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10-letter words containing n, r, e

  • ciceronian — of or resembling Cicero or his rhetorical style; eloquent
  • cinderella — If you describe a person or organization as a Cinderella, you mean that they receive very little attention and that they deserve to receive more.
  • cinemagoer — a person who attends the cinema
  • cinerarium — a place for keeping the ashes of the dead after cremation
  • cineration — The reducing of anything to ashes by combustion; cinefaction.
  • circensial — relating to the Roman circuses
  • circumvent — If someone circumvents a rule or restriction, they avoid having to obey the rule or restriction, in a clever and perhaps dishonest way.
  • cis person — a person who is cisgender or cissexual.
  • cistercian — a member of a Christian order of monks and nuns founded in 1098, which follows an especially strict form of the Benedictine rule
  • citronella — a tropical Asian grass, Cymbopogon (or Andropogon) nardus, with bluish-green lemon-scented leaves
  • citrulline — an amino acid that occurs in watermelons and is an intermediate in the formation of urea. Formula: NH2CONH(CH2)3CHNH2COOH
  • cladoceran — any minute freshwater crustacean of the order Cladocera, which includes the water fleas
  • clambering — of or relating to plants that creep or climb like vines, but without benefit of tendrils.
  • clappering — the sound made by using a clapper
  • clarenceux — the second King-of-Arms in England
  • clattering — to make a loud, rattling sound, as that produced by hard objects striking rapidly one against the other: The shutters clattered in the wind.
  • clean room — an environment, typically used in manufacturing or scientific research, in which environmental contaminants are kept to an absolute minimum
  • clearances — Plural form of clearance.
  • clearwings — Plural form of clearwing.
  • cleromancy — a divination involving dice-throwing or lot-casting
  • cleverness — mentally bright; having sharp or quick intelligence; able.
  • clinometer — an instrument used in surveying for measuring an angle of inclination
  • cloak fern — a type of fern, genus Notholaena, found in dry, rocky areas of temperate and tropical America, often used as an ornamental.
  • clobbering — Present participle of clobber.
  • clustering — cluster
  • cluttering — A speech disorder characterized by fast, jerky, or irregular speech, which often sounds like stuttering.
  • cnidophore — a part or organ bearing cnidoblasts.
  • co-founder — a person who founds or establishes something with another.
  • co-manager — a person who manages something jointly with one or more other people
  • co-partner — a partner or associate, as in a business.
  • co-routine — a section of a computer program similar to but differing from a subroutine in that it can be left and re-entered at any point
  • co-venture — a business project or enterprise undertaken jointly by two or more companies, each sharing in the capitalization and in any profits or losses.
  • coal miner — A coal miner is a person whose job is mining coal.
  • coarseness — composed of relatively large parts or particles: The beach had rough, coarse sand.
  • coarsening — Present participle of coarsen.
  • coathanger — Alternative spelling of coat hanger.
  • cockernony — a woman's hairstyle in which the hair is gathered up in a band
  • coconspire — (intransitive) To conspire together with.
  • cocreation — Joint creation.
  • codecenter — (programming)   (Formerly Saber-C) A proprietary software development environment for C programs, offering an integrated toolkit for developing, testing, debugging and maintainance.
  • coenosarcs — Plural form of coenosarc.
  • coeternity — existence for, from, or in eternity with another being
  • cofounders — a person who founds or establishes something with another.
  • cogenerate — To generate two forms of energy simultaneously.
  • coherences — Plural form of coherence.
  • coherently — logically connected; consistent: a coherent argument.
  • coinventor — a fellow inventor
  • coinvestor — a fellow investor
  • collarbone — Your collarbones are the two long bones which run from throat to your shoulders.
  • colonisers — Plural form of coloniser.
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