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14-letter words containing o, m, i, t

  • committeewomen — Plural form of committeewoman.
  • commodity loan — a loan made to producers of commodities, whereby the trader buys commodities on credit and returns the loan after the commodities are sold
  • communications — the ways in which human beings communicate
  • communitarians — Plural form of communitarian.
  • community card — (in certain card games) a card that every player can use to form a hand in combination with the cards that he or she alone has been dealt
  • community care — help available to persons living in their own homes, rather than services provided in residential institutions
  • community home — a home provided by a local authority for children who cannot remain with parents or relatives, or be placed with foster parents
  • community life — the life and activities of a community
  • compactibility — capable of being compacted: compactible rubbish.
  • companion star — companion1 (def 6).
  • compassionated — Simple past tense and past participle of compassionate.
  • compatibilists — Plural form of compatibilist.
  • compatibleness — The state or quality of being compatible.
  • compensability — eligibility for compensation
  • compensational — the act or state of compensating, as by rewarding someone for service or by making up for someone's loss, damage, or injury by giving the injured party an appropriate benefit.
  • complementizer — a word or morpheme that serves to introduce a complement clause or a reduced form of such a clause, as that in I wish that he would leave
  • complexometric — as in complexometric indicator, an ionochromic dye that undergoes a definite colour change in presence of specific metal ions
  • complimentable — Archaic. a gift; present.
  • composite shot — split screen.
  • composite vote — a voting result arrived at through averaging or combining other votes
  • composite-shot — Also called composite shot. Movies, Television. a type of process photography in which two or more shots are juxtaposed and projected simultaneously on the screen.
  • compossibility — the possibility of coexisting
  • compostability — The quality of being compostable.
  • compromisation — The act of compromising.
  • computer crime — crime perpetrated on or requiring the use of computers
  • computer virus — virus
  • computer-aided — done or improved by computer
  • computerizable — able to be computerized
  • computerphobia — the fear or dislike of computers
  • computerphobic — a computerphobe
  • concrete mixer — a device used for mixing cement, sand, gravel, or other substances to make concrete; it has a rotating drum in which the concrete is mixed
  • concrete music — music consisting of an electronically modified montage of tape-recorded sounds
  • conductometric — relating to the measurement of conductivity
  • confirmability — the quality of being confirmable
  • confirmational — providing proof or supporting evidence
  • conformability — Conformableness.
  • conformational — manner of formation; structure; form, as of a physical entity.
  • conglomerating — Present participle of conglomerate.
  • conglomeration — A conglomeration of things is a group of many different things, gathered together.
  • conglomerative — of, relating to, or resembling a conglomerate
  • conservativism — Alternative form of conservatism.
  • constructivism — a movement in abstract art evolved in Russia after World War I, primarily by Naum Gabo, which explored the use of movement and machine-age materials in sculpture and had considerable influence on modern art and architecture
  • contaminations — Plural form of contamination.
  • contemperation — the act of contempering
  • contemplations — Plural form of contemplation.
  • contemplatives — Plural form of contemplative.
  • contemporaries — existing, occurring, or living at the same time; belonging to the same time: Newton's discovery of the calculus was contemporary with that of Leibniz.
  • contemporarily — existing, occurring, or living at the same time; belonging to the same time: Newton's discovery of the calculus was contemporary with that of Leibniz.
  • contemporising — to place in or regard as belonging to the same age or time.
  • conterminously — having a common boundary; bordering; contiguous.
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