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11-letter words containing c, l, a, m, e

  • compliances — Plural form of compliance.
  • complicated — If you say that something is complicated, you mean it has so many parts or aspects that it is difficult to understand or deal with.
  • complicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of complicate.
  • componental — of, relating to, or having components
  • comportable — (obsolete) suitable; consistent.
  • compostable — capable of being used as compost
  • comprisable — to include or contain: The Soviet Union comprised several socialist republics.
  • concealment — Concealment is the state of being hidden or the act of hiding something.
  • condemnable — to express an unfavorable or adverse judgment on; indicate strong disapproval of; censure.
  • condimental — relating to or belonging to a condiment
  • confirmable — Capable of being checked, verifiable.
  • conformable — corresponding in character; similar
  • congealment — The act of congealing.
  • consumables — goods intended to be bought, used, and replaced, esp materials needed for computers and photocopiers
  • contemplant — absorbed in contemplation
  • contemplate — If you contemplate an action, you think about whether to do it or not.
  • conterminal — having a common boundary; bordering; contiguous.
  • cremaillere — a trench or fortification constructed in an indented or saw-tooth pattern
  • criminalese — the jargon of criminals
  • criminalise — (chiefly, British) alternative spelling of criminalize.
  • criminalize — If a government criminalizes an action or person, it officially declares that the action or the person's behaviour is illegal.
  • cromwellian — of, relating to, or characteristic of the politics, practices, etc., of Oliver Cromwell or of the Commonwealth and Protectorate.
  • culminative — (of stress or tone accent) serving to indicate the number of independent words or the important points in an utterance by assigning prominence to one syllable in each word or close-knit group of words.
  • cumbernauld — a town in central Scotland, in North Lanarkshire, northeast of Glasgow: developed as a new town since 1956. Pop: 49 664 (2001)
  • curtailment — The curtailment of something is the act of reducing or limiting it.
  • cut a melon — to declare an abnormally high dividend to shareholders
  • cytomegalic — of or relating to a disease characterized by enlarged cells
  • dame school — (formerly) a small school, often in a village, usually run by an elderly woman in her own home to teach young children to read and write
  • dame-school — a school in which the rudiments of reading, writing, and arithmetic were taught to neighborhood children by a woman in her own home.
  • decimalized — Simple past tense and past participle of decimalize.
  • decimalizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decimalize.
  • declamation — a rhetorical or emotional speech, made esp in order to protest or condemn; tirade
  • declamatory — A declamatory phrase, statement, or way of speaking is dramatic and confident.
  • declarement — (obsolete) declaration.
  • decremental — relating to a small amount that is taken away
  • demagogical — Demagogic.
  • demonically — In a demonic way.
  • descrambled — Simple past tense and past participle of descramble.
  • descrambler — unscrambler (def 2).
  • diametrical — of or along a diameter
  • dimercaprol — a colorless, oily, viscous liquid, C 3 H 8 OS 2 , originally developed as an antidote to lewisite and now used in treating bismuth, gold, mercury, and arsenic poisoning.
  • diplomacies — Plural form of diplomacy.
  • direct mail — mail, usually consisting of advertising matter, appeals for donations, or the like, sent simultaneously to large numbers of possible individual customers or contributors. Abbreviation: DM.
  • disclaimers — Plural form of disclaimer.
  • domiciliate — to domicile.
  • duodecimals — Plural form of duodecimal.
  • dutch metal — an alloy of copper and zinc in the form of thin sheets, used as an imitation of gold leaf.
  • early music — music of the medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque periods, especially revived and played on period instruments; European music after ancient music and before the classical music era, from the beginning of the Middle Ages to about 1750.
  • ectoplasmic — Relating to, or having the properties or appearance of, ectoplasm.
  • ectothermal — coldblooded (sense 1)
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