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10-letter words containing p, i, n, c

  • price ring — a group of traders formed to maintain the prices of their goods
  • prick song — written music.
  • pricklings — tingly sensations of discomfort or euphoria
  • princedoms — the position, rank, or dignity of a prince.
  • princehood — the office or rank of a prince
  • princeling — a young prince.
  • princeship — a nonreigning male member of a royal family.
  • princesses — a nonreigning female member of a royal family.
  • princessly — resembling a princess
  • princified — like a prince
  • principate — supreme power or office.
  • principial — original, elementary
  • principium — a principle.
  • principled — imbued with or having moral principles (often used in combination): high-principled.
  • principles — an accepted or professed rule of action or conduct: a person of good moral principles.
  • pro-acting — serving temporarily, especially as a substitute during another's absence; not permanent; temporary: the acting mayor.
  • probenecid — a white, crystalline, water-insoluble powder, C 1 3 H 1 9 NO 4 S, used chiefly in the treatment of gout.
  • proceedingproceeds. something that results or accrues. the total amount derived from a sale or other transaction: The proceeds from the deal were divided equally among us. the profits or returns from a sale, investment, etc.
  • processing — a systematic series of actions directed to some end: to devise a process for homogenizing milk.
  • procession — the act of moving along or proceeding in orderly succession or in a formal and ceremonious manner, as a line of people, animals, vehicles, etc.
  • procidence — a prolapse
  • proclinate — (of a part) directed or inclined forward.
  • production — the act of producing; creation; manufacture.
  • proficient — well-advanced or competent in any art, science, or subject; skilled: a proficient swimmer.
  • profiction — the class of literature comprising works of imaginative narration, especially in prose form.
  • prognathic — having protrusive jaws; having a gnathic index over 103.
  • prognostic — of or relating to prognosis.
  • projecting — something that is contemplated, devised, or planned; plan; scheme.
  • projection — a projecting or protruding part. Synonyms: overhang, protrusion, jut.
  • prominence — Also, prominency. the state of being prominent; conspicuousness.
  • prominency — Also, prominency. the state of being prominent; conspicuousness.
  • proscenium — Also called proscenium arch. the arch that separates a stage from the auditorium. Abbreviation: pros.
  • proscience — a branch of knowledge or study dealing with a body of facts or truths systematically arranged and showing the operation of general laws: the mathematical sciences.
  • prosecting — to dissect (a cadaver or part) for anatomical demonstration.
  • protecting — providing protection or shelter.
  • protection — the act of protecting or the state of being protected; preservation from injury or harm.
  • protogenic — (of a compound) able to donate a hydrogen ion (proton) in a chemical reaction
  • provection — (in Celtic languages) the devoicing of a consonant
  • providence — a state of the NE United States, on the Atlantic coast: a part of New England. 1214 sq. mi. (3145 sq. km). Capital: Providence. Abbreviation: RI (for use with zip code), R.I.
  • provincial — belonging or peculiar to some particular province; local: the provincial newspaper.
  • psilocybin — a hallucinogenic crystalline solid, C 1 2 H 1 7 N 2 O 4 P, obtained from the mushroom Psilocybe mexicana.
  • psittacine — of or relating to parrots.
  • publicness — the quality or state of being public or being owned by the public.
  • pugnacious — inclined to quarrel or fight readily; quarrelsome; belligerent; combative.
  • punch line — the climactic phrase or sentence in a joke, speech, advertisement, or humorous story that produces the desired effect.
  • punch list — a list of unfinished matters that require attention.
  • punctation — punctate condition or marking.
  • punctiform — shaped like or of the nature of a point or dot.
  • punic wars — three wars (264–241 bc, 218–201 bc, and 149–146 bc), in which Rome crushed Carthaginian power, destroying Carthage itself
  • purchasing — buying
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