5-letter words containing p
- cuspy — (of a computer program) well-designed and user-friendly
- cutup — a person who clowns, plays practical jokes, etc. to attract attention
- damps — Moisture diffused through the air or a solid substance or condensed on a surface, typically with detrimental or unpleasant effects.
- dampy — damp or moist
- darpa — Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
- ddcmp — Digital Data Communications Message Protocol (DEC).
- deepe — Obsolete spelling of deep.
- deeps — Plural form of deep.
- delph — Delftware crockery.
- depew — Chauncey Mitchell, 1834–1928, U.S. lawyer, legislator, and orator.
- depot — A depot is a place where large amounts of raw materials, equipment, arms, or other supplies are kept until they are needed.
- depth — The depth of something such as a river or hole is the distance downwards from its top surface, or between its upper and lower surfaces.
- depts — Plural form of dept, departments.
- derpy — (slang) Foolish, silly.
- dhrop — Eye dialect of drop.
- dipad — Diploma in Art and Design
- diped — Diploma in Education
- dippy — somewhat mad or foolish: dippy with love.
- dipso — a dipsomaniac; habitual drunk.
- djgpp — (tool) A 32-bit GNU C/C++/etc development system for MS-DOS. Address: DJ Delorie, Rochester, NH, USA.
- dnepr — Russian name of Dnieper.
- do up — Informal. a burst of frenzied activity; action; commotion.
- doped — Drugged.
- doper — a drug addict.
- dopes — Plural form of dope.
- dopey — stupid; inane: It was rather dopey of him to lock himself out.
- dorps — Plural form of dorp.
- doupe — (UK, dialect, obsolete) The carrion crow.
- 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.
- dphil — Doctor of Philosophy
- dps-6 — (computer) A Honeywell minicomputer from the 1980s-1990s. It originally ran the GCOS-6 operating system.
- drape — to cover or hang with cloth or other fabric, especially in graceful folds; adorn with drapery.
- drips — Plural form of drip.
- dript — a simple past tense and past participle of drop.
- droop — to sag, sink, bend, or hang down, as from weakness, exhaustion, or lack of support.
- drops — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
- dropt — a simple past tense and past participle of drop.
- drupe — any fruit, as a peach, cherry, plum, etc., consisting of an outer skin, a usually pulpy and succulent middle layer, and a hard and woody inner shell usually enclosing a single seed.
- dumps — an accumulation of discarded garbage, refuse, etc.
- dumpy — short and stout; squat: a dumpy figure.
- duped — duplicate.
- duper — a person who is easily deceived or fooled; gull.
- dupes — Plural form of dupe.
- duple — having two parts; double; twofold.
- duply — a second or subsequent response
- duppy — A malevolent spirit or ghost.
- dupre — Jules [zhyl] /ʒül/ (Show IPA), 1812–89, French painter.
- ecip2 — An Esprit project on the definition of a specification language at the requirement level.
- ecoop — European Conference on Object-oriented Programming.
- egrep — (tool) An extended version of the Unix grep command. Egrep accepts extended regular expressions (REs) including "*" following multi-character REs; "+" (one or more matches); "?" (zero or one matches); "|" separating two REs matches either. REs may be bracketed with (). Despite its additional complexity, egrep is usually faster than fgrep or grep.