7-letter words containing e, c, l, o
- octuple — eightfold; eight times as great.
- oculate — Having eyes.
- oilcake — a cake or mass of linseed, cottonseed, soybean, or the like, from which the oil has been extracted or expressed, used as food for livestock.
- oobleck — A mixture of cornstarch and water with unusual physical properties.
- opercle — an operculum, especially the posterior bone of the operculum of a fish.
- opuscle — Obsolete form of opuscule.
- oracles — (especially in ancient Greece) an utterance, often ambiguous or obscure, given by a priest or priestess at a shrine as the response of a god to an inquiry.
- osceola — 1804–38, U.S. Indian leader: chief of the Seminole tribe.
- oscheal — relating to or resembling the scrotum
- ossicle — a small bone.
- pedocal — a soil rich in carbonates, especially those of lime.
- pinocle — a popular card game played by two, three, or four persons, with a 48-card deck.
- placebo — Medicine/Medical, Pharmacology. a substance having no pharmacological effect but given merely to satisfy a patient who supposes it to be a medicine. a substance having no pharmacological effect but administered as a control in testing experimentally or clinically the efficacy of a biologically active preparation.
- placode — a local thickening of the endoderm in the embryo, that usually constitutes the primordium of a specific structure or organ.
- polacre — a three-masted sailing vessel used in the Mediterranean
- polecat — a European mammal, Mustela putorius, of the weasel family, having a blackish fur and ejecting a fetid fluid when attacked or disturbed. Compare ferret1 (def 1).
- polemic — a controversial argument, as one against some opinion, doctrine, etc.
- policer — a computer device controlling traffic
- polices — Also called police force. an organized civil force for maintaining order, preventing and detecting crime, and enforcing the laws.
- poulenc — Francis [frahn-sees] /frɑ̃ˈsis/ (Show IPA), 1899–1963, French composer and pianist.
- precool — to cool in advance; cool artificially, as meat or fresh produce, before shipping.
- re-coil — to coil anew or again
- reblock — a solid mass of wood, stone, etc., usually with one or more flat or approximately flat faces.
- reclose — to close (something) again
- recolor — the quality of an object or substance with respect to light reflected by the object, usually determined visually by measurement of hue, saturation, and brightness of the reflected light; saturation or chroma; hue.
- recolte — a harvest; crop.
- relcode — Early system on UNIVAC I or II. Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959).
- schelog — (language, Scheme, Prolog) (Previously "slog"?) A Prolog to Chez Scheme macro translator by <[email protected]>. Schelog relies on continuations.
- sclero- — indicating hardness
- scolded — to find fault with angrily; chide; reprimand: The teacher scolded me for being late.
- scowled — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
- scowler — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
- scroyle — a wretch or a mean or unfortunate person
- seconal — secobarbital
- slocken — to slake
- talcose — containing or composed largely of talc.
- telcomp — (language) A variant of JOSS.
- telecom — telecommunications.
- telomic — relating to the telome
- toeclip — an attachment on a bicycle pedal into which the toes are inserted to prevent the foot from slipping
- uccello — Paolo [pah-aw-law] /ˈpɑ ɔ lɔ/ (Show IPA), (Paolo di Dono) 1397–1475, Italian painter.
- unclose — to open or cause to open
- vacuole — a membrane-bound cavity within a cell, often containing a watery liquid or secretion.
- vocable — a word; term; name.
- volcker — Paul Adolph, born 1927, U.S. economist: Federal Reserve Board chairman 1979–87.
- wedlock — the state of marriage; matrimony.
- welcome — a kindly greeting or reception, as to one whose arrival gives pleasure: to give someone a warm welcome.
- weslaco — a city in S Texas.
- yelloch — a loud yell