disappearance |
the act of disappearing or condition of having vanished. |
disappoint |
to fail to fulfill the expectations, wishes, or hopes of. [2 definitions] |
disappointed |
unhappy because of unfulfilled expectations. |
disappointing |
failing to measure up to one's expectations, standards, or wishes. |
disappointment |
the act of disappointing. [3 definitions] |
disapprobation |
disapproval. |
disapproval |
the act of censuring or condemning, or the opinion that something should be condemned. [2 definitions] |
disapprove |
to hold an unfavorable opinion (often fol. by "of"). [3 definitions] |
disarm |
to take away the weapons of; divest of the means of attack or defense. [4 definitions] |
disarmament |
the act or process of disarming, esp. the reduction of a country's military force or arsenal. |
disarming |
easing hostility or mistrust; charmingly agreeable. |
disarrange |
to disturb the arrangement or order of. |
disarray |
to upset or throw into disorder or confusion. [4 definitions] |
disassemble |
to take apart. [2 definitions] |
disassociate |
to put to an end an association with (persons, causes, or the like); dissociate. |
disaster |
a sudden calamity, esp. one causing widespread damage or suffering such as an earthquake, flood, oil spill, or fire. [2 definitions] |
disastrous |
causing grave harm, loss, ruin, or the like; tragic or calamitous. |
disavow |
to deny any knowledge of, responsibility for, or connection with; disclaim. [3 definitions] |
disavowable |
combined form of disavow. |
disband |
of an organized group, to break up or disperse. [2 definitions] |
disbar |
to expel officially from the legal profession. |