| BODACHS | • bodachs n. Plural of bodach. • BODACH n. (Gaelic) an old man, a churl; a goblin or spectre. |
| DACITES | • dacites n. Plural of dacite. • DACITE n. a fine-grained volcanic rock. |
| DACKERS | • DACKER v. (Scots) to lounge, saunter, also DAIKER, DAKER. |
| DACKING | • dacking v. Present participle of dack. • DACK v. (Australian slang) to remove the trousers from, debag. |
| DACOITS | • dacoits n. Plural of dacoit. • DACOIT n. (Hindi) a member of an Indian robber gang, also DAKOIT. |
| DACOITY | • dacoity n. (Chiefly India, Myanmar) Violent robbery carried out by a dacoit or a gang of dacoits. • DACOITY n. (Hindi) robbery by dacoits, also DACOITAGE, DAKOITI, DAKOITY. |
| DACRONS | • dacrons n. Plural of dacron. • Dacrons n. Plural of Dacron. • DACRON n. a synthetic polyester textile fiber. |
| DACTYLI | • dactyli n. Plural of dactylus. • DACTYLUS n. (Greek) the leg joint of certain insects. |
| DACTYLS | • dactyls n. Plural of dactyl. • DACTYL n. (Greek) a metrical foot of one short syllable followed by two long syllables. |
| DIDACTS | • didacts n. Plural of didact. • DIDACT n. a person given to lecturing or moralizing. |
| EDACITY | • edacity n. (Archaic) Greediness; voracity; rapacity. • EDACITY n. ravenousness, voracity. |
| GEDACTS | • GEDACT n. a flutelike organ stop, also GEDECKT. |
| MEDACCA | • MEDACCA n. (Japanese) a small Japanese fish, also MEDAKA. |
| REDACTS | • redacts v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of redact. • REDACT v. to prepare for publication. |
| VENDACE | • vendace n. Either of two types of whitefish, Coregonus albula and Coregonus vandesius. • VENDACE n. a whitefish, found in Scottish lochs, also VENDIS, VENDISS. |
| WINDACS | • windacs n. Plural of windac. • WINDAC n. a windlass, also WINDAS. |