0%

11-letter words containing e, n, m

  • chimpanzees — Plural form of chimpanzee.
  • chiromancer — A palm reader, one who practices chiromancy.
  • chloramines — Plural form of chloramine.
  • christendom — All the Christian people and countries in the world can be referred to as Christendom.
  • chrominance — the quality of light that causes the sensation of colour. It is determined by comparison with a reference source of the same brightness and of known chromaticity
  • chromogenic — producing colour
  • chronometer — A chronometer is an extremely accurate clock that is used especially by sailors at sea.
  • chronometre — (nonstandard, and, now, largely obsolete) Alternative form of chronometer.
  • chronometry — the science or technique of measuring time with extreme accuracy
  • churchwomen — Plural form of churchwoman.
  • cine camera — a camera in which a strip of film moves past the lens, usually to give 16 or 24 exposures per second, thus enabling moving pictures to be taken
  • cinemagoers — Plural form of cinemagoer.
  • cinemascope — an anamorphic process of wide-screen film projection in which an image of approximately twice the usual width is squeezed into a 35mm frame and then screened by a projector having complementary lenses
  • cinematical — Of or pertaining to the cinema; cinematic.
  • cinematized — Simple past tense and past participle of cinematize.
  • circumvents — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of circumvent.
  • cleanlimbed — having shapely limbs
  • clement iii — (Paolo Scolari) died 1191, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1187–91.
  • clement vii — original name Giulio de' Medici. 1478–1534, pope (1523–34): refused to authorize the annulment of the marriage of Henry VIII of England to Catherine of Aragon (1533)
  • clement xii — (Lorenzo Corsini) 1652–1740, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1730–40.
  • clement xiv — (Giovanni Vincenzo Antonio Ganganelli; Lorenzo Ganganelli) 1705–74, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1769–74.
  • clementines — an official compilation of decretals named after Clement V and issued in 1317 which forms part of the Corpus Juris Canonici
  • cleptomania — kleptomania
  • clergywoman — a female member of the clergy
  • clergywomen — Plural form of clergywoman.
  • clientelism — A political system based on personal relations rather than personal merits.
  • clinometers — Plural form of clinometer.
  • clinometric — (of crystals) having oblique angles between one or all axes.
  • coalignment — Alignment together.
  • code monkey — a computer programmer who is able to perform only routine tasks
  • code number — a number used to identify something
  • codominance — Ecology. being one of two or more species that are equally dominant in a biotic community: a forest in which oak and hickory are codominant.
  • coenenchyma — gelatinous material uniting the polyps of an anthozoan colony
  • coenenchyme — the gelatinous framework between polyps of an anthozoan colony
  • coenobitism — the practice of coenobites
  • coenzymatic — of or relating to coenzymes
  • coffee name — Your coffee name is a name that you give in some situations because it is simpler than your real name.
  • cognominate — of or relating to a cognomen
  • collembolan — any small primitive wingless insect of the order Collembola, which comprises the springtails
  • collenchyma — a strengthening and supporting tissue in plants, consisting of elongated living cells whose walls are thickened with cellulose and pectins
  • collenchyme — Botany. a gelatinous, thickened, and usually elongated cell that is part of a layer of modified tissue in some plants.
  • columniated — having columns or arranged in columns
  • combat zone — (in warfare) an area where fighting is taking place
  • combed yarn — cotton or worsted yarn of fibers laid parallel, superior in smoothness to carded yarn.
  • combinative — resulting from being, tending to be, or able to be joined or mixed together
  • come and go — to approach or move toward a particular person or place: Come here. Don't come any closer!
  • come around — If someone comes around or comes round to your house, they call there to see you.
  • come in for — If someone or something comes in for criticism or blame, they receive it.
  • come out in — If you come out in spots, you become covered with them.
  • comediennes — Plural form of comedienne.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?