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7-letter words containing l, o, r

  • broddle — to poke or pierce (something)
  • broglie — Achille Charles Léonce Victor Duc de Broglie1785-1870; Fr. statesman under Napoleon I & Louis Philippe
  • broiler — A broiler is a part of a stove which produces strong heat and cooks food placed underneath it.
  • bromley — a borough of SE Greater London. Pop: 298 300 (2003 est). Area: 153 sq km (59 sq miles)
  • bromoil — an offset reproduction produced by the bromoil process.
  • brothel — A brothel is a building where men can go to pay to have sex with prostitutes.
  • brotula — any of several chiefly deep-sea fishes of the family Brotulidae.
  • cajoler — A person who cajoles; a flatterer.
  • caldron — a large kettle or boiler
  • caloric — Caloric means relating to calories.
  • calorie — Calories are units used to measure the energy value of food. People who are on diets try to eat food that does not contain many calories.
  • caloyer — a monk of the Greek Orthodox Church, esp of the Basilian Order
  • caltrop — any tropical or subtropical plant of the zygophyllaceous genera Tribulus and Kallstroemia that have spiny burs or bracts
  • caporal — a strong coarse dark tobacco
  • caracol — caracole.
  • cariole — a small open two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle
  • carload — A carload of people or things is as many people or things as a car can carry.
  • carlock — a type of Russian isinglass made from the bladder of a sturgeon
  • carlota — original name Marie Charlotte Amélie Augustine Victoire Clémentine Léopoldine. 1840–1927, wife of Maximilian; empress of Mexico (1864–67)
  • carlson — Chester1906-68; U.S. inventor; developed xerography
  • carlton — a town in N central England, in S Nottinghamshire. Pop: 48 493 (2001)
  • caroled — Simple past tense and past participle of carol.
  • caroler — A carol singer.
  • carolus — any of several coins struck in the reign of a king called Charles, esp an English gold coin from the reign of Charles I
  • carolyn — a feminine name
  • caromel — to convert or be converted into caramel
  • carpool — A carpool is an arrangement where a group of people take turns driving each other to work, or driving each other's children to school. A carpool also refers to the people traveling together in a car.
  • carroll — Lewis. real name the Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. 1832–98, English writer; an Oxford mathematics don who wrote Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1872) and the nonsense poem The Hunting of the Snark (1876)
  • celeron — (processor)   Intel Corporation's trade name for its family of Pentium II microprocessors meant for use in low-end computers. The Celeron is constructed on the 0.25 micron Deschutes base. Clock rates of 266, 300 and 333 MHz are supported. It is built on the same daughterboard as the Pentium II without the black plastic case and heat sink. Four Celeron models are in production as of October 1998. The 266 and 300 MHz models are essentially Pentium II CPUs without the Level 2 cache RAM. The 300A and 333 MHz Celerons include 128k of Level 2 cache. A special mounting bracket on the motherboard is used to secure the Celeron in place in its standard 242-pin Slot 1 socket. Intel calls the caseless design SEPP (Single Edge Processor Package) to differentiate it from the Pentium II SEC (Single Edge Cartridge). Some believe that the real purpose for the different mounting configurations is to prevent users from placing lower cost processors onto Pentium II motherboards. A Celeron is about one third the cost of a similar speed Pentium II. Hardware hackers claim that the Celeron 300 without Level 2 cache could be overclocked to perform as well as a Pentium II at a fraction of the price.
  • chabrol — Claude (klod). 1930–2010, French film director, whose films, such as Le Beau Serge (1958), Les Biches (1968), Le Boucher (1969), Au coeur du mensonge (1999), and La Fleur du mal (2003) explore themes of jealousy, guilt, and murder
  • charlotJean [jeen;; French zhahn] /dʒin;; French ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1898–1979, U.S. painter, lithographer, and illustrator; born in France and active in Mexico.
  • chloral — a colourless oily liquid with a pungent odour, made from chlorine and acetaldehyde and used in preparing chloral hydrate and DDT; trichloroacetaldehyde
  • chloric — of or containing chlorine in the pentavalent state
  • chlorid — Archaic form of chloride.
  • chlorin — (organic compound) A large heterocyclic aromatic ring consisting, at the core, of three pyrroles and one pyrroline coupled through four methine linkages.
  • chloro- — indicating the colour green
  • cholera — Cholera is a serious disease that often kills people. It is caused by drinking infected water or by eating infected food.
  • cholers — irascibility; anger; wrath; irritability.
  • choltry — a place where travellers can rest
  • chorale — A chorale is a piece of music sung as part of a church service.
  • chorals — Plural form of choral.
  • chordal — of, relating to, or resembling a chord.
  • chorial — Embryology. the outermost of the extraembryonic membranes of land vertebrates, contributing to the formation of the placenta in the placental mammals.
  • chorley — a town in NW England, in S Lancashire: cotton textiles. Pop: 33 424 (2001)
  • chortle — To chortle means to laugh in a way that shows you are very pleased.
  • chromel — a nickel-based alloy containing about 10 per cent chromium, used in heating elements
  • chromyl — of, consisting of, or containing the divalent radical CrO2
  • chronal — Of or pertaining to time.
  • clamors — Plural form of clamor.
  • clamour — If people are clamouring for something, they are demanding it in a noisy or angry way.
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