0%

9-letter words containing c, a, s, o

  • cauldrons — Plural form of cauldron.
  • causation — The causation of something, usually something bad, is the factors that have caused it.
  • cautelous — crafty or cunning
  • caveators — a person who files or enters a caveat.
  • cavernous — A cavernous room or building is very large inside, and so it reminds you of a cave.
  • cavessons — Plural form of cavesson.
  • cavillous — Characterized by caviling, or disposed to cavil; quibbling.
  • ceanothus — any shrub of the North American rhamnaceous genus Ceanothus: grown for their ornamental, often blue, flower clusters
  • cellarous — of, relating to or resembling a cellar
  • cenotaphs — Plural form of cenotaph.
  • censorial — an official who examines books, plays, news reports, motion pictures, radio and television programs, letters, cablegrams, etc., for the purpose of suppressing parts deemed objectionable on moral, political, military, or other grounds.
  • censorian — relating to the official supervision of public behaviour and morals
  • cepaceous — having an onion-like smell or taste
  • cephalous — having a head
  • ceraceous — waxlike or waxy
  • ceratodus — any of various extinct lungfish constituting the genus Ceratodus, common in Cretaceous and Triassic times
  • certosina — a technique of inlaying light-colored material, as bone, ivory, metal, or pale wood, in elaborate designs on a dark ground.
  • cessation — The cessation of something is the stopping of it.
  • cetaceous — Relating to whales or more generally to any marine mammal of the order Cetacea.
  • cetshwayo — ?1826–84, king of the Zulus (1873–79): defeated the British at Isandhlwana (1879) but was overwhelmed by them at Ulundi (1879); captured, he stated his case in London, and was reinstated as ruler of part of Zululand (1883)
  • chaconnes — Plural form of chaconne.
  • chamfrons — Plural form of chamfron.
  • chamosite — a mineral of the chlorite group, hydrous aluminum silicate of iron, occurring in gray or black crystals in oolitic iron ore.
  • champions — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of champion.
  • chancrous — (medicine) Of the nature of a chancre; affected by chancre.
  • chapbooks — Plural form of chapbook.
  • chaperons — Plural form of chaperon.
  • charangos — Plural form of charango.
  • charcoals — Plural form of charcoal.
  • chargeous — (obsolete) burdensome.
  • charolais — a breed of large white beef cattle that originated in France
  • charoseth — haroseth.
  • chaseport — a porthole through which a gun was fired
  • chassepot — a breech-loading bolt-action rifle formerly used by the French Army
  • chat show — A chat show is a television or radio show in which people talk in a friendly, informal way about different topics.
  • chatrooms — Plural form of chatroom.
  • chelators — Plural form of chelator.
  • chemostat — an apparatus for growing bacterial cultures at a constant rate by controlling the supply of nutrient medium
  • cheongsam — a straight dress, usually of silk or cotton, with a stand-up collar and a slit in one side of the skirt, worn by Chinese women
  • chisimaio — a port in S Somalia, on the Indian Ocean. Pop: reliable recent estimates are not available
  • chlorates — Plural form of chlorate.
  • chokeslam — A wrestling move in which someone is picked up by their neck and is driven into the mat.
  • chomskyan — of or relating to Noam Chomsky or his linguistic theories, especially to transformational-generative grammar.
  • choosable — to select from a number of possibilities; pick by preference: She chose Sunday for her departure.
  • chopsteak — chopped steak.
  • choralist — a person who sings in a chorus or ensemble
  • chordates — belonging or pertaining to the phylum Chordata, comprising the true vertebrates and those animals having a notochord, as the lancelets and tunicates.
  • choriambs — Plural form of choriamb.
  • chromates — Plural form of chromate.
  • churrasco — meat cooked over an open fire.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?