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8-letter words containing c, o, e, t, u

  • counter- — Counter- is used to form words which refer to actions or activities that are intended to prevent other actions or activities or that respond to them.
  • counters — Plural form of counter.
  • countess — A countess is a woman who has the same rank as a count or earl, or who is married to a count or earl.
  • countest — to check over (the separate units or groups of a collection) one by one to determine the total number; add up; enumerate: He counted his tickets and found he had ten.
  • counties — Plural form of county.
  • countrey — Archaic spelling of country.
  • countrie — Obsolete spelling of country.
  • coupette — a small coupe for serving dessert.
  • couplets — Plural form of couplet.
  • courante — an old dance in quick triple time
  • courters — Plural form of courter.
  • courtest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of court.
  • courtesy — Courtesy is politeness, respect, and consideration for others.
  • courtier — Courtiers were noblemen and women who spent a lot of time at the court of a king or queen.
  • courtlet — a small court or courtyard
  • courtney — a feminine and masculine name
  • courtsey — Archaic spelling of curtsey.
  • cousteau — Jacques Yves (ʒɑk iv). 1910–97, French underwater explorer
  • covetous — A covetous person has a strong desire to possess something, especially something that belongs to another person.
  • crustose — having a crustlike appearance
  • culottes — Culottes are knee-length women's trousers that look like a skirt.
  • custodes — plural of custos.
  • customed — accustomed; inured
  • customer — You can use customer in expressions such as a cool customer or a tough customer to indicate what someone's behaviour or character is like.
  • deck out — If a person or thing is decked out with or in something, they are decorated with it or wearing it, usually for a special occasion.
  • deductor — One who deducts tax.
  • document — a written or printed paper furnishing information or evidence, as a passport, deed, bill of sale, or bill of lading; a legal or official paper.
  • duecento — the 13th century, with reference to Italy, especially to its art or literature.
  • educator — a person or thing that educates, especially a teacher, principal, or other person involved in planning or directing education.
  • eduction — the act of educing.
  • epulotic — a substance that promotes the formation of scar tissue
  • euphotic — Describing that part of the near-surface ocean in which photosynthesis is possible.
  • eurocrat — European Union official
  • eutropic — of, relating to or characterized by eutropy
  • executor — A person or institution appointed by a testator to carry out the terms of their will.
  • face out — the front part of the head, from the forehead to the chin.
  • foucquet — Jean or Jehan [both French zhahn] /both French ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), c1420–c80, French painter.
  • fructose — Chemistry, Pharmacology. a yellowish to white, crystalline, water-soluble, levorotatory ketose sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , sweeter than sucrose, occurring in invert sugar, honey, and a great many fruits: used in foodstuffs and in medicine chiefly in solution as an intravenous nutrient.
  • housecat — a domesticated cat kept as a pet.
  • lacteous — milky; of the color of milk.
  • leukotic — any of several diseases occurring chiefly in chickens, involving proliferation of the leukocytes and characterized by paralysis, blindness, formation of tumors in the internal organs, and bone calcification.
  • loculate — having one or more locules.
  • neurotic — pertaining to the nerves or to nerve disease; neural: no longer in technical use.
  • noctules — Plural form of noctule.
  • nocturne — a piece appropriate to the night or evening.
  • occulted — of or relating to magic, astrology, or any system claiming use or knowledge of secret or supernatural powers or agencies.
  • occulter — Any object, natural or man-made, that blocks the light of an object from an observer, typically used in reference to astronomical events.
  • occupate — (obsolete) To occupy.
  • oceanaut — aquanaut.
  • octuples — Plural form of octuple.
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