| 1105 | daring | adj. | Brave. |
| 1106 | darkling | adv. | Blindly. |
| 1107 | Darwinism | n. | The doctrine that natural selection has been the prime cause of evolution of higher forms. |
| 1108 | dastard | n. | A base coward. |
| 1109 | datum | n. | A premise, starting-point, or given fact. |
| 1110 | dauntless | adj. | Fearless. |
| 1111 | day-man | n. | A day-laborer. |
| 1112 | dead-heat | n. | A race in which two or more competitors come out even, and there is no winner. |
| 1113 | dearth | n. | Scarcity, as of something customary, essential ,or desirable. |
| 1114 | death's-head | n. | A human skull as a symbol of death. |
| 1115 | debase | v. | To lower in character or virtue. |
| 1116 | debatable | adj. | Subject to contention or dispute. |
| 1117 | debonair | adj. | Having gentle or courteous bearing or manner. |
| 1118 | debut | n. | A first appearance in society or on the stage. |
| 1119 | decagon | n. | A figure with ten sides and ten angles. |
| 1120 | decagram | n. | A weight of 10 grams. |
| 1121 | decaliter | n. | A liquid and dry measure of 10 liters. |
| 1122 | decalogue | n. | The ten commandments. |
| 1123 | Decameron | n. | A volume consisting of ten parts or books. |
| 1124 | decameter | n. | A length of ten meters. |
| 1125 | decamp | v. | To leave suddenly or unexpectedly. |
| 1126 | decapitate | v. | To behead. |
| 1127 | decapod | adj. | Ten-footed or ten-armed. |
| 1128 | decasyllable | n. | A line of ten syllables. |
| 1129 | deceit | n. | Falsehood. |
| 1130 | deceitful | adj. | Fraudulent. |
| 1131 | deceive | v. | To mislead by or as by falsehood. |
| 1132 | decency | n. | Moral fitness. |
| 1133 | decent | adj. | Characterized by propriety of conduct, speech, manners, or dress. |
| 1134 | deciduous | adj. | Falling off at maturity as petals after flowering, fruit when ripe, etc. |
| 1135 | decimal | adj. | Founded on the number 10. |
| 1136 | decimate | v. | To destroy a measurable or large proportion of. |
| 1137 | decipher | v. | To find out the true words or meaning of, as something hardly legible. |
| 1138 | decisive | ad. | Conclusive. |
| 1139 | declamation | n. | A speech recited or intended for recitation from memory in public. |
| 1140 | declamatory | adj. | A full and formal style of utterance. |
| 1141 | declarative | adj. | Containing a formal, positive, or explicit statement or affirmation. |
| 1142 | declension | n. | The change of endings in nouns and adj. to express their different relations of gender. |
| 1143 | decorate | v. | To embellish. |
| 1144 | decorous | adj. | Suitable for the occasion or circumstances. |
| 1145 | decoy | n. | Anything that allures, or is intended to allures into danger or temptation. |
| 1146 | decrepit | adj. | Enfeebled, as by old age or some chronic infirmity. |
| 1147 | dedication | n. | The voluntary consecration or relinquishment of something to an end or cause. |
| 1148 | deduce | v. | To derive or draw as a conclusion by reasoning from given premises or principles. |
| 1149 | deface | v. | To mar or disfigure the face or external surface of. |
| 1150 | defalcate | v. | To cut off or take away, as a part of something. |
| 1151 | defamation | n. | Malicious and groundless injury done to the reputation or good name of another. |
| 1152 | defame | v. | To slander. |
| 1153 | default | n. | The neglect or omission of a legal requirement. |
| 1154 | defendant | n. | A person against whom a suit is brought. |
| 1155 | defensible | adj. | Capable of being maintained or justified. |
| 1156 | defensive | adj. | Carried on in resistance to aggression. |
| 1157 | defer | v. | To delay or put off to some other time. |
| 1158 | deference | n. | Respectful submission or yielding, as to another's opinion, wishes, or judgment. |
| 1159 | defiant | adj. | Characterized by bold or insolent opposition. |
| 1160 | deficiency | n. | Lack or insufficiency. |
| 1161 | deficient | adj. | Not having an adequate or proper supply or amount. |
| 1162 | definite | adj. | Having an exact signification or positive meaning. |
| 1163 | deflect | v. | To cause to turn aside or downward. |
| 1164 | deforest | v. | To clear of forests. |
| 1165 | deform | v. | To disfigure. |
| 1166 | deformity | n. | A disfigurement. |
| 1167 | defraud | v. | To deprive of something dishonestly. |
| 1168 | defray | v. | To make payment for. |
| 1169 | degeneracy | n. | A becoming worse. |
| 1170 | degenerate | v. | To become worse or inferior. |
| 1171 | degradation | n. | Diminution, as of strength or magnitude. |
| 1172 | degrade | v. | To take away honors or position from. |
| 1173 | dehydrate | v. | To deprive of water. |
| 1174 | deify | v. | To regard or worship as a god. |
| 1175 | deign | v. | To deem worthy of notice or account. |
| 1176 | deist | n. | One who believes in God, but denies supernatural revelation. |
| 1177 | deity | n. | A god, goddess, or divine person. |
| 1178 | deject | v. | To dishearten. |
| 1179 | dejection | n. | Melancholy. |
| 1180 | delectable | adj. | Delightful to the taste or to the senses. |
| 1181 | delectation | n. | Delight. |
| 1182 | deleterious | adj. | Hurtful, morally or physically. |
| 1183 | delicacy | n. | That which is agreeable to a fine taste. |
| 1184 | delineate | v. | To represent by sketch or diagram. |
| 1185 | deliquesce | v. | To dissolve gradually and become liquid by absorption of moisture from the air. |
| 1186 | delirious | adj. | Raving. |
| 1187 | delude | v. | To mislead the mind or judgment of. |
| 1188 | deluge | v. | To overwhelm with a flood of water. |
| 1189 | delusion | n. | Mistaken conviction, especially when more or less enduring. |
| 1190 | demagnetize | v. | To deprive (a magnet) of magnetism. |
| 1191 | demagogue | n. | An unprincipled politician. |
| 1192 | demeanor | n. | Deportment. |
| 1193 | demented | adj. | Insane. |
| 1194 | demerit | n. | A mark for failure or bad conduct. |
| 1195 | demise | n. | Death. |
| 1196 | demobilize | v. | To disband, as troops. |
| 1197 | demolish | v. | To annihilate. |
| 1198 | demonstrable | adj. | Capable of positive proof. |
| 1199 | demonstrate | v. | To prove indubitably. |
| 1200 | demonstrative | adj. | Inclined to strong exhibition or expression of feeling or thoughts. |
| 1201 | demonstrator | n. | One who proves in a convincing and conclusive manner. |
| 1202 | demulcent | n. | Any application soothing to an irritable surface |
| 1203 | demurrage | n. | the detention of a vessel beyond the specified time of sailing. |
| 1204 | dendroid | adj. | Like a tree. |
| 1205 | dendrology | n. | The natural history of trees. |
| 1206 | denizen | n. | Inhabitant. |
| 1207 | denominate | v. | To give a name or epithet to. |
| 1208 | denomination | n. | A body of Christians united by a common faith and form of worship and discipline. |
| 1209 | denominator | n. | Part of a fraction which expresses the number of equal parts into which the unit is divided. |
| 1210 | denote | v. | To designate by word or mark. |
| 1211 | denouement | n. | That part of a play or story in which the mystery is cleared up. |
| 1212 | denounce | v. | To point out or publicly accuse as deserving of punishment, censure, or odium. |
| 1213 | dentifrice | n. | Any preparation used for cleaning the teeth. |
| 1214 | denude | v. | To strip the covering from. |
| 1215 | denunciation | n. | The act of declaring an action or person worthy of reprobation or punishment. |
| 1216 | deplete | v. | To reduce or lessen, as by use, exhaustion, or waste. |
| 1217 | deplorable | adj. | Contemptible. |
| 1218 | deplore | v. | To regard with grief or sorrow. |
| 1219 | deponent | adj. | Laying down. |
| 1220 | depopulate | v. | To remove the inhabitants from. |
| 1221 | deport | v. | To take or send away forcibly, as to a penal colony. |
| 1222 | deportment | n. | Demeanor. |
| 1223 | deposition | n. | Testimony legally taken on interrogatories and reduced to writing, for use as evidence in court. |
| 1224 | depositor | n. | One who makes a deposit, or has an amount deposited. |
| 1225 | depository | n. | A place where anything is kept in safety. |
| 1226 | deprave | v. | To render bad, especially morally bad. |
| 1227 | deprecate | v. | To express disapproval or regret for, with hope for the opposite. |
| 1228 | depreciate | v. | To lessen the worth of. |
| 1229 | depreciation | n. | A lowering in value or an underrating in worth. |
| 1230 | depress | v. | To press down. |
| 1231 | depression | n. | A falling of the spirits. |
| 1232 | depth | n. | Deepness. |
| 1233 | derelict | adj. | Neglectful of obligation. |
| 1234 | deride | v. | To ridicule. |
| 1235 | derisible | adj. | Open to ridicule. |
| 1236 | derision | n. | Ridicule. |
| 1237 | derivation | n. | That process by which a word is traced from its original root or primitive form and meaning. |
| 1238 | derivative | adj. | Coming or acquired from some origin. |
| 1239 | derive | v. | To deduce, as from a premise. |
| 1240 | dermatology | n. | The branch of medical science which relates to the skin and its diseases. |
| 1241 | derrick | n. | An apparatus for hoisting and swinging great weights. |
| 1242 | descendant | n. | One who is descended lineally from another, as a child, grandchild, etc. |
| 1243 | descendent | adj. | Proceeding downward. |
| 1244 | descent | n. | The act of moving or going downward. |
| 1245 | descry | v. | To discern. |
| 1246 | desert | v. | To abandon without regard to the welfare of the abandoned |
| 1247 | desiccant | n. | Any remedy which, when applied externally, dries up or absorbs moisture, as that of wounds. |
| 1248 | designate | v. | To select or appoint, as by authority. |
| 1249 | desist | v. | To cease from action. |
| 1250 | desistance | n. | Cessation. |
| 1251 | despair | n. | Utter hopelessness and despondency. |
| 1252 | desperado | n. | One without regard for law or life. |
| 1253 | desperate | adj. | Resorted to in a last extremity, or as if prompted by utter despair. |
| 1254 | despicable | adj. | Contemptible. |
| 1255 | despite | prep. | In spite of. |
| 1256 | despond | v. | To lose spirit, courage, or hope. |
| 1257 | despondent | adj. | Disheartened. |
| 1258 | despot | n. | An absolute and irresponsible monarch. |
| 1259 | despotism | n. | Any severe and strict rule in which the judgment of the governed has little or no part. |
| 1260 | destitute | adj. | Poverty-stricken. |
| 1261 | desultory | adj. | Not connected with what precedes. |
| 1262 | deter | v. | To frighten away. |
| 1263 | deteriorate | v. | To grow worse. |
| 1264 | determinate | adj. | Definitely limited or fixed. |
| 1265 | determination | n. | The act of deciding. |
| 1266 | deterrent | adj. | Hindering from action through fear. |
| 1267 | detest | v. | To dislike or hate with intensity. |
| 1268 | detract | v. | To take away in such manner as to lessen value or estimation. |
| 1269 | detriment | n. | Something that causes damage, depreciation, or loss. |
| 1270 | detrude | v. | To push down forcibly. |
| 1271 | deviate | v. | To take a different course. |
| 1272 | devilry | n. | Malicious mischief. |
| 1273 | deviltry | n. | Wanton and malicious mischief. |
| 1274 | devious | adj. | Out of the common or regular track. |
| 1275 | devise | v. | To invent. |
| 1276 | devout | adj. | Religious. |
| 1277 | dexterity | n. | Readiness, precision, efficiency, and ease in any physical activity or in any mechanical work. |
| 1278 | diabolic | adj. | Characteristic of the devil. |
| 1279 | diacritical | adj. | Marking a difference. |
| 1280 | diagnose | v. | To distinguish, as a disease, by its characteristic phenomena. |
| 1281 | diagnosis | n. | Determination of the distinctive nature of a disease. |
| 1282 | dialect | n. | Forms of speech collectively that are peculiar to the people of a particular district. |
| 1283 | dialectician | n. | A logician. |
| 1284 | dialogue | n. | A formal conversation in which two or more take part. |
| 1285 | diaphanous | adj. | Transparent. |
| 1286 | diatomic | adj. | Containing only two atoms. |
| 1287 | diatribe | n. | A bitter or malicious criticism. |
| 1288 | dictum | n. | A positive utterance. |
| 1289 | didactic | adj. | Pertaining to teaching. |
| 1290 | difference | n. | Dissimilarity in any respect. |
| 1291 | differentia | n. | Any essential characteristic of a species by reason of which it differs from other species. |
| 1292 | differential | adj. | Distinctive. |
| 1293 | differentiate | v. | To acquire a distinct and separate character. |
| 1294 | diffidence | n. | Self-distrust. |
| 1295 | diffident | adj. | Affected or possessed with self-distrust. |
| 1296 | diffusible | adj. | Spreading rapidly through the system and acting quickly. |
| 1297 | diffusion | n. | Dispersion. |
| 1298 | dignitary | n. | One who holds high rank. |
| 1299 | digraph | n. | A union of two characters representing a single sound. |
| 1300 | digress | v. | To turn aside from the main subject and for a time dwell on some incidental matter. |
| 1301 | dilapidated | pa. | Fallen into decay or partial ruin. |
| 1302 | dilate | v. | To enlarge in all directions. |
| 1303 | dilatory | adj. | Tending to cause delay. |
| 1304 | dilemma | n. | A situation in which a choice between opposing modes of conduct is necessary. |
| 1305 | dilettante | n. | A superficial amateur. |
| 1306 | diligence | n. | Careful and persevering effort to accomplish what is undertaken. |
| 1307 | dilute | v. | To make more fluid or less concentrated by admixture with something. |
| 1308 | diminution | n. | Reduction. |
| 1309 | dimly | adv. | Obscurely. |
| 1310 | diphthong | n. | The sound produced by combining two vowels in to a single syllable or running together the sounds. |
| 1311 | diplomacy | n. | Tact, shrewdness, or skill in conducting any kind of negotiations or in social matters. |
| 1312 | diplomat | n. | A representative of one sovereign state at the capital or court of another. |
| 1313 | diplomatic | adj. | Characterized by special tact in negotiations. |
| 1314 | diplomatist | n. | One remarkable for tact and shrewd management. |
| 1315 | disagree | v. | To be opposite in opinion. |
| 1316 | disallow | v. | To withhold permission or sanction. |
| 1317 | disappear | v. | To cease to exist, either actually or for the time being. |
| 1318 | disappoint | v. | To fail to fulfill the expectation, hope, wish, or desire of. |
| 1319 | disapprove | v. | To regard with blame. |
| 1320 | disarm | v. | To deprive of weapons. |
| 1321 | disarrange | v. | To throw out of order. |
| 1322 | disavow | v. | To disclaim responsibility for. |
| 1323 | disavowal | n. | Denial. |
| 1324 | disbeliever | n. | One who refuses to believe. |
| 1325 | disburden | v. | To disencumber. |
| 1326 | disburse | v. | To pay out or expend, as money from a fund. |
| 1327 | discard | v. | To reject. |
| 1328 | discernible | adj. | Perceivable. |
| 1329 | disciple | n. | One who believes the teaching of another, or who adopts and follows some doctrine. |
| 1330 | disciplinary | adj. | Having the nature of systematic training or subjection to authority. |
| 1331 | discipline | v. | To train to obedience. |
| 1332 | disclaim | v. | To disavow any claim to, connection with, or responsibility to. |
| 1333 | discolor | v. | To stain. |
| 1334 | discomfit | v. | To put to confusion. |
| 1335 | discomfort | n. | The state of being positively uncomfortable. |
| 1336 | disconnect | v. | To undo or dissolve the connection or association of. |
| 1337 | disconsolate | adj. | Grief-stricken. |
| 1338 | discontinuance | n. | Interruption or intermission. |
| 1339 | discord | n. | Absence of harmoniousness. |
| 1340 | discountenance | v. | To look upon with disfavor. |
| 1341 | discover | v. | To get first sight or knowledge of, as something previously unknown or unperceived. |
| 1342 | discredit | v. | To injure the reputation of. |
| 1343 | discreet | adj. | Judicious. |
| 1344 | discrepant | adj. | Opposite. |
| 1345 | discriminate | v. | To draw a distinction. |
| 1346 | discursive | adj. | Passing from one subject to another. |
| 1347 | discussion | n. | Debate. |
| 1348 | disenfranchise | v. | To deprive of any right privilege or power |
| 1349 | disengage | v. | To become detached. |
| 1350 | disfavor | n. | Disregard. |
| 1351 | disfigure | v. | To impair or injure the beauty, symmetry, or appearance of. |
| 1352 | dishabille | n. | Undress or negligent attire. |
| 1353 | dishonest | adj. | Untrustworthy. |
| 1354 | disillusion | v. | To disenchant. |
| 1355 | disinfect | v. | To remove or destroy the poison of infectious or contagious diseases. |
| 1356 | disinfectant | n. | A substance used to destroy the germs of infectious diseases. |
| 1357 | disinherit | v. | To deprive of an inheritance. |
| 1358 | disinterested | adj. | Impartial. |
| 1359 | disjunctive | adj. | Helping or serving to disconnect or separate. |
| 1360 | dislocate | v. | To put out of proper place or order. |
| 1361 | dismissal | n. | Displacement by authority from an office or an employment. |
| 1362 | dismount | v. | To throw down, push off, or otherwise remove from a horse or the like. |
| 1363 | disobedience | n. | Neglect or refusal to comply with an authoritative injunction. |
| 1364 | disobedient | adj. | Neglecting or refusing to obey. |
| 1365 | disown | v. | To refuse to acknowledge as one's own or as connected with oneself. |
| 1366 | disparage | v. | To regard or speak of slightingly. |
| 1367 | disparity | n. | Inequality. |
| 1368 | dispel | v. | To drive away by or as by scattering in different directions. |
| 1369 | dispensation | n. | That which is bestowed on or appointed to one from a higher power. |
| 1370 | displace | v. | To put out of the proper or accustomed place. |
| 1371 | dispossess | v. | To deprive of actual occupancy, especially of real estate. |
| 1372 | disputation | n. | Verbal controversy. |
| 1373 | disqualify | v. | To debar. |
| 1374 | disquiet | v. | To deprive of peace or tranquillity. |
| 1375 | disregard | v. | To take no notice of. |
| 1376 | disreputable | adj. | Dishonorable or disgraceful. |
| 1377 | disrepute | n. | A bad name or character. |
| 1378 | disrobe | v. | To unclothe. |
| 1379 | disrupt | v. | To burst or break asunder. |
| 1380 | dissatisfy | v. | To displease. |
| 1381 | dissect | v. | To cut apart or to pieces. |
| 1382 | dissection | n. | The act or operation of cutting in pieces, specifically of a plant or an animal. |
| 1383 | dissemble | v. | To hide by pretending something different. |
| 1384 | disseminate | v. | To sow or scatter abroad, as seed is sown. |
| 1385 | dissension | n. | Angry or violent difference of opinion. |
| 1386 | dissent | n. | Disagreement. |
| 1387 | dissentient | n. | One who disagrees. |
| 1388 | dissentious | adj. | Contentious. |
| 1389 | dissertation | n. | Thesis. |
| 1390 | disservice | n. | An ill turn. |
| 1391 | dissever | v. | To divide. |
| 1392 | dissimilar | adj. | Different. |
| 1393 | dissipate | v. | To disperse or disappear. |
| 1394 | dissipation | n. | The state of being dispersed or scattered. |
| 1395 | dissolute | adj. | Lewd. |
| 1396 | dissolution | n. | A breaking up of a union of persons. |
| 1397 | dissolve | v. | To liquefy or soften, as by heat or moisture. |
| 1398 | dissonance | n. | Discord. |
| 1399 | dissonant | adj. | Harsh or disagreeable in sound. |
| 1400 | dissuade | v. | To change the purpose or alter the plans of by persuasion, counsel, or pleading. |
| 1401 | dissuasion | n. | The act of changing the purpose of or altering the plans of through persuasion, or pleading. |
| 1402 | disyllable | n. | A word of two syllables. |
| 1403 | distemper | n. | A disease or malady. |
| 1404 | distend | v. | To stretch out or expand in every direction. |
| 1405 | distensible | adj. | Capable of being stretched out or expanded in every direction. |
| 1406 | distention | n. | Expansion. |
| 1407 | distill | v. | To extract or produce by vaporization and condensation. |
| 1408 | distillation | n. | Separation of the more volatile parts of a substance from those less volatile. |
| 1409 | distiller | n. | One occupied in the business of distilling alcoholic liquors. |
| 1410 | distinction | n. | A note or designation of honor, officially recognizing superiority or success in studies. |
| 1411 | distort | v. | To twist into an unnatural or irregular form. |
| 1412 | distrain | v. | To subject a person to distress. |
| 1413 | distrainor | n. | One who subjects a person to distress. |
| 1414 | distraught | adj. | Bewildered. |
| 1415 | distrust | n. | Lack of confidence in the power, wisdom, or good intent of any person. |
| 1416 | disunion | n. | Separation of relations or interests. |
| 1417 | diurnal | adj. | Daily. |
| 1418 | divagation | n. | Digression. |
| 1419 | divergent | adj. | Tending in different directions. |
| 1420 | diverse | adj. | Capable of various forms. |
| 1421 | diversion | n. | Pastime. |
| 1422 | diversity | n. | Dissimilitude. |
| 1423 | divert | v. | To turn from the accustomed course or a line of action already established. |
| 1424 | divertible | adj. | Able to be turned from the accustomed course or a line of action already established. |
| 1425 | divest | v. | To strip, specifically of clothes, ornaments, or accouterments or disinvestment. |
| 1426 | divination | n. | The pretended forecast of future events or discovery of what is lost or hidden. |
| 1427 | divinity | n. | The quality or character of being godlike. |
| 1428 | divisible | adj. | Capable of being separated into parts. |
| 1429 | divisor | n. | That by which a number or quantity is divided. |
| 1430 | divulge | v. | To tell or make known, as something previously private or secret. |
| 1431 | divulgence | n. | A divulging. |
| 1432 | docile | adj. | Easy to manage. |
| 1433 | docket | n. | The registry of judgments of a court. |
| 1434 | doe | n. | The female of the deer. |
| 1435 | dogma | n. | A statement of religious faith or duty formulated by a body claiming authority. |
| 1436 | dogmatic | adj. | Making statements without argument or evidence. |
| 1437 | dogmatize | v. | To make positive assertions without supporting them by argument or evidence. |
| 1438 | doleful | adj. | Melancholy. |
| 1439 | dolesome | adj. | Melancholy. |
| 1440 | dolor | n. | Lamentation. |
| 1441 | dolorous | adj. | Expressing or causing sorrow or pain. |
| 1442 | domain | n. | A sphere or field of action or interest. |
| 1443 | domesticity | n. | Life in or fondness for one's home and family. |
| 1444 | domicile | n. | The place where one lives. |
| 1445 | dominance | n. | Ascendancy. |
| 1446 | dominant | adj. | Conspicuously prominent. |
| 1447 | dominate | v. | To influence controllingly. |
| 1448 | domination | n. | Control by the exercise of power or constituted authority. |
| 1449 | domineer | v. | To rule with insolence or unnecessary annoyance. |
| 1450 | donate | v. | To bestow as a gift, especially for a worthy cause. |
| 1451 | donator | n. | One who makes a donation or present. |
| 1452 | donee | n. | A person to whom a donation is made. |
| 1453 | donor | n. | One who makes a donation or present. |
| 1454 | dormant | adj. | Being in a state of or resembling sleep. |
| 1455 | doublet | n. | One of a pair of like things. |
| 1456 | doubly | adv. | In twofold degree or extent. |
| 1457 | dowry | n. | The property which a wife brings to her husband in marriage. |
| 1458 | drachma | n. | A modern and an ancient Greek coin. |
| 1459 | dragnet | n. | A net to be drawn along the bottom of the water. |
| 1460 | dragoon | n. | In the British army, a cavalryman. |
| 1461 | drainage | n. | The means of draining collectively, as a system of conduits, trenches, pipes, etc. |
| 1462 | dramatist | n. | One who writes plays. |
| 1463 | dramatize | v. | To relate or represent in a dramatic or theatrical manner. |
| 1464 | drastic | adj. | Acting vigorously. |
| 1465 | drought | n. | Dry weather, especially when so long continued as to cause vegetation to wither. |
| 1466 | drowsy | adj. | Heavy with sleepiness. |
| 1467 | drudgery | n. | Hard and constant work in any menial or dull occupation. |
| 1468 | dubious | adj. | Doubtful. |
| 1469 | duckling | n. | A young duck. |
| 1470 | ductile | adj. | Capable of being drawn out, as into wire or a thread. |
| 1471 | duet | n. | A composition for two voices or instruments. |
| 1472 | dun | v. | To make a demand or repeated demands on for payment. |
| 1473 | duplex | adj. | Having two parts. |
| 1474 | duplicity | n. | Double-dealing. |
| 1475 | durance | n. | Confinement. |
| 1476 | duration | n. | The period of time during which anything lasts. |
| 1477 | duteous | adj. | Showing submission to natural superiors. |
| 1478 | dutiable | adj. | Subject to a duty, especially a customs duty. |
| 1479 | dutiful | adj. | Obedient. |
| 1480 | dwindle | v. | To diminish or become less. |
| 1481 | dyne | n. | The force which, applied to a mass of one gram for 1 second, would give it a velocity of 1 cm/s. |
Friday, 7 May 2010
Vocabulary builder D
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