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10-letter words containing o, n, i

  • conciliate — If you conciliate someone, you try to end a disagreement with them.
  • concinnate — to arrange or blend together skillfully, as parts or elements; put together in a harmonious, precisely appropriate, or elegant manner.
  • concinnity — a harmonious arrangement of parts, esp in literary works, speeches, etc
  • concinnous — characterized by concinnity; elegant; harmonious; stylistically congruous.
  • concipient — conceptive
  • conclavism — a minority movement (and the beliefs of certain Traditionalist Catholics) that rejects the authority of the established pope and instead supports an alternative pope
  • conclavist — either of two persons who attend upon a cardinal at a conclave, one usually being an ecclesiastical secretary and the other a personal servant.
  • concluding — final
  • conclusion — When you come to a conclusion, you decide that something is true after you have thought about it carefully and have considered all the relevant facts.
  • conclusive — Conclusive evidence shows that something is certainly true.
  • concocting — to prepare or make by combining ingredients, especially in cookery: to concoct a meal from leftovers.
  • concoction — A concoction is something that has been made out of several things mixed together.
  • concoctive — Of or pertaining to digestion; digestive.
  • concordial — characterized by concord
  • concording — Present participle of concord.
  • concreting — Present participle of concrete.
  • concretion — the act or process of coming or growing together; coalescence
  • concretise — to make concrete, real, or particular; give tangible or definite form to: to concretize abstractions.
  • concretism — the practice of representing abstract concepts in concrete terms
  • concretist — a person who represents abstract concepts in concrete terms
  • concretive — constituting an actual thing or instance; real: a concrete proof of his sincerity.
  • concretize — to render concrete; make real or specific; give tangible form to
  • concubines — Plural form of concubine.
  • concurring — to accord in opinion; agree: Do you concur with his statement?
  • concussing — Present participle of concuss.
  • concussion — If you suffer concussion after a blow to your head, you lose consciousness or feel sick or confused.
  • concussive — Pathology. injury to the brain or spinal cord due to jarring from a blow, fall, or the like.
  • condemning — Present participle of condemn.
  • condensing — to make more dense or compact; reduce the volume or extent of; concentrate.
  • condiction — (legal) A claim for restitution of a payment.
  • condignity — merit earned through good works while in a state of grace, and having a just claim on such rewards as heavenly glory. Compare congruity (def 4).
  • condiments — something used to give a special flavor to food, as mustard, ketchup, salt, or spices.
  • conditions — external or existing circumstances
  • conducting — personal behavior; way of acting; bearing or deportment.
  • conduction — Conduction is the process by which heat or electricity passes through or along something.
  • conductive — A conductive substance is able to conduct things such as heat and electricity.
  • confection — You can refer to a sweet food that someone has made as a confection.
  • conferring — to consult together; compare opinions; carry on a discussion or deliberation.
  • confessing — Present participle of confess.
  • confession — A confession is a signed statement by someone in which they admit that they have committed a particular crime.
  • confidable — Able to be entrusted with secrets, or private information.
  • confidante — Someone's confidante is a woman who they are able to discuss their private problems with.
  • confidants — a close friend or associate to whom secrets are confided or with whom private matters and problems are discussed.
  • confidence — If you have confidence in someone, you feel that you can trust them.
  • confidente — a sofa or settee, especially of the 18th century, having a triangular seat at each end divided from the greater part of the seat by an armrest.
  • confidents — having strong belief or full assurance; sure: confident of fulfillment.
  • confidings — Plural form of confiding.
  • config.sys — (operating system)   A text file containing special system configuration commands, found in the root directory on an MS-DOS computer, typically on drive C (the hard disk). It is read by MS-DOS at boot time, after the setup has been read from CMOS RAM and before running AUTOEXEC.BAT. It can be modified by the user. Some example commands which CONFIG.SYS might contain are: DEVICE=C:\DOS\HIMEM.SYS /testmem:off Load the extended memory manager. DEVICE=C:\DOS\EMM386.EXE RAM Load the expanded memory manager. BUFFERS=10,0 Specify memory for disk buffers. FILES=70 Set the number of files that can be open at once. DOS=UMB DOS is located in UppeMemoryBlock. LASTDRIVE=Z Disk drives are A: to Z:. FCBS=16,0 Set the number of file control blocks. DEVICEHIGH /L:1,12048 =C:\DOS\SETVER.EXE Report the DOS version to older programs. DOS=HIGH DOS should maintain a link to UMB. COUNTRY=358,437 C:\DOS\COUNTRY.SYS Set the country code for some programs. STACKS=9,256 Set dynamic stacks for hardware control. SHELL=C:\DOS\COMMAND.COM C:\DOS\ /E:1024 /p Set the location of the command interpreter.
  • configured — Simple past tense and past participle of configure.
  • configures — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of configure.
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