0%

8-letter words containing c, u, t, e

  • come out — When a new product such as a book or CD comes out, it becomes available to the public.
  • commuted — to change (a prison sentence or other penalty) to a less severe one: The death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment.
  • commuter — a person who travels to work over an appreciable distance, usually from the suburbs to the centre of a city
  • commutes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commute.
  • computed — Calculate or reckon (a figure or amount).
  • computer — a device, usually electronic, that processes data according to a set of instructions. The digital computer stores data in discrete units and performs arithmetical and logical operations at very high speed. The analog computer has no memory and is slower than the digital computer but has a continuous rather than a discrete input. The hybrid computer combines some of the advantages of digital and analog computers
  • computes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compute.
  • confuted — Simple past tense and past participle of confute.
  • confuter — A person who confutes.
  • confutes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of confute.
  • conneaut — a city in NE Ohio.
  • conquest — Conquest is the act of conquering a country or group of people.
  • construe — If something is construed in a particular way, its nature or meaning is interpreted in that way.
  • continue — If someone or something continues to do something, they keep doing it and do not stop.
  • contused — Simple past tense and past participle of contuse.
  • contuses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of contuse.
  • copulate — If one animal or person copulates with another, they have sex. You can also say that two animals or people copulate.
  • coquetry — flirtation
  • coquette — A coquette is a woman who behaves in a coquettish way.
  • cornuate — (medicine) Being or pertaining to a hornlike structure, as with a bicornuate uterus.
  • cornuted — having horns
  • costumed — Simple past tense and past participle of costume.
  • costumer — A costumer is the same as a costumier.
  • costumes — Plural form of costume.
  • costumey — resembling a costume and therefore unrealistic
  • cotquean — a coarse woman
  • couldest — Alternative form of couldst.
  • counter- — Counter- is used to form words which refer to actions or activities that are intended to prevent other actions or activities or that respond to them.
  • counters — Plural form of counter.
  • countess — A countess is a woman who has the same rank as a count or earl, or who is married to a count or earl.
  • countest — to check over (the separate units or groups of a collection) one by one to determine the total number; add up; enumerate: He counted his tickets and found he had ten.
  • counties — Plural form of county.
  • countrey — Archaic spelling of country.
  • countrie — Obsolete spelling of country.
  • coupette — a small coupe for serving dessert.
  • couplets — Plural form of couplet.
  • courante — an old dance in quick triple time
  • courters — Plural form of courter.
  • courtest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of court.
  • courtesy — Courtesy is politeness, respect, and consideration for others.
  • courtier — Courtiers were noblemen and women who spent a lot of time at the court of a king or queen.
  • courtlet — a small court or courtyard
  • courtney — a feminine and masculine name
  • courtsey — Archaic spelling of curtsey.
  • cousteau — Jacques Yves (ʒɑk iv). 1910–97, French underwater explorer
  • covetous — A covetous person has a strong desire to possess something, especially something that belongs to another person.
  • cpu time — processor time
  • crateful — (informal) As much as a crate would hold.
  • creature — You can refer to any living thing that is not a plant as a creature, especially when it is of an unknown or unfamiliar kind. People also refer to imaginary animals and beings as creatures.
  • crepitus — a crackling chest sound heard in pneumonia and other lung diseases
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?