| ACCOUCHEMENTS | • accouchements n. Plural of accouchement. • ACCOUCHEMENT n. (French) childbirth; a confinement. |
| CIRCUMSTANCED | • circumstanced v. Simple past tense and past participle of circumstance. • circumstanced adj. (In combination) In the specified situation or circumstances. • CIRCUMSTANCE v. to place in particular circumstances. |
| CIRCUMSTANCES | • circumstances n. Plural of circumstance. • CIRCUMSTANCE v. to place in particular circumstances. |
| COMPLACENCIES | • complacencies n. Plural of complacency. • COMPLACENCY n. self-satisfaction esp. when accompanied by unawareness of actual dangers or deficiencies, also COMPLACENCE. |
| CONCOMITANCES | • concomitances n. Plural of concomitance. • CONCOMITANCE n. accompaniment. |
| COSMECEUTICAL | • cosmeceutical n. Any cosmetic that is claimed to have a medicinal action. • COSMECEUTICAL n. a product which overlaps the cosmetics and drugs industries. |
| COSMOCHEMICAL | • cosmochemical adj. Of or pertaining to cosmochemistry. • COSMOCHEMICAL adj. relating to cosmochemistry. |
| CYCLOTHYMIACS | • cyclothymiacs n. Plural of cyclothymiac. • CYCLOTHYMIAC n. one suffering from cyclothymia. |
| ECCREMOCARPUS | • ECCREMOCARPUS n. an evergreen climbing plant, grown for its decorative pinnate foliage and bright orange-red bell flowers. |
| MICROCOSMICAL | • microcosmical adj. Alternative form of microcosmic. • MICROCOSMICAL adj. of or like a microcosm, also MICROCOSMIC. |
| MICROSCOPICAL | • microscopical adj. Pertaining to the microscope; achieved by means of a microscope. • microscopical adj. (Now rare) Only visible by means of a microscope; very small, microscopic. • MICROSCOPICAL adj. able to be seen only though a microscope, also MICROSCOPIC. |
| SACCHAROMYCES | • saccharomyces n. Any of many single-celled fungi of the genus Saccharomyces, which lack a true mycelium; especially the yeasts. • Saccharomyces prop.n. A taxonomic genus within the family Saccharomycetaceae – many yeasts, especially those involved in fermentation. • SACCHAROMYCES n. any of a genus of usually unicellular yeasts. |