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10-letter words containing c, a, l, e

  • blackstone — Sir William. 1723–80, English jurist noted particularly for his Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765–69), which had a profound influence on jurisprudence in the US
  • blackwater — a stream stained dark with peat
  • blanc fixe — barium sulfate
  • blancmange — Blancmange is a cold dessert that is made from milk, sugar, cornflour or corn starch, and flavouring, and looks rather like jelly.
  • blast cell — any undifferentiated or immature cell.
  • blastocoel — the cavity within a blastula
  • blue coral — any coral of the genus Heliopora, having brown polyps and a blue skeleton, found in the Indo-Pacific region.
  • blue crane — the great blue heron.
  • blue racer — a long slender blackish-blue fast-moving colubrid snake, Coluber constrictor flaviventris, of the US
  • blue-black — Something that is blue-black is bluish black in colour.
  • bluejacket — a sailor in the Navy
  • bold-faced — confident or impudent
  • bomb lance — a harpoon fitted with an explosive head.
  • bone black — a fine charcoal made by burning animal bones in closed containers: used as a pigment, in refining sugar, etc.
  • bottle cap — a device for closing or sealing a bottle, especially a metal cover with a cork gasket fitting tightly over the mouth of a glass or plastic bottle, held in place by crimping the edge of the cap over the lip or flange of the bottle.
  • bounceable — to spring back from a surface in a lively manner: The ball bounced off the wall.
  • bradytelic — of or relating to evolution at a rate slower than the standard for a given group of plants or animals.
  • brain cell — a nerve cell that is situated in the brain
  • bricklayer — A bricklayer is a person whose job is to build walls using bricks.
  • brilliance — great brightness; radiance
  • brix scale — a scale for calibrating hydrometers used for measuring the concentration and density of sugar solutions at a given temperature
  • broadscale — on a broad scale; extensive; spread over a wide area
  • brocatelle — a heavy brocade with the design in deep relief, used chiefly in upholstery
  • bubble car — (in Britain, formerly) a small car, often having three wheels, with a transparent bubble-shaped top
  • bucephalus — the favourite horse of Alexander the Great
  • buchenwald — a village in E central Germany, near Weimar; site of a Nazi concentration camp (1937–45)
  • bulbaceous — bulbous
  • cable bend — a knot or clinch for attaching a cable to an anchor or mooring post.
  • cable buoy — a buoy marking or supporting part of a submerged cable.
  • cable-knit — knitted using the cable stitch
  • cable-laid — (of a rope) made of three plain-laid ropes twisted together in a left-handed direction
  • cablecasts — Plural form of cablecast.
  • cablegrams — Plural form of cablegram.
  • cablephoto — a photographic image transmitted via cable, especially for use by newspapers or in police work.
  • cabriolets — Plural form of cabriolet.
  • cache line — (storage)   (Or cache block) The smallest unit of memory than can be transferred between the main memory and the cache. Rather than reading a single word or byte from main memory at a time, each cache entry is usually holds a certain number of words, known as a "cache line" or "cache block" and a whole line is read and cached at once. This takes advantage of the principle of locality of reference: if one location is read then nearby locations (particularly following locations) are likely to be read soon afterward. It can also take advantage of page-mode DRAM which allows faster access to consecutive locations.
  • cacodylate — a salt of cacodylic acid.
  • cacomistle — a catlike omnivorous mammal, Bassariscus astutus, of S North America, related to but smaller than the raccoons: family Procyonidae, order Carnivora (carnivores). It has yellowish-grey fur and a long bushy tail banded in black and white
  • caddicefly — caddisfly.
  • cadwalader — 7th century ad, legendary king of the Britons, probably a confusion of several historical figures
  • caecilians — Plural form of caecilian.
  • caerphilly — a market town in SE Wales, in Caerphilly county borough: site of the largest castle in Wales (13th–14th centuries). Pop: 31 060 (2001)
  • cajolement — The act of cajoling or the state of being cajoled.
  • cake flour — finely ground wheat flour.
  • calabashes — Plural form of calabash.
  • calabooses — Plural form of calaboose.
  • calamander — the hard black-and-brown striped wood of several trees of the genus Diospyros, esp D. quaesita of India and Sri Lanka, used in making furniture: family Ebenaceae
  • calamities — a great misfortune or disaster, as a flood or serious injury.
  • calaverite — a metallic pale yellow mineral consisting of a telluride of gold in the form of elongated striated crystals. It is a source of gold in Australia and North America. Formula: AuTe2
  • calcaneous — Misspelling of calcaneus.
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