Words

Akkadian
damāšu - to wipe; to cover (AHw. 156, CAD D 64)

See also dumšu 'a wiping cloth; a coverlet' (AHw. 176, CAD D 183). Akkadian words are to be compared to the widespread Ethiopian root *dmš. Von Soden (AHw. 156) compares the Akk. verb with Arb. dms 'to become heavy, strong (darkness); to bury; to cover, to conceaľ, to which one should add Gez. damasa 'to cover, to hide' and, most probably Mhr. hədmōs 'to dip', Jib. edmís 'to dip', Soq. édmes 'to plant tree spalings into a hole'. In fact, the two sets of meaning (“to wipe out” and “to hide”) need not be mutually opposed and may well be combined within one lexeme, see the discussion in EDA II.

Akkadian
damtu - figure (of a man) (CAD D 74, CDA 55)
Var. dattu. The word may well be borrowed from Aramaic (hapax legomenon in a late lexical list), cf. Kogan 2015:234.
Akkadian
damu - blood (CAD D 75, AHw. 158)
Akkadian
dâmu - to be giddy, stagger (CAD D 80, AHw. 146)
Akkadian
danānu - a part of the liver (CAD D 81, AHw. 158)
Akkadian
danānu - to be strong (CAD D 83; AHw. 159)

To be compared to Gez. dandana 'to be fat, stout', Amh. dännänä 'to be dense, thick; to be very fat', dänäddänä 'to be fat, stout', Muh. dənäddänä 'to be stout, fat, thick', Msq. dənäddänä 'id.', Gog. dənäddänä 'id.', Sod. dənäddänä 'id.', Eža dəräddärä 'id.', Cha. dərätärä 'id.', Gyt. dərätärä 'id.'. Ugr, dn is highly uncertain.

Akkadian
dannu - hard, strong (CAD D 87‒92)
Akkadian
dannu - vat (for beer, wine) (CAD D 98)
NA, NB
Akkadian
daprānu, duprānu, daparānu - tree-like variety of juniper (Juniperus drupacea) (CAD D 189)
Akkadian
darāsu - to trample (CAD D 110)

Var. darāšu