8-letter words containing e, o, l
- cleidoic — isolated from the environment, as certain eggs enclosed within a shell or membrane.
- clobbers — Plural form of clobber.
- clockers — Plural form of clocker.
- clodpate — A blockhead; a dolt or fool.
- clodpole — a dull or stupid person
- cloister — A cloister is a covered area round a square in a monastery or a cathedral.
- clonebot — (chat) (Or "clone") A bot meant to replicate itself en masse on a talk network (generally IRC). A bot appears on the network as several agents, and then carries out some task, typically that of flooding another user. Compare ghost.
- closable — to put (something) in a position to obstruct an entrance, opening, etc.; shut.
- close in — If a group of people close in on a person or place, they come nearer and nearer to them and gradually surround them.
- close up — If someone closes up a building, they shut it completely and securely, often because they are going away.
- close-by — nearby; adjacent; neighboring.
- close-in — near, as to a common center; adjacent, especially to a city: The city is enveloping its close-in suburbs.
- close-up — the end or conclusion: at the close of day; the close of the speech.
- closeout — A closeout at a store is a sale at which goods are sold at reduced prices.
- closeted — If you are closeted with someone, you are talking privately to them.
- closeups — Plural form of closeup.
- closures — Plural form of closure.
- clothier — a person who makes, sells, or deals in clothes or cloth
- clotures — Plural form of cloture.
- cloudage — a mass of clouds
- cloudier — full of or overcast by clouds: a cloudy sky.
- cloudlet — a small cloud
- clovelly — a village in SW England, in Devon on the Bristol Channel: famous for its steep cobbled streets: tourism, fishing. Pop: 472 (2001)
- clovered — covered with clover
- clownery — clownish behavior.
- cloyless — not cloying
- cloyment — satiety
- cloysome — having a cloying nature
- clupeoid — of, relating to, or belonging to the Isospondyli (or Clupeiformes), a large order of soft-finned fishes, including the herrings, salmon, and tarpon
- coalesce — If two or more things coalesce, they come together and form a larger group or system.
- coalface — In a coal mine, the coalface is the part where the coal is being cut out of the rock.
- coalhole — a small coal cellar
- coalless — without coal
- coalmine — a system of excavations made for the extraction of coal
- coalshed — a shed in which coal is stored
- coarsely — composed of relatively large parts or particles: The beach had rough, coarse sand.
- coatless — without a coat or coat of arms
- cobblers — rubbish; nonsense
- cobblery — the occupation of shoemaking or shoemending
- cochleae — Plural form of cochlea.
- cochlear — a spiral-shaped cavity forming a division of the internal ear in humans and in most other mammals.
- cockerel — A cockerel is a young male chicken.
- cocklike — resembling a cock
- codeless — lacking a code
- coelomic — Of, or relating to a coelom.
- coemploy — to employ together
- coequals — Plural form of coequal.
- coevolve — to evolve together
- cogenial — Alternative spelling of congenial.
- cogently — convincing or believable by virtue of forcible, clear, or incisive presentation; telling.