0%

9-letter words containing s, e, t, r, c

  • cartelist — a member of a cartel, or a supporter of cartelism
  • cartesian — of or relating to the works of René Descartes
  • carthorse — A carthorse is a large, powerful horse that is used to pull carts or farm machinery.
  • castering — a person or thing that casts.
  • castlebar — the county town of Co Mayo, Republic of Ireland; site of the battle (1798) between the French and British known as Castlebar Races. Pop: 11 371 (2002)
  • castoreum — the oil secreted from the beaver which is used as bait by trappers
  • castrated — to remove the testes of; emasculate; geld.
  • castrater — a person who castrates
  • castrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of castrate.
  • cat's-ear — any of various European plants of the genus Hypochoeris, esp H. radicata, having dandelion-like heads of yellow flowers: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • catalyser — Alternative form of catalyzer.
  • catharise — purify
  • catharses — Plural form of catharsis.
  • catheters — Plural form of catheter.
  • catteries — Plural form of cattery.
  • cauteries — Plural form of cautery.
  • cauterise — to burn with a hot iron, electric current, fire, or a caustic, especially for curative purposes; treat with a cautery.
  • cauterism — the application of burning, searing, or cautery
  • caveators — a person who files or enters a caveat.
  • ceintures — cincture (defs 1, 2).
  • centaurus — a conspicuous extensive constellation in the S hemisphere, close to the Southern Cross, that contains two first magnitude stars, Alpha Centauri and Beta Centauri, and the globular cluster Omega Centauri
  • centrists — Plural form of centrist.
  • centroids — Plural form of centroid.
  • centuries — Plural form of century.
  • ceramists — Plural form of ceramist.
  • cerastium — any of a genus of plants belonging to the family Caryophyllaceae
  • ceratitis — Alternative spelling of keratitis.
  • ceratodus — any of various extinct lungfish constituting the genus Ceratodus, common in Cretaceous and Triassic times
  • cerealist — a person who studies cereals and the conditions for their growth
  • cerements — Plural form of cerement.
  • certifies — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of certify.
  • certosina — a technique of inlaying light-colored material, as bone, ivory, metal, or pale wood, in elaborate designs on a dark ground.
  • cerussite — a usually white mineral, found in veins. It is a source of lead. Composition: lead carbonate. Formula: PbCO3. Crystal structure: orthorhombic
  • cervantes — Miguel de (miˈɣɛl ðe), full surname Cervantes Saavedra. 1547–1616, Spanish dramatist, poet, and prose writer, most famous for Don Quixote (1605), which satirizes the chivalric romances and greatly influenced the development of the novel
  • chantress — a female chanter or singer
  • chantries — Plural form of chantry.
  • chapiters — Plural form of chapiter.
  • charities — Plural form of charity.
  • charoseth — haroseth.
  • charteris — Leslie, original name Leslie Charles Bowyer Yin. 1907–93, British novelist, born in Singapore: created the character Simon Templar, known as The Saint, the central character in many adventure novels
  • chartless — not mapped; uncharted
  • chaseport — a porthole through which a gun was fired
  • chastener — to inflict suffering upon for purposes of moral improvement; chastise.
  • chastiser — Someone who chastises.
  • cheeriest — Superlative form of cheery.
  • chelators — Plural form of chelator.
  • chemistry — Chemistry is the scientific study of the structure of substances and of the way that they react with other substances.
  • chesstree — (in the 17th and 18th centuries) a wooden fastening with one or more sheaves, attached to the topside of a sailing vessel, through which the windward tack of a course was rove.
  • chin rest — a device fixed to the top of a violin or viola to provide a firm rest for the player's chin.
  • chlorates — Plural form of chlorate.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?