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7-letter words containing c, e, s, p

  • percase — maybe; perhaps
  • perches — a former division of N France.
  • percuss — Medicine/Medical. to strike or tap for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes.
  • pescara — a city in E Italy, on the Adriatic Sea.
  • petscii — (character)   /pet'skee/ PET ASCII. The variation (many would say perversion) of the ASCII character set used by the Commodore Business Machines' PET series of personal computers and the later Commodore 64, Commodore 16, and Commodore 128 computers. The PETSCII set used left-arrow and up-arrow (as in old-style ASCII) instead of underscore and caret, placed the unshifted alphabet at positions 65--90, put the shifted alphabet at positions 193--218, and added graphic characters.
  • piceous — of, relating to, or resembling pitch.
  • pickensAndrew, 1739–1817, American Revolutionary general.
  • pincase — a case for holding pins
  • pincers — a gripping tool consisting of two pivoted limbs forming a pair of jaws and a pair of handles (usually used with pair of).
  • piscean — a person born under the sign of Pisces.
  • piscine — of, relating to, or resembling a fish or fishes.
  • poaches — to trespass, especially on another's game preserve, in order to steal animals or to hunt.
  • pockies — woollen mittens
  • poetics — poetics.
  • polices — Also called police force. an organized civil force for maintaining order, preventing and detecting crime, and enforcing the laws.
  • pouches — a bag, sack, or similar receptacle, especially one for small articles or quantities: a tobacco pouch.
  • precast — to cast (a concrete block or slab, etc.) in a place other than where it is to be installed in a structure.
  • precess — to undergo precession (def 2).
  • precise — definitely or strictly stated, defined, or fixed: precise directions.
  • process — a systematic series of actions directed to some end: to devise a process for homogenizing milk.
  • proesch — Gilbert. Born 1942, an Italian artist who is noted esp for his photomontages and performance works with George Passmore
  • prosect — to dissect (a cadaver or part) for anatomical demonstration.
  • pschent — the double crown worn by ancient Egyptian kings, symbolic of dominion over Upper and Lower Egypt, which had previously been separate kingdoms.
  • psyched — psych1 .
  • punches — the chief male character in a Punch-and-Judy show.
  • recepts — an idea formed by the repetition of similar percepts, as successive percepts of the same object.
  • reclasp — to clasp (something) again or (of two things) to clasp together again
  • respace — to change the spacing of
  • respect — a particular, detail, or point (usually preceded by in): to differ in some respect.
  • respice — any of a class of pungent or aromatic substances of vegetable origin, as pepper, cinnamon, or cloves, used as seasoning, preservatives, etc.
  • scaleup — an increase in size, quantity, or activity according to a fixed scale or proportion: a scaleup of an engineering design; a scaleup program of energy conservation.
  • scalped — the integument of the upper part of the head, usually including the associated subcutaneous structures.
  • scalpel — a small, light, usually straight knife used in surgical and anatomical operations and dissections.
  • scalper — the integument of the upper part of the head, usually including the associated subcutaneous structures.
  • scamper — to run or go hastily or quickly.
  • scapose — having scapes; consisting of a scape.
  • scapple — to shape (stone, timber, etc) into a plane in a rough or unfinished manner
  • scarper — to flee or depart suddenly, especially without having paid one's bills.
  • scauper — a graver with a flattened or hollowed blade, used in engraving.
  • scepsis — a philosophical attitude of doubt or scepticism
  • scepter — a rod or wand borne in the hand as an emblem of regal or imperial power.
  • sceptic — a person who questions the validity or authenticity of something purporting to be factual.
  • sceptre — to give a scepter to; invest with authority.
  • schappe — to remove sericin from (silk waste) by fermentation.
  • schlepp — to carry; lug: to schlep an umbrella on a sunny day.
  • scooper — a ladle or ladlelike utensil, especially a small, deep-sided shovel with a short, horizontal handle, for taking up flour, sugar, etc.
  • scopate — pollen brush.
  • scorper — scauper.
  • scraper — a person or thing that scrapes.
  • scrapie — a usually fatal brain disease of sheep, characterized by twitching of the neck and head, grinding of the teeth, and scraping of itching portions of skin against fixed objects with a subsequent loss of wool: thought to be caused by an infectious prion.
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