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7-letter words containing c, u, t, e

  • coquets — Plural form of coquet.
  • cornute — having or resembling cornua; hornlike
  • costume — An actor's or performer's costume is the set of clothes they wear while they are performing.
  • coulter — a blade or sharp-edged disc attached to a plough so that it cuts through the soil vertically in advance of the ploughshare
  • counted — Simple past tense and past participle of count.
  • counter — In a place such as a shop or café, a counter is a long narrow table or flat surface at which customers are served.
  • couplet — A couplet is two lines of poetry which come next to each other, especially two lines that rhyme with each other and are the same length.
  • courbet — Gustave (ɡystav). 1819–77, French painter, a leader of the realist movement; noted for his depiction of contemporary life
  • courted — Law. a place where justice is administered. a judicial tribunal duly constituted for the hearing and determination of cases. a session of a judicial assembly.
  • courter — a person who courts; a suitor
  • couteau — a large two-edged knife used formerly as a weapon
  • couther — known or acquainted with.
  • couthie — sociable; friendly; congenial
  • couture — Couture is the designing and making of expensive fashionable clothes, or the clothes themselves.
  • creatur — Obsolete spelling of creature.
  • crewcut — very short haircut
  • croquet — Croquet is a game played on grass in which the players use long wooden sticks called mallets to hit balls through metal arches.
  • crudest — in a raw or unprepared state; unrefined or natural: crude sugar.
  • cruelty — Cruelty is behaviour that deliberately causes pain or distress to people or animals.
  • crufted — cruft
  • crumpet — Crumpets are round, flat pieces of a substance like bread or batter with small holes in them. You toast them and eat them with butter.
  • crusted — If something is crusted with a substance, it is covered with a hard or thick layer of that substance.
  • crutzenPaul, born 1933, Dutch meteorologist and chemist: Nobel Prize 1995.
  • cuittle — to wheedle; coax
  • culotte — a pair of culottes
  • culters — Plural form of culter.
  • culture — Culture consists of activities such as the arts and philosophy, which are considered to be important for the development of civilization and of people's minds.
  • culvert — A culvert is a water pipe or sewer that crosses under a road or railway.
  • cumbent — lying down; recumbent
  • cumulet — a variety of domestic fancy pigeon, pure white or white with light red markings
  • cuneate — wedge-shaped: cuneate leaves are attached at the narrow end
  • cunette — a small trench dug in the main ditch of a fortification, acting as both a drain and an obstacle to attackers
  • cup tie — In sports, especially football, a cup tie is a match between two teams who are taking part in a competition in which the prize is a cup.
  • cuprate — (inorganic chemistry) Any of several non-stoichiometric compounds, of general formula XYCumOn, many of which are superconductors.
  • cuprite — a red secondary mineral consisting of cuprous oxide in cubic crystalline form: a source of copper. Formula: Cu2O
  • curated — Chiefly British. a member of the clergy employed to assist a rector or vicar.
  • curates — Plural form of curate.
  • curette — a surgical instrument for removing dead tissue, growths, etc, from the walls of certain body cavities
  • current — A current is a steady and continuous flowing movement of some of the water in a river, lake, or sea.
  • curtate — shortened
  • curtesy — the tenure that a widower holds over the property of his deceased wife
  • curtsey — A small bow, generally performed by a woman or a girl, where she crosses one calf of her leg behind the other and briefly bends her knees and lowers her body in deference.
  • curvate — curved in form
  • curvets — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of curvet.
  • cuspate — having a cusp or cusps
  • custode — a custodian
  • custrel — a servant or attendant to a knight or man-at-arms
  • cutesie — forcedly and consciously cute; coyly mannered: cutesy greeting cards, with animals peeking from behind flowers.
  • cuticle — Your cuticles are the skin at the base of each of your fingernails.
  • cutlers — Plural form of cutler.
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