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13-letter words containing r, c, o, l, i, n

  • fluoroscoping — Present participle of fluoroscope.
  • flying boxcar — a large airplane designed to carry cargo.
  • flying colorswith flying colors, with an overwhelming victory, triumph, or success: He passed the test with flying colors.
  • flying doctor — a doctor listed with local authorities as willing to be flown to remote areas to give emergency medical care.
  • folding chair — a chair that can be collapsed flat for easy storage or transport.
  • fore clipping — a word formed by omitting the first part of the form from which it is derived.
  • fractionalise — Alt form fractionalize.
  • fractionalism — the state of being separate or inharmonious
  • fractionalist — an advocate or supporter of fractionalism
  • fractionalize — Divide (someone or something) into separate groups or parts.
  • french polish — French polish is a type of varnish which is painted onto wood so that the wood has a hard shiny surface.
  • french-polish — to finish or treat (a piece of furniture) with French polish.
  • friction pile — a pile depending on the friction of surrounding earth for support.
  • fuel injector — injector (def 2b).
  • galvanometric — Of or pertaining to galvanometry.
  • gastronomical — the art or science of good eating.
  • glorification — a glorified or more splendid form of something.
  • glucuronidase — an enzyme that catalyzes glucuronide hydrolysis
  • glycoproteins — Plural form of glycoprotein.
  • goliath crane — a gantry crane for heavy work, as in steel mills.
  • gopher client — (networking)   A program which runs on your local computer and provides a user interface to the Gopher protocol and to gopher servers. Web browsers can act as Gopher clients and simple Gopher-only clients are available for ordinary terminals, the X Window System, GNU Emacs, and other systems.
  • grain alcohol — alcohol (def 1).
  • graminicolous — (esp of parasitic fungi) living on grass
  • graphic novel — a novel in the form of comic strips.
  • graticulation — the division of a design, plan, etc into squares in order to improve the accuracy of enlargement or reduction
  • great council — (in Norman England) an assembly composed of the king's tenants in chief that served as the principal council of the realm and replaced the witenagemot.
  • ground sluice — a trench, cut through a placer or through bedrock, through which a stream is diverted in order to dislodge and wash the gravel.
  • hallucinatory — pertaining to or characterized by hallucination: hallucinatory visions.
  • heliocentrism — The theory that the sun is the center of the universe, (This theory is historically important and was widely accepted at the time of Copernicus, Galileo and Kepler.).
  • honorifically — In a honorific manner.
  • hypobranchial — situated below the gills or beneath the branchial arches.
  • illocutionary — pertaining to a linguistic act performed by a speaker in producing an utterance, as suggesting, warning, promising, or requesting.
  • incarnational — an incarnate being or form.
  • inclinatorium — an instrument invented by Robert Norman in 1576, used to determine the degree to which a magnetic needle dips towards the earth; a dipping needle
  • inclinometers — Plural form of inclinometer.
  • inconformable — Obsolete form of unconformable.
  • incongruently — not congruent.
  • incongruously — out of keeping or place; inappropriate; unbecoming: an incongruous effect; incongruous behavior.
  • inconquerable — That cannot be conquered; unconquerable.
  • inconstruable — unable to be construed
  • inconversable — (obsolete) uncommunicative; reserved.
  • inconvertible — (of paper money) not capable of being converted into specie.
  • inconvertibly — In an inconvertible manner.
  • incorporeally — In an incorporeal manner.
  • incorrigibles — Plural form of incorrigible.
  • incorruptable — Misspelling of incorruptible.
  • incorruptible — not corruptible: incorruptible integrity.
  • incorruptibly — In an incorruptible manner.
  • incredulously — not credulous; disinclined or indisposed to believe; skeptical.
  • inculturation — enculturation.
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