7-letter words containing m, e, d
- crammed — If a place is crammed with things or people, it is full of them, so that there is hardly room for anything or anyone else.
- cramped — A cramped room or building is not big enough for the people or things in it.
- creamed — the fatty part of milk, which rises to the surface when the liquid is allowed to stand unless homogenized.
- crimped — folded into ridges
- crumbed — Simple past tense and past participle of crumb.
- crumped — Simple past tense and past participle of crump.
- d meson — a meson with charm +1 or −1, strangeness 0, and isotopic spin ½.
- daemons — Plural form of daemon.
- dahomey — Benin
- daimler — Gottlieb (Wilhelm) (German ˈɡɔtliːp ˈvɪlhɛlm). 1834–1900, German engineer and car manufacturer, who collaborated with Nikolaus Otto in inventing the first internal-combustion engine (1876)
- dalmane — a yellow, crystalline hypnotic drug, C21H25Cl3FN3O, prescribed for insomnia
- damaged — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
- damager — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
- damages — money to be paid as compensation to a person for injury, loss, etc
- damosel — damsel.
- damozel — damsel.
- dampens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dampen.
- dampers — Plural form of damper.
- dampest — Superlative form of damp Most damp.
- dampier — William. 1652–1715, English navigator, pirate, and writer: sailed around the world twice
- damsels — Plural form of damsel.
- daumier — Honoré (ɔnɔre). 1808–79, French painter and lithographer, noted particularly for his political and social caricatures
- daymare — an unpleasant experience one has when not asleep
- daytime — The daytime is the part of a day between the time when it gets light and the time when it gets dark.
- deadman — a heavy plate, wall, or block buried in the ground that acts as an anchor for a retaining wall, sheet pile, etc, by a tie connecting the two
- deadmen — Plural form of deadman.
- dear me — surprise
- decamer — An oligomer having ten subunits.
- decamps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decamp.
- decimal — A decimal is a fraction that is written in the form of a dot followed by one or more numbers which represent tenths, hundredths, and so on: for example .5, .51, .517.
- decimus — (in prescriptions) tenth.
- deckman — A man who works on the deck of a ship.
- declaim — If you declaim, you speak dramatically, as if you were acting in a theatre.
- decorum — Decorum is behaviour that people consider to be correct, polite, and respectable.
- decuman — a huge wave
- dedimus — a legal document or decree authorizing a person who is not a judge to act instead of a judge
- deeming — to form or have an opinion; judge; think: He did not deem lightly of the issue.
- defamed — Simple past tense and past participle of defame.
- defamer — One who defames.
- defames — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of defame.
- deframe — a border or case for enclosing a picture, mirror, etc.
- degames — lemonwood.
- deiform — having the form or appearance of a god; sacred or divine
- del mar — Norman. 1919–94, British conductor, associated esp with 20th- century British music
- delimit — If you delimit something, you fix or establish its limits.
- delorme — Philibert (filibɛr). ?1510–70, French Renaissance architect of the Tuileries, Paris
- demagog — a person, especially an orator or political leader, who gains power and popularity by arousing the emotions, passions, and prejudices of the people.
- demands — Plural form of demand.
- demarco — Tom DeMarco proposed a form of structured analysis.
- demasts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demast.