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10-letter words containing d, e, t, c, i

  • fascinated — to attract and hold attentively by a unique power, personal charm, unusual nature, or some other special quality; enthrall: a vivacity that fascinated the audience.
  • fieldcraft — (military) The basic military skills required to operate in the field, such as stealth, camouflage, and observation.
  • fixed cost — a cost unvarying with a change in the volume of business (distinguished from variable cost).
  • forcipated — Like a pair of forceps.
  • fornicated — Simple past tense and past participle of fornicate.
  • fractioned — Mathematics. a number usually expressed in the form a/b. a ratio of algebraic quantities similarly expressed.
  • fratricide — a person who kills his or her brother.
  • fructified — Simple past tense and past participle of fructify.
  • fructoside — a glycoside that yields fructose upon hydrolysis.
  • functioned — Simple past tense and past participle of function.
  • gametocide — a substance that kills gametes or gametocytes.
  • geodetical — Of, or relating to geodesy; geodesic.
  • hedgewitch — A modern witch who focuses on herbalism and shamanic experience.
  • hedonistic — a person whose life is devoted to the pursuit of pleasure and self-gratification.
  • hemisected — Simple past tense and past participle of hemisect.
  • heptapodic — having seven metrical feet
  • hitchhiked — Simple past tense and past participle of hitchhike.
  • idealistic — of or relating to idealism or idealists.
  • idiolectal — Of or relating to an idiolect.
  • idiolectic — Pertaining to an idiolect.
  • imbricated — Overlapping, like scales or roof-tiles; intertwined.
  • impictured — painted
  • implicated — to show to be also involved, usually in an incriminating manner: to be implicated in a crime.
  • imprecated — Simple past tense and past participle of imprecate.
  • in deficit — If an account or organization is in deficit, more money has been spent than has been received.
  • inaffected — (obsolete) unaffected.
  • incarnated — embodied in flesh; given a bodily, especially a human, form: a devil incarnate.
  • incidental — happening or likely to happen in an unplanned or subordinate conjunction with something else.
  • incidently — (obsolete) Alternative spelling of incidentally.
  • inculcated — to implant by repeated statement or admonition; teach persistently and earnestly (usually followed by upon or in): to inculcate virtue in the young.
  • inculpated — Simple past tense and past participle of inculpate.
  • incurvated — Simple past tense and past participle of incurvate.
  • indecently — offending against generally accepted standards of propriety or good taste; improper; vulgar: indecent jokes; indecent language; indecent behavior.
  • indelicate — offensive to a sense of generally accepted propriety, modesty, or decency; improper, unrefined, or coarse: indelicate language.
  • indicative — showing, signifying, or pointing out; expressive or suggestive (usually followed by of): behavior indicative of mental disorder.
  • indicolite — Mineralogy. a dark-blue tourmaline, used as a gem.
  • indictable — liable to being indicted, as a person.
  • indictment — an act of indicting.
  • indirected — (obsolete) Lacking direction; aimless.
  • indirectly — not in a direct course or path; deviating from a straight line; roundabout: an indirect course in sailing.
  • indiscreet — not discreet; lacking prudence, good judgment, or circumspection: an indiscreet remark.
  • indiscrete — not discrete; not divided into parts.
  • inducement — the act of inducing.
  • inductance — that property of a circuit by which a change in current induces, by electromagnetic induction, an electromotive force. Symbol: L. Compare inductive coupling, mutual inductance, self-inductance.
  • inducteous — Rendered electropolar by induction, or brought into the opposite electrical state by the influence of inductive bodies.
  • inexpected — Obsolete form of unexpected.
  • inoculated — to implant (a disease agent or antigen) in a person, animal, or plant to produce a disease for study or to stimulate disease resistance.
  • instructed — Simple past tense and past participle of instruct.
  • intendance — an administrative department, especially one in the government system introduced by the French statesman Richelieu during the 17th century, or the officials in charge of it.
  • intendancy — the office or function of an intendant.
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