0%

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.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?