8-letter words containing a, l, e, n, c
- cameline — a material made from camel hair
- canaille — the masses; mob; rabble
- canalise — (British spelling) To convert a river or other waterway into a canal.
- canalize — to provide with or convert into a canal or canals
- canaller — a person who works on a canal boat
- canceled — to make void; revoke; annul: to cancel a reservation.
- canceler — A device used to cancel something, especially one that makes a cancellation on a postage stamp.
- cancelli — strips that form a latticework
- candelas — Plural form of candela.
- candolle — Augustin Pyrame de. 1778–1841, Swiss botanist; his Théorie élémentaire de la botanique (1813) introduced a new system of plant classification
- canfield — a gambling game adapted from a type of patience
- canistel — an evergreen tree, Pouteria campechiana, that is native to Central America and the West Indies
- cannelon — a dish consisting of a roll of puff pastry stuffed with minced meat or a sweet filling
- cannulae — Irregular plural form of cannula.
- canoodle — If two people are canoodling, they are kissing and holding each other a lot.
- canticle — a nonmetrical hymn, derived from the Bible and used in the liturgy of certain Christian churches
- canulate — Alternative form of cannulate.
- capeline — a cap-shaped bandage for covering either the head or an amputation stump
- capelins — Plural form of capelin.
- car line — trolley line.
- cardenal — Ernesto (ˈɜːnɛstaʊ). born 1925, Nicaraguan poet, revolutionary, and Roman Catholic priest; an influential figure in the Sandinista movement
- careline — a telephone service set up by a company or other organization to provide its customers or clients with information about its products or services
- carleton — Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester, 1724–1808, English general.
- carolean — characteristic of the time of Charles I and II of England: a Carolean costume.
- caroline — characteristic of or relating to Charles I or Charles II, kings of England, Scotland, and Ireland, the society over which they ruled, or their government
- caruncle — a fleshy outgrowth on the heads of certain birds, such as a cock's comb
- cat line — A cat line is a thin cable which is used with other equipment to move small parts of a rig or drill string.
- cathleen — a female given name, Irish form of Catherine.
- catiline — Latin name Lucius Sergius Catilina. ?108–62 bc, Roman politician: organized an unsuccessful conspiracy against Cicero (63–62)
- centeral — Misspelling of central.
- centrale — (anatomy) The central, or one of the central, bones of the carpus or tarsus. In the human tarsus it is represented by the navicular.
- cephalin — a phospholipid, similar to lecithin, that occurs in the nerve tissue and brain
- cephalon — the head, especially of an arthropod.
- cerulean — a deep blue colour; azure
- chainlet — a small chain of hotels, shops, etc
- chaldean — a member of an ancient Semitic people who controlled S Babylonia from the late 8th to the late 7th century bc
- chancels — Plural form of chancel.
- chandler — a dealer in a specified trade or merchandise
- channels — Plural form of channel.
- charlene — a female given name, form of Caroline.
- charline — a female given name, form of Caroline.
- charlyne — a female given name, form of Caroline.
- charnels — Plural form of charnel.
- charnley — Sir John. 1911–82, British surgeon noted for his invention of an artificial hip joint and his development of hip-replacement surgery
- chatline — People phone in to chatlines to have conversations with other people who have also phoned in.
- chellean — Abbevillian
- cinereal — relating to the grey matter of the brain and nervous system
- clangers — Plural form of clanger.
- clanless — a group of families or households, as among the Scottish Highlanders, the heads of which claim descent from a common ancestor: the Mackenzie clan.
- clansmen — Irregular plural form of clansman.