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13-letter words containing c, l, a, s, i, o

  • inclusion map — a map of a set to itself in which each element of a given subset of the set is mapped to itself.
  • incompatibles — not compatible; unable to exist together in harmony: She asked for a divorce because they were utterly incompatible.
  • incondensable — not condensable; incapable of being condensed.
  • inconstruable — unable to be construed
  • incontestable — incapable of being contested; not open to dispute; incontrovertible: incontestable proof.
  • incontestably — incapable of being contested; not open to dispute; incontrovertible: incontestable proof.
  • inconversable — (obsolete) uncommunicative; reserved.
  • indissociable — Unable to be dissociated.
  • indissociably — In a way that does not allow dissociation; having an inextricable link.
  • infant school — In Britain, an infant school is a school for children between the ages of five and seven.
  • informercials — Plural form of informercial.
  • inscriptional — Of or pertaining to inscription.
  • insociability — the state or quality of being insociable
  • instructional — the act or practice of instructing or teaching; education.
  • interosculant — Mutually touching or intersecting.
  • interosculate — to interpenetrate; inosculate.
  • intersocietal — noting or pertaining to large social groups, or to their activities, customs, etc.
  • islamofascism — an ideology promoted by some Islamists, the aims of which are to establish Islamic orthodoxy and to resist western secularism
  • isle of capri — Capri.
  • isometrically — of, relating to, or having equality of measure.
  • isosmotically — With the same osmotic pressure.
  • isostatically — In an isostatic manner.
  • isostructural — (of two substances) having the same crystal structure but not necessarily a similar chemical composition.
  • juan carlos iKing (Juan Carlos Alfonso Victor María de Borbón y Borbón) born 1938, Spanish monarch, born in Italy: king since 1975.
  • kaleidoscoped — Simple past tense and past participle of kaleidoscope.
  • kaleidoscopes — Plural form of kaleidoscope.
  • kaleidoscopic — of, relating to, or created by a kaleidoscope.
  • kleptomaniacs — Plural form of kleptomaniac.
  • lactobacillus — any long, slender, rod-shaped, anaerobic bacterium of the genus Lactobacillus, that produces large amounts of lactic acid in the fermentation of carbohydrates, especially in milk.
  • lactoproteins — Plural form of lactoprotein.
  • laminectomies — Plural form of laminectomy.
  • laparoscopies — Plural form of laparoscopy.
  • laparoscopist — One who carries out laparoscopy.
  • laryngoscopic — Of or pertaining to laryngoscopy.
  • laser cooling — a technique using laser light to cool atoms to a very low temperature by removing momentum from the particles.
  • laughingstock — an object of ridicule; the butt of a joke or the like: His ineptness as a public official made him the laughingstock of the whole town.
  • lexical scope — (programming)   (Or "static scope") When the scope of an identifier is fixed at compile time to some region in the source code containing the identifier's declaration. This means that an identifier is only accessible within that region (including procedures declared within it). This contrasts with dynamic scope where the scope depends on the nesting of procedure and function calls at run time. Statically scoped languages differ as to whether the scope is limited to the smallest block (including begin/end blocks) containing the identifier's declaration (e.g. C, Perl) or to whole function and procedure bodies (e.g. ECMAScript), or some larger unit of code (e.g. ?). The former is known as static nested scope.
  • liquefactions — Plural form of liquefaction.
  • little casino — the two of spades.
  • localisations — Plural form of localisation.
  • logical shift — (programming)   (Either shift left logical or shift right logical) Machine-level operations available on nearly all processors which move each bit in a word one or more bit positions in the given direction. A left shift moves the bits to more significant positions (like multiplying by two), a right shift moves them to less significant positions (like dividing by two). The comparison with multiplication and division breaks down in certain circumstances - a logical shift may discard bits that are shifted off either end of the word and does not preserve the sign of the word (positive or negative). Logical shift is approriate when treating the word as a bit string or a sequence of bit fields, whereas arithmetic shift is appropriate when treating it as a binary number. The word to be shifted is usually stored in a register, or possibly in memory.
  • long-distance — of, from, or between distant places: a long-distance phone call.
  • lymphoblastic — (US, cytology, immunology) Of or pertaining to a lymphoblast.
  • macroclimates — Plural form of macroclimate.
  • macroscopical — Macroscopic.
  • magnoliaceous — belonging to the plant family Magnoliaceae.
  • malapropistic — an act or habit of misusing words ridiculously, especially by the confusion of words that are similar in sound.
  • maliciousness — full of, characterized by, or showing malice; intentionally harmful; spiteful: malicious gossip.
  • marginal cost — the cost of one additional unit of any item produced or bought in quantity.
  • master policy — a single policy covering a group of people, typically employees of a company, issued to an employer.
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