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7-letter words containing c, e, r, i

  • coheirs — a joint heir.
  • coinfer — to infer jointly
  • cointer — to bury together
  • collier — a coal miner
  • comfier — comfortable.
  • conifer — Conifers are a group of trees and shrubs, for example pine trees and fir trees, that grow in cooler areas of the world. They have fruit called cones, and very thin leaves called needles which they do not normally lose in winter.
  • copiers — Plural form of copier.
  • coprime — (mathematics, of two or more positive integers) Having no positive integer factors in common, aside from 1.
  • corbeil — a carved ornament in the form of a basket of fruit, flowers, etc
  • cordite — Cordite is an explosive substance used in guns and bombs.
  • coreign — to reign jointly
  • corelli — Arcangelo (arˈkandʒelo). 1653–1713, Italian violinist and composer of sonatas and concerti grossi
  • coremia — the fruiting bodies of certain fungi, consisting of a loosely bound bundle of conidiophores.
  • corinne — a feminine name
  • cornice — A cornice is a strip of plaster, wood, or stone which goes along the top of a wall or building.
  • cornier — pertaining to or affected with corns of the feet.
  • corries — Plural form of corrie.
  • corsive — a corrosive drug
  • cortile — (in Italy) a roofless internal courtyard
  • corvine — of, relating to, or resembling a crow
  • coterie — A coterie of a particular kind is a small group of people who are close friends or have a common interest, and who do not want other people to join them.
  • cottier — (in Ireland) a peasant farming a smallholding under cottier tenure (the holding of not more than half an acre at a rent of not more than five pounds a year)
  • courier — A courier is a person who is paid to take letters and parcels direct from one place to another.
  • cowries — Plural form of cowrie.
  • cowrite — to write (something) in collaboration with another writer
  • crackie — a small noisy dog.
  • craigie — Sir William A(lexander). 1867–1957, Scottish lexicographer; joint editor of the Oxford English Dictionary (1901–33), and of A Dictionary of American English on Historical Principles (1938–44)
  • crappie — either of two North American freshwater percoid food and game fishes, Pomoxis nigromaculatus (black crappie) or P. annularis (white crappie): family Centrarchidae (sunfishes, etc)
  • crazier — mentally deranged; demented; insane.
  • crazies — mentally deranged; demented; insane.
  • creatic — of or relating to flesh or meat
  • creatin — Alternative form of creatine.
  • credits — a list of those responsible for the production of a film or television programme
  • creepie — a low stool
  • cremini — a variety of edible mushroom, Agaricus bisporus
  • creping — a lightweight fabric of silk, cotton, or other fiber, with a finely crinkled or ridged surface.
  • cretins — Plural form of cretin.
  • cretism — a lie or falsehood
  • crevice — A crevice is a narrow crack or gap, especially in a rock.
  • crewing — a group of persons involved in a particular kind of work or working together: the crew of a train; a wrecking crew.
  • cribbed — Of or pertaining to a crib, or things in a crib.
  • cribber — a person who cribs.
  • cribble — a sieve
  • cricked — a sharp, painful spasm of the muscles, as of the neck or back.
  • cricket — Cricket is an outdoor game played between two teams. Players try to score points, called runs, by hitting a ball with a wooden bat.
  • crimean — of or relating to the Crimea or its inhabitants
  • crimine — an expression of surprise
  • crimmer — krimmer
  • crimped — folded into ridges
  • crimper — Small climbing hold that can only be held with the tips of a person's fingers.
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