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13-letter words containing c, o, u

  • churchpersons — Plural form of churchperson.
  • churn molding — a molding decorated with chevrons.
  • chylophyllous — having fleshy leaves, as certain desert plants.
  • cinchonaceous — relating to cinchona
  • circuit board — A circuit board is the same as a printed circuit board.
  • circuit court — a court with jurisdiction over several counties or districts within a state.
  • circumcisions — Plural form of circumcision.
  • circumduction — the action of turning anything on its axis
  • circumductory — relating to circumduction
  • circumflexion — The act of bending, or causing to assume a curved form.
  • circumlocutes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of circumlocute.
  • circumorbital — (anatomy) Around the eye.
  • circumvention — to go around or bypass: to circumvent the lake; to circumvent the real issues.
  • circumvolving — Present participle of circumvolve.
  • ciudad madero — city in Tamaulipas state, EC Mexico: suburb of Tampico: pop. 160,000
  • clair-obscure — chiaroscuro.
  • clamorousness — The state or quality of being clamorous.
  • clare-obscure — chiaroscuro.
  • claustrophobe — a person who suffers from claustrophobia.
  • clearinghouse — If an organization acts as a clearinghouse, it collects, sorts, and distributes specialized information.
  • cleistogamous — having small, unopened, self-pollinating flowers, usually in addition to the showier flowers
  • click through — to navigate around (a website) using the links provided to move onto different pages
  • click-through — the act of clicking on an advertisement or other link to go to another website, especially a retail site: The store gets lots of clickthroughs from social media.
  • clistocarpous — Mycology. having cleistothecia.
  • clistothecium — cleistothecium.
  • clock puncher — a worker with a routine job in a factory or office, as one who punches a time clock at the beginning and end of a work shift.
  • close-mouthed — Someone who is close-mouthed about something does not say much about it.
  • closed source — intellectual property, esp computer source code, that is not made available to the general public by its creators
  • clothes brush — a brush used to remove dust, fluff, dirt, etc from clothes
  • cloud chamber — an apparatus for detecting high-energy particles by observing their tracks through a chamber containing a supersaturated vapour. Each particle ionizes molecules along its path and small droplets condense on them to produce a visible track
  • cloud physics — the science of the physical properties and processes of clouds.
  • cloud seeding — any technique of adding material to a cloud to alter its natural development, usually to increase or obtain precipitation.
  • cloudlessness — Absence of clouds.
  • club together — If people club together to do something, they all give money towards the cost of it.
  • cluster point — a point of a net having the property that the net is frequently in each neighborhood of the point.
  • co-authorship — the state a coauthor
  • co-curricular — related but only complementary to the official curriculum, as a civic or service activity outside the classroom.
  • co-occurrence — the fact of two things happening at the same time
  • co-production — a film, play, television programme, etc, produced by two or more people or organizations
  • coachbuilders — Plural form of coachbuilder.
  • coachbuilding — the manufacture of bodies for cars, buses, and coaches
  • coadjutorship — the state of being a coadjutor
  • coagulability — The ability to coagulate, of being coagulable.
  • coal industry — a branch of commercial enterprise concerned with the discovery and mining of coal
  • coal measures — a series of coal-bearing rocks formed in the upper Carboniferous period; the uppermost series of the Carboniferous system
  • coalesced sum — (theory)   (Or "smash sum") In domain theory, the coalesced sum of domains A and B, A (+) B, contains all the non-bottom elements of both domains, tagged to show which part of the sum they come from, and a new bottom element. D (+) E = { bottom(D(+)E) } U { (0,d) | d in D, d /= bottom(D) } U { (1,e) | e in E, e /= bottom(E) } The bottoms of the constituent domains are coalesced into a single bottom in the sum. This may be generalised to any number of domains. The ordering is bottom(D(+)E) <= v For all v in D(+)E (i,v1) <= (j,v2) iff i = j & v1 <= v2 "<=" is usually written as LaTeX \sqsubseteq and "(+)" as LaTeX \oplus - a "+" in a circle.
  • cobaltiferous — containing cobalt
  • coccobacillus — a spherelike bacillus.
  • cochlear duct — a spiral tube enclosed in the bony canal of the cochlea.
  • cocktail hour — the interval before the evening meal during which cocktails and other alcoholic beverages are often served.
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