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10-letter words containing c, m, i

  • cacomistle — a catlike omnivorous mammal, Bassariscus astutus, of S North America, related to but smaller than the raccoons: family Procyonidae, order Carnivora (carnivores). It has yellowish-grey fur and a long bushy tail banded in black and white
  • cacuminous — (of a tree) having a pointed or a pyramidal top
  • caddisworm — the aquatic larva of a caddis fly, which constructs a protective case around itself made of silk, sand, stones, etc
  • cafetorium — a room, usually in a school or other educational institution, which serves both as a cafeteria and an auditorium
  • caffeinism — caffeism
  • calamities — a great misfortune or disaster, as a flood or serious injury.
  • calamitous — If you describe an event or situation as calamitous, you mean it is very unfortunate or serious.
  • calamondin — a small citrus tree, Citrus mitis, of the Philippines
  • calceiform — shaped like a shoe or slipper
  • calcimined — Simple past tense and past participle of calcimine.
  • calciminer — A person who calcimines.
  • calcimines — Plural form of calcimine.
  • callithump — a noisy band or parade
  • calmodulin — a protein found in most living cells; it regulates many enzymic processes that are dependent on calcium
  • calumniate — to slander
  • calumnious — of or using calumny
  • calyciform — having the form of a calyx
  • camarillas — Plural form of camarilla.
  • camel hair — the hair of the camel, used especially for cloth, painters' brushes, and Oriental rugs.
  • camel spin — camel (def 3).
  • camel-hair — A camel-hair coat is made of a kind of soft, thick woollen cloth, usually creamy-brown in colour.
  • camelshair — (attributive) The hair of a camel, used for paintbrushes etc.
  • cameralism — any of the mercantilist economists or public servants in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries who held that the economic power of a nation can be enhanced by increasing its monetary wealth, as by the accumulation of bullion.
  • cameralist — any of the mercantilist economists or public servants in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries who held that the economic power of a nation can be enhanced by increasing its monetary wealth, as by the accumulation of bullion.
  • cameration — vaulting
  • camisadoes — Plural form of camisado.
  • caml light — A small portable implementation of a version of CAML by Xavier Leroy <[email protected]> and Damien Doligez of INRIA. Caml Light uses a bytecode interpreter written in C. It adds a Modula-2-like module system, separate compilation, lazy streams for parsing and printing, graphics primitives and an interface with C. Version 0.6 runs on Unix, MS-DOS, Macintosh, Atari ST and Amiga. It includes an interpreter, compiler, Emacs mode, libraries, scanner generator, parser generator, run-time support and an interactive development environment. The latest version, as of April 2003, is 0.75 and runs on Unix, Macintosh and Windows. The development of Caml Light has been stopped; current development is on Objective Caml. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Mailing list: <[email protected]>.
  • camorrista — a member of a camorra
  • camp chair — a lightweight folding chair
  • camp david — the US president's retreat in the Appalachian Mountains, Maryland: scene of the Camp David Agreement (Sept, 1978) between Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Menachem Begin of Israel, mediated by Jimmy Carter, which outlined a framework for establishing peace in the Middle East. This agreement was the basis of the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt signed in Washington (March, 1979)
  • camp it up — If a performer camps it up, they deliberately perform in an exaggerated and often amusing way.
  • camp shirt — a short-sleeved shirt or blouse with a notched collar and usually two breast pockets.
  • campaigned — Simple past tense and past participle of campaign.
  • campaigner — A campaigner is a person who campaigns for social or political change.
  • campaniles — Plural form of campanile.
  • campership — financial aid given to a needy youngster to attend summer camp.
  • campignian — of or relating to a Mesolithic and Neolithic technological facies characterized by picks and tranchets.
  • campimeter — an instrument for determining the visual field.
  • campimetry — a technique for assessing the central part of the visual field
  • camptonite — a lamprophyric rock occurring in dikes and composed of labradorite, pyroxene, sodic hornblende and olivine.
  • campuswide — Throughout a campus.
  • cancriform — shaped like a crab
  • candaulism — A practice or in which a man exposes his female partner, or images of her, to other people for their pleasure.
  • capitalism — Capitalism is an economic and political system in which property, business, and industry are owned by private individuals and not by the state.
  • capitellum — an enlarged knoblike structure at the end of a bone that forms an articulation with another bone; capitulum
  • caporegime — the second in command to a capo; Mafia lieutenant.
  • caramanlis — Konstantinos [kawn-stahn-dee-naws] /ˌkɔn stɑnˈdi nɔs/ (Show IPA), 1907–98, Greek politician: prime minister 1955–63, 1974–80; president 1980–85, 1990–95.
  • caramelise — (cooking) To convert sugar into caramel.
  • caramelize — If sugar caramelizes, it turns to caramel as a result of being heated.
  • carchemish — an ancient city in Syria on the Euphrates, lying on major trade routes; site of a victory of the Babylonians over the Egyptians (605 bc)
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