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10-letter words containing p, i, s, c, a

  • cityscapes — Plural form of cityscape.
  • clipboards — Plural form of clipboard.
  • clistocarp — cleistothecium.
  • collapsing — Present participle of collapse.
  • collapsion — (archaic) collapse.
  • companions — Plural form of companion.
  • compansion — Companding.
  • comparison — When you make a comparison, you consider two or more things and discover the differences between them.
  • compassing — Present participle of compass.
  • compassion — Compassion is a feeling of pity, sympathy, and understanding for someone who is suffering.
  • complaints — A statement that a situation is unsatisfactory or unacceptable.
  • conspiracy — Conspiracy is the secret planning by a group of people to do something illegal.
  • conspirant — planning a crime or harmful act in secret
  • constipate — to cause constipation in
  • coping saw — a handsaw with a U-shaped frame used for cutting curves in a material too thick for a fret saw
  • crappiness — extremely bad, unpleasant, or inferior; lousy: crappy weather.
  • crepitates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of crepitate.
  • crispation — the act of curling or state of being curled
  • crispature — the state of being crisped or crispate
  • crispbread — Crispbreads are thin dry biscuits made from wheat or rye. They are often eaten instead of bread by people who want to lose weight.
  • crispinianSaint, See under Crispin, Saint.
  • curateship — the office or position of a curate
  • cuspidated — Alternative form of cuspidate.
  • deaconship — (in hierarchical churches) a member of the clerical order next below that of a priest.
  • despicable — If you say that a person or action is despicable, you are emphasizing that they are extremely nasty, cruel, or evil.
  • despicably — deserving to be despised, or regarded with distaste, disgust, or disdain; contemptible: He was a mean, despicable man, who treated his wife and children badly.
  • despotical — of, relating to, or of the nature of a despot or despotism; autocratic; tyrannical.
  • diaphonics — The doctrine of refracted sound; diacoustics.
  • diplacusis — a difference in hearing by the two ears so that one sound is heard as two.
  • discrepant — (usually of two or more objects, accounts, findings etc.) differing; disagreeing; inconsistent: discrepant accounts.
  • disculpate — (transitive) To free from blame or the imputation of a fault; to exculpate.
  • disk space — a number of bytes on a disk for the storage of data
  • disparency — (proscribed) A significant discrepancy.
  • dispatched — to send off or away with speed, as a messenger, telegram, body of troops, etc.
  • dispatcher — a person who dispatches.
  • dispatches — Plural form of dispatch.
  • displacing — Present participle of displace.
  • displacive — That involves or causes displacement.
  • dispondaic — of or relating to a dispondee
  • duplicates — Plural form of duplicate.
  • duplicatus — (of a cloud) consisting of superposed layers that sometimes partially merge.
  • dysgraphic — a person who suffers from dysgraphia
  • dysplastic — Exhibiting dysplasia.
  • dyspractic — relating to or affected by dyspraxia
  • ecmascript — (language)   (ECMA standard 262, ISO standard 16262) The standardised version of the core JavaScript language.
  • eigenspace — (linear algebra) A set of the eigenvectors associated with a particular eigenvalue, together with the zero vector.
  • ekphrastic — Pertaining to ekphrasis; clear, lucid.
  • emacs lisp — (language)   A dialect of Lisp used to implement the higher layers of the Free Software Foundation's editor, GNU Emacs. Sometimes abbreviated to "elisp". An enormous number of Emacs Lisp packages have been written including modes for editing many programming languages and interfaces to many Unix programs.
  • emancipist — (Australia, historical) In penal colonies of early Australia, a convict who had been pardoned for good conduct; sometimes inclusively a convict whose sentence had completed, though one such was more usually called an expiree.
  • epiblastic — Of, or relating to the epiblast.
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