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11-letter words containing o, b, s, c

  • abhorrences — Plural form of abhorrence.
  • abscessions — Plural form of abscession.
  • abscondence — secret concealment or seclusion, or the action of absconding
  • abscondment — An act of absconding or escaping.
  • absorptance — a measure of the ability of an object to absorb radiation, equal to the ratio of the absorbed radiant flux to the incident flux. For a layer of material the ratio of the flux absorbed between the entry and exit surfaces of the layer to the flux leaving the entry surface is the internal absorptance
  • abstraction — An abstraction is a general idea rather than one relating to a particular object, person, or situation.
  • abstriction — the separation and release of a mature spore from a sporophore by the formation of a septum. This process occurs in some fungi
  • amblyoscope — an instrument used to train an amblyopic eye to function properly.
  • ambulocetus — A large carnivorous amphibian (Ambulocetus natans).
  • amoebocytes — Plural form of amoebocyte.
  • antibiotics — Plural form of antibiotic.
  • aquaerobics — A form of aerobics done while in water.
  • arboraceous — resembling a tree
  • arborescent — having the shape or characteristics of a tree
  • archbishops — Plural form of archbishop.
  • asciibonics — (chat)   (From ASCII and Ebonics) A style of text communication in English which is most common on talk systems such as irc. Its notable characteristics are: Typing all in lowercase (and occasionally all in uppercase). Copious use of abbreviations of the sort "u" for "you" "1" for "one" (and therefore "some1" for "someone", "ne1" for "anyone"), "2" for "to", "r" for "are", etc. A general lack of punctuation, except for strings of question marks and exclamation marks. Common use of the idiom "m or f?", meant to elicit a statement of the listener's gender. Typical extended discourse in ASCIIbonics: "hey wasup ne1 want 2 cyber?" "m or f?" ASCIIbonics is similar to the way B1FF talked, although B1FF used more punctuation (lots more), and used all uppercase, rather than all lowercase. What's more, B1FF was only interested in warez, and so never asked "m or f?". It has been widely observed that some of the purest examples of ASCIIbonics come from non-native speakers of English. The phenomenon of ASCIIbonics predates by several years the use of the word "ASCIIbonics", as the word could only have been coined in or after late 1996, when "Ebonics" was first used in the US media to denote the US English dialects known in the linguistic literature as "Black Vernacular English".
  • babelicious — (of a woman) sexually very attractive.
  • bacciferous — bearing berries
  • baccivorous — feeding on berries
  • bachelorism — bachelorhood
  • backcrossed — Simple past tense and past participle of backcross.
  • backcrosses — Plural form of backcross.
  • backgammons — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of backgammon.
  • backgrounds — Plural form of background.
  • backside-to — backend-to.
  • backsolving — Present participle of backsolve.
  • backstopped — Simple past tense and past participle of backstop.
  • backstopper — a wall, wire screen, or the like, serving to prevent a ball from going too far beyond the normal playing area.
  • backstroker — a person who swims the backstroke, especially a member of a competitive swimming team who specializes in the backstroke.
  • backstrokes — Plural form of backstroke.
  • bacteriosis — any bacterial disease
  • bacteroides — any of several rod-shaped, anaerobic bacteria of the genus Bacteroides, occurring in the alimentary and genitourinary tracts of humans and other mammals, certain species of which are pathogenic.
  • baculovirus — any of a family of viruses that attack insects and other arthropods, used as biological pesticides
  • badderlocks — a seaweed, Alaria esculenta, that has long brownish-green fronds and is eaten in parts of N Europe
  • baroceptors — Plural form of baroceptor.
  • barracootas — Plural form of barracoota.
  • barracoutas — Plural form of barracouta.
  • basic cobol — (language)   A subset of COBOL from COBOL-60 standards.
  • basidiocarp — the fruiting body of basidiomycetous fungi; the mushroom of agarics
  • bay scallop — a small scallop, Pecten irradians, inhabiting shallow waters and mud flats from southeastern Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, especially eastern Long Island Sound.
  • beach house — a holiday house overlooking a beach
  • bellicosity — inclined or eager to fight; aggressively hostile; belligerent; pugnacious.
  • below decks — If someone or something is below decks, they are inside a ship in the part of it that is underneath the deck.
  • belt course — an ornamental projecting band or continuous moulding along a wall
  • belt-course — a horizontal band or course, as of stone, projecting beyond or flush with the face of a building, often molded and sometimes richly carved.
  • benthoscope — a deep-sea diving vessel
  • betulaceous — of, relating to, or belonging to the Betulaceae, a family of mostly N temperate catkin-bearing trees and shrubs such as birch and alder, some species of which reach the northern limits of tree growth
  • biblioclasm — a person who mutilates or destroys books.
  • biblioclast — One who destroys books, especially the Bible.
  • bicephalous — having two heads

On this page, we collect all 11-letter words with O-B-S-C. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 11-letter word that contains in O-B-S-C to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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