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10-letter words containing c, l, t

  • lose touch — not keep in contact
  • lose track — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • lost cause — a cause that has been defeated or whose defeat is inevitable.
  • love match — a marriage entered into for love alone.
  • lovestruck — Alternative spelling of love-struck.
  • low-impact — Low-impact exercise does not put a lot of stress on your body.
  • low-ticket — having a relatively low price: a growing market for low-ticket items.
  • lubricants — Plural form of lubricant.
  • lubricated — to apply some oily or greasy substance to (a machine, parts of a mechanism, etc.) in order to diminish friction; oil or grease (something).
  • lubricates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lubricate.
  • lubricator — a person or thing that lubricates.
  • lucanthone — A particular drug used in chemotherapy.
  • lucerative — Misspelling of lucrative.
  • lucubrator — One who lucubrates.
  • luftmensch — a person unconcerned with the practicalities of earning a living
  • lumpectomy — the surgical removal of a breast cyst or tumor.
  • lunch meat — Lunch meat is meat that you eat in a sandwich or salad, and that is usually cold and either sliced or formed into rolls.
  • lycra lout — an aggressive urban cyclist who disregards the rules of the road
  • lymphatics — Plural form of lymphatic.
  • lymphocyte — a type of white blood cell having a large, spherical nucleus surrounded by a thin layer of nongranular cytoplasm.
  • lysimetric — of or relating to the measurement of solubility
  • macanalyst — An analysis CASE tool for the Macintosh from Excel Software, Inc.
  • maculating — Present participle of maculate.
  • maculation — the act of spotting.
  • maculature — (dated) Blotting paper.
  • magnetical — (obsolete) Pertaining to the magnet; possessing the properties of the magnet, or corresponding properties; magnetic.
  • mail truck — a large vehicle that is used to transport letters, packages, etc, by road
  • majestical — characterized by or possessing majesty; of lofty dignity or imposing aspect; stately; grand: the majestic Alps.
  • malachites — Plural form of malachite.
  • malcontent — not satisfied or content with currently prevailing conditions or circumstances.
  • maledicent — ((archaic)) one who enjoys using slanderous language.
  • maledicted — Simple past tense and past participle of maledict.
  • malefactor — a person who violates the law; criminal.
  • maleficent — doing evil or harm; harmfully malicious: maleficent destroyers of reputations.
  • malolactic — Of or denoting bacterial fermentation that converts malic acid to lactic acid, especially as a secondary process used to reduce the acidity of some wines.
  • mast clamp — a pierced slab of hardwood built into the deck structure of a small ship or boat to receive the force of the mast, which is fitted tightly through it.
  • mast cloth — a partial lining sewed to the back of a square sail to prevent chafing from contact with the mast.
  • match play — play in which the score is reckoned by counting the holes won by each side.
  • matchgirls — Plural form of matchgirl.
  • matchlocks — Plural form of matchlock.
  • matricidal — Relating to matricide, the killing of a mother.
  • matricliny — matrocliny.
  • matricular — relating to a matricula, or having the nature of a matricula
  • matrifocal — of, relating to, or designating a family unit or structure headed by the mother and lacking a father permanently or for extended periods.
  • matrilocal — of or relating to residence with the wife's family or tribe; uxorilocal: matrilocal customs.
  • matrocliny — inheritance in which the traits of the offspring are derived primarily from the maternal parent (opposed to patrocliny).
  • mcclintockBarbara, 1902–92, U.S. geneticist: Nobel prize 1983.
  • mcpartlandMarian, 1918–2013, British jazz pianist and composer, in U.S. since 1946.
  • megalithic — a stone of great size, especially in ancient construction work, as the Cyclopean masonry, or in prehistoric Neolithic remains, as dolmens or menhirs.
  • megalocyte — (physiology) A large, flattened corpuscle, twice the diameter of the ordinary red corpuscle, found in considerable numbers in the blood in profound anemia.
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