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13-letter words containing c, o, m, n, s, a

  • concertmaster — The concertmaster of an orchestra is the most senior violin player, who acts as a deputy to the conductor.
  • concomitances — Plural form of concomitance.
  • condemnations — Plural form of condemnation.
  • condylomatous — Relating to condyloma.
  • confirmations — Plural form of confirmation.
  • conformations — Plural form of conformation.
  • conglomerates — anything composed of heterogeneous materials or elements.
  • congresswoman — A Congresswoman is a female member of the US Congress, especially of the House of Representatives.
  • consimilarity — the condition of being mutually alike
  • consumability — able or meant to be consumed, as by eating, drinking, or using: consumable goods.
  • contemplatist — a contemplator
  • contemplators — Plural form of contemplator.
  • contextualism — (in motion-picture criticism) the theory that all incidents in a film must be viewed in the social, political, and cultural context with which the film concerns itself and in which it was made.
  • contrabandism — the practice of trading contraband goods
  • contrarianism — Beliefs and practices of a contrarian.
  • cosmopolitans — Plural form of cosmopolitan.
  • costardmonger — a costermonger
  • costimulation — Alternative spelling of co-stimulation.
  • counterclaims — Plural form of counterclaim.
  • counterstream — a stream (of matter) which travels in the opposite direction
  • cousin-german — the child of one's aunt or uncle
  • cross-examine — When a lawyer cross-examines someone during a trial or hearing, he or she questions them about the evidence that they have already given.
  • customariness — The state or quality of being customary.
  • customisation — Alternative spelling of customization.
  • customization — to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference: to customize an automobile.
  • damson cheese — thick damson jam
  • decisionmaker — One who makes decisions.
  • decompensated — Simple past tense and past participle of decompensate.
  • decompensates — Psychology. to lose the ability to maintain normal or appropriate psychological defenses, sometimes resulting in depression, anxiety, or delusions.
  • demochristian — a member or supporter of a Christian democratic party or movement
  • dipsomaniacal — Pertaining to or suffering from dipsomania.
  • discordianism — (recreation)   /dis-kor'di-*n-ism/ The veneration of Eris, also known as Discordia; widely popular among hackers. Discordianism was popularised by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson's novel "Illuminatus!" as a sort of self-subverting Dada-Zen for Westerners - it should on no account be taken seriously but is far more serious than most jokes. Consider, for example, the Fifth Commandment of the Pentabarf, from "Principia Discordia": "A Discordian is Prohibited of Believing What he Reads." Discordianism is usually connected with an elaborate conspiracy theory/joke involving millennia-long warfare between the anarcho-surrealist partisans of Eris and a malevolent, authoritarian secret society called the Illuminati. See Religion, Church of the SubGenius, and ha ha only serious.
  • discriminator — a person or thing that discriminates.
  • doctrinairism — Doctrinaire attitudes generally.
  • document case — a flat, portable case, often of leather, for carrying papers, documents etc.
  • documentalist — a specialist in documentation; a person working strictly with information and record-keeping.
  • documentaries — Plural form of documentary.
  • documentarist — Movies, Television. a filmmaker, producer, etc., who specializes in documentaries.
  • dodecaphonism — musical composition using the 12-tone technique.
  • domesticating — Present participle of domesticate.
  • domestication — to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame.
  • dynamic scope — (language)   In a dynamically scoped language, e.g. most versions of Lisp, an identifier can be referred to, not only in the block where it is declared, but also in any function or procedure called from within that block, even if the called procedure is declared outside the block. This can be implemented as a simple stack of (identifier, value) pairs, accessed by searching down from the top of stack for the most recent instance of a given identifier. The opposite is lexical scope. A common implementation of dynamic scope is shallow binding.
  • economy class — a low-priced type of accommodation for travel, especially on an airplane.
  • ectocommensal — Biology. (of an organism) living in a commensal relationship on the exterior of another organism.
  • elasmobranchs — Plural form of elasmobranch.
  • emancipations — Plural form of emancipation.
  • encomiastical — Alternative form of encomiastic.
  • encompassable — Capable of being encompassed.
  • encompassment — The act of surrounding, or the state of being surrounded.
  • encroachments — Plural form of encroachment.
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