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12-letter words containing a, m, t, e, r, o

  • compartments — Plural form of compartment.
  • compaternity — the relationship between the godparents of a child or between the godparents and the child's parents.
  • compensatory — Compensatory payments involve money paid as compensation.
  • computer age — modern society regarded as the period when the widespread use of computers has fundamentally changed people's lives
  • computer law — a body of law arising out of the special conditions relating to the use of computers, as in computer crime or software copyright.
  • concamerated — Simple past tense and past participle of concamerate.
  • concremation — the cremation of multiple things or people at the same time, esp suttee
  • condemnatory — Condemnatory means expressing strong disapproval.
  • confirmative — serving to confirm; corroborative.
  • conformative — (nonstandard) Tending to conform; conforming.
  • conglomerate — A conglomerate is a large business firm consisting of several different companies.
  • conservatism — Conservatism is a political philosophy which believes that if changes need to be made to society, they should be made gradually. You can also refer to the political beliefs of a conservative party in a particular country as Conservatism.
  • contemplator — to look at or view with continued attention; observe or study thoughtfully: to contemplate the stars.
  • contemporary — Contemporary things are modern and relate to the present time.
  • content farm — a website that exploits the way search engines retrieve and rank pages by incorporating popular search terms and topics in its content, often with little attention to the originality, appropriateness, or quality of the subject matter, in order to elevate the ranking of its articles in online search results and attract advertisers.
  • conterminant — enclosed within a common boundary
  • conterminate — conterminous
  • cotemporally — At the same time.
  • countercharm — an object or action that is capable of destroying a magical charm
  • counterclaim — a claim set up in opposition to another, esp by the defendant in a civil action against the plaintiff
  • counterimage — a corresponding image
  • countermands — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of countermand.
  • countermarch — to march or cause to march back along the same route
  • counterstamp — a stamp added to a stamped paper or document as a qualifying mark.
  • counterwoman — A woman who serves at a counter.
  • craniometric — the science of measuring skulls, chiefly to determine their characteristic relationship to sex, body type, or genetic population.
  • craniotomies — Plural form of craniotomy.
  • crater mound — huge, circular depression in central Ariz., believed to have been made by a meteorite: depth, 600 ft (183 m); diameter, 0.75 mi (1.2 km)
  • cremationist — a person who advocates cremation instead of burial of the dead.
  • crematoriums — Plural form of crematorium.
  • crymotherapy — cryotherapy.
  • cryptomerias — Plural form of cryptomeria.
  • cryptomnesia — the reappearance of a suppressed or forgotten memory which is mistaken for a new experience
  • cytomembrane — a membrane around a cell that encloses cytoplasm and acts as a semi-permeable barrier
  • dame fortune — the personification of fortune as a woman
  • deambulatory — a place for walking often with a covering overhead
  • deformations — Plural form of deformation.
  • demarcations — Plural form of demarcation.
  • demiromantic — Lb neologism Romantically attracted to people only after forming deep emotional bonds.
  • democratical — pertaining to or of the nature of democracy or a democracy.
  • democratised — Simple past tense and past participle of democratise.
  • democratiser — one who democratises
  • democratized — Simple past tense and past participle of democratize.
  • democratizer — a person or thing that democratizes
  • democratizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of democratize.
  • demonstrable — A demonstrable fact or quality can be shown to be true or to exist.
  • demonstrably — capable of being demonstrated or proved.
  • demonstrated — Simple past tense and past participle of demonstrate.
  • demonstrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of demonstrate.
  • demonstrator — Demonstrators are people who are marching or gathering somewhere to show their opposition to something or their support for something.
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