7-letter words containing e, c, o, m
- comines — Philippe de (filip də). ?1447–?1511, French diplomat and historian, noted for his Mémoires (1489–98)
- comique — a comic actor or singer
- commend — If you commend someone or something, you praise them formally.
- comment — If you comment on something, you give your opinion about it or you give an explanation for it.
- commère — female compere
- commeth — (obsolete) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of come.
- commies — (slang, pejorative, dated) Plural form of commie (communists).
- commode — A commode is a movable piece of furniture shaped like a chair, which has a large pot below or inside it. It is used as a toilet, especially by people who are too ill to be able to walk easily.
- commote — A secular division of land in mediaeval Wales.
- commove — to disturb; stir up
- commune — A commune is a group of people who live together and share everything.
- commute — If you commute, you travel a long distance every day between your home and your place of work.
- compane — (obsolete) To associate with.
- compare — When you compare things, you consider them and discover the differences or similarities between them.
- compear — to appear in court
- compeer — a person of equal rank, status, or ability; peer
- compels — Force or oblige (someone) to do something.
- compend — a compendium
- compere — A compere is the person who introduces the people taking part in a radio or television show or a live show.
- compete — If you compete in a contest or a game, you take part in it.
- compile — When you compile something such as a report, book, or programme, you produce it by collecting and putting together many pieces of information.
- complex — Something that is complex has many different parts, and is therefore often difficult to understand.
- compose — The things that something is composed of are its parts or members. The separate things that compose something are the parts or members that form it.
- compote — Compote is fruit stewed with sugar or in syrup.
- compter — a prison, esp one in which the inmates are debtors
- compute — To compute a quantity or number means to calculate it.
- comrade — Your comrades are your friends, especially friends that you share a difficult or dangerous situation with.
- con-dem — of or relating to the coalition government (2010–15) of the United Kingdom formed by the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats
- condemn — If you condemn something, you say that it is very bad and unacceptable.
- consume — If you consume something, you eat or drink it.
- contemn — to treat or regard with contempt; scorn
- coombes — Plural form of coombe.
- coprime — (mathematics, of two or more positive integers) Having no positive integer factors in common, aside from 1.
- coremia — the fruiting bodies of certain fungi, consisting of a loosely bound bundle of conidiophores.
- cosmine — a substance resembling dentine, forming the outer layer of cosmoid scales
- costume — An actor's or performer's costume is the set of clothes they wear while they are performing.
- coueism — a method of self-help stressing autosuggestion, popular especially in the U.S. c1920 and featuring the slogan “Day by day in every way I am getting better and better.”.
- cozumel — an island off NE Quintana Roo state, on the Yucatán Peninsula, in SE Mexico: tourist resort.
- cremona — a city in N Italy, in Lombardy on the River Po: noted for the manufacture of fine violins in the 16th–18th centuries. Pop: 70 887 (2001)
- crombec — any African Old World warbler of the genus Sylvietta, having colourful plumage
- decorum — Decorum is behaviour that people consider to be correct, polite, and respectable.
- demarco — Tom DeMarco proposed a form of structured analysis.
- demonic — Demonic means coming from or belonging to a demon or being like a demon.
- demotic — Demotic language is the type of informal language used by ordinary people.
- domenic — a male given name.
- dormice — any small, furry-tailed, Old World rodent of the family Gliridae, resembling small squirrels in appearance and habits.
- echoism — onomatopoeia.
- economy — thrifty management; frugality in the expenditure or consumption of money, materials, etc.
- embolic — (pathology) Of or relating to an embolus or an embolism.
- emocore — Emo (the original style of hardcore punk rock).