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9-letter words containing e, c, l, o

  • confuzzle — (neologism, cute, childish) The state of confusion and/or being puzzled.
  • congealed — Simple past tense and past participle of congeal.
  • congenial — friendly, pleasant, or agreeable
  • congo eel — an aquatic salamander, Amphiuma means, having an eel-like body with gill slits and rudimentary limbs and inhabiting still, muddy waters in the southern US: family Amphiumidae
  • congolese — of or relating to the Republic of Congo or the Democratic Republic of Congo or their inhabitants
  • connately — In a connate fashion.
  • cons cell — (programming)   /konz sel/ or /kons sel/ A Lisp pair object containing any two objects. In Lisp, "cons" (short for "construct") is the fundamental operation for building structures such as lists and other binary trees. The application of "cons" to objects H and T is written (cons H T) and returns a pair object known as a "cons", "cons cell" or dotted pair. Typically, a cons would be stored in memory as a two consecutive pointers. The two objects in a cons, and the functions to extract them, are called "car" and "cdr" after two 15-bit fields of the machine code instruction format of the IBM 7090 that hosted the original LISP implementation. These fields were called the "address" and "decrement" parts so "car" stood for "Contents of Address part of Register" and "cdr" for "Contents of Decrement part of Register". In the typical case where the cons holds one node of a list structure, the car is the head of the list (first element) and the cdr is the tail of the list (the rest). If the list had only one element then the tail would be an empty list, represented by the cdr containing the special value "nil". To aid in working with nested structures such as lists of lists, Lisp provides functions to access the car of the car ("caar"), the car of the cdr ("cadr"), the cdr of the car ("cdar") and the cdr of the cdr ("cddr").
  • consolate — to console (a person)
  • consolers — Plural form of consoler.
  • consolute — (of two or more liquids) mutually soluble in all proportions
  • constable — In Britain and some other countries, a constable is a police officer of the lowest rank.
  • consulage — a duty paid by merchants for a consul's protection of their goods while abroad
  • consulate — A consulate is the place where a consul works.
  • consulted — to seek advice or information from; ask guidance from: Consult your lawyer before signing the contract.
  • consultee — a person or organization that is consulted
  • consulter — One who consults, or asks counsel or information.
  • contently — satisfied with what one is or has; not wanting more or anything else.
  • controled — Misspelling of controlled.
  • controlee — (informal, UK) A person who is the subject of a control order.
  • contumely — scornful or insulting language or behaviour
  • convolute — to form into a twisted, coiled, or rolled shape
  • convolved — Simple past tense and past participle of convolve.
  • convolves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of convolve.
  • convulsed — to shake violently; agitate.
  • convulses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of convulse.
  • coolhouse — a greenhouse in which a cool temperature is maintained
  • copiloted — Simple past tense and past participle of copilot.
  • copolymer — a chemical compound of high molecular weight formed by uniting the molecules of two or more different compounds (monomers)
  • coprolite — any of various rounded stony nodules thought to be the fossilized faeces of Palaeozic-Cenozoic vertebrates
  • copulated — Simple past tense and past participle of copulate.
  • copulates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of copulate.
  • coquilles — any of various seafood or chicken dishes baked with a sauce and usually served in a scallop shell or a shell-shaped serving dish.
  • coral sea — the SW arm of the Pacific, between Australia, New Guinea, and Vanuatu
  • coralline — of, relating to, or resembling coral
  • corallite — the skeleton of a coral polyp
  • corbeille — corbeil.
  • corbeling — the fashioning of corbels
  • corbelled — any bracket, especially one of brick or stone, usually of slight extent.
  • cordately — In a cordate form.
  • cordelier — a Franciscan friar of the order of the Friars Minor
  • cordyline — any of various trees or shrubs of the genus Cordyline that are native to eastern Asia, Australasia, and Polynesia
  • core leak — memory leak
  • core loss — Core loss is the loss that occurs in a magnetic core due to alternating magnetization, which is the sum of the hysteresis loss and the eddy current loss.
  • core tool — a stone tool with a cutting edge, as a hand ax, chopper, or scraper, formed by chipping away flakes from a core.
  • corelated — to correlate.
  • corn belt — region in the NC plains area of the Midwest where much corn and cornfed livestock are raised: it extends from W Ohio to E Nebr. and NE Kans.
  • corn meal — meal made from maize
  • corneille — Pierre (pjɛr). 1606–84, French tragic dramatist often regarded as the founder of French classical drama. His plays include Médée (1635), Le Cid (1636), Horace (1640), and Polyeucte (1642)
  • cornelian — carnelian
  • cornelius — a masculine name: fem. Cornelia
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