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10-letter words containing e, s, c, r, i, t

  • trichinose — to infest with parasitic worms (trichinae)
  • trickiness — given to or characterized by deceitful tricks; crafty; wily.
  • tricostate — having three ribs, costae, or raised lines.
  • tricoteuse — a woman who knits, with reference to women who sat and witnessed the public executions taking place during the French Revolution
  • triniscope — an early television with three tubes projecting the three primary colours
  • trioecious — of or relating to a species having male, female, and hermaphrodite flowers on different plants.
  • triple sec — a type of curaçao liqueur.
  • trisection — to divide into three parts, especially into three equal parts.
  • trisectrix — a trisecting line
  • trisulcate — having three grooves or furrows
  • triticeous — used to refer to specific small rounded structures of tissue or cartilage, resembling grains of wheat, sometimes found in the area near the larynx and the base of the tongue
  • true basic — (language)   A compiled BASIC, by John Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz, requiring no line numbers.
  • trumscheit — trumpet marine.
  • tsarevitch — the son of a czar.
  • twin-screw — (of a vessel) having two screw propellers, which usually revolve in opposite directions.
  • typescript — a typewritten copy of a literary composition, document, or the like, especially as prepared for a printer.
  • unchristen — unchristian
  • uncloister — to free from confinement of any kind
  • unscripted — not scripted; lacking a script: an unscripted idea for a movie.
  • urosthenic — having a tail which drives movement of the body
  • ventricles — Zoology. any of various hollow organs or parts in an animal body.
  • ventricose — swollen, especially on one side or unequally; protuberant.
  • viscometer — a device for measuring viscosity.
  • viscometry — a device for measuring viscosity.
  • vitrescent — becoming glass.
  • vivisector — to dissect the living body of (an animal).
  • water-sick — (of soil) unproductive due to excessive watering or salt residues from irrigation.
  • winchester — (in the Middle Ages) a kingdom, later an earldom, in S England. Capital: Winchester.
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