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10-letter words containing c, i, r, p, e

  • precarious — dependent on circumstances beyond one's control; uncertain; unstable; insecure: a precarious livelihood.
  • precaution — a measure taken in advance to avert possible evil or to secure good results.
  • preceptial — preceptive, instructive, didactic; conveying or consisting of precepts
  • preceptive — of the nature of or expressing a precept; mandatory.
  • preceramic — noting or pertaining to a period or culture antedating the use of ceramics or pottery.
  • precession — the act or fact of preceding; precedence.
  • preciosity — fastidious or carefully affected refinement, as in language, style, or taste.
  • preciouses — of high price or great value; very valuable or costly: precious metals.
  • preciously — of high price or great value; very valuable or costly: precious metals.
  • precipitin — an antibody that reacts with its specific antigen to form an insoluble precipitate.
  • preclusion — to prevent the presence, existence, or occurrence of; make impossible: The insufficiency of the evidence precludes a conviction.
  • preclusive — to prevent the presence, existence, or occurrence of; make impossible: The insufficiency of the evidence precludes a conviction.
  • precocious — unusually advanced or mature in development, especially mental development: a precocious child.
  • precognize — to know or cognize in advance; to have prior cognizance of (something)
  • preconceit — a preconceived idea; a preconception
  • preconized — to proclaim or commend publicly.
  • precooling — Precooling is a process which improves the performance of a unit by reducing the compressor load and the head pressure.
  • precursive — of the nature of a precursor; preliminary; introductory: precursory remarks.
  • predacious — predatory; rapacious.
  • predicable — that may be predicated or affirmed; assertable.
  • predicated — to proclaim; declare; affirm; assert.
  • predicator — the verbal element of a clause or sentence.
  • predicting — to declare or tell in advance; prophesy; foretell: to predict the weather; to predict the fall of a civilization.
  • prediction — an act of predicting.
  • predictive — of or relating to prediction: losing one's predictive power.
  • predictory — predictive.
  • prediscuss — to consider or examine by argument, comment, etc.; talk over or write about, especially to explore solutions; debate: to discuss the proposed law on taxes.
  • prefascist — relating to fascist leanings before Fascism was founded in 1919
  • prefinance — the management of revenues; the conduct or transaction of money matters generally, especially those affecting the public, as in the fields of banking and investment.
  • preglacial — prior to a given glacial epoch, especially the Pleistocene.
  • preincline — to dispose or prepare beforehand: Their experiences had preinclined them to think pessimistically.
  • prejudiced — an unfavorable opinion or feeling formed beforehand or without knowledge, thought, or reason.
  • prejudices — an unfavorable opinion or feeling formed beforehand or without knowledge, thought, or reason.
  • prelection — to lecture or discourse publicly.
  • prelexical — denoting or applicable at a stage in the formation of a sentence at which words and phrases have not yet replaced all of the underlying grammatical and semantic material of that sentence in the speaker's mind
  • prelogical — according to or agreeing with the principles of logic: a logical inference.
  • premedical — of or relating to studies in preparation for the formal study of medicine: a premedical course.
  • premeiotic — occurring before the start of meiosis
  • premycotic — relating to the early phase of mycosis fungoides
  • prepacking — a package assembled by a manufacturer, distributor, or retailer and containing a specific number of items or a specific assortment of sizes, colors, flavors, etc., of a product.
  • prepricing — the sum or amount of money or its equivalent for which anything is bought, sold, or offered for sale.
  • prepyloric — the opening between the stomach and the duodenum.
  • prescience — knowledge of things before they exist or happen; foreknowledge; foresight.
  • prescribed — to lay down, in writing or otherwise, as a rule or a course of action to be followed; appoint, ordain, or enjoin.
  • prescriber — to lay down, in writing or otherwise, as a rule or a course of action to be followed; appoint, ordain, or enjoin.
  • preservice — of a period before a person begins service
  • presidency — the office, function, or term of office of a president.
  • prespecify — to specify in advance
  • prevocalic — immediately preceding a vowel.
  • price list — a list giving the prices of items for sale.
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