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8-letter words containing i, c, e

  • asbestic — relating to asbestos
  • ascetics — Plural form of ascetic.
  • ascribed — Simple past tense and past participle of ascribe.
  • ascribes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ascribe.
  • aseismic — denoting a region free of earthquakes
  • aspermic — (of a male animal) Unable to produce sperm.
  • aspheric — a lens that has a shape that is not completely round
  • asthenic — of, relating to, or having asthenia; weak
  • atechnic — a person who has no technical or scientific ability or understanding
  • athletic — Athletic means relating to athletes and athletics.
  • atticize — to conform or adapt to the Attic Greek style of expression, habits, and beliefs
  • audience — The audience at a play, concert, film, or public meeting is the group of people watching or listening to it.
  • auncient — Obsolete form of ancient.
  • auricled — (botany) auriculate.
  • auricles — Plural form of auricle.
  • auspices — an augur of ancient Rome.
  • autecism — the development of the entire life cycle of a parasitic fungus on a single host or group of hosts.
  • autocide — suicide by crashing the vehicle one is driving.
  • avicenna — Arabic name ibn-Sina. 980–1037, Arab philosopher and physician whose philosophical writings, which combined Aristotelianism with neo-Platonist ideas, greatly influenced scholasticism, and whose medical work Qanun was the greatest single influence on medieval medicine
  • aycliffe — a town in Co Durham: founded as a new town in 1947. Pop (including Newton Aycliffe): 25 655 (2001)
  • azotemic — the accumulation of abnormally large amounts of nitrogenous waste products in the blood, as in uremic poisoning.
  • babiches — Plural form of babiche.
  • backbite — to talk spitefully about (an absent person)
  • backfile — the archives of a newspaper or magazine
  • backfire — If a plan or project backfires, it has the opposite result to the one that was intended.
  • backline — (in some team sports) the defensive players considered as a unit
  • backlite — (in automotive styling) the rear window of a vehicle.
  • backside — Your backside is the part of your body that you sit on.
  • bacteria — Bacteria are very small organisms. Some bacteria can cause disease.
  • bacterin — a vaccine prepared from bacteria
  • baculine — relating to flogging with a rod
  • baculite — an extinct species of mollusc from the Late Cretaceous period, fossils of which have been found ranging from 7cm to 2m in length
  • balearic — of or relating to the Balearic Islands
  • ball ice — floating balls of slushy ice formed at sea.
  • balletic — If you describe someone's movements as balletic, you mean that they have some of the graceful qualities of ballet.
  • barbicel — any of the minute hooks on the barbules of feathers that interlock with those of adjacent barbules
  • basilect — (in a region where creole is or has been spoken) the dialect closest to that creole and furthest removed from the most prestigious dialect (the acrolect) of the region
  • bathetic — containing or displaying bathos
  • beaching — an expanse of sand or pebbles along a shore.
  • beatific — A beatific expression shows or expresses great happiness and calmness.
  • beatrice — a feminine name: dim. Bea; var. Beatrix
  • beccaria — Cesare Bonesana (ˈtʃɛzare bɔnɛˈzɑːna), Marchese de. 1738–94, Italian legal theorist and political economist; author of the influential treatise Crimes and Punishments (1764), which attacked corruption, torture, and capital punishment
  • becoming — A piece of clothing, a colour, or a hairstyle that is becoming makes the person who is wearing it look attractive.
  • bedchair — an adjustable chair to support an invalid sitting up in bed
  • belching — to eject gas spasmodically and noisily from the stomach through the mouth; eruct.
  • benching — a long seat for several persons: a bench in the park.
  • benedick — a newly married man
  • benedict — Saint. ?480–?547 ad, Italian monk: founded the Benedictine order at Monte Cassino in Italy in about 540 ad. His Regula Monachorum became the basis of the rule of all Western Christian monastic orders. Feast day: July 11 or March 14
  • benefice — an endowed Church office yielding an income to its holder; a Church living
  • bentinck — Lord William Cavendish. 1774–1839, British statesman, governor general of Bengal (1828–35)
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