9-letter words containing e, t, c
- copy-edit — to prepare (copy) for printing by styling, correcting, etc
- copy-text — a manuscript or earlier published version of a text, used as the basis for an emended, scholarly edition
- copyedits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of copyedit.
- copytaker — (esp in a newspaper office) a person employed to type reports as journalists dictate them over the telephone
- copywrite — (rare) To write the copy (or text) of an advertisement; to have a job as a copywriter.
- coquetted — to coquet.
- coquettes — Plural form of coquette.
- corallite — the skeleton of a coral polyp
- cordately — In a cordate form.
- cordonnet — a thread or cord that is produced from coarse silk and is commonly used to outline embroidery and lacework, and for fringes
- core city — central city.
- core tool — a stone tool with a cutting edge, as a hand ax, chopper, or scraper, formed by chipping away flakes from a core.
- corelated — to correlate.
- cork tree — the cork oak, Quercus suber, of the beech family.
- corn belt — region in the NC plains area of the Midwest where much corn and cornfed livestock are raised: it extends from W Ohio to E Nebr. and NE Kans.
- corneitis — an inflammation of the cornea
- cornetist — a person who plays the cornet
- cornstone — a mottled green and red limestone
- corollate — having or resembling a corolla
- coronated — having or wearing a crown, coronet, or the like.
- coroneted — wearing a coronet
- coroutine — (programming) A piece of code that performs a task, and that can be passed new input and return output more than once.
- corporate — Corporate means relating to business corporations or to a particular business corporation.
- corpulent — If you describe someone as corpulent, you mean they are fat.
- corrected — to set or make true, accurate, or right; remove the errors or faults from: The native guide corrected our pronunciation. The new glasses corrected his eyesight.
- correctly — to set or make true, accurate, or right; remove the errors or faults from: The native guide corrected our pronunciation. The new glasses corrected his eyesight.
- corrector — to set or make true, accurate, or right; remove the errors or faults from: The native guide corrected our pronunciation. The new glasses corrected his eyesight.
- corregate — Based on Internal Translator (IT).
- correlate — If one thing correlates with another, there is a close similarity or connection between them, often because one thing causes the other. You can also say that two things correlate.
- corrigent — (in a medicine) an ingredient that negates a side effect of another ingredient
- corrolate — Misspelling of correlate.
- corrugate — to fold or be folded into alternate furrows and ridges
- corrupted — guilty of dishonest practices, as bribery; lacking integrity; crooked: a corrupt judge.
- corrupter — guilty of dishonest practices, as bribery; lacking integrity; crooked: a corrupt judge.
- corselets — Plural form of corselet.
- corsetier — a man who makes and fits corsets
- corseting — Present participle of corset.
- cortelyou — George Bruce, 1862–1940, U.S. cabinet officer and public utility director.
- corticate — (of plants, seeds, etc) having a bark, husk, or rind
- corticose — of, consisting of, or resembling bark
- cortisone — Cortisone is a hormone used in the treatment of arthritis, allergies, and some skin diseases.
- coruscate — to emit flashes of light; sparkle
- corvettes — Plural form of corvette.
- cosecants — Plural form of cosecant.
- cosmetics — beauty preparations; make-up
- cosmetize — to cosmeticize.
- cosseting — to treat as a pet; pamper; coddle.
- cossetted — Simple past tense and past participle of cosset.
- cost rent — (in Britain) the rent of a dwelling calculated on the cost of providing and maintaining the property without allowing for a profit
- costarred — Simple past tense and past participle of costar.