| ADDEEM | • addeem v. (Transitive, now rare, archaic) To adjudge; to try, test. • addeem v. (Transitive, obsolete) To deem; think; judge; esteem; account; determine; be of an opinion. • ADDEEM v. (obsolete) to award; to adjudge, also ADDOOM. |
| ADDOOM | • addoom v. (Obsolete) To adjudge. • ADDOOM v. (Spenser) to award; to adjudge, also ADDEEM. |
| DADGUM | • dadgum adj. (US, euphemistic) goddamned. • dadgum adv. (US, euphemistic) goddamned. • dadgum interj. (US, euphemistic) goddammit. |
| DAMMED | • dammed v. Simple past tense and past participle of dam. • DAM v. to build an embankment to retain water. |
| DAMNED | • damned adj. Godforsaken. • damned adj. Variant of profane damn, used to express contempt, exasperation, etc. towards someone or something. • damned adj. Used to express vehemently that one is not or does not do something, or refuses to be or do something. |
| DAMPED | • damped v. Simple past tense and past participle of damp. • damped adj. (Of an extinguished fire) stopped from smouldering and reigniting by the application of water. • damped adj. (Physics, of a linear dynamic system) Possessing a nonzero damping ratio. |
| DEMAND | • demand n. The desire to purchase goods and services. • demand n. (Economics) The amount of a good or service that consumers are willing to buy at a particular price. • demand n. A forceful claim for something. |
| DIADEM | • diadem n. An ornamental headband worn as a badge of royalty. • diadem n. A crown. • diadem n. Regal power; sovereignty; empire—considered as symbolized by the crown. |
| DIRDAM | • DIRDAM n. (Scots) an uproar, also DIRDUM, DURDUM. |
| DODMAN | • dodman n. A land-based snail. • dodman n. A snail’s shell. • dodman n. Any shellfish which casts its shell, such as a lobster. |
| GODDAM | • goddam n. (Gallicism, chiefly in the plural) An English person, from the perspective of a French person or in… • goddam interj. (Uncommon) Alternative spelling of goddamn. • GODDAM v. to damn, also GODDAMN. |
| MADDED | • madded v. Simple past tense and past participle of mad. • MAD v. to become or make angry or mad. |
| MADDEN | • madden v. (Transitive) To make angry. • madden v. (Transitive) To make insane; to inflame with passion. • madden v. (Intransitive, obsolete) To become furious. |
| MADDER | • madder n. A herbaceous plant, Rubia tinctorum, native to Asia, cultivated for a red-purple dye (alizarin) obtained… • madder n. The root of the plant, used as a medicine or a dye. • madder n. A dye made from the plant. |
| MAIDED | • MAID v. to work as a maidservant. |
| MEDIAD | • mediad adj. Toward the middle line. • MEDIAD adv. toward the middle of a body. |
| MIDDAY | • midday n. Noon; twelve o’clock during the day. • MIDDAY n. the middle of the day. |
| MISADD | • misadd v. To add incorrectly. • MISADD v. to add incorrectly. |