| DREAD | • dread v. (Transitive) To fear greatly. • dread v. To anticipate with fear. • dread v. (Intransitive) To be in dread, or great fear. |
| DREAM | • dream n. Imaginary events seen in the mind while sleeping. • dream n. (Figurative) A hope or wish. • dream n. A visionary scheme; a wild conceit; an idle fancy. |
| DREAR | • drear adj. (Poetic, literary) Dreary. • drear n. (Obsolete) Gloom; sadness. • DREAR n. gloom. |
| DRECK | • dreck n. (Informal) Trash; worthless merchandise. • DRECK n. (Yiddish) inferior merchandise, rubbish, also DREK. |
| DREED | • dreed v. Simple past tense and past participle of dree. • DREE v. to suffer, endure. |
| DREER | • DREE adj. (Scots) dreary. |
| DREES | • drees v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dree. • Drees prop.n. A surname. • DREE v. to suffer, endure. |
| DREGS | • dregs n. (Collectively) The sediment settled at the bottom of a liquid; the lees in a container of unfiltered wine. • dregs n. (Figuratively, the dregs) The worst and lowest part of something. • DREG n. the sediment of liquors. |
| DREKS | • DREK n. (Yiddish) inferior merchandise, rubbish, also DRECK. |
| DRENT | • DRENCH v. to wet thoroughly. |
| DRERE | • DRERE n. (Spenser) dreariness, gloom, also DREARE. |
| DRESS | • dress v. (Transitive). • dress v. (Reflexive, intransitive, obsolete) To prepare (oneself); to make ready. • dress v. (Intransitive). |
| DREST | • drest v. Obsolete form of dressed; simple past tense and past participle of dress. • DRESS v. to put clothes on. |
| DREYS | • dreys n. Plural of drey. • Dreys prop.n. Plural of Drey. • DREY n. a squirrel's nest. |