7-letter words containing c, n, d
- command — If someone in authority commands you to do something, they tell you that you must do it.
- commend — If you commend someone or something, you praise them formally.
- compand — to compress (a transmitter signal) before transmission and then expand it after transmission
- compend — a compendium
- con-dem — of or relating to the coalition government (2010–15) of the United Kingdom formed by the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats
- concede — If you concede something, you admit, often unwillingly, that it is true or correct.
- concedo — I allow, or I concede (a point)
- conceed — Misspelling of concede.
- conched — Simple past tense and past participle of conch.
- concord — Concord is a state of peaceful agreement.
- condela — Connection Definition Language
- condemn — If you condemn something, you say that it is very bad and unacceptable.
- condign — (esp of a punishment) fitting; deserved
- condole — to express sympathy with someone in grief, pain, etc
- condoms — Plural form of condom.
- condone — If someone condones behaviour that is morally wrong, they accept it and allow it to happen.
- condors — Plural form of condor.
- conduce — to lead or contribute (to a result)
- conduct — When you conduct an activity or task, you organize it and carry it out.
- conduit — A conduit is a small tunnel, pipe, or channel through which water or electrical wires go.
- condyle — the rounded projection on the articulating end of a bone, such as the ball portion of a ball-and-socket joint
- confed. — Confederate
- confide — If you confide in someone, you tell them a secret.
- congaed — Simple past tense and past participle of conga.
- conidia — (in fungi) an asexual spore formed by abstriction at the top of a hyphal branch.
- contend — If you have to contend with a problem or difficulty, you have to deal with it or overcome it.
- contoid — of or relating to a sound characterized by stoppage or obstruction of the flow of air in the vocal tract; consonantlike.
- contund — to pummel or bruise (a person)
- coondog — a dog that has been trained to hunt raccoons, or, specifically, a coonhound
- copland — Aaron. 1900–90, US composer of orchestral and chamber music, ballets, and film music
- cording — a type of corded material, esp when used as a decorative trimming
- cordons — Plural form of cordon.
- corndog — a sandwich consisting of a frankfurter baked or fried in corn bread and usually spread with mustard before eating: often served on a stick.
- cornfed — fed on corn
- corsned — (in Anglo-Saxon times) an ordeal whereby an accused person had to eat a morsel of bread; swallowing it without difficulty indicated innocence, and choking indicated guilt
- corydon — (in pastoral literature) a shepherd or rustic
- cotland — the grounds that belonged to a cotter and which amounted to around 5 acres
- couldnt — (informal, nonstandard) Alternative form of couldn't.
- counted — Simple past tense and past participle of count.
- cowbind — any of various bryony plants, esp the white bryony
- cowhand — a hired man who herds and tends cattle, usually on horseback, esp in the western US
- cozened — Simple past tense and past participle of cozen.
- cranked — Machinery. any of several types of arms or levers for imparting rotary or oscillatory motion to a rotating shaft, one end of the crank being fixed to the shaft and the other end receiving reciprocating motion from a hand, connecting rod, etc.
- credent — believing or believable
- cringed — to shrink, bend, or crouch, especially in fear or servility; cower.
- crinoid — any primitive echinoderm of the class Crinoidea, having delicate feathery arms radiating from a central disc. The group includes the free-swimming feather stars, the sessile sea lilies, and many stemmed fossil forms
- crooned — to sing or hum in a soft, soothing voice: to croon to a baby.
- crowned — characterized by or having a crown (often used in combination): a crowned signet ring; a low-crowned fedora.
- croydon — a borough in S Greater London (since 1965): formerly important for its airport (1915–59). Pop: 336 700 (2003 est). Area: 87 sq km (33 sq miles)
- crunked — excited or intoxicated