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8-letter words containing e, n, c, u

  • consumed — If you are consumed with a feeling or idea, it affects you very strongly indeed.
  • consumer — A consumer is a person who buys things or uses services.
  • consumes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of consume.
  • continue — If someone or something continues to do something, they keep doing it and do not stop.
  • contused — Simple past tense and past participle of contuse.
  • contuses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of contuse.
  • convulse — If someone convulses or if they are convulsed by or with something, their body moves suddenly in an uncontrolled way.
  • coquelin — Beˈnoit Consˈtant (bəˈnwa kɔ̃̃ˈstɑ̃) ; bənwȧˈ kōnstänˈ) 1841-1909; Fr. actor
  • corneous — horny; hornlike
  • cornuate — (medicine) Being or pertaining to a hornlike structure, as with a bicornuate uterus.
  • cornuted — having horns
  • cotquean — a coarse woman
  • councell — Obsolete spelling of council.
  • counsell — Obsolete spelling of counsel.
  • counsels — Plural form of counsel.
  • counter- — Counter- is used to form words which refer to actions or activities that are intended to prevent other actions or activities or that respond to them.
  • counters — Plural form of counter.
  • countess — A countess is a woman who has the same rank as a count or earl, or who is married to a count or earl.
  • countest — to check over (the separate units or groups of a collection) one by one to determine the total number; add up; enumerate: He counted his tickets and found he had ten.
  • counties — Plural form of county.
  • countrey — Archaic spelling of country.
  • countrie — Obsolete spelling of country.
  • couperin — François (frɑ̃swa). 1668–1733, French composer, noted for his harpsichord suites and organ music
  • couponer — a person who seeks out or saves discount coupons, as for buying grocery items.
  • courante — an old dance in quick triple time
  • courtney — a feminine and masculine name
  • crumenal — a purse
  • crunched — Simple past tense and past participle of crunch.
  • cruncher — the critical or decisive thing
  • crunches — Plural form of crunch.
  • crunkest — a type of hip-hop originating in the southern U.S. and characterized by heavy bass and call-and-response vocals.
  • cube van — a van with a cube-shaped storage compartment that is wider and taller than the front of the vehicle
  • cucquean — (obsolete) A woman whose husband is unfaithful to her.
  • cuisines — Plural form of cuisine.
  • culloden — a moor near Inverness in N Scotland: site of a battle in 1746 in which government troops under the Duke of Cumberland defeated the Jacobites under Prince Charles Edward Stuart
  • cultigen — a species of plant that is known only as a cultivated form and did not originate from a wild type
  • culverin — a long-range medium to heavy cannon used during the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries
  • cumacean — any small malacostracan marine crustacean of the Cumacea family, mostly dwelling on the sea bed but sometimes found among the plankton
  • cumarone — a colourless insoluble aromatic liquid obtained from coal tar and used in the manufacture of synthetic resins. Formula: C 8H 6O
  • cuneatic — cuneiform; cuneate.
  • cunjevoi — an aroid plant, Alocasia macrorrhiza, of tropical Asia and Australia, cultivated for its edible rhizome
  • curarine — an alkaloid extracted from curare, used as a muscle relaxant in surgery. Formula: C19H26ON2
  • currency — The money used in a particular country is referred to as its currency.
  • currents — Plural form of current.
  • curtness — rudely brief in speech or abrupt in manner.
  • cuteness — attractive, especially in a dainty way; pleasingly pretty: a cute child; a cute little apartment.
  • cutinize — to become or cause to become covered or impregnated with cutin
  • cutlines — Plural form of cutline.
  • cutscene — (in computer games) a scene that develops the story line and is often shown on completion of a certain level, or when the player’s character dies.
  • cuxhaven — a port in NW Germany, at the mouth of the River Elbe. Pop: 52 876 (2003 est)
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