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11-letter words containing s, c, u, l, e, r

  • credulously — In a credulous manner; believably.
  • crepuscular — Crepuscular means relating to twilight.
  • crepusculum — Crepuscule; twilight; dusk.
  • crest cloud — a stationary cloud parallel to and near the top of a mountain ridge. Compare cap cloud (def 1).
  • crude steel — unrefined steel
  • crumbliness — The state of being crumbly.
  • culmiferous — (of grasses) having a hollow jointed stem
  • cultureless — Devoid of culture.
  • curableness — The quality or state of being curable.
  • curie's law — the principle that the magnetic susceptibility of a paramagnetic substance is inversely proportional to its thermodynamic temperature
  • curtainless — without a curtain or curtains
  • dauerschlaf — a form of therapy, now rarely used, that involves the use of drugs to induce long periods of deep sleep.
  • decursively — in a decursive manner
  • disclosures — Plural form of disclosure.
  • discoloured — (British) alternative spelling of discolored.
  • disgraceful — bringing or deserving disgrace; shameful; dishonorable; disreputable.
  • doublecross — To betray someone by leading them into trap after having gained their trust and led them to believe that they were actually being aided.
  • dulcimerist — Someone who plays the dulcimer.
  • early music — music of the medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque periods, especially revived and played on period instruments; European music after ancient music and before the classical music era, from the beginning of the Middle Ages to about 1750.
  • electuaries — Plural form of electuary.
  • elucidators — Plural form of elucidator.
  • emasculator — One who, or that which, emasculates.
  • ensepulcher — (transitive) To lay in a sepulcher; to entomb.
  • ensepulchre — to place into a sepulchre
  • excursively — In an excursive manner.
  • ferociously — savagely fierce, as a wild beast, person, action, or aspect; violently cruel: a ferocious beating.
  • flea circus — a number of fleas trained to perform tricks, as for a carnival sideshow
  • fluorescein — an orange-red, crystalline, water-insoluble solid, C 20 H 12 O 5 , that in alkaline solutions produces an orange color and an intense green fluorescence: used to trace subterranean waters and in dyes.
  • fluorescent — possessing the property of fluorescence; exhibiting fluorescence.
  • fluorescing — Present participle of fluoresce.
  • fluoroscope — a tube or box fitted with a screen coated with a fluorescent substance, used for viewing objects, especially deep body structures, by means of x-ray or other radiation.
  • foreclosure — the act of foreclosing a mortgage or pledge.
  • fruticulose — (botany) Like, or pertaining to, a small shrub.
  • glasscutter — a small hand tool that is specially designed for cutting sheets of glass, having a cutting wheel of steel or tungsten carbide and notches for snapping the glass
  • golf course — the ground or course over which golf is played. A standard full-scale golf course has 125 to 175 acres (51 to 71 hectares), usually with 18 holes varying from 100 to 650 yards (91 to 594 meters) in length from tee to cup.
  • granduncles — Plural form of granduncle.
  • groupuscule — A political or religious splinter group.
  • helichrysum — any of the numerous composite plants of the genus Helichrysum, having alternate leaves and solitary or clustered flower heads, including the strawflower.
  • heuristical — Of or pertaining to heuristics.
  • horn clause — (logic)   A set of atomic literals with at most one positive literal. Usually written L <- L1, ..., Ln or <- L1, ..., Ln where n>=0, "<-" means "is implied by" and comma stands for conjuction ("AND"). If L is false the clause is regarded as a goal. Horn clauses can express a subset of statements of first order logic. The name "Horn Clause" comes from the logician Alfred Horn, who first pointed out the significance of such clauses in 1951, in the article "On sentences which are true of direct unions of algebras", Journal of Symbolic Logic, 16, 14-21. A definite clause is a Horn clause that has exactly one positive literal.
  • hypercasual — Extremely casual.
  • increaseful — full of increase; fertile; fruitful
  • incredulous — not credulous; disinclined or indisposed to believe; skeptical.
  • influencers — Plural form of influencer.
  • inscrutable — incapable of being investigated, analyzed, or scrutinized; impenetrable.
  • insculpture — an inscription or carving
  • irrecusable — not to be objected to or rejected.
  • lack-luster — lacking brilliance or radiance; dull: lackluster eyes.
  • lactiferous — producing or secreting milk: lactiferous glands.
  • larcenously — In a larcenous manner.
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