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9-letter words containing l, o, a, d

  • cold case — a police inquiry that has been suspended with the crime still unsolved
  • cold cash — money paid in full at the time of a business transaction
  • cold meat — a form of meat that has been cooked and allowed to become cold
  • cold pack — a method of lowering the body temperature by wrapping a person in a sheet soaked in cold water
  • cold snap — A cold snap is a short period of cold and icy weather.
  • cold wave — a sudden spell of low temperatures over a wide area, often following the passage of a cold front
  • cold-call — a visit or telephone call to a prospective customer without an appointment or a previous introduction.
  • cold-draw — to draw (wire, tubing, etc.) without preheating the metal.
  • cold-pack — to place a cold pack on: to cold-pack a feverish patient.
  • coldwater — a river in NW Mississippi, flowing S to the Tallahatchie River. 220 miles (354 km) long.
  • collapsed — Simple past tense and past participle of collapse.
  • colloidal — of, denoting, or having the character of a colloid
  • collonade — Alternative spelling of colonnade.
  • colocated — Simple past tense and past participle of colocate.
  • colombard — a white grape grown in France, California, and Australia, used for making wine
  • colonnade — A colonnade is a row of evenly-spaced columns.
  • coloradan — of Colorado
  • colubriad — a poem about a snake
  • comatulid — any of a group of crinoid echinoderms, including the feather stars, in which the adults are free-swimming
  • comedical — of, relating to, or of the nature of comedy.
  • comradely — If you do something in a comradely way, you are being pleasant and friendly to other people.
  • concealed — to hide; withdraw or remove from observation; cover or keep from sight: He concealed the gun under his coat.
  • concordal — of or relating to concord
  • 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)
  • condyloma — a skin tumour near the anus or genital organs, esp as a result of syphilis
  • conflated — Simple past tense and past participle of conflate.
  • congealed — Simple past tense and past participle of congeal.
  • coordinal — (of animals or plants) belonging to the same order
  • copulated — Simple past tense and past participle of copulate.
  • coralloid — of or resembling coral
  • cordately — In a cordate form.
  • cordially — courteous and gracious; friendly; warm: a cordial reception.
  • corelated — to correlate.
  • corralled — an enclosure or pen for horses, cattle, etc.
  • corydalis — any erect or climbing plant of the N temperate genus Corydalis, having finely-lobed leaves and spurred yellow or pinkish flowers: family Fumariaceae
  • coverdale — Miles. 1488–1568, the first translator of the complete Bible into English (1535)
  • crinoidal — (zoology) Relating to, consisting of, or containing crinoids.
  • crownland — a large administrative division of the former empire of Austria-Hungary
  • cupolated — having a cupola or cupolas.
  • custodial — Custodial means relating to keeping people in prison.
  • cycloidal — Pertaining to or resembling a cycloid; or a circle.
  • cytocidal — capable of killing cells.
  • dado rail — a moulding at about waist height on an interior wall, used for decoration and to protect the wall
  • daedalion — a son of Lucifer who, despondent over the death of his daughter Chione, leaped off Parnassus: Apollo changed him into a hawk.
  • daffodils — Plural form of daffodil.
  • dal segno — (of a piece of music) to be repeated from the point marked with a sign to the word fine
  • dalhousie — 9th Earl of, title of George Ramsay. 1770–1838, British general; governor of the British colonies in Canada (1819–28)
  • daltonian — relating to John Dalton or his atomic theory
  • daltonism — colour blindness, esp the confusion of red and green
  • damn fool — Damn fool means 'very stupid'.
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