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5-letter words containing do

  • doses — Plural form of dose.
  • dosha — Any of the three regulatory principles of Ayurveda.
  • dotal — Pertaining to dower, or a woman's marriage portion; constituting or comprised in dower.
  • doted — to bestow or express excessive love or fondness habitually (usually followed by on or upon): They dote on their youngest daughter.
  • doter — to bestow or express excessive love or fondness habitually (usually followed by on or upon): They dote on their youngest daughter.
  • dotes — to bestow or express excessive love or fondness habitually (usually followed by on or upon): They dote on their youngest daughter.
  • dotty — marked with dots; dotted.
  • douai — a city in N France, SE of Calais.
  • doubs — a river in E France, flowing into the Saône River. About 260 miles (420 km) long.
  • doubt — to be uncertain about; consider questionable or unlikely; hesitate to believe.
  • douce — sedate; modest; quiet.
  • doucs — Plural form of douc.
  • dough — flour or meal combined with water, milk, etc., in a mass for baking into bread, cake, etc.; paste of bread.
  • doula — a woman who assists women during labor and after childbirth.
  • douma — duma.
  • doune — Obsolete spelling of down.
  • doupe — (UK, dialect, obsolete) The carrion crow.
  • doura — a type of grain sorghum with slender stalks, cultivated in Asia and Africa and introduced into the U.S.
  • douro — a river in SW Europe, flowing W from N Spain through N Portugal to the Atlantic. About 475 miles (765 km) long.
  • douse — to plunge into water or the like; drench: She doused the clothes in soapy water.
  • doust — (obsolete, West Country) Dust.
  • douth — (rare, or, obsolete) Virtue; excellence; atheldom; nobility; power; riches.
  • dovap — Electronics. a system for plotting the trajectory of a missile or other rapidly moving long-range object by means of the Doppler effect exhibited by radio waves bounced off the object.
  • doven — daven
  • dover — a seaport in E Kent, in SE England: point nearest the coast of France.
  • doves — Plural form of dove.
  • dowds — Plural form of dowd.
  • dowdy — not stylish; drab; old-fashioned: Why do you always wear those dowdy old dresses?
  • dowed — to be able.
  • dowel — a piece of wood driven into a hole drilled in a masonry wall to receive nails, as for fastening woodwork.
  • dower — Law. the portion of a deceased husband's real property allowed to his widow for her lifetime.
  • dowie — dull; melancholy; dismal.
  • dowle — Feathery or woolly down; filament of a feather.
  • dowly — dull; low-spirited; dismal
  • down- — down
  • downs — from higher to lower; in descending direction or order; toward, into, or in a lower position: to come down the ladder.
  • downy — of the nature of or resembling down; fluffy; soft.
  • dowry — Also, dower. the money, goods, or estate that a wife brings to her husband at marriage.
  • dowse — to plunge or be plunged into a liquid.
  • doxie — opinion; doctrine.
  • doyen — the senior member, as in age, rank, or experience, of a group, class, profession, etc.
  • doyle — Sir Arthur Conan [kaw-nuh n,, koh-] /ˈkɔ nən,, ˈkoʊ-/ (Show IPA), 1859–1930, British physician, novelist, and detective-story writer.
  • doyly — Archaic form of doily.
  • dozed — to sleep lightly or fitfully.
  • dozen — a group of 12.
  • dozer — bulldozer (def 1).
  • dozes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of doze.
  • eidos — The distinctive expression of the cognitive or intellectual character of a culture or social group.
  • ejido — (in Mexico) a piece of land farmed communally under a system supported by the state.
  • eldon — Earl of, title of John Scott. 1751–1838, British statesman and jurist; Lord Chancellor (1801–06, 1807–27): an inflexible opponent of parliamentary reform, Catholic emancipation, and the abolition of slavery
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