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8-letter words containing s, u, c

  • cruisers — Plural form of cruiser.
  • cruising — Present participle of cruise.
  • crullers — Plural form of cruller.
  • crumbles — Plural form of crumble.
  • crummies — a cow with crooked horns.
  • crumpets — Plural form of crumpet.
  • crumples — to press or crush into irregular folds or into a compact mass; bend out of shape; rumple; wrinkle.
  • crunches — Plural form of crunch.
  • crunkest — a type of hip-hop originating in the southern U.S. and characterized by heavy bass and call-and-response vocals.
  • cruppers — Plural form of crupper.
  • crusaded — (often initial capital letter) any of the military expeditions undertaken by the Christians of Europe in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries for the recovery of the Holy Land from the Muslims.
  • crusader — A crusader for a cause is someone who does a lot in support of it.
  • crusades — (often initial capital letter) any of the military expeditions undertaken by the Christians of Europe in the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries for the recovery of the Holy Land from the Muslims.
  • crushers — Plural form of crusher.
  • crushing — A crushing defeat, burden, or disappointment is a very great or severe one.
  • crustate — having a crust or shell
  • crustily — In a crusty manner.
  • crusting — Present participle of crust.
  • crustose — having a crustlike appearance
  • crutches — Plural form of crutch.
  • cu-seeme — (communications)   /see`-yoo-see'-mee/ ("CU" from Cornell University) A shareware personal computer-based videoconferencing program for use over the Internet, developed at Cornell University, starting in 1992. CU-SeeMe allows for direct audiovisual connections between clients, or, like irc, it can support multi-user converencing via servers (here called "reflectors") to distribute the video and audio signals between multiple clients. CU-SeeMe was the first videoconferencing tool available at a reasonable price (in this case, free) to users of personal computers. Compare with multicast backbone.
  • cubicles — A small partitioned-off area of a room, for example one containing a bed in a dwelling or one containing a desk in an office.
  • cubistic — a style of painting and sculpture developed in the early 20th century, characterized chiefly by an emphasis on formal structure, the reduction of natural forms to their geometrical equivalents, and the organization of the planes of a represented object independently of representational requirements.
  • cuckolds — Plural form of cuckold.
  • cudweeds — Plural form of cudweed.
  • cuffless — having no cuff or cuffs
  • cuisines — Plural form of cuisine.
  • culchies — Plural form of culchie.
  • culdesac — Alternative spelling of cul-de-sac.
  • cullions — Plural form of cullion.
  • cullyism — the state of being a cully
  • culottes — Culottes are knee-length women's trousers that look like a skirt.
  • culprits — Plural form of culprit.
  • cultists — Plural form of cultist.
  • cultures — the quality in a person or society that arises from a concern for what is regarded as excellent in arts, letters, manners, scholarly pursuits, etc.
  • culverts — Plural form of culvert.
  • cumbrous — cumbersome
  • cummings — Edward Estlin (ˈɛstlɪn), (preferred typographical representation of name e. e. cummings). 1894–1962, US poet
  • cumstain — Lb vulgar A stain from ejaculate.
  • cumulose — abounding in heaps or cumuli
  • cumulous — resembling or consisting of cumulus clouds
  • cup size — a measurement of the parts of a bra that actually hold the breasts
  • cupcakes — Plural form of cupcake.
  • cuprates — Plural form of cuprate.
  • cupreous — of, consisting of, containing, or resembling copper; coppery
  • curacies — Plural form of curacy.
  • curassow — any gallinaceous ground-nesting bird of the family Cracidae, of S North, Central, and South America. Curassows have long legs and tails and, typically, a distinctive crest of curled feathers
  • curators — Plural form of curator.
  • curbless — with no curb or restraint
  • curbside — at the curb or on the sidewalk adjacent to the street
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