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7-letter words containing c, o, l, s

  • occults — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of occult.
  • ocellus — a type of simple eye common to invertebrates, consisting of retinal cells, pigments, and nerve fibers.
  • ocelots — Plural form of ocelot.
  • oculars — Plural form of ocular.
  • oculist — ophthalmologist.
  • oilcans — Plural form of oilcan.
  • opuscle — Obsolete form of opuscule.
  • oracles — (especially in ancient Greece) an utterance, often ambiguous or obscure, given by a priest or priestess at a shrine as the response of a god to an inquiry.
  • orchils — Plural form of orchil.
  • osceola — 1804–38, U.S. Indian leader: chief of the Seminole tribe.
  • oscheal — relating to or resembling the scrotum
  • oscular — pertaining to an osculum.
  • osculum — a small mouthlike aperture, as of a sponge.
  • ossicle — a small bone.
  • polices — Also called police force. an organized civil force for maintaining order, preventing and detecting crime, and enforcing the laws.
  • proclus — a.d. c411–485, Greek philosopher and theologian.
  • reclose — to close (something) again
  • salchow — a jump in which the skater leaps from the back inside edge of one skate, making one full rotation of the body in the air, and lands on the back outside edge of the other skate.
  • scallop — any of the bivalve mollusks of the genus Argopecten (Pecten) and related genera that swim by rapidly clapping the fluted shell valves together.
  • schelog — (language, Scheme, Prolog)   (Previously "slog"?) A Prolog to Chez Scheme macro translator by <[email protected]>. Schelog relies on continuations.
  • schlock — Also, schlocky. cheap; trashy: a schlock store.
  • schlong — the penis.
  • schloss — a castle or palace.
  • scholar — a learned or erudite person, especially one who has profound knowledge of a particular subject.
  • schools — a large number of fish, porpoises, whales, or the like, feeding or migrating together.
  • sciolto — (of a piece of music) to be played freely and easily
  • sclero- — indicating hardness
  • scolded — to find fault with angrily; chide; reprimand: The teacher scolded me for being late.
  • scolion — a song sung at banquets in ancient Greece.
  • scollop — (in Ireland) a rod, pointed at both ends, used to pin down thatch
  • scopula — a dense tuft of hairs, as on the feet of certain spiders.
  • scowled — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
  • scowler — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
  • scroyle — a wretch or a mean or unfortunate person
  • seconal — secobarbital
  • shlocky — schlock (def 1).
  • shylock — a relentless and revengeful moneylender in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice.
  • silico- — silicon, silica
  • silicon — a nonmetallic element, having amorphous and crystalline forms, occurring in a combined state in minerals and rocks and constituting more than one fourth of the earth's crust: used in steelmaking, alloys, etc. Symbol: Si; atomic weight: 28.086; atomic number: 14; specific gravity: 2.4 at 20°C.
  • sillock — a young coalfish
  • slocken — to slake
  • slouchy — of or relating to a slouch or to a slouching manner, posture, etc.
  • sociol. — sociology
  • solicit — to seek for (something) by entreaty, earnest or respectful request, formal application, etc.: He solicited aid from the minister.
  • splotch — a large, irregular spot; blot; stain; blotch.
  • stoical — impassive; characterized by a calm, austere fortitude befitting the Stoics: a stoical sufferer.
  • subcool — to cool (liquid) to a temperature lower than the temperature it was when it condensed into steam
  • talcose — containing or composed largely of talc.
  • unclose — to open or cause to open
  • weslaco — a city in S Texas.
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