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10-letter words containing m, c, a

  • emphatical — Emphatic.
  • emphractic — medication that closes the pores of the skin
  • enactments — Plural form of enactment.
  • encampment — A place with temporary accommodations consisting of huts or tents, typically for troops or nomads.
  • encasement — The act of encasing or something that encases.
  • encashment — (finance) The payment in cash of a note, draft, etc.
  • encephalum — The brain of an insect.
  • encomiasts — Plural form of encomiast.
  • encomienda — A grant by the Spanish Crown to a colonist in America conferring the right to demand tribute and forced labor from the Indian inhabitants of an area.
  • endamoebic — relating to endamebae
  • endermical — relating to an endermic process
  • enharmonic — Of or relating to notes that are the same in pitch (in modern tuning) though bearing different names (e.g., F sharp and G flat or B and C flat).
  • enomotarch — (historical, Ancient Greece) The commander of an enomoty.
  • epagomenic — Intercalary.
  • epicardium — A serous membrane that forms the innermost layer of the pericardium and the outer surface of the heart.
  • epicranium — (anatomy) The upper and superficial part of the head, including the scalp, muscles, etc.
  • epidemical — Alternative form of epidemic.
  • episematic — (esp of coloration) aiding recognition between animals of the same species
  • epitomical — Epitomic.
  • eremitical — Alternative form of eremitic.
  • ergomaniac — one with an excessive desire to work or exercise
  • erotomanic — Exhibiting or relating to erotomania.
  • erraticism — the action or tendency to be erratic
  • escamotage — juggling; trickery
  • escapement — A mechanism in a clock or watch that alternately checks and releases the train by a fixed amount and transmits a periodic impulse from the spring or weight to the balance wheel or pendulum.
  • escarpment — A long, steep slope, especially one at the edge of a plateau or separating areas of land at different heights.
  • eudaemonic — Conducive to happiness.
  • euharmonic — producing perfect concord or harmony
  • exclaiming — Present participle of exclaim.
  • face cream — Face cream is a thick substance that you rub into your face in order to keep it soft.
  • facsimiled — Simple past tense and past participle of facsimile.
  • facsimiles — Plural form of facsimile.
  • factualism — emphasis on, devotion to, or extensive reliance upon facts: the factualism of scientific experiment.
  • falciparum — The parasitic protozoan Plasmodium falciparum that causes falciparum malaria.
  • familicide — The murder of an entire family by a family member.
  • familistic — the subordination of the personal interests and prerogatives of an individual to the values and demands of the family: Familism characterized the patriarchal family.
  • family car — a car suitable for a family
  • fanaticism — fanatical character, spirit, or conduct.
  • farce-meat — forcemeat.
  • fasciotomy — (surgery) The cutting of the fascia to relieve tension or pressure (and treat the resulting loss of circulation to an area of tissue or muscle).
  • filmically — (nonstandard) in a filmic manner.
  • flame cell — one of the hollow cells terminating the branches of the excretory tubules of certain invertebrates, having a tuft of continuously moving cilia.
  • flaminical — relating to a flamen
  • folk magic — any attempt to practice charms, spells, etc., to control events or people.
  • form class — a class of words or forms in a given language that have one or more grammatical features in common, as, in Latin, all masculine nouns in the nominative singular, all masculine singular nouns, all masculine nouns, or all nouns.
  • formicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of formicate.
  • freddy mac — (in the US) an informal name for the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, a private company that buys and sells mortgage debt
  • freshmanic — of, relating to, or characteristic of a freshman: freshmanic enthusiasm.
  • frog march — to force (a person) to march with the arms pinioned firmly behind the back.
  • frog-march — If you are frog-marched somewhere, someone takes you there by force, holding you by the arms or another part of your body so that you have to walk along with them.
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