/se
ljʊla
I
t/ N‑UNCOUNT
Cellulite
is lumpy fat which people may get under their skin, especially on their thighs.
cel|lu|loid
/se
ljʊlɔ
I
d/ N‑UNCOUNT
[oft N
n] You can use
celluloid
to refer to films and the cinema. □
King's works seem to lack something on celluloid.
cel|lu|lose
/se
ljʊloʊs/ N‑UNCOUNT
Cellulose
is a substance that exists in the cell walls of plants and is used to make paper, plastic, and various fabrics and fibres.
Celsius
/se
lsiəs/ ADJ
Celsius
is a scale for measuring temperature, in which water freezes at 0 degrees and boils at 100 degrees. It is represented by the symbol °C. □
Highest temperatures 11° Celsius, that's 52° Fahrenheit.
● N‑UNCOUNT
Celsius
is also a noun. □
The thermometer shows the temperature in Celsius and Fahrenheit.
Celt
/ke
lt, se
lt/ (Celts
) N‑COUNT
If you describe someone as a
Celt
, you mean that they are part of the racial group which comes from Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and some other areas such as Brittany.
Celt|ic
/ke
lt
I
k, se
l-/ ADJ
[usu ADJ
n] If you describe something as
Celtic
, you mean that it is connected with the people and the culture of Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and some other areas such as Brittany. □
…important figures in Celtic tradition.
ce|ment
/s
I
me
nt/ (cements
, cementing
, cemented
)
1
N‑UNCOUNT
Cement
is a grey powder which is mixed with sand and water in order to make concrete. □
…a mixture of wet sand and cement.
2
N‑UNCOUNT
Cement
is the same as
concrete
. □
…the hard cold cement floor.
3
N‑UNCOUNT
[usu n N
] Glue that is made for sticking particular substances together is sometimes called
cement
. □
Stick the pieces on with tile cement.
4
VERB
Something that
cements
a relationship or agreement makes it stronger. □ [V
n]
Nothing cements a friendship between countries so much as trade.
5
VERB
[usu passive] If things
are cemented
together, they are stuck or fastened together. □ [be
V
-ed prep/adv]
Most artificial joints are cemented into place.
ce|me
nt mix|er
(
cement mixers
) N‑COUNT
A
cement mixer
is a machine with a large revolving container into which builders put cement, sand, and water in order to make concrete.
cem|etery
/se
mətri, [AM
] -teri/ (cemeteries
) N‑COUNT
A
cemetery
is a place where dead people's bodies or their ashes are buried.
ceno|taph
/se
nətɑːf, -tæf/ (cenotaphs
) N‑COUNT
A
cenotaph
is a structure that is built in honour of soldiers who died in a war.
cen|sor
/se
nsə
r
/ (censors
, censoring
, censored
)
1
VERB
If someone in authority
censors
letters or the media, they officially examine them and cut out any information that is regarded as secret. □ [V
n]
The military-backed government has heavily censored the news.
2
N‑COUNT
A
censor
is a person who has been officially appointed to examine letters or the media and to cut out any parts that are regarded as secret. □
The report was cleared by the American military censors.
3
VERB
If someone in authority
censors
a book, play, or film, they officially examine it and cut out any parts that are considered to be immoral or inappropriate. □ [V
n]
ITV companies tend to censor bad language in feature films.
4
N‑COUNT
A
censor
is a person who has been officially appointed to examine plays, films, and books and to cut out any parts that are considered to be immoral. □
…the British Board of Film Censors.
cen|so|ri|ous
/sensɔː
riəs/ ADJ
If you describe someone as
censorious
, you do not like the way they strongly disapprove of and criticize someone else's behaviour. [FORMAL
, DISAPPROVAL
] □
Despite strong principles he was never censorious.
cen|sor|ship
/se
nsə
r
ʃ
I
p/ N‑UNCOUNT
Censorship
is the censoring of books, plays, films, or reports, especially by government officials, because they are considered immoral or secret in some way. □
The government today announced that press censorship was being lifted.