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10-letter words containing c, r, e, n

  • incompared — incomparable; unmatched; unequalled
  • inconcrete — Not concrete.
  • incoronate — wearing a crown
  • incouraged — Simple past tense and past participle of incourage.
  • incrassate — Pharmacology. to make (a liquid) thicker by addition of another substance or by evaporation.
  • increaseth — Archaic third-person singular form of increase.
  • increasing — growing larger or greater; enlarging; augmenting.
  • increating — Present participle of increate.
  • incredible — so extraordinary as to seem impossible: incredible speed.
  • incredibly — so extraordinary as to seem impossible: incredible speed.
  • increments — Plural form of increment.
  • increscent — increasing or waxing, as the moon.
  • incumbered — encumber.
  • incurables — Plural form of incurable.
  • incurrence — the act of incurring, bringing on, or subjecting oneself to something.
  • incurvated — Simple past tense and past participle of incurvate.
  • indecorous — not decorous; violating generally accepted standards of good taste or propriety; unseemly.
  • index card — a card, often relatively small, as 3 × 5 inches (7.6 × 12.7 cm), used in noting or recording information and usually filed in an index.
  • indirected — (obsolete) Lacking direction; aimless.
  • indirectly — not in a direct course or path; deviating from a straight line; roundabout: an indirect course in sailing.
  • indiscreet — not discreet; lacking prudence, good judgment, or circumspection: an indiscreet remark.
  • indiscrete — not discrete; not divided into parts.
  • inferences — the act or process of inferring.
  • influencer — a person or thing that influences: The most powerful influencer of beliefs is direct experience.
  • inner city — an older part of a city, densely populated and usually deteriorating, inhabited mainly by poor, often minority, groups.
  • inner dock — a part of dock or pier which is further inland
  • innumeracy — unfamiliar with mathematical concepts and methods; unable to use mathematics; not numerate.
  • inoperancy — The quality of being inoperant or inoperative, of lacking the power to be effective or effectual.
  • inrichment — Alternative form of enrichment.
  • insecurely — subject to fears, doubts, etc.; not self-confident or assured: an insecure person.
  • insecurity — lack of confidence or assurance; self-doubt: He is plagued by insecurity.
  • inspectors — Plural form of inspector.
  • instructed — Simple past tense and past participle of instruct.
  • instructer — (obsolete) One who instructs.
  • insurancer — a person who in some way protects something important to another person when that thing is endangered
  • insurances — Plural form of insurance.
  • insurgence — an act of rebellion; insurrection; revolt.
  • insurgency — the state or condition of being insurgent.
  • insurrecto — (US) A rebel, especially in Cuba or the Philippines during American military involvement there around the start of the 20th century.
  • interacted — to act one upon another.
  • intercalar — intercalary
  • intercaste — Sociology. an endogamous and hereditary social group limited to persons of the same rank, occupation, economic position, etc., and having mores distinguishing it from other such groups. any rigid system of social distinctions.
  • interceded — Simple past tense and past participle of intercede.
  • interceder — to act or interpose in behalf of someone in difficulty or trouble, as by pleading or petition: to intercede with the governor for a condemned man.
  • intercedes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of intercede.
  • intercepts — Plural form of intercept.
  • interchain — a series of objects connected one after the other, usually in the form of a series of metal rings passing through one another, used either for various purposes requiring a flexible tie with high tensile strength, as for hauling, supporting, or confining, or in various ornamental and decorative forms.
  • interclass — between classes; involving different classes.
  • interclude — to confine
  • intercross — to cross one with another; place across each other.
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