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

  • contracted — under contract; governed or arranged by special contract: a contract carrier.
  • contrasted — to compare in order to show unlikeness or differences; note the opposite natures, purposes, etc., of: Contrast the political rights of Romans and Greeks.
  • controlled — held in check; curbed: poorly controlled anger.
  • convertend — the proposition to be subjected to conversion
  • convocated — Simple past tense and past participle of convocate.
  • convoluted — If you describe a sentence, idea, or system as convoluted, you mean that it is complicated and difficult to understand.
  • cooled-out — moderately cold; neither warm nor cold: a rather cool evening.
  • cooperated — to work or act together or jointly for a common purpose or benefit.
  • coordinate — If you coordinate an activity, you organize the various people and things involved in it.
  • copycatted — Simple past tense and past participle of copycat.
  • copyedited — Simple past tense and past participle of copyedit.
  • copyeditor — a person who edits a manuscript, text, etc., for publication, especially to find and correct errors in style, punctuation, and grammar.
  • coradicate — (of multiple words) derived from the same root
  • cordectomy — the removal of a cord, esp a vocal cord
  • cordierite — a grey or violet-blue dichroic mineral that consists of magnesium aluminium iron silicate in orthorhombic crystalline form and is found in metamorphic rocks. Formula: (Mg,Fe)2AL4Si5O18.nH2O
  • coresident — one of two or more computer programs stored in a computer memory simultaneously
  • coronetted — Bearing one or more coronets.
  • corporated — Simple past tense and past participle of corporate.
  • correlated — to place in or bring into mutual or reciprocal relation; establish in orderly connection: to correlate expenses and income.
  • corrugated — Corrugated metal or cardboard has been folded into a series of small parallel folds to make it stronger.
  • corticated — having a cortex.
  • coruscated — Simple past tense and past participle of coruscate.
  • cosmetized — to cosmeticize.
  • cotehardie — (in the Middle Ages) a close-fitting outer garment with long sleeves, hip-length for men and full-length for women, often laced or buttoned down the front or back.
  • cottonseed — the seed of the cotton plant: a source of oil and fodder
  • cottonweed — a downy perennial plant, Otanthus maritimus, of European coastal regions, having small yellow flowers surrounded by large hairy bracts: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • cotyledons — Plural form of cotyledon.
  • counterbid — A counterbid is a bid that is made in response to a bid from another person or group, offering the seller more advantages.
  • countywide — Occurring or extending throughout a county.
  • covenanted — an agreement, usually formal, between two or more persons to do or not do something specified.
  • crookedest — Superlative form of crooked.
  • cropduster — an aeroplane used to spray crops with fertilizer or insecticide
  • crotcheted — short-tempered
  • croustades — Plural form of croustade.
  • 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
  • datacode i — (language)   An early system used on the Datatron 200 series.
  • dead stock — farm equipment
  • deallocate — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
  • death code — A routine whose job is to set everything in the computer - registers, memory, flags - to zero, including that portion of memory where it is running; its last act is to stomp on its own "store zero" instruction. Death code isn't very useful, but writing it is an interesting hacking challenge on architectures where the instruction set makes it possible, such as the PDP-8 or the Data General Nova. Perhaps the ultimate death code is on the TI 990 series, where all registers are actually in RAM, and the instruction "store immediate 0" has the opcode 0. The program counter will immediately wrap around core as many times as it can until a user hits HALT. Any empty memory location is death code. Worse, the manufacturer recommended use of this instruction in startup code (which would be in ROM and therefore survive).
  • decalogist — a person who interprets and expounds on the Ten Commandments
  • decastylos — a decastyle building, as a classical temple.
  • decathlons — Plural form of decathlon.
  • deceptions — Plural form of deception.
  • deceptious — relating to deception or inclined to deceive
  • decimation — to destroy a great number or proportion of: The population was decimated by a plague.
  • declarator — an action seeking to have some right, status, etc, judicially ascertained
  • declinator — a piece of apparatus that establishes the measure of a plane's deviation from the prime vertical or the meridian
  • declotting — a mass or lump.
  • decoctible — capable of being decocted
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