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4-letter words containing da

  • dans — a title of honor equivalent to master or sir: Dan Chaucer.
  • danu — the mother of the Tuatha De Danann: identified with the Welsh Don.
  • daps — a pair of plimsolls
  • darb — something excellent of its kind
  • dard — a member of any of the Indo-European peoples speaking a Dardic language
  • dare — If you do not dare to do something, you do not have enough courage to do it, or you do not want to do it because you fear the consequences. If you dare to do something, you do something which requires a lot of courage.
  • darg — a day's work
  • dari — the local name for the dialect of the Persian language spoken in Afghanistan
  • dark — When it is dark, there is not enough light to see properly, for example because it is night.
  • darn — If you darn something knitted or made of cloth, you mend a hole in it by sewing stitches across the hole and then weaving stitches in and out of them.
  • darr — (UK, dialect, Norfolk) A bird, the European black tern.
  • dart — If a person or animal darts somewhere, they move there suddenly and quickly.
  • dasd — Direct-Access Storage Device
  • dase — Obsolete form of daze.
  • dash — If you dash somewhere, you run or go there quickly and suddenly.
  • dasl — Datapoint's Advanced System Language. A cross between C and Pascal by Gene Hughes with custom features for Datapoint hardware (no stack). It is used internally by Datapoint.
  • dass — (archaic) To dare.
  • dast — Older Use. dare (def 1).
  • data — You can refer to information as data, especially when it is in the form of facts or statistics that you can analyse. In American English, data is usually a plural noun. In technical or formal British English, data is sometimes a plural noun, but at other times, it is an uncount noun.
  • date — A date is a specific time that can be named, for example a particular day or a particular year.
  • dato — the chief of any of certain Muslim tribes in the Philippine Islands
  • datu — dato.
  • datv — digitally assisted television: a technique in which special digital signals are transmitted with an analogue picture signal to assist the receiver to display the picture to the best advantage
  • daub — When you daub a substance such as mud or paint on something, you spread it on that thing in a rough or careless way.
  • daud — a lump or chunk of something
  • daut — to stroke, pet, or cuddle
  • daveDavid 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.
  • edac — error detection and correction
  • edam — a mild, hard, yellow cheese, produced in a round shape and coated with red wax.
  • edda — either of two old Icelandic literary works, one a collection of poems on mythical and religious subjects (or) erroneously attributed to Saemund Sigfusson (c1055–1133), the other a collection of ancient Scandinavian myths and legends, rules and theories of versification, poems, etc. (or) compiled and written in part by Snorri Sturluson (1179–1241).
  • esda — Electrostatic Deposition Analysis: a technique used to check the sequence in which a statement written in police custody was made. The chronology of the statement is arrived at by the examination of indentations on subsequent pages
  • irda — Infrared Data Association
  • juda — the fourth son of Jacob and Leah. Gen. 29:35.
  • ldap — Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
  • leda — Library of Efficient Data types and Algorithms
  • lmda — Labour Market Development Agreement
  • luda — former name of Dalian (def 1).
  • mdac — Microsoft Data Access Components
  • mrda — Mandy Rice-Davis Applies
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