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13-letter words containing c, u, s, e

  • cold shoulder — If one person gives another the cold shoulder, they behave towards them in an unfriendly way, to show them that they do not care about them or that they want them to go away.
  • cold-shoulder — to snub; show indifference to.
  • colleagueship — workplace companionship
  • colour scheme — In a room or house, the colour scheme is the way in which colours have been used to decorate it.
  • column inches — the amount of coverage given to a story in a newspaper
  • come a stumer — to crash financially
  • come up roses — If you say that everything is coming up roses for someone, you mean that everything is going well for them.
  • come up short — disappoint
  • commeasurable — having the same measure or extent; commensurate.
  • commensurable — having a common factor
  • commensurably — In a commensurable manner; so as to be commensurable.
  • commensurated — Simple past tense and past participle of commensurate.
  • commensurates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commensurate.
  • communalities — the state or condition of being communal.
  • compendiously — of or like a compendium; containing the substance of a subject, often an exclusive subject, in a brief form; concise: a compendious history of the world.
  • compound lens — a lens consisting of more than one component lens
  • computer disk — a computer data storage device such as a hard drive or floppy disk
  • computerising — Present participle of computerise.
  • conceptualise — to form into a concept; make a concept of.
  • conceptualism — the philosophical theory that the application of general words to a variety of objects reflects the existence of some mental entity through which the application is mediated and which constitutes the meaning of the term
  • conceptualist — any of several doctrines existing as a compromise between realism and nominalism and regarding universals as concepts. Compare nominalism, realism (def 5).
  • conchylaceous — Of or relating to shells; resembling a shell.
  • concupiscence — strong desire, esp sexual desire
  • concupiscible — characterized or driven by sexual desire
  • concurrencies — Plural form of concurrency.
  • conduciveness — tending to produce; contributive; helpful; favorable (usually followed by to): Good eating habits are conducive to good health.
  • conduct sheet — a form for detailing information about a person's offences and punishments
  • confusingness — causing or tending to cause confusion: a confusing attempt at explanation.
  • confusticated — Simple past tense and past participle of confusticate.
  • congratulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of congratulate.
  • congruousness — The state or quality of being congruous.
  • conjugateness — The quality of being conjugate.
  • consanguineal — having the same ancestry or descent; related by blood.
  • conscientious — Someone who is conscientious is very careful to do their work properly.
  • consciousness — Your consciousness is your mind and your thoughts.
  • consectaneous — following logically; consequent
  • consecutively — following one another in uninterrupted succession or order; successive: six consecutive numbers, such as 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10.
  • consentaneous — accordant or consistent (with)
  • consequent on — following as a result of
  • consequential — Consequential means the same as consequent.
  • consimilitude — the quality of resembling or of being mutually alike
  • constituently — serving to compose or make up a thing; component: the constituent parts of a motor.
  • constructible — to build or form by putting together parts; frame; devise.
  • consuetudinal — According to custom; customary; usual.
  • consumer unit — A consumer unit is a particular type of distribution board that controls and distributes electrical energy, especially in domestic premises.
  • consumeristic — characterized by consumerism
  • consumptively — In a consumptive manner.
  • contentiously — tending to argument or strife; quarrelsome: a contentious crew.
  • contextualise — to put (a linguistic element, an action, etc.) in a context, especially one that is characteristic or appropriate, as for purposes of study.
  • contextualism — (in motion-picture criticism) the theory that all incidents in a film must be viewed in the social, political, and cultural context with which the film concerns itself and in which it was made.
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