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7-letter words containing o, d

  • copland — Aaron. 1900–90, US composer of orchestral and chamber music, ballets, and film music
  • coppled — (obsolete) Rising to a point; conical; copped.
  • cordage — the lines and rigging of a vessel
  • cordate — heart-shaped
  • cordele — a city in SW Georgia.
  • cordial — Cordial means friendly.
  • cording — a type of corded material, esp when used as a decorative trimming
  • cordite — Cordite is an explosive substance used in guns and bombs.
  • cordoba — standard monetary unit of Nicaragua
  • cordons — Plural form of cordon.
  • cordova — Córdoba
  • corixid — any heteropterous water bug of the vegetarian family Corixidae, typified by Corixa punctata, common in sluggish waters. The forelegs have become modified and are used in stridulation, as by the water singer (Micronecta poweri)
  • cormoid — similar to a corm
  • corndog — a sandwich consisting of a frankfurter baked or fried in corn bread and usually spread with mustard before eating: often served on a stick.
  • cornfed — fed on corn
  • corrade — (of rivers, streams, etc) to erode (land) by the abrasive action of rock particles
  • corrida — a public program in which a series of bullfights, usually six, are held
  • corrido — a Mexican ballad or folksong about struggle against oppression and injustice.
  • corrode — If metal or stone corrodes, or is corroded, it is gradually destroyed by a chemical or by rust.
  • corrody — Old English Law. corody.
  • corsned — (in Anglo-Saxon times) an ordeal whereby an accused person had to eat a morsel of bread; swallowing it without difficulty indicated innocence, and choking indicated guilt
  • cortado — A cup of espresso served with warm milk.
  • corvids — Plural form of corvid.
  • corydon — (in pastoral literature) a shepherd or rustic
  • cosmoid — (of the scales of coelacanths and lungfish) consisting of two inner bony layers and an outer layer of cosmine
  • costard — an English variety of apple tree
  • cotidal — (of a line on a tidal chart) joining points at which high tide occurs simultaneously
  • cotland — the grounds that belonged to a cotter and which amounted to around 5 acres
  • cottoid — resembling or belonging to a fish of the genus Cottus
  • couched — a piece of furniture for seating from two to four people, typically in the form of a bench with a back, sometimes having an armrest at one or each end, and partly or wholly upholstered and often fitted with springs, tailored cushions, skirts, etc.; sofa.
  • coughed — Simple past tense and past participle of cough.
  • couldnt — (informal, nonstandard) Alternative form of couldn't.
  • couldst — can1
  • counted — Simple past tense and past participle of count.
  • coupled — being one of the partners in a permanent sexual relationship
  • coursed — a direction or route taken or to be taken.
  • courted — Law. a place where justice is administered. a judicial tribunal duly constituted for the hearing and determination of cases. a session of a judicial assembly.
  • couvade — a custom in certain cultures of treating the husband of a woman giving birth as if he were bearing the child
  • covered — A covered area is an area that has a roof.
  • coveted — You use coveted to describe something that very many people would like to have.
  • cowards — Plural form of coward.
  • cowardy — A cowardly person (often used as a taunt by children).
  • cowbind — any of various bryony plants, esp the white bryony
  • cowbird — any of various American orioles of the genera Molothrus, Tangavius, etc, esp M. ater (common or brown-headed cowbird). They have a dark plumage and short bill
  • cowdies — Plural form of cowdie.
  • cowdrey — (Michael) Colin, Baron. 1932–2000, English cricketer. He played for Kent and in 114 Test matches (captaining England 27 times)
  • cowedly — in a cowed or frightened manner
  • cowered — to crouch, as in fear or shame.
  • cowhand — a hired man who herds and tends cattle, usually on horseback, esp in the western US
  • cowherd — a person employed to tend cattle
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