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13-letter words containing c, i, s, o, e

  • cohesive soil — sticky soil such as clay or clayey silt whose strength depends on the surface tension of capillary water
  • collateralise — Alternative spelling of collateralize.
  • colleagueship — workplace companionship
  • collectivised — Simple past tense and past participle of collectivise.
  • collectivizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collectivize.
  • collectorship — The rank or office of a collector of customs or other taxes.
  • collieshangie — a quarrel
  • colonoscopies — Plural form of colonoscopy.
  • column inches — the amount of coverage given to a story in a newspaper
  • combativeness — The state of being combative.
  • come to grips — to engage in hand-to-hand fighting
  • commandership — a person who commands.
  • commendations — the act of commending; recommendation; praise: commendation for a job well done.
  • commensalisms — a companion at table.
  • commentations — Plural form of commentation.
  • commercialese — business jargon
  • commercialise — to make commercial in character, methods, or spirit.
  • commercialism — Commercialism is the practice of making a lot of money from things without caring about their quality.
  • commercialist — the principles, practices, and spirit of commerce.
  • commiserating — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commiseration — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commiserative — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commissioners — a person commissioned to act officially; member of a commission.
  • committedness — The state or condition of being committed; commitment.
  • committeeship — (formerly) the office of a person to whom the care of a mentally incompetent person or his or her property was entrusted by a court
  • common sennit — flat sennit.
  • commonalities — Plural form of commonality.
  • communalities — the state or condition of being communal.
  • comorbidities — Plural form of comorbidity.
  • companies act — (in Britain) any of various laws that govern the formation, dissolution, and management of companies
  • companion set — a set of fire irons on a stand
  • companionless — Without a companion; friendless, alone.
  • compassionate — If you describe someone or something as compassionate, you mean that they feel or show pity, sympathy, and understanding for people who are suffering.
  • compendiously — of or like a compendium; containing the substance of a subject, often an exclusive subject, in a brief form; concise: a compendious history of the world.
  • compensations — Plural form of compensation.
  • complacencies — a feeling of quiet pleasure or security, often while unaware of some potential danger, defect, or the like; self-satisfaction or smug satisfaction with an existing situation, condition, etc.
  • completionist — (in a video game) a player who attempts to complete every challenge and earn every achievement or trophy: I’m not really a completionist, so I skipped the side missions and focused on the main story quests.
  • compos mentis — of sound mind; sane
  • comprehension — Comprehension is the ability to understand something.
  • comprehensive — Something that is comprehensive includes everything that is needed or relevant.
  • compressional — relating to compression
  • compromisable — Capable of being compromised.
  • computer disk — a computer data storage device such as a hard drive or floppy disk
  • computerising — Present participle of computerise.
  • comradeliness — the quality of being comradely
  • conceitedness — having an excessively favorable opinion of one's abilities, appearance, etc.
  • conceptualise — to form into a concept; make a concept of.
  • conceptualism — the philosophical theory that the application of general words to a variety of objects reflects the existence of some mental entity through which the application is mediated and which constitutes the meaning of the term
  • conceptualist — any of several doctrines existing as a compromise between realism and nominalism and regarding universals as concepts. Compare nominalism, realism (def 5).
  • concessionary — A concessionary price is a special price which is lower than the normal one and which is often given to old people, students, and the unemployed.
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