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Decorative

Suited to decorate or embellish; adorning.

Decorator

One who decorates, adorns, or embellishes; specifically, an artisan whose business is the decoration of houses, esp. their interior decoration.

decore

To decorate; to beautify.

Decorous

Suitable to a character, or to the time, place, and occasion; marked with decorum; becoming; proper; seemly; befitting; as, a decorous speech; decorous behavior; a decorous dress for a judge.

Decorticate

To divest of the bark, husk, or exterior coating; to husk; to peel; to hull.

Decortication

The act of stripping off the bark, rind, hull, or outer coat.

Decorticator

A machine for decorticating wood, hulling grain, etc.; also, an instrument for removing surplus bark or moss from fruit trees.

Decorum

Propriety of manner or conduct; grace arising from suitableness of speech and behavior to one's own character, or to the place and occasion; decency of conduct; seemliness; that which is seemly or suitable.

Decoy

Anything intended to lead into a snare; a lure that deceives and misleads into danger, or into the power of an enemy; a bait.

Decoy-duck

A duck used to lure wild ducks into a decoy; hence, a person employed to lure others into danger.

Decoy-man

A man employed in decoying wild fowl.

Decrease

A becoming less; gradual diminution; decay; as, a decrease of revenue or of strength.

decreased

made less in size or amount or degree. Opposite of increased.

Decree

To make decrees; -- used absolutely.

Decreet

The final judgment of the Court of Session, or of an inferior court, by which the question at issue is decided.

Decrement

The state of becoming gradually less; decrease; diminution; waste; loss.

Decrepit

Broken down with age; wasted and enfeebled by the infirmities of old age; feeble; worn out.

Decrepitation

The act of decrepitating; a crackling noise, such as salt makes when roasting.

Decrepitude

The broken state produced by decay and the infirmities of age; infirm old age.

Decrescendo

With decreasing volume of sound; -- a direction to performers, either written upon the staff (abbreviated Dec., or Decresc.), or indicated by the sign.

Decrescent

A crescent with the horns directed towards the sinister.

Decretal

An authoritative order or decree; especially, a letter of the pope, determining some point or question in ecclesiastical law. The decretals form the second part of the canon law.

Decretist

One who studies, or professes the knowledge of, the decretals.

Decretive

Having the force of a decree; determining.

Decretorily

In a decretory or definitive manner; by decree.

Decretory

Established by a decree; definitive; settled.

Decrial

A crying down; a clamorous censure; condemnation by censure.

Decrown

To deprive of a crown; to discrown.

Decry

To cry down; to censure as faulty, mean, or worthless; to clamor against; to blame clamorously; to discredit; to disparage.

decrypt

to convert from a coded form into the original; -- of communications. Inverse of encrypt.

Decubitus

An attitude assumed in lying down; as, the dorsal decubitus.

Deculassment Deculassement

An accidental blowing off of, or other serious damage to, the breechblock of a gun; also, a removal of the breechblock for the purpose of disabling the gun.

Decuman

Large; chief; -- applied to an extraordinary billow, supposed by some to be every tenth in order. [R.] Also used substantively.

decumary

a woody climber of southeastern US (Decumaria barbara) having white flowers in compound terminal clusters.

Decumbiture

Confinement to a sick bed, or time of taking to one's bed from sickness.

Decuple

To make tenfold; to multiply by ten.

Decurion

A head or chief over ten; especially, an officer who commanded a division of ten soldiers.

Decurrent

Extending downward; -- said of a leaf whose base extends downward and forms a wing along the stem.

Decursion

A flowing; also, a hostile incursion.

Decurt

To cut short; to curtail.

Decury

A set or squad of ten men under a decurion.

Decussate

To cross at an acute angle; to cut or divide in the form of X; to intersect; -- said of lines in geometrical figures, rays of light, nerves, etc.

Decussation

Act of crossing at an acute angle, or state of being thus crossed; an intersection in the form of an X; as, the decussation of lines, nerves, etc.

Decyl

A hydrocarbon radical, C10H21., never existing alone, but regarded as the characteristic constituent of a number of compounds of the paraffin series.

Decylic

Allied to, or containing, the radical decyl.

Dedans

A division, at one end of a tennis court, for spectators.

Dedicate

To set apart and consecrate, as to a divinity, or for sacred uses; to devote formally and solemnly; as, to dedicate vessels, treasures, a temple, or a church, to a religious use.

dedicated

wholly committed to a purpose or cause; as, a dedicated musician.

Dedicatee

One to whom a thing is dedicated; -- correlative to dedicator.

Dedication

The act of setting apart or consecrating to a divine Being, or to a sacred use, often with religious solemnities; solemn appropriation; as, the dedication of Solomon's temple.

Dedicator

One who dedicates; more especially, one who inscribes a book to the favor of a patron, or to one whom he desires to compliment.

Dedimus

A writ to commission private persons to do some act in place of a judge, as to examine a witness, etc.

Dedolent

Feeling no compunction; apathetic.

Deducible

Capable of being deduced or inferred; derivable by reasoning, as a result or consequence.

Deductible

Capable of being deducted, taken away, or withdrawn.

Deduction

Act or process of deducing or inferring.

Deductive

Of or pertaining to deduction; capable of being deduced from premises; deducible.

Deductively

By deduction; by way of inference; by consequence.

Deduplication

The division of that which is morphologically one organ into two or more, as the division of an organ of a plant into a pair or cluster.

dee

an electrode with a large interior cavity, shaped like the letter "D", used in opposed pairs to accelerate particles in a cyclotron.

Deed

To convey or transfer by deed; as, he deeded all his estate to his eldest son.

Deedful

Full of deeds or exploits; active; stirring.

Deedless

Not performing, or not having performed, deeds or exploits; inactive.

deeds

performance of moral or religious acts; salvation is not by deeds, but by faith; to do good deeds.

Deedy

Industrious; active.

Deem

Opinion; judgment.

Deemster

A judge in the Isle of Man who decides controversies without process.

Deep

That which is deep, especially deep water, as the sea or ocean; an abyss; a great depth.

deep fat

Hot liquified fat used to deep-fry food. See deep-fry.

deep-eyed

having eyes set well behind the brow; characteristic of the bony face of a cadaver.

deep-fried

Fried in fat or oil deep enough to cover the object.

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