0%

6-letter words containing c, l, e, a

  • claime — Obsolete spelling of claim.
  • claire — a feminine name
  • claque — a group of people hired to applaud
  • claret — Claret is a type of French red wine.
  • clarke — Sir Arthur C(harles). 1917–2008, British science-fiction writer, who helped to develop the first communications satellites. He scripted the film 2001, A Space Odyssey (1968)
  • claude — Albert. 1898–1983, US cell biologist, born in Belgium: shared the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine (1974) for work on microsomes and mitochondria
  • clause — A clause is a section of a legal document.
  • claver — to talk idly; gossip
  • claves — one of a pair of wooden sticks or blocks that are held one in each hand and are struck together to accompany music and dancing.
  • clavie — a tar-barrel traditionally set alight in Moray on Hogmanay
  • clawed — having claws (sometimes used in combination): sharp-clawed.
  • clayed — a natural earthy material that is plastic when wet, consisting essentially of hydrated silicates of aluminum: used for making bricks, pottery, etc.
  • clayey — of, smeared with, or full of clay
  • cleane — Obsolete spelling of clean.
  • cleans — Plural form of clean.
  • cleare — Obsolete spelling of clear.
  • clears — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of clear.
  • clearyBeverly, born 1916, U.S. author.
  • cleats — Plural form of cleat.
  • cleave — To cleave something means to split or divide it into two separate parts, often violently.
  • coaled — Simple past tense and past participle of coal.
  • coaler — a ship, train, etc, used to carry or supply coal
  • coales — Obsolete spelling of coals.
  • coelia — Alternative form of cœlia.
  • coeval — of or belonging to the same age or generation
  • colead — to lead together
  • cradle — A cradle is a baby's bed with high sides. Cradles often have curved bases so that they rock from side to side.
  • credal — of a creed; creedal
  • cuneal — wedge-shaped; cuneiform
  • decals — Plural form of decal.
  • declaw — to remove the claws from (an animal or bird)
  • eclair — a finger-shaped cream puff, filled with whipped cream, custard, or pastry cream, often coated with icing.
  • elance — (transitive, archaic) To throw like a lance; to hurl.
  • encalm — to becalm, settle
  • enlace — Entwine or entangle.
  • epical — (literature) Any book containing 2 or more epics.
  • exclam — (grammar) abbreviation of exclamation.
  • facile — moving, acting, working, proceeding, etc., with ease, sometimes with superficiality: facile fingers; a facile mind.
  • faecal — feces.
  • fecula — fecal matter, especially of insects.
  • gaelic — a Celtic language that includes the speech of ancient Ireland and the dialects that have developed from it, especially those usually known as Irish, Manx, and Scottish Gaelic. Gaelic constitutes the Goidelic subbranch of Celtic.
  • gelcap — a dose of medicine enclosed in a soluble case of gelatine
  • glaces — ice placed in a drink to cool it.
  • glance — to look quickly or briefly.
  • glauce — the second bride of Jason, murdered on her wedding day by Medea, whom Jason had deserted
  • hackle — 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.
  • heliac — pertaining to or occurring near the sun, especially applied to such risings and settings of a star as are most nearly coincident with those of the sun while yet visible.
  • inlace — enlace.
  • jacmel — a seaport in S Haiti.
  • lacert — (obsolete) A fleshy muscle of the human body.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?