6-letter words containing e, o, c
- coggle — to wobble or rock; be unsteady
- cohead — a fellow principal or leader
- coheir — a person who inherits jointly with others
- cohere — If the different elements of a piece of writing, a piece of music, or a set of ideas cohere, they fit together well so that they form a united whole.
- cohoes — a small salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch, of the North Pacific coasts and also in the Great Lakes, where it was introduced: important as a game and food fish.
- cohune — a tropical American feather palm, Attalea (or Orbignya) cohune, whose large oily nuts yield an oil similar to coconut oil
- coifed — wearing a coif
- coiffe — to coiffure
- coigne — quoin.
- coiled — Coiled means in the form of a series of loops.
- coined — a piece of metal stamped and issued by the authority of a government for use as money.
- coiner — A person who coins money, in particular a maker of counterfeit coins.
- colden — Cadwallader, 1688–1776, Scottish physician, botanist, and public official in America, born in Ireland.
- colder — having a relatively low temperature; having little or no warmth: cold water; a cold day.
- coldie — a cold can or bottle of beer
- colead — to lead together
- coleen — Alternative form of colleen.
- coleus — any plant of the Old World genus Coleus: cultivated for their variegated leaves, typically marked with red, yellow, or white: family Lamiaceae (labiates)
- coline — (mathematics).
- colled — Simple past tense and past participle of coll.
- collet — (in a jewellery setting) a band or coronet-shaped claw that holds an individual stone
- colley — Dated form of collie (dog breed).
- collie — A collie or a collie dog is a dog with long hair and a long, narrow nose.
- colter — a blade or disk on a plow, for forming the vertical wall of the furrow
- colure — either of two great circles on the celestial sphere, one of which passes through the celestial poles and the equinoxes and the other through the poles and the solstices
- comake — to make together
- comate — having tufts of hair
- combed — Simple past tense and past participle of comb.
- comber — a person, tool, or machine that combs wool, flax, etc
- combes — Plural form of combe.
- comble — the highest point of achievement or success in something
- comdex — (business) A computer show that is held twice yearly, once in the spring (in Atlanta) and once in autumn (in Las Vegas). Comdex is a major show during which new releases of software and hardware are made. Microsoft, for example, often annouces its products at Comdex.
- comedo — a plug of dirt and fatty matter in a skin duct; blackhead
- comedy — Comedy consists of types of entertainment, such as plays and films, or particular scenes in them, that are intended to make people laugh.
- comely — A comely woman is attractive.
- comers — Plural form of comer.
- comest — Archaic second-person singular form of come.
- cometh — 3rd person singular present indicative of come.
- comets — Plural form of comet.
- comice — a type of pear originally cultivated in France
- commen — [L.J. Cohen. Proc SJCC 30:671-676, AFIPS (Spring 1967)].
- commie — A commie is the same as a communist.
- comnet — (simulation, networking) A simulation tool from CACI for analysing wide-area voice or data networks, based on SIMSCRIPT.
- comose — having a tuft of hairs; hairy
- comped — a ticket, book, service, etc., provided free of charge to specially chosen recipients.
- compel — If a situation, a rule, or a person compels you to do something, they force you to do it.
- comper — a person who regularly enters competitions in newspapers, magazines, etc, esp competitions offering consumer goods as prizes
- comune — The smallest civil administrative unit in Italy.
- conche — a machine, used during the manufacture of chocolate, which mixes and smooths the chocolate mass
- conder — a person who directs the steering of a ship