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10-letter words containing c, a, n, l, r

  • corallines — Plural form of coralline.
  • corelation — a correlation
  • coriglianoJohn Paul, born 1938, U.S. composer.
  • coriolanus — Gaius Marcius (ˈɡaɪəs ˈmɑːsɪəs). 5th century bc, a legendary Roman general, who allegedly led an army against Rome but was dissuaded from conquering it by his mother and wife
  • corn plant — any of several treelike tropical plants of the genus Draecena, especially D. fragrans massangeana, widely cultivated as a houseplant.
  • corn salad — any valerianaceous plant of the genus Valerianella, esp the European species V. locusta, which often grows in cornfields and whose leaves are sometimes used in salads
  • cornflakes — a breakfast cereal made from toasted maize, eaten with milk, sugar, etc
  • cornstalks — Plural form of cornstalk.
  • cornwallis — Charles, 1st Marquis Cornwallis. 1738–1805, British general in the War of American Independence: commanded forces defeated at Yorktown (1781): defeated Tipu Sahib (1791): governor general of Bengal (1786–93, 1805): negotiated the Treaty of Amiens (1801)
  • coromandel — calamander
  • coronalled — a crown; coronet.
  • corralling — an enclosure or pen for horses, cattle, etc.
  • corydaline — an alkaloid, C22H27NO4, that is found in the roots of certain plants of the genus Corydalis
  • coterminal — having the same border or covering the same area.
  • cracklings — Plural form of crackling.
  • cradleland — The region where something, especially a race of people, originated.
  • cradlesong — a lullaby
  • crandalled — Simple past tense and past participle of crandall.
  • cranesbill — any of various plants of the genus Geranium, having pink or purple flowers and long slender beaked fruits: family Geraniaceae
  • craniology — the branch of science concerned with the shape and size of the human skull, esp with reference to variations between different races
  • crapulence — sickness caused by excess in drinking or eating
  • crash-land — If a pilot crash-lands an aircraft, or if it crash-lands, it lands more quickly and less safely than usual, for example when there is something wrong with the aircraft, and it cannot land normally.
  • crashingly — extremely; exceedingly
  • creakingly — With a creaking sound.
  • creational — Of, or pertaining to creation.
  • credential — something that entitles a person to confidence, authority, etc
  • crenelated — In a castle, a crenelated wall has gaps in the top or openings through which to fire at attackers.
  • crenellate — to supply with battlements
  • crenulated — minutely crenate, as the margin of certain leaves.
  • criminally — In a criminal manner.
  • crown gall — a disease of peaches, apples, roses, grapes, etc., characterized by the formation of galls on the roots or stems usually at or below ground level, caused by a bacterium, Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
  • crown land — (in the United Kingdom) land belonging to the Crown
  • crunchable — That can be crunched.
  • culinarian — a person skilled in cookery
  • culinarily — of, relating to, or used in cooking or the kitchen.
  • cumberland — (until 1974) a county of NW England, now part of Cumbria
  • curtailing — Present participle of curtail.
  • curtmantle — ("Henry the Saint") 973–1024, king of Germany 1002–24 and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1014–24.
  • cyclosarin — Cyclohexyl methylphosphonofluoridate, an extremely toxic substance used as a chemical weapon.
  • dancefloor — Alternative form of dance floor.
  • decanormal — (of a solution) containing ten equivalent weights of solute per liter of solution.
  • decinormal — having one tenth of the strength of a standard solution
  • declarants — Plural form of declarant.
  • declinator — a piece of apparatus that establishes the measure of a plane's deviation from the prime vertical or the meridian
  • decolorant — able to decolour or bleach
  • demilancer — A soldier who carries a demilance.
  • edulcorant — tending to edulcorate
  • encrinital — relating to encrinites
  • endermical — relating to an endermic process
  • endocrinal — Endocrine.
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