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8-letter words containing p, a, c

  • captured — Simple past tense and past participle of capture.
  • capturer — to take by force or stratagem; take prisoner; seize: The police captured the burglar.
  • captures — to take by force or stratagem; take prisoner; seize: The police captured the burglar.
  • capuccio — a capuche
  • capuched — hooded
  • capuches — Plural form of capuche.
  • capuchin — any agile intelligent New World monkey of the genus Cebus, inhabiting forests in South America, typically having a cowl of thick hair on the top of the head
  • capulets — Plural form of capulet.
  • capybara — the largest rodent: a pig-sized amphibious hystricomorph, Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris, resembling a guinea pig and inhabiting river banks in Central and South America: family Hydrochoeridae
  • car park — A car park is an area or building where people can leave their cars.
  • car part — a component of an automobile
  • car pool — A car pool is an arrangement where a group of people take turns driving each other to work, or driving each other's children to school. In American English, car pool is sometimes used to refer simply to people travelling together in a car.
  • car port — A car port is a shelter for cars which is attached to a house and consists of a flat roof supported on pillars.
  • car-pool — Also, carpooling, car pooling. an arrangement among a group of automobile owners by which each owner in turn drives the others or their children to and from a designated place.
  • carapace — A carapace is the protective shell on the back of some animals such as tortoises or crabs.
  • carpalia — any of the bones of the wrist.
  • carpeaux — Jean Baptiste [zhahn ba-teest] /ʒɑ̃ baˈtist/ (Show IPA), 1827–75, French sculptor.
  • carpeted — Simple past tense and past participle of carpet.
  • carphone — a telephone that operates by cellular radio for use in a car
  • carpools — Plural form of carpool.
  • carports — Plural form of carport.
  • carupano — a seaport in N Venezuela.
  • carve up — If you say that someone carves something up, you disapprove of the way they have divided it into small parts.
  • cassiope — (sometimes initial capital letter) any evergreen shrub belonging to the genus Cassiope, of the heath family, having nodding white or pinkish solitary flowers and scalelike or needlelike leaves.
  • cat flap — opening in door for cat
  • catalpas — Plural form of catalpa.
  • cataphor — a word that refers to or stands for another word used later
  • catapult — A catapult is a device for shooting small stones. It is made of a Y-shaped stick with a piece of elastic tied between the two top parts.
  • catch up — If you catch up with someone who is in front of you, you reach them by walking faster than they are walking.
  • catch-up — an effort to reach or pass a norm, especially after a period of delay: After the slowdown there was a catch-up in production.
  • cawnpore — former name of Kanpur.
  • cecropia — A fast-growing tropical American tree, typically among the first to colonize a cleared area. Many cecropias have a symbiotic relationship with ants.
  • cei-pact — Central European Initiative on Parallel Computation.
  • cell sap — the watery fluid within the central vacuole of a plant cell.
  • cenotaph — A cenotaph is a structure that is built in honour of soldiers who died in a war.
  • cephalad — towards the head or anterior part
  • cephalic — of or relating to the head
  • cephalin — a phospholipid, similar to lecithin, that occurs in the nerve tissue and brain
  • cephalo- — indicating the head
  • cephalon — the head, especially of an arthropod.
  • cephalus — the husband of Procris.
  • chalk up — If you chalk up a success, a victory, or a number of points in a game, you achieve it.
  • chalkpit — a quarry for chalk
  • champaks — Plural form of champak.
  • champart — the granting of land to a person on condition that a portion of the harvest will be given to the landowner
  • champers — Champers is champagne.
  • champian — A plain; a flat expanse of land; a champaign.
  • champing — to bite upon or grind, especially impatiently: The horses champed the oats.
  • champion — A champion is someone who has won the first prize in a competition, contest, or fight.
  • changeup — Alternative form of change-up.
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