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13-letter words containing i, m, a, r, e, t

  • breast timber — wale1 (def 5).
  • breast-timber — a streak, stripe, or ridge produced on the skin by the stroke of a rod or whip; welt.
  • bureaucratism — an official of a bureaucracy.
  • bus mastering — bus master
  • cabinet maker — A cabinet maker is a person who makes high-quality wooden furniture.
  • cabinet-maker — a person who makes fine furniture and other woodwork.
  • cabinetmakers — Plural form of cabinetmaker.
  • camel cricket — cave cricket.
  • capellmeister — a person in charge of an orchestra, esp in an 18th-century princely household
  • cat distemper — distemper1 (def 1c).
  • categorematic — (of a word) able to stand alone as a term or subject
  • cecropia moth — a large North American saturniid moth, Hyalophora (or Samia) cecropia, with brightly coloured wings and feathery antennae
  • cephalometric — Relating to cephalometrics.
  • ceremonialist — of, relating to, or characterized by ceremony; formal; ritual: a ceremonial occasion.
  • cerium metals — the metals lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, promethium, and samarium, forming a sub-group of the lanthanides
  • chase mortise — a mortise having one inclined narrow side.
  • cheiromantist — A chiromancer.
  • chimneybreast — the wall or walls that surround the base of a chimney or fireplace
  • cholesteremia — cholesterolemia.
  • chrematistics — Study of wealth.
  • chrestomathic — (of teaching or learning) That has a practical use.
  • christmas eve — Christmas Eve is the 24th of December, the day before Christmas Day.
  • christmastide — the festival season from Christmas to after New Year's Day.
  • christmastime — the Christmas season, traditionally from Christmas Eve through New Year's Day or to Epiphany (Jan. 6)
  • chromaticness — the attribute of colour that involves both hue and saturation
  • chromatophile — Also, chromophilic, chromophilous [kroh-mof-uh-luh s] /kroʊˈmɒf ə ləs/ (Show IPA), chromatophilic, chromatophilous. staining readily.
  • chromesthesia — (neurology, psychology) sound-to-color synaesthesia.
  • cinema verite — films characterized by subjects, actions, etc, that have the appearance of real life
  • cinematograph — a combined camera, printer, and projector
  • circumagitate — (transitive) To agitate on all sides.
  • circumambient — surrounding
  • circumstanced — simple past tense and past participle of circumstance.
  • circumstances — someone's financial situation
  • circumstellar — surrounding, or revolving around, a star
  • circumvallate — to surround with a defensive fortification
  • city chambers — (in Scotland) the municipal building of a city; town hall
  • cliometrician — An expert at cliometrics.
  • commemorating — Present participle of commemorate.
  • commemoration — the act or an instance of commemorating
  • commemorative — A commemorative object or event is intended to make people remember a particular event or person.
  • commercial at — (character)   "@". ASCII code 64. Common names: at sign, at, strudel. Rare: each, vortex, whorl, INTERCAL: whirlpool, cyclone, snail, ape, cat, rose, cabbage, amphora. ITU-T: commercial at. The @ sign is used in an electronic mail address to separate the local part from the hostname. This dates back to July 1972 when Ray Tomlinson was designing the first[?] e-mail program. It is ironic that @ has become a trendy mark of Internet awareness since it is a very old symbol, derived from the latin preposition "ad" (at). Giorgio Stabile, a professor of history in Rome, has traced the symbol back to the Italian Renaissance in a Roman mercantile document signed by Francesco Lapi on 1536-05-04. In Dutch it is called "apestaartje" (little ape-tail), in German "affenschwanz" (ape tail). The French name is "arobase". In Spain and Portugal it denotes a weight of about 25 pounds, the weight and the symbol are called "arroba". Italians call it "chiocciola" (snail). See @-party.
  • commercialist — the principles, practices, and spirit of commerce.
  • commerciality — commercial quality or character; ability to produce a profit: Distributors were concerned about the film's commerciality compared with last year's successful pictures.
  • commiserating — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commiseration — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commiserative — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • communautaire — supporting the principles of the European Community (now the European Union)
  • comparatively — in a comparative manner
  • compartimento — any of the 18 administrative districts into which Italy is divided.
  • complimentary — If you are complimentary about something, you express admiration for it.
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