7-letter words containing c, t
- clotbur — the burdock
- clothed — If you are clothed in a certain way, you are dressed in that way.
- clothes — Clothes are the things that people wear, such as shirts, coats, trousers, and dresses.
- clotted — a mass or lump.
- clotter — to clot
- cloture — closure in the US Senate
- clouted — a blow, especially with the hand; cuff: The bully gave him a painful clout on the head.
- clouter — a blow, especially with the hand; cuff: The bully gave him a painful clout on the head.
- cluebat — (computing slang) A bat (club) with which someone clueless is (figuratively or in one's imagination) struck.
- cluster — A cluster of people or things is a small group of them close together.
- clutchy — (of a person) tending to cling
- clutter — Clutter is a lot of things in an untidy state, especially things that are not useful or necessary.
- clyster — an enema
- clytius — (in the Iliad) a brother of Priam killed by Hercules.
- co-host — a person who co-hosts.
- 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.
- coactor — one of two or more people or species that interact
- coadmit — to admit together
- coagent — an associate
- coapted — to bring close together: The surgeons coapted the edges of the wound.
- coastal — Coastal is used to refer to things that are in the sea or on the land near a coast.
- coasted — Simple past tense and past participle of coast.
- coaster — A coaster is a small mat that you put underneath a glass or cup to protect the surface of a table.
- coatees — Plural form of coatee.
- coaters — Plural form of coater.
- coating — A coating of a substance is a thin layer of it spread over a surface.
- cobbett — William. 1763–1835, English journalist and social reformer; founded The Political Register (1802); author of Rural Rides (1830)
- cobnuts — Plural form of cobnut.
- cockpit — In an aeroplane or racing car, the cockpit is the part where the pilot or driver sits.
- cocomat — a mat made from coconut fibre
- coconut — A coconut is a very large nut with a hairy shell, which has white flesh and milky juice inside it.
- cocotte — a small fireproof dish in which individual portions of food are cooked and served
- cocteau — Jean (ʒɑ̃). 1889–1963, French dramatist, novelist, poet, critic, designer, and film director. His works include the novel Les Enfants terribles (1929) and the play La Machine infernale (1934)
- coctile — made by exposing to heat
- coction — the act of boiling
- cocytus — the river of wailing, a tributary of the Acheron in Hades
- cod-act — to play tricks; fool
- codetta — a short coda
- coenact — to enact jointly
- coerect — to erect together
- coesite — a form of silicon dioxide produced when high pressure and temperature are applied to quartz
- coetzee — J(ohn) M(ichael). born 1940, South African novelist: his works include Life and Times of Michael K (1983), which won the Booker Prize, Age of Iron (1990), Disgrace (1999), which won his second Booker Prize, and Elizabeth Costello (2003); Nobel prize for literature (2003)
- coexert — to exert together
- coexist — If one thing coexists with another, they exist together at the same time or in the same place. You can also say that two things coexist.
- coffret — a small coffer
- cognate — Cognate things are related to each other.
- cohabit — If two people are cohabiting, they are living together and have a sexual relationship, but are not married.
- cohibit — to restrain (a person)
- cohorts — Plural form of cohort.
- cointer — to bury together