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10-letter words containing e, m, b, l

  • camberwell — a former residential borough of Greater London, England, now part of Southwark.
  • campobello — an island in the Bay of Fundy, off the coast of SE Canada: part of New Brunswick province. Pop: 1195 (2001). Area: about 52 sq km (20 sq miles)
  • candlebeam — a medieval chandelier formed of crossed timbers.
  • cerebellum — The cerebellum is a part of the brain in humans and other mammals that controls the body's movements and balance.
  • chamberlin — ˈThomas Chrowder (ˈkraʊdər ) ; krouˈdər) 1843-1928; U.S. geologist
  • chambranle — the three-sided ornamental bordering found around doors, windows, and fireplaces
  • clambering — of or relating to plants that creep or climb like vines, but without benefit of tendrils.
  • cloth beam — a roller, located at the front of a loom, on which woven material is wound after it leaves the breast beam.
  • clubmaster — the manager of a gentlemen's club
  • cockwomble — (UK,slang,derogatory) A foolish or obnoxious person.
  • collembola — Any of many minute wingless arthropods of subclass Collembola; a springtail.
  • columbines — Plural form of columbine.
  • comb jelly — ctenophore
  • combatable — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.
  • combinable — capable of combining or being combined.
  • combinedly — made by combining; joined; united, as in a chemical compound.
  • comestible — food
  • commonable — (of land) held in common
  • commutable — (of a punishment) capable of being reduced in severity
  • comparable — Something that is comparable to something else is roughly similar, for example in amount or importance.
  • compatable — Misspelling of compatible.
  • compatible — If things, for example systems, ideas, and beliefs, are compatible, they work well together or can exist together successfully.
  • competible — (obsolete) Compatible.
  • compilable — (computing) That can be compiled.
  • compliable — compliant
  • composable — to make or form by combining things, parts, or elements: He composed his speech from many research notes.
  • computable — computability theory
  • consumable — Consumable goods are items which are intended to be bought, used, and then replaced.
  • cor blimey — an exclamation of surprise or annoyance
  • cumberland — (until 1974) a county of NW England, now part of Cumbria
  • cumberless — unencumbered
  • customable — subject to customs
  • d'alembert — Jean Le Rond (ʒɑ̃ lə rɔ̃). 1717–83, French mathematician, physicist, and rationalist philosopher, noted for his contribution to Newtonian physics in Traité de dynamique (1743) and for his collaboration with Diderot in editing the Encyclopédie
  • damageable — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
  • damsel bug — any of various bugs of the carnivorous family Nabiidae, related to the bedbugs but feeding on other insects. The larvae of some species mimic and associate with ants
  • debt limit — (in public finance) the legal maximum debt permitted a municipal, state, or national government.
  • deformable — to mar the natural form or shape of; put out of shape; disfigure: In cases where the drug was taken during pregnancy, its effects deformed the infants.
  • demandable — to ask for with proper authority; claim as a right: He demanded payment of the debt.
  • demobilise — to disband (troops, an army, etc.).
  • demobilize — If a country or armed force demobilizes its troops, or if its troops demobilize, its troops are released from service and allowed to go home.
  • demothball — to remove (naval or military equipment) from storage or reserve, usually for active duty; reactivate.
  • descramble — to restore (a scrambled signal) to an intelligible form, esp automatically by the use of electronic devices
  • disembowel — to remove the bowels or entrails from; eviscerate.
  • disembroil — to free from embroilment, entanglement, or confusion.
  • disselboom — One of the poles supporting a wagon.
  • dissembled — Simple past tense and past participle of dissemble.
  • dissembler — to give a false or misleading appearance to; conceal the truth or real nature of: to dissemble one's incompetence in business.
  • do a melba — to make repeated farewell appearances
  • drum table — a table having a cylindrical top with drawers or shelves in the skirt, rotating on a central post with three or four outwardly curving legs.
  • dumbledore — (dialectal) A bumblebee.
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