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8-letter words containing c, r, e, m

  • champers — Champers is champagne.
  • charmers — Plural form of charmer.
  • chemurgy — the branch of chemistry concerned with the industrial use of organic raw materials, esp materials of agricultural origin
  • cheremis — Mari.
  • cherubim — a celestial being. Gen. 3:24; Ezek. 1, 10.
  • chimaera — any tapering smooth-skinned cartilaginous deep-sea fish of the subclass Holocephali (or Bradyodonti), esp any of the genus Chimaera. They have a skull in which the upper jaw is fused to the cranium
  • chimeral — Of or pertaining to a chimera (in all senses).
  • chimeras — Plural form of chimera.
  • chimeres — Plural form of chimere.
  • chimeric — unreal; imaginary; visionary: a chimerical terrestrial paradise.
  • chimerid — any fish of the genus Chimaera
  • chompers — (informal) teeth.
  • choreman — a handyman or odd-job man
  • chremzel — a flat cake made from matzo meal, topped or stuffed with a filling, as of ground meat or fruit and nuts.
  • chromate — any salt or ester of chromic acid. Simple chromate salts contain the divalent ion, CrO42–, and are orange
  • chromene — a compound derived from plants, used as an insecticide
  • chromide — any fish of the family Cichlidae
  • chromite — a brownish-black mineral consisting of a ferrous chromic oxide in cubic crystalline form, occurring principally in basic igneous rocks: the only commercial source of chromium and its compounds. Formula: FeCr2O4
  • chromize — to plate with chromium
  • chroneme — A basic, theoretical unit of sound that can distinguish words by duration only of a vowel or consonant.
  • chummery — (India) The building in which unmarried British army officers were quartered during the w British Raj.
  • cinerama — wide-screen presentation of films using either three separate 35mm projectors or one 70mm projector to produce an image on a large deeply curved screen
  • clambers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of clamber.
  • clammers — Plural form of clammer.
  • clamored — a loud uproar, as from a crowd of people: the clamor of the crowd at the gates.
  • clamorer — Alternative spelling of clamourer.
  • clampers — Plural form of clamper.
  • claymore — a large two-edged broadsword used formerly by Scottish Highlanders
  • climbers — Plural form of climber.
  • clumpier — Comparative form of clumpy.
  • clumsier — Comparative form of clumsy.
  • coadmire — to admire together
  • combater — One who combats.
  • combiner — Any of various electronic devices that combine signals, in particular.
  • combover — Hair that is combed over a bald spot in an attempt to cover it.
  • come for — If people such as soldiers or police come for you, they come to find you, usually in order to harm you or take you away, for example to prison.
  • comelier — Comparative form of comely.
  • comeover — a person who has come from Britain to settle in the Isle of Man; used by people native to the island, often pejoratively about someone with a complaining or arrogant attitude
  • cometary — a celestial body moving about the sun, usually in a highly eccentric orbit, consisting of a central mass surrounded by an envelope of dust and gas that may form a tail that streams away from the sun.
  • comether — the act of persuading or coaxing
  • commagerHenry Steele, 1902–98, U.S. historian, author, and teacher.
  • commerce — Commerce is the activities and procedures involved in buying and selling things.
  • commerge — to merge together
  • commoner — In countries which have a nobility, commoners are the people who are not members of the nobility.
  • communer — a person who participates in the Eucharist
  • commuter — a person who travels to work over an appreciable distance, usually from the suburbs to the centre of a city
  • compadre — a male friend
  • compared — to examine (two or more objects, ideas, people, etc.) in order to note similarities and differences: to compare two pieces of cloth; to compare the governments of two nations.
  • comparer — One who, or that which, compares.
  • compares — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compare.
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