper house and a lower house: replaced in 1953 by the unicameral Folketing.
  • riksdag — the parliament of Sweden, consisting of an upper house and a lower house.
  • rotunda — a round building, especially one with a dome.
  • rundale — (formerly) the name given, esp in Ireland and earlier in Scotland, to the system of land tenure in which each land-holder had several strips of land that were not contiguous
  • rwandan — a republic in central Africa, E of the Democratic Republic of the Congo: formerly comprising the N part of the Belgian trust territory of Ruanda-Urundi; became independent 1962. 10,169 sq. mi. (26,338 sq. km). Capital: Kigali.
  • s. dak. — South Dakota
  • sadaqat — zakat.
  • sandage — Allan R(ex) 1926–2010, U.S. astronomer: codiscoverer of the first quasar 1961.
  • sardana — a dance of the region of Catalonia, Spain, in which the dancers form a moving circle.
  • saudade — (in Portuguese folk culture) a deep emotional state of melancholic longing for a person or thing that is absent: the theme of saudade in literature and music.
  • scandal — a disgraceful or discreditable action, circumstance, etc.
  • sedalia — a city in central Missouri.
  • sedarim — a plural of Seder.
  • sedated — calm, quiet, or composed; undisturbed by passion or excitement: a sedate party; a sedate horse.
  • shaddai — the Almighty; God.
  • shahada — Islam. the Islamic profession of faith, “There is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is his messenger”: the first of the Pillars of Islam.
  • sladang — the Malayan tapir, Tapirus indicus
  • soldado — a soldier
  • someday — at an indefinite future time.
  • sondage — a deep trial trench for inspecting stratigraphy
  • spandau — a district of Berlin, in E Germany: site of prison for Nazi war criminals.
  • subadar — a provincial governor of the Mogul empire.
  • sudamen — a small, whitish vesicle in the skin formed due to retention of fluid, particularly sweat, in the epidermis
  • sudanic — (especially in former systems of classification) of or relating to a residual category of African languages including most of the non-Bantu and non-Hamitic languages of northern and central Africa: most now reclassified as part of the Niger-Congo subfamily.
  • sudaria — (in ancient Rome) a cloth, usually of linen, for wiping the face; handkerchief.
  • sudatio — (in an ancient Roman bath) a chamber, between the sudatorium and the calidarium, where sweat was removed.
  • sundari — one of two varieties of mangrove tree, Heritiera fomes or Heritiera littoralis, native to India, particularly found in the Sudarban jungles
  • sundays — on Sundays.
  • synodal — an assembly of ecclesiastics or other church delegates, convoked pursuant to the law of the church, for the discussion and decision of ecclesiastical affairs; ecclesiastical council.
  • tag day — a day on which contributions to a fund are solicited, each contributor receiving a tag.
  • tanadar — a revenue official of the East India company
  • tasaday — a member of a very small group of forest-dwelling people of southern Mindanao.
  • tidally — of, pertaining to, characterized by, or subject to tides: a tidal current.
  • tindale — William Tyndale
  • to date — a particular month, day, and year at which some event happened or will happen: July 4, 1776 was the date of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
  • tostada — a tortilla fried until crisp and usually topped with a variety of ingredients, as shredded meat or chicken, refried beans, lettuce, tomatoes, and cheese.
  • trianda — a town on the Greek island of Rhodes, in the Aegean Sea: built on the site of ancient Ialysus.
  • tridarn — a 17th-century sideboard with three levels
  • tuesday — the third day of the week, following Monday.
  • tyndaleWilliam, c1492–1536, English religious reformer, translator of the Bible into English, and martyr.
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