8-letter words containing c, i, t, e, s
- misteach — to teach wrongly or badly.
- mistrace — to trace incorrectly
- mitscher — Marc Andrew, 1887–1947, U.S. naval officer and aviator.
- mycetism — poisoning due to mushrooms.
- neckties — Plural form of necktie.
- nescient — lack of knowledge; ignorance.
- niceties — a delicate or fine point; punctilio: niceties of protocol.
- oscitate — To gape; to yawn.
- osteitic — inflammation of the substance of bone.
- outcries — Plural form of outcry.
- pastiche — a literary, musical, or artistic piece consisting wholly or chiefly of motifs or techniques borrowed from one or more sources.
- patrices — a mold of a Linotype for casting right-reading type for use in dry offset.
- pc-tiles — (language) A visual programming language.
- persicot — a sweet beverage that is made from the stones of apricots or peaches that are soaked or pulverized in distilled liquid or alcohol
- pickiest — extremely fussy or finicky, usually over trifles.
- pictures — a visual representation of a person, object, or scene, as a painting, drawing, photograph, etc.: I carry a picture of my grandchild in my wallet.
- piecrust — the crust or shell of a pie.
- pistache — the nut of a Eurasian tree, Pistacia vera, of the cashew family, containing an edible, greenish kernel.
- postiche — superadded, especially inappropriately, as a sculptural or architectural ornament.
- practise — habitual or customary performance; operation: office practice.
- quickest — done, proceeding, or occurring with promptness or rapidity, as an action, process, etc.; prompt; immediate: a quick response.
- quickset — a plant or cutting, especially of hawthorn, set to grow, as in a hedge.
- receipts — a written acknowledgment of having received, or taken into one's possession, a specified amount of money, goods, etc.
- rectitis — an inflammation of the rectum
- rescript — a written answer, as of a Roman emperor or a pope, to a query or petition in writing.
- restitch — one complete movement of a threaded needle through a fabric or material such as to leave behind it a single loop or portion of thread, as in sewing, embroidery, or the surgical closing of wounds.
- restrict — to confine or keep within limits, as of space, action, choice, intensity, or quantity.
- scanties — women's underwear
- scariest — causing fright or alarm.
- scawtite — a hydrated carbonate and silicate of calcium, Ca7Si6(CO3)O18·2H2O
- scenting — a distinctive odor, especially when agreeable: the scent of roses.
- sci-tech — combining scientific and technical features: sci-tech culture.
- scienter — a mental state in which one has knowledge that one’s action, statement, etc., is wrong, deceptive, or illegal: often used as a standard of guilt: The court found that the company had the requisite scienter for securities fraud.
- scilicet — to wit; namely.
- scituate — a town in E Massachusetts.
- sclerite — any chitinous, calcareous, or similar hard part, plate, spicule, or the like.
- scotties — Scottish terrier.
- scripted — the letters or characters used in writing by hand; handwriting, especially cursive writing.
- scripter — the letters or characters used in writing by hand; handwriting, especially cursive writing.
- scutiger — any species of the Scutigera genus which includes many types of centipede
- secretin — a polypeptide hormone, produced in the small intestine, that activates the pancreas to secrete pancreatic juice.
- security — freedom from danger, risk, etc.; safety.
- seicento — the 17th century, with reference to the Italian art or literature of that period.
- selictar — the sword-bearer of a chieftain
- semantic — of, relating to, or arising from the different meanings of words or other symbols: semantic change; semantic confusion.
- semiotic — of or relating to signs.
- semitics — a subfamily of Afroasiatic languages that includes Akkadian, Arabic, Aramaic, Ethiopic, Hebrew, and Phoenician.
- septical — septic
- sericate — sericeous; silky.
- sericite — a fine-grained variety of muscovite produced by the alteration of feldspar.