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13-letter words containing o, c, t, m

  • come up short — disappoint
  • come what may — to approach or move toward a particular person or place: Come here. Don't come any closer!
  • comfort woman — a girl or woman forced into prostitution by Japanese soldiers during World War II.
  • comfortablest — Superlative form of comfortable.
  • commaundement — Obsolete spelling of commandment.
  • comme il faut — correct or correctly
  • commemorating — Present participle of commemorate.
  • commemoration — the act or an instance of commemorating
  • commemorative — A commemorative object or event is intended to make people remember a particular event or person.
  • commemoratory — commemorative (def 1).
  • commencements — Plural form of commencement.
  • commendations — the act of commending; recommendation; praise: commendation for a job well done.
  • commensurated — Simple past tense and past participle of commensurate.
  • commensurates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commensurate.
  • commentations — Plural form of commentation.
  • commented out — comment out
  • commerce city — a city in central Colorado.
  • commercial at — (character)   "@". ASCII code 64. Common names: at sign, at, strudel. Rare: each, vortex, whorl, INTERCAL: whirlpool, cyclone, snail, ape, cat, rose, cabbage, amphora. ITU-T: commercial at. The @ sign is used in an electronic mail address to separate the local part from the hostname. This dates back to July 1972 when Ray Tomlinson was designing the first[?] e-mail program. It is ironic that @ has become a trendy mark of Internet awareness since it is a very old symbol, derived from the latin preposition "ad" (at). Giorgio Stabile, a professor of history in Rome, has traced the symbol back to the Italian Renaissance in a Roman mercantile document signed by Francesco Lapi on 1536-05-04. In Dutch it is called "apestaartje" (little ape-tail), in German "affenschwanz" (ape tail). The French name is "arobase". In Spain and Portugal it denotes a weight of about 25 pounds, the weight and the symbol are called "arroba". Italians call it "chiocciola" (snail). See @-party.
  • commercialist — the principles, practices, and spirit of commerce.
  • commerciality — commercial quality or character; ability to produce a profit: Distributors were concerned about the film's commerciality compared with last year's successful pictures.
  • commiserating — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commiseration — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commiserative — to feel or express sorrow or sympathy for; empathize with; pity.
  • commissariats — Plural form of commissariat.
  • committedness — The state or condition of being committed; commitment.
  • committeeship — (formerly) the office of a person to whom the care of a mentally incompetent person or his or her property was entrusted by a court
  • commoditising — Present participle of commoditise.
  • commoditizing — to turn into a commodity; make commercial.
  • common factor — a number or quantity that is a factor of each member of a group of numbers or quantities
  • common market — A common market is an organization of countries who have agreed to trade freely with each other and make common decisions about industry and agriculture.
  • common rafter — a rafter having no function other than to bear roofing.
  • common rhythm — the usual English verse rhythm created by a succession of metrical feet each of which consists of a stressed syllable and one or two unstressed ones.
  • common scoter — a sea duck of northern regions, Melanitta nigra. The male plumage is black with white patches around the head and eyes
  • common sennit — flat sennit.
  • common tannin — Chemistry. any of a group of astringent vegetable principles or compounds, chiefly complex glucosides of catechol and pyrogallol, as the reddish compound that gives the tanning properties to oak bark or the whitish compound that occurs in large quantities in nutgalls (common tannin, tannic acid)
  • commonalities — Plural form of commonality.
  • commonwealths — Plural form of commonwealth.
  • communalistic — Pertaining to communalism.
  • communalities — the state or condition of being communal.
  • communautaire — supporting the principles of the European Community (now the European Union)
  • communicating — making or having a direct connection from one room to another
  • communication — Communications are the systems and processes that are used to communicate or broadcast information, especially by means of electricity or radio waves.
  • communicative — Someone who is communicative talks to people, for example about their feelings, and tells people things.
  • communicators — Plural form of communicator.
  • communicatory — inclined to communicate or impart; talkative: He isn't feeling very communicative today.
  • communisation — (British spelling) Alternative form of communization.
  • communitarian — a member of a communist community
  • communization — The act or process of communizing.
  • commutability — The quality of being commutable.
  • commutatively — of or relating to commutation, exchange, substitution, or interchange.
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