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8-letter words containing c, o, r, l, e

  • cornelia — a feminine name
  • cornhole — to have anal intercourse with.
  • cornicle — a wax-secreting organ on an aphid's abdomen that is shaped like a horn
  • cornmeal — Cornmeal is a powder made from maize. It is used in cooking.
  • cornwell — Patricia D(aniels). born 1956, US crime novelist; her novels, many of which feature the pathologist Dr Kay Scarpetta, include Postmortem (1990), The Last Precinct (2000), and Isle of Dogs (2002)
  • coromuel — a cooling westerly breeze that flows in from the Pacific over the La Paz region of the southern Baja California peninsula of Mexico.
  • corselet — a piece of armour for the top part of the body
  • corslets — Plural form of corslet.
  • costlier — costing much; expensive; high in price: a costly emerald bracelet; costly medical care.
  • couplers — Plural form of coupler.
  • courtlet — a small court or courtyard
  • coverall — a thing that covers something entirely
  • coverlet — A coverlet is the same as a bedspread.
  • coverleySir Roger de, a literary figure representing the ideal of the early 18th-century squire in The Spectator, by Addison and Steele.
  • coverlid — coverlet
  • covertly — concealed; secret; disguised.
  • cowalker — A phantom or astral body deemed to be separable from the physical body and capable of acting independently; a doppelganger.
  • creolise — (of a pidgin language) to become the native language of a speech community
  • creolist — a student of creole languages
  • creolize — to make (a language) become a creole
  • cromlech — a circle of prehistoric standing stones
  • cromwell — Oliver. 1599–1658, English general and statesman. A convinced Puritan, he was an effective leader of the parliamentary army in the Civil War. After the execution of Charles I he quelled the Royalists in Scotland and Ireland, and became Lord Protector of the Commonwealth (1653–58)
  • cropless — without a crop or crops
  • crosslet — a cross having a smaller cross near the end of each arm
  • crousely — in a crouse manner
  • crownlet — a small crown
  • crozzled — blackened or burnt at the edges
  • cryolite — a white or colourless mineral consisting of a fluoride of sodium and aluminium in monoclinic crystalline form: used in the production of aluminium, glass, and enamel. Formula: Na3AlF6
  • dalcroze — Jaques-Dalcroze.
  • decolour — to deprive of colour, as by bleaching
  • el greco — real name Domenikos Theotocopoulos. 1541–1614, Spanish painter, born in Crete; noted for his elongated human forms and dramatic use of colour
  • electors — Plural form of elector.
  • electro- — Electro- is used to form words that refer to electricity or processes involving electricity.
  • electron — A stable subatomic particle with a charge of negative electricity, found in all atoms and acting as the primary carrier of electricity in solids.
  • electros — Plural form of electro.
  • elicitor — A person or thing that elicits.
  • encloser — (now, chiefly, historical) Someone who appropriates common land.
  • encolour — to give a colour to
  • encolure — The neck of a horse.
  • ensorcel — Alternative form of ensorcell.
  • erotical — (obsolete) Erotic.
  • escarole — An endive of a variety with broad undivided leaves and a slightly bitter flavor, used in salads.
  • escolars — Plural form of escolar.
  • escorial — a village in central Spain, northwest of Madrid: site of an architectural complex containing a monastery, palace, and college, built by Philip II between 1563 and 1584
  • falconer — a person who hunts with falcons or follows the sport of hawking.
  • firelock — a gun having a lock in which the priming is ignited by sparks struck from flint and steel, as the flintlock musket.
  • florence — Italian Firenze. a city in central Italy, on the Arno River: capital of the former grand duchy of Tuscany.
  • forcedly — enforced or compulsory: forced labor.
  • forceful — full of force; powerful; vigorous; effective: a forceful plea for peace.
  • forcible — done or effected by force: forcible entry into a house.
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