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8-letter words containing e, c, l

  • colleger — a member of a college
  • colleges — Plural form of college.
  • collegia — Ecclesiastical. college (def 11).
  • collegue — Misspelling of colleague.
  • colleted — a collar or enclosing band.
  • colletid — (zoology) Any member of the Colletidae.
  • collette — Toni, full name Antonia Collette. born 1972, Australian film actress. Her films include Muriel's Wedding (1994), The Sixth Sense (1999) and Little Miss Sunshine (2006)
  • collided — to strike one another or one against the other with a forceful impact; come into violent contact; crash: The two cars collided with an ear-splitting crash.
  • collider — a particle accelerator in which beams of particles are made to collide
  • collides — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collide.
  • colliers — Plural form of collier.
  • colliery — A colliery is a coal mine and all the buildings and equipment which are connected with it.
  • collogue — to confer confidentially; intrigue or conspire
  • colloque — to collocate (objects or data)
  • colluded — Simple past tense and past participle of collude.
  • colluder — to act together through a secret understanding, especially with evil or harmful intent.
  • colludes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collude.
  • colocate — to locate (two or more things) together
  • cologned — Perfumed with cologne.
  • colombes — an industrial and residential suburb of NW Paris. Pop: 83 220 (2006)
  • colonels — An army officer of high rank, in particular (in the US Army, Air Force, and Marine Corps) an officer above a lieutenant colonel and below a brigadier general.
  • colonies — the subject territories formerly in the British Empire
  • colonise — to establish a colony in; settle: England colonized Australia.
  • colonize — If people colonize a foreign country, they go to live there and take control of it.
  • colorate — To apply color to something, make colourful.
  • coloreds — Plural form of colored.
  • colorize — to prepare a video version of (a black-and-white film) in which color tones have been added by means of a computer program
  • colossae — an ancient city in SW Phrygia in Asia Minor: seat of an early Christian Church
  • coloured — Something that is coloured a particular colour is that colour.
  • colourer — a person or thing that colours
  • coltrane — John (William). 1926–67, US jazz tenor and soprano saxophonist and composer
  • columnea — any plant belonging to the genus Columnea, a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Gesneriaceae, with bright red, yellow, or orange tubular flowers and glossy leaves
  • columned — Having columns.
  • combless — without a comb
  • comblike — resembling a comb
  • comeddle — to mix (two or more things) together
  • comedial — a play, movie, etc., of light and humorous character with a happy or cheerful ending; a dramatic work in which the central motif is the triumph over adverse circumstance, resulting in a successful or happy conclusion.
  • comelier — Comparative form of comely.
  • comelily — in a comely manner
  • comeling — (obsolete) A comer; (person) an arrival.
  • comingle — Alternative spelling of commingle.
  • compiled — to put together (documents, selections, or other materials) in one book or work.
  • compiler — A compiler is someone who compiles books, reports, or lists of information.
  • compiles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of compile.
  • compleat — an archaic spelling of complete, used esp in the titles of handbooks, in imitation of The Compleat Angler by Izaak Walton
  • complect — to interweave or entwine
  • complete — You use complete to emphasize that something is as great in extent, degree, or amount as it possibly can be.
  • completo — (slang) A hot dog with the works.
  • complice — an associate or accomplice
  • complied — to act or be in accordance with wishes, requests, demands, requirements, conditions, etc.; agree (sometimes followed by with): They asked him to leave and he complied. She has complied with the requirements.
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