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7-letter words containing c, l

  • blocker — a person or thing that acts as a block
  • blockie — an owner of a small property, esp a farm
  • blotchy — Something that is blotchy has blotches on it.
  • blucher — a high shoe with laces over the tongue
  • bolices — to do (something) badly; bungle (often followed by up): His interference bollixed up the whole deal.
  • bollock — to rebuke severely, upbraid, reprimand
  • bouclée — support for a cue in billiards using the hand
  • brickle — brittle
  • bricole — a shot in which the cue ball touches a cushion after striking the object ball and before touching another ball
  • bruckle — brittle, fragile
  • buckled — Buckled shoes have buckles on them, either to fasten them or as decoration.
  • buckler — a small round shield worn on the forearm or held by a short handle
  • buckleyWilliam F., Jr. 1925–2008, U.S. writer and editor.
  • bucolic — Bucolic means relating to the countryside.
  • bulimic — If someone is bulimic, they are suffering from bulimia.
  • bullace — a small Eurasian rosaceous tree, Prunus domestica insititia (or P. insititia), of which the damson is the cultivated form
  • bullock — A bullock is a young bull that has been castrated.
  • byplace — a private place
  • c geleeClaude [klohd] /kloʊd/ (Show IPA), Lorraine, Claude.
  • c shell — (operating system)   (csh) The Unix command-line interpreter shell and script language by William Joy, originating from Berkeley Unix. Presumably, csh's C-like syntax was intended to endear it to programmers but sadly it lacks some sh features which are useful for writing shell scripts so you need to know two different syntaxes for every shell construct. A plethora of different shells followed csh, e.g. tcsh, ksh, bash, rc, but sh and csh are the only ones which are provided with most versions of Unix.
  • c-clamp — a general-purpose clamp shaped like the letter C
  • c-linda — (language)   The most widely used variant of Linda, with C as the base language. It is available from Sci Comp Assocs <[email protected]>.
  • caballe — Montserrat (monserˈrat). born 1933, Spanish operatic soprano
  • cabbala — cabala
  • cabildo — a municipal council, or a town hall, in Latin America
  • cablets — Plural form of cablet.
  • cabling — Cabling is used to refer to electrical or electronic cables, or to the process of putting them in a place.
  • caboclo — a Brazilian of Indian or mixed Indian and white ancestry.
  • cackled — Simple past tense and past participle of cackle.
  • cackler — A person or creature that cackles.
  • cackles — to utter a shrill, broken sound or cry, as of a hen.
  • cacodyl — an oily poisonous liquid with a strong garlic smell; tetramethyldiarsine. Formula: [(CH3)2As]2
  • cacolet — a seat or bed fitted to a mule for carrying the sick or wounded
  • cadelle — a widely distributed beetle, Tenebroides mauritanicus, that feeds on flour, grain, and other stored foods, as well as on other insects: family Trogositidae
  • caelian — the southeasternmost of the Seven Hills of Rome
  • caffila — a caravan train
  • cafileh — Alternative form of cafila.
  • cageful — an amount which fills a cage to capacity
  • cagoule — a lightweight usually knee-length type of anorak
  • caitlin — a female given name, Irish form of Cathleen, Kathleen.
  • cajoled — Persuade someone to do something by sustained coaxing or flattery.
  • cajoler — A person who cajoles; a flatterer.
  • cajoles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cajole.
  • calabar — a port in SE Nigeria, capital of Cross River state. Pop: 418 000 (2005 est)
  • calaloo — Alternative spelling of callaloo.
  • calamar — a squid
  • calamus — any tropical Asian palm of the genus Calamus, some species of which are a source of rattan and canes
  • calando — (to be performed) with gradually decreasing tone and speed
  • calapan — a seaport on NE Mindoro, in the central Philippines.
  • calchas — a soothsayer who assisted the Greeks in the Trojan War
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