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

  • clapham sect — a group of early 19th-century Church of England evangelicals advocating personal piety, the abolition of slavery, etc
  • class method — (programming)   1. A method that operates on a class object (an object of class "class"). A class method is really just an ordinary object method that happens to operate on class objects. A class method might, for example, return a list of objects representing the methods and attributes of the given class. 2. A static method.
  • class system — a system in which social status is largely determined by the family into which a person is born
  • claude monetClaude [klawd;; French klohd] /klɔd;; French kloʊd/ (Show IPA), 1840–1926, French painter.
  • clavicembalo — a harpsichord.
  • clay mineral — any of a group of minerals consisting of hydrated aluminium silicates: the major constituents of clays
  • clean a room — If you clean a room, you make the inside of it and the furniture in it free from dirt and dust.
  • clean-limbed — having well-proportioned limbs
  • clear as mud — not at all clear
  • cleistogamic — Alternative form of cleistogamous.
  • cleptomaniac — kleptomania.
  • clickstreams — Plural form of clickstream.
  • climacterics — Plural form of climacteric.
  • clomipramine — A tricyclic, heterocyclic drug used to treat depression, anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
  • close combat — the act of fighting at close quarters
  • closet drama — drama suitable for reading rather than performing
  • clotrimazole — An antifungal medication used to treat humans and animals.
  • clytemnestra — the wife of Agamemnon, whom she killed on his return from the Trojan War
  • cobaltammine — any of the various complex derivatives of cobalt containing one or more molecules of ammonia bonded to the cobalt.
  • collegialism — the theory that the church's highest authority is its collective membership
  • collembolans — Plural form of collembolan.
  • columnarized — columnar (def 3).
  • come-all-you — a street ballad, especially in England.
  • comfortables — Plural form of comfortable.
  • comma splice — comma fault.
  • command line — typed instructions that access a computer system
  • commemorable — worthy of being commemorated
  • commensalism — a close association or union between two kinds of organisms, in which one is benefited by the relationship and the other is neither benefited nor harmed
  • commensality — eating together at the same table.
  • commentarial — a series of comments, explanations, or annotations: a commentary on the Bible; news followed by a commentary.
  • commercially — of, relating to, or characteristic of commerce.
  • commiserable — worthy of commiseration; pitiable
  • common pleas — in some U.S. states, a court having general and original jurisdiction over civil and criminal trials
  • commonalties — Plural form of commonalty.
  • commonplaces — Plural form of commonplace.
  • commonwealth — The Commonwealth is an organization consisting of the United Kingdom and most of the countries that were previously under its rule.
  • communicable — A communicable disease is one that can be passed on to other people.
  • compellation — appellation
  • compellative — an appellation
  • complacently — pleased, especially with oneself or one's merits, advantages, situation, etc., often without awareness of some potential danger or defect; self-satisfied: The voters are too complacent to change the government.
  • complainable — That may be complained of.
  • complaintive — Tending to complain, characterized by complaining.
  • complaisance — deference to the wishes of others; willing compliance
  • complemental — complementary; completing.
  • complex salt — a salt that contains one or more complex ions
  • complex wave — a waveform consisting of a fundamental frequency with superimposed harmonics
  • complexation — the formation of a complex
  • complexional — Relating to complexion.
  • compliancies — compliance (defs 1, 2, 4).
  • complicative — having a tendency to complicate
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