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8-letter words containing nd

  • dendrite — any of the short branched threadlike extensions of a nerve cell, which conduct impulses towards the cell body
  • dendroid — freely branching; arborescent; treelike
  • dendrons — Plural form of dendron.
  • depended — to rely; place trust (usually followed by on or upon): You may depend on the accuracy of the report.
  • depender — (programming) An agent that depends on another agent, the dependee; the subject of a dependency, a dependent (used in w agent-oriented programming).
  • desander — A desander is a device at the surface which removes very small particles from the drilling mud.
  • descends — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of descend.
  • desponds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of despond.
  • dew pond — a shallow pond, usually man-made, that is kept supplied with water by dew and condensation
  • diamonds — one of the four suits in an ordinary pack of cards bearing red lozenge-shapes symbols
  • disbands — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disband.
  • disbound — (of a book) having the binding torn or loose.
  • discandy — to melt or dissolve
  • disendow — to deprive (a church, school, etc.) of endowment.
  • distends — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of distend.
  • dividend — Mathematics. a number that is to be divided by a divisor.
  • dockhand — a dockworker.
  • dockland — the land or area surrounding a commercial port.
  • dorkland — an offensive name for Auckland
  • dortmund — a city in W Germany.
  • downland — An area of rolling downs, often grassy pasture over chalk or limestone.
  • downwind — in the direction toward which the wind is blowing: We coasted downwind.
  • dreibund — a triple alliance, esp that formed between Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy (1882–1915)
  • dromonds — Plural form of dromond.
  • drownded — Simple past tense and past participle of drownd.
  • drummondHenry, 1851–97, Scottish clergyman and writer.
  • dry land — terra firma, earth
  • dumfound — To confuse and bewilder.
  • duneland — a tract of land dominated by sand dunes, often bordering on a beach.
  • dvandvas — Plural form of dvandva.
  • dwindled — Simple past tense and past participle of dwindle.
  • dwindles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dwindle.
  • 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.
  • east end — a section of E London, England.
  • eastland — James O(liver) 1904–86, U.S. politician: senator 1941, 1943–78.
  • edmund i — a.d. 921?–946, English king 940–946.
  • effendis — Plural form of effendi.
  • elkhound — A large hunting dog of a Scandinavian breed with a shaggy gray coat.
  • emendals — funds put aside for repairs
  • emendate — (obsolete) emended, corrected, restored.
  • emending — Present participle of emend.
  • end date — day when sth finishes or closes
  • end line — American football: field marking
  • end user — consumer
  • end zone — In American football, an end zone is one of the areas at each end of the field that the ball must cross for a touchdown to be scored.
  • end-user — (job)   The person who uses a computer application, as opposed to those who developed or support it. The end-user may or may not know anything about computers, how they work, or what to do if something goes wrong. End-users do not usually have administrative responsibilities or privileges. End users are certain to have a different set of assumptions than the developers who created the application.
  • endamage — (archaic) To damage.
  • endameba — any of a genus (Endamoeba) of amoebas parasitic in invertebrates, as in the digestive tract of cockroaches and termites
  • endanger — Put (someone or something) at risk or in danger.
  • endarchy — a central government
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