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7-letter words containing c, o, m

  • chamois — Chamois are small animals rather like goats that live in the mountains of Europe and South West Asia.
  • chamoix — an agile, goatlike antelope, Rupicapra rupicapra, of high mountains of Europe: now rare in some areas.
  • chefdom — the state or condition of being a chef
  • chelmno — a Nazi concentration camp in central Poland.
  • chemosh — a Moabite god. Jer. 48.
  • chommie — a friend, used esp by Black males and Afrikaans-speakers
  • chomped — Simple past tense and past participle of chomp.
  • chomper — a person who chomps
  • chomsky — (Avram) Noam (ˈnəʊəm). born 1928, US linguist and political critic. His theory of language structure, transformational generative grammar, superseded the behaviourist view of Leonard Bloomfield
  • chrisom — a white robe put on an infant at baptism and formerly used as a burial shroud if the infant died soon afterwards
  • chromed — Chromium-plated.
  • chromel — a nickel-based alloy containing about 10 per cent chromium, used in heating elements
  • chromic — of or containing chromium in the trivalent state
  • chromo- — indicating colour, coloured, or pigment
  • chromyl — of, consisting of, or containing the divalent radical CrO2
  • cinamon — Misspelling of cinnamon.
  • clamors — Plural form of clamor.
  • clamour — If people are clamouring for something, they are demanding it in a noisy or angry way.
  • clomped — Simple past tense and past participle of clomp.
  • clonism — a series of clonic spasms
  • clonmel — the county town of Co Tipperary, Republic of Ireland; birthplace of Laurence Sterne; meat processing and enamelware. Pop: 16 910 (2002)
  • coadmit — to admit together
  • coalman — a person who sells or delivers coal
  • coaming — a raised frame around the cockpit or hatchway of a vessel for keeping out water
  • cocomat — a mat made from coconut fibre
  • cocoyam — either of two food plants of West Africa, the taro or the yantia, both of which have edible underground stems
  • coeloms — Plural form of coelom.
  • coimbra — a city in central Portugal: capital of Portugal from 1190 to 1260; seat of the country's oldest university. Pop: 148 474 (2001)
  • coleman — Ornette (ɔːˈnɛt). (1930–2015), US avant-garde jazz alto saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist
  • colombo — the administrative capital and chief port of Sri Lanka, on the W coast, with one of the largest artificial harbours in the world. Pop: 653 000 (2005 est)
  • columba — as in Alpha Columbae. a small constellation in the S hemisphere south of Orion
  • columel — the central column in a capsule
  • columns — Plural form of column.
  • comaker — a person who, in addition to a person who is borrowing money, makes a formal promise that a loan will be repaid or a payment made to a creditor, by signing a promissory note
  • comales — a griddle made from sandstone or earthenware.
  • comatic — of, relating to, or produced by a coma
  • combats — Plural form of combat.
  • combers — Plural form of comber.
  • combine — If you combine two or more things or if they combine, they exist together.
  • combing — a toothed strip of plastic, hard rubber, bone, wood, or metal, used for arranging the hair, untangling it, or holding it in place.
  • combust — (of a star or planet) invisible for a period between 24 and 30 days each year due to its proximity to the sun
  • come at — If a person or animal comes at you, they move towards you in a threatening way and try to attack you.
  • come by — To come by something means to obtain it or find it.
  • come in — If information, a report, or a telephone call comes in, it is received.
  • come it — to pretend; act a part
  • come of — to be descended from
  • come on — You say 'Come on' to someone to encourage them to do something they do not much want to do.
  • come to — When someone who is unconscious comes to, they recover consciousness.
  • come up — If someone comes up or comes up to you, they approach you until they are standing close to you.
  • come-in — to approach or move toward a particular person or place: Come here. Don't come any closer!
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