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8-letter words containing t, r, i, c, s

  • robotics — the use of computer-controlled robots to perform manual tasks, especially on an assembly line.
  • ructions — disturbance
  • ructious — tending or likely to cause ructions
  • rustical — of, relating to, or living in the country, as distinguished from towns or cities; rural.
  • rusticly — in a rustic manner
  • sacristy — an apartment in or a building connected with a church or a religious house, in which the sacred vessels, vestments, etc., are kept.
  • sanscrit — Sanskrit
  • sarmatic — of or relating to Sarmatia or its inhabitants
  • saturnic — having or affected with lead-poisoning
  • scarcity — insufficiency or shortness of supply; dearth.
  • scariest — causing fright or alarm.
  • scienter — a mental state in which one has knowledge that one’s action, statement, etc., is wrong, deceptive, or illegal: often used as a standard of guilt: The court found that the company had the requisite scienter for securities fraud.
  • scimitar — a curved, single-edged sword of Asian, especially Eastern origin.
  • sclerite — any chitinous, calcareous, or similar hard part, plate, spicule, or the like.
  • scrimpit — ungenerous
  • scripsit — he wrote (it); she wrote (it).
  • scripted — the letters or characters used in writing by hand; handwriting, especially cursive writing.
  • scripter — the letters or characters used in writing by hand; handwriting, especially cursive writing.
  • scrutiny — a searching examination or investigation; minute inquiry.
  • scutiger — any species of the Scutigera genus which includes many types of centipede
  • secretin — a polypeptide hormone, produced in the small intestine, that activates the pancreas to secrete pancreatic juice.
  • security — freedom from danger, risk, etc.; safety.
  • selictar — the sword-bearer of a chieftain
  • sericate — sericeous; silky.
  • sericite — a fine-grained variety of muscovite produced by the alteration of feldspar.
  • socratic — of or relating to Socrates or his philosophy, followers, etc., or to the Socratic method.
  • sorbitic — relating to sorbite
  • spectrin — a rodlike structural protein of the red blood cell membrane.
  • spitcher — the end or finish
  • sterical — of or relating to the spatial relationships of atoms in a molecule.
  • stickler — a person who insists on something unyieldingly (usually followed by for): a stickler for ceremony.
  • stitcher — one complete movement of a threaded needle through a fabric or material such as to leave behind it a single loop or portion of thread, as in sewing, embroidery, or the surgical closing of wounds.
  • straicht — straight
  • stricken — a past participle of strike.
  • strickle — a straightedge used for sweeping off heaped-up grain to the level of the rim of a measure.
  • stricter — characterized by or acting in close conformity to requirements or principles: a strict observance of rituals.
  • strictly — in a strict manner; rigorously; stringently: strictly enforced.
  • strontic — of or relating to strontium
  • strophic — Also, strophical. consisting of, pertaining to, or characterized by a strophe or strophes.
  • suricate — a small, burrowing South African carnivore, Suricata suricatta, of a grayish color with dark bands across the back, related to the mongooses and having social behavior similar to that of prairie dogs.
  • trackies — loose-fitting trousers with elasticated cuffs, designed to be worn as part of a tracksuit
  • triassic — noting or pertaining to a period of the Mesozoic Era, occurring from 230 to 190 million years ago and characterized by the advent of dinosaurs and coniferous forests.
  • tribasic — (of an acid) having three atoms of hydrogen replaceable by basic atoms or groups.
  • trickish — tricky.
  • trisemic — relating to a triseme
  • trisomic — having one chromosome in addition to the usual diploid number.
  • tristich — a strophe, stanza, or poem consisting of three lines.
  • truistic — a self-evident, obvious truth.
  • vbscript — Visual BASIC Script
  • veristic — the theory that rigid representation of truth and reality is essential to art and literature, and therefore the ugly and vulgar must be included.
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