Danish |
of or pertaining to Denmark or its people, culture, language, or the like. [3 definitions] |
Danish pastry |
a light, flaky pastry that is made of raised dough, filled with cheese, fruit, or the like, and usu. drizzled with icing. |
dank |
unpleasantly damp and chilly. |
danseuse |
a female ballet dancer. |
Dante |
an Italian poet; Dante Alighieri (1265-1321). |
Danube |
a river originating in Germany and flowing through central Europe, eventually emptying into the Black Sea. |
Danube River |
a river originating in Germany and flowing through central Europe, eventually emptying into the Black Sea. |
dapper |
neat and stylish in dress and appearance. |
dapple |
a patch or group of spotted markings of different shade or color than their background, or a single such mark. [4 definitions] |
dapple-gray |
gray spotted with a darker shade. [2 definitions] |
DAR |
abbreviation of "Daughters of the American Revolution." |
dare |
to be courageous enough or reckless enough to do something. [4 definitions] |
daredevil |
a person who recklessly risks physical harm by performing dangerous feats. [2 definitions] |
daresay |
to take the risk of saying (used to introduce a statement of what one imagines to be true; used only in the first person singular in the present tense). |
Dar es Salaam |
the seaport capital of Tanzania. |
Darfur |
a region of western Sudan. |
Dari |
the dialect of Persian spoken in Afghanistan and one of its two official languages, the other being Pashto. |
daring |
willingness to take risks; boldness. [4 definitions] |
Darjeeling |
a variety of black tea grown in the mountainous region around Darjeeling, India. |
dark |
characterized by a lack of light. [7 definitions] |
Dark Ages |
the Middle Ages, esp. from about 476 A.D. to the end of the tenth century, so called because of intellectual, cultural, and social decline and stagnation. |