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8-letter words containing t, i, c, e

  • citadels — Plural form of citadel.
  • citeable — to quote (a passage, book, author, etc.), especially as an authority: He cited the Constitution in his defense.
  • citified — having the customs, manners, or dress of city people
  • citizens — a native or naturalized member of a state or nation who owes allegiance to its government and is entitled to its protection (distinguished from alien).
  • citrange — a hybrid orange
  • citrated — treated with a citrate
  • citrates — Plural form of citrate.
  • citreous — of a greenish-yellow colour; citron
  • citrines — Plural form of citrine.
  • citruses — Plural form of citrus.
  • citterns — Plural form of cittern.
  • cityfied — made into a city.
  • citywide — Citywide activities or situations happen or exist in all parts of a city.
  • clarinet — A clarinet is a musical instrument of the woodwind family in the shape of a pipe. You play the clarinet by blowing into it and covering and uncovering the holes with your fingers.
  • clavinet — An electrophonic keyboard instrument, an electronically amplified clavichord with a distinctive bright staccato sound.
  • cleating — a wedge-shaped block fastened to a surface to serve as a check or support: He nailed cleats into the sides of the bookcase to keep the supports from slipping.
  • clefting — (medicine) The formation of a cleft lip or cleft palate.
  • clematis — A clematis is a type of flowering shrub which can be grown to climb up walls or fences. There are many different varieties of clematis.
  • clementi — Muzio [moo-tsyaw] /ˈmu tsyɔ/ (Show IPA), 1752–1832, Italian pianist and composer in England.
  • cleveite — a crystalline variety of the mineral uranitite
  • cliental — a person or group that uses the professional advice or services of a lawyer, accountant, advertising agency, architect, etc.
  • climates — Plural form of climate.
  • clitella — a ring or saddle-shaped region of glandular tissue in the body wall of certain annelids, as earthworms and some leeches, that after copulation secretes a cocoon in which the eggs and sperm are deposited for fertilization and development.
  • cloister — A cloister is a covered area round a square in a monastery or a cathedral.
  • clothier — a person who makes, sells, or deals in clothes or cloth
  • coactive — acting together.
  • codirect — to direct jointly
  • coeditor — a person who cooperates or collaborates as editor with another.
  • coexists — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of coexist.
  • cogitate — If you are cogitating, you are thinking deeply about something.
  • cohenite — a rare microscopic mineral, carbide of iron, nickel, or cobalt, (Fe, Ni, Co) 3 C, found in lunar rocks and some meteorites.
  • coinfect — to infect (a person or animal) at the same time as another infection
  • coinmate — a fellow inmate
  • coinvent — to invent jointly
  • coistrel — a knave
  • colletid — (zoology) Any member of the Colletidae.
  • comedist — a writer of comedies.
  • comfiest — comfortable.
  • comities — Plural form of comity.
  • conative — denoting an aspect of verbs in some languages used to indicate the effort of the agent in performing the activity described by the verb
  • conceits — Plural form of conceit.
  • conceity — full of conceit
  • concerti — a composition for one or more principal instruments, with orchestral accompaniment, now usually in symphonic form.
  • conepati — hog-nosed skunk (def 2).
  • confetti — Confetti is small pieces of coloured paper that people throw over the bride and bridegroom at a wedding.
  • continue — If someone or something continues to do something, they keep doing it and do not stop.
  • contline — the space between the bilges of stowed casks
  • contrite — If you are contrite, you are very sorry because you have done something wrong.
  • contrive — If you contrive an event or situation, you succeed in making it happen, often by tricking someone.
  • cooptive — to elect into a body by the votes of the existing members.
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