0%

13-letter words containing a, n, t, i

  • conspiratress — a woman who conspires
  • conspurcation — the act of defiling
  • constablewick — the area of land under the charge of a constable
  • constantine i — known as Constantine the Great. Latin name Flavius Valerius Aurelius Constantinus. ?280–337 ad, first Christian Roman emperor (306–337): moved his capital to Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople (330)
  • constellation — A constellation is a group of stars which form a pattern and have a name.
  • consternating — Present participle of consternate.
  • consternation — Consternation is a feeling of anxiety or fear.
  • constrainable — able to be constrained
  • constrainedly — forced, compelled, or obliged: a constrained confession.
  • constupration — the act of raping or violating
  • consuetudinal — According to custom; customary; usual.
  • consultations — Plural form of consultation.
  • consumability — able or meant to be consumed, as by eating, drinking, or using: consumable goods.
  • contact print — a photographic print made by exposing the printing paper through a negative placed directly onto it
  • container car — a flatcar or gondola car for carrying a number of standard, separate, removable containers.
  • containerised — Simple past tense and past participle of containerise.
  • containerized — Simple past tense and past participle of containerize.
  • containerless — having no container
  • containerport — a shipping port specially equipped to handle containerized cargo
  • containership — a ship specially designed or equipped for carrying containerized cargo
  • contaminating — Present participle of contaminate.
  • contamination — the act or process of contaminating or the state of being contaminated
  • contaminative — That contaminates.
  • contemplating — to think studiously; meditate; consider deliberately.
  • contemplation — thoughtful or long consideration or observation
  • contemplatist — a contemplator
  • contemplative — Someone who is contemplative thinks deeply, or is thinking in a serious and calm way.
  • contestations — Plural form of contestation.
  • contextualise — to put (a linguistic element, an action, etc.) in a context, especially one that is characteristic or appropriate, as for purposes of study.
  • contextualism — (in motion-picture criticism) the theory that all incidents in a film must be viewed in the social, political, and cultural context with which the film concerns itself and in which it was made.
  • contextualist — (in motion-picture criticism) the theory that all incidents in a film must be viewed in the social, political, and cultural context with which the film concerns itself and in which it was made.
  • contextuality — (uncountable) The condition of being contextual.
  • contextualize — to state the social, grammatical, or other context of; put into context
  • continentally — of or of the nature of a continent.
  • continuations — continuation passing style
  • continuatives — Plural form of continuative.
  • contortionate — tortuous; contortive
  • contrabandism — the practice of trading contraband goods
  • contrabandist — a person who trades in contraband goods; smuggler
  • contrabassist — Someone who plays the contrabass.
  • contracepting — to prevent the conception of (offspring).
  • contraception — Contraception refers to methods of preventing pregnancy.
  • contraceptive — A contraceptive method or device is a method or a device which a woman uses to prevent herself from becoming pregnant.
  • contractility — capable of contracting or causing contraction.
  • contractional — of, relating to, or produced by contraction
  • contradicting — Present participle of contradict.
  • contradiction — If you describe an aspect of a situation as a contradiction, you mean that it is completely different from other aspects, and so makes the situation confused or difficult to understand.
  • contradictive — tending or inclined to contradict; involving contradiction; contradictory.
  • contradictory — If two or more facts, ideas, or statements are contradictory, they state or imply that opposite things are true.
  • contrafactive — Denoting a verb that assigns to its object (normally a clausal object) the status of not being true, e.g., pretend and wish.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?