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12-letter words containing n, e, u, r, c

  • countersinks — Plural form of countersink.
  • counterspell — a spell or charm which acts against another spell, esp in fantasy or role-playing games
  • counterspies — Plural form of counterspy.
  • counterstain — to apply two or more stains in sequence to (a specimen to be examined), each of which colours a different tissue
  • counterstamp — a stamp added to a stamped paper or document as a qualifying mark.
  • counterstate — across state; traversing the state
  • counterstyle — an opposing style
  • countertenor — A countertenor is a man who sings with a high voice that is similar to a low female singing voice.
  • countertrade — international trade in which payment is made in goods rather than currency
  • countertrend — a trend which is contrary to the established or perceived trend
  • countertypes — Plural form of countertype.
  • countervails — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of countervail.
  • countervalue — An equivalent or equal, especially in military strategy.
  • counterweigh — counterbalance
  • counterwoman — A woman who serves at a counter.
  • counterworld — an alternative world opposite to the virtual world
  • country code — a code of good practice recommended to those who use the countryside for recreational purposes
  • country lane — a narrow country road, often bordered by hedges
  • country life — life in the country
  • country mile — a long way
  • country seat — A country seat is a large house with land in the country which is owned by someone who also owns a house in a town.
  • country-bred — brought up in the country
  • countrywomen — Plural form of countrywoman.
  • county clerk — a senior local government official
  • court tennis — a variety of tennis played indoors on a specially constructed court having high cement walls off which the ball may be played, points being made chiefly by stroking the ball into any of three openings in the walls of the court. Compare penthouse (def 7), tambour (def 7), winning opening.
  • cover ground — to move or traverse a certain distance
  • crassamentum — a blood clot
  • crassulacean — as in crassulacean acid metabolism, a method of photosynthesis
  • crater mound — huge, circular depression in central Ariz., believed to have been made by a meteorite: depth, 600 ft (183 m); diameter, 0.75 mi (1.2 km)
  • credit union — A credit union is a financial institution that offers its members low-interest loans.
  • crenulations — Plural form of crenulation.
  • croquet lawn — a lawn where croquet is played
  • crosscurrent — a current in a river or sea flowing across another current
  • crown cutter — a hollow, thin-walled cylinder having teeth formed radially on the end and used for cutting round holes out of thin, flat stock.
  • cumbrousness — The state or quality of being cumbrous.
  • cuneiformist — a person who studies or deciphers cuneiform writing.
  • curanderismo — the use of folk medicine, especially as practiced by a curandero.
  • curelessness — The state or quality of being cureless.
  • curmudgeonly — If you describe someone as curmudgeonly, you do not like them because they are mean or bad-tempered.
  • currency bar — a long narrow iron bar, often sword-like or spear-like in shape, dating from the pre-Roman and Roman period in Britain; the purpose of currency bars is not certain, and while they may have been used in trade, they may have had a ritual significance
  • current cost — The current cost of assets is their current value, or what it would cost to replace them at this time.
  • curtailments — Plural form of curtailment.
  • curtain line — the last line of a scene, act, etc., as in a play; tag line.
  • curtain pole — a pole from which a curtain is hung in front of a window, door, etc
  • curtain time — the time at which a play or other performance is scheduled to begin.
  • cusip number — A CUSIP number is a number that identifies an individual security like a stock or a bond.
  • cybersurfing — The practice of using and browsing the Internet, especially as a habitual pastime.
  • cycle crunch — (jargon)   A situation wherein the number of people trying to use a computer simultaneously has reached the point where no one can get enough cycles because they are spread too thin and the system has probably begun to thrash. This scenario is an inevitable result of Parkinson's Law applied to time-sharing. Usually the only solution is to buy more computer. Happily, this has rapidly become easier since the mid-1980s, so much so that the very term "cycle crunch" now has a faintly archaic flavour; most hackers now use workstations or personal computers as opposed to traditional time-sharing systems.
  • dark current — the residual current produced by a photoelectric device when not illuminated
  • declustering — Any technique that counteracts clustering (in any sense).
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