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9-letter words containing e, m, o, c

  • commenced — Simple past tense and past participle of commence.
  • commences — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commence.
  • commendam — the temporary holding of an ecclesiastical benefice
  • commended — to present, mention, or praise as worthy of confidence, notice, kindness, etc.; recommend: to commend a friend to another; to commend an applicant for employment.
  • commender — a person who commends
  • commensal — (of two different species of plant or animal) living in close association, such that one species benefits without harming the other
  • commented — a remark, observation, or criticism: a comment about the weather.
  • commenter — a remark, observation, or criticism: a comment about the weather.
  • commerced — Simple past tense and past participle of commerce.
  • comminate — to anathematize
  • commingle — to mix or be mixed; blend
  • comminute — to break (a bone) into several small fragments
  • committed — having a strong commitment to an ideology, religion, etc
  • committee — A committee is a group of people who meet to make decisions or plans for a larger group or organization that they represent.
  • committer — A person who commits a crime; perpetrator.
  • commodate — (Scotland, legal) A gratuitous loan.
  • commodore — A commodore is an officer of senior rank in the navy, especially the British Royal Navy.
  • commonage — the use of something, esp a pasture, in common with others
  • commoners — Plural form of commoner.
  • commonest — belonging equally to, or shared alike by, two or more or all in question: common property; common interests.
  • commonise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of commonize.
  • commonize — To make similar or common.
  • commotive — violent or tumultuous motion; agitation; noisy disturbance: What's all the commotion in the hallway?
  • communise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of communize.
  • communize — to make (property) public; nationalize
  • commutate — to reverse the direction of (an electric current)
  • commuters — Plural form of commuter.
  • commutive — (linguistics) That which serves to commute.
  • comonomer — a monomer that, with another monomer, forms a copolymer
  • comp time — Comp time is time off that an employer gives to an employee because the employee has worked overtime. Comp time is short for compensation time.
  • compacted — compressed as a result of physical pressure
  • compacter — Comparative form of compact.
  • compadres — Plural form of compadre.
  • compagnie — company.
  • compander — a system for improving the signal-to-noise ratio of a signal at a transmitter or recorder by first compressing the volume range of the signal and then restoring it to its original amplitude level at the receiving or reproducing apparatus
  • companera — (in the southwestern U.S.) a female companion; friend.
  • companero — (in the southwestern U.S.) a male companion or partner.
  • companied — Simple past tense and past participle of company.
  • companies — Plural form of company.
  • compassed — Simple past tense and past participle of compass.
  • compasses — Plural form of compass.
  • compazine — a tranquilizing drug, C28H32ClN3O8S, used to control serious nausea or vomiting and to reduce anxiety
  • compeered — an equal in rank, ability, accomplishment, etc.; peer; colleague.
  • compelled — to force or drive, especially to a course of action: His disregard of the rules compels us to dismiss him.
  • compeller — to force or drive, especially to a course of action: His disregard of the rules compels us to dismiss him.
  • compendia — a brief treatment or account of a subject, especially an extensive subject; concise treatise: a compendium of medicine.
  • compering — a host, master of ceremonies, or the like, especially of a stage revue or television program.
  • competent — Someone who is competent is efficient and effective.
  • competing — Competing ideas, requirements, or interests cannot all be right or satisfied at the same time.
  • compiegne — a city in N France, on the Oise River: scene of the armistice at the end of World War I (1918) and of the Franco-German armistice of 1940. Pop: 41 714 (2007)
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