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

  • costate — having ribs
  • costean — to mine for lodes
  • costive — having constipation; constipated
  • costner — Kevin. born 1955, US film actor: his films include Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1990), Dances with Wolves (1990; also directed), JFK (1991), Waterworld (1995), Open Range (2003), and the TV mini-series Hatfields & McCoys (2012)
  • costrel — a flask, usually of earthenware or leather
  • costume — An actor's or performer's costume is the set of clothes they wear while they are performing.
  • coterie — A coterie of a particular kind is a small group of people who are close friends or have a common interest, and who do not want other people to join them.
  • cottage — A cottage is a small house, usually in the country.
  • cotters — Plural form of cotter.
  • cottier — (in Ireland) a peasant farming a smallholding under cottier tenure (the holding of not more than half an acre at a rent of not more than five pounds a year)
  • cottise — a narrow stripe that usually occurs as one of a pair, with each stripe occurring on either side of a bend, fess, or other charge, and each being one fourth of a bend in breadth
  • coulter — a blade or sharp-edged disc attached to a plough so that it cuts through the soil vertically in advance of the ploughshare
  • counted — Simple past tense and past participle of count.
  • counter — In a place such as a shop or café, a counter is a long narrow table or flat surface at which customers are served.
  • couplet — A couplet is two lines of poetry which come next to each other, especially two lines that rhyme with each other and are the same length.
  • courbet — Gustave (ɡystav). 1819–77, French painter, a leader of the realist movement; noted for his depiction of contemporary life
  • courted — Law. a place where justice is administered. a judicial tribunal duly constituted for the hearing and determination of cases. a session of a judicial assembly.
  • courter — a person who courts; a suitor
  • couteau — a large two-edged knife used formerly as a weapon
  • couther — known or acquainted with.
  • couthie — sociable; friendly; congenial
  • couture — Couture is the designing and making of expensive fashionable clothes, or the clothes themselves.
  • covelet — a small cove
  • coverts — concealed; secret; disguised.
  • coveted — You use coveted to describe something that very many people would like to have.
  • coveter — to desire wrongfully, inordinately, or without due regard for the rights of others: to covet another's property.
  • cowrite — to write (something) in collaboration with another writer
  • cowrote — Simple past tense and past participle of cowrite.
  • cowtree — a South American moraceous tree, Brosimum galactodendron, producing latex used as a substitute for milk
  • coyotes — Plural form of coyote.
  • coziest — snugly warm and comfortable: a cozy little house.
  • creator — The creator of something is the person who made it or invented it.
  • creston — a ridge on a hill that curves downwards at the ends
  • cretons — a spread of shredded pork cooked with onions in pork fat
  • crochet — Crochet is a way of making cloth out of cotton or wool by using a needle with a small hook at the end.
  • crocket — a carved ornament in the form of a curled leaf or cusp, used in Gothic architecture
  • crofter — In Scotland, a crofter is a person who lives on a croft or small farm.
  • croquet — Croquet is a game played on grass in which the players use long wooden sticks called mallets to hit balls through metal arches.
  • crotone — a town in S Italy, on the coast of Calabria: founded in about 700 bc by the Achaeans; chemical works and zinc-smelting. Pop: 60 010 (2001)
  • crownet — a coronet.
  • ctenoid — toothed like a comb, as the scales of perches
  • culotte — a pair of culottes
  • custode — a custodian
  • cutover — an area cleared of timber
  • cystose — Containing, or resembling, a cyst or cysts; cystic; bladdery.
  • decocts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of decoct.
  • decoity — Alternative form of dacoity.
  • defacto — (Australia, New Zealand) A partner in a spousal relationship not officially declared as a marriage, comparable to a common law husband or wife.
  • demotic — Demotic language is the type of informal language used by ordinary people.
  • deontic — of or relating to such ethical concepts as obligation and permissibility
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