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

  • marcels — Plural form of marcel.
  • mascled — Composed of, or covered with, lozenge-shaped scales.
  • masculy — covered with mascles
  • miscall — to call by a wrong name.
  • mucosal — mucous membrane.
  • musical — of, relating to, or producing music: a musical instrument.
  • nicolas — a masculine name
  • oculars — Plural form of ocular.
  • oilcans — Plural form of oilcan.
  • oracles — (especially in ancient Greece) an utterance, often ambiguous or obscure, given by a priest or priestess at a shrine as the response of a god to an inquiry.
  • osceola — 1804–38, U.S. Indian leader: chief of the Seminole tribe.
  • oscheal — relating to or resembling the scrotum
  • oscular — pertaining to an osculum.
  • pascal- — Pascal subset used in Brinch Hansen on Pascal Compilers, P. Brinch Hansen, P-H 1985.
  • paschal — of or relating to Easter.
  • pascual — of or relating to pasture
  • plasmic — Anatomy, Physiology. the liquid part of blood or lymph, as distinguished from the suspended elements.
  • plastic — Often, plastics. any of a group of synthetic or natural organic materials that may be shaped when soft and then hardened, including many types of resins, resinoids, polymers, cellulose derivatives, casein materials, and proteins: used in place of other materials, as glass, wood, and metals, in construction and decoration, for making many articles, as coatings, and, drawn into filaments, for weaving. They are often known by trademark names, as Bakelite, Vinylite, or Lucite.
  • raschel — a type of loosely knitted fabric
  • reclasp — to clasp (something) again or (of two things) to clasp together again
  • reclass — a number of persons or things regarded as forming a group by reason of common attributes, characteristics, qualities, or traits; kind; sort: a class of objects used in daily living.
  • recusal — the disqualification of a judge for a particular lawsuit or proceeding, especially due to some possible conflict of interest or prejudice.
  • rescale — to revise the scale of, especially to make smaller or more modest: to rescale a budget.
  • saccule — Anatomy. the smaller of two sacs in the membranous labyrinth of the internal ear. Compare utricle (def 3).
  • sackful — the amount a sack will hold.
  • saclike — a baglike structure in an animal, plant, or fungus, as one containing fluid.
  • salchow — a jump in which the skater leaps from the back inside edge of one skate, making one full rotation of the body in the air, and lands on the back outside edge of the other skate.
  • salicin — a colorless, crystalline, water-soluble glucoside, C 1 3 H 1 8 O 7 , obtained from the bark of the American aspen: used in medicine chiefly as an antipyretic and analgesic.
  • saltcat — a salty matter for attracting pigeons
  • sanicle — any plant belonging to the genus Sanicula, of the parsley family, as S. marilandica, of America, used in medicine.
  • satchelLeroy Robert ("Satchel") 1906–82, U.S. baseball player.
  • saucily — impertinent; insolent: a saucy remark; a saucy child.
  • scabble — to shape or dress (stone) roughly.
  • scaglia — a type of reddish limestone found in Italy
  • scalade — escalade.
  • scalage — an assessed percentage deduction, as in weight or price, granted in dealings with goods that are likely to shrink, leak, or otherwise vary in the amount or weight originally stated.
  • scalare — any of three deep-bodied, cichlid fishes, Pterophyllum scalare, P. altum, and P. eimekei, inhabiting northern South American rivers, often kept in aquariums.
  • scalene — Geometry. (of a cone or the like) having the axis inclined to the base. (of a triangle) having three unequal sides.
  • scaleup — an increase in size, quantity, or activity according to a fixed scale or proportion: a scaleup of an engineering design; a scaleup program of energy conservation.
  • scaling — a succession or progression of steps or degrees; graduated series: the scale of taxation; the social scale.
  • scallop — any of the bivalve mollusks of the genus Argopecten (Pecten) and related genera that swim by rapidly clapping the fluted shell valves together.
  • scalped — the integument of the upper part of the head, usually including the associated subcutaneous structures.
  • scalpel — a small, light, usually straight knife used in surgical and anatomical operations and dissections.
  • scalper — the integument of the upper part of the head, usually including the associated subcutaneous structures.
  • scamble — a long bench used in a farm kitchen
  • scandal — a disgraceful or discreditable action, circumstance, etc.
  • scantle — a small or scant amount
  • scantly — barely sufficient in amount or quantity; not abundant; almost inadequate: to do scant justice.
  • scapple — to shape (stone, timber, etc) into a plane in a rough or unfinished manner
  • scapula — Anatomy. either of two flat, triangular bones, each forming the back part of a shoulder in humans; shoulder blade.
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