0%

7-letter words containing c, y

  • beckley — a city in SW West Virginia.
  • bicycle — A bicycle is a vehicle with two wheels which you ride by sitting on it and pushing two pedals with your feet. You steer it by turning a bar that is connected to the front wheel.
  • blackly — drearily; gloomily
  • blotchy — Something that is blotchy has blotches on it.
  • bockedy — (of a structure, piece of furniture, etc) unsteady
  • boychik — (esp in Jewish usage) a term of endearment for a boy or young man
  • boycott — If a country, group, or person boycotts a country, organization, or activity, they refuse to be involved with it in any way because they disapprove of it.
  • brachy- — indicating something short
  • buckeye — any of several North American trees of the genus Aesculus, esp A. glabra (Ohio buckeye), having erect clusters of white or red flowers and prickly fruits: family Hippocastanaceae
  • buckleyWilliam F., Jr. 1925–2008, U.S. writer and editor.
  • bucyrus — a city in N central Ohio.
  • butyric — of or obtained from butter
  • buyback — an agreement to buy something in return, as by a supplier to buy its customer's product
  • buycott — a type of protest aimed at a company or country with dubious ethical standards in which consumers buy the products of another company or country
  • bycoket — a type of high-crowned hat
  • byplace — a private place
  • byronic — of, like, or characteristic of Byron or his writings; romantic, passionate, cynical, ironic, etc.
  • cabbagy — having the characteristics of the cabbage as in odor, taste, or color; cabbagelike.
  • cachexy — (medicine, archaic) Cachexia.
  • cacodyl — an oily poisonous liquid with a strong garlic smell; tetramethyldiarsine. Formula: [(CH3)2As]2
  • cacoepy — bad or mistaken pronunciation
  • caconym — an erroneous name, esp in taxonomic classification
  • cadbury — George. 1839–1922, British Quaker industrialist and philanthropist. He established, with his brother Richard Cadbury (1835–99), the chocolate-making company Cadbury Brothers and the garden village Bournville, near Birmingham, for their workers
  • cadency — the line of descent from a younger member of a family
  • calcify — to convert or be converted into lime
  • calgary — a city in Canada, in S Alberta: centre of a large agricultural region; oilfields. Pop: 879 277 (2001)
  • callboy — a person who notifies actors when it is time to go on stage
  • caloyer — a monk of the Greek Orthodox Church, esp of the Basilian Order
  • calumny — Calumny or a calumny is an untrue statement made about someone in order to reduce other people's respect and admiration for them.
  • calvary — a representation of Christ's crucifixion, usually sculptured and in the open air
  • calyces — calyx
  • calycle — a cup-shaped structure, as in the coral skeleton
  • calydon — ancient city in S Aetolia, central Greece
  • calypso — A calypso is a song about a current subject, sung in a style which originally comes from the West Indies.
  • calyxes — Botany. the outermost group of floral parts; the sepals.
  • camelry — the part of an army composed of troops mounted on camels
  • campery — campness
  • campily — in a campy manner
  • cankery — having a canker or cankers
  • cannery — A cannery is a factory where food is canned.
  • cannily — in a canny manner
  • canonry — the office, benefice, or status of a canon
  • cantily — In a canty manner.
  • canyons — Plural form of canyon.
  • capably — having power and ability; efficient; competent: a capable instructor.
  • caprify — to induce (a fig) to ripen
  • caraway — Caraway is a plant with strong-tasting seeds that are used in cooking. Caraway seeds are often used to flavour bread and cakes.
  • carboys — Plural form of carboy.
  • carlyle — Robert. born 1961, Scottish actor; his work includes the television series Cracker and Hamish Macbeth and the films Trainspotting (1996), The Full Monty (1997), The Beach (2000), and 28 Weeks Later (2007)
  • carnify — (esp of lung tissue, as the result of pneumonia) to be altered so as to resemble skeletal muscle
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?