| DEEDED | • deeded v. Simple past tense and past participle of deed. • DEED v. to transfer by a legal document. |
| DEEDER | • deeder n. (Law) One who establishes or executes a legal deed. • deeder n. (Slang or nonstandard) One who commits a deed or action; a doer or perpetrator. • DEED adj. (Scots) dead. |
| DEEING | • DEE v. to damn. |
| DEEJAY | • deejay n. A disc jockey. • deejay v. To perform as a disc jockey. • deejay v. To play music as a disc jockey. |
| DEEMED | • deemed v. Simple past tense and past participle of deem. • deemed adj. An accreditation awarded to higher educational institutions in India. • DEEM v. to hold as an opinion. |
| DEEPEN | • deepen v. (Transitive) To make deep or deeper. • deepen v. (Transitive) To make darker or more intense; to darken. • deepen v. (Transitive) To make more poignant or affecting; to increase in degree. |
| DEEPER | • deeper adj. Comparative form of deep: more deep. • DEEP adj. extending far down from the surface. |
| DEEPIE | • deepie n. (Informal) A three-dimensional motion picture. • DEEPIE n. (colloquial) a three-dimensional cinematograph film. |
| DEEPLY | • deeply adv. To a deep extent or degree; very greatly. • deeply adv. So as to extend far down or far into something. • deeply adv. At depth. |
| DEERES | • deeres n. Plural of deere. • DEERE n. (Spenser) a deer. |
| DEEVED | • DEEVE v. (Scots) to deafen, also DEAVE. |
| DEEVES | • DEEVE v. (Scots) to deafen, also DEAVE. |
| DEEWAN | • deewan n. Alternative form of dewan. • DEEWAN n. (Urdu) an official in India. |