10-letter words containing e, o, c, n
- cordonbleu — any of several small African finches of the genus Uraeginthus, having pale blue and buff plumage and commonly kept as cage birds.
- cordwainer — a shoemaker or worker in cordovan leather
- coregonine — relating to fish of the genus Coregonus of the family Coregonidae, which are also known as whitefish
- corelation — a correlation
- coresident — one of two or more computer programs stored in a computer memory simultaneously
- corn borer — the larva of a European moth (Ostrinia nubilalis), now a destructive pest in the U.S., feeding on corn and other plants
- corn bread — a baked or fried flat bread made with cornmeal and, variously, milk or water, flour, eggs, sugar, etc.
- corn crake — a short-billed Eurasian rail, Crex crex, frequenting grainfields.
- corn snake — a large, harmless rat snake, Elaphe guttata guttata, of the southeastern U.S., having yellow, tan, or gray scales with dark-red blotches: once common in cornfields but now an endangered species.
- cornaceous — of, relating to, or belonging to the Cornaceae, a family of temperate plants, mostly trees and shrubs, including dogwood, cornel, and spotted laurel
- corncockle — a European caryophyllaceous plant, Agrostemma githago, that has reddish-purple flowers and grows in cornfields and by roadsides
- corncrakes — Plural form of corncrake.
- corndodger — a small cake of cornmeal, baked or fried hard
- cornerback — a defensive back
- cornerwise — with a corner in front; diagonally
- cornetfish — any of several slender fishes of the family Fistulariidae, of tropical seas, having an elongated snout and bony plates instead of scales.
- cornetists — Plural form of cornetist.
- cornettino — a small woodwind instrument of the cornett family that was popular in northern Europe in the 15th century
- cornettist — A musician who plays the cornett.
- cornfields — Plural form of cornfield.
- cornflakes — a breakfast cereal made from toasted maize, eaten with milk, sugar, etc
- cornflower — Cornflowers are small plants with flowers that are usually blue.
- cornhusker — a person or machine that strips cornhusks from ears of maize
- coromandel — calamander
- coronalled — a crown; coronet.
- coronaries — Plural form of coronary.
- coronatine — A polycyclic phytotoxin, produced by some forms of Pseudomonas, that can induce chlorosis.
- coronetted — Bearing one or more coronets.
- coroutines — Plural form of coroutine.
- corpulence — fatness or stoutness of body; obesity
- corpulency — Alternative form of corpulence.
- correcting — Present participle of correct.
- correction — Corrections are marks or comments made on a piece of work, especially school work, which indicate where there are mistakes and what are the right answers.
- correption — the shortening of vowels in pronunciation
- correspond — If one thing corresponds to another, there is a close similarity or connection between them. You can also say that two things correspond.
- corrientes — a port in NE Argentina, on the Paraná River. Pop: 340 000 (2005 est)
- corrigenda — Plural form of corrigendum.
- corydaline — an alkaloid, C22H27NO4, that is found in the roots of certain plants of the genus Corydalis
- coryneform — resembling a corynebacterium
- cosentient — perceiving simultaneously or together
- cosherings — (in Ireland) visits to tenants' houses by a chief and his followers, where they would expect to be fed and accommodated
- cosmogenic — (of an isotope) produced by cosmic rays
- cost money — If you say that something costs money, you mean that it has to be paid for, and perhaps cannot be afforded.
- costeaning — the activity of mining for lodes
- costliness — costing much; expensive; high in price: a costly emerald bracelet; costly medical care.
- cotangents — Plural form of cotangent.
- coterminal — having the same border or covering the same area.
- cotransfer — a simultaneous transfer of multiple genes
- cotter pin — a split pin secured, after passing through holes in the parts to be attached, by spreading the ends
- cotton tie — a light, narrow strip of metal for binding together bales of cotton, hemp, jute, etc.