5-letter words containing in
- din-8 — (hardware) An 8-pin round connector, sometimes used for EIA-232 serial communication when space is restricted, such as on laptop computers.
- dinah — Also, Douay Bible, Dina. the daughter of Jacob and Leah. Gen. 30:21.
- dinan — a town in NW France, in Brittany, on the estuary of the River Rance: medieval buildings, including town walls and castle: tourism, hosiery, cider: Pop: 10 953 (2008)
- dinar — any of various former coins of the Near East, especially gold coins issued by Islamic governments.
- dindu — Synonym of dindu nuffin.
- dined — to eat the principal meal of the day; have dinner.
- diner — a person who dines.
- dines — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dine.
- dinge — the condition of being dingy.
- dingo — a wolflike, wild dog, Canis familiaris dingo, of Australia, having a reddish- or yellowish-brown coat.
- dings — to cause surface damage to; dent: Flying gravel had dinged the car's fenders.
- dingy — of a dark, dull, or dirty color or aspect; lacking brightness or freshness.
- dinic — a medicine for vertigo
- dinka — a member of a tall, pastoral people of Sudan.
- dinks — Plural form of dink.
- dinky — Informal. small, unimportant, unimpressive, or shabby: We stayed in a dinky old hotel.
- dinna — (Scotland, Geordie) do not.
- dino- — terrible, dreadful
- dints — Plural form of dint.
- djing — The role of a DJ (disk jockey).
- djinn — any of a class of spirits, lower than the angels, capable of appearing in human and animal forms and influencing humankind for either good or evil.
- djins — jinn.
- do in — Informal. a burst of frenzied activity; action; commotion.
- doing — action; performance; execution: Your misfortune is not of my doing.
- doink — (US slang, humorous, transitive) To have sexual intercourse (with someone).
- dolin — Sir Anton [an-ton] /ˈæn tɒn/ (Show IPA), (Patrick Healey-Kay) 1904–83, English ballet dancer.
- drain — to withdraw or draw off (a liquid) gradually; remove slowly or by degrees, as by filtration: to drain oil from a crankcase.
- drina — a river in S Europe, flowing N along the part of the border between Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to the Sava River at Belgrade, Serbia. 285 miles (459 km) long.
- drink — to take water or other liquid into the mouth and swallow it; imbibe.
- dvina — Also called Western Dvina. Latvian Daugava. a river rising in the Valdai Hills in the W Russian Federation, flowing W through Byelorussia (Belarus) and Latvia to the Baltic Sea at Riga. About 640 miles (1030) long.
- dwine — (archaic except in Scotland and dialects) To wither, decline, pine away.
- dying — ceasing to live; approaching death; expiring: a dying man.
- edina — a city in SE Minnesota, near Minneapolis.
- edwin — MIT Scheme
- eking — Manage to support oneself or make a living with difficulty.
- eldin — fuel or firewood
- elfin — (with reference to a person) small and delicate, typically with an attractively mischievous or strange charm.
- elgin — a market town in NE Scotland, the administrative centre of Moray, on the River Lossie: ruined 13th-century cathedral: distilling, engineering. Pop: 20 829 (2001)
- elint — intelligence gathered by using electronic sensors to intercept electromagnetic signals, such as radio signals, from other countries
- engin — engineer
- eosin — A red fluorescent dye that is a bromine derivative of fluorescein, or one of its salts or other derivatives.
- ermin — Obsolete form of ermine.
- erwin — a masculine name: var. Irwin
- ettin — (dialectal, archaic, fantasy) A giant.
- exine — The decay-resistant outer coating of a pollen grain or spore. It typically bears a highly characteristic surface pattern that is used in palynology.
- exing — Present participle of ex.
- eying — Present participle of eye.
- ezine — Alternative spelling of e-zine.
- ezrin — (genetics) A human gene that encodes a cytoplasmic peripheral membrane protein serving as an intermediate between the plasma membrane and the actin cytoskeleton.
- fagin — (in Dickens' Oliver Twist) a villainous old man who trains and uses young boys as thieves.