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9-letter words containing f, a, l, c

  • facialist — a person who has special training in administering facials and other skin treatments for the face.
  • facsimile — an exact copy, as of a book, painting, or manuscript.
  • factional — of a faction or factions.
  • factoidal — of or resembling a factoid; (of a piece of writing) comprising facts and factoids
  • factorial — Mathematics. the product of a given positive integer multiplied by all lesser positive integers: The quantity four factorial (4!) = 4 ⋅ 3 ⋅ 2 ⋅ 1 = 24. Symbol: n!, where n is the given integer.
  • factually — of or relating to facts; concerning facts: factual accuracy.
  • faculties — an ability, natural or acquired, for a particular kind of action: a faculty for making friends easily.
  • faculty's — an ability, natural or acquired, for a particular kind of action: a faculty for making friends easily.
  • falcation — the state of being falcate, a falcate appendage
  • falchions — Plural form of falchion.
  • falciform — sickle-shaped; falcate.
  • falconers — Plural form of falconer.
  • falconets — Plural form of falconet.
  • falconine — any of several birds of prey of the family Falconidae, especially of the genus Falco, usually distinguished by long, pointed wings, a hooked beak with a toothlike notch on each side of the upper bill, and swift, agile flight, typically diving to seize prey: some falcon species are close to extinction.
  • falconoid — an antioxidant compound found in tea and thought to resist cancer
  • falculate — (zoology) Curved and sharp-pointed, like a falcula.
  • fall back — to drop or descend under the force of gravity, as to a lower place through loss or lack of support.
  • fallacies — a deceptive, misleading, or false notion, belief, etc.: That the world is flat was at one time a popular fallacy.
  • fallbacks — Plural form of fallback.
  • falseface — a mask
  • fanatical — motivated or characterized by an extreme, uncritical enthusiasm or zeal, as in religion or politics.
  • fanciable — Sexually attractive.
  • fancifull — Archaic form of fanciful.
  • fanciless — Having no fancy; without ideas or imagination.
  • farcelike — Resembling or characteristic of farce.
  • fascicled — Growing in a bundle, tuft, or close cluster.
  • fascicles — Plural form of fascicle.
  • fascicule — a fascicle, especially of a book.
  • fasciculi — a fascicle, as of nerve or muscle fibers.
  • fatidical — prophetic.
  • febricula — a slight and short fever, especially when of obscure causation.
  • fictional — invented as part of a work of fiction: Sherlock Holmes is a fictional detective.
  • filaceous — composed of threads
  • file card — a card of a size suitable for filing, typically 3 × 5 inches (7.62 × 12.7 cm) or 4 × 6 inches (10.16 × 15.24 cm).
  • film pack — a number of sheets of film arranged one over the other and connected so that they can be exposed successively.
  • final cut — the final edited version of a film, approved by the director and producer.
  • financial — pertaining to monetary receipts and expenditures; pertaining or relating to money matters; pecuniary: financial operations.
  • fire clay — a refractory clay used for making crucibles, firebricks, etc.
  • fireplace — the part of a chimney that opens into a room and in which fuel is burned; hearth.
  • fiscalist — someone who believes that fiscal policy is of paramount importance in economic regulation
  • fiscality — Fiscal policy or considerations.
  • flaccidly — In a flaccid manner.
  • flagrance — shockingly noticeable or evident; obvious; glaring: a flagrant error.
  • flagrancy — shockingly noticeable or evident; obvious; glaring: a flagrant error.
  • flagstick — pin (def 13).
  • flamencos — Plural form of flamenco.
  • flapjacks — Plural form of flapjack; pancakes.
  • flaptrack — (in an aircraft wing) a track along which the wing flap runs when it is being deployed
  • flareback — a blast of flame that sometimes issues from the breech of a large gun or cannon when it is opened after firing.
  • flashback — a device in the narrative of a motion picture, novel, etc., by which an event or scene taking place before the present time in the narrative is inserted into the chronological structure of the work.
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