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7-letter words containing c, o, u, e, i

  • comique — a comic actor or singer
  • copihue — an evergreen climber, Lapageria rosea, that is found in southern Chile and has red flowers and edible fruit
  • coueism — a method of self-help stressing autosuggestion, popular especially in the U.S. c1920 and featuring the slogan “Day by day in every way I am getting better and better.”.
  • courier — A courier is a person who is paid to take letters and parcels direct from one place to another.
  • couthie — sociable; friendly; congenial
  • doucine — a type of moulding of the cornice
  • ice-out — the breaking up of ice on lakes and streams during spring thaw.
  • leichou — a peninsula of SW Guangdong province, in SE China, between the South China Sea and the Gulf of Tonkin. About 75 miles (120 km) long; about 30 miles (48 km) wide.
  • nourice — a nurse.
  • piceous — of, relating to, or resembling pitch.
  • ricoeur — Paul (pɔl) 1913–2005, French philosopher, noted for his work on theories of interpretation. His books include Philosophy of the Will (3 vols, 1950–60), Freud and Philosophy (1965), and The Living Metaphor (1975)
  • scourie — a young seagull
  • unicode — 1.   (character)   A 16-bit character set standard, designed and maintained by the non-profit consortium Unicode Inc. Originally Unicode was designed to be universal, unique, and uniform, i.e., the code was to cover all major modern written languages (universal), each character was to have exactly one encoding (unique), and each character was to be represented by a fixed width in bits (uniform). Parallel to the development of Unicode an ISO/IEC standard was being worked on that put a large emphasis on being compatible with existing character codes such as ASCII or ISO Latin 1. To avoid having two competing 16-bit standards, in 1992 the two teams compromised to define a common character code standard, known both as Unicode and BMP. Since the merger the character codes are the same but the two standards are not identical. The ISO/IEC standard covers only coding while Unicode includes additional specifications that help implementation. Unicode is not a glyph encoding. The same character can be displayed as a variety of glyphs, depending not only on the font and style, but also on the adjacent characters. A sequence of characters can be displayed as a single glyph or a character can be displayed as a sequence of glyphs. Which will be the case, is often font dependent. See also Jörgen Bettels and F. Avery Bishop's paper Unicode: A universal character code. 2.   (language)   A pre-Fortran on the IBM 1130, similar to MATH-MATIC.
  • unvoice — to pronounce without vibration of the vocal cords

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with C-O-U-E-I. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in C-O-U-E-I to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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