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10-letter words containing eas

  • easy-going — calm and unworried; relaxed and rather casual: an easygoing person.
  • easy-peasy — very easy; presenting no difficulty at all
  • echinaceas — Plural form of echinacea.
  • enneastyle — having nine pillars
  • entreasure — to keep in a treasury
  • galleasses — Plural form of galleass.
  • go easy on — use sparingly
  • grease cup — oilcup.
  • grease gun — a hand-operated pump for greasing bearings under pressure.
  • greaseball — Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a person of Mediterranean or Latin American descent.
  • greaseband — a band of greasy or sticky material wrapped around a tree trunk in order to prevent insects from ascending the tree
  • greaseless — Without fats or oils.
  • greasewood — a shrub, Sarcobatus vermiculatus, of the amaranth family, growing in alkaline regions of the western U.S., containing a small amount of oil.
  • greasiness — smeared, covered, or soiled with grease.
  • green peas — peas eaten while fresh and immature
  • heartsease — peace of mind.
  • hydrangeas — Plural form of hydrangea.
  • immeasured — immeasurable
  • increaseth — Archaic third-person singular form of increase.
  • increasing — growing larger or greater; enlarging; augmenting.
  • infeasible — not feasible; impracticable.
  • infeasibly — In a manner that\u2019s not feasible.
  • lease-back — an arrangement by which a company sells a property and simultaneously obtains a long-term lease from the buyer for continued use of the deeded property
  • lease-lend — material assistance to an ally
  • leasebacks — Plural form of leaseback.
  • leaseholds — Plural form of leasehold.
  • lend-lease — the matériel and services supplied by the U.S. to its allies during World War II under an act of Congress (Lend-Lease Act) passed in 1941: such aid was to be repaid in kind after the war.
  • long lease — (in England and Wales) a lease, originally for a period of over 21 years, on a whole house of low rent and ratable value, which is the occupants' only or main residence. The leaseholder is entitled to buy the freehold, claim an extension of 50 years, or become a statutory tenant
  • love feast — (among the early Christians) a meal eaten in token of brotherly love and charity; agape.
  • low season — The low season is the time of year when a place receives the fewest visitors, and fares and holiday accommodation are often cheaper.
  • malfeasant — the performance by a public official of an act that is legally unjustified, harmful, or contrary to law; wrongdoing (used especially of an act in violation of a public trust). Compare misfeasance (def 2), nonfeasance.
  • measliness — the state or quality of being measly or meagre
  • measurable — capable of being measured.
  • measurably — capable of being measured.
  • measure up — a unit or standard of measurement: weights and measures.
  • measuredly — In a measured fashion.
  • mid-season — the middle of a season of the year or of a sporting season
  • minibeasts — Plural form of minibeast.
  • mismeasure — a unit or standard of measurement: weights and measures.
  • mushy peas — dried peas that have been soaked, boiled and mashed - often eaten with fish and chips
  • non-greasy — smeared, covered, or soiled with grease.
  • nor'easter — northeaster.
  • north-east — The north-east is the direction which is halfway between north and east.
  • off season — a time of year other than the regular or busiest one for a specific activity: Fares are lower in the off-season.
  • off-season — a time of year other than the regular or busiest one for a specific activity: Fares are lower in the off-season.
  • outmeasure — to measure out
  • peashooter — a tube through which dried peas, beans, or small pellets are blown, used as a toy.
  • pheasantry — a place where pheasants are bred or are kept together
  • pleasantly — pleasing, agreeable, or enjoyable; giving pleasure: pleasant news.
  • pleasanton — a town in W California.
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