0%

10-letter words containing n, i, c, o, l, s

  • conclavist — either of two persons who attend upon a cardinal at a conclave, one usually being an ecclesiastical secretary and the other a personal servant.
  • conclusion — When you come to a conclusion, you decide that something is true after you have thought about it carefully and have considered all the relevant facts.
  • conclusive — Conclusive evidence shows that something is certainly true.
  • consilient — showing consilience
  • consimilar — similar; alike
  • consortial — a combination of financial institutions, capitalists, etc., for carrying into effect some financial operation requiring large resources of capital.
  • consulship — an official appointed by the government of one country to look after its commercial interests and the welfare of its citizens in another country.
  • consulting — acting in an advisory capacity on professional matters
  • consultive — of or relating to consultation; advisory.
  • convulsing — to shake violently; agitate.
  • convulsion — If someone has convulsions, they suffer uncontrollable movements of their muscles.
  • convulsive — A convulsive movement or action is sudden and cannot be controlled.
  • corallines — Plural form of coralline.
  • coriolanus — Gaius Marcius (ˈɡaɪəs ˈmɑːsɪəs). 5th century bc, a legendary Roman general, who allegedly led an army against Rome but was dissuaded from conquering it by his mother and wife
  • cornfields — Plural form of cornfield.
  • cornwallis — Charles, 1st Marquis Cornwallis. 1738–1805, British general in the War of American Independence: commanded forces defeated at Yorktown (1781): defeated Tipu Sahib (1791): governor general of Bengal (1786–93, 1805): negotiated the Treaty of Amiens (1801)
  • costliness — costing much; expensive; high in price: a costly emerald bracelet; costly medical care.
  • cotillions — Plural form of cotillion.
  • councilors — Plural form of councilor.
  • counseling — Counseling is advice which a therapist or other expert gives to someone about a particular problem.
  • crinolines — Plural form of crinoline.
  • cross-link — a chemical bond, atom, or group of atoms that connects two adjacent chains of atoms in a large molecule such as a polymer or protein
  • crosslines — Plural form of crossline.
  • cyclosarin — Cyclohexyl methylphosphonofluoridate, an extremely toxic substance used as a chemical weapon.
  • decisional — the act or process of deciding; determination, as of a question or doubt, by making a judgment: They must make a decision between these two contestants.
  • declension — the inflection of nouns, pronouns, or adjectives for case, number, and gender
  • decolonise — to release from the status of a colony.
  • disclosing — indicating or involving a substance used to reveal the presence of plaque on the teeth by staining the plaque.
  • discounsel — to advise (a person) against a specific act
  • disenclose — (transitive) To free from being enclosed.
  • disinclose — to free from being inclosed
  • elocutions — Plural form of elocution.
  • encloister — to imprison or cloister
  • epsilonics — The study of error in mathematical approximations.
  • escalation — A rapid increase; a rise.
  • escallonia — Any of several South American flowering plants of the genus Escallonia.
  • excisional — Performed by excision.
  • exclusions — Plural form of exclusion.
  • flintlocks — Plural form of flintlock.
  • fonticulus — a fontanelle of the cranium
  • forclosing — Present participle of forclose.
  • forinsecal — foreign
  • glasnostic — relating to the policy of glasnost
  • haloclines — Plural form of halocline.
  • iconoclasm — the action or spirit of iconoclasts.
  • iconoclast — a person who attacks cherished beliefs, traditional institutions, etc., as being based on error or superstition.
  • inceptisol — a soil so young that horizons have just begun to form: especially prevalent in tundra areas.
  • incisional — Relating to an incision.
  • incisorial — of or relating to the incisors
  • inclusions — Plural form of inclusion.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?