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6-letter words containing c, o, a

  • clamor — If people are clamoring for something, they are demanding it in a noisy or angry way.
  • claxon — a loud electric horn, formerly used on automobiles, trucks, etc., and now often used as a warning signal.
  • cloaca — a cavity in the pelvic region of most vertebrates, except higher mammals, and certain invertebrates, into which the alimentary canal and the genital and urinary ducts open
  • cloaks — Plural form of cloak.
  • cloath — (obsolete) cloth.
  • clonal — Biology. a cell, cell product, or organism that is genetically identical to the unit or individual from which it was derived. a population of identical units, cells, or individuals that derive from the same ancestral line.
  • coachy — a coachman
  • 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.
  • coanda — Henri Marie [ahn-ree ma-ree] /ɑ̃ˈri maˈri/ (Show IPA), 1885–1972, French engineer and inventor.
  • coarse — Coarse things have a rough texture because they consist of thick threads or large pieces.
  • coasts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of coast.
  • coated — covered with an outer layer, film, etc
  • coatee — a short coat, esp for a baby
  • coater — a machine that applies a coating to something
  • coates — Joseph Gordon. 1878–1943, New Zealand statesman; prime minister of New Zealand (1925–28)
  • coatis — Plural form of coati.
  • coaxed — to attempt to influence by gentle persuasion, flattery, etc.; cajole: He coaxed her to sing, but she refused.
  • coaxer — A person who coaxes.
  • coaxes — to attempt to influence by gentle persuasion, flattery, etc.; cajole: He coaxed her to sing, but she refused.
  • coaxis — (math).
  • cobaea — any climbing shrub of the tropical American genus Cobaea, esp C. scandens, grown for its large trumpet-shaped purple or white flowers: family Polemoniaceae
  • cobalt — Cobalt is a hard silvery-white metal which is used to harden steel and for producing a blue dye.
  • cobhamSir John, Oldcastle, Sir John.
  • cobras — Plural form of cobra.
  • cocain — Dated form of cocaine.
  • coccal — Bacteriology. a spherical bacterium.
  • cocoas — Plural form of cocoa.
  • codeia — codeine
  • coelia — Alternative form of cœlia.
  • coeval — of or belonging to the same age or generation
  • coggan — (Frederick) Donald, 1909–2000, English clergyman: archbishop of Canterbury 1974–80.
  • cognac — Cognac is a type of brandy made in the south west of France.
  • cohead — a fellow principal or leader
  • cohoba — parica.
  • coital — Coital means connected with or relating to sexual intercourse.
  • colada — piña colada.
  • colasl — (mathematics, application)   An early system for numerical problems on the IBM 7030. It used a special character set for input of natural mathematical expressions.
  • colead — to lead together
  • colfaxSchuyler, 1823–85, U.S. political leader: vice president of the U.S. 1869–73.
  • colima — a state of SW Mexico, on the Pacific coast: mainly a coastal plain, rising to the foothills of the Sierra Madre, with important mineral resources. Capital: Colima. Pop: 238 000 (2005 est). Area: 5455 sq km (2106 sq miles)
  • collab — a collaboration
  • collar — The collar of a shirt or coat is the part which fits round the neck and is usually folded over.
  • colmar — a city in NE France: annexed to Germany 1871–1919 and 1940–45; textile industry. Pop: 65 136 (1999)
  • coltan — a metallic ore found esp in the E Congo, consisting of columbite and tantalite (a source of the element tantalum)
  • comake — to make together
  • comart — a binding agreement
  • comate — having tufts of hair
  • combat — Combat is fighting that takes place in a war.
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