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10-letter words containing a, c, o, r, n

  • capsorubin — (organic compound) A di-hydroxy, keto carotenoid, which, together with capsanthin, constitutes the red pigment of paprika.
  • carabinero — a Chilean police officer
  • carbanions — Plural form of carbanion.
  • carbon arc — an electric arc produced between two carbon electrodes, formerly used as a light source
  • carbon tax — A carbon tax is a tax on the burning of fuels such as coal, gas, and oil. Its aim is to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere.
  • carbonados — Plural form of carbonado.
  • carbonated — Carbonated drinks are drinks that contain small bubbles of carbon dioxide.
  • carbonates — a salt or ester of carbonic acid.
  • carbondale — a city in SW Illinois.
  • carbonette — a ball of compressed coal dust used as fuel
  • carbonised — Alternative spelling of carbonized.
  • carbonized — Simple past tense and past participle of carbonize.
  • carbonizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of carbonize.
  • carbonless — containing no carbon
  • carbonnade — a thick stew of beef, onions, herbs, etc., cooked in beer.
  • carbonylic — of, relating to, or characteristic of the carbonyl group.
  • carcinogen — A carcinogen is a substance which can cause cancer.
  • carcinoids — Plural form of carcinoid.
  • carcinomas — Plural form of carcinoma.
  • cardphones — Plural form of cardphone.
  • carhopping — the practice of serving customers at a drive-in restaurant
  • cariogenic — (of a substance) producing caries, esp in the teeth
  • carmagnole — a dance and song popular during the French Revolution
  • carnations — Plural form of carnation.
  • carnivores — an animal that eats flesh.
  • carolinian — of or relating to North or South Carolina
  • carotenoid — any of a group of red or yellow pigments, including carotenes, found in plants and certain animal tissues
  • carpooling — Present participle of carpool.
  • carrington — Dora, known as Carrington. 1893–1932, British painter, engraver, and letter writer; a member of the Bloomsbury Group
  • carrollton — city in NE Tex.: suburb of Dallas: pop. 110,000
  • carron oil — an ointment of limewater and linseed oil, formerly used to treat burns
  • carronades — Plural form of carronade.
  • cartomancy — the telling of fortunes with playing cards
  • cartoneros — Plural form of cartonero.
  • cartonnage — The papyrus used to wrap mummies in ancient Egypt.
  • cartonnier — an ornamental box for papers, usually for placing on a desk.
  • cartooning — a sketch or drawing, usually humorous, as in a newspaper or periodical, symbolizing, satirizing, or caricaturing some action, subject, or person of popular interest.
  • cartoonish — like a cartoon, esp in being one-dimensional, brightly coloured, or exaggerated
  • cartoonist — A cartoonist is a person whose job is to draw cartoons for newspapers and magazines.
  • castration — to remove the testes of; emasculate; geld.
  • cat around — to search promiscuously for sexual partners; be promiscuous
  • cautionary — A cautionary story or a cautionary note to a story is one that is intended to give a warning to people.
  • cautioners — Plural form of cautioner.
  • cavortings — sexual frolics
  • censorware — (computing) Software or hardware used to filter content on the Internet or block Internet access or restrict the running of applications or computer usage. Content filtering software, or a component in an operating system or console used to disable reception of media on the basis of content believed to be objectionable.
  • centration — The tendency to focus on one aspect of a situation and neglect others.
  • centroidal — of or relating to a centroid
  • ceremonial — Something that is ceremonial relates to a ceremony or is used in a ceremony.
  • cessionary — a person to whom something is transferred; assignee; grantee
  • cfortran.h — (library)   A transparent, machine independent interface between C and Fortran routines and global data, developed by Burkhard Burow at CERN. It provides macros which allow the C preprocessor to translate a simple description of a C (Fortran) routine or global data into a Fortran (C) interface. Version 2.6 runs on VAX/VMS/Ultrix, DECstation, Silicon Graphics, IBM RS/6000, Sun, Cray, Apollo, HP9000, LynxOS, f2c, NAG f90. cfortran.h was reviewed in RS/Magazine November 1992 and a user's experiences with cfortran.h are described in the Jan 93 issue of Computers in Physics.
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