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9-letter words containing c, o, e, r, t

  • connector — A connector is a device that joins two pieces of equipment, wire, or piping together.
  • consenter — to permit, approve, or agree; comply or yield (often followed by to or an infinitive): He consented to the proposal. We asked her permission, and she consented.
  • conserted — Misspelling of concerted.
  • consorted — a husband or wife; spouse, especially of a reigning monarch. Compare prince consort, queen consort.
  • construed — to give the meaning or intention of; explain; interpret.
  • construes — to give the meaning or intention of; explain; interpret.
  • consulter — One who consults, or asks counsel or information.
  • container — A container is something such as a box or bottle that is used to hold or store things in.
  • contemner — One who contemns, who displays contempt towards another.
  • contemnor — to treat or regard with disdain, scorn, or contempt.
  • contemper — to temper (something) by mixing with something of a different nature
  • contender — A contender is someone who takes part in a competition.
  • contester — a race, conflict, or other competition between rivals, as for a prize.
  • continuer — One who, or that which, continues.
  • contorted — twisted out of shape
  • contoured — A contoured surface has curves and slopes on it, rather than being flat.
  • contrived — If you say that something someone says or does is contrived, you think it is false and deliberate, rather than natural and not planned.
  • contriver — to plan with ingenuity; devise; invent: The author contrived a clever plot.
  • contrives — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of contrive.
  • controled — Misspelling of controlled.
  • controlee — (informal, UK) A person who is the subject of a control order.
  • convector — a space-heating device from which heat is transferred to the surrounding air by convection
  • converted — (of a building) having been changed from a different use
  • converter — A converter is a device that changes something into a different form.
  • convertor — converter
  • cooperate — If you cooperate with someone, you work with them or help them for a particular purpose. You can also say that two people cooperate.
  • cooperite — a mineral, sulfide and arsenide of platinum, occurring in igneous rocks in the form of steel-gray crystals.
  • copartner — a partner or associate, esp an equal partner in business
  • copresent — to present jointly
  • coprolite — any of various rounded stony nodules thought to be the fossilized faeces of Palaeozic-Cenozoic vertebrates
  • copytaker — (esp in a newspaper office) a person employed to type reports as journalists dictate them over the telephone
  • copywrite — (rare) To write the copy (or text) of an advertisement; to have a job as a copywriter.
  • corallite — the skeleton of a coral polyp
  • cordately — In a cordate form.
  • cordonnet — a thread or cord that is produced from coarse silk and is commonly used to outline embroidery and lacework, and for fringes
  • core city — central city.
  • core tool — a stone tool with a cutting edge, as a hand ax, chopper, or scraper, formed by chipping away flakes from a core.
  • corelated — to correlate.
  • cork tree — the cork oak, Quercus suber, of the beech family.
  • corn belt — region in the NC plains area of the Midwest where much corn and cornfed livestock are raised: it extends from W Ohio to E Nebr. and NE Kans.
  • corneitis — an inflammation of the cornea
  • cornetist — a person who plays the cornet
  • cornstone — a mottled green and red limestone
  • corollate — having or resembling a corolla
  • coronated — having or wearing a crown, coronet, or the like.
  • coroneted — wearing a coronet
  • coroutine — (programming) A piece of code that performs a task, and that can be passed new input and return output more than once.
  • corporate — Corporate means relating to business corporations or to a particular business corporation.
  • corpulent — If you describe someone as corpulent, you mean they are fat.
  • corrected — to set or make true, accurate, or right; remove the errors or faults from: The native guide corrected our pronunciation. The new glasses corrected his eyesight.
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