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10-letter words containing c, r, a, p

  • importancy — (obsolete) importance; significance.
  • imprecated — Simple past tense and past participle of imprecate.
  • imprecates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of imprecate.
  • incaparina — a cheap high-protein food made of cottonseed, sorghum flours, maize, yeast, etc, used, esp in Latin America, to prevent protein-deficiency diseases
  • incompared — incomparable; unmatched; unequalled
  • incorporal — Obsolete form of incorporeal.
  • inoperancy — The quality of being inoperant or inoperative, of lacking the power to be effective or effectual.
  • interspace — a space between things.
  • isographic — (in the study of the geographical distribution of a dialect) a line drawn on a map to indicate areas having common linguistic characteristics.
  • j particle — an early name for the J/psi particle.
  • javascript — Alternative capitalization of JavaScript.
  • jockstraps — Plural form of jockstrap.
  • karyotypic — Of or pertaining to karyotypes.
  • keep track — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • kiloparsec — a unit of distance, equal to 1000 parsecs. Abbreviation: kpc.
  • kilpatrick — Hugh Judson [juhd-suh n] /ˈdʒʌd sən/ (Show IPA), 1836–81, Union general in the U.S. Civil War.
  • kleptocrat — a government official who is a thief or exploiter.
  • kneecapper — Person doing kneecapping.
  • labor camp — Also called slave labor camp. a penal colony where inmates are forced to work.
  • laeotropic — oriented or coiled in a leftward direction, as a left-spiraling snail shell.
  • landscaper — a gardener who does landscape gardening.
  • lap dancer — a scantily dressed woman who dances erotically for individual members of the audience
  • laparocele — (medicine) A rupture or hernia in the lumbar regions.
  • laserscope — a surgical instrument that employs a laser beam to destroy diseased tissue or to create small channels; used to open clogged arteries and, in ophthalmology, to treat patients with glaucoma or diabetic retinopathy.
  • leprechaun — a dwarf or sprite.
  • lunarscape — the landscape of the moon.
  • lupercalia — a festival held in ancient Rome on the 15th of February to promote fertility and ward off disasters.
  • macphersonJames, 1736–96, Scottish author and translator.
  • macrocarpa — (NZ) The Monterey cypress.
  • macrograph — a representation of an object that is of the same size as or larger than the object.
  • macrophage — a large white blood cell, occurring principally in connective tissue and in the bloodstream, that ingests foreign particles and infectious microorganisms by phagocytosis.
  • macrophyte — a plant, especially a marine plant, large enough to be visible to the naked eye.
  • macropores — Plural form of macropore.
  • macroprism — a prism belonging to an orthorhombic crystal found between the macropinacoid and the unit prism
  • macroscope — A wide-field imaging device.
  • macrospore — megaspore.
  • madreporic — Resembling, or pertaining to, the genus Madrepora.
  • manuscript — the original text of an author's work, handwritten or now usually typed, that is submitted to a publisher.
  • march past — a parade or procession, especially of troops past a reviewing stand.
  • march-past — a parade or procession, especially of troops past a reviewing stand.
  • marco polo — Marco [mahr-koh] /ˈmɑr koʊ/ (Show IPA), c1254–1324, Venetian traveler.
  • market cap — A market cap is the total market value of all the shares in a company.
  • mascarpone — a very soft Italian cream cheese made from cow's milk.
  • mcpartlandMarian, 1918–2013, British jazz pianist and composer, in U.S. since 1946.
  • meatpacker — a person or company involved in the wholesale meat trade
  • mecopteran — mecopterous.
  • megaparsec — one million parsecs.
  • mercaptide — a metallic salt of a mercaptan.
  • metacarpal — of or relating to the metacarpus.
  • metacarpus — the part of a hand or forelimb, especially of its bony structure, included between the wrist, or carpus, and the fingers, or phalanges.
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