| DEOPPILATE | • deoppilate v. (Obsolete, rare) To free from obstructions; to clear a passage through. • DEOPPILATE v. to free from obstruction. |
| DEPOPULATE | • depopulate v. (Transitive) To reduce the population of a region by disease, war, forced relocation etc. • depopulate v. (Transitive, electronics) To remove the components from a circuit board. • depopulate v. (Intransitive) To become depopulated, to lose its population. |
| DOPPLERITE | • dopplerite n. (Mineralogy) A brownish-black native hydrocarbon occurring in elastic or jelly-like masses, derived… • DOPPLERITE n. a black elastic substance (calcium salts of humus acids) found in peat beds. |
| ELECTROPOP | • electropop n. (Music) electronic pop music; technopop. • electro-pop n. Alternative spelling of electropop. • ELECTROPOP n. a genre of pop music characterized by the use of synthesizers to replace guitars and drums. |
| EPILEPTOID | • epileptoid adj. (Medicine) Resembling epilepsy. • epileptoid n. (Archaic) A person with epilepsy. • EPILEPTOID adj. resembling epilepsy; as, epileptoid convulsions. |
| LEPTOSPIRE | • leptospire n. Any bacterium of the genus Leptospira. • LEPTOSPIRE n. any of a genus of slender aerobic spirochetes. |
| OUTPEOPLED | • OUTPEOPLE v. to rid a country of its people. |
| OUTPEOPLES | • OUTPEOPLE v. to rid a country of its people. |
| PALAEOTYPE | • palaeotype n. An old book printed between 1500 and 1550. • palaeotype n. (Historical) A phonetic alphabet developed by Alexander John Ellis to represent all spoken sounds of… • PALAEOTYPE n. a nineteenth century phonetic adaptation of ordinary alphabetical type. |
| POPLINETTE | • POPLINETTE n. an imitation poplin. |
| PREPOLLENT | • prepollent adj. Having superior influence or power; prevailing; predominant. • prepollent n. An extra first digit, or rudiment of a digit, on the preaxial side of the pollex. • PREPOLLENT adj. having superior influence or power. |
| PROPELLENT | • propellent n. Alternative spelling of propellant. • propellent adj. Capable of propelling. • PROPELLENT n. something that propels, also PROPELLANT. |
| PROPELMENT | • propelment n. (Archaic) Propulsion, the act of propeling. • propelment n. A mechanism that propels something. • PROPELMENT n. propulsion; a propelling motion. |
| REPOPULATE | • repopulate v. To populate again; to breed among a group in order to keep the population up. • repopulate v. (Transitive) To reintroduce a species into (an area). • repopulate v. (Computing) To fill with data again; to refresh. |
| WAITPEOPLE | • waitpeople n. Plural of waitperson. • WAITPERSON n. a waiter of either sex. |