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13-letter words containing c, o, g, i, t

  • cosignatories — Plural form of cosignatory.
  • cosmetologist — a person skilled or trained in the use of cosmetics and beauty treatments
  • cosmic string — a one-dimensional defect in space-time postulated in certain theories of cosmology to exist in the universe as a consequence of the big bang
  • cottage fries — potatoes that have been thinly sliced and then fried
  • cottage piano — a small upright piano
  • cottage tulip — a late-flowering type of tulip, usually having pointed or elongated flowers.
  • cough mixture — Cough mixture is the same as cough medicine.
  • count against — If something counts against you, it may cause you to be rejected or punished, or cause people to have a lower opinion of you.
  • countenancing — appearance, especially the look or expression of the face: a sad countenance.
  • counter image — the point or set of points in the domain of a function corresponding to a given point or set of points in the range of the function.
  • counteracting — Present participle of counteract.
  • counterboring — a tool for enlarging a drilled hole for a portion of its length, as to permit sinking a screw head.
  • countermining — Present participle of countermine.
  • countermoving — Present participle of countermove.
  • countersigned — a sign used in reply to another sign.
  • counterspying — the activities of a counterspy
  • counterweighs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of counterweigh.
  • counterweight — A counterweight is an action or proposal that is intended to balance or counter other actions or proposals.
  • counting room — counting house.
  • countinghouse — a building, room, or office used for keeping books and transacting business
  • court hearing — an official meeting held in court
  • court packing — an unsuccessful attempt by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1937 to appoint up to six additional justices to the Supreme Court, which had invalidated a number of his New Deal laws.
  • cove lighting — indirect lighting directed upward from an interior cornice or the like toward a cove at the edge of the ceiling.
  • criminologist — the study of crime and criminals: a branch of sociology.
  • cross-cutting — linking traditionally separate or independent parties or interests
  • cross-footing — Accounting. to total figures horizontally across columns instead of vertically.
  • cross-posting — the sending of an email to many forums, mailing lists, etc
  • crosshatching — to mark or shade with two or more intersecting series of parallel lines.
  • cryobiologist — A biologist who specializes in cryobiology.
  • cryptographic — Relating to cryptography.
  • cryptological — cryptography.
  • cucking stool — stool in which suspected witches were tested
  • cummingtonite — an amphibole mineral, magnesium iron silicate hydroxide, found in metamorphic rocks
  • curling stone — a large, heavy, ellipsoidal stone or a similar object made of iron, usually having one rough side and one smooth side with a hole in the center of each for screwing in a handle by which the stone is released, for use in the game of curling.
  • curling tongs — a metal scissor-like device that is heated, so that strands of hair may be twined around it in order to form curls
  • cutting board — A cutting board is a wooden or plastic board that you chop meat and vegetables on.
  • cutting horse — a saddle horse trained for use in separating an individual animal, such as a cow, from a herd
  • cytodiagnosis — the diagnosis of disease through the study of cells in the body
  • cytogenetical — of or related to cytogenetics
  • cytologically — the study of the microscopic appearance of cells, especially for the diagnosis of abnormalities and malignancies.
  • decarbonating — Present participle of decarbonate.
  • deconflicting — Present participle of deconflict.
  • decorticating — Present participle of decorticate.
  • democratizing — Present participle of democratize.
  • dentosurgical — relating to or used in both dentistry and surgery
  • deontological — (of an ethical theory) regarding obligation as deriving from reason or as residing primarily in certain specific rules of conduct rather than in the maximization of some good
  • diagnosticate — (archaic, transitive) To make a diagnosis of; to recognise (a disease or similar) by its symptoms.
  • diagnostician — a specialist or expert in making diagnoses
  • dichotomising — Present participle of dichotomise.
  • dichotomizing — Present participle of dichotomize.
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