Matching Words
1310 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Driving
- verb - acting with vigor; "responsibility turned the spoiled playboy into a driving young executive"
- cause someone or something to move by driving; "She drove me to school every day"; "We drove the car to the garage"
- cause to function by supplying the force or power for or by controlling; "The amplifier drives the tube"; "steam drives the engines"; "this device drives the disks for the computer"
- cause to move back by force or influence; "repel the enemy"; "push back the urge to smoke"; "beat back the invaders"
- cause to move rapidly by striking or throwing with force; "drive the ball far out into the field"
- compel somebody to do something, often against his own will or judgment; "She finally drove him to change jobs"
- excavate horizontally; "drive a tunnel"
- force into or from an action or state, either physically or metaphorically; "She rammed her mind into focus"; "He drives me mad"
- have certain properties when dri
Droning
- verb - an unchanging intonation
- make a monotonous low dull sound; "The harmonium was droning on"
- talk in a monotonous voice
Dubbing
- verb - a new soundtrack that is added to a film
- give a nickname to
- provide (movies) with a soundtrack of a foreign language
- raise (someone) to knighthood; "The Beatles were knighted"
Ducking
- verb - avoid or try to avoid fulfilling, answering, or performing (duties, questions, or issues); "He dodged the issue"; "she skirted the problem"; "They tend to evade their responsibilities"; "he evaded the questions skillfully"
- dip into a liquid; "He dipped into the pool"
- hunting ducks
- submerge or plunge suddenly
- the act of wetting something by submerging it
- to move (the head or body) quickly downwards or away; "Before he could duck, another stone struck him"
Ducting
- unknown - A duct or system of ducts.
Dueling
- verb - fight a duel, as over one's honor or a woman; "In the 19th century, men often dueled over small matters"
Duffing
- unknown - stealing cattle (coll)
Dulling
- verb - become dull or lusterless in appearance; lose shine or brightness; "the varnished table top dulled with time"
- become less interesting or attractive
- deaden (a sound or noise), especially by wrapping
- make dull in appearance; "Age had dulled the surface"
- make dull or blunt; "Too much cutting dulls the knife's edge"
- make less lively or vigorous; "Middle age dulled her appetite for travel"
- make numb or insensitive; "The shock numbed her senses"
Dumping
- verb - drop (stuff) in a heap or mass; "The truck dumped the garbage in the street"
- fall abruptly; "It plunged to the bottom of the well"
- knock down with force; "He decked his opponent"
- sell at artificially low prices
- selling goods abroad at a price below that charged in the domestic market
- sever all ties with, usually unceremoniously or irresponsibly; "The company dumped him after many years of service"; "She dumped her boyfriend when she fell in love with a rich man"
- throw away as refuse; "No dumping in these woods!"