7-letter words containing n, o
- cojones — testicles
- coleman — Ornette (ɔːˈnɛt). (1930–2015), US avant-garde jazz alto saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist
- colenso — John William. 1814–83, British churchman; Anglican bishop of Natal from 1853: charged with heresy for questioning the accuracy of the Pentateuch
- colicin — a bacteriocidal protein
- coligny — Gaspard de (ɡaspar də), Seigneur de Châtillon. 1519–72, French Huguenot leader
- colines — Plural form of coline.
- colingo — (language) Compile On-LINe and GO. An english-like query system from MITRE Corporation for the IBM 1401.
- colleen — an Irish girl
- colling — an embrace
- collins — a tall fizzy iced drink made with gin, vodka, rum, etc, mixed with fruit juice, soda water, and sugar
- cologne — Cologne is a kind of weak perfume.
- colonel — A colonel is a senior officer in an army, air force, or the marines.
- colonia — in Mexico, a neighborhood, district, or suburb of a city
- colonic — of or relating to the colon
- colonna — Cape. Sounion, Cape.
- colonus — (in ancient Rome) a farmer
- columns — Plural form of column.
- combine — If you combine two or more things or if they combine, they exist together.
- combing — a toothed strip of plastic, hard rubber, bone, wood, or metal, used for arranging the hair, untangling it, or holding it in place.
- come in — If information, a report, or a telephone call comes in, it is received.
- come on — You say 'Come on' to someone to encourage them to do something they do not much want to do.
- come-in — to approach or move toward a particular person or place: Come here. Don't come any closer!
- come-on — inducement; lure.
- comecon — (formerly) an association of Soviet-oriented Communist nations, founded in 1949 to coordinate economic development, etc; it was disbanded in 1991 when free-market policies were adopted by its members
- comines — Philippe de (filip də). ?1447–?1511, French diplomat and historian, noted for his Mémoires (1489–98)
- comings — Plural form of coming.
- comlink — Alternative form of commlink.
- command — If someone in authority commands you to do something, they tell you that you must do it.
- commend — If you commend someone or something, you praise them formally.
- comment — If you comment on something, you give your opinion about it or you give an explanation for it.
- comming — Obsolete spelling of coming.
- commons — people not of noble birth viewed as forming a political order
- commune — A commune is a group of people who live together and share everything.
- comoran — Also, Comorian [kuh-mawr-ee-uh n] /kəˈmɔr i ən/ (Show IPA). of or relating to the Comoros or its inhabitants.
- comorin — Capecape at the southernmost tip of India
- compand — to compress (a transmitter signal) before transmission and then expand it after transmission
- compane — (obsolete) To associate with.
- company — A company is a business organization that makes money by selling goods or services.
- compend — a compendium
- comping — a ticket, book, service, etc., provided free of charge to specially chosen recipients.
- complin — Alternative form of compline.
- compony — made up of alternating metal and colour, colour and fur, or fur and metal
- compton — Arthur Holly. 1892–1962, US physicist, noted for his research on X-rays, gamma rays, and nuclear energy: Nobel prize for physics 1927
- comtian — Also, Comtean. of or relating to the philosophy of Auguste Comte.
- comtran — ["Communications Computer Language COMTRAN", D.W. Clark et al, RADC-TR-69-190, Rose Air Development Center, Griffiss AFB, NY, July 1969].
- con job — an act or instance of duping or swindling.
- con man — A con man is a man who persuades people to give him their money or property by lying to them.
- con-dem — of or relating to the coalition government (2010–15) of the United Kingdom formed by the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats
- conacre — farming land let for a season or for eleven months
- conakry — the capital of Guinea, a port on the island of Tombo. Pop: 1 465 000 (2005 est)