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13-letter words containing e, s, m

  • cinema goers' — filmgoer.
  • cinematheques — Plural form of cinematheque.
  • circumambages — round-about methods
  • circumlocutes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of circumlocute.
  • circumscribed — to draw a line around; encircle: to circumscribe a city on a map.
  • circumscribes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of circumscribe.
  • circumspectly — watchful and discreet; cautious; prudent: circumspect behavior.
  • circumstanced — simple past tense and past participle of circumstance.
  • circumstances — someone's financial situation
  • circumstellar — surrounding, or revolving around, a star
  • city chambers — (in Scotland) the municipal building of a city; town hall
  • claims farmer — a middleman who encourages people to make compensation claims and who then sells these claims on to a lawyer
  • clamorousness — The state or quality of being clamorous.
  • class meaning — the meaning of a grammatical category or a form class, common to all forms showing the category or to all members of the form class, as in the meaning of number common to all Latin nouns or the meaning of singular common to all Latin singular noun and verb forms.
  • cleistogamous — having small, unopened, self-pollinating flowers, usually in addition to the showier flowers
  • cleomenes iii — died 219? b.c.; king of Sparta (235?-220? b.c.); sought to institute sweeping social reforms
  • cleptomaniacs — kleptomania.
  • climbing rose — any of various roses that ascend and cover a trellis, arbor, etc., chiefly by twining about the supports.
  • clishmaclaver — idle talk; gossip
  • clistothecium — cleistothecium.
  • close company — a company under the control of its directors or fewer than five independent participants
  • close harmony — a type of singing in which all the parts except the bass lie close together and are confined to the compass of a tenth
  • close to home — affecting sb personally
  • close-mouthed — Someone who is close-mouthed about something does not say much about it.
  • closed system — a region that is isolated from its surroundings by a boundary that admits no transfer of matter or energy across it.
  • closed-minded — having a mind firmly unreceptive to new ideas or arguments: It's hard to argue with, much less convince, a closed-minded person.
  • coal measures — a series of coal-bearing rocks formed in the upper Carboniferous period; the uppermost series of the Carboniferous system
  • coalesced sum — (theory)   (Or "smash sum") In domain theory, the coalesced sum of domains A and B, A (+) B, contains all the non-bottom elements of both domains, tagged to show which part of the sum they come from, and a new bottom element. D (+) E = { bottom(D(+)E) } U { (0,d) | d in D, d /= bottom(D) } U { (1,e) | e in E, e /= bottom(E) } The bottoms of the constituent domains are coalesced into a single bottom in the sum. This may be generalised to any number of domains. The ordering is bottom(D(+)E) <= v For all v in D(+)E (i,v1) <= (j,v2) iff i = j & v1 <= v2 "<=" is usually written as LaTeX \sqsubseteq and "(+)" as LaTeX \oplus - a "+" in a circle.
  • coleman stove — a portable kerosene camp stove
  • colour scheme — In a room or house, the colour scheme is the way in which colours have been used to decorate it.
  • column inches — the amount of coverage given to a story in a newspaper
  • combativeness — The state of being combative.
  • come a stumer — to crash financially
  • come to blows — to fight
  • come to grips — to engage in hand-to-hand fighting
  • come to terms — to reach acceptance or agreement
  • come up roses — If you say that everything is coming up roses for someone, you mean that everything is going well for them.
  • come up short — disappoint
  • comfortablest — Superlative form of comfortable.
  • commandership — a person who commands.
  • commeasurable — having the same measure or extent; commensurate.
  • commencements — Plural form of commencement.
  • commendations — the act of commending; recommendation; praise: commendation for a job well done.
  • commensalisms — a companion at table.
  • commensurable — having a common factor
  • commensurably — In a commensurable manner; so as to be commensurable.
  • commensurated — Simple past tense and past participle of commensurate.
  • commensurates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commensurate.
  • commentations — Plural form of commentation.
  • commercialese — business jargon
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