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11-letter words containing c, a, u, s, e, r

  • duster coat — a woman's loose summer coat with wide sleeves and no buttons, popular in the mid-20th century
  • early music — music of the medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque periods, especially revived and played on period instruments; European music after ancient music and before the classical music era, from the beginning of the Middle Ages to about 1750.
  • egg custard — sweet custard made with milk and egg and baked
  • electuaries — Plural form of electuary.
  • elucidators — Plural form of elucidator.
  • emasculator — One who, or that which, emasculates.
  • enunciators — Plural form of enunciator.
  • eremacausis — A gradual oxidation from exposure to air and moisture, as in the decay of old trees or dead animals.
  • eructations — Plural form of eructation.
  • escarmouche — a skirmish
  • eucharistic — (Theosophy) Pertaining to the Eucharist.
  • facinerious — (in the works of Shakespeare) extremely wicked
  • farinaceous — consisting or made of flour or meal, as food.
  • fiduciaries — Plural form of fiduciary.
  • first cause — God.
  • flea circus — a number of fleas trained to perform tricks, as for a carnival sideshow
  • futurebasic — (language)   A BASIC compiler for the Macintosh.
  • gas furnace — a furnace using gas as a fuel.
  • glasscutter — a small hand tool that is specially designed for cutting sheets of glass, having a cutting wheel of steel or tungsten carbide and notches for snapping the glass
  • goatsuckers — Plural form of goatsucker.
  • granduncles — Plural form of granduncle.
  • grasscutter — a device used to cut grass, as a lawn mower.
  • haruspicate — of or relating to a haruspex
  • heartstruck — Driven to the heart; infixed in the mind.
  • heat source — sth that generates warmth
  • hederaceous — (rare) Of, pertaining to, or resembling ivy.
  • hercogamous — (of flowers) incapable of self-fertilization
  • heuristical — Of or pertaining to heuristics.
  • horn clause — (logic)   A set of atomic literals with at most one positive literal. Usually written L <- L1, ..., Ln or <- L1, ..., Ln where n>=0, "<-" means "is implied by" and comma stands for conjuction ("AND"). If L is false the clause is regarded as a goal. Horn clauses can express a subset of statements of first order logic. The name "Horn Clause" comes from the logician Alfred Horn, who first pointed out the significance of such clauses in 1951, in the article "On sentences which are true of direct unions of algebras", Journal of Symbolic Logic, 16, 14-21. A definite clause is a Horn clause that has exactly one positive literal.
  • house-craft — skill in domestic management
  • hucksterage — the business of a huckster; peddling
  • hyperacusis — (medicine) A heightened sensitivity to some sounds.
  • hypercasual — Extremely casual.
  • increaseful — full of increase; fertile; fruitful
  • inscrutable — incapable of being investigated, analyzed, or scrutinized; impenetrable.
  • insectarium — a place in which a collection of living insects is kept, as in a zoo.
  • intercampus — the grounds, often including the buildings, of a college, university, or school.
  • irrecusable — not to be objected to or rejected.
  • isoceraunic — representing, having, or indicating equality in the frequency or intensity of thunderstorms: isoceraunic line; isoceraunic map.
  • isokeraunic — isoceraunic.
  • judicatures — Plural form of judicature.
  • judiciaries — Plural form of judiciary.
  • keratoconus — a degenerative condition characterized by conical protrusion of the cornea and irregular astigmatism.
  • lack-luster — lacking brilliance or radiance; dull: lackluster eyes.
  • lactiferous — producing or secreting milk: lactiferous glands.
  • larcenously — In a larcenous manner.
  • leprechauns — a dwarf or sprite.
  • lumberjacks — Plural form of lumberjack.
  • lunarscapes — Plural form of lunarscape.
  • lythraceous — belonging to the Lythraceae, the loosestrife family of plants.
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