0%

11-letter words containing s, e, r, i, a

  • centralises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of centralise.
  • centralists — a centralizing system; centralization.
  • centralizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of centralize.
  • ceramicists — Plural form of ceramicist.
  • ceratopsian — resembling or belonging to the Ceratopsia, a suborder of herbivorous dinosaurs characterized by their parrot-like beaks, horns, and neck frills
  • cerebralism — the theory that physical phenomena arise from the action of the brain
  • cerebralist — a person that advocates the theory of cerebralism
  • ceremonials — Plural form of ceremonial.
  • ceroplastic — relating to wax modelling
  • certainties — Plural form of certainty.
  • certioraris — Plural form of certiorari.
  • cesarevitch — the eldest son of a czar.
  • cesca chair — a chair, with or without arms, designed by Marcel Breuer in 1928, having a cantilevered frame of chromium-plated or stainless tubular steel and a seat and back of bentwood-framed canework.
  • chain store — A chain store is one of several similar shops that are owned by the same person or company, especially one that sells a variety of things.
  • chairperson — The chairperson of a meeting, committee, or organization is the person in charge of it.
  • chalkstripe — clothing with a pattern of thin white stripes on a dark background
  • champerties — Plural form of champerty.
  • chandeliers — Plural form of chandelier.
  • chandleries — Plural form of chandlery.
  • chansonnier — a writer of chansons
  • chaperonins — Plural form of chaperonin.
  • charchemish — an ancient city in S Turkey, on the upper Euphrates: important city in the Mitanni kingdom; later the capital of the Hittite empire.
  • charientism — (rhetoric) A figure of speech wherein a taunting expression is softened by a jest; an insult veiled in grace.
  • charioteers — Plural form of charioteer.
  • charles iii — known as Charles the Fat. 839–888 ad, Holy Roman Emperor (881–887) and, as Charles II, king of France (884–887). He briefly reunited the empire of Charlemagne
  • charles vii — 1403–61, king of France (1422–61), son of Charles VI. He was excluded from the French throne by the Treaty of Troyes, but following Joan of Arc's victory over the English at Orléans (1429), was crowned
  • charles xii — 1682–1718, king of Sweden (1697–1718), who inflicted defeats on Denmark, Russia, and Poland during the Great Northern War (1700–21)
  • charles xiv — the title as king of Sweden and Norway of Jean Baptiste Jules Bernadotte
  • cherishable — to hold or treat as dear; feel love for: to cherish one's native land.
  • chevrotains — Plural form of chevrotain.
  • chicaneries — Plural form of chicanery.
  • china aster — a related Chinese plant, Callistephus chinensis, widely cultivated for its showy brightly coloured flowers
  • chloramines — Plural form of chloramine.
  • chlorinates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of chlorinate.
  • choirmaster — A choirmaster is a person whose job is to train a choir.
  • chrysalides — the hard-shelled pupa of a moth or butterfly; an obtect pupa.
  • chrysalises — Plural form of chrysalis.
  • cigar store — a retail store specializing in tobacco products, as cigars and cigarettes.
  • cinemagoers — Plural form of cinemagoer.
  • circularise — (British) alternative spelling of circularize.
  • clamdiggers — Close-fitting women’s casual pants hemmed at mid-calf.
  • clarinetist — A clarinetist is someone who plays the clarinet.
  • clarksville — city in N Tenn., on the Cumberland River: pop. 103,000
  • classifiers — Plural form of classifier.
  • clavigerous — bearing a key or club
  • cleistocarp — cleistothecium.
  • clericalism — a policy of upholding the power of the clergy
  • clericalist — Of or pertaining to clericalism.
  • clickstream — a record of the path taken by users through a website, enabling designers to access the use being made of their website
  • coal strike — a cessation of work by coal miners as a protest against working conditions or low pay
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?