9-letter words containing c, o, d, a
- coachload — A coachload of people is a group of people who are travelling somewhere together in a coach.
- coachwood — an Australian tree, Ceratopetalum apetalum, yielding light aromatic wood used for furniture, turnery, etc
- coadapted — adapted to one another
- coadjutor — a bishop appointed as assistant to a diocesan bishop
- coadunate — united; joined together
- coalesced — Simple past tense and past participle of coalesce.
- coalfield — A coalfield is a region where there is coal under the ground.
- coarsened — Simple past tense and past participle of coarsen.
- coastland — the land fringing a coast
- coastward — towards the coast
- coat card — face card.
- coatdress — a coatlike dress having a buttoned front and, usually, lapels and long sleeves
- coatstand — a frame or pole equipped with hooks or arms for hanging up coats, etc
- coccoidal — relating to a coccus
- cocreated — Simple past tense and past participle of cocreate.
- code flag — a flag forming part of a signal code.
- code name — A code name is a name used for someone or something in order to keep their identity secret.
- code walk — (programming) Stepping through source code as part of a code review. Where a code walk probably only follows the potential control flow of a program, a dry run is a more detailed manual execution of a program that also keeps track of the value of every variable involved.
- code-name — to assign a code name to.
- codenamed — Simple past tense and past participle of codename.
- codenames — Plural form of codename.
- codeshare — (aviation) Agreement whereby an airline buys space on another airline and markets the extra space as its own. Often used to increase a route network without the costs of running a full service.
- coeducate — Alternative spelling of co-educate.
- cofferdam — a watertight structure, usually of sheet piling, that encloses an area under water, pumped dry to enable construction work to be carried out. Below a certain depth a caisson is required
- cogitated — Simple past tense and past participle of cogitate.
- cohabited — to live together as if married, usually without legal or religious sanction.
- cohobated — to distill again from the same or a similar substance, as by pouring a distilled liquid back upon the matter remaining in the vessel, or upon another mass of similar matter.
- cokeheads — Plural form of cokehead.
- colanders — Plural form of colander.
- cold call — If someone makes a cold call, they telephone or visit someone they have never contacted, without making an appointment, in order to try and sell something.
- cold case — a police inquiry that has been suspended with the crime still unsolved
- cold cash — money paid in full at the time of a business transaction
- cold meat — a form of meat that has been cooked and allowed to become cold
- cold pack — a method of lowering the body temperature by wrapping a person in a sheet soaked in cold water
- cold snap — A cold snap is a short period of cold and icy weather.
- cold wave — a sudden spell of low temperatures over a wide area, often following the passage of a cold front
- cold-call — a visit or telephone call to a prospective customer without an appointment or a previous introduction.
- cold-draw — to draw (wire, tubing, etc.) without preheating the metal.
- cold-pack — to place a cold pack on: to cold-pack a feverish patient.
- coldwater — a river in NW Mississippi, flowing S to the Tallahatchie River. 220 miles (354 km) long.
- collapsed — Simple past tense and past participle of collapse.
- colloidal — of, denoting, or having the character of a colloid
- collonade — Alternative spelling of colonnade.
- colocated — Simple past tense and past participle of colocate.
- colombard — a white grape grown in France, California, and Australia, used for making wine
- colonnade — A colonnade is a row of evenly-spaced columns.
- coloradan — of Colorado
- colubriad — a poem about a snake
- comatulid — any of a group of crinoid echinoderms, including the feather stars, in which the adults are free-swimming
- combatted — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.