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8-letter words containing c, e, t, i

  • artifice — Artifice is the clever use of tricks and devices.
  • asbestic — relating to asbestos
  • ascetics — Plural form of ascetic.
  • asthenic — of, relating to, or having asthenia; weak
  • atechnic — a person who has no technical or scientific ability or understanding
  • athletic — Athletic means relating to athletes and athletics.
  • atticize — to conform or adapt to the Attic Greek style of expression, habits, and beliefs
  • auncient — Obsolete form of ancient.
  • autecism — the development of the entire life cycle of a parasitic fungus on a single host or group of hosts.
  • autocide — suicide by crashing the vehicle one is driving.
  • azotemic — the accumulation of abnormally large amounts of nitrogenous waste products in the blood, as in uremic poisoning.
  • backbite — to talk spitefully about (an absent person)
  • backlite — (in automotive styling) the rear window of a vehicle.
  • bacteria — Bacteria are very small organisms. Some bacteria can cause disease.
  • bacterin — a vaccine prepared from bacteria
  • baculite — an extinct species of mollusc from the Late Cretaceous period, fossils of which have been found ranging from 7cm to 2m in length
  • balletic — If you describe someone's movements as balletic, you mean that they have some of the graceful qualities of ballet.
  • basilect — (in a region where creole is or has been spoken) the dialect closest to that creole and furthest removed from the most prestigious dialect (the acrolect) of the region
  • bathetic — containing or displaying bathos
  • beatific — A beatific expression shows or expresses great happiness and calmness.
  • beatrice — a feminine name: dim. Bea; var. Beatrix
  • benedict — Saint. ?480–?547 ad, Italian monk: founded the Benedictine order at Monte Cassino in Italy in about 540 ad. His Regula Monachorum became the basis of the rule of all Western Christian monastic orders. Feast day: July 11 or March 14
  • bentinck — Lord William Cavendish. 1774–1839, British statesman, governor general of Bengal (1828–35)
  • betacism — a type of speech impediment where the b sound is excessive
  • biacetyl — a liquid with a strong, butter-like odour
  • bisector — a straight line or plane that bisects an angle
  • bitbrace — brace (def 3).
  • bitchery — spiteful talk
  • bluetick — a type of coonhound commonly bred in the southern United States
  • boracite — a white mineral that forms salt deposits of magnesium borate and chloride in orthorhombic crystalline form. Formula: Mg3ClB7O13
  • brattice — a partition of wood or treated cloth used to control ventilation in a mine
  • britches — breeches (sense 2)
  • c-interp — An interpreter for a small subset of C, originally part of a communications package.
  • cabinets — Plural form of cabinet.
  • caecitis — an inflammation of the caecum
  • cake tin — A cake tin is a metal container that you bake a cake in.
  • calamite — any extinct treelike plant of the genus Calamites, of Carboniferous times, related to the horsetails
  • calebite — a member of a tribe descended from Caleb.
  • califate — the rank, jurisdiction, or government of a caliph.
  • calltime — time available for making calls on a mobile phone
  • campiest — of, relating to, or characterized by camp: a campy send-up of romantic operetta.
  • campsite — A campsite is a place where people who are on holiday can stay in tents.
  • canidate — Eye dialect of candidate.
  • canistel — an evergreen tree, Pouteria campechiana, that is native to Central America and the West Indies
  • canister — A canister is a strong metal container. It is used to hold gases or chemical substances.
  • canities — greyness or whiteness of hair
  • canoeist — A canoeist is someone who is skilled at racing and performing tests of skill in a canoe.
  • canotier — a fabric constructed in a twill weave, used in the manufacture of yachting clothes.
  • canticle — a nonmetrical hymn, derived from the Bible and used in the liturgy of certain Christian churches
  • capetian — a member of the dynasty founded by Hugh Capet, which ruled France from 987–1328 ad
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