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7-letter words containing c, o, a, e

  • located — to identify or discover the place or location of: to locate the bullet wound.
  • locater — a person who locates something.
  • locates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of locate.
  • lochage — (historical) An officer who commanded a company in Ancient Greece.
  • lockage — the construction, use, or operation of locks, as in a canal or stream.
  • lockean — an adherent of the philosophy of Locke.
  • macedon — Also, Macedon [mas-i-don] /ˈmæs ɪˌdɒn/ (Show IPA). an ancient kingdom in the Balkan Peninsula, in S Europe: now a region in N Greece, SW Bulgaria, and the Republic of Macedonia.
  • macleodFiona, Sharp, William.
  • makedoc — A program from Carleton University, Ottawa that generates documentation for Objective C programs. It will also generate a class hierarchy diagram. The output format is similar to that used by StepStone.
  • meacock — (obsolete) An uxorious, effeminate, or spiritless man.
  • meccano — a construction set consisting of miniature metal or plastic parts from which mechanical models can be made
  • menorca — Minorca.
  • mercado — a market.
  • morceau — piece; morsel.
  • mucosae — mucous membrane.
  • narcose — characterized by stupor; stuporous.
  • nechako — a river in central British Columbia, Canada, flowing NE and E to the Fraser river. About 150 miles (240 km) long.
  • noplace — nowhere.
  • noyance — a nuisance; a source of annoyance
  • o'caseySean [shawn,, shahn] /ʃɔn,, ʃɑn/ (Show IPA), 1880–1964, Irish playwright.
  • oatcake — a cake, usually thin and brittle, made of oatmeal.
  • oceania — the islands of the central and S Pacific, including Micronesia, Melanesia, Polynesia, and traditionally Australasia. About 3,450,000 sq. mi. (8,935,500 sq. km).
  • oceanic — of, living in, or produced by the ocean: oceanic currents.
  • oceanid — any of the daughters of Oceanus and Tethys; a sea nymph.
  • oceanus — a Titan who was the son of Uranus and Gaea, the consort of Tethys, and the father of the river gods and Oceanids.
  • ocellar — pertaining to an ocellus.
  • ocreate — having an ocrea or ocreae; sheathed.
  • octamer — an eight-molecule complex.
  • octaves — Plural form of octave.
  • oculate — Having eyes.
  • odoacer — a.d. 434?–493, first barbarian ruler of Italy 476–493.
  • oilcake — a cake or mass of linseed, cottonseed, soybean, or the like, from which the oil has been extracted or expressed, used as food for livestock.
  • one-act — a short play consisting of one act.
  • ootheca — a case or capsule containing eggs, as that of certain gastropods and insects.
  • oraches — Plural form of orache.
  • 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
  • outface — to cause to submit by or as if by staring down; face or stare down.
  • outpace — to surpass or exceed, as in speed, development, or performance: a company that has consistently outpaced the competition in sales.
  • outrace — to race or run faster than: The deer outraced its pursuers.
  • overact — (of an actor) act a role in an exaggerated manner.
  • panoche — Also, penuche. a coarse grade of sugar made in Mexico.
  • patonce — (of a cross) having limbs which broaden from the centre and are floriated at the end
  • peacoat — pea jacket.
  • peacock — the male of the peafowl distinguished by its long, erectile, greenish, iridescent tail coverts that are brilliantly marked with ocellated spots and that can be spread in a fan.
  • pechora — a river in the NE Russian Federation in Europe, flowing from the Ural Mountains to the Arctic Ocean. 1110 miles (1785 km) long.
  • pedocal — a soil rich in carbonates, especially those of lime.
  • phocaea — an ancient seaport in Asia Minor: northernmost of the Ionian cities; later an important maritime state.
  • placebo — Medicine/Medical, Pharmacology. a substance having no pharmacological effect but given merely to satisfy a patient who supposes it to be a medicine. a substance having no pharmacological effect but administered as a control in testing experimentally or clinically the efficacy of a biologically active preparation.
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