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

  • confiteor — a prayer consisting of a general confession of sinfulness and an entreaty for forgiveness
  • confiture — a confection, preserve of fruit, etc
  • confrerie — a brotherhood
  • congeries — a collection of objects or ideas; mass; heap
  • congruity — the condition or fact of being congruous or congruent
  • coniferin — a grayish-white, water-soluble powder, C 16 H 22 O 8 ⋅2H 2 O, obtained from the cambium of coniferous trees and from asparagus: used chiefly in the manufacture of vanillin.
  • conjoiner — A person who conjoins.
  • conjuring — the performance of tricks that appear to defy natural laws
  • connivers — to cooperate secretly; conspire (often followed by with): They connived to take over the business.
  • connivery — the act of conniving
  • conrad ii — c990–1039, king of Germany 1024–39 and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1027–39.
  • conrad iv — 1228–54, king of Germany 1237–54 and Sicily 1251–54; uncrowned emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (son of Frederick II).
  • conscribe — to conscript
  • conscript — A conscript is a person who has been made to join the armed forces of a country.
  • considers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of consider.
  • consigner — a person or company that consigns goods, merchandise, etc.
  • consignor — a person, enterprise, etc, that consigns goods
  • consortia — a combination of financial institutions, capitalists, etc., for carrying into effect some financial operation requiring large resources of capital.
  • conspired — Make secret plans jointly to commit an unlawful or harmful act.
  • conspirer — to agree together, especially secretly, to do something wrong, evil, or illegal: They conspired to kill the king.
  • conspires — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of conspire.
  • constrain — To constrain someone or something means to limit their development or force them to behave in a particular way.
  • constrict — If a part of your body, especially your throat, is constricted or if it constricts, something causes it to become narrower.
  • container — A container is something such as a box or bottle that is used to hold or store things in.
  • continuer — One who, or that which, continues.
  • contrails — Plural form of contrail.
  • contrived — If you say that something someone says or does is contrived, you think it is false and deliberate, rather than natural and not planned.
  • contriver — to plan with ingenuity; devise; invent: The author contrived a clever plot.
  • contrives — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of contrive.
  • convincer — to move by argument or evidence to belief, agreement, consent, or a course of action: to convince a jury of his guilt; A test drive will convince you that this car handles well.
  • cooldrink — (South Africa) soft drink.
  • coopering — Present participle of cooper.
  • coordinal — (of animals or plants) belonging to the same order
  • coportion — (obsolete, nonce) equal share.
  • coppering — Present participle of copper.
  • coralline — of, relating to, or resembling coral
  • corbeling — the fashioning of corbels
  • cordoning — Present participle of cordon.
  • cordyline — any of various trees or shrubs of the genus Cordyline that are native to eastern Asia, Australasia, and Polynesia
  • coriander — Coriander is a plant with seeds that are used as a spice and leaves that are used as a herb.
  • corkiness — the state of being corky
  • corkingly — (informal) In a corking manner; splendidly.
  • corkonian — a native or inhabitant of the city of Cork
  • corn chip — a thin, crisp piece of snack food made from cornmeal.
  • 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
  • cornbraid — to braid (hair) in close parallel rows, creating a hairstyle known as a corn row
  • corncribs — Plural form of corncrib.
  • 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)
  • corneitis — an inflammation of the cornea
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