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8-letter words containing a, t, r, c

  • catbirds — Plural form of catbird.
  • catbrier — any prickly vines of the genus Smilax, such as greenbrier
  • catchcry — a well-known, frequently used phrase, esp one associated with a particular group, etc
  • catchers — Plural form of catcher.
  • category — If people or things are divided into categories, they are divided into groups in such a way that the members of each group are similar to each other in some way.
  • catenary — the curve assumed by a heavy uniform flexible cord hanging freely from two points. When symmetrical about the y-axis and intersecting it at y = a, the equation is y = a cosh x/a
  • caterans — Plural form of cateran.
  • caterers — Plural form of caterer.
  • cateress — a female caterer
  • caterina — a female given name, form of Catherine.
  • catering — Catering is the activity of providing food and drink for a large number of people, for example at weddings and parties.
  • cathedra — a bishop's throne
  • catheter — A catheter is a tube which is used to introduce liquids into a human body or to withdraw liquids from it.
  • catworks — the machinery used on a drilling platform
  • cave art — paintings and engravings on the walls of caves and rock-shelters, especially naturalistic depictions of animals, produced by Upper Paleolithic peoples of western Europe between about 28,000 and 10,000 years ago.
  • caveator — a person who enters a caveat
  • cavitary — having or containing cavities
  • cavorted — Simple past tense and past participle of cavort.
  • celature — the art of embossing metal.
  • cellaret — a case, cabinet, or sideboard with compartments for holding wine bottles
  • cemetary — Misspelling of cemetery.
  • centaurs — Classical Mythology. one of a race of monsters having the head, trunk, and arms of a man, and the body and legs of a horse.
  • centaury — any Eurasian plant of the genus Centaurium, esp C. erythraea, having purplish-pink flowers and formerly believed to have medicinal properties: family Gentianaceae
  • centeral — Misspelling of central.
  • centiare — a unit of area equal to one square metre
  • centibar — a centimeter-gram-second unit of pressure, equal to 1/100 (0.01) bar or 10,000 dynes per square centimeter.
  • centrale — (anatomy) The central, or one of the central, bones of the carpus or tarsus. In the human tarsus it is represented by the navicular.
  • ceramist — a person who works in ceramics; ceramic artist
  • cerastes — any venomous snake of the genus Cerastes, esp the horned viper
  • ceratite — An ammonoid fossil of an intermediate type found chiefly in the Permian and Triassic periods, typically with partly frilled and partly lobed suture lines.
  • ceratoid — having the shape or texture of animal horn
  • cernauti — a city in SW Ukraine, on the Prut River: formerly in Romania.
  • cervelat — a smoked sausage made from pork and beef
  • ceterach — any of a genus of ferns characterized by scales found on the underside of the fronds
  • cextract — (programming, tool)   A C prototype extractor by Adam Bryant <[email protected]>. cextract can generate header files for large multi-file C programs, and will automatically generate prototypes for all of the functions in such a program. It can also generate a sorted list of all functions and their locations. cextract version 1.7 works with both ANSI C and K&R C and runs under Unix and VMS. Posted to comp.sources.reviewed.
  • champart — the granting of land to a person on condition that a portion of the harvest will be given to the landowner
  • chanters — Plural form of chanter.
  • chanteur — a male singer, especially one who sings in nightclubs and cabarets.
  • chapiter — the capital of a column
  • chapters — Plural form of chapter.
  • chaptrel — a side pillar supporting the weight of an arch
  • charente — a department of W central France, in Poitou-Charentes region. Capital: Angoulême. Pop: 341 275 (2003 est). Area: 5972 sq km (2329 sq miles)
  • charette — a final, intensive effort to finish a project, especially an architectural design project, before a deadline.
  • chargeth — Archaic third-person singular form of charge.
  • chariest — Superlative form of chary.
  • chariots — Plural form of chariot.
  • charlton — Bobby, full name Sir Robert Charlton. born 1937, English footballer; played for Manchester United (1956–73) and England (1958–70) for whom he played 106 times, scoring 49 goals
  • charoset — a dish of chopped fruit, nuts, and wine eaten at Passover, representing the mortar that Jewish slaves used to build parts of Egypt
  • charters — Plural form of charter.
  • charting — a sheet exhibiting information in tabular form.
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