9-letter words containing a, e, c, i
- ethically — In an ethical manner.
- eucalypti — Plural form of eucalyptus.
- eucharist — The Eucharist is the Christian religious ceremony in which Christ's last meal with his disciples is celebrated by eating bread and drinking wine.
- euclidean — (rare) alternative spelling of Euclidean.
- eucryphia — any tree or shrub of the mostly evergreen genus Eucryphia, native to Australia and S America, having leaves of a dark lustrous green and white flowers: family Eucryphiaceae
- euplastic — healing quickly and well
- eutaxitic — resembling eutaxite in form
- evangelic — Evangelical.
- evocating — Present participle of evocate.
- evocation — The act of calling out or forth, or evoking.
- evocative — Bringing strong images, memories, or feelings to mind.
- exactions — Plural form of exaction.
- exarchist — a supporter of an exarch, esp the Exarch of Bulgaria
- excalibur — (in Arthurian legend) the magic sword of King Arthur
- excambion — an exchange, esp of land
- excisable — Liable or subject to excise.
- exciseman — An official responsible for collecting excise tax and preventing infringement of the excise laws (especially by smuggling).
- excitable — Responding rather too readily to something new or stimulating; too easily excited.
- excitancy — the ability to excite or stimulate
- excitants — Plural form of excitant.
- exclaimed — Cry out suddenly, esp. in surprise, anger, or pain.
- exclaimer — One who exclaims.
- excoriate — Censure or criticize severely.
- existance — Misspelling of existence.
- exoterica — (Used with or without an article) Writing, facts, principles, etc. that are widely known.
- expiscate — to fish out; to find out by investigation
- explicate — Analyze and develop (an idea or principle) in detail.
- exsiccant — Having the quality of drying up; causing a drying up.
- exsiccate — To dry, to desiccate, to dehydrate.
- extricate — Free (someone or something) from a constraint or difficulty.
- fabricate — to make by art or skill and labor; construct: The finest craftspeople fabricated this clock.
- face time — time spent speaking or meeting with one or more people face to face, in contrast to phone conversations or other means of communication: Is he available for a couple of hours of face time?
- face-lift — Also, face lifting, facelifting. plastic surgery on the face for elevating sagging tissues and eliminating wrinkles and other signs of age; rhytidectomy.
- face-nail — to secure with nails driven perpendicular to the surface. Compare toenail (def 4).
- face-time — Face-time is time that you spend talking directly to someone, rather than talking by phone or email.
- facefirst — Violently forward, so as to strike something with one's face.
- facelifts — Plural form of facelift.
- faceprint — a digitally recorded representation of a person's face that can be used for security purposes because it is as individual as a fingerprint
- facetious — not meant to be taken seriously or literally: a facetious remark.
- facsimile — an exact copy, as of a book, painting, or manuscript.
- factitive — noting or pertaining to verbs that express the idea of making or rendering in a certain way and that take a direct object and an additional word or group of words indicating the result of the process, as made in They made him king.
- factories — A building or group of buildings where goods are manufactured or assembled chiefly by machine.
- factorise — (mathematics): To create a list of factors.
- factorize — Mathematics. to resolve into factors.
- faculties — an ability, natural or acquired, for a particular kind of action: a faculty for making friends easily.
- faineance — Also, faineant [fey-nee-uh nt] /ˈfeɪ ni ənt/ (Show IPA). idle; indolent.
- faineancy — Synonym of faineance.
- fairfaced — (of brickwork) having a neat smooth unplastered surface
- faithcure — a cure or healing through prayer or faith in God
- falconine — any of several birds of prey of the family Falconidae, especially of the genus Falco, usually distinguished by long, pointed wings, a hooked beak with a toothlike notch on each side of the upper bill, and swift, agile flight, typically diving to seize prey: some falcon species are close to extinction.