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10-letter words containing d, e, c, o, m

  • complained — to express dissatisfaction, pain, uneasiness, censure, resentment, or grief; find fault: He complained constantly about the noise in the corridor.
  • complected — complexioned
  • composedly — calm; tranquil; serene: His composed face reassured the nervous passengers.
  • composited — Simple past tense and past participle of composite.
  • compounded — If something is compounded of different things, it is a mixture of those things.
  • compounder — A person who mixes or combines ingredients in order to produce an animal feed, medicine, or other substance.
  • comprehend — If you cannot comprehend something, you cannot understand it.
  • compressed — Compressed air or gas is squeezed into a small space or container and is therefore at a higher pressure than normal. It is used especially as a source of power for machines.
  • condemners — to express an unfavorable or adverse judgment on; indicate strong disapproval of; censure.
  • condemning — Present participle of condemn.
  • condiments — something used to give a special flavor to food, as mustard, ketchup, salt, or spices.
  • consumedly — (intensifier)
  • coomceiled — (of an attic room) having a sloped or arching ceiling
  • cordectomy — the removal of a cord, esp a vocal cord
  • coromandel — calamander
  • cosmetized — to cosmeticize.
  • cosmodrome — a site, esp one in the former Soviet Union, from which spacecraft are launched
  • cream soda — a carbonated soft drink flavoured with vanilla
  • crippledom — the state of being crippled
  • cuddlesome — cuddly (sense 1)
  • curmudgeon — If you call someone a curmudgeon, you do not like them because they are mean or bad-tempered.
  • customised — to modify or build according to individual or personal specifications or preference: to customize an automobile.
  • customized — modified according to a customer's individual requirements
  • daemonical — Of or relating to daemons; diabolical.
  • dampcourse — a horizontal layer of impervious material in a brick wall, fairly close to the ground, to stop moisture rising
  • dance form — the binary form used in most of the movements of the 18th-century suite.
  • decamerous — having ten sections or partitions
  • decanormal — (of a solution) containing ten equivalent weights of solute per liter of solution.
  • decimation — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • decinormal — having one tenth of the strength of a standard solution
  • decompiler — (computer science) A computer program performing the reverse operation to that of a compiler.
  • decomposed — having been subject to decomposition
  • decomposer — any organism in a community, such as a bacterium or fungus, that breaks down dead tissue enabling the constituents to be recycled to the environment
  • decomposes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decompose.
  • decompound — (of a compound leaf) having leaflets consisting of several distinct parts
  • decompress — to relieve (a substance) of pressure or (of a substance) to be relieved of pressure
  • demarcator — to determine or mark off the boundaries or limits of: to demarcate a piece of property.
  • demicanton — either of the two parts of certain Swiss cantons
  • democratic — A democratic country, government, or political system is governed by representatives who are elected by the people.
  • democritus — ?460–?370 bc, Greek philosopher who developed the atomist theory of matter of his teacher, Leucippus
  • demoniacal — of, relating to, or like a demon; demonic: demoniac laughter.
  • dichromate — any salt or ester of dichromic acid. Dichromate salts contain the ion Cr2O72–
  • dictyosome — a Golgi body, esp in a plant cell
  • discectomy — Surgical removal of the whole or a part of an intervertebral disc.
  • discommend — to express disapproval of; belittle; disparage. The diners discommended the wine.
  • discommode — to cause inconvenience to; disturb, trouble, or bother.
  • discompose — to upset the order of; disarrange; disorder; unsettle: The breeze discomposed the bouquet.
  • diseconomy — a lack of economy.
  • dockmackie — a North American shrub, Viburnum acerifolium, of the honeysuckle family, having long stemmed clusters of white flowers and ovoid, almost black berries.
  • dockmaster — a person who supervises the dry-docking of ships.
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