10-letter words containing s, a, c, r, e
- barcaroles — Plural form of barcarole.
- barricades — Plural form of barricade.
- base price — a price quoted as a base without including additional charges.
- basic rate — the standard or lowest level on a scale of money payable, esp in taxation
- beachgoers — Plural form of beachgoer.
- bergamasca — a fast dance similar to the tarantella.
- bomb scare — an alarm arising from the fear that a bomb may have been left in a place
- brake disc — a metal disc that revolves with the wheel in a disc brake
- brass neck — effrontery; nerve
- breadstick — bread baked in a long thin crisp stick
- brix scale — a scale for calibrating hydrometers used for measuring the concentration and density of sugar solutions at a given temperature
- broadscale — on a broad scale; extensive; spread over a wide area
- bruschetta — Bruschetta is a slice of toasted bread which is brushed with olive oil and usually covered with chopped tomatoes.
- buckpasser — a person who avoids responsibility by shifting it to another, especially unjustly or improperly.
- cablegrams — Plural form of cablegram.
- cabriolets — Plural form of cabriolet.
- cadaverous — If you describe someone as cadaverous, you mean they are extremely thin and pale.
- caesareans — Plural form of caesarean, an alternative capitalization of 'Caesarean'.
- cafeterias — Plural form of cafeteria.
- calcareous — of, containing, or resembling calcium carbonate; chalky
- calcsinter — travertine.
- calibrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of calibrate.
- camcorders — Plural form of camcorder.
- camelshair — (attributive) The hair of a camel, used for paintbrushes etc.
- camera-shy — Someone who is camera-shy is nervous and uncomfortable about being filmed or about having their photograph taken.
- cameralism — any of the mercantilist economists or public servants in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries who held that the economic power of a nation can be enhanced by increasing its monetary wealth, as by the accumulation of bullion.
- cameralist — any of the mercantilist economists or public servants in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries who held that the economic power of a nation can be enhanced by increasing its monetary wealth, as by the accumulation of bullion.
- campership — financial aid given to a needy youngster to attend summer camp.
- campestral — of or relating to open fields or country
- cane grass — any of several tall perennial hard-stemmed grasses, esp Eragrostis australasica, of inland swamps
- cane sugar — the sucrose obtained from sugar cane, which is identical to that obtained from sugar beet
- canebrakes — Plural form of canebrake.
- canephoros — in ancient Greece, any of the maidens who carried on her head a basket holding the sacred things used at feasts
- cannelures — Plural form of cannelure.
- cannisters — Plural form of cannister.
- cannoneers — Plural form of cannoneer.
- cantor set — the set obtained from the closed interval from 0 to 1 by removing the middle third from the interval, then the middle third from each of the two remaining sets, and continuing the process indefinitely.
- canvassers — Plural form of canvasser.
- capistrate — (zoology, rare) hooded; cowled.
- capraesque — relating to or in the style of the movies of Frank Capra, focusing on courage and its positive effects and the triumph of the underdog.
- capsomeres — Plural form of capsomere.
- car stereo — a stereo built into the dashboard of an automobile
- carabiners — Plural form of carabiner.
- caramelise — (cooking) To convert sugar into caramel.
- caravaners — Also, caravaneer, C01/C0128700 kar-uh-va-neer, ˌkær ə væˈnɪər. a leader of a caravan. a person who travels or lives in a caravan.
- carbineers — Plural form of carbineer.
- carbolised — phenolate (def 2).
- carbonates — a salt or ester of carbonic acid.
- carbonised — Alternative spelling of carbonized.
- carbonizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of carbonize.