10-letter words containing t, i, e, o
- continency — self-restraint or abstinence, especially in regard to sexual activity; temperance; moderation.
- continents — one of the main landmasses of the globe, usually reckoned as seven in number (Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Australia, and Antarctica).
- contingent — A contingent of police, soldiers, or military vehicles is a group of them.
- continuate — continuous
- continueth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of continue.
- contortive — characterized by, tending toward, or causing contortions or twisting: contortive movements; contortive pain; contortive alleyways.
- contraries — opposite in nature or character; diametrically or mutually opposed: contrary to fact; contrary propositions.
- contribute — If you contribute to something, you say or do things to help to make it successful.
- contritely — caused by or showing sincere remorse.
- contrivers — Plural form of contriver.
- conuenient — Obsolete spelling of convenient.
- convecting — Transport (heat or material) by convection.
- convection — Convection is the process by which heat travels through air, water, and other gases and liquids.
- convective — physics: transferring heat, etc.
- convenient — If a way of doing something is convenient, it is easy, or very useful or suitable for a particular purpose.
- convention — A convention is a way of behaving that is considered to be correct or polite by most people in a society.
- converting — Present participle of convert.
- convertion — Misspelling of conversion.
- convertite — a convert, esp a reformed prostitute
- convictive — able or serving to convince or convict
- cook inlet — an inlet of the Pacific on the coast of S Alaska: part of the Gulf of Alaska
- coolie hat — a wide, conical straw hat worn especially as a shield against the sun.
- cooptative — to elect into a body by the votes of the existing members.
- coordinate — If you coordinate an activity, you organize the various people and things involved in it.
- copesettic — Misspelling of copacetic.
- coprolites — Plural form of coprolite.
- copulative — serving to join or unite
- copyedited — Simple past tense and past participle of copyedit.
- copyeditor — a person who edits a manuscript, text, etc., for publication, especially to find and correct errors in style, punctuation, and grammar.
- copywriter — A copywriter is a person whose job is to write the words for advertisements.
- coquelicot — corn poppy
- coquetting — to coquet.
- coquettish — If you describe a woman as coquettish, you mean she acts in a playful way that is intended to make men find her attractive.
- coquimbite — hydrated ferric sulphate found in certain rocks and in volcanic fumaroles
- coradicate — (of multiple words) derived from the same root
- corbiestep — one of a series of steps at the upper end wall of some gables
- cordierite — a grey or violet-blue dichroic mineral that consists of magnesium aluminium iron silicate in orthorhombic crystalline form and is found in metamorphic rocks. Formula: (Mg,Fe)2AL4Si5O18.nH2O
- corelation — a correlation
- corelative — correlative
- coresident — one of two or more computer programs stored in a computer memory simultaneously
- cornetfish — any of several slender fishes of the family Fistulariidae, of tropical seas, having an elongated snout and bony plates instead of scales.
- cornetists — Plural form of cornetist.
- cornettino — a small woodwind instrument of the cornett family that was popular in northern Europe in the 15th century
- cornettist — A musician who plays the cornett.
- coronatine — A polycyclic phytotoxin, produced by some forms of Pseudomonas, that can induce chlorosis.
- coroutines — Plural form of coroutine.
- corporeity — bodily or material nature or substance; physical existence; corporeality
- correcting — Present participle of correct.
- correction — Corrections are marks or comments made on a piece of work, especially school work, which indicate where there are mistakes and what are the right answers.
- corrective — Corrective measures or techniques are intended to put right something that is wrong.