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7-letter words containing c, o, r

  • clobber — You can refer to someone's possessions, especially their clothes, as their clobber.
  • clocker — a person who times racehorses during tryouts to determine their speed.
  • clogger — a clogmaker
  • cloners — Plural form of cloner.
  • clopper — (My Little Pony fandom slang) One who engages in clopping.
  • closers — Plural form of closer.
  • closure — The closure of a place such as a business or factory is the permanent ending of the work or activity there.
  • clotbur — the burdock
  • clotter — to clot
  • cloture — closure in the US Senate
  • clouder — a visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth's surface.
  • clouter — a blow, especially with the hand; cuff: The bully gave him a painful clout on the head.
  • clovers — Plural form of clover.
  • clovery — relating to clover; covered in clover
  • clowder — a collective term for a group of cats
  • co-star — An actor's or actress's co-stars are the other actors or actresses who also have one of the main parts in a particular film.
  • coacher — a person who coaches; a coach.
  • coactor — one of two or more people or species that interact
  • coalers — Plural form of coaler.
  • coarsen — If something coarsens or is coarsened, it becomes thicker or rougher in texture.
  • coarser — composed of relatively large parts or particles: The beach had rough, coarse sand.
  • coaster — A coaster is a small mat that you put underneath a glass or cup to protect the surface of a table.
  • coaters — Plural form of coater.
  • cobbers — Plural form of cobber.
  • cobbler — A cobbler is a person whose job is to make or mend shoes.
  • cobourg — a piece-dyed or printed twill dress fabric or lining cloth.
  • cochair — to chair jointly
  • cochere — Used only in the term porte-cochere.
  • cochranJacqueline, 1910?–80, U.S. aviator.
  • cockers — Plural form of cocker.
  • cockier — Comparative form of cocky.
  • cockler — a person employed to gather cockles from the seashore
  • cod war — any of three disputes that occurred in 1958, 1972–73, and 1975–76 between Britain and Iceland, concerning Iceland's unilateral extension of her fishing limits
  • coddler — to treat tenderly; nurse or tend indulgently; pamper: to coddle children when they're sick.
  • codgers — Plural form of codger.
  • coehorn — a type of small artillery mortar
  • coerced — to compel by force, intimidation, or authority, especially without regard for individual desire or volition: They coerced him into signing the document.
  • coercer — to compel by force, intimidation, or authority, especially without regard for individual desire or volition: They coerced him into signing the document.
  • coerces — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of coerce.
  • coerect — to erect together
  • coexert — to exert together
  • coffers — a store of money
  • coffret — a small coffer
  • cogener — a congener
  • coheirs — a joint heir.
  • cohered — Simple past tense and past participle of cohere.
  • coherer — an electrical component formerly used to detect radio waves, consisting of a tube containing loosely packed metal particles. The waves caused the particles to cohere, thereby changing the current through the circuit
  • coheres — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cohere.
  • cohorts — Plural form of cohort.
  • coimbra — a city in central Portugal: capital of Portugal from 1190 to 1260; seat of the country's oldest university. Pop: 148 474 (2001)
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