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7-letter words containing c, l, a, r

  • candler — a long, usually slender piece of tallow or wax with an embedded wick that is burned to give light.
  • canular — shaped like a cannula; tubular.
  • caporal — a strong coarse dark tobacco
  • caracal — a lynxlike feline mammal, Lynx caracal, inhabiting deserts of N Africa and S Asia, having long legs, a smooth coat of reddish fur, and black-tufted ears
  • caracol — caracole.
  • caracul — the black loosely curled fur obtained from the skins of newly born lambs of the karakul sheep
  • caramel — A caramel is a chewy sweet food made from sugar, butter, and milk.
  • caraval — Obsolete spelling of caravel.
  • caravel — a two- or three-masted sailing ship, esp one with a broad beam, high poop deck, and lateen rig that was used by the Spanish and Portuguese in the 15th and 16th centuries
  • cardial — (rare) Relating to the heart.
  • careful — If you are careful, you give serious attention to what you are doing, in order to avoid harm, damage, or mistakes. If you are careful to do something, you make sure that you do it.
  • carinal — resembling or relating to a carina
  • cariole — a small open two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle
  • carleen — a female given name, form of Caroline.
  • carless — having no car
  • carline — a Eurasian thistle-like plant, Carlina vulgaris, having spiny leaves and flower heads surrounded by raylike whitish bracts: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • carling — a fore-and-aft beam in a vessel, used for supporting the deck, esp around a hatchway or other opening
  • carlish — churlish or coarse
  • carlist — (in Spain) a supporter of Don Carlos or his descendants as the rightful kings of Spain
  • carlita — a female given name.
  • carload — A carload of people or things is as many people or things as a car can carry.
  • carlock — a type of Russian isinglass made from the bladder of a sturgeon
  • carlota — original name Marie Charlotte Amélie Augustine Victoire Clémentine Léopoldine. 1840–1927, wife of Maximilian; empress of Mexico (1864–67)
  • carlson — Chester1906-68; U.S. inventor; developed xerography
  • carlton — a town in N central England, in S Nottinghamshire. Pop: 48 493 (2001)
  • carlyle — Robert. born 1961, Scottish actor; his work includes the television series Cracker and Hamish Macbeth and the films Trainspotting (1996), The Full Monty (1997), The Beach (2000), and 28 Weeks Later (2007)
  • carmela — a female given name, form of Carmel.
  • caroled — Simple past tense and past participle of carol.
  • caroler — A carol singer.
  • carolus — any of several coins struck in the reign of a king called Charles, esp an English gold coin from the reign of Charles I
  • carolyn — a feminine name
  • caromel — to convert or be converted into caramel
  • carpale — carpal
  • carpals — pertaining to the carpus: the carpal joint.
  • carpels — Plural form of carpel.
  • carpool — A carpool is an arrangement where a group of people take turns driving each other to work, or driving each other's children to school. A carpool also refers to the people traveling together in a car.
  • carrell — Also called cubicle, stall. a small recess or enclosed area in a library stack, designed for individual study or reading.
  • carrels — Plural form of carrel.
  • carroll — Lewis. real name the Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. 1832–98, English writer; an Oxford mathematics don who wrote Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1872) and the nonsense poem The Hunting of the Snark (1876)
  • cartels — Plural form of cartel.
  • cartful — the amount a cart can hold
  • castral — of or relating to a camp, esp a military camp
  • catgirl — (chiefly, Japanese fiction) A female fictional character who has a cat's ears, tail or other feline characteristics on an otherwise humanoid body.
  • caulker — a person who caulks the seams of boats or the like.
  • cavalry — The cavalry is the part of an army that uses armoured vehicles for fighting.
  • caviler — a person who cavils
  • cellars — Plural form of cellar.
  • cellary — Characteristic of a cellar; musty, gloomy, etc.
  • central — Something that is central is in the middle of a place or area.
  • ceramal — cermet
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