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9-letter words containing c, o, n, g

  • combating — to fight or contend against; oppose vigorously: to combat crime.
  • combining — the process or an act of combining two or more things
  • comingled — Simple past tense and past participle of comingle.
  • commingle — to mix or be mixed; blend
  • commixing — Present participle of commix.
  • commonage — the use of something, esp a pasture, in common with others
  • commoving — Present participle of commove.
  • communing — to partake of the Eucharist.
  • commuting — the activity of travelling some distance to work every day by car, bus, or train
  • compagnie — company.
  • comparing — Present participle of compare.
  • compering — a host, master of ceremonies, or the like, especially of a stage revue or television program.
  • competing — Competing ideas, requirements, or interests cannot all be right or satisfied at the same time.
  • compiegne — a city in N France, on the Oise River: scene of the armistice at the end of World War I (1918) and of the Franco-German armistice of 1940. Pop: 41 714 (2007)
  • compiling — Present participle of compile.
  • complying — Present participle of comply.
  • composing — Present participle of compose.
  • computing — Computing is the activity of using a computer and writing programs for it.
  • concaving — curved like a segment of the interior of a circle or hollow sphere; hollow and curved. Compare convex (def 1).
  • conceding — to acknowledge as true, just, or proper; admit: He finally conceded that she was right.
  • concierge — (Britain) One who attends to the maintenance of a building and provides services to its tenants and visitors.
  • condignly — (especially of a punishment) appropriate.
  • condoling — to express sympathy with a person who is suffering sorrow, misfortune, or grief (usually followed by with): to condole with a friend whose father has died.
  • condoning — Present participle of condone.
  • conducing — Present participle of conduce.
  • conestoga — a large, heavy, broad-wheeled covered wagon, used especially for transporting pioneers and freight across North America during the early westward migration.
  • confiding — unsuspicious; trustful
  • configure — If you configure a piece of computer equipment, you set it up so that it is ready for use.
  • confining — to enclose within bounds; limit or restrict: She confined her remarks to errors in the report. Confine your efforts to finishing the book.
  • confusing — Something that is confusing makes it difficult for people to know exactly what is happening or what to do.
  • confuting — Present participle of confute.
  • congealed — Simple past tense and past participle of congeal.
  • congeners — Plural form of congener.
  • congenial — friendly, pleasant, or agreeable
  • congeries — a collection of objects or ideas; mass; heap
  • congested — A congested road or area is extremely crowded and blocked with traffic or people.
  • congo dye — any of certain azo dyes, derived mainly from benzidine
  • congo eel — an aquatic salamander, Amphiuma means, having an eel-like body with gill slits and rudimentary limbs and inhabiting still, muddy waters in the southern US: family Amphiumidae
  • congo red — a brownish-red soluble powder, used as a dye, a diagnostic indicator, a biological stain, and a chemical indicator. Formula: C32H22N6O6S2Na2
  • congolese — of or relating to the Republic of Congo or the Democratic Republic of Congo or their inhabitants
  • congruent — If one thing is congruent with another thing, they are similar or fit together well.
  • congruity — the condition or fact of being congruous or congruent
  • congruous — corresponding or agreeing
  • conjugant — either of a pair of organisms or gametes undergoing conjugation
  • conjugate — When pupils or teachers conjugate a verb, they give its different forms in a particular order.
  • conjugial — A form of \"conjugal\" used by Swedenborg and his followers, used to distinguish their ideas about marital relations.
  • conjuring — the performance of tricks that appear to defy natural laws
  • connaught — Connacht
  • conniving — If you describe someone as conniving, you mean you dislike them because they make secret plans in order to get things for themselves or harm other people.
  • connoting — Present participle of connote.
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