| centipede |
chiefly nocturnal predacious arthropod having a flattened body of 15 to 173 segments each with a pair of legs the foremost being modified into poison fangs
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|---|---|
| Ce |
cerium: a ductile grey metallic element of the lanthanide series; used in lighter flints; the most abundant of the rare-earth group of the period coinciding with the Christian era; preferred by some writers who are not Christians; "in 200 CE"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| cerebral aqueduct |
a canal connecting the third and fourth ventricles
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| cellular |
relating to cells; "cellular walls"; "cellular physiology" characterized by or divided into or containing cells or compartments (the smallest organizational or structural unit of an organism or organization); "the cellular construction of a beehive"; "any effective opposition to a totalitarian regime must be secretive and cellular"
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| central |
cardinal: serving as an essential component; "a cardinal rule"; "the central cause of the problem"; "an example that was fundamental to the argument"; "computers are fundamental to modern industrial structure" in or near a center or constituting a center; the inner area; "a central position"; "central heating and air conditioning" used in the description of a place that in the middle of another place; "the people of Central and Northern Europe"; "country in central Africa" a workplace that serves as a telecommunications facility where lines from telephones can be connected together to permit communication centrally located and easy to reach; "the central city has good bus service"; "the shop has a central location"
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