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10-letter words containing com

  • locomobile — automotive; self-propelling.
  • locomoting — to move about, especially under one's own power.
  • locomotion — the act or power of moving from place to place.
  • locomotive — a self-propelled, vehicular engine, powered by steam, a diesel, or electricity, for pulling or, sometimes, pushing a train or individual railroad cars.
  • locomotors — Also, locomotory. of, relating to, or affecting locomotion.
  • locomotory — Also, locomotory. of, relating to, or affecting locomotion.
  • low comedy — comedy that depends on physical action, broadly humorous or farcical situations, and often bawdy or vulgar jokes.
  • low-income — of or relating to those with a relatively small income.
  • m-commerce — business that is conducted on the Internet through the use of cell phones or other wireless, handheld electronic devices.
  • marcomanni — an ancient Germanic people who lived in central Europe.
  • misbecomes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misbecome.
  • miscompute — To compute erroneously.
  • myosarcoma — A malignant muscle tumor.
  • narcomania — Psychiatry. abnormal craving for a drug to deaden pain.
  • net income — the excess of revenues and gains of a business over expenses and losses during a given period of time.
  • new comedy — Greek comedy arising toward the end of the 4th century b.c. that employed stock characters and plots drawn from contemporary bourgeois life, the formulas of which were adopted by later Roman writers for the comic stage.
  • nincompoop — a fool or simpleton.
  • no comment — expressing refusal to speak
  • non compos — not of sound mind; mentally incapable of managing one's affairs.
  • non-combat — not including, entailing, or requiring combat: noncombat duty.
  • noncompete — (legal) Of or pertaining to a commitment not to engage in competition with another party.
  • noncomplex — not complex or complicated; simple
  • nosocomial — (of infections) contracted as a result of being hospitalized; hospital-acquired.
  • old comedy — Greek comedy of the 5th century b.c., which derived from fertility rites in honor of Dionysus and combined robust humor with biting personal and political satire.
  • outcompete — to strive to outdo another for acknowledgment, a prize, supremacy, profit, etc.; engage in a contest; vie: to compete in a race; to compete in business.
  • overcometh — Archaic third-person singular form of overcome.
  • overcoming — to get the better of in a struggle or conflict; conquer; defeat: to overcome the enemy.
  • overcommit — to commit more than is feasible, desirable, or necessary.
  • phocomelia — a usually congenital deformity of the extremities in which the limbs are abnormally short.
  • precompose — to compose beforehand: to precompose a reply to a possible question.
  • precompute — to determine by calculation; reckon; calculate: to compute the period of Jupiter's revolution.
  • recommence — start again
  • recompense — to repay; remunerate; reward, as for service, aid, etc.
  • recompress — to compress (something) again
  • recomputed — to determine by calculation; reckon; calculate: to compute the period of Jupiter's revolution.
  • semi-comic — of, relating to, or characterized by comedy: comic opera.
  • seriocomic — partly serious and partly comic: a seriocomic play.
  • subcompact — an automobile that is smaller than a compact.
  • subcompany — subsidiary company.
  • the comics — the comic strips in newspapers, etc
  • tragicomic — a dramatic or other literary composition combining elements of both tragedy and comedy.
  • unbecoming — detracting from one's appearance, character, or reputation; unattractive or unseemly: an unbecoming hat; unbecoming language.
  • uncombined — made by combining; joined; united, as in a chemical compound.
  • uncommonly — in an uncommon or unusual manner or degree.
  • uncommuted — not commuted or exchanged for another thing; unaltered
  • uncompared — to examine (two or more objects, ideas, people, etc.) in order to note similarities and differences: to compare two pieces of cloth; to compare the governments of two nations.
  • uncomplete — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • uncomposed — calm; tranquil; serene: His composed face reassured the nervous passengers.
  • unovercome — not overcome
  • unwelcomed — a kindly greeting or reception, as to one whose arrival gives pleasure: to give someone a warm welcome.
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