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12-letter words containing c, h, e, s, o

  • jackson hole — a valley in NW Wyoming, near the Teton Range: wildlife preserve.
  • kitchen soap — heavy-duty soap intended for use in the kitchen
  • leiotrichous — Having smooth hair.
  • lemon cheese — a soft paste made from lemons, sugar, eggs, and butter, used as a spread or filling
  • lincolnshire — a county in E England. 2272 sq. mi. (5885 sq. km).
  • lithospheric — Of or pertaining to the lithosphere.
  • long clothes — dress-like garments formerly worn by a baby
  • loose change — money in the form of coins suitable for small expenditures
  • lower school — a school that is preparatory to one on a more advanced level.
  • lycanthropes — Plural form of lycanthrope.
  • lysolecithin — any compound of lecithin produced by the removal of one of the fatty acid groups by hydrolysis
  • machine shop — a workshop in which metal and other substances are cut, shaped, etc., by machine tools.
  • mackintoshes — Plural form of mackintosh.
  • mechatronics — The synergistic combination of mechanical engineering, electronic engineering and software engineering for the study of automata from an engineering perspective and the control of advanced hybrid systems.
  • melancholics — Plural form of melancholic.
  • melancholies — a gloomy state of mind, especially when habitual or prolonged; depression.
  • mesocephalic — having a head with a cephalic index between that of dolichocephaly and brachycephaly.
  • mesolecithal — centrolecithal.
  • metachronism — An error in chronological ordering in which a character or an event is placed at too late a time.
  • metachronous — Medicine/Medical. occurring at a different time than a similar event: metachronous tumors.
  • mischievious — Misconstruction of mischievous.
  • moeso-gothic — of the Moeso-Goths, their extinct East Germanic language, or their culture
  • monotheistic — pertaining to, characterized by, or adhering to monotheism, the doctrine that there is only one God: a monotheistic religion.
  • moschiferous — giving off or producing musk
  • moustachioed — Alternative spelling of moustachio\u2019d.
  • nasotracheal — (anatomy) Of or relating to the nose and trachea.
  • natchitoches — a city in NW Louisiana.
  • necrophagous — That eats dead or decaying animal flesh.
  • necrophilism — necrophilia.
  • necrophilous — displaying a preference for dead tissue, esp of certain bacteria and insects
  • necrophorous — denoting animals, such as certain beetles, that carry away the bodies of dead animals
  • neurochemist — A researcher or other professional in the field of neurochemistry.
  • neutrosophic — Neutrosophy
  • nightclothes — Clothes worn to bed.
  • non-cohesion — the act or state of cohering, uniting, or sticking together.
  • non-cohesive — characterized by or causing cohesion: a cohesive agent.
  • nonaesthetic — not aesthetic, not related to the appreciation of beauty
  • noncrushable — (of a container, material, etc) not easily crushed
  • nonscheduled — not scheduled; not entered on or having a schedule; unscheduled: nonscheduled activities.
  • nonspherical — not spherical
  • nucleophiles — Plural form of nucleophile.
  • occurs check — (programming)   A feature of some implementations of unification which causes unification of a logic variable V and a structure S to fail if S contains V. Binding a variable to a structure containing that variable results in a cyclic structure which may subsequently cause unification to loop forever. Some implementations use extra pointer comparisons to avoid this. Most implementations of Prolog do not perform the occurs check for reasons of efficiency. Without occurs check the complexity of unification is O(min(size(term1), size(term2))) with occurs check it's O(max(size(term1), size(term2))) In theorem proving unification without the occurs check can lead to unsound inference. For example, in Prolog it is quite valid to write X = f(X). which will succeed, binding X to a cyclic structure. Clearly however, if f is taken to stand for a function rather than a constructor, then the above equality is only valid if f is the identity function. Weijland calls unification without occur check, "complete unification". The reference below describes a complete unification algorithm in terms of Colmerauer's consistency algorithm.
  • ochlocracies — Plural form of ochlocracy.
  • ochroleucous — having an off-white colour or a white colour tinted with yellow
  • office hours — hours when a business is open
  • old chestnut — old saying, cliché
  • oligochaetes — Plural form of oligochaete.
  • on the cards — likely
  • on the cross — diagonally
  • on the rocks — a large mass of stone forming a hill, cliff, promontory, or the like.
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