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

  • colourant — A colourant is a substance that is used to give something a particular colour.
  • colouring — The colouring of something is the colour or colours that it is.
  • colourman — a person who deals in paints
  • colubrine — of or resembling a snake
  • concealer — to hide; withdraw or remove from observation; cover or keep from sight: He concealed the gun under his coat.
  • conciliar — of, from, or by means of a council, esp an ecclesiastical one
  • concluder — A person who, or thing which concludes (in any sense).
  • concordal — of or relating to concord
  • conferral — a conferring of an honor, degree, or favor; bestowal
  • conformal — (of a transformation) preserving the angles of the depicted surface
  • consolers — Plural form of consoler.
  • construal — an act of construing
  • consulter — One who consults, or asks counsel or information.
  • consultor — a counselor or advisor
  • contrails — Plural form of contrail.
  • contralto — A contralto is a woman with a low singing voice.
  • control-c — (character)   (Or ETX, End of Text) The ASCII character with code 3. Control-C is the interrupt character used in the command-line interface of many operating systems, including Unix and MS-DOS to force a running program to stop and return control to the user.
  • control-g — bell
  • control-o — (character)   ASCII character 15 (SI). The character used on some operating systems to abort output but allow the program to keep on running. The name "SI" comes from its use on some terminals to "shift in" an alternative character set. "SO" is Control-N. Compare control-S.
  • control-q — (character)   (Or XON, DC1, Device Control 1) The character with ASCII code 17, used in software handshaking to resume output after a previous control-S.
  • control-s — (character)   (Or XOFF, DC3, Device Control 3) The character with ASCII code 19, used in software handshaking to temporarily suspend output until a control-Q is received.
  • controled — Misspelling of controlled.
  • controlee — (informal, UK) A person who is the subject of a control order.
  • 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 belt — region in the NC plains area of the Midwest where much corn and cornfed livestock are raised: it extends from W Ohio to E Nebr. and NE Kans.
  • corn laws — the laws introduced in Britain in 1804 to protect domestic farmers against foreign competition by the imposition of a heavy duty on foreign corn: repealed in 1846
  • corn lily — any of several South African iridaceous plants of the genus Ixia, which have coloured lily-like flowers
  • corn meal — meal made from maize
  • corn silk — the silky tuft of styles and stigmas at the tip of an ear of maize, formerly used as a diuretic
  • cornballs — Plural form of cornball.
  • 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
  • cornfield — A cornfield is a field in which corn is being grown.
  • cornflake — Cornflakes are small flat pieces of maize that are eaten with milk as a breakfast cereal. They are popular in Britain and the United States.
  • cornflour — Cornflour is a fine white powder made from maize and is used to make sauces thicker.
  • cornicula — plural form of singular corniculum: small horn
  • corniglia — a group of five coastal villages (Monterosso al Mare, Vernazza, Corniglia, Manarola, and Riomaggiore) on the Ligurian Sea in NW Italy, near La Spezia.
  • cornstalk — a stalk or stem of corn
  • corolline — relating to a corolla
  • coronally — in a coronal manner
  • corpulent — If you describe someone as corpulent, you mean they are fat.
  • corraling — Present participle of corral.
  • cothurnal — relating to the cothurnus or to tragedy
  • councilor — A councilor is a member of a local council.
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