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10-letter words containing n, a, m, e, c

  • calcimined — Simple past tense and past participle of calcimine.
  • calciminer — A person who calcimines.
  • calcimines — Plural form of calcimine.
  • call money — money loaned by banks and recallable on demand
  • call names — to speak of or to in an abusive manner
  • calumniate — to slander
  • camel spin — camel (def 3).
  • cameration — vaulting
  • camerlengo — a cardinal who acts as the pope's financial secretary and the papal treasurer
  • campaigned — Simple past tense and past participle of campaign.
  • campaigner — A campaigner is a person who campaigns for social or political change.
  • campanella — Tommaso. 1568–1639, Italian philosopher and Dominican friar. During his imprisonment by the Spaniards (1599–1626) he wrote his celebrated utopian fantasy, La città del sole
  • campaniles — Plural form of campanile.
  • camper van — A camper van is a van which is equipped with beds and cooking equipment so that you can live, cook, and sleep in it.
  • camptonite — a lamprophyric rock occurring in dikes and composed of labradorite, pyroxene, sodic hornblende and olivine.
  • candlebeam — a medieval chandelier formed of crossed timbers.
  • cankerworm — the larva of either of two geometrid moths, Paleacrita vernata or Alsophila pometaria, which feed on and destroy fruit and shade trees in North America
  • cant frame — any of several frames bracketed aft of the transom of a ship and inclined slightly to the fore-and-aft direction.
  • cantonment — A cantonment is a group of buildings or a camp where soldiers live.
  • carbapenem — (organic compound) Any of a class of broad-spectrum beta-lactam antibiotics that are resistant to enzymatic hydrolysis.
  • carmagnole — a dance and song popular during the French Revolution
  • carmarthen — a market town in S Wales, the administrative centre of Carmarthenshire: Norman castle. Pop: 14 648 (2001)
  • carmustine — a toxic nitrosurea, C 5 H 9 Cl 2 N 3 O 2 , used in the treatment of a wide range of tumors.
  • carthamine — a yellow or red dye obtained from safflower
  • cash money — cash, as distinguished from a check or money order.
  • catamenial — Of or relating to the menses or menstruation.
  • catamnesis — a medical history following the onset of an illness.
  • catchments — Plural form of catchment.
  • catechumen — a person, esp in the early Church, undergoing instruction prior to baptism
  • cavalrymen — a soldier in the cavalry.
  • cave canem — beware the dog
  • cefmatilen — An orally active cephalosporin antibiotic.
  • cellar-man — a person who is in charge of the alcoholic-beverage supply of a hotel or restaurant.
  • centesimal — hundredth
  • centigrams — Plural form of centigram.
  • centralism — Centralism is a way of governing a country, or organizing something such as industry, education, or politics, which involves having one central group of people who give instructions to everyone else.
  • ceremonial — Something that is ceremonial relates to a ceremony or is used in a ceremony.
  • chairwomen — Plural form of chairwoman.
  • chamaeleon — a faint constellation lying between Volans and the South celestial pole
  • chambering — a room, usually private, in a house or apartment, especially a bedroom: She retired to her chamber.
  • chamberlin — ˈThomas Chrowder (ˈkraʊdər ) ; krouˈdər) 1843-1928; U.S. geologist
  • chambertin — a dry red burgundy wine produced in Gevrey-Chambertin in E France
  • chambranle — the three-sided ornamental bordering found around doors, windows, and fireplaces
  • chameleons — Plural form of chameleon.
  • chamfering — Present participle of chamfer.
  • champagnes — Plural form of champagne.
  • champaigne — Philippe de (filip də). 1602–74, French painter, born in Brussels: noted particularly for his portraits and historical and religious scenes
  • championed — a person who has defeated all opponents in a competition or series of competitions, so as to hold first place: the heavyweight boxing champion.
  • changeroom — a room for use in changing one's clothes.
  • cheltenham — a town in W England, in central Gloucestershire: famous for its schools, racecourse, and saline springs (discovered in 1716). Pop: 98 875 (2001)
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