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11-letter words containing s, l, o, c

  • cladoptosis — the annual shedding of twigs or branches instead of leaves, as in certain cypresses.
  • clamorously — full of, marked by, or of the nature of clamor.
  • classloader — (computing, Java) A mechanism for dynamically loading classes into a virtual machine.
  • clavichords — Plural form of clavichord.
  • clavigerous — bearing a key or club
  • clean house — to clean and put a home in order
  • cleethorpes — a resort in E England, in North East Lincolnshire unitary authority, Lincolnshire. Pop: 31 853 (2001)
  • cleistocarp — cleistothecium.
  • cleistogamy — self-pollination and fertilization of an unopened flower, as in the flowers of the violet produced in summer
  • clingstones — Plural form of clingstone.
  • clinometers — Plural form of clinometer.
  • cliometrics — the study of economic history using statistics and computer analysis
  • clock speed — clock rate
  • clodhoppers — a large heavy shoe or boot
  • cloisonnage — cloisonné work
  • cloistering — Present participle of cloister.
  • close brace — right brace
  • close order — an arrangement of troops in compact units at close intervals and distances, as for marching
  • close quote — (used by a speaker to indicate the end of a quotation.)
  • close ranks — to maintain discipline or solidarity, esp in anticipation of attack
  • close reach — an act or instance of reaching: to make a reach for a gun.
  • close round — to encircle; surround
  • close shave — a narrow escape
  • close to/on — Close to a particular amount or distance means slightly less than that amount or distance. In British English, you can also say close on a particular amount or distance.
  • close up/to — If you look at something close up or close to, you look at it when you are very near to it.
  • close-stool — a wooden stool containing a covered chamber pot
  • closed book — something deemed unknown or incapable of being understood
  • closed door — held in strict privacy; not open to the press or the public: a closed-door strategy meeting of banking executives.
  • closed game — a relatively complex game involving closed ranks and files and permitting only nontactical positional manoeuvring
  • closed plan — an office floor plan consisting of fully enclosed office spaces.
  • closed rule — a rule that prohibits amendments to a bill from the floor.
  • closed shop — If a factory, shop, or other business is a closed shop, the employees must be members of a particular trade union.
  • closed term — (theory)   A term with no free variables.
  • closed-door — private; barred to members of the public
  • closed-loop — of or relating to a processing system in which effluents are recycled, that is, treated and returned for reuse.
  • closefisted — stingy
  • closehauled — having the sails adjusted for heading as nearly as possible into the wind
  • clostridial — any of several rod-shaped, spore-forming, anaerobic bacteria of the genus Clostridium, found in soil and in the intestinal tract of humans and animals.
  • clostridium — any anaerobic typically rod-shaped bacterium of the genus Clostridium, occurring mainly in soil, but also in the intestines of humans and animals: family Bacillaceae. The genus includes the species causing botulism and tetanus
  • clothes peg — A clothes peg is a small device which you use to fasten clothes to a washing line.
  • clothes-peg — a clothespin.
  • clothes-pin — a device, such as a forked piece of wood or plastic, for fastening articles to a clothesline.
  • clothesless — Without clothes.
  • clothesline — A clothesline is a thin rope on which you hang washing so that it can dry.
  • clothespins — Plural form of clothespin.
  • clothespole — a pole for supporting a clothesline
  • cloud grass — a grass, Agrostis nebulosa, of Spain, having clusters of tiny spikelets on slender stalks, used in bouquets.
  • cloud-based — Cloud-based technology allows you to use programs and information that are stored on the Internet rather than on your own computer.
  • cloudbursts — Plural form of cloudburst.
  • cloudlessly — Without clouds.
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