| ADMISSIVE | • admissive adj. Tending to admit or allow. • ADMISSIVE adj. relating to admission. |
| ADVISINGS | • advisings n. Plural of advising. • ADVISING n. (Shakespeare) counsel, advice. |
| DEMISSIVE | • demissive adj. Downcast; submissive; humble. • DEMISSIVE adj. (obsolete) humble, also DEMISS. |
| DEVILISMS | • devilisms n. Plural of devilism. • DEVILISM n. the cult of a devil. |
| DISINVEST | • disinvest v. To reduce investment, or cease to invest. • DISINVEST v. to reduce or eliminate capital investment. |
| DISSAVING | • dissaving v. Present participle of dissave. • DISSAVING n. the spending of savings made in the past to finance an excess of spending over disposable income, thus diminishing accumulated assets. |
| DISSHIVER | • DISSHIVER v. (Spenser) to shiver or break in pieces. |
| DIVINISES | • divinises v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of divinise. • DIVINISE v. to treat as divine, also DIVINIZE, DIVINIFY. |
| DIVISIONS | • divisions n. Plural of division. • divisions n. (UK, naval) A formal parade of a ship’s or shore establishment’s company. • DIVISION n. the act of dividing. |
| LIVIDNESS | • lividness n. The state or condition of being livid (dark or pallid). • LIVIDNESS n. the state of being livid. |
| MISADVISE | • misadvise v. To give bad advice. • MISADVISE v. to advise wrongly. |
| MISAVISED | • misavised v. Simple past tense and past participle of misavise. • MISAVISED adj. (Spenser) ill-advised. |
| MISDRIVES | • misdrives v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misdrive. • MISDRIVE v. to drive improperly. |
| VIDIMUSES | • vidimuses n. Plural of vidimus. • VIDIMUS n. (Latin) an attested copy; inspection of accounts. |
| VIRUSOIDS | • virusoids n. Plural of virusoid. • VIRUSOID n. a particle of RNA associated with some plant viruses. |
| VIVIDNESS | • vividness n. The quality or state of being vivid. • VIVIDNESS n. the state of being vivid. |