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7-letter words containing c, o, e

  • cajoler — A person who cajoles; a flatterer.
  • cajoles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cajole.
  • caledon — a town in SE Ontario, in S Canada, near Toronto.
  • callose — a carbohydrate, a polymer of glucose, found in plants, esp in the sieve tubes
  • calomel — a colourless tasteless powder consisting chiefly of mercurous chloride, used medicinally, esp as a cathartic. Formula: Hg2Cl2
  • calorie — Calories are units used to measure the energy value of food. People who are on diets try to eat food that does not contain many calories.
  • calotte — a skullcap worn by Roman Catholic clergy
  • caloyer — a monk of the Greek Orthodox Church, esp of the Basilian Order
  • calzone — a dish of Italian origin consisting of pizza dough folded over a filling of cheese and tomatoes, herbs, ham, etc
  • camelot — (in Arthurian legend) the English town where King Arthur's palace and court were situated
  • cameron — David (William Donald). born 1966, British politician; leader of the Conservative party 2005–16; prime minister 2010–16
  • camoens — Luis Vaz de (lwiʃ vɑʃ ˈdəː). 1524–80, Portuguese epic poet; author of The Lusiads (1572)
  • camogie — a form of hurling played by women
  • camrose — a city in central Alberta, in W Canada, near Edmonton.
  • canzone — a Provençal or Italian lyric, often in praise of love or beauty
  • capcode — (telecommunications) The address of a specific pager in a paging network.
  • capello — Fabio. born 1946. Italian football player and coach; he won four Italian league titles with Milan and two Spanish league titles with Real Madrid; managed England (2008–12)
  • capotes — Plural form of capote.
  • carbone — Obsolete form of carbon.
  • care of — at the address of: written on envelopes
  • cargoes — the lading or freight of a ship, airplane, etc.
  • cariole — a small open two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle
  • carnose — fleshy
  • caroche — a stately ceremonial carriage used in the 16th and 17th centuries
  • caroled — Simple past tense and past participle of carol.
  • caroler — A carol singer.
  • caromed — Billiards, Pool. a shot in which the cue ball hits two balls in succession.
  • caromel — to convert or be converted into caramel
  • carouse — If you say that people are carousing, you mean that they are behaving very noisily and drinking a lot of alcohol as they enjoy themselves.
  • casebox — a device, similar to an abacus, for recording the cards as they are drawn from the dealing box.
  • caseose — a peptide produced by the peptic digestion of casein
  • caseous — of or like cheese
  • cassone — a highly-decorated, Italian dowry chest
  • cathode — A cathode is the negative electrode in a cell such as a battery. Compare anode.
  • cathole — one of a pair of holes in the after part of a ship through which hawsers are passed for steadying the ship or heaving astern
  • catouse — New England. a noisy disturbance; commotion.
  • cattelo — A cross between domestic cattle and buffalo.
  • caulome — the stem structure of a plant considered as a whole
  • cavetto — a concave moulding, shaped to a quarter circle in cross section
  • cecrops — (in ancient Greek tradition) the first king of Attica, represented as half-human, half-dragon
  • celadon — a type of porcelain having a greyish-green glaze: mainly Chinese
  • celaeno — one of the Pleiades
  • celeron — (processor)   Intel Corporation's trade name for its family of Pentium II microprocessors meant for use in low-end computers. The Celeron is constructed on the 0.25 micron Deschutes base. Clock rates of 266, 300 and 333 MHz are supported. It is built on the same daughterboard as the Pentium II without the black plastic case and heat sink. Four Celeron models are in production as of October 1998. The 266 and 300 MHz models are essentially Pentium II CPUs without the Level 2 cache RAM. The 300A and 333 MHz Celerons include 128k of Level 2 cache. A special mounting bracket on the motherboard is used to secure the Celeron in place in its standard 242-pin Slot 1 socket. Intel calls the caseless design SEPP (Single Edge Processor Package) to differentiate it from the Pentium II SEC (Single Edge Cartridge). Some believe that the real purpose for the different mounting configurations is to prevent users from placing lower cost processors onto Pentium II motherboards. A Celeron is about one third the cost of a similar speed Pentium II. Hardware hackers claim that the Celeron 300 without Level 2 cache could be overclocked to perform as well as a Pentium II at a fraction of the price.
  • celosia — any of several species (genus Celosia) of the amaranth family, of annual garden plants with minute, brilliant red or yellow flowers in large clusters; cockscomb
  • celotex — a type of thermal insulation board
  • cembalo — harpsichord
  • cenotes — Plural form of cenote.
  • censors — Plural form of censor.
  • centavo — a monetary unit of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Cape Verde, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Guinea-Bissau, Honduras, Mexico, Mozambique, Nicaragua, and the Philippines. It is worth one hundredth of their respective standard units
  • centimo — monetary unit of Costa Rica, Paraguay, Peru, and Venezuela
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