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9-letter words containing a, b, o, l

  • cobaltous — of or containing cobalt in the divalent state
  • cogitable — conceivable
  • colaborer — One who labors with another; an associate in labor.
  • colobomas — Plural form of coloboma.
  • colombard — a white grape grown in France, California, and Australia, used for making wine
  • colombian — Colombian means belonging or relating to Colombia or its people or culture.
  • color bar — color line
  • colorable — capable of being colored
  • colorably — in a colourable manner
  • colubriad — a poem about a snake
  • columbary — a dovecote
  • columbate — any salt of columbic acid
  • columbian — of or relating to the United States
  • comptable — countable
  • connubial — of or relating to marriage; conjugal
  • constable — In Britain and some other countries, a constable is a police officer of the lowest rank.
  • coolibahs — Plural form of coolibah.
  • corbicula — pollen basket.
  • cornballs — Plural form of cornball.
  • coulibiac — a Russian dish of rich pastry with a filling of salmon or other fish and mushrooms, onions, egg, buckwheat, dill, etc.
  • countable — capable of being counted
  • countably — in a countable manner
  • courbaril — a tropical American leguminous tree, Hymenaea courbaril. Its wood is a useful timber and its gum is a source of copal
  • coverable — Able to be covered.
  • covetable — to desire wrongfully, inordinately, or without due regard for the rights of others: to covet another's property.
  • cristobal — seaport in Panama, at the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal: part of the city of Colón
  • crossable — able to be crossed
  • cryocable — a highly conducting electrical cable cooled with a refrigerant such as liquid nitrogen
  • day labor — workers hired on a daily basis only, especially unskilled labor.
  • deathblow — a thing or event that destroys life or hope, esp suddenly
  • decodable — Able to be read using a certain set of reading knowledge.
  • denotable — Capable of being denoted or marked.
  • deposable — Capable of being deposed, or deprived of office.
  • detonable — able to be detonated
  • diabolify — (transitive) To ascribe diabolical qualities to; to change into, or represent as, a devil.
  • diabolism — activities designed to enlist the aid of devils, esp in witchcraft or sorcery
  • diabolist — Theology. action aided or caused by the devil; sorcery; witchcraft. the character or condition of a devil. a doctrine concerning devils. a belief in or worship of devils.
  • diabolize — to make (someone or something) diabolical
  • diabology — the study of the devil or devils
  • do battle — fight, struggle
  • doability — Feasibility; practicability.
  • dodgeball — a circle game in which players throw an inflated ball at opponents within the circle who try to avoid being hit, and therefore eliminated, the winner being the one who remains unhit.
  • domitable — Able to be tamed or bent to one's will; tamable, subduable.
  • double ax — an ax with a double-edged blade, frequently depicted in prehistoric decorative designs of the eastern Mediterranean region, especially in Minoan religious sites.
  • doubledayAbner, 1819–93, U.S. army officer; sometimes credited with inventing the modern game of baseball.
  • doubtable — (uncommon) Capable of being doubted; doubtful; dubious; dubitable. See usage notes below.
  • doubtably — to be uncertain about; consider questionable or unlikely; hesitate to believe.
  • doughball — a small ball of bread dough, cooked in a stew, as an accompaniment to a meal, etc
  • droppable — Capable of being dropped (especially by an aircraft).
  • dual boot — (operating system)   Any system offering the user the choice of two operation systems (OSes) under which to start a computer. A dual boot system allows the user to run programs for both operating systems on a single computer (though not simultaneously). The term "multiple boot" or "multiboot" extends the idea to more than two OSes. The OSes are generally unaware of each other's existence. They are installed on separate hard disk partitions or on separate disks. They may be able to access each other's files, possibly via some extra driver software if they use different file systems. The OSes need not be completely different - they might be different versions of Microsoft Windows (e.g. Windows XP and Windows NT) or Linux (e.g. Debian and Fedora). A dual boot system differs from an emulator such as vmware, which runs one or more OSes "on top" of the primary OS, using its resources.
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