0%

13-letter words containing i, r, t

  • counterboring — a tool for enlarging a drilled hole for a portion of its length, as to permit sinking a screw head.
  • counterclaims — Plural form of counterclaim.
  • counterfeited — Simple past tense and past participle of counterfeit.
  • counterfeiter — made in imitation so as to be passed off fraudulently or deceptively as genuine; not genuine; forged: counterfeit dollar bills.
  • counterfeitly — in a counterfeit manner
  • countermining — Present participle of countermine.
  • countermotion — an opposing motion
  • countermoving — Present participle of countermove.
  • counterphobic — seeking out a situation that one fears in an attempt to overcome the fear.
  • counterpicket — a picket which opposes an existing picket at the same location
  • counterpoints — Plural form of counterpoint.
  • counterpoised — a counterbalancing weight.
  • counterpoises — Plural form of counterpoise.
  • counterpoison — A poison used against another poison, serving as an antidote.
  • countersigned — a sign used in reply to another sign.
  • countersniper — designed to act against or eliminate snipers
  • counterspying — the activities of a counterspy
  • counterstains — Plural form of counterstain.
  • counterstrike — a retaliatory strike
  • countertactic — an opposing tactic
  • counterthesis — A thesis that rebuts another.
  • countervailed — Simple past tense and past participle of countervail.
  • counterweighs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of counterweigh.
  • counterweight — A counterweight is an action or proposal that is intended to balance or counter other actions or proposals.
  • counting room — counting house.
  • country music — a type of 20th-century popular music based on White folk music of the southeastern US
  • county prison — the prison of a particular county
  • court hearing — an official meeting held in court
  • court martial — A court martial is a trial in a military court of a member of the armed forces who is charged with breaking a military law.
  • court packing — an unsuccessful attempt by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1937 to appoint up to six additional justices to the Supreme Court, which had invalidated a number of his New Deal laws.
  • court-martial — a court consisting of military or naval personnel appointed by a commander to try charges of offenses by soldiers, sailors, etc., against military or naval law.
  • covert action — a secret action undertaken to influence the course of political events, as a government intelligence operation.
  • craftsmanlike — Resembling or characteristic of a craftsman.
  • craftsmanship — Craftsmanship is the skill that someone uses when they make beautiful things with their hands.
  • cranioscopist — a practitioner of cranioscopy
  • credentialing — Usually, credentials. evidence of authority, status, rights, entitlement to privileges, or the like, usually in written form: Only those with the proper credentials are admitted.
  • credentialism — a tendency to value formal qualifications, esp at the expense of competence and experience
  • credentialled — having credentials
  • credibilities — the quality of being believable or worthy of trust: After all those lies, his credibility was at a low ebb.
  • credit agency — an agency that checks whether people are able to pay for goods and services they wish to buy on credit, and provides them with a credit rating
  • credit bureau — an agency that is a clearinghouse for information on the credit rating of individuals or firms
  • credit crunch — A credit crunch is a period during which there is a sudden reduction in the amount of money that banks and other lenders have available to lend.
  • credit rating — Your credit rating is a judgment of how likely you are to pay money back if you borrow it or buy things on credit.
  • creditability — bringing or deserving credit, honor, reputation, or esteem.
  • crenellations — the battlements on a building
  • crested swift — any of several birds of the family Hemiprocnidae, of southeast Asia and the East Indies, related to the true swifts but differing in having erectile crests and the habit of perching in trees.
  • cricket table — a three-legged table of the Jacobean period.
  • crime-fighter — any person, as a law-enforcement officer or government official, who works to prevent crime or to enforce criminal laws.
  • crimean tatar — a member of a Turkic people who lived in the Crimea before emigration to Anatolia in the 18th and 19th centuries and deportations to Soviet central Asia after World War II.
  • criminalities — Plural form of criminality.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?