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10-letter words containing c, h, r, o, m

  • chromatids — Plural form of chromatid.
  • chromatins — Plural form of chromatin.
  • chromatism — chromatic aberration
  • chromatoid — Resembling chromatin.
  • chromatype — a procedure in photography that uses photographic paper that is made reactive to light by the use of a salt of chromium
  • chrome red — any red pigment used in paints, consisting of a mixture of lead chromate and lead oxide; basic lead chromate
  • chromidium — a length or particle of chromatin in cell cytoplasm
  • chromogens — Plural form of chromogen.
  • chromogram — a photograph that depicts an object in true-to-life colours that is obtained by putting together three different photographs
  • chromomere — any of the dense areas of chromatin along the length of a chromosome during the early stages of cell division
  • chromonema — a coiled chromatin thread within a single chromosome
  • chromophil — a cell that takes a stain easily
  • chromosome — A chromosome is a part of a cell in an animal or plant. It contains genes which determine what characteristics the animal or plant will have.
  • chronemics — The study of the communicative function of time.
  • chronogram — a phrase or inscription in which letters such as M, C, X, L, and V can be read as Roman numerals giving a date
  • chrysostom — Saint John. ?345–407 ad, Greek patriarch; archbishop of Constantinople (398–404). Feast day: Sept 13 or Nov 13
  • chyloderma — (medicine) swelling of the scrotum resulting from chronic lymphatic obstruction.
  • cibachrome — the old name for the Ilfochrome photographic printing process
  • climograph — A chart that summarizes the climate of a place by superimposing a line graph representing average monthly temperature on a bar chart representing average monthly precipitation.
  • coachmaker — A coachbuilder.
  • cochairman — a person who cochairs an organization
  • comanchero — (in 19th-century New Mexico) a trader who traded with the Native American nomadic tribes such as the Comanche, Navajo, and Apache
  • comprehend — If you cannot comprehend something, you cannot understand it.
  • conchiform — shaped like a shell
  • cormophyte — any of the Cormophyta, a major division (now obsolete) of plants having a stem, root, and leaves: includes the mosses, ferns, and seed plants
  • cornishman — a man who is a native or inhabitant of Cornwall
  • crossmatch — (pathology) To test that the blood of a donor and recipient are compatible.
  • crumbcloth — a cloth placed under a dining table to protect the carpet from crumbs and other material
  • cyathiform — shaped like a drinking glass or cup, with a wider upper section
  • cymotrichy — the state of having wavy hair
  • cytochrome — any of a group of naturally occurring compounds, consisting of iron, a protein, and a porphyrin, that are important in cell oxidation-reduction reactions
  • dichromacy — The quality of having two independent channels for conveying color information in the eye.
  • dichromasy — Alternative spelling of dichromacy.
  • dichromate — any salt or ester of dichromic acid. Dichromate salts contain the ion Cr2O72–
  • dichromism — the state of being dichromic
  • dyschromia — Abnormal alteration of the color of the skin or nails.
  • dysmorphic — relating to or resulting in misshapenness of parts of the body
  • echinoderm — any marine animal of the invertebrate phylum Echinodermata, having a radiating arrangement of parts and a body wall stiffened by calcareous pieces that may protrude as spines and including the starfishes, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, etc.
  • ectomorphs — Plural form of ectomorph.
  • ectomorphy — having a thin body build, roughly characterized by the relative prominence of structures developed from the embryonic ectoderm (contrasted with endomorphic, mesomorphic).
  • ectotherms — Plural form of ectotherm.
  • ectothermy — (biology) The condition of being ectothermic or warm-blooded; the ability to maintain the body's temperature.
  • embouchure — The way in which a player applies the mouth to the mouthpiece of a brass or wind instrument.
  • enharmonic — Of or relating to notes that are the same in pitch (in modern tuning) though bearing different names (e.g., F sharp and G flat or B and C flat).
  • enomotarch — (historical, Ancient Greece) The commander of an enomoty.
  • epimorphic — (zoology, of an insect larva) That becomes segmented prior to hatching.
  • euharmonic — producing perfect concord or harmony
  • exothermic — (of a reaction or process) Accompanied by the release of heat.
  • frog march — to force (a person) to march with the arms pinioned firmly behind the back.
  • frog-march — If you are frog-marched somewhere, someone takes you there by force, holding you by the arms or another part of your body so that you have to walk along with them.
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