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10-letter words containing o, l, d, t

  • bloodstain — A bloodstain is a mark on a surface caused by blood.
  • bloodstock — Horses that are bred for racing are referred to as bloodstock.
  • bloodstone — a dark-green variety of chalcedony with red spots: used as a gemstone
  • boat drill — practice in launching the lifeboats and taking off the passengers and crew of a ship
  • bollandist — any of the editors of the Acta Sanctorum.
  • bootlegged — made, sold, or transported unlawfully.
  • bootloader — a bootstrap loader
  • botryoidal — (of minerals, parts of plants, etc) shaped like a bunch of grapes
  • bottlehead — bottlenose (def 2).
  • bottomland — a lowland alluvial area near a river
  • broadcloth — fabric woven on a wide loom
  • build into — to make (something) a definite part of (a contract, agreement, etc)
  • bulletwood — the wood of a tropical American sapotaceous tree, Manilkara bidentata, widely used for construction due to its durability and toughness
  • buttonhold — to buttonhole a person
  • buttonmold — a small disk of wood, metal, etc., which is covered as with cloth or leather to form a button
  • cacodylate — a salt of cacodylic acid.
  • carbolated — containing carbolic acid
  • castleford — a town in N England, in Wakefield unitary authority, West Yorkshire on the River Aire. Pop: 37 525 (2001)
  • catalogued — a list or record, as of items for sale or courses at a university, systematically arranged and often including descriptive material: a stamp catalog.
  • catch cold — to become ill with a cold
  • cattle dog — a catalogue
  • celadonite — a hydrous silicate of iron and potassium; an iron-rich soft mica.
  • centerfold — A centerfold is a picture that covers the two central pages of a magazine, especially a photograph of a naked or partly naked woman.
  • centrefold — A centrefold is a picture that covers the two central pages of a magazine, especially a photograph of a naked or partly naked woman.
  • centroidal — of or relating to a centroid
  • chest cold — a cold mainly affecting the chest
  • chloridate — to expose to or prepare with a chloride
  • cloistered — If you have a cloistered way of life, you live quietly and are not involved in the normal busy life of the world around you.
  • closed set — a set that includes all the values obtained by application of a given operation to its members
  • clostridia — Plural form of clostridium.
  • cloth yard — a medieval unit of measure for cloth, fixed at 37 inches by Edward VI of England: also used as a length for longbow arrows
  • clothbound — (of a book) bound in stiff boards covered in cloth
  • cloudburst — A cloudburst is a sudden, very heavy fall of rain.
  • clubfooted — Having a clubfoot.
  • cnidoblast — any of the cells of a coelenterate that contain nematocysts
  • coagulated — Subject to coagulation.
  • coal depot — a place at which coal may be deposited, stored, etc
  • coastlands — Plural form of coastland.
  • codetalker — A military communications specialist using codes based on an obscure language.
  • colatitude — the complement of the celestial latitude
  • cold front — the boundary line between a warm air mass and the cold air pushing it from beneath and behind as it moves
  • cold light — light emitted at low temperatures from a source that is not incandescent, such as fluorescence, phosphorescence, bioluminescence, or triboluminescence
  • cold start — the reloading of a program or operating system
  • cold steel — the use of bayonets, knives, etc, in combat
  • cold store — A cold store is a building or room which is artificially cooled so that food can be preserved in it.
  • cold sweat — If you are in a cold sweat, you are sweating and feel cold, usually because you are very afraid or nervous.
  • cold-patch — to apply a cold patch to.
  • cold-store — to store in cold storage.
  • cold-water — designating a room, apartment, etc. that is not provided with hot water or, sometimes, a bathroom
  • coldstream — a town in SE Scotland, in Scottish Borders on the English border: the Coldstream Guards were formed here (1660). Pop: 1813 (2001)
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