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5-letter words containing l, d, c

  • acold — cold; chilled
  • alcid — any of twenty-two species of oceanic birds of the family Alcidae
  • cadel — An ornate capital letter used in calligraphy consisting of interlacing pen strokes.
  • calid — warm
  • child — A child is a human being who is not yet an adult.
  • clade — a group of organisms considered as having evolved from a common ancestor
  • clads — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of clad.
  • clods — Plural form of clod.
  • cloud — A cloud is a mass of water vapour that floats in the sky. Clouds are usually white or grey in colour.
  • clued — Simple past tense and past participle of clue.
  • clwyd — a former county in NE Wales, formed in 1974 from Flintshire, most of Denbighshire, and part of Merionethshire; replaced in 1996 by Flintshire, Denbighshire, Wrexham county borough, and part of Conwy county borough
  • clyde — a river in S Scotland, rising in South Lanarkshire and flowing northwest to the Firth of Clyde: formerly extensive shipyards. Length: 170 km (106 miles)
  • codel — Abbreviation of congressional delegation, government-paid trips abroad, designed to give lawmakers first-hand knowledge of matters relevant to their legislation.
  • codil — COntext Dependent Information Language
  • codle — Obsolete form of coddle.
  • colds — Plural form of cold.
  • colid — (zoology) Any member of the Colidae.
  • could — You use could to indicate that someone had the ability to do something. You use could not or couldn't to say that someone was unable to do something.
  • dactl — Declarative Alvey Compiler Target Language. An intermediate language from the University of East Anglia, used in the Flagship project. DACTL is based on a form of graph rewriting which can be used to implement functional languages, logic languages and imperative languages. The current version is Dactl0.
  • decal — Decals are pieces of paper with a design on one side. The design can be transferred onto a surface by heating it, soaking it in water, or pressing it hard.
  • decyl — a group of isomeric univalent radicals, C 10 H 21 , derived from the decanes by removing one hydrogen atom.
  • dolce — sweet; soft.
  • ducal — of or relating to a duke or dukedom.
  • dulce — a female given name: from the Latin word meaning “sweet.”.
  • dulcy — a female given name, form of Dulce.
  • laced — Tainted with something, especially a drug.
  • lucid — easily understood; completely intelligible or comprehensible: a lucid explanation.
  • ludic — playful in an aimless way: the ludic behavior of kittens.
  • meldc — A reflective object-oriented concurrent programming language developed in 1990 by the MELD Project of the Programming Systems Laboratory at Columbia University. MELDC is a redesign of MELD based on C. The core of the architecture is a micro-kernel (the MELDC kernel), which encapsulates a minimum set of entities that cannot be modelled as objects. All components outside of the kernel are implemented as objects in MELDC itself and are modularised in the MELDC libraries. MELDC is reflective in three dimensions: structural, computational and architectural. The structural reflection indicates that classes and meta-classes are objects, which are written in MELDC. The computational reflection means that object behaviours can be computed and extended at run time. The architectural reflection indicates that new features/properties (e.g. persistency and remoteness) can be constructed in MELDC. Version 2.0 runs on Sun-4/SunOS 4.1 and DECstation and MIPS/Ultrix 4.2. E-mail: Gail Kaiser <[email protected]>. MELDC is available under licence from <[email protected]> and may not be used for commercial purposes.
  • scald — to burn or affect painfully with or as if with hot liquid or steam.
  • scold — to find fault with angrily; chide; reprimand: The teacher scolded me for being late.
  • yclad — past participle of clothe.

On this page, we collect all 5-letter words with L-D-C. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 5-letter word that contains in L-D-C to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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