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10-letter words containing c, o, s, t, e

  • lovestruck — Alternative spelling of love-struck.
  • macrocytes — Plural form of macrocyte.
  • mastectomy — the operation of removing all or part of the breast or mamma.
  • matchboxes — Plural form of matchbox.
  • mckeesport — a city in SW Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh.
  • meatoscope — (medicine) A speculum for examining a natural passage, such as the urethra.
  • mesocratic — (of an igneous rock) composed of light and dark minerals in nearly equal amounts.
  • mesokurtic — (of a frequency distribution or its graphical representation) having the same kurtosis as the normal distribution.
  • mesolectal — any variety of language in a creole continuum that is intermediate between the basilect and the acrolect.
  • mesolithic — of, relating to, or characteristic of a transitional period of the Stone Age intermediate between the Paleolithic and the Neolithic periods, characterized by adaptation to a hunting, collecting, and fishing economy based on the use of forest, lakeside, and seashore environments; Epipaleolithic.
  • mesophytic — Relating to a mesophyte.
  • mesorectum — the mesentery of the rectum.
  • meticulous — taking or showing extreme care about minute details; precise; thorough: a meticulous craftsman; meticulous personal appearance.
  • metroscope — an instrument for examining the cavity of the uterus.
  • microcytes — Pathology. an abnormally small red blood cell.
  • microstate — ministate.
  • microtomes — Plural form of microtome.
  • microtones — any musical interval smaller than a semitone, specifically, a quarter tone.
  • microtubes — Plural form of microtube.
  • midsection — the middle section or part of anything.
  • miscompute — To compute erroneously.
  • misconceit — a misconception or misapprehension
  • misconnect — to join, link, or fasten together; unite or bind: to connect the two cities by a bridge; Communication satellites connect the local stations into a network.
  • misconster — Obsolete form of misconstrue (16th-17th c.).
  • miscontent — discontented; dissatisfied
  • miscorrect — to correct wrongly
  • miscounted — Simple past tense and past participle of miscount.
  • miscreator — a person or entity that creates wrongly
  • mislocated — to misplace.
  • molestache — (slang, rare) A type of mustache supposedly associated with child molesters.
  • mollescent — softening or tending to soften.
  • monostelic — having an individual or sole stele or cylindrical part in the middle of the stem or root of a plant that contains tubular-like vessels
  • monstrance — a receptacle in which the consecrated Host is exposed for adoration.
  • mont cenisMont, a mountain pass between SE France and Italy, in the Alps. 6834 feet (2083 meters) high.
  • motorcades — Plural form of motorcade.
  • moustached — Having moustache.
  • moustaches — Plural form of moustache.
  • ms project — Microsoft Project
  • muscovites — Plural form of muscovite.
  • myelocytes — Plural form of myelocyte.
  • myrtaceous — belonging to the Myrtaceae, the myrtle family of plants. Compare myrtle family.
  • narcotised — Simple past tense and past participle of narcotise.
  • narcotizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of narcotize.
  • neckcloths — Plural form of neckcloth.
  • nectareous — nectarous.
  • nematocyst — an organ in coelenterates consisting of a minute capsule containing an ejectable thread that causes a sting.
  • neofascist — any of various political movements or beliefs inspired by or reminiscent of fascism or Nazism.
  • neoplastic — the theory and practice of the de Stijl school, chiefly characterized by an emphasis on the formal structure of a work of art, and restriction of spatial or linear relations to vertical and horizontal movements as well as restriction of the artist's palette to black, white, and the primary colors.
  • neotropics — Tropical America: the tropical areas of North, Central and South America; the tropics of the New World.
  • nepotistic — patronage bestowed or favoritism shown on the basis of family relationship, as in business and politics: She was accused of nepotism when she made her nephew an officer of the firm.
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