6-letter words containing o, c, e, l
- colden — Cadwallader, 1688–1776, Scottish physician, botanist, and public official in America, born in Ireland.
- colder — having a relatively low temperature; having little or no warmth: cold water; a cold day.
- coldie — a cold can or bottle of beer
- colead — to lead together
- coleen — Alternative form of colleen.
- coleus — any plant of the Old World genus Coleus: cultivated for their variegated leaves, typically marked with red, yellow, or white: family Lamiaceae (labiates)
- coline — (mathematics).
- colled — Simple past tense and past participle of coll.
- collet — (in a jewellery setting) a band or coronet-shaped claw that holds an individual stone
- colley — Dated form of collie (dog breed).
- collie — A collie or a collie dog is a dog with long hair and a long, narrow nose.
- colter — a blade or disk on a plow, for forming the vertical wall of the furrow
- colure — either of two great circles on the celestial sphere, one of which passes through the celestial poles and the equinoxes and the other through the poles and the solstices
- comble — the highest point of achievement or success in something
- comely — A comely woman is attractive.
- compel — If a situation, a rule, or a person compels you to do something, they force you to do it.
- cooled — At a lower temperature.
- cooler — A cooler is a container for keeping things cool, especially drinks.
- cooley — Charles Horton [hawr-tn] /ˈhɔr tn/ (Show IPA), 1864–1929, U.S. author and pioneer in the field of sociology.
- coolie — (in China, India, and some other countries) a cheaply hired unskilled labourer
- copels — Plural form of copel.
- copley — John Singleton. 1738–1815, US painter
- coppel — Obsolete spelling of cupel.
- copple — a tuft of feathers on a bird's head
- corbel — a bracket, usually of stone or brick
- corcle — Alternative form of corcule.
- cormel — a new small corm arising from the base of a fully developed one
- cornel — any cornaceous plant of the genus Cornus, such as the dogwood and dwarf cornel
- cosell — Howard, 1918–95, U.S. sportscaster.
- cotyle — a cavity that resembles a cup
- coulde — Obsolete spelling of could.
- coulee — a flow of molten lava
- couple — If you refer to a couple of people or things, you mean two or approximately two of them, although the exact number is not important or you are not sure of it.
- cowell — Simon. born 1959, British manager of pop groups and TV personality, best known as an outspoken judge on the TV talent contests Pop Idol (2001–04), The X Factor (from 2004), and Britain's Got Talent (from 2007)
- cowled — wearing a cowl
- cowley — Abraham. 1618–67, English poet and essayist, who introduced the Pindaric ode to English literature
- cowsel — COntrolled Working SpacE Language. Burstall and Popplestone, U Edinburgh, 1964-66. LISP-like semantics with FORTH-like stack, and reverse Polish syntax. Forerunner of POP. EPU-R-12, U Edinburgh (Apr 1966).
- coypel — Antoine. 1661–1722, French baroque painter, noted esp for his large biblical compositions
- creole — A creole is a language that has developed from a mixture of different languages and has become the main language in a particular place.
- cresol — an aromatic compound derived from phenol, existing in three isomeric forms: found in coal tar and creosote and used in making synthetic resins and as an antiseptic and disinfectant; hydroxytoluene. Formula: C6H4(CH3)OH
- cronel — The iron head of a tilting spear.
- docile — easily managed or handled; tractable: a docile horse.
- e-coli — Escherichia coli.
- ecbole — (rhetoric) A digression in which a person is introduced speaking his or her own words.
- eclose — To give rise to, or to undergo eclosion.
- enlock — to lock or secure
- hockle — (of a rope) to have the yarns spread and kinked through twisting in use.
- lector — a lecturer in a college or university.
- leuco- — white or lacking colour
- leucon — a type of sponge having a thick body wall with a highly branched canal system leading into the spongocoel.