0%

10-letter words containing e, c, l, o

  • polychaete — any annelid of the class Polychaeta, having unsegmented swimming appendages with many setae or bristles.
  • polychrest — a thing which has adapted to multiple uses
  • polychrome — being of many or various colors.
  • polycrates — died 522? b.c, Greek tyrant of Samos.
  • polydeuces — Greek name of Pollux.
  • polyethnic — inhabited by or consisting of people of many ethnic backgrounds.
  • polyhedric — resembling a polyhedron
  • pomace fly — vinegar fly.
  • ponchielli — Amilcare [ah-meel-kah-re] /ɑˈmil kɑ rɛ/ (Show IPA), 1834–86, Italian composer.
  • ponticello — a bridge on a stringed instrument
  • postexilic — being or occurring subsequent to the exile of the Jews in Babylonia 597–538 b.c.
  • postulance — the period or state of being a postulant, especially in a religious order.
  • pratincole — any of several limicoline birds of the genus Glareola, of the Eastern Hemisphere, having a short bill, long, narrow, pointed wings, and a forked tail.
  • pre-school — Pre-school is used to describe things relating to the care and education of children before they reach the age when they have to go to school.
  • preciously — of high price or great value; very valuable or costly: precious metals.
  • preclosure — the act of closing; the state of being closed.
  • preclusion — to prevent the presence, existence, or occurrence of; make impossible: The insufficiency of the evidence precludes a conviction.
  • precollege — occurring or carried out before entry to college, esp as a means of preparation for college entry
  • precooling — Precooling is a process which improves the performance of a unit by reducing the compressor load and the head pressure.
  • prelection — to lecture or discourse publicly.
  • prelogical — according to or agreeing with the principles of logic: a logical inference.
  • prepyloric — the opening between the stomach and the duodenum.
  • prevocalic — immediately preceding a vowel.
  • procedural — procedural language
  • procellous — stormy, as the sea.
  • processual — a systematic series of actions directed to some end: to devise a process for homogenizing milk.
  • proclaimer — to announce or declare in an official or formal manner: to proclaim war.
  • proclinate — (of a part) directed or inclined forward.
  • procoelous — describing vertebrae with a concave cranial surface
  • proctodeal — a depression in the ectoderm of the anal region of a young embryo, which develops into part of the anal canal.
  • procurable — obtainable.
  • producible — to bring into existence; give rise to; cause: to produce steam.
  • productile — capable of being lengthened out; extensile.
  • profluence — abundance
  • projectile — an object fired from a gun with an explosive propelling charge, such as a bullet, shell, rocket, or grenade.
  • pronuclear — of or relating to a pronucleus.
  • pronucleus — either of the gametic nuclei that unite in fertilization to form the nucleus of the zygote.
  • provencale — (sometimes lowercase) cooked, usually in olive oil, with garlic, tomatoes, onions, and herbs.
  • pseudocoel — the body cavity of certain invertebrate metazoan animals between the body wall and the intestine, which is not lined with a mesodermal epithelium.
  • pulpectomy — the removal of all the pulp tissue in a tooth in the course of endodontic therapy.
  • pultaceous — resembling pap
  • pycnocline — a layer, zone, or gradient of changing density, esp. a thin layer of ocean water with a density that increases rapidly with depth
  • pycnostyle — having an intercolumniation of 1½ diameters.
  • pyrochlore — a mineral, chiefly composed of niobates of the cerium metals, occurring in syenites in the form of brown crystals.
  • radiculose — having small roots or rhizoids
  • re-collect — to collect, gather, or assemble again (something scattered).
  • reactional — a reverse movement or tendency; an action in a reverse direction or manner.
  • reallocate — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
  • reblocking — a solid mass of wood, stone, etc., usually with one or more flat or approximately flat faces.
  • reciprocal — given or felt by each toward the other; mutual: reciprocal respect.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?