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9-letter words containing i, c, o, n, l

  • colonised — to establish a colony in; settle: England colonized Australia.
  • coloniser — (British) alternative spelling of colonizer.
  • colonises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of colonise.
  • colonists — Plural form of colonist.
  • colonitis — (obsolete) Colitis.
  • colonized — (of a territory) settled as a colony
  • colonizer — to establish a colony in; settle: England colonized Australia.
  • colorings — Plural form of coloring.
  • colossian — a native or inhabitant of Colossae
  • colour in — If you colour in a drawing, you give it different colours using crayons or paints.
  • colouring — The colouring of something is the colour or colours that it is.
  • colubrine — of or resembling a snake
  • columbian — of or relating to the United States
  • columbine — any plant of the ranunculaceous genus Aquilegia, having purple, blue, yellow, or red flowers with five spurred petals
  • columnist — A columnist is a journalist who regularly writes a particular kind of article in a newspaper or magazine.
  • comingled — Simple past tense and past participle of comingle.
  • commingle — to mix or be mixed; blend
  • compiling — Present participle of compile.
  • complains — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of complain.
  • complaint — A complaint is a statement in which you express your dissatisfaction with a particular situation.
  • compliant — If you say that someone is compliant, you mean they willingly do what they are asked to do.
  • complying — Present participle of comply.
  • conciliar — of, from, or by means of a council, esp an ecclesiastical one
  • concisely — expressing or covering much in few words; brief in form but comprehensive in scope; succinct; terse: a concise explanation of the company's retirement plan.
  • concyclic — (of a set of geometric points) lying on a common circle
  • condiddle — to steal
  • condignly — (especially of a punishment) appropriate.
  • condillac — Étienne Bonnot de (etjɛn bɔno də). 1715–80, French philosopher. He developed Locke's view that all knowledge derives from the senses in his Traité des sensations (1754)
  • condoling — to express sympathy with a person who is suffering sorrow, misfortune, or grief (usually followed by with): to condole with a friend whose father has died.
  • condyloid — of or resembling a condyle
  • conflicts — Plural form of conflict.
  • congenial — friendly, pleasant, or agreeable
  • conically — Also, conical. having the form of, resembling, or pertaining to a cone.
  • conjugial — A form of \"conjugal\" used by Swedenborg and his followers, used to distinguish their ideas about marital relations.
  • connubial — of or relating to marriage; conjugal
  • consoling — to alleviate or lessen the grief, sorrow, or disappointment of; give solace or comfort: Only his children could console him when his wife died.
  • continual — A continual process or situation happens or exists without stopping.
  • contrails — Plural form of contrail.
  • convivial — Convivial people or occasions are pleasant, friendly, and relaxed.
  • cooldrink — (South Africa) soft drink.
  • coordinal — (of animals or plants) belonging to the same order
  • coralline — of, relating to, or resembling coral
  • corbeling — the fashioning of corbels
  • cordyline — any of various trees or shrubs of the genus Cordyline that are native to eastern Asia, Australasia, and Polynesia
  • corkingly — (informal) In a corking manner; splendidly.
  • corn lily — any of several South African iridaceous plants of the genus Ixia, which have coloured lily-like flowers
  • corn silk — the silky tuft of styles and stigmas at the tip of an ear of maize, formerly used as a diuretic
  • corneille — Pierre (pjɛr). 1606–84, French tragic dramatist often regarded as the founder of French classical drama. His plays include Médée (1635), Le Cid (1636), Horace (1640), and Polyeucte (1642)
  • cornelian — carnelian
  • cornelius — a masculine name: fem. Cornelia
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