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10-letter words containing r, c, o, l

  • coral fern — a scrambling fern of the genus Gleichenia, having repeatedly forked fronds
  • coral lily — a bulbous herb, Lilium pumilum, of eastern Asia, having scarlet flowers with recurved petals.
  • coral pink — a light to medium yellowish-pink color.
  • coral reef — A coral reef is a long narrow mass of coral and other substances, the top of which is usually just above or just below the surface of the sea.
  • coral tree — any of various thorny, tropical trees of the leguminous genus Erythrina, having bright red flowers and reddish shiny seeds
  • coral vine — a Mexican climbing vine, Antigonon leptopus, of the buckwheat family, having arrow- or heart-shaped leaves and pink or white flowers.
  • coralbells — a perennial herb of the western US, Heuchera sanguinea, with red flowers that are shaped like bells
  • coralberry — a small shrub, Symphoricarpos orbiculatus, that is native to North America and is cultivated for its berries
  • corallines — Plural form of coralline.
  • coralroots — Plural form of coralroot.
  • corbel out — to support on corbels
  • corbelling — a set of corbels stepped outwards, one above another
  • cord blood — blood from the placenta drawn through the newly severed umbilical cord, collected for study or for possible transfusion to treat disease in the child.
  • cordeliers — a Franciscan friar: so called from the knotted cord worn as a girdle.
  • cordiality — warmth of feeling
  • cordialize — to become warm and friendly
  • cordillera — a series of parallel ranges of mountains, esp in the northwestern US
  • cordonbleu — any of several small African finches of the genus Uraeginthus, having pale blue and buff plumage and commonly kept as cage birds.
  • corelation — a correlation
  • corelative — correlative
  • coriglianoJohn Paul, born 1938, U.S. composer.
  • coriolanus — Gaius Marcius (ˈɡaɪəs ˈmɑːsɪəs). 5th century bc, a legendary Roman general, who allegedly led an army against Rome but was dissuaded from conquering it by his mother and wife
  • corn color — light yellow.
  • corn dolly — a decorative figure made by plaiting straw
  • corn flour — flour made from corn
  • corn plant — any of several treelike tropical plants of the genus Draecena, especially D. fragrans massangeana, widely cultivated as a houseplant.
  • corn salad — any valerianaceous plant of the genus Valerianella, esp the European species V. locusta, which often grows in cornfields and whose leaves are sometimes used in salads
  • corncockle — a European caryophyllaceous plant, Agrostemma githago, that has reddish-purple flowers and grows in cornfields and by roadsides
  • cornfields — Plural form of cornfield.
  • cornflakes — a breakfast cereal made from toasted maize, eaten with milk, sugar, etc
  • cornflower — Cornflowers are small plants with flowers that are usually blue.
  • cornholing — to have anal intercourse with.
  • corniculum — a small horn or corniform part
  • cornstalks — Plural form of cornstalk.
  • cornwallis — Charles, 1st Marquis Cornwallis. 1738–1805, British general in the War of American Independence: commanded forces defeated at Yorktown (1781): defeated Tipu Sahib (1791): governor general of Bengal (1786–93, 1805): negotiated the Treaty of Amiens (1801)
  • coromandel — calamander
  • coronalled — a crown; coronet.
  • corporally — of the human body; bodily; physical: corporal suffering.
  • corpselike — Resembling a corpse.
  • corpulence — fatness or stoutness of body; obesity
  • corpulency — Alternative form of corpulence.
  • corpuscles — Plural form of corpuscle.
  • corpuscule — Biology. an unattached cell, especially of a kind that floats freely, as a blood or lymph cell.
  • corralling — an enclosure or pen for horses, cattle, etc.
  • correlated — to place in or bring into mutual or reciprocal relation; establish in orderly connection: to correlate expenses and income.
  • correlates — Plural form of correlate.
  • correlator — a device that locates leaks in water or gas lines through noise detection
  • corriedale — a breed of sheep reared for both wool and meat, originally developed in New Zealand and Australia
  • corrigible — capable of being corrected
  • corrodible — Readily corroded.
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