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8-letter words containing o, l, d

  • condoled — Simple past tense and past participle of condole.
  • condoler — A person who condoles.
  • condoles — to express sympathy with a person who is suffering sorrow, misfortune, or grief (usually followed by with): to condole with a friend whose father has died.
  • condylar — Anatomy. the smooth surface area at the end of a bone, forming part of a joint.
  • condyles — Plural form of condyle.
  • conelrad — a US defence and information system used between 1951 and 1963 in the event of air attack
  • conidial — of or like conidia
  • conoidal — Having the shape of a conoid; having a roughly conical shape.
  • consoled — to alleviate or lessen the grief, sorrow, or disappointment of; give solace or comfort: Only his children could console him when his wife died.
  • cooldown — a series of gentle stretching exercises conducted after strenuous activity in order to allow the heart rate to gradually return to normal
  • coolidge — (John) Calvin. 1872–1933, 30th president of the US (1923–29)
  • copyhold — a tenure less than freehold of land in England evidenced by a copy of the Court roll
  • corbeled — Alternative form of corbelled.
  • cordelia — a feminine name
  • cordelle — to tow (a boat) with a towrope
  • cordials — Plural form of cordial.
  • cordless — A cordless telephone or piece of electric equipment is operated by a battery fitted inside it and is not connected to the electricity mains.
  • cordlike — a string or thin rope made of several strands braided, twisted, or woven together.
  • cornland — the type of land that is suitable for growing corn or grain
  • cortland — a variety of large, dark-red apple
  • cotswold — a breed of sheep with long wool that originated in the Cotswolds. It is believed to be one of the oldest breeds in the world
  • cotyloid — shaped like a cup
  • 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.
  • couldn't — Couldn't is the usual spoken form of 'could not'.
  • coupland — Douglas. born 1961, Canadian novelist and journalist; novels include Generation X (1991), Girlfriend in a Coma (1998), and City of Glass (2000)
  • courland — a region of Latvia, between the Gulf of Riga and the Lithuanian border
  • coverlid — coverlet
  • cowardly — If you describe someone as cowardly, you disapprove of them because they are easily frightened and avoid doing dangerous and difficult things.
  • cropland — an area of land on which crops are grown
  • crosland — Anthony. 1918–77, British Labour politician and socialist theorist, author of The Future of Socialism (1957)
  • crozzled — blackened or burnt at the edges
  • crunodal — of or relating to a crunode
  • cuboidal — Also, cuboidal. resembling a cube in form.
  • cuckolds — Plural form of cuckold.
  • 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
  • cupolaed — having a cupola
  • cycloids — Plural form of cycloid.
  • d-prolog — (language)   A version of Prolog extended with defeasible reasoning.
  • dactylo- — finger or toe
  • daffodil — A daffodil is a yellow spring flower with a central part shaped like a tube and a long stem.
  • dalcroze — Jaques-Dalcroze.
  • dalmahoy — a bushy wig
  • daltonic — color blindness, especially the inability to distinguish red from green.
  • damnfool — (informal) Contemptibly foolish.
  • 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
  • danilova — Alexandra [al-ig-zan-druh,, -zahn-;; Russian uh-lyi-ksahn-druh] /ˌæl ɪgˈzæn drə,, -ˈzɑn-;; Russian ʌ lyɪˈksɑn drə/ (Show IPA), 1904?–97, Russian ballet dancer.
  • darioles — Plural form of dariole.
  • datolite — a colourless mineral consisting of a hydrated silicate of calcium and boron in monoclinic crystalline form, occurring in cavities in igneous rocks. Formula: CaBSiO4(OH)
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