deport |
to eject from a country under the law. |
deposit |
to hand over, esp. for safekeeping, as to a bank account. [10 definitions] |
depot |
a bus or train station. [2 definitions] |
depress |
to cause to be unhappy or dejected. [4 definitions] |
depressed |
sad or very low in spirits; morose. [4 definitions] |
depression |
a state of deep sadness or hopelessness that can persist for months or years and is not necessarily triggered by any particular external events. [7 definitions] |
deprive |
to take a possession or attribute away from; divest of. [2 definitions] |
depth |
the state of being deep. [8 definitions] |
deputy |
someone authorized to be a substitute or assistant. [3 definitions] |
derby |
any of numerous horse races run every year and often restricted to three-year-old horses. [3 definitions] |
derivation |
the act, fact, or process of deriving or being derived. [4 definitions] |
derive |
to obtain or extract from an original source (usu. fol. by "from"). [3 definitions] |
derrick |
a device for lifting and moving heavy loads, usu. consisting of a stationary mast and a rotating boom that projects upward from its base. [2 definitions] |
desalinate |
to remove salt from, esp. to make sea water drinkable. |
desalination |
the process of removing salt from water, esp. for the purpose of making sea water drinkable; desalinization. |
desalinization |
the process of removing salt from water; desalination. |
descend |
to move downward or to a lower position or state. [7 definitions] |
descendant |
one regarded as the biological offspring of a given ancestor or ancestors. [3 definitions] |
descent |
the act or process of going downward. [4 definitions] |
describe |
to tell about; give a verbal account of. [2 definitions] |
description |
the act of describing. [3 definitions] |