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12-letter words containing e, u, r, o, m

  • comes around — to approach or move toward a particular person or place: Come here. Don't come any closer!
  • commensurate — If the level of one thing is commensurate with another, the first level is in proportion to the second.
  • commuter tax — an income tax imposed by a locality on those who work within its boundaries but reside elsewhere.
  • compte rendu — a short review or notice, esp of a book
  • compulsories — Plural form of compulsory.
  • computer age — modern society regarded as the period when the widespread use of computers has fundamentally changed people's lives
  • computer bus — bus
  • computer law — a body of law arising out of the special conditions relating to the use of computers, as in computer crime or software copyright.
  • computer sex — (jargon)   Two computers interfaced with each other.
  • computerised — to control, perform, process, or store (a system, operation, or information) by means of or in an electronic computer or computers.
  • computerized — A computerized system, process, or business is one in which the work is done by computer.
  • computerizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of computerize.
  • computerless — having no computer
  • computerlike — similar to a computer
  • consumerists — Plural form of consumerist.
  • consumerized — to make (goods or a product) suitable or available for mass consumption: to consumerize computers by making them cheaper.
  • consumership — the state of being a consumer
  • conterminous — enclosed within a common boundary
  • coram judice — before a court having the authority to hear and decide (the case in question).
  • countercharm — an object or action that is capable of destroying a magical charm
  • counterclaim — a claim set up in opposition to another, esp by the defendant in a civil action against the plaintiff
  • counterimage — a corresponding image
  • countermands — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of countermand.
  • countermarch — to march or cause to march back along the same route
  • countermined — Simple past tense and past participle of countermine.
  • countermines — Plural form of countermine.
  • countermoved — Simple past tense and past participle of countermove.
  • countermoves — Plural form of countermove.
  • counterstamp — a stamp added to a stamped paper or document as a qualifying mark.
  • counterwoman — A woman who serves at a counter.
  • country mile — a long way
  • countrywomen — Plural form of countrywoman.
  • courier firm — a firm that provides special delivery services
  • crater mound — huge, circular depression in central Ariz., believed to have been made by a meteorite: depth, 600 ft (183 m); diameter, 0.75 mi (1.2 km)
  • crematoriums — Plural form of crematorium.
  • cumbersomely — In a cumbersome way.
  • cumbrousness — The state or quality of being cumbrous.
  • cuneiformist — a person who studies or deciphers cuneiform writing.
  • curanderismo — the use of folk medicine, especially as practiced by a curandero.
  • curmudgeonly — If you describe someone as curmudgeonly, you do not like them because they are mean or bad-tempered.
  • custom-order — to obtain by special or individual order: These wide doors have to be custom-ordered.
  • cyber mosque — a website dealing with Islamic religious matters
  • dame fortune — the personification of fortune as a woman
  • deambulatory — a place for walking often with a covering overhead
  • deinotherium — any member of the genus Deinotherium, consisting of mammals resembling elephants that existed during the Miocene, Pliocene, and Pleistocene epochs
  • desquamatory — an obsolete surgical instrument once used for the desquamation of bones
  • deuteronomic — of, relating to, or resembling Deuteronomy, especially the laws contained in that book.
  • deuterostome — any member of the major group of animals defined by the fact that during early embryonic development the first opening to form becomes the anus of the animal. The opposite is protostome
  • discomfiture — Archaic. defeat in battle; rout.
  • discomposure — the state of being discomposed; disorder; agitation; perturbation.
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