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13-letter words containing c, r, l

  • councilmember — a member of a council, especially a legislative council.
  • councilperson — a member of a city or local legislative council.
  • counselorship — The function and rank or office of a counselor.
  • counter table — a medieval English table having a top divided into appropriately marked spaces for various denominations of money.
  • counterblasts — Plural form of counterblast.
  • counterclaims — Plural form of counterclaim.
  • counterfeitly — in a counterfeit manner
  • countermelody — a secondary melody that accompanies the primary melody
  • counterplayer — a person who makes a counterplay
  • countervailed — Simple past tense and past participle of countervail.
  • country blues — acoustic folk blues with a guitar accompaniment
  • countrypeople — countryfolk.
  • court martial — A court martial is a trial in a military court of a member of the armed forces who is charged with breaking a military law.
  • court plaster — a plaster, composed of isinglass on silk, formerly used to cover superficial wounds
  • court-martial — a court consisting of military or naval personnel appointed by a commander to try charges of offenses by soldiers, sailors, etc., against military or naval law.
  • courtesy call — a formal visit
  • coventry bell — a perennial garden plant, Campanula trachelium, of Eurasia, having coarsely toothed leaves and bluish-purple flowers.
  • coxwell chair — Cogswell chair.
  • crack a smile — to break into a smile
  • crackle china — porcelain or pottery with intentional crazing
  • cradle scythe — cradle (def 4b).
  • craftsmanlike — Resembling or characteristic of a craftsman.
  • cramer's rule — a method involving the determinant of the coefficients, for calculating a unique solution for a given system of linear equations.
  • cranial index — the ratio of the greatest length to the greatest width of the cranium, multiplied by 100: used in comparative anthropology
  • cranial nerve — any of the 12 paired nerves that have their origin in the brain and reach the periphery through natural openings in the skull
  • crapulousness — The state or quality of being crapulous.
  • crash blossom — an ambiguously worded headline whose meaning can be interpreted in the wrong way, as “Missing Woman Remains Found.”. See also garden-path.
  • crash landing — aircraft: emergency descent
  • crassulaceous — of, relating to, or belonging to the Crassulaceae, a family of herbaceous or shrubby flowering plants with fleshy succulent leaves, including the houseleeks and stonecrops
  • crayola books — (publication)   A humorous and/or disparaging term for the rainbow series of National Computer Security Center (NCSC) computer security standards. See also Orange Book.
  • cream-colored — yellowish-white
  • credentialing — Usually, credentials. evidence of authority, status, rights, entitlement to privileges, or the like, usually in written form: Only those with the proper credentials are admitted.
  • credentialism — a tendency to value formal qualifications, esp at the expense of competence and experience
  • credentialled — having credentials
  • credibilities — the quality of being believable or worthy of trust: After all those lies, his credibility was at a low ebb.
  • creditability — bringing or deserving credit, honor, reputation, or esteem.
  • credulousness — willing to believe or trust too readily, especially without proper or adequate evidence; gullible.
  • creepy-crawly — You can refer to insects as creepy-crawlies when they give you a feeling of fear or disgust. This word is mainly used by children.
  • crème caramel — a dessert made of eggs, sugar, milk, etc, topped with caramel
  • cremorne bolt — (on a French window or the like) a pair of rods, moved by a knob mechanism, sliding into sockets in the head and sill of the opening to provide a secure fastening.
  • crenellations — the battlements on a building
  • creole tomato — cherry tomato.
  • crevalle jack — any of various portable devices for raising or lifting heavy objects short heights, using various mechanical, pneumatic, or hydraulic methods.
  • cricket table — a three-legged table of the Jacobean period.
  • criminal code — the body of laws regulating how crimes are to be punished
  • criminalising — Present participle of criminalise.
  • criminalities — Plural form of criminality.
  • criminalizing — Present participle of criminalize.
  • criminologist — the study of crime and criminals: a branch of sociology.
  • crinicultural — of or relating to hair growth
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