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

  • decrial — the act of decrying; noisy censure.
  • dorlach — a quiver for arrows
  • dracula — (italics) a novel (1897) by Bram Stoker.
  • earlock — a lock of hair worn near or in front of the ear.
  • electra — the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra. She persuaded her brother Orestes to avenge their father by killing his murderess Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus
  • escolar — A large, elongated predatory fish occurring in tropical and temperate oceans throughout the world.
  • filacer — (in former times) a legal officer of the British superior courts
  • flacker — To flutter as a bird.
  • flatcar — a railroad car consisting of a platform without sides or top.
  • fractal — a geometrical or physical structure having an irregular or fragmented shape at all scales of measurement between a greatest and smallest scale such that certain mathematical or physical properties of the structure, as the perimeter of a curve or the flow rate in a porous medium, behave as if the dimensions of the structure (fractal dimensions) are greater than the spatial dimensions.
  • furcula — the forked clavicular bone of a bird; wishbone.
  • garlick — Archaic spelling of garlic.
  • garlics — (rare) Plural form of garlic.
  • glacier — an extended mass of ice formed from snow falling and accumulating over the years and moving very slowly, either descending from high mountains, as in valley glaciers, or moving outward from centers of accumulation, as in continental glaciers.
  • glancer — One who glances.
  • gracile — gracefully slender.
  • grackle — any of several long-tailed American birds of the family Icteridae, especially of the genus Quiscalus, having usually iridescent black plumage.
  • hackler — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
  • harlech — a town in N Wales, in Gwynedd: noted for its ruined 13th-century castle overlooking Cardigan Bay: tourism. Pop: 1233 (2001)
  • jocular — given to, characterized by, intended for, or suited to joking or jesting; waggish; facetious: jocular remarks about opera stars.
  • lacerta — a small faint constellation in the N hemisphere, part of which is crossed by the Milky Way, lying between Cygnus and Andromeda
  • lackers — Plural form of lacker.
  • lacquer — a protective coating consisting of a resin, cellulose ester, or both, dissolved in a volatile solvent, sometimes with pigment added.
  • lactary — of, relating to, or of the nature of milk.
  • lacunar — Architecture. a coffered vault, ceiling, or soffit. coffer (def 4).
  • lamarck — Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet de [zhahn ba-teest pyer ahn-twan duh maw-ne duh] /ʒɑ̃ baˈtist pyɛr ɑ̃ˈtwan də mɔˈnɛ də/ (Show IPA), 1744–1829, French naturalist: pioneer in the field of comparative anatomy.
  • lancers — a cavalry soldier armed with a lance.
  • lancier — Synonym of lancer.
  • larceny — the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods of another from his or her possession with intent to convert them to the taker's own use.
  • larchen — Of or pertaining to the larch tree.
  • larches — Plural form of larch.
  • lascars — Plural form of lascar.
  • lautrec — Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri.
  • le crac — former name of Kerak.
  • leacher — to dissolve out soluble constituents from (ashes, soil, etc.) by percolation.
  • leclair — Jean Marie [zhahn ma-ree] /ʒɑ̃ maˈri/ (Show IPA), 1697–1764, French violinist and composer.
  • leuctra — a town in ancient Greece, in Boeotia: Thebans defeated Spartans here 371 b.c.
  • linacreThomas, 1460?–1521, English humanist, translator, scholar, and physician.
  • lo-carb — containing few or fewer carbohydrates: a low-carb diet.
  • locarno — a town in S Switzerland, on Lake Maggiore: Locarno Pact 1925.
  • locater — a person who locates something.
  • locator — a person who locates something.
  • lockram — a rough-textured linen cloth.
  • locrian — either of two districts in the central part of ancient Greece.
  • locular — having one or more locules.
  • lucarne — a dormer window.
  • lyrical — (of poetry) having the form and musical quality of a song, and especially the character of a songlike outpouring of the poet's own thoughts and feelings, as distinguished from epic and dramatic poetry.
  • maceral — any of the organic units that constitute coal: equivalent to any of the mineral constituents of a rock
  • macular — a spot or blotch, especially on one's skin; macule.
  • marcels — Plural form of marcel.
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