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9-letter words containing i, t, o, u

  • centurion — A centurion was an officer in the Roman army.
  • cespitous — Turfy; resembling turf.
  • chill out — To chill out means to relax after you have done something tiring or stressful.
  • chitinous — a nitrogen-containing polysaccharide, related chemically to cellulose, that forms a semitransparent horny substance and is a principal constituent of the exoskeleton, or outer covering, of insects, crustaceans, and arachnids.
  • choreutic — of or belonging to a chorus.
  • chukotian — a group of genetically related languages spoken on the Chukchi and Kamchatka peninsulas in eastern Siberia, including Chukchi, Kamchadal, and Koryak.
  • clafoutis — a French baked pudding
  • cloudiest — Superlative form of cloudy.
  • cointreau — a colourless liqueur with orange flavouring
  • colourist — A colourist is someone such as an artist or a fashion designer who uses colours in an interesting and original way.
  • columbite — a black mineral consisting of a niobium oxide of iron and manganese in orthorhombic crystalline form: occurs in coarse granite, often with tantalite, and is an ore of niobium. Formula: (Fe, Mn)(Nb)2O6
  • columnist — A columnist is a journalist who regularly writes a particular kind of article in a newspaper or magazine.
  • comatulid — any of a group of crinoid echinoderms, including the feather stars, in which the adults are free-swimming
  • comfiture — (obsolete) A confection, especially of preserved fruit.
  • comitatus — a retinue of warriors serving a leader, esp in pre-Christian Germanic cultures, such as Anglo-Saxon England and Viking Age Scandinavia
  • comminute — to break (a bone) into several small fragments
  • communist — A communist is someone who believes in communism.
  • community — The community is all the people who live in a particular area or place.
  • commuting — the activity of travelling some distance to work every day by car, bus, or train
  • commutive — (linguistics) That which serves to commute.
  • computing — Computing is the activity of using a computer and writing programs for it.
  • computist — a person who computes
  • confiture — a confection, preserve of fruit, etc
  • confuting — Present participle of confute.
  • congruity — the condition or fact of being congruous or congruent
  • contagium — the specific virus or other direct cause of any infectious disease
  • continual — A continual process or situation happens or exists without stopping.
  • continued — continuing; not having stopped
  • continuer — One who, or that which, continues.
  • continues — to go on after suspension or interruption: The program continued after an intermission.
  • continuos — a keyboard accompanying part consisting originally of a figured bass, which in modern scores is usually realized, and serving to provide or fill out the harmonic texture.
  • continuum — A continuum is a set of things on a scale, which have a particular characteristic to different degrees.
  • contusing — Present participle of contuse.
  • contusion — A contusion is a bruise.
  • contusive — to injure (tissue), especially without breaking the skin; bruise.
  • coroutine — (programming) A piece of code that performs a task, and that can be passed new input and return output more than once.
  • cost unit — a quantity or unit of a product or service whose cost is computed, used as a standard for comparison with other costs.
  • costumier — A costumier is a person or company that makes or supplies costumes.
  • costuming — a style of dress, including accessories and hairdos, especially that peculiar to a nation, region, group, or historical period.
  • coticular — of or relating to whetstones
  • cotunnite — a soft, white to yellowish mineral, lead chloride, PbCl 2 , that forms as an alteration product of galena.
  • countline — (in the confectionery trade) a chocolate-based bar
  • countries — a state or nation: What European countries have you visited?
  • countrify — to make countrified.
  • countship — the rank or position of a count.
  • coupstick — (historical) A stick or switch used among some Native Americans for making or counting a coup.
  • courtesie — Obsolete spelling of courtesy.
  • courtiers — a person who is often in attendance at the court of a king or other royal personage.
  • courtlike — reminiscent of the court in style or manner; elegant; courtly
  • courtling — a fawning or sycophantic member of a royal court
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