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6-letter words containing c, o, n

  • connorRalph (Charles William Gordon) 1860–1937, Canadian novelist and clergyman.
  • conoid — a geometric surface formed by rotating a parabola, ellipse, or hyperbola about one axis
  • conque — Alternative spelling of conch.
  • conrad — Joseph. real name Teodor Josef Konrad Korzeniowski. 1857–1924, British novelist born in Poland, noted for sea stories such as The Nigger of the Narcissus (1897) and Lord Jim (1900) and novels of politics and revolution such as Nostromo (1904) and Under Western Eyes (1911)
  • conroe — a town in E Texas.
  • conses — Plural form of cons.
  • consol — an irredeemable British government security carrying an annual interest rate of two and a half or four per cent
  • const. — constant
  • constr — construction
  • consul — A consul is an official who is sent by his or her government to live in a foreign city in order to look after all the people there that belong to his or her own country.
  • contex — (obsolete, transitive) To context.
  • contig — (genetics) A set of overlapping DNA segments, derived from a single source of genetic material, from which the complete sequence may be deduced.
  • contra — against
  • conure — any of various small American parrots of the genus Aratinga and related genera
  • convex — Convex is used to describe something that curves outwards in the middle.
  • convey — To convey information or feelings means to cause them to be known or understood by someone.
  • convoy — A convoy is a group of vehicles or ships travelling together.
  • conwayThomas, 1735–1800? Irish soldier of fortune in America and India.
  • cooing — the act of making a gentle low noise
  • cooned — Simple past tense and past participle of coon.
  • cooner — coon dog.
  • coowns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of coown.
  • copine — Any of a group of highly conserved, calcium-dependent membrane proteins found in a variety of eukaryotes.
  • coping — the sloping top course of a wall, usually made of masonry or brick
  • coppin — a conical roll of thread wound on a spindle
  • corant — A coranto (kind of dance).
  • corban — a gift to God
  • corbin — Margaret (Cochran) 1751–1800, American Revolutionary military heroine.
  • corbyn — Jeremy (Bernard). born 1949, British politician; leader of the Labour Party from 2015
  • cordon — A cordon is a line or ring of police, soldiers, or vehicles preventing people from entering or leaving an area.
  • coring — Coring is taking a cylindrical sample of a reservoir using a special drill bit and barrel.
  • cornea — The cornea is the transparent skin covering the outside of your eye.
  • corned — (esp of beef) cooked and then preserved or pickled in salt or brine, now often canned
  • cornel — any cornaceous plant of the genus Cornus, such as the dogwood and dwarf cornel
  • corner — A corner is a point or an area where two or more edges, sides, or surfaces of something join.
  • cornet — A cornet is a musical instrument of the brass family that looks like a small trumpet.
  • cornin — (organic compound) A bitter principle obtained from dogwood (Cornus florida), as a white crystalline substance; cornic acid.
  • cornua — a horn, especially a bony part that resembles a horn.
  • cornus — any member of the genus Cornus, such as dogwood
  • corona — The sun's corona is its outer atmosphere.
  • corrin — (chemistry) a molecular species that contains four reduced pyrrole rings joined in a macrocycle by three -CH= groups and one direct bond; central to the cobalt containing vitamin cobalamin.
  • cortin — an adrenal cortex extract containing cortisone and other hormones
  • coruna — a seaport in NW Spain.
  • corwin — Norman (Lewis) 1910–2011, U.S. radio and stage dramatist and novelist.
  • cosign — to sign (a document) jointly
  • cosine — a trigonometric function that in a right-angled triangle is the ratio of the length of the adjacent side to that of the hypotenuse; the sine of the complement
  • costen — (transitive, obsolete) To try; tempt.
  • coting — to pass by; outstrip; surpass.
  • cotman — John Sell. 1782–1842, English landscape watercolourist and etcher
  • cotton — Cotton is a type of cloth made from soft fibres from a particular plant.
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