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7-letter words containing s, n, c

  • consarn — Eye dialect of concern.
  • conseil — a council
  • consent — If you give your consent to something, you give someone permission to do it.
  • consett — a town in N England, in N Durham. Pop: 20 659 (2001)
  • consign — To consign something or someone to a place where they will be forgotten about, or to an unpleasant situation or place, means to put them there.
  • consist — Something that consists of particular things or people is formed from them.
  • console — If you console someone who is unhappy about something, you try to make them feel more cheerful.
  • consols — British government securities, esp. those established in 1751 by the consolidation of nine loans
  • consort — If you say that someone consorts with a particular person or group, you mean that they spend a lot of time with them, and usually that you do not think this is a good thing.
  • conspue — to spit on with contempt
  • constat — (legal, religion, science) It is clearly evident; It is certain, without a doubt.
  • conster — Obsolete spelling of construe.
  • consuls — Plural form of consul.
  • consult — If you consult an expert or someone senior to you or consult with them, you ask them for their opinion and advice about what you should do or their permission to do something.
  • consume — If you consume something, you eat or drink it.
  • contest — A contest is a competition or game in which people try to win.
  • contigs — Plural form of contig.
  • contras — (often initial capital letter) a member of a counterrevolutionary guerrilla group in Nicaragua.
  • contuse — to injure (the body) without breaking the skin; bruise
  • conveys — to carry, bring, or take from one place to another; transport; bear.
  • convoys — to accompany or escort, usually for protection: A destroyer convoyed the merchant ship.
  • cookson — Dame Catherine. 1906-98, British novelist, known for her popular novels set in northeast England
  • coonass — (chiefly in Louisiana and southeast Texas) a Cajun.
  • copings — Plural form of coping.
  • corbans — Plural form of corban.
  • cordons — Plural form of cordon.
  • corneas — Plural form of cornea.
  • cornels — Plural form of cornel.
  • corners — Plural form of corner.
  • cornets — Plural form of cornet.
  • cornish — Cornish means belonging or relating to the English county of Cornwall.
  • cornist — a person who plays the horn
  • coronis — a symbol placed over a contracted syllable
  • 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
  • cosenza — a city in S Italy, in Calabria. Pop: 72 998 (2001)
  • coshing — Present participle of cosh.
  • cosines — Plural form of cosine.
  • cosmine — a substance resembling dentine, forming the outer layer of cosmoid scales
  • costainThomas Bertram, 1885–1965, U.S. novelist, historian, and editor, born in Canada.
  • costean — to mine for lodes
  • costing — A costing is an estimate of all the costs involved in a project or a business venture.
  • costner — Kevin. born 1955, US film actor: his films include Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1990), Dances with Wolves (1990; also directed), JFK (1991), Waterworld (1995), Open Range (2003), and the TV mini-series Hatfields & McCoys (2012)
  • cosying — snugly warm and comfortable: a cozy little house.
  • cottons — Plural form of cotton.
  • counsel — Counsel is advice.
  • coupons — Plural form of coupon.
  • cousins — A child of one's uncle or aunt.
  • covings — Plural form of coving.
  • cowskin — the skin of a cow.
  • coyness — artfully or affectedly shy or reserved; slyly hesitant; coquettish.
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