11-letter words containing m, y, c, i
- comminatory — Threatening, punitive, or vengeful.
- committedly — In a committed manner; with commitment.
- commonality — Commonality is used to refer to a feature or purpose that is shared by two or more people or things.
- communality — the state or condition of being communal.
- comorbidity — the occurrence of more than one illness or condition at the same time
- companywide — Extending throughout a company.
- competitory — competitive.
- compilatory — of or relating to a compilation or compiler
- compliantly — complying; obeying, obliging, or yielding, especially in a submissive way: a man with a compliant nature.
- complicitly — in a way that amounts to complicity
- compositely — In a composite manner.
- confirmedly — In a manner that is confirmed; definitely, as has been demonstrated.
- consimility — consimilitude
- consumingly — In a consuming manner; so as to consume.
- contumacity — the quality of being contumacious
- copolymeric — of or relating to a copolymer
- corbynomics — the economic policies advocated by Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the UK Labour Party from 2015
- corybantism — a delirium characterized by vivid frightening hallucinations and causing insomnia
- cosmic rays — Cosmic rays are rays that reach Earth from outer space and consist of atomic nuclei.
- craniectomy — the surgical removal of a part of the skull to facilitate brain surgery, the bone then being discarded rather than replaced
- craniognomy — the scientific study of the shape and characteristics of the skull
- craniometry — the study and measurement of skulls
- criminality — the state or quality of being criminal
- criminatory — Relating to, or involving, crimination; accusing.
- criminology — Criminology is the scientific study of crime and criminals.
- crithomancy — a form of divination in which grain or meal used in a sacrifice is analysed
- cryptarithm — a type of mathematical puzzle in which the digits of an equation have been substituted by letters
- cryptogamic — Of, relating to, or denoting cryptogams.
- cryptomeria — a coniferous tree, Cryptomeria japonica, of China and Japan, with curved needle-like leaves and small round cones: family Taxodiaceae
- customarily — according to custom; usually
- cyclothymia — a condition characterized by periodical swings of mood between excitement and depression, activity and inactivity
- cyclothymic — Of or pertaining to cyclothymia.
- cypriniform — Any of many ray-finned fish, of the order Cypriniformes, such as the carps, minnows and loaches.
- cypripedium — any orchid of the genus Cypripedium, having large flowers with an inflated pouchlike lip
- cytomegalic — of or relating to a disease characterized by enlarged cells
- cytoplasmic — the cell substance between the cell membrane and the nucleus, containing the cytosol, organelles, cytoskeleton, and various particles.
- cytotropism — cytotropic tendency or behavior.
- demonically — In a demonic way.
- demythicize — to turn into, treat, or explain as a myth.
- determinacy — the quality of being defined or fixed
- discomycete — any of a group of fungi considered as belonging to the class Ascomycetes of the kingdom Plantae, including cup fungi, morels, and truffles, characterized by a cup-shaped or disk-shaped fruiting body.
- dithyrambic — of, relating to, or of the nature of a dithyramb, or an impassioned oration.
- domesticity — the state of being domestic; domestic or home life.
- domiciliary — of or relating to a domicile, or place of residence.
- dynamic ram — dynamic random-access memory
- dynamically — Of a dynamic nature; variable or constantly changing nature.
- dynasticism — a system of government in which the rulers are all drawn from the same family
- dysharmonic — relating to abnormal bone development
- dysrhythmic — Having an unpleasing, irregular beat.
- early music — music of the medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque periods, especially revived and played on period instruments; European music after ancient music and before the classical music era, from the beginning of the Middle Ages to about 1750.