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8-letter words that end in re

  • centiare — a unit of area equal to one square metre
  • cheniere — a hummock in a marshy region, with stands of evergreen oaks.
  • cheshire — a former administrative county of NW England; administered since 2009 by the unitary authorities of Cheshire West and Chester, and Cheshire East: low-lying and undulating, bordering on the Pennines in the east; mainly agricultural: the geographic and ceremonial county includes Warrington and Halton, which became independent unitary authorities in 1998. Area 2077 sq km (802 sq miles)
  • cincture — something that encircles or surrounds, esp a belt, girdle, or border
  • ciselure — the art or process of chasing metal
  • claymore — a large two-edged broadsword used formerly by Scottish Highlanders
  • clayware — pottery
  • coadmire — to admire together
  • cocksure — Someone who is cocksure is so confident and sure of their abilities that they annoy other people.
  • coendure — to endure together
  • coiffure — A person's coiffure is their hairstyle.
  • coinhere — to inhere together
  • coinsure — to take out coinsurance
  • compadre — a male friend
  • confrere — colleague
  • conspire — If two or more people or groups conspire to do something illegal or harmful, they make a secret agreement to do it.
  • cookfire — A fire used for cooking food.
  • cookware — Cookware is the range of pans and pots which are used in cooking.
  • creature — You can refer to any living thing that is not a plant as a creature, especially when it is of an unknown or unfamiliar kind. People also refer to imaginary animals and beings as creatures.
  • crudware — /kruhd'weir/ Pejorative term for the hundreds of megabytes of low-quality freeware circulated by user's groups and BBSs in the micro-hobbyist world.
  • cubature — the determination of the cubic contents of something
  • cynosure — a person or thing that attracts notice, esp because of its brilliance or beauty
  • daguerre — Louis Jacques Mandé (lwi ʒɑk mɑ̃de). 1789–1851, French inventor, who devised one of the first practical photographic processes (1838)
  • day care — Day care is care that is provided during the day for people who cannot look after themselves, such as small children, old people, or people who are ill. Day care is provided by paid workers.
  • day-care — of, relating to, or providing day care: day-care center; day-care program.
  • decentre — to take away a temporary support from
  • delaware — a member of a North American Indian people formerly living near the Delaware River
  • delustre — to remove the lustre from (something)
  • demoware — (computing) A cut-down demonstration version of a computer program so that it can be tried before purchase.
  • denature — to change the nature of
  • derriere — backside
  • diametre — Alternative form of diameter.
  • diaspore — a white, yellowish, or grey mineral consisting of hydrated aluminium oxide in orthorhombic crystalline form, found in bauxite and corundum. Formula: AlO(OH)
  • discoure — Obsolete form of discover.
  • dishware — dishes used for food; tableware.
  • disinure — to render unaccustomed
  • dogshore — any of several shores for holding the hull of a small or moderate-sized vessel in place after keel blocks and other shores are removed and until the vessel is launched.
  • doublure — an ornamental lining of a book cover.
  • drawbore — a hole in a tenon made eccentric with the corresponding holes to the mortise so that the two pieces being joined will be forced tightly together when the pin (drawbore pin) is hammered into place.
  • drumfire — gunfire so heavy and continuous as to sound like the beating of drums.
  • dungmere — a hole or a trench for the collection of waste matter
  • ectomere — any of the blastomeres that participate in the development of the ectoderm.
  • egregore — An angelic being from the Book of Enoch.
  • elsinore — Helsingør
  • enacture — an enactment
  • encastre — (of a beam) fixed at the ends
  • encolure — The neck of a horse.
  • ensphere — (transitive) To place in a sphere; to envelop.
  • entendre — Only used in double entendre.
  • epispore — the outer layer of certain spores
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