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7-letter words containing c, s, e

  • cassate — (obsolete) To render void or useless; to vacate or annul.
  • cassena — dahoon.
  • cassite — a member of an ancient people related to the Elamites, who ruled Babylonia from c1650 to c1100 b.c.
  • cassone — a highly-decorated, Italian dowry chest
  • castell — A human tower formed in festivals in Catalonia.
  • casters — Plural form of caster.
  • castest — 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.
  • casteth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cast.
  • castile — a former kingdom comprising most of modern Spain: originally part of León, it became an independent kingdom in the 10th century and united with Aragon (1469), the first step in the formation of the Spanish state
  • castled — like a castle in construction; castellated
  • castles — Plural form of castle.
  • castner — Hamilton Young. 1858–98, US chemist, who devised the Castner process for extracting sodium from sodium hydroxide
  • catches — Plural form of catch.
  • catesby — Robert. 1573–1605, English conspirator, leader of the Gunpowder Plot (1605): killed while resisting arrest
  • catouse — New England. a noisy disturbance; commotion.
  • catseye — a glass reflector set into a small fixture, placed at intervals along roads to indicate traffic lanes at night
  • causate — (philosophy) The effect of a cause.
  • causers — Plural form of causer.
  • causeth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cause.
  • caveats — Plural form of caveat.
  • caverns — Plural form of cavern.
  • cayuses — Plural form of cayuse.
  • cb user — user of Citizens' Band
  • ceaseth — Archaic third-person singular form of cease.
  • ceasing — to stop; discontinue: Not all medieval beliefs have ceased to exist.
  • cecitis — the inflammation of the caecum
  • cecrops — (in ancient Greek tradition) the first king of Attica, represented as half-human, half-dragon
  • celebes — Sulawesi
  • celesta — a keyboard percussion instrument consisting of a set of steel plates of graduated length that are struck with key-operated hammers. The tone is an ethereal tinkling sound. Range: four octaves upwards from middle C
  • celeste — a feminine name: var. Celestine
  • celiacs — Plural form of celiac.
  • cellars — Plural form of cellar.
  • cellist — A cellist is someone who plays the cello.
  • cellsim — (application)   A program for modelling populations of biological cells.
  • celosia — any of several species (genus Celosia) of the amaranth family, of annual garden plants with minute, brilliant red or yellow flowers in large clusters; cockscomb
  • celsius — Celsius is a scale for measuring temperature, in which water freezes at 0 degrees and boils at 100 degrees. It is represented by the symbol °C.
  • cements — Plural form of cement.
  • cenotes — Plural form of cenote.
  • censers — Plural form of censer.
  • censors — Plural form of censor.
  • censual — an official enumeration of the population, with details as to age, sex, occupation, etc.
  • censure — If you censure someone for something that they have done, you tell them that you strongly disapprove of it.
  • centers — Plural form of center.
  • centres — Geometry. the middle point, as the point within a circle or sphere equally distant from all points of the circumference or surface, or the point within a regular polygon equally distant from the vertices.
  • cepheus — a faint constellation in the N hemisphere near Cassiopeia and the Pole Star
  • cepstra — cepstrum
  • cerasin — an insoluble amorphous gum from the cherry and other trees, known also as meta-arabinic acid
  • cereals — Cereals are foods made from grain. They are mixed with milk and eaten for breakfast.
  • cereous — resembling wax; wax-like
  • ceresin — a white wax extracted from ozocerite
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