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8-letter words containing o, c, e, l

  • coromuel — a cooling westerly breeze that flows in from the Pacific over the La Paz region of the southern Baja California peninsula of Mexico.
  • corselet — a piece of armour for the top part of the body
  • corslets — Plural form of corslet.
  • costable — For which a monetary cost may be assessed.
  • costello — Elvis, real name Declan McManus. born 1954, British rock singer and songwriter. His recordings include This Year's Model (1978), "Oliver's Army" (1979), Spike (1989), Brutal Youth (1994), and When I Was Cruel (2003)
  • costless — the price paid to acquire, produce, accomplish, or maintain anything: the high cost of a good meal.
  • costlier — costing much; expensive; high in price: a costly emerald bracelet; costly medical care.
  • coteline — a kind of white muslin, either corded or ribbed, manufactured in France and designed for dress material
  • could be — It's possible
  • could've — Could've is the usual spoken form of 'could have', when 'have' is an auxiliary verb.
  • couldest — Alternative form of couldst.
  • coulisse — a timber member grooved to take a sliding panel, such as a sluicegate, portcullis, or stage flat
  • councell — Obsolete spelling of council.
  • counsell — Obsolete spelling of counsel.
  • counsels — Plural form of counsel.
  • couplers — Plural form of coupler.
  • couplets — Plural form of couplet.
  • courtlet — a small court or courtyard
  • covalent — the number of electron pairs that an atom can share with other atoms.
  • coverall — a thing that covers something entirely
  • coverlet — A coverlet is the same as a bedspread.
  • coverleySir Roger de, a literary figure representing the ideal of the early 18th-century squire in The Spectator, by Addison and Steele.
  • coverlid — coverlet
  • covertly — concealed; secret; disguised.
  • cowalker — A phantom or astral body deemed to be separable from the physical body and capable of acting independently; a doppelganger.
  • cowbells — Plural form of cowbell.
  • cowlneck — a style of neckline for a woman's garment having material draped in rounded folds.
  • creolise — (of a pidgin language) to become the native language of a speech community
  • creolist — a student of creole languages
  • creolize — to make (a language) become a creole
  • cromlech — a circle of prehistoric standing stones
  • cromwell — Oliver. 1599–1658, English general and statesman. A convinced Puritan, he was an effective leader of the parliamentary army in the Civil War. After the execution of Charles I he quelled the Royalists in Scotland and Ireland, and became Lord Protector of the Commonwealth (1653–58)
  • cropless — without a crop or crops
  • crosslet — a cross having a smaller cross near the end of each arm
  • crousely — in a crouse manner
  • crownlet — a small crown
  • crozzled — blackened or burnt at the edges
  • cryolite — a white or colourless mineral consisting of a fluoride of sodium and aluminium in monoclinic crystalline form: used in the production of aluminium, glass, and enamel. Formula: Na3AlF6
  • culloden — a moor near Inverness in N Scotland: site of a battle in 1746 in which government troops under the Duke of Cumberland defeated the Jacobites under Prince Charles Edward Stuart
  • culottes — Culottes are knee-length women's trousers that look like a skirt.
  • cumulose — abounding in heaps or cumuli
  • cupolaed — having a cupola
  • cyclones — Plural form of cyclone.
  • cyclopes — Plural form of cyclops.
  • dalcroze — Jaques-Dalcroze.
  • damocles — a sycophant forced by Dionysius, tyrant of Syracuse, to sit under a sword suspended by a hair to demonstrate that being a king was not the happy state Damocles had said it was
  • deadlock — If a dispute or series of negotiations reaches deadlock, neither side is willing to give in at all and no agreement can be made.
  • decalogy — A set of ten works of art that are connected, and that can be seen either as a single work or as ten individual works. They are commonly found in literature, film, or video games.
  • deck log — a log filled in by the officer of the watch at the end of each watch, giving details of weather, navigation, unusual happenings, etc.
  • decolour — to deprive of colour, as by bleaching
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