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8-letter words containing o, r, d

  • corixids — Plural form of corixid.
  • corkwood — a small tree, Leitneria floridana, of the southeastern US, having very lightweight porous wood: family Leitneriaceae
  • corn dog — a frankfurter coated in cornmeal batter before frying
  • corn-fed — fed on corn, esp maize
  • cornered — having (a specified number or type of) corners
  • corniced — having or decorated with a cornice
  • cornland — the type of land that is suitable for growing corn or grain
  • cornuted — having horns
  • coronado — Franˈcisˈco Vásquez de (fʀɑnˈðisˈkɔ vɑskɛð ðɛ) ; fränthēsˈk^ō väsˈketh the) 1510?-54?; Sp. explorer of what is now the Southwest in the U.S.
  • coronoid — (of a process of a bone) resembling a crow's beak
  • corraded — Simple past tense and past participle of corrade.
  • corrades — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of corrade.
  • corridas — Plural form of corrida.
  • corridor — A corridor is a long passage in a building or train, with doors and rooms on one or both sides.
  • corridos — Plural form of corrido.
  • corroded — affected by corrosion; rusty
  • corrodes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of corrode.
  • corseted — A woman who is corseted is wearing a corset.
  • cortland — a variety of large, dark-red apple
  • corundum — a white, grey, blue, green, red, yellow, or brown mineral, found in metamorphosed shales and limestones, in veins, and in some igneous rocks. It is used as an abrasive and as gemstone; the red variety is ruby, the blue is sapphire. Composition: aluminium oxide. Formula: Al2O3. Crystal structure: hexagonal (rhombohedral)
  • costards — Plural form of costard.
  • cottered — Simple past tense and past participle of cotter.
  • couraged — Having a specified form or amount of courage.
  • courland — a region of Latvia, between the Gulf of Riga and the Lithuanian border
  • cournand — André (Frederic). 1895–1988, US physician, born in France: shared the 1956 Nobel prize for physiology or medicine for his work on heart catheterization
  • 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.
  • cowardry — Lb uncommon Cowardice.
  • cowbirds — Plural form of cowbird.
  • cowherds — Plural form of cowherd.
  • crabwood — a tropical American meliaceous tree, Carapa guianensis
  • cramdown — (legal) A court settlement in bankruptcy in which creditors receive less than they were owed.
  • cranford — a township in NE New Jersey.
  • crawford — Joan, real name Lucille le Sueur. 1908–77, US film actress, who portrayed ambitious women in such films as Mildred Pierce (1945)
  • crayoned — Simple past tense and past participle of crayon.
  • creditor — Your creditors are the people who you owe money to.
  • creodont — any of a group of extinct Tertiary mammals some of which are thought to have been the ancestors of modern carnivores: order Carnivora
  • crinoids — Plural form of crinoid.
  • 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)
  • crotched — Having a crotch or fork; forked.
  • crouched — to stoop or bend low.
  • croupade — a type of horse leap in which the hind legs are drawn towards the belly
  • crowd in — If problems or thoughts crowd in on you, a lot of them happen to you or affect you at the same time, so that they occupy all your attention and make you feel unable to escape.
  • crowding — a large number of persons gathered closely together; throng: a crowd of angry people.
  • crozzled — blackened or burnt at the edges
  • crunodal — of or relating to a crunode
  • cry down — to belittle; disparage
  • cudworth — Ralph. 1617–88, English philosopher and theologian. His works include True Intellectual System of the Universe (1678) and A Treatise concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality (1731)
  • cupboard — A cupboard is a piece of furniture that has one or two doors, usually contains shelves, and is used to store things. In British English, cupboard refers to all kinds of furniture like this. In American English, closet is usually used instead to refer to larger pieces of furniture.
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