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9-letter words containing c, o, n, s, e

  • comfiness — the feeling or quality of being comfortable
  • commences — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of commence.
  • commensal — (of two different species of plant or animal) living in close association, such that one species benefits without harming the other
  • commoners — Plural form of commoner.
  • commonest — belonging equally to, or shared alike by, two or more or all in question: common property; common interests.
  • commonise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of commonize.
  • communise — (British spelling) alternative spelling of communize.
  • companies — Plural form of company.
  • conceives — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of conceive.
  • concensus — Misspelling of consensus.
  • concentus — a concent
  • conceptus — any of various products of conception, including the embryo, fetus, and surrounding tissue
  • concertos — Plural form of concerto.
  • concessor — A person who concedes.
  • concestor — The last common ancestor, whether of several individuals, species or genes.
  • concisely — expressing or covering much in few words; brief in form but comprehensive in scope; succinct; terse: a concise explanation of the company's retirement plan.
  • conclaves — A private meeting.
  • concludes — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
  • concourse — A concourse is a wide hall in a public building, for example a hotel, airport, or station.
  • concretes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of concrete.
  • concussed — If someone is concussed, they lose consciousness or feel sick or confused because they have been hit hard on the head.
  • concusses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of concuss.
  • condensed — A condensed book, explanation, or piece of information has been made shorter, usually by including only the most important parts.
  • condenser — A condenser is a device that cools gases into liquids.
  • condenses — to make more dense or compact; reduce the volume or extent of; concentrate.
  • condensor — Misspelling of condenser.
  • conestoga — a large, heavy, broad-wheeled covered wagon, used especially for transporting pioneers and freight across North America during the early westward migration.
  • conferees — Plural form of conferee.
  • confessed — You use confessed to describe someone who openly admits that they have a particular fault or have done something wrong.
  • confesser — Alternative form of confessor.
  • confesses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of confess.
  • confessio — (legal) A confession; A defense of one's faith, or a confession of guilt.
  • confessor — A confessor is a priest who hears a person's confession.
  • confiseur — a confectioner
  • conflates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of conflate.
  • confluxes — Plural form of conflux.
  • confreres — Plural form of confrere.
  • congeners — Plural form of congener.
  • congeries — a collection of objects or ideas; mass; heap
  • congested — A congested road or area is extremely crowded and blocked with traffic or people.
  • congolese — of or relating to the Republic of Congo or the Democratic Republic of Congo or their inhabitants
  • conjurers — Plural form of conjurer.
  • connivers — to cooperate secretly; conspire (often followed by with): They connived to take over the business.
  • conoscope — a polarizing microscope for giving interference figures and for determining the principal axis of a crystal.
  • conquests — Plural form of conquest.
  • cons cell — (programming)   /konz sel/ or /kons sel/ A Lisp pair object containing any two objects. In Lisp, "cons" (short for "construct") is the fundamental operation for building structures such as lists and other binary trees. The application of "cons" to objects H and T is written (cons H T) and returns a pair object known as a "cons", "cons cell" or dotted pair. Typically, a cons would be stored in memory as a two consecutive pointers. The two objects in a cons, and the functions to extract them, are called "car" and "cdr" after two 15-bit fields of the machine code instruction format of the IBM 7090 that hosted the original LISP implementation. These fields were called the "address" and "decrement" parts so "car" stood for "Contents of Address part of Register" and "cdr" for "Contents of Decrement part of Register". In the typical case where the cons holds one node of a list structure, the car is the head of the list (first element) and the cdr is the tail of the list (the rest). If the list had only one element then the tail would be an empty list, represented by the cdr containing the special value "nil". To aid in working with nested structures such as lists of lists, Lisp provides functions to access the car of the car ("caar"), the car of the cdr ("cadr"), the cdr of the car ("cdar") and the cdr of the cdr ("cddr").
  • consarned — confounded; damned.
  • conscient — conscious
  • conscribe — to conscript
  • consenses — Plural form of consense.
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