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12-letter words containing c, o, d, e, t

  • country code — a code of good practice recommended to those who use the countryside for recreational purposes
  • country-bred — brought up in the country
  • court record — (in the US) a record of court proceedings
  • crater mound — huge, circular depression in central Ariz., believed to have been made by a meteorite: depth, 600 ft (183 m); diameter, 0.75 mi (1.2 km)
  • creaturehood — the state of being a creature
  • credit score — A borrower's credit score is a number calculated by a credit bureau to express how likely they are to be able to pay back their loans.
  • credit union — A credit union is a financial institution that offers its members low-interest loans.
  • creditworthy — A creditworthy person or organization is one who can safely be lent money or allowed to have goods on credit, for example because in the past they have always paid back what they owe.
  • custom-order — to obtain by special or individual order: These wide doors have to be custom-ordered.
  • customs shed — a large building in which customs officers carry out customs inspections
  • cut-off date — the last date on which it is possible to do something
  • cyclodextrin — any of a group of cyclic oligosaccharides found in starch digests of certain bacteria
  • cysticercoid — the larva of any of certain tapeworms, which resembles a cysticercus but has a smaller bladder
  • d'oyly carte — Richard. 1844–1901, British impresario noted for his productions of the operettas of Gilbert and Sullivan
  • dance studio — A dance studio is a place where people pay to learn how to dance.
  • deactivation — The act of deactivating something, such as a bomb.
  • dead account — an account that is no longer being used and on which no transactions have taken place for a considerable length of time
  • deallocation — the act of allocating; apportionment.
  • death notice — a public announcement, e.g. in a newspaper, that someone has died
  • debit policy — a policy for industrial life insurance sold door to door by an agent who collects the premiums.
  • decapitation — to cut off the head of; behead: Many people were decapitated during the French Revolution.
  • decarbonated — Simple past tense and past participle of decarbonate.
  • decategorize — to arrange in categories or classes; classify.
  • deceleration — to decrease the velocity of: He decelerates the bobsled when he nears a curve.
  • decentration — The removal of something from a centre.
  • dechlorinate — to remove chlorine from (a substance)
  • declamations — Plural form of declamation.
  • declarations — Plural form of declaration.
  • declinations — Plural form of declination.
  • declinometer — an instrument for measuring magnetic declination
  • decoloration — appearance with regard to color arrangement or use of colors; coloring: the bold coloration of some birds.
  • decompensate — to undergo decompensation due to disease or impairment
  • deconflicted — Simple past tense and past participle of deconflict.
  • decongestant — A decongestant is a medicine which helps someone who has a cold to breathe more easily.
  • decongesting — Present participle of decongest.
  • decongestion — the act of decongesting
  • decongestive — having the ability to ease crowding or clogging in busy locations
  • deconsecrate — to transfer (a church) to secular use
  • deconstructs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deconstruct.
  • decontrolled — Simple past tense and past participle of decontrol.
  • decoratively — In a decorative manner.
  • decorrelated — Simple past tense and past participle of decorrelate.
  • decorticated — Having had the outer covering removed.
  • decorticator — A machine that peels off the fibrous husk, bark or outer layer of some vegetable product; used in the manufacture of animal feed etc.
  • decrustation — the act of removing a crust
  • decumulation — a decrease in amount or value
  • dedicatorial — relating to or acting as a dedication
  • deep pockets — If you say that a person or organization has deep pockets, you mean that they have a lot of money with which to pay for something.
  • deexcitation — to cause (an atom) to fall from an excited energy level to a lower energy level.
  • defectionist — a person who is in favour of lapsing, backsliding, or defection
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