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9-letter words containing o, r, a, l, c

  • cornelian — carnelian
  • cornflake — Cornflakes are small flat pieces of maize that are eaten with milk as a breakfast cereal. They are popular in Britain and the United States.
  • cornicula — plural form of singular corniculum: small horn
  • corniglia — a group of five coastal villages (Monterosso al Mare, Vernazza, Corniglia, Manarola, and Riomaggiore) on the Ligurian Sea in NW Italy, near La Spezia.
  • cornstalk — a stalk or stem of corn
  • corollary — A corollary of something is an idea, argument, or fact that results directly from it.
  • corollate — having or resembling a corolla
  • coronally — in a coronal manner
  • coroplast — A manufacturer of terracotta figurines (in Ancient Greece).
  • corporals — Plural form of corporal.
  • corporeal — Corporeal means involving or relating to the physical world rather than the spiritual world.
  • corraling — Present participle of corral.
  • corralled — an enclosure or pen for horses, cattle, etc.
  • correlate — If one thing correlates with another, there is a close similarity or connection between them, often because one thing causes the other. You can also say that two things correlate.
  • corrolate — Misspelling of correlate.
  • corvallis — a city in W Oregon.
  • corydalis — any erect or climbing plant of the N temperate genus Corydalis, having finely-lobed leaves and spurred yellow or pinkish flowers: family Fumariaceae
  • cosplayer — One who takes part in cosplay.
  • cothurnal — relating to the cothurnus or to tragedy
  • coticular — of or relating to whetstones
  • courbaril — a tropical American leguminous tree, Hymenaea courbaril. Its wood is a useful timber and its gum is a source of copal
  • coverable — Able to be covered.
  • coveralls — Coveralls are a single piece of clothing that combines pants and a jacket. You wear coveralls over your clothes in order to protect them while you are working.
  • coverdale — Miles. 1488–1568, the first translator of the complete Bible into English (1535)
  • crapulous — characterized by intemperance, esp. in drinking; debauched
  • crinoidal — (zoology) Relating to, consisting of, or containing crinoids.
  • cristobal — seaport in Panama, at the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal: part of the city of Colón
  • crossable — able to be crossed
  • crossfall — the camber of a road
  • crossrail — a horizontal slat forming part of the back of a chair.
  • crosstalk — unwanted signals in one channel of a communications system as a result of a transfer of energy from one or more other channels
  • crosswalk — A crosswalk is a place where pedestrians can cross a street and where drivers must stop to let them cross.
  • crotaline — of or relating to rattlesnakes (Crotalinae)
  • crotalism — a type of poisoning caused by ingestion of plants of the genus Crotalaria
  • crown law — criminal law
  • crownland — a large administrative division of the former empire of Austria-Hungary
  • cryocable — a highly conducting electrical cable cooled with a refrigerant such as liquid nitrogen
  • cryolathe — an instrument for reshaping the cornea to correct severe nearsightedness or farsightedness: the cornea is removed from the eye, rapidly frozen, reshaped, and reinserted.
  • culpatory — expressing blame
  • cup coral — any of several species of coral in which the polyp forms and houses itself in a cup-shaped depression in the skeleton.
  • cursorial — adapted for running
  • cyclorama — a large picture, such as a battle scene, on the interior wall of a cylindrical room, designed to appear in natural perspective to a spectator in the centre
  • delacroix — (Ferdinand Victor) Eugène (øʒɛn). 1798–1863, French romantic painter whose use of colour and free composition influenced impressionism. His paintings of historical and contemporary scenes include The Massacre at Chios (1824)
  • delaroche — (Hippolyte) Paul. 1797–1859, French painter of portraits and sentimental historical scenes, such as The Children of Edward IV in the Tower (1830)
  • dicumarol — a white, crystalline powder, C19H12O6, originally extracted from spoiled sweet clover, used to retard blood clots
  • doctorial — a person licensed to practice medicine, as a physician, surgeon, dentist, or veterinarian.
  • doctrinal — of, relating to, or concerned with doctrine: a doctrinal dispute.
  • dreadlock — A single strand of dreadlocks.
  • dropsical — of, like, or affected with dropsy.
  • dulcorate — (obsolete, transitive) To sweeten; to make less acrimonious.
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