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11-letter words containing s, i, r, e, n, c

  • centerlines — Plural form of centerline.
  • centilitres — Plural form of centilitre.
  • centimeters — one 100th of a meter, equivalent to 0.3937 inch. Abbreviation: cm, cm.
  • centimetres — Plural form of centimetre.
  • centralised — to draw to or gather about a center.
  • 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.
  • centrelines — Plural form of centreline.
  • centrifuges — Plural form of centrifuge.
  • centrosomic — Relating to the centrosome.
  • ceratopsian — resembling or belonging to the Ceratopsia, a suborder of herbivorous dinosaurs characterized by their parrot-like beaks, horns, and neck frills
  • ceremonials — Plural form of ceremonial.
  • ceremonious — especially or excessively polite or formal
  • certainties — Plural form of certainty.
  • 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.
  • chandeliers — Plural form of chandelier.
  • chandleries — Plural form of chandlery.
  • chansonnier — a writer of chansons
  • chaperonins — Plural form of chaperonin.
  • charientism — (rhetoric) A figure of speech wherein a taunting expression is softened by a jest; an insult veiled in grace.
  • cherishment — the act or process of cherishing
  • chevrotains — Plural form of chevrotain.
  • chicaneries — Plural form of chicanery.
  • chiffoniers — Plural form of chiffonier.
  • china aster — a related Chinese plant, Callistephus chinensis, widely cultivated for its showy brightly coloured flowers
  • chinese red — a bright red colour
  • chinoiserie — a style of decorative or fine art based on imitations of Chinese motifs
  • chirurgeons — Plural form of chirurgeon.
  • chloramines — Plural form of chloramine.
  • chlorinates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of chlorinate.
  • cholesterin — a sterol, C 27 H 46 O, that occurs in all animal tissues, especially in the brain, spinal cord, and adipose tissue, functioning chiefly as a protective agent in the skin and myelin sheaths of nerve cells, a detoxifier in the bloodstream, and as a precursor of many steroids: deposits of cholesterol form in certain pathological conditions, as gallstones and atherosclerotic plaques.
  • chorus line — the group of dancers who perform routines in a musical
  • christendom — All the Christian people and countries in the world can be referred to as Christendom.
  • christening — A christening is a Christian ceremony in which a baby is made a member of the Christian church and is officially given his or her name. Compare baptism.
  • christingle — (in Britain) a Christian service for children held shortly before Christmas, in which each child is given a decorated fruit with a lighted candle in it
  • chroniclers — Plural form of chronicler.
  • chrysoidine — a red-brown or greenish-black, crystalline solid, C 12 H 13 N 4 Cl, that yields orange colors in aqueous or alcohol solution: used chiefly in dyeing cotton and silk.
  • cinemagoers — Plural form of cinemagoer.
  • cineritious — See cinereous.
  • circumvents — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of circumvent.
  • cirencester — a market town in S England, in Gloucestershire: Roman amphitheatre. Pop: 15 861 (2001)
  • citizenries — Plural form of citizenry.
  • clarinetist — A clarinetist is someone who plays the clarinet.
  • clerkliness — (obsolete) scholarship.
  • clinometers — Plural form of clinometer.
  • cloistering — Present participle of cloister.
  • coasteering — the sport of following a coastline by swimming, climbing, diving, and walking while wearing a wetsuit, a life jacket, and a helmet
  • coextrusion — simultaneous extrusion of two or more different yet compatible metals or plastics through the same die.
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