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
- buckley — William 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