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8-letter words containing e, c, a

  • aspheric — a lens that has a shape that is not completely round
  • asscheek — (vulgar slang) A buttock.
  • asthenic — of, relating to, or having asthenia; weak
  • at peace — in a state of harmony or friendship
  • atechnic — a person who has no technical or scientific ability or understanding
  • athletic — Athletic means relating to athletes and athletics.
  • attached — If you are attached to someone or something, you like them very much.
  • attacher — Someone who attaches.
  • attaches — to fasten or affix; join; connect: to attach a photograph to an application with a staple.
  • attacked — to set upon in a forceful, violent, hostile, or aggressive way, with or without a weapon; begin fighting with: He attacked him with his bare hands.
  • attacker — You can refer to a person who attacks someone as their attacker.
  • attercop — a spider
  • atticize — to conform or adapt to the Attic Greek style of expression, habits, and beliefs
  • audience — The audience at a play, concert, film, or public meeting is the group of people watching or listening to it.
  • auerbach — Frank (Helmuth). born 1931, British painter, born in Germany, noted esp for his use of impasto
  • auncient — Obsolete form of ancient.
  • auricled — (botany) auriculate.
  • auricles — Plural form of auricle.
  • auspices — an augur of ancient Rome.
  • autecism — the development of the entire life cycle of a parasitic fungus on a single host or group of hosts.
  • autocade — a procession or parade of automobiles; motorcade.
  • autocide — suicide by crashing the vehicle one is driving.
  • autocode — (language)   1. The assembly language accepted by AUTOCODER. 2. A generic term for symbolic assembly language. Versions of Autocode were developed for Ferranti Atlas, Titan, Mercury and Pegasus and IBM 702 and IBM 705.
  • auxocyte — any cell undergoing meiosis, esp an oocyte or spermatocyte
  • avicenna — Arabic name ibn-Sina. 980–1037, Arab philosopher and physician whose philosophical writings, which combined Aristotelianism with neo-Platonist ideas, greatly influenced scholasticism, and whose medical work Qanun was the greatest single influence on medieval medicine
  • avoucher — a person who avouches
  • avouches — to make frank acknowledgment or affirmation of; declare or assert with positiveness.
  • avowance — (obsolete) Act of avowing; avowal.
  • axle cap — a cap that covers the end of an axle
  • aycliffe — a town in Co Durham: founded as a new town in 1947. Pop (including Newton Aycliffe): 25 655 (2001)
  • azotemic — the accumulation of abnormally large amounts of nitrogenous waste products in the blood, as in uremic poisoning.
  • babiches — Plural form of babiche.
  • babouche — a Middle-Eastern, particularly Turkish, heelless slipper
  • bachelor — A bachelor is a man who has never married.
  • back emf — an electromagnetic force appearing in an inductive circuit in such a direction as to oppose any change of current in the circuit
  • back end — autumn
  • back-end — (programming)   Any software performing either the final stage in a process, or a task not apparent to the user. A common usage is in a compiler. A compiler's back-end generates machine language and performs optimisations specific to the machine's architecture. The term can also be used in the context of network applications. E.g. "The back-end of the system handles socket protocols". Contrast front end.
  • backache — Backache is a dull pain in your back.
  • backbeat — the second and fourth beats of a bar written in even time or, in more complex time signatures, the last beat of the bar
  • backbend — a gymnastic exercise in which the trunk is bent backwards until the hands touch the floor
  • backbite — to talk spitefully about (an absent person)
  • backbone — Your backbone is the column of small linked bones down the middle of your back.
  • backdate — If a document or an arrangement is backdated, it is valid from a date before the date when it is completed or signed.
  • backends — Plural form of backend.
  • backfile — the archives of a newspaper or magazine
  • backfire — If a plan or project backfires, it has the opposite result to the one that was intended.
  • backheel — (soccer) A kick played by the heel which typically travels in the opposite direction from which the player is facing.
  • backhoes — Plural form of backhoe.
  • backless — A backless dress leaves most of a woman's back uncovered down to her waist.
  • backline — (in some team sports) the defensive players considered as a unit
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