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9-letter words containing c, o, i, n, e, r

  • narcotine — An alkaloid found in opium; noscapine.
  • narcotise — Alternative spelling of narcotize.
  • narcotize — to subject to or treat with a narcotic; stupefy.
  • necrophil — person who is sexually attracted to dead bodies
  • necrosing — Present participle of necrose.
  • necrotise — to undergo necrosis.
  • necrotize — to undergo necrosis.
  • nephrotic — Pertaining to, resembling or caused by nephrosis.
  • neurochip — a semiconductor chip designed for use in an electronic neural network
  • neurotics — Plural form of neurotic.
  • neutronic — (physics) Involving neutrons.
  • nictheroy — Niterói.
  • ninescore — the product (180) of nine multiplied by twenty
  • noisecore — (music) A genre of hardcore punk music characterized by distorted feedback.
  • nonameric — Of or pertaining to a nonamer.
  • noncredit — (of academic courses) carrying or conferring no official academic credit in a particular program or toward a particular degree or diploma.
  • nondirect — Not direct.
  • nonerotic — Not erotic.
  • nonheroic — Not heroic.
  • nonmetric — not metric
  • obrenovic — Aleksandar [Serbo-Croatian. ah-le-ksahn-dahr] /Serbo-Croatian. ˌɑ lɛˈksɑn dɑr/ (Show IPA), Alexander I (def 3).
  • on credit — with payment to be made at a future date
  • ordinance — an authoritative rule or law; a decree or command.
  • peribonca — a river in central Quebec, Canada, flowing S to Lake St. John. 280 miles (451 km) long.
  • porcelain — a strong, vitreous, translucent ceramic material, biscuit-fired at a low temperature, the glaze then fired at a very high temperature.
  • porcupine — any of several rodents covered with stiff, sharp, erectile spines or quills, as Erethizon dorsatum of North America.
  • preaction — the process or state of acting or of being active: The machine is not in action now.
  • precision — the state or quality of being precise.
  • preconize — to proclaim or commend publicly.
  • princedom — the position, rank, or dignity of a prince.
  • princeton — a borough in central New Jersey: battle 1777.
  • procident — relating to a prolapse
  • proteinic — Biochemistry. any of numerous, highly varied organic molecules constituting a large portion of the mass of every life form and necessary in the diet of all animals and other nonphotosynthesizing organisms, composed of 20 or more amino acids linked in a genetically controlled linear sequence into one or more long polypeptide chains, the final shape and other properties of each protein being determined by the side chains of the amino acids and their chemical attachments: proteins include such specialized forms as collagen for supportive tissue, hemoglobin for transport, antibodies for immune defense, and enzymes for metabolism.
  • pyrogenic — producing or produced by heat or fever.
  • racegoing — that goes to races
  • recaption — the taking back without violence of one's property or a member of one's family or household unlawfully in the possession or custody of another.
  • recaution — alertness and prudence in a hazardous situation; care; wariness: Landslides ahead—proceed with caution.
  • recension — an editorial revision of a literary work, especially on the basis of critical examination of the text and the sources used.
  • reception — the act of receiving or the state of being received.
  • recession — a return of ownership to a former possessor.
  • reckoning — count; computation; calculation.
  • reclusion — the condition or life of a recluse.
  • recognise — to identify as something or someone previously seen, known, etc.: He had changed so much that one could scarcely recognize him.
  • recognize — to identify as something or someone previously seen, known, etc.: He had changed so much that one could scarcely recognize him.
  • recoiling — to draw back; start or shrink back, as in alarm, horror, or disgust.
  • recoinage — the act, process, or right of making coins.
  • recombine — to bring into or join in a close union or whole; unite: She combined the ingredients to make the cake. They combined the two companies.
  • reconcile — to cause (a person) to accept or be resigned to something not desired: He was reconciled to his fate.
  • recondite — dealing with very profound, difficult, or abstruse subject matter: a recondite treatise.
  • reconfine — to confine (something or someone) again
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