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7-letter words containing c, e, u

  • clypeus — a cuticular plate on the head of some insects between the labrum and the frons
  • cocteau — Jean (ʒɑ̃). 1889–1963, French dramatist, novelist, poet, critic, designer, and film director. His works include the novel Les Enfants terribles (1929) and the play La Machine infernale (1934)
  • coequal — of the same size, rank, etc
  • cohunes — a pinnate-leaved palm, Orbignya cohune, native to Central America, bearing large nuts whose meat yields an oil resembling that of the coconut.
  • collude — If one person colludes with another, they co-operate with them secretly or illegally.
  • columel — the central column in a capsule
  • colures — Plural form of colure.
  • come up — If someone comes up or comes up to you, they approach you until they are standing close to you.
  • comique — a comic actor or singer
  • commune — A commune is a group of people who live together and share everything.
  • commute — If you commute, you travel a long distance every day between your home and your place of work.
  • compute — To compute a quantity or number means to calculate it.
  • conduce — to lead or contribute (to a result)
  • conecuh — a river in SE Alabama, known there as the (Conecuh) and NW Florida, flowing SW and S to Escambia Bay on the Gulf of Mexico. 231 miles (372 km) long.
  • confuse — If you confuse two things, you get them mixed up, so that you think one of them is the other one.
  • confute — to prove (a person or thing) wrong, invalid, or mistaken; disprove
  • congrue — to agree
  • conjure — If you conjure something out of nothing, you make it appear as if by magic.
  • conquer — If one country or group of people conquers another, they take complete control of their land.
  • conspue — to spit on with contempt
  • consume — If you consume something, you eat or drink it.
  • contuse — to injure (the body) without breaking the skin; bruise
  • copihue — an evergreen climber, Lapageria rosea, that is found in southern Chile and has red flowers and edible fruit
  • copulae — Plural form of copula.
  • coquets — Plural form of coquet.
  • corbeau — a blackish green colour
  • corcule — (botany, obsolete) The heart of the seed; the embryo or germ.
  • cornute — having or resembling cornua; hornlike
  • coruler — a joint ruler
  • costume — An actor's or performer's costume is the set of clothes they wear while they are performing.
  • couched — a piece of furniture for seating from two to four people, typically in the form of a bench with a back, sometimes having an armrest at one or each end, and partly or wholly upholstered and often fitted with springs, tailored cushions, skirts, etc.; sofa.
  • couchee — a reception held late at night, usually by the nobility or royalty
  • coucher — the worker who transfers sheets of wet pulp to the couch.
  • couches — Plural form of couch.
  • coueism — a method of self-help stressing autosuggestion, popular especially in the U.S. c1920 and featuring the slogan “Day by day in every way I am getting better and better.”.
  • coughed — Simple past tense and past participle of cough.
  • cougher — A person who coughs.
  • couhage — Obsolete form of cowage.
  • coulees — Plural form of coulee.
  • couleur — (card games) A suit of cards, in certain French card games.
  • coulter — a blade or sharp-edged disc attached to a plough so that it cuts through the soil vertically in advance of the ploughshare
  • counsel — Counsel is advice.
  • counted — Simple past tense and past participle of count.
  • counter — In a place such as a shop or café, a counter is a long narrow table or flat surface at which customers are served.
  • coupage — The blending (or 'cutting') of wine.
  • coupled — being one of the partners in a permanent sexual relationship
  • coupler — a link or rod transmitting power between two rotating mechanisms or a rotating part and a reciprocating part
  • couples — Combine.
  • couplet — A couplet is two lines of poetry which come next to each other, especially two lines that rhyme with each other and are the same length.
  • coupure — a trench or palisade made by a besieged force behind a breach in their defences
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