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10-letter words containing t, i, s

  • choreutics — a system that analyzes form in movement, developed by Rudolf von Laban (1879–1958), Hungarian choreographer and dance theorist.
  • choristers — Plural form of chorister.
  • chrematist — a person who studies political economy or is interested in the wealth of countries
  • christened — to receive into the Christian church by baptism; baptize.
  • christhood — the state of being the Christ, the anointed one of God
  • christless — being without the teachings or spirit of Christ; unchristian.
  • christlike — resembling or showing the spirit of Jesus Christ
  • christophe — Henri (ɑ̃ri). 1767–1820, Haitian revolutionary leader; king of Haiti (1811–20)
  • chromatics — the science of colour
  • chromatids — Plural form of chromatid.
  • chromatins — Plural form of chromatin.
  • chromatism — chromatic aberration
  • chrysolite — a yellowish-green gem derived chiefly from varieties of olivine
  • chrysotile — a green, grey, or white fibrous mineral, a variety of serpentine, that is an important source of commercial asbestos. Formula: Mg3Si2O5(OH)4
  • cicatrices — Plural form of cicatrix; scars.
  • cicatrizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cicatrize.
  • cigarettes — Plural form of cigarette.
  • cinematics — the art of making motion pictures; cinematography.
  • cinematise — (transitive) To adapt (an event or story) for the cinema.
  • circuities — Plural form of circuity.
  • circuitous — A circuitous route is long and complicated rather than simple and direct.
  • circulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of circulate.
  • cismontane — on this (the writer's or speaker's) side of the mountains, esp the Alps
  • cispontine — on the near side of the bridge
  • cistaceous — of, relating to, or belonging to the Cistaceae, a family of shrubby or herbaceous plants that includes the rockroses
  • cistercian — a member of a Christian order of monks and nuns founded in 1098, which follows an especially strict form of the Benedictine rule
  • citizeness — a woman citizen
  • citizenish — Of the nature of citizens.
  • citronalis — lemon verbena.
  • city-state — a state consisting of a sovereign city and its dependencies. Among the most famous are the great independent cities of the ancient world, such as Athens, Sparta, Carthage, Thebes, Corinth, and Rome
  • cityscapes — Plural form of cityscape.
  • civil list — The Civil List is money paid by the state every year to members of the British Royal Family to cover their living expenses.
  • civilities — Plural form of civility.
  • cladistics — a method of grouping animals that makes use of lines of descent rather than structural similarities
  • class list — (in Britain) a list categorizing students according to the class of honours they have obtained in their degree examination
  • classicist — A classicist is someone who studies the ancient Greek and Roman civilizations, especially their languages, literature, and philosophy.
  • clausewitz — Karl von (karl fɔn). 1780–1831, Prussian general, noted for his works on military strategy, esp Vom Kriege (1833)
  • clavierist — a person who plays the clavier
  • clematises — Plural form of clematis.
  • click stop — a control device, as in a camera, that can be turned or rotated so that when it reaches a specific setting it engages with an audible click.
  • clienteles — Plural form of clientele.
  • clientless — having no clients
  • clientship — the state of being a client
  • clientside — Alternative spelling of client-side.
  • climatised — to acclimate to a new environment.
  • clingstone — a fruit, such as certain peaches, in which the flesh tends to adhere to the stone
  • clinkstone — a variety of phonolite that makes a metallic sound when struck
  • clinostats — Plural form of clinostat.
  • clisthenes — Cleisthenes
  • clistocarp — cleistothecium.
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