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11-letter words containing s, c, i, u

  • hircocervus — (in classical and medieval fable) a mythical creature that is half goat and half stag
  • holluschick — a young male fur seal.
  • holocaustic — a great or complete devastation or destruction, especially by fire.
  • house finch — a small common finch, Carpodacus mexicanus, originally of the western U.S. and Mexico and now widely distributed: the males have a red forehead, throat, breast, and rump.
  • house music — an up-tempo style of disco music characterized by deep bass rhythms, piano or synthesizer melodies, and soul-music singing, sometimes with elements of rap music.
  • hsuan chiao — Taoism (def 2).
  • huckstering — Present participle of huckster.
  • hucksterish — a retailer of small articles, especially a peddler of fruits and vegetables; hawker.
  • hucksterism — a retailer of small articles, especially a peddler of fruits and vegetables; hawker.
  • hudibrastic — of, relating to, or resembling the style of Samuel Butler's Hudibras (published 1663–78), a mock-heroic poem written in tetrameter couplets.
  • humouristic — Alternative spelling of humoristic.
  • hyperacusis — (medicine) A heightened sensitivity to some sounds.
  • ice-scoured — noting an area having surface features resulting from scouring by an advancing ice sheet during glaciation.
  • ichthyosaur — any fishlike marine reptile of the extinct order Ichthyosauria, ranging from 4 to 40 feet (1.2 to 12 meters) in length and having a round, tapering body, a large head, four paddlelike flippers, and a vertical caudal fin.
  • icing sugar — Icing sugar is very fine white sugar that is used for making icing and sweets.
  • icosandrous — belonging to the Icosandria, a class of plants
  • icteritious — jaundiced; yellow
  • impecunious — having little or no money; penniless; poor.
  • impuissance — Impotence, weakness.
  • in close-up — If you see something in close-up, you see it in great detail in a photograph or piece of film which has been taken very near to the subject.
  • inasmuch as — to the extent that, in that
  • incapacious — Not capacious; narrow, small, weak, or foolish.
  • incapsulate — Alternative form of encapsulate.
  • inclusively — including or encompassing the stated limit or extremes in consideration or account (usually used postpositively): from 6 to 37 inclusive.
  • inclusivism — The practice of incorporating disparate or unreconciled elements in a single, inclusive system or theory.
  • inclusivity — An intention or policy of including people who might otherwise be excluded or marginalized, such as those who are handicapped or learning-disabled, or racial and sexual minorities.
  • incommodius — Misspelling of incommodious.
  • incongruous — out of keeping or place; inappropriate; unbecoming: an incongruous effect; incongruous behavior.
  • inconscious — (obsolete) unconscious.
  • increaseful — full of increase; fertile; fruitful
  • incredulous — not credulous; disinclined or indisposed to believe; skeptical.
  • incubations — Plural form of incubation.
  • incuriosity — The quality or state of lacking curiosity.
  • incuriously — In an incurious manner.
  • incurrences — Plural form of incurrence.
  • indeciduous — not deciduous, as leaves.
  • inducements — Plural form of inducement.
  • inductances — Plural form of inductance.
  • inductivism — The use of or preference for inductive methods of reasoning, especially in science.
  • indulgences — Plural form of indulgence.
  • inexcusable — incapable of being excused or justified.
  • inexcusably — incapable of being excused or justified.
  • influencers — Plural form of influencer.
  • infructuose — Not yielding fruit.
  • infructuous — (Pakistan and India only; of a project etc) not fruitful.
  • injudicious — not judicious; showing lack of judgment; unwise; imprudent; indiscreet: an injudicious decision.
  • injunctions — Plural form of injunction.
  • innocuously — not harmful or injurious; harmless: an innocuous home remedy.
  • inofficious — being inconsistent with moral duty and natural affection.
  • inosculated — Simple past tense and past participle of inosculate.
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