Matching Words
2206 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Disherit
- - To disinherit; to cut off, or detain, from the possession or enjoyment of an inheritance.
Dishiest
- adjective - (informal British) sexually attractive; "a dishy blonde"
Disjoint
- adjective - become separated, disconnected or disjoint
- having no elements in common
- make disjoint, separated, or disconnected; undo the joining of
- part; cease or break association with; "She disassociated herself from the organization when she found out the identity of the president"
- separate at the joints; "disjoint the chicken before cooking it"
Disjunct
- adjective - having deep constrictions separating head, thorax, and abdomen, as in insects
- marked by separation of or from usually contiguous elements; "little isolated worlds, as abruptly disjunct and unexpected as a palm-shaded well in the Sahara"- Scientific Monthly
- progressing melodically by intervals larger than a major second
- used of distributions, as of statistical or natural populations; "disjunct distribution of king crabs"
Dismount
- noun - alight from (a horse)
- the act of dismounting (a horse or bike etc.)
Dispirit
- verb - lower someone's spirits; make downhearted; "These news depressed her"; "The bad state of her child's health demoralizes her"
Displant
- - To remove (what is planted or fixed); to unsettle and take away; to displace; to root out; as, to displant inhabitants.
Dispunct
- - Wanting in punctilious respect; discourteous.
Disquiet
- noun - a feeling of mild anxiety about possible developments
- disturb in mind or make uneasy or cause to be worried or alarmed; "She was rather perturbed by the news that her father was seriously ill"
- the trait of seeming ill at ease
Distinct
- adjective - (often followed by `from') not alike; different in nature or quality; "plants of several distinct types"; "the word `nationalism' is used in at least two distinct senses"; "gold is distinct from iron"; "a tree related to but quite distinct from the European beech"; "management had interests quite distinct from those of their employees"
- clearly or sharply defined to the mind; "clear-cut evidence of tampering"; "Claudius was the first to invade Britain with distinct...intentions of conquest"; "trenchant distinctions between right and wrong"
- constituting a separate entity or part; "a government with three discrete divisions"; "on two distinct occasions"
- easy to perceive; especially clearly outlined; "a distinct flavor"; "a distinct odor of turpentine"; "a distinct outline"; "the ship appeared as a distinct silhouette"; "distinct fingerprints"
- recognizable; marked; "noticed a distinct improvement"; "at a distinct (or decided) disadvantage"