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7-letter words containing a, c, e, s

  • caveats — Plural form of caveat.
  • caverns — Plural form of cavern.
  • cayuses — Plural form of cayuse.
  • ceaseth — Archaic third-person singular form of cease.
  • ceasing — to stop; discontinue: Not all medieval beliefs have ceased to exist.
  • celesta — a keyboard percussion instrument consisting of a set of steel plates of graduated length that are struck with key-operated hammers. The tone is an ethereal tinkling sound. Range: four octaves upwards from middle C
  • celiacs — Plural form of celiac.
  • cellars — Plural form of cellar.
  • celosia — any of several species (genus Celosia) of the amaranth family, of annual garden plants with minute, brilliant red or yellow flowers in large clusters; cockscomb
  • censual — an official enumeration of the population, with details as to age, sex, occupation, etc.
  • cepstra — cepstrum
  • cerasin — an insoluble amorphous gum from the cherry and other trees, known also as meta-arabinic acid
  • cereals — Cereals are foods made from grain. They are mixed with milk and eaten for breakfast.
  • cesaire — Aimé Fernand [e-mey fer-nahn] /ɛˈmeɪ fɛrˈnɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1913–2008, West Indian poet, playwright, and politician.
  • cessant — (obsolete) inactive; dormant.
  • chafers — Plural form of chafer.
  • chagres — a river in Panama, flowing southwest through Gatún Lake, then northwest to the Caribbean Sea
  • chaises — Plural form of chaise.
  • chalets — Plural form of chalet.
  • chamise — An evergreen shrub native to California, Adenostoma fasciculatum in the botanical family Rosaceae.
  • chances — Plural form of chance.
  • changes — to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc., of (something) different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone: to change one's name; to change one's opinion; to change the course of history.
  • chaoses — Plural form of chaos.
  • chapels — Plural form of chapel.
  • chapess — a woman
  • charges — Plural form of charge.
  • charles — Prince of Wales. born 1948, son of Elizabeth II; heir apparent to the throne of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. He married (1981) Lady Diana Spencer; they separated in 1992 and were divorced in 1996; their son, Prince William of Wales, was born in 1982 and their second son, Prince Henry, in 1984; married (2005) Camilla Parker Bowles
  • chasers — Plural form of chaser.
  • chaseth — Archaic third-person singular form of chase.
  • chasles — Michel [mee-shel] /miˈʃɛl/ (Show IPA), 1793–1880, French mathematician.
  • chasted — Simple past tense and past participle of chast.
  • chasten — If you are chastened by something, it makes you regret that you have behaved badly or stupidly.
  • chaster — refraining from sexual intercourse that is regarded as contrary to morality or religion; virtuous.
  • chausse — (historical) Armor for the legs, usually made of mail.
  • chelsea — a residential district of SW London, in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea: site of the Chelsea Royal Hospital for old and infirm soldiers (Chelsea Pensioners)
  • cimaise — a pewter wine jar having a spout, a fixed handle on the side opposite the spout, and a bail for carrying.
  • cineast — An enthusiast of film and the cinema.
  • cinemas — Plural form of cinema.
  • ciseaux — a jump in which the dancer's legs are opened wide in the air and closed on landing.
  • claques — Plural form of claque.
  • clashed — Simple past tense and past participle of clash.
  • clasher — to make a loud, harsh noise: The gears of the old car clashed and grated.
  • clashes — Plural form of clash.
  • clasped — a device, usually of metal, for fastening together two or more things or parts of the same thing: a clasp for paper money; a clasp on a necklace.
  • clasper — a person or thing that clasps.
  • classed — Simple past tense and past participle of class.
  • classer — One who classes or classifies.
  • classes — a number of persons or things regarded as forming a group by reason of common attributes, characteristics, qualities, or traits; kind; sort: a class of objects used in daily living.
  • clauses — Grammar. a syntactic construction containing a subject and predicate and forming part of a sentence or constituting a whole simple sentence.
  • clavers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of claver.
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