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8-letter words containing e, a, r, c

  • 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.
  • careerer — a person who careers
  • carefree — A carefree person or period of time doesn't have or involve any problems, worries, or responsibilities.
  • carefull — Obsolete spelling of careful.
  • careless — If you are careless, you do not pay enough attention to what you are doing, and so you make mistakes, or cause harm or damage.
  • careline — a telephone service set up by a company or other organization to provide its customers or clients with information about its products or services
  • caressed — an act or gesture expressing affection, as an embrace or kiss, especially a light stroking or touching.
  • caresser — One who caresses.
  • caresses — an act or gesture expressing affection, as an embrace or kiss, especially a light stroking or touching.
  • caretake — to work as a caretaker
  • careware — computer software licensed in exchange for a donation to charity
  • careworn — A person who looks careworn looks worried, tired, and unhappy.
  • carfares — Plural form of carfare.
  • carfaxes — Plural form of carfax.
  • caribees — See under Antilles.
  • carinate — having a keel or ridge; shaped like a keel
  • carioles — Plural form of cariole.
  • caritive — (in certain inflected languages, especially of the Caucasian group) abessive.
  • carletonGuy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester, 1724–1808, English general.
  • carlisle — a city in NW England, administrative centre of Cumbria: railway and industrial centre. Pop: 71 773 (2001)
  • carmaker — a company that manufactures automobiles
  • carnegie — Andrew. 1835–1919, US steel manufacturer and philanthropist, born in Scotland: endowed public libraries, education, and research trusts
  • carneous — fleshy
  • carnifex — an executioner
  • caroches — Plural form of caroche.
  • carolean — characteristic of the time of Charles I and II of England: a Carolean costume.
  • carolers — Plural form of caroler.
  • caroline — characteristic of or relating to Charles I or Charles II, kings of England, Scotland, and Ireland, the society over which they ruled, or their government
  • carolled — Simple past tense and past participle of carol.
  • caroller — A person who sings carols; a carol singer.
  • carotene — any of four orange-red isomers of an unsaturated hydrocarbon present in many plants (β-carotene is the orange pigment of carrots) and converted to vitamin A in the liver. Formula: C40H56
  • caroused — Simple past tense and past participle of carouse.
  • carousel — At an airport, a carousel is a moving surface from which passengers can collect their luggage.
  • carouser — to engage in a drunken revel: They caroused all night.
  • carouses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of carouse.
  • carpeaux — Jean Baptiste [zhahn ba-teest] /ʒɑ̃ baˈtist/ (Show IPA), 1827–75, French sculptor.
  • carpeted — Simple past tense and past participle of carpet.
  • carphone — a telephone that operates by cellular radio for use in a car
  • carrells — Plural form of carrell.
  • carreras — José (həʊsˈzeɪ). born 1947, Spanish tenor
  • carriage — A carriage is an old-fashioned vehicle, usually for a small number of passengers, which is pulled by horses.
  • carriere — Eugène [œ-zhen] /œˈʒɛn/ (Show IPA), 1849–1906, French painter and lithographer.
  • carriers — Plural form of carrier.
  • carriole — cariole
  • carshare — to take turns in driving fellow commuters to and from work or friends' children to school and back, so as to avoid the unnecessary use of several underoccupied vehicles
  • cartable — Able to be carted or carried.
  • carteret — John, 1st Earl Granville. 1690–1763, British statesman, diplomat, and orator who led the opposition to Walpole (1730–42), after whose fall he became a leading minister as secretary of state (1742–44)
  • carthage — an ancient city state, on the N African coast near present-day Tunis. Founded about 800 bc by Phoenician traders, it grew into an empire dominating N Africa and the Mediterranean. Destroyed and then rebuilt by Rome, it was finally razed by the Arabs in 697 ad
  • carucage — the tax due on a carucate
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