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10-letter words containing t, o, p, m

  • compatable — Misspelling of compatible.
  • compatible — If things, for example systems, ideas, and beliefs, are compatible, they work well together or can exist together successfully.
  • compatibly — capable of existing or living together in harmony: the most compatible married couple I know.
  • compatriot — Your compatriots are people from your own country.
  • compearant — a person who appears in court
  • compellent — to force or drive, especially to a course of action: His disregard of the rules compels us to dismiss him.
  • compelleth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compel.
  • compensate — To compensate someone for money or things that they have lost means to pay them money or give them something to replace that money or those things.
  • competence — Competence is the ability to do something well or effectively.
  • competency — Competency means the same as competence.
  • competible — (obsolete) Compatible.
  • competitor — A company's competitors are companies who are trying to sell similar goods or services to the same people.
  • compilator — a compiler
  • complacent — A complacent person is very pleased with themselves or feels that they do not need to do anything about a situation, even though the situation may be uncertain or dangerous.
  • complaints — A statement that a situation is unsatisfactory or unacceptable.
  • complanate — having a flattened or compressed aspect
  • complected — complexioned
  • complement — If one thing complements another, it goes well with the other thing and makes its good qualities more noticeable.
  • completely — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • completers — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • completest — Superlative form of complete.
  • completing — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • completion — the act of completing, or finishing
  • completist — a person with an obsessive interest in a subject
  • completive — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • completory — serving the purpose of completing
  • complexity — Complexity is the state of having many different parts connected or related to each other in a complicated way.
  • complicant — (of the elytra of a beetle) overlapping
  • complicate — To complicate something means to make it more difficult to understand or deal with.
  • complicity — Complicity is involvement with other people in an illegal activity or plan.
  • compliment — A compliment is a polite remark that you say to someone to show that you like their appearance, appreciate their qualities, or approve of what they have done.
  • complotter — One who complots; a conspirator.
  • components — A part or element of a larger whole, esp. a part of a machine or vehicle.
  • composited — Simple past tense and past participle of composite.
  • composites — Plural form of composite.
  • compositor — A compositor is a person who arranges the text and pictures of a book, magazine, or newspaper before it is printed.
  • composters — Plural form of composter.
  • composting — the activity or practice of converting garden and kitchen waste to compost
  • composture — compost or manure
  • compotator — a person who drinks or tipples with another.
  • computable — computability theory
  • computator — a person who computes or calculates
  • copayments — Plural form of copayment.
  • copromoter — a joint promoter
  • cormophyte — any of the Cormophyta, a major division (now obsolete) of plants having a stem, root, and leaves: includes the mosses, ferns, and seed plants
  • couplement — the action of coupling or the state of being coupled
  • cryptogams — Plural form of cryptogam.
  • cryptogamy — the state of being a cryptogam
  • cryptogram — a secret symbol
  • cytoplasms — Plural form of cytoplasm.
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