8-letter words containing d, e, a, c
- camelids — Plural form of camelid.
- cameloid — a member of the camel family
- camp bed — A camp bed is a small bed that you can fold up.
- campshed — to line (the bank of a river) with campshot.
- canceled — to make void; revoke; annul: to cancel a reservation.
- cancered — affected by cancer
- candelas — Plural form of candela.
- candolle — Augustin Pyrame de. 1778–1841, Swiss botanist; his Théorie élémentaire de la botanique (1813) introduced a new system of plant classification
- canfield — a gambling game adapted from a type of patience
- canidate — Eye dialect of candidate.
- cankered — (esp of fruit trees) affected by canker
- cannoned — Simple past tense and past participle of cannon.
- cannoted — a form of ·can not.
- canoodle — If two people are canoodling, they are kissing and holding each other a lot.
- canopied — A canopied building or piece of furniture is covered with a roof or a piece of material supported by poles.
- cantered — an easy gallop.
- cantoned — Simple past tense and past participle of canton.
- canvased — Simple past tense and past participle of canvas.
- cape cod — a long sandy peninsula in SE Massachusetts, between Cape Cod Bay and the Atlantic
- capeador — a person who assists a matador by harassing or distracting the bull with a red cape, or capa.
- capeweed — a low-growing, creeping plant, Arctotheca calendulacea, used as a ground cover in warm climates.
- capsized — Simple past tense and past participle of capsize.
- capsuled — Enclosed within a capsule.
- captived — Simple past tense and past participle of captive.
- captured — Simple past tense and past participle of capture.
- capuched — hooded
- card key — a small plastic card with magnetic coding that is read electronically when inserted into a scanner and used in place of a key to open locks, hotel doors, etc.
- card-key — a small plastic card with magnetic coding that is read electronically when inserted into a scanner and used in place of a key to open locks, hotel doors, etc.
- cardcase — a small case for holding business cards
- cardenal — Ernesto (ˈɜːnɛstaʊ). born 1925, Nicaraguan poet, revolutionary, and Roman Catholic priest; an influential figure in the Sandinista movement
- cardenas — Lázaro (ˈlaθaro). 1895–1970, Mexican statesman and general; president of Mexico (1934–40)
- careened — Simple past tense and past participle of careen.
- careered — an occupation or profession, especially one requiring special training, followed as one's lifework: He sought a career as a lawyer.
- caressed — an act or gesture expressing affection, as an embrace or kiss, especially a light stroking or touching.
- carolled — Simple past tense and past participle of carol.
- caroused — Simple past tense and past participle of carouse.
- carpeted — Simple past tense and past participle of carpet.
- cascaded — a waterfall descending over a steep, rocky surface.
- cascades — a mountain range extending from N California to W Canada: highest peak, Mt. Rainier, 14,408 feet (4322 meters).
- caseated — Simple past tense and past participle of caseate.
- caseload — The caseload of someone such as a doctor, social worker, or lawyer is the number of cases that they have to deal with.
- castered — a person or thing that casts.
- cat-eyed — having eyes resembling those of a cat.
- catenoid — the geometrical surface generated by rotating a catenary about its axis
- catheads — Plural form of cathead.
- cathedra — a bishop's throne
- cathodes — Plural form of cathode.
- catslide — (in early American architecture) a steep roof ending close to the ground, as on a saltbox.
- caucused — U.S. Politics. a meeting of party leaders to select candidates, elect convention delegates, etc. a meeting of party members within a legislative body to select leaders and determine strategy. (often initial capital letter) a faction within a legislative body that pursues its interests through the legislative process: the Women's Caucus; the Black Caucus.
- caudaite — a small meteorite, generally less than one half millimeter in diameter, containing crystals of more or less pure magnetite.