0%

9-letter words containing a, e, r, o, c

  • corralled — an enclosure or pen for horses, cattle, etc.
  • corrasive — Obsolete form of corrosive.
  • corregate — Based on Internal Translator (IT).
  • correlate — If one thing correlates with another, there is a close similarity or connection between them, often because one thing causes the other. You can also say that two things correlate.
  • corrolate — Misspelling of correlate.
  • corrugate — to fold or be folded into alternate furrows and ridges
  • corticate — (of plants, seeds, etc) having a bark, husk, or rind
  • coruscate — to emit flashes of light; sparkle
  • cosplayer — One who takes part in cosplay.
  • costarred — Simple past tense and past participle of costar.
  • cothamore — a frieze fabric, often used in the manufacture of overcoats.
  • cottagers — Plural form of cottager.
  • coumarone — a colorless liquid, C8H6O, derived from coal tar and combined with indene to produce synthetic resins used in paints, adhesives, etc.
  • courantes — Plural form of courante.
  • courtesan — In former times, a courtesan was a woman who had sexual relationships with rich and powerful men for money.
  • courtezan — Alternative spelling of courtesan.
  • covariate — a statistical variable that changes in a predictable way and can be used to predict the outcome of a study
  • coverable — Able to be covered.
  • coverages — Plural form of coverage.
  • coveralls — Coveralls are a single piece of clothing that combines pants and a jacket. You wear coveralls over your clothes in order to protect them while you are working.
  • coverdale — Miles. 1488–1568, the first translator of the complete Bible into English (1535)
  • cowardice — Cowardice is cowardly behaviour.
  • cowardise — Obsolete spelling of cowardice.
  • cramponee — (heraldry) Having a cramp or square piece at the end; said of a cross.
  • craterous — of, relating to, or resembling a crater
  • cream off — To cream off part of a group of people means to take them away and treat them in a special way, because they are better than the others.
  • creamwove — (of wove paper) cream-coloured and even-surfaced
  • creations — The action or process of bringing something into existence.
  • cremation — to reduce (a dead body) to ashes by fire, especially as a funeral rite.
  • crematory — A crematory is the same as a crematorium.
  • cremocarp — any fruit consisting of two united carpels which hang from a supporting axis
  • crenation — any of the rounded teeth or the notches between them on a crenate structure
  • crewwoman — A female crewmember.
  • croquante — a crisp cake or pastry
  • crorepati — (in India) a person whose assets are worth at least one crore or 10 million rupees
  • cross sea — a sea with a choppy surface produced by the intersection of waves from different storms.
  • crossable — able to be crossed
  • crossbeam — A crossbeam is a long, thick bar of wood, metal, or concrete that is placed between two walls or other structures, especially in order to support the roof of a building.
  • crosshead — a subsection or paragraph heading printed within the body of the text
  • crotaline — of or relating to rattlesnakes (Crotalinae)
  • croustade — a hollowed pastry case or piece of cooked bread, potato, etc, in which food is served
  • croweater — (Australia, slang) A person from South Australia.
  • crusadoes — Plural form of crusado.
  • cryocable — a highly conducting electrical cable cooled with a refrigerant such as liquid nitrogen
  • cryolathe — an instrument for reshaping the cornea to correct severe nearsightedness or farsightedness: the cornea is removed from the eye, rapidly frozen, reshaped, and reinserted.
  • curandero — a male healer or shaman in Hispanic-America
  • cytosmear — (cytology) A sample of cells, in the form of a smear on a microscope slide, that has been stained ready for diagnostic examination.
  • dancegoer — a person who attends dances or dance performances.
  • decachord — a ten-stringed musical instrument
  • decameron — a collection of a hundred tales by Boccaccio (published 1353), presented as stories told by a group of Florentines to while away ten days during a plague
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?