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9-letter words containing c, o, t, d

  • abdicator — to renounce or relinquish a throne, right, power, claim, responsibility, or the like, especially in a formal manner: The aging founder of the firm decided to abdicate.
  • abduction — the act of taking someone away by force or cunning; kidnapping
  • abductors — Plural form of abductor.
  • acanthoid — resembling a spine; spiny
  • accolated — (of portraits on a coin, medal, or escutcheon) overlapping and facing in the same direction; conjoined.
  • accordant — in conformity or harmony
  • accounted — an oral or written description of particular events or situations; narrative: an account of the meetings; an account of the trip.
  • accoutred — equipped or dressed in a particular way
  • acetaldol — aldol (def 1).
  • acrodonts — Plural form of acrodont.
  • actinopod — any protozoan of the phylum Actinopoda, such as a radiolarian or a heliozoan, having stiff radiating cytoplasmic projections
  • addiction — Addiction is the condition of taking harmful drugs and being unable to stop taking them.
  • adduction — an adducing or citing
  • adductors — Plural form of adductor.
  • adipocyte — a fat cell that accumulates and stores fats
  • adjection — Act of adjecting or adding, or the thing added.
  • advection — the transference of heat energy in a horizontal stream of gas, esp of air
  • advocated — to speak or write in favor of; support or urge by argument; recommend publicly: He advocated higher salaries for teachers.
  • advocater — Alternative form of advocator.
  • advocates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of advocate.
  • advocator — a person who advocates
  • allocated — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
  • anecdotal — Anecdotal evidence is based on individual accounts, rather than on reliable research or statistics, and so may not be valid.
  • anecdotes — a short account of a particular incident or event, especially of an interesting or amusing nature.
  • anecdotic — anecdotal
  • anecdoton — (Grecian) alternative spelling of anecdote.
  • anecdotum — (rare, Latinate) alternative spelling of anecdote.
  • anticodon — a three-base unit of genetic code contained in transfer RNA that corresponds to a codon region on messenger RNA, involved in genetic translation
  • apodictic — that can clearly be shown or proved; absolutely certain or necessarily true
  • auctioned — Also called public sale. a publicly held sale at which property or goods are sold to the highest bidder.
  • autocidal — (of insect pest control) effected by the introduction of sterile or genetically altered individuals into the wild population
  • autocoder — (language)   Possibly the first primitive compiler. AUTOCODER was written by Alick E. Glennie in 1952. It translated symbolic statements into machine language for the Manchester Mark I computer. Autocoding later came to be a generic term for assembly language programming.
  • bacteroid — resembling a bacterium
  • bad actor — a mean, ill-tempered, troublemaking, or evil person.
  • bandicoot — any agile terrestrial marsupial of the family Peramelidae of Australia and New Guinea. They have a long pointed muzzle and a long tail and feed mainly on small invertebrates
  • boat deck — the deck of a ship on which the lifeboats are kept
  • botchedly — in a botched or clumsy manner
  • broadcast — A broadcast is a programme, performance, or speech on the radio or on television.
  • byproduct — A byproduct is something that is produced during the manufacture or processing of another product.
  • byte-code — (file format, software)   A binary file containing an executable program, consisting of a sequence of (op code, data) pairs. Byte-code op codes are most often fixed size bit patterns, but can be variable size. The data portion consists of zero or more bits whose format typically depends on the op code. A byte-code program is interpreted by a byte-code interpreter. The advantage of this technique compared with outputing machine code for some particular processor is that the same byte-code can be executed on any processor on which the byte-code interpreter runs. The byte-code may be compiled to machine code ("native code") for speed of execution but this usually requires significantly greater effort for each new taraget architecture than simply porting the interpreter. For example, Java is compiled to byte-code which runs on the Java Virtual Machine.
  • caldecott — Randolph1846-86; Eng. artist & illustrator: illustrated many books for children
  • cane toad — a large toad, Rhinella marina, native to Central and South America but introduced into many countries to control insects and other pests of sugar-cane plantations
  • captioned — Simple past tense and past participle of caption.
  • card vote — a vote by delegates, esp at a trade-union conference, in which each delegate's vote counts as a vote by all his or her constituents
  • cardstock — paper stock stiff enough for the printing of business cards and similar uses.
  • cartloads — Plural form of cartload.
  • cast down — If someone is cast down by something, they are sad or worried because of it.
  • cataloged — a list or record, as of items for sale or courses at a university, systematically arranged and often including descriptive material: a stamp catalog.
  • catch dog — a dog used to help round up livestock.
  • catchword — A catchword is a word or phrase that becomes popular or well-known, for example, because it is associated with a political campaign.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with C-O-T-D. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in C-O-T-D to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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