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12-letter words containing c, l, e, n

  • benefit club — a club whose members enjoy certain benefits, such as reduced prices for travel or sporting events
  • berlichingen — Götz von (ɡœts fɔn), called the Iron Hand. 1480–1562, German warrior knight, who robbed merchants and kidnapped nobles for ransom
  • beseechingly — to implore urgently: They besought him to go at once.
  • beurre blanc — an emulsion of cold butter in a white wine or vinegar and shallot reduction
  • bicentennial — A bicentennial is the same as a bicentenary.
  • bingo caller — the person who shouts out the numbers to bingo players
  • biocoenology — the branch of ecology concerned with the relationships and interactions between the members of a natural community
  • biotechnical — relating to biotechnology
  • bird colonel — a full colonel in the US Army
  • black heroin — a very potent and addictive form of heroin that is dark-colored.
  • black prince — Edward2 (Prince of Wales)
  • black tongue — canine pellagra.
  • blank cheque — If someone is given a blank cheque, they are given the authority to spend as much money as they need or want.
  • blind corner — a corner where the view of the road ahead is completely obscured or very restricted
  • bluestocking — A bluestocking is an intellectual woman.
  • bonnyclabber — clotted or curdled milk
  • botticellian — Sandro [san-droh,, sahn-;; Italian sahn-draw] /ˈsæn droʊ,, ˈsɑn-;; Italian ˈsɑn drɔ/ (Show IPA), (Alessandro di Mariano dei Filipepi) 1444?–1510, Italian painter.
  • bounce flash — a flash lamp designed to produce a bounced flash.
  • bounce light — Also, bounce lighting. light that is bounced off a reflective surface onto the subject in order to achieve a softer lighting effect.
  • bowel cancer — cancer of the colon
  • brown hackle — an artificial fly having a peacock herl body, golden tag and tail, and brown hackle.
  • brunelleschi — Filippo (fiˈlippo). 1377–1446, Italian architect, whose works in Florence include the dome of the cathedral, the Pazzi chapel of Santa Croce, and the church of San Lorenzo
  • bubble dance — a solo dance by a nude or nearly nude woman, as in a burlesque show, using one or more balloons for covering.
  • buckle under — If you buckle under to a person or a situation, you do what they want you to do, even though you do not want to do it.
  • buckler fern — any of various ferns of the genus Dryopteris, such as D. dilatata (broad buckler fern): family Polypodiaceae
  • buffet lunch — a lunch at which people stand up and help themselves from the table
  • bye-election — a special election, not held at the time of a general election, to fill a vacancy in Parliament.
  • cable length — a unit of length in nautical use that has various values, including 100 fathoms (600 feet)
  • cable-laying — involved in or connected to the activity of laying cables
  • cablecasting — relating to broadcasting by cable
  • caesalpinoid — of, relating to, or belonging to the Caesalpinoideae, a mainly tropical subfamily of leguminous plants that have irregular flowers: includes carob, senna, brazil, cassia, and poinciana
  • calabar bean — the dark brown very poisonous seed of a leguminous woody climbing plant, Physostigma venenosum, of tropical Africa, used as a source of the drug physostigmine
  • calceamentum — (in ancient Rome) a sandal, boot, shoe, or other type of footwear
  • calendar api — Calendar Application Programming Interface
  • calendar art — a type of sentimental, picturesque, or sexually titillating picture used on some calendars.
  • calendar day — the period from one midnight to the following midnight.
  • calisthenics — Calisthenics are simple exercises that you can do to keep fit and healthy.
  • call time on — If you call time on something, you end it.
  • call-by-name — (reduction)   (CBN) (Normal order reduction, leftmost, outermost reduction). An argument passing convention (first provided by ALGOL 60?) where argument expressions are passed unevaluated. This is usually implemented by passing a pointer to a thunk - some code which will return the value of the argument and an environment giving the values of its free variables. This evaluation strategy is guaranteed to reach a normal form if one exists. When used to implement functional programming languages, call-by-name is usually combined with graph reduction to avoid repeated evaluation of the same expression. This is then known as call-by-need. The opposite of call-by-name is call-by-value where arguments are evaluated before they are passed to a function. This is more efficient but is less likely to terminate in the presence of infinite data structures and recursive functions. Arguments to macros are usually passed using call-by-name.
  • call-by-need — (reduction)   A reduction strategy which delays evaluation of function arguments until their values are needed. A value is needed if it is an argument to a primitive function or it is the condition in a conditional. Call-by-need is one aspect of lazy evaluation. The term first appears in Chris Wadsworth's thesis "Semantics and Pragmatics of the Lambda calculus" (Oxford, 1971, p. 183). It was used later, by J. Vuillemin in his thesis (Stanford, 1973).
  • callisthenes — c360–327 b.c, Greek philosopher: chronicled Alexander the Great's conquests.
  • callisthenic — Alternative spelling of calisthenic.
  • calorescence — the absorption of radiation by a body, subsequently re-emitted at a higher frequency (lower wavelength)
  • calreticulin — (protein) A multifunctional protein that binds calcium ions.
  • calvin cycle — a series of reactions, occurring during photosynthesis, in which glucose is synthesized from carbon dioxide
  • calycanthemy — the abnormal development of the calyx of a flower into a structure resembling a corolla
  • camp lejeune — a U.S. Marine Corps base in SE North Carolina SE of Jacksonville on Onslow Bay.
  • canaliculate — having a groove or grooves
  • cancellarial — relating to a chancellor
  • cancellation — the fact or an instance of cancelling
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