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English 6 letter words - Containing letters dor - page 2

Next letter probability

e : 50.30%

a : 31.45%

n : 25.09%

s : 18.61%

i : 17.65%

l : 13.57%

u : 13.09%

t : 11.64%

c : 11.40%

b : 9.96%

m : 9.84%

h : 8.40%

p : 7.80%

w : 7.44%

g : 7.08%

y : 6.72%

f : 6.36%

v : 3.48%

k : 3.12%

x : 1.20%

z : 1.20%

j : 1.08%

Possible word length

6

Results:

Page 2 from 6

Total results: 833

Flash Deals (EN)

deport

deport

verb

  1. (reflexive, now rare) To comport (oneself); to behave.
  2. (transitive) To evict, especially from a country.

dermol

dermot

derobe

derobe

verb

  1. (transitive, intransitive, sometimes figurative) To disrobe; undress; divest of clothing or status.

derosa

derout

derron

derwon

derzon

desorb

desorb

verb

  1. (of a substance) To remove (or be removed) from a surface onto which it was adsorbed or through which it was absorbed

detort

detort

verb

  1. to pervert
  2. to turn from the original or plain meaning
  3. to wrest

detour

detour

noun

  1. (programming) The diversion of the flow of execution for debugging or similar purposes.
  2. A diversion or deviation from one's original route.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To make a detour.
  2. (transitive) To direct or send on a detour.

devoir

devoir

noun

  1. (archaic, often in plural) Duty, business; something that one must do.

devora

devour

devour

verb

  1. To absorb or engross the mind fully, especially in a destructive manner.
  2. To eat quickly, greedily, hungrily, or ravenously.
  3. To rapidly destroy, engulf, or lay waste.
  4. To take in avidly with the intellect or with one's gaze.

deworm

deworm

verb

  1. To cause an animal to excrete any worms in the digestive tract by the administration of drugs.

dewrot

dextro

dhoora

dibrom

dinero

diores

dirigo

disorb

disorb

verb

  1. (transitive) To throw out of the proper orbit; to unsphere.

disour

disour

noun

  1. (obsolete) A professional storyteller or joker.

diuron

diuron

noun

  1. The non-selective herbicide N'-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-N,N-dimethyl-urea

divort

doater

doater

noun

  1. Obsolete spelling of doter

dobber

dobber

noun

  1. (Australia, UK, derogatory) One who dobs (informs against or implicates to authority).
  2. (Britain, Ireland, chiefly dialect) A large marble.
  3. (Britain, informal) Any small electronic device that plugs directly into a larger one, such as a wireless scoring system in fencing or a USB mass storage device.
  4. (UK, derogatory) A member of the working class in Scotland or Ireland who is seen as undereducated, with poor taste, especially in clothes, and poor social skills; closely connected to chav.
  5. (US, regional) A float (as used by an angler).
  6. A dabchick.
  7. Alternative form of dauber (“marker pen used for bingo cards”)

dobrao

dobras

dobras

noun

  1. plural of dobra

docker

docker

noun

  1. A dockworker.
  2. One who engages in the sexual practice of docking (where the tip of one participant's penis is inserted into the foreskin of the other participant).
  3. One who performs docking, as of tails.

doctor

doctor

noun

  1. (dated) Any mechanical contrivance intended to remedy a difficulty or serve some purpose in an exigency.
  2. (obsolete) A teacher; one skilled in a profession or a branch of knowledge; a learned man.
  3. (obsolete, nautical, slang) A ship's cook.
  4. A fish, the friar skate.
  5. A nickname for a person who has special knowledge or talents to manipulate or arrange transactions.
  6. A person who has attained a doctorate, such as a Ph.D. or Th.D. or one of many other terminal degrees conferred by a college or university.
  7. A physician; a member of the medical profession; one who is trained and licensed to heal the sick or injured. The final examination and qualification may award a doctor degree in which case the post-nominal letters are D.O., DPM, M.D., DMD, DDS, in the US or MBBS in the UK.
  8. A veterinarian; a medical practitioner who treats non-human animals.

verb

  1. (intransitive, humorous) To act as a medical doctor.
  2. (intransitive, obsolete) To take medicine.
  3. (transitive) To act as a medical doctor to.
  4. (transitive) To adulterate, drug, or poison (drink).
  5. (transitive) To alter or make obscure, as with the intention to deceive, especially a document.
  6. (transitive) To genetically alter an extant species.
  7. (transitive) To make (someone) into an (academic) doctor; to confer a doctorate upon.
  8. (transitive) To physically alter (medically or surgically) a living being in order to change growth or behavior.

dodder

dodder

noun

  1. Any of about 100-170 species of yellow, orange or red (rarely green) parasitic plants of the genus Cuscuta. Formerly treated as the only genus in the family Cuscutaceae, it is now placed in the morning glory family, Convolvulaceae.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To shake or tremble as one moves, especially as of old age or childhood; to totter.

dodger

dodger

noun

  1. (countable) A person full of tricks or street smarts.
  2. (countable) Someone who dodges (avoids something by quickly moving).
  3. (countable, Australia, slang) An advertising leaflet; a flyer.
  4. (countable, nautical) A frame-supported canvas over the companionway (entrance) of a sailboat providing the on-deck crew partial cover from the splashes of the seas that break against the hull of the boat.
  5. (uncountable, Australia, US, slang, dated) Bread.

doerun

doffer

doffer

noun

  1. (textile manufacturing) A revolving cylinder, or a vibrating bar with teeth, in a carding machine, which doffs, or strips off, the cotton or fiber from the cards.
  2. A worker who replaces full bobbins by empty ones on the throstle or ring frames.

dogear

dogear

noun

  1. Alternative form of dog-ear

dogger

dogger

noun

  1. (Australia) A wild dog trapper employed in the pastoral industry.
  2. (Australia, New Zealand) A dogman.
  3. (Britain) A participant in the sexual activity of dogging.
  4. A sort of stone, found in the mines with the true alum rock, chiefly of silica and iron.
  5. A two-masted fishing vessel, used by the Dutch.

dogrib

dogrib

Noun

  1. A member of a people native to the Northwest Territories of Canada.

Proper noun

  1. The Athabaskan language of this people.

dohter

dollar

dollar

noun

  1. (UK, colloquial, historical) A quarter of a pound or one crown, historically minted as a coin of approximately the same size and composition as a then-contemporary dollar coin of the United States, and worth slightly more.
  2. (attributive, historical) Imported from the United States, and paid for in U.S. dollars. (Note: distinguish "dollar wheat", North American farmers' slogan, meaning a market price of one dollar per bushel.)
  3. (by extension) Money generally.
  4. (nuclear physics) A unit of reactivity equal to the interval between delayed criticality and prompt criticality.
  5. Official designation for currency in some parts of the world, including Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and elsewhere. Its symbol is $.

dolora

dolors

dolors

noun

  1. plural of dolor

dolour

dolour

noun

  1. (chiefly uncountable, literary) Anguish, grief, misery, or sorrow.
  2. (countable, economics, ethics) In economics and utilitarianism: a unit of pain used to theoretically weigh people's outcomes.

donary

donary

noun

  1. A thing given to a sacred use.

donner

donner

verb

  1. (South Africa, slang) To beat up; clobber; thrash.

donora

donors

donors

noun

  1. plural of donor

doomer

doomer

noun

  1. (neologism, sometimes capitalized) Someone who is apathetic or has a negative prospect towards the world, especially in relation to climate change.
  2. (rare) One who, or that which, dooms.
  3. One who believes that petroleum depletion will inevitably lead to a severe recession or depression, followed by a Malthusian catastrophe.

doorba

doored

doored

adj

  1. Having or furnished with doors

verb

  1. simple past tense and past participle of door

doover

doover

noun

  1. (Australia) Alternative form of doofer

doozer

doozer

noun

  1. Alternative form of doozy

dopers

dopers

noun

  1. plural of doper

dopier

dopier

adj

  1. comparative form of dopy: more dopy

dopper

dopper

Noun

  1. An Anabaptist or Baptist.

dorado

dorado

noun

  1. Coryphaena hippurus, the mahi-mahi or dolphin, a species of fish with a dorsal fin that runs the length of the body, also known for iridescent coloration.

dorask

dorati

dorbel

dorbie

dorbug

dorbug

noun

  1. (Canada, US) The dor.

dorcas

dorcea

dorcia

dorcus

doreen

doreen

Proper noun

  1. name, anglicized from of Gaelic Dáireann or Doirind, of uncertain origin; or an Irish type variant of Dora.

dorena

dorene

dorian

dorian

Adjective

  1. of or relating to the Dorians

Noun

  1. a member of the Dorians

Proper noun

  1. name, apparently first used by Oscar Wilde in his novel The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891).

dorice

dories

dories

noun

  1. plural of dory

dorina

dorine

dorion

dorisa

dorise

dorism

dorism

Noun

  1. A Doric phrase or idiom.

dorita

dorize

dorkas

dorkus

dorkus

noun

  1. (colloquial) A silly or foolish person; a dork.

dorloo

dorlot

dorman

dormer

dormer

noun

  1. (Philippines) A resident of a dormitory.
  2. (architecture) A room-like, roofed projection from a sloping roof.
  3. (architecture) Ellipsis of dormer-window..

dormie

dormie

adj

  1. (golf) In match play, leading the match by the same number of holes as remain to be played.

dormin

dornic

dorobo

dorpat

dorper

dorran

dorree

dorren

dorrie

dorris

dorsad

dorsad

adv

  1. (anatomy) Toward the dorsal side.

dorsal

dorsal

adj

  1. (anatomy) Relating to the top surface of the foot or hand.
  2. (botany) Relating to the surface naturally inferior, as of a leaf.
  3. (botany) Relating to the surface naturally superior, as of a creeping hepatic moss.
  4. (linguistics, of a sound) Produced using the dorsum of the tongue.
  5. (of a knife) Having only one sharp side.

noun

  1. (art) A hanging, usually of rich stuff, at the back of a throne, altar, etc.
  2. (linguistics) A sound produced using the dorsum of the tongue.
  3. (zootomy, in snakes) Any of the longitudinal series of plates that encircle the body, excluding the ventral scales.

dorsel

dorsel

noun

  1. A pannier.
  2. Alternative form of dorsal

dorser

dorser

noun

  1. Alternative form of dosser (a basket).

dorset

dorset

Proper noun

  1. A maritime county of England bounded by Somerset, Wiltshire, Hampshire, Devon and the English Channel.

dorsey

dorsum

dorsum

noun

  1. (astronomy) Theta Capricorni, a star on the back of the Goat.
  2. (geology) A ridge on a hill, or on the surface of a planet or moon.
  3. The back of the tongue, used for articulating dorsal consonants.
  4. The top of the foot or the back of the hand.

dorter

dorter

noun

  1. (historical) A bedroom or dormitory, especially in a monastery.

dorthy

dorton

doruck

dorwin

dosers

dosers

noun

  1. plural of doser

dosser

dosser

noun

  1. (Britain, Ireland) Someone who dosses, someone known for avoiding work.
  2. A hanging tapestry; a dorsal.
  3. A homeless and jobless person.
  4. A pannier or basket.
  5. One who lodges in a doss-house.

dotard

dotard

noun

  1. An old person with impaired intellect; one in his or her dotage.
  2. One who dotes on another, showing excessive fondness.

doters

doters

noun

  1. plural of doter

dother

dotier

dotier

adj

  1. comparative form of doty: more doty

dotter

dotter

noun

  1. An instrument for drawing dots.

douper

dourah

dourah

noun

  1. Alternative form of durra

douras

dourer

dourer

adj

  1. comparative form of dour: more dour

dourly

dourly

adv

  1. In a dour manner.

douser

douser

noun

  1. One who, or that which, douses or extinguishes.

douter

douter

noun

  1. (obsolete) An extinguisher for candles.

dovray

dowers

dowers

noun

  1. plural of dower

verb

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dower

dowery

dowery

noun

  1. Alternative form of dowry

downer

downer

noun

  1. (slang) A drug that has depressant qualities.
  2. (slang) A negative drug trip.
  3. (slang) Something or someone disagreeable, dispiriting or depressing; a killjoy.
  4. A form of industrial action in which workers down tools and refuse to work.
  5. A livestock animal that has collapsed.

dowser

dowser

noun

  1. A divining rod used in searching for water, ore, etc.; a dowsing rod.
  2. One who uses the dowser or divining rod. A diviner.

dozers

dozers

noun

  1. plural of dozer

dozier

dozier

adj

  1. comparative form of dozy: more dozy

dracon

dragon

dragon

noun

  1. (astronomy, with definite article, often capitalized) The constellation Draco.
  2. (computing, rare) A background process similar to a daemon.
  3. (derogatory) A fierce and unpleasant woman; a harridan.
  4. (figuratively) Something very formidable or dangerous.
  5. (military, historical) A short musket hooked to a swivel attached to a soldier's belt; so called from a representation of a dragon's head at the muzzle.
  6. (obsolete) A very large snake; a python.
  7. (slang) A transvestite man, or more broadly a male-to-female transgender person.
  8. (with definite article, often capitalized) The (historical) Chinese empire or the People's Republic of China.
  9. A Komodo dragon.
  10. A legendary serpentine or reptilian creature.
  11. A luminous exhalation from marshy ground, seeming to move through the air like a winged serpent.
  12. A type of playing-tile (red dragon, green dragon, white dragon) in the game of mahjong.
  13. A variety of carrier pigeon.
  14. Any of various agamid lizards of the genera Draco, Physignathus or Pogona.
  15. In Eastern mythology, a large, snake-like monster with the eyes of a hare, the horns of a stag and the claws of a tiger, usually beneficent.
  16. In Western mythology, a gigantic beast, typically reptilian with leathery bat-like wings, lion-like claws, scaly skin and a serpent-like body, often a monster with fiery breath.

drasco

drisko

droger

droger

noun

  1. Alternative form of drogher

drogin

drogue

drogue

noun

  1. (aeronautics) A conical basket or device used variously as a target for gunnery practice, and as a docking point for aerial refuelling.
  2. (aeronautics) A conical parachute used as a brake for some kinds of aircraft, or as a means of extracting and deploying a larger parachute, or to slow a rapidly-moving vehicle to a speed where it can safely deploy a larger parachute.
  3. (nautical) A type of bag pulled behind a boat to stop it from broaching to.
  4. (whaling) A floating object attached to the end of a harpoon line to slow a whale down and prevent it from diving.
  5. A wind cone.

verb

  1. To act as a drogue, slowing down and stabilizing a drifting object.
  2. To harpoon or spear (a whale) with a weapon that has a drogue attached.
  3. To transport small loads along the coastline to larger ports, where they can be added to the cargo of larger ships that make longer journeys.
  4. To use a drogue with.

droich

droits

droits

noun

  1. plural of droit

drokpa

drolet

drolls

drolls

noun

  1. plural of droll

drolly

drolly

adv

  1. In a droll, odd or humorous manner.

dromed

dromic

dromoi

dromoi

noun

  1. plural of dromos

dromon

dromon

noun

  1. (historical, nautical) A Byzantine bireme, similar to the chelandion, but used primarily for naval combat.

dromos

dromos

noun

  1. (historical) A racecourse, especially in Ancient Greece.
  2. (historical) A walkway to a building, (especially) a ceremonial walkway to a temple or tomb in Ancient Greece or Egypt.
  3. (historical) An avenue, especially in Ancient Greece.

droned

droned

verb

  1. simple past tense and past participle of drone

dronel

droner

droner

noun

  1. One who drones.

drones

drones

noun

  1. plural of drone

dronet

drongo

drongo

noun

  1. (Australia, New Zealand, slang, derogatory) A fool, an idiot, a stupid fellow.
  2. Any bird of the family Dicruridae.

dronte

dronte

noun

  1. (archaic) The dodo (†Raphus cucullatus).