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12-letter words containing c, i, s, e

  • eviscerating — Present participle of eviscerate.
  • evisceration — A disemboweling; the removal of viscera.
  • exactingness — The state of being exacting.
  • excellencies — Plural form of excellency.
  • exceptionals — Plural form of exceptional.
  • exclamations — Plural form of exclamation.
  • exclusionary — restrictive or elitist
  • exclusionism — The quality of being exclusionist.
  • exclusionist — Acting to shut out or bar someone from a place, group, or privilege.
  • exclusive of — not including or allowing for; ignoring
  • exclusive or — (logic)   (XOR, EOR) /X or, E or/ A two-input function whose result is true if one input is true and the other is false. The truth table is A | B | A xor B --+---+-------- F | F | F F | T | T T | F | T T | T | F The output is thus true if the inputs are not equal. If one input is false, the other is passed unchanged whereas if one input is true, the other is inverted. In Boolean algebra, exclusive or is often written as a plus in a circle: "⊕". The circle may be omitted suggesting addition modulo two. In digital logic, an exclusive or logic gate is drawn like a normal inclusive or gate but with a curved line across both inputs: {exclusive or gate " />.
  • excoriations — Plural form of excoriation.
  • excursioning — Present participle of excursion.
  • excursionist — A person who goes on excursions; a traveller or tourist.
  • excursionize — to go on an excursion or excursions
  • executioners — Plural form of executioner.
  • executorship — The office or position of an executor.
  • expectancies — Plural form of expectancy.
  • expectations — Plural form of expectation.
  • expediencies — Plural form of expediency.
  • explications — Plural form of explication.
  • explicitness — The state or characteristic of being explicit.
  • exsufflicate — Empty, inflated, frivolous.
  • extramusical — outside the field or scope of music
  • factiousness — given to faction; dissentious: A factious group was trying to undermine the government.
  • factorisable — Alternative spelling of factorizable.
  • factualities — of or relating to facts; concerning facts: factual accuracy.
  • false acacia — black locust.
  • false cirrus — a type of thick cirrus cloud spreading from the top of a cumulonimbus cloud
  • false-acacia — Also called false acacia, yellow locust. a North American tree, Robinia pseudoacacia, of the legume family, having pinnate leaves and clusters of fragrant white flowers.
  • fancifulness — The quality of being fanciful.
  • fantasticate — to make or render fantastic.
  • farcicalness — The property of being farcical.
  • fasciculated — Grouped in a fascicle; fascicled.
  • fascinatedly — In a fascinated manner; with fascination.
  • federalistic — an advocate of federalism.
  • felicitously — In a felicitous manner.
  • fence-sitter — a person who remains neutral or undecided in a controversy.
  • fennoscandia — region in N Europe, including Scandinavia, Finland, and the part of NW Russia west of the White Sea
  • ferrosilicon — a ferroalloy containing up to 95 percent silicon.
  • festschrifts — Plural form of festschrift.
  • fiber optics — the branch of optics that deals with the transmission of light through transparent fibers, as in the form of pulses for the transmission of data or communications, or through fiber bundles for the transmission of images.
  • fibre optics — optical fibre
  • fictionalise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of fictionalize.
  • fiddlesticks — anything; a bit: I don't care a fiddlestick for what they say.
  • fidel castro — Cipriano [sip-ree-ah-noh;; Spanish see-pree-ah-naw] /ˌsɪp riˈɑ noʊ;; Spanish ˌsi priˈɑ nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1858?–1924, Venezuelan military and political leader: president 1901–08; exiled 1908.
  • field circus — A derogatory pun on "field service". The field service organisation of any hardware manufacturer, but especially DEC. There is an entire genre of jokes about DEC field circus engineers: Q: How can you recognise a DEC field circus engineer with a flat tire? A: He's changing one tire at a time to see which one is flat. Q: How can you recognise a DEC field circus engineer who is out of gas? A: He's changing one tire at a time to see which one is flat. See Easter egging for additional insight on these jokes. There is also the "Field Circus Cheer" (from the plan file for DEC on MIT-AI): Maynard! Maynard! Don't mess with us! We're mean and we're tough! If you get us confused We'll screw up your stuff. (DEC's service HQ is located in Maynard, Massachusetts).
  • fieri facias — a writ commanding a sheriff to levy and sell as much of a debtor's property as is necessary to satisfy a creditor's claim against the debtor. Abbreviation: FI. FA., fi. fa.
  • fifty-second — next after the fifty-first; being the ordinal number for 52.
  • final clause — a clause expressing intention or purpose
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