| ADJUDICATES | • adjudicates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of adjudicate. • ADJUDICATE v. to settle judicially. |
| ADJUDICATIONS | • adjudications n. Plural of adjudication. • ADJUDICATION n. the act of adjudicating. |
| ADJUDICATORS | • adjudicators n. Plural of adjudicator. • ADJUDICATOR n. one who adjudicates. |
| DIDJERIDOOS | • didjeridoos n. Plural of didjeridoo. • DIDJERIDOO n. (Native Australian) a native Australian musical instrument, also DIDGERIDOO, DIDJERIDU. |
| DIDJERIDUS | • didjeridus n. Plural of didjeridu. • DIDJERIDU n. a native Australian musical instrument, also DIDGERIDOO, DIDJERIDOO. |
| DIJUDICATES | • dijudicates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dijudicate. • DIJUDICATE v. to judge, to decide. |
| DIJUDICATIONS | • dijudications n. Plural of dijudication. • DIJUDICATION n. a judgment. |
| DISJECTED | • disjected v. Simple past tense and past participle of disject. • DISJECT v. to dismember, to scatter. |
| DISJOINED | • disjoined v. Simple past tense and past participle of disjoin. • disjoined adj. Separated. • DISJOIN v. to separate. |
| DISJOINTED | • disjointed adj. (Figuratively) Not connected, coherent, or continuous. • DISJOINT v. to put out of order. |
| DISJOINTEDLY | • disjointedly adv. In a disjointed manner. • DISJOINTED adv. DISJOINT, to put out of order. |
| DISJOINTEDNESS | • disjointedness n. The state or condition of being disjointed. • DISJOINTEDNESS n. the state of being disjointed. |
| DISJUNED | • DISJUNE v. to take breakfast, also DEJEUNE, DEJEUNER. |
| JEOPARDISED | • jeopardised v. Simple past tense and past participle of jeopardise. • JEOPARDISE v. to expose to loss or injury, also JEOPARDIZE. |
| JUDDERIEST | • JUDDERY adj. given to juddering. |
| MISADJUSTED | • misadjusted v. Simple past tense and past participle of misadjust. • MISADJUST v. to adjust wrongly; to throw out of adjustment. |
| MISJUDGED | • misjudged v. Simple past tense and past participle of misjudge. • MISJUDGE v. to judge wrongly. |