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8-letter words containing a, c, s

  • caroused — Simple past tense and past participle of carouse.
  • carousel — At an airport, a carousel is a moving surface from which passengers can collect their luggage.
  • carouser — to engage in a drunken revel: They caroused all night.
  • carouses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of carouse.
  • carpools — Plural form of carpool.
  • carports — Plural form of carport.
  • carrells — Plural form of carrell.
  • carreras — José (həʊsˈzeɪ). born 1947, Spanish tenor
  • carriers — Plural form of carrier.
  • carryons — Plural form of carryon.
  • carshare — to take turns in driving fellow commuters to and from work or friends' children to school and back, so as to avoid the unnecessary use of several underoccupied vehicles
  • cartoons — Plural form of cartoon.
  • carvings — Plural form of carving.
  • casanova — Giovanni Jacopo (dʒoˈvanni ˈjaːkopo). 1725–98, Italian adventurer noted for his Mémoires, a vivid account of his sexual adventures and of contemporary society
  • casaubon — Isaac (izaak). 1559–1614, French Protestant theologian and classical scholar
  • cascabel — a knoblike protrusion on the rear part of the breech of an obsolete muzzle-loading cannon
  • cascaded — a waterfall descending over a steep, rocky surface.
  • cascades — a mountain range extending from N California to W Canada: highest peak, Mt. Rainier, 14,408 feet (4322 meters).
  • cascaras — Plural form of cascara.
  • caschrom — a wooden hand-plough used to till the ground in the northwest of Scotland
  • case bay — (in a roof or floor) the section between two principals.
  • case law — Case law is law that has been established by following decisions made by judges in earlier cases.
  • case out — an often small or portable container for enclosing something, as for carrying or safekeeping; receptacle: a jewel case.
  • caseated — Simple past tense and past participle of caseate.
  • casebook — A casebook is a written record of the cases dealt with by someone such as a doctor, social worker, or police officer.
  • caseload — The caseload of someone such as a doctor, social worker, or lawyer is the number of cases that they have to deal with.
  • casemate — an armoured compartment in a ship or fortification in which guns are mounted
  • casement — A casement or a casement window is a window that opens by means of hinges, usually at the side.
  • casevacs — Plural form of casevac.
  • casework — Casework is social work that involves actually dealing or working with the people who need help.
  • caseworm — any of various insect larvae that build protective cases about their bodies
  • cash bar — A cash bar is a bar at a party or similar event where guests can buy drinks.
  • cash cow — In business, a cash cow is a product or investment that steadily continues to be profitable.
  • cash mob — a group of people coordinated to meet and spend money at a local, independent business at a particular time
  • cash out — cash in1 (sense 1)
  • cash-out — Also, cashout. a direct cash payment or a cash profit or remainder: The store owner lived on a cash-out of fifty dollars a day.
  • cashable — Able to be converted into cash.
  • cashback — a discount offered in return for immediate payment
  • cashbook — a book in which all receipts and payments of money are entered
  • cashflow — Of or pertaining to a cash flow.
  • cashiers — Plural form of cashier.
  • cashless — Cashless payments are made using cards or electronic methods rather than physical money.
  • cashmere — Cashmere is a kind of very fine, soft wool.
  • casimere — cassimere
  • cassette — A cassette is a small, flat, rectangular plastic case containing magnetic tape which is used for recording and playing back sound or film.
  • cassiope — (sometimes initial capital letter) any evergreen shrub belonging to the genus Cassiope, of the heath family, having nodding white or pinkish solitary flowers and scalelike or needlelike leaves.
  • cassirer — Ernst (ɛrnst). 1874–1945, German neo-Kantian philosopher. The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms (1923–29) analyses the symbols that underlie all manifestations, including myths and language, of human culture
  • cassocks — Plural form of cassock.
  • cast off — If you cast off something, you get rid of it because it is no longer necessary or useful to you, or because it is harmful to you.
  • cast out — To cast out something or someone means to get rid of them because you do not like or need them, or do not want to take responsibility for them.
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