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7-letter words containing c, o, r, n

  • conster — Obsolete spelling of construe.
  • contort — If someone's face or body contorts or is contorted, it moves into an unnatural and unattractive shape or position.
  • contour — You can refer to the general shape or outline of an object as its contours.
  • contra- — against; contrary; opposing; contrasting
  • contras — (often initial capital letter) a member of a counterrevolutionary guerrilla group in Nicaragua.
  • contree — Archaic spelling of country.
  • control — Control of an organization, place, or system is the power to make all the important decisions about the way that it is run.
  • convert — If you convert a vehicle or piece of equipment, you change it so that it can use a different fuel.
  • coowner — Someone who owns something together with one or more other people.
  • coranto — courante
  • corazon — the heart.
  • corbans — Plural form of corban.
  • corbina — a marine food fish, Menticirrhus undulatus, found in Pacific waters off Mexico and California
  • cording — a type of corded material, esp when used as a decorative trimming
  • cordons — Plural form of cordon.
  • coreign — to reign jointly
  • corinne — a feminine name
  • corinth — a port in S Greece, in the NE Peloponnese: the modern town is near the site of the ancient city, the largest and richest of the city-states after Athens. Pop (municipality): 36 991 (2001)
  • corking — excellent
  • cornage — a type of rent fixed according to the number of horned cattle pastured
  • corncob — the core of an ear of maize, to which kernels are attached
  • corndog — a sandwich consisting of a frankfurter baked or fried in corn bread and usually spread with mustard before eating: often served on a stick.
  • corneal — Corneal means relating to the cornea.
  • corneas — Plural form of cornea.
  • cornell — Ezra (ˈɛzrə ) ; ezˈrə) 1807-74; U.S. capitalist & philanthropist
  • cornels — Plural form of cornel.
  • corners — Plural form of corner.
  • cornets — Plural form of cornet.
  • cornett — a musical instrument consisting of a straight or curved tube of wood or ivory having finger holes like a recorder and a cup-shaped mouthpiece like a trumpet
  • cornfed — fed on corn
  • cornfly — a small fly of the genera Oscinis whose larvae cause swollen, gouty stems in cereal crops
  • cornice — A cornice is a strip of plaster, wood, or stone which goes along the top of a wall or building.
  • cornier — pertaining to or affected with corns of the feet.
  • cornify — (of soft tissue) to become converted into horn or hard tissue
  • cornily — in a corny manner
  • corning — Also called Indian corn; especially technical and British, maize. a tall cereal plant, Zea mays, cultivated in many varieties, having a jointed, solid stem and bearing the grain, seeds, or kernels on large ears.
  • cornish — Cornish means belonging or relating to the English county of Cornwall.
  • cornist — a person who plays the horn
  • cornrow — If someone wears their hair in cornrows, they braid their hair in parallel rows that lie flat upon their head.
  • cornual — a horn, especially a bony part that resembles a horn.
  • cornute — having or resembling cornua; hornlike
  • cornuto — a cuckold
  • coronal — a circlet for the head; crown
  • coronel — the iron head of a tilting spear, used as a lance in jousting
  • coroner — A coroner is an official who is responsible for investigating the deaths of people who have died in a sudden, violent, or unusual way.
  • coronet — A coronet is a small crown.
  • coronis — a symbol placed over a contracted syllable
  • corsned — (in Anglo-Saxon times) an ordeal whereby an accused person had to eat a morsel of bread; swallowing it without difficulty indicated innocence, and choking indicated guilt
  • cortina — the weblike part of certain mushrooms, which hangs from the edge of the pileus and consists of silky fibrils
  • cortona — a town in central Italy, in Tuscany: Roman and Etruscan remains, 15th-century cathedral. Pop: 22 048 (2001)
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