| ACCIDENTS | • accidents n. Plural of accident. • ACCIDENT n. a mishap. |
| ACCREDITS | • accredits v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accredit. • ACCREDIT v. to accept as true. |
| ANECDOTIC | • anecdotic adj. Anecdotal; of or pertaining to anecdotes. • anecdotic adj. Tending to tell anecdotes. • ANECDOTIC adj. pertaining to anecdote, also ANECDOTAL. |
| APODICTIC | • apodictic adj. Incontrovertible; demonstrably true or certain. • apodictic adj. Being a style of argument in which a person presents their reasoning as categorically true, even if… • apodictic adj. (Theology, Biblical studies) Absolute and without explanation, as in a command from God like "Thou shalt not kill!". |
| CANTICOED | • CANTICO v. (Native American) to dance as an act of worship, also KANTIKOY, CANTICOY. |
| CLADISTIC | • cladistic adj. Relating to a clade. • cladistic adj. Relating to cladistics. • CLADISTIC adj. relating to cladism, a method of taxonomy. |
| DACTYLICS | • dactylics n. Plural of dactylic. • DACTYLIC n. a dactylic verse. |
| DECASTICH | • decastich n. A poem of ten lines. • DECASTICH n. a ten-line poem. |
| DESICCANT | • desiccant n. A substance (such as calcium oxide or silica gel) that is used as a drying agent because of its high… • desiccant adj. Causing dryness. • DESICCANT n. a drying or desiccating agent. |
| DESICCATE | • desiccate v. (Transitive) To remove moisture from; to dry. • desiccate v. (Transitive) To preserve by drying. • desiccate v. (Intransitive, rare) To become dry; to dry up. |
| DIACRITIC | • diacritic adj. Distinguishing. • diacritic adj. (Orthography, not comparable) Denoting a distinguishing mark applied to a letter or character. • diacritic n. A special mark added to a letter to indicate a different pronunciation, stress, tone, or meaning. |
| DIACTINIC | • diactinic adj. (Physics) Capable of transmitting the chemical or actinic rays of light. • DIACTINIC adj. capable of transmitting actinic rays. |
| DIALECTIC | • dialectic n. Any formal system of reasoning that arrives at a truth by the exchange of logical arguments. • dialectic n. A contradiction of ideas that serves as the determining factor in their interaction. • dialectic n. (Marxism) Progress of conflict, especially class conflict. |
| DIDACTICS | • didactics n. Plural of didactic. • didactics n. The art and science of teaching. • DIDACTICS n. the art or science of teaching. |
| DRACONTIC | • dracontic adj. Alternative form of draconic (“suggestive of dragons”). • DRACONTIC adj. unusually harsh, also DRACONIAN, DRACONIC. |
| DYSCRATIC | • dyscratic adj. Of, relating to dyscrasy. • DYSCRATIC adj. relating to dyscrasia, a disordered condition of the body, also DYSCRASIC. |
| OCTAPODIC | • OCTAPODIC adj. of a verse line, having eight feet. |
| PRACTICED | • practiced adj. Skillful, proficient, knowledgeable or expert as a result of practice. • practiced v. Simple past tense and past participle of practice. • PRACTICE v. to train or drill in order to acquire skill, also PRACTISE. |
| STICCADOS | • STICCADO n. (Italian) an instrument like a xylophone, also STICCATO. |
| TICTACKED | • TICTAC v. to use arm signals for bookmaker information, also TICKTACK, TICTOC, TICKTOCK. |