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7-letter words containing c, d

  • c and w — country-and-western.
  • c-linda — (language)   The most widely used variant of Linda, with C as the base language. It is available from Sci Comp Assocs <[email protected]>.
  • cabildo — a municipal council, or a town hall, in Latin America
  • cabinda — an exclave of Angola, separated from the rest of the country by part of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Pop: about 300 000 (2002 est). Area: 7270 sq km (2807 sq miles)
  • cabined — a small house or cottage, usually of simple design and construction: He was born in a cabin built of rough logs.
  • cackled — Simple past tense and past participle of cackle.
  • cacodyl — an oily poisonous liquid with a strong garlic smell; tetramethyldiarsine. Formula: [(CH3)2As]2
  • cactoid — resembling a cactus
  • cad/cam — design and manufacturing by means of a computer system, as in the creation of complex wiring diagrams, the design of coordinated machine parts, etc.
  • cadance — Misspelling of cadence.
  • cadaver — A cadaver is a dead body.
  • cadbury — George. 1839–1922, British Quaker industrialist and philanthropist. He established, with his brother Richard Cadbury (1835–99), the chocolate-making company Cadbury Brothers and the garden village Bournville, near Birmingham, for their workers
  • caddice — caddis1
  • caddied — Golf. a person hired to carry a player's clubs, find the ball, etc.
  • caddies — Plural form of caddie.
  • caddish — like or characteristic of a cad; ungentlemanly
  • caddoan — a family of Native American languages, including Pawnee, formerly spoken in a wide area of the Midwest, and probably distantly related to Siouan
  • cadelle — a widely distributed beetle, Tenebroides mauritanicus, that feeds on flour, grain, and other stored foods, as well as on other insects: family Trogositidae
  • cadence — The cadence of someone's voice is the way their voice gets higher and lower as they speak.
  • cadency — the line of descent from a younger member of a family
  • cadenza — In classical music, a cadenza is a long and difficult solo passage in a piece for soloist and orchestra.
  • cadette — a member of the division of the Girl Scouts for girls twelve to fourteen years of age
  • cadgers — Plural form of cadger.
  • cadging — Present participle of cadge.
  • cadmean — of or like Cadmus
  • cadmium — Cadmium is a soft bluish-white metal that is used in the production of nuclear energy.
  • cadrans — an instrument which measures the angles of gems and is used during the cutting process
  • caducei — Plural form of caduceus.
  • caedmon — fl. a.d. c670, Anglo-Saxon religious poet.
  • cairned — marked by a cairn
  • cajoled — Persuade someone to do something by sustained coaxing or flattery.
  • calando — (to be performed) with gradually decreasing tone and speed
  • caldera — a large basin-shaped crater at the top of a volcano, formed by the collapse or explosion of the cone
  • caldron — a large kettle or boiler
  • caledon — a town in SE Ontario, in S Canada, near Toronto.
  • calends — the first day of each month in the ancient Roman calendar
  • calydon — ancient city in S Aetolia, central Greece
  • camcord — (rare, transitive) To record using a camcorder.
  • camelid — of or relating to camels
  • camwood — a W African leguminous tree, Baphia nitida, whose hard wood was formerly used in making a red dye
  • canards — Plural form of canard.
  • candace — a female given name: from a Greek word meaning “glowing.”.
  • candela — the basic SI unit of luminous intensity; the luminous intensity in a given direction of a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 × 1012 hertz and that has a radiant intensity in that direction of (1⁄683) watt per steradian
  • candent — glowing with heat
  • candice — a female given name.
  • candida — any yeastlike parasitic fungus of the genus Candida, esp C. albicans, which causes thrush (candidiasis)
  • candide — a philosophical novel (1759) by Voltaire.
  • candids — Plural form of candid.
  • candied — Food such as candied fruit has been covered with sugar or has been cooked in sugar syrup.
  • candies — Plural form of candy.
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