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7-letter words containing t, a, c, l

  • clacket — Make a series of sharp sounds as a result of a hard object striking another.
  • clacton — a town and resort in SE England, in E Essex. Pop: 51 284 (2001)
  • cladist — a specialist in cladistics
  • clairty — Misspelling of clarity.
  • clamant — noisy
  • clapton — Eric. born 1945, British rock guitarist, noted for his virtuoso style, his work with the Yardbirds (1963–65), Cream (1966–68), and, with Derek and the Dominos, the album Layla (1970); later solo work includes Unplugged (1992)
  • clarity — The clarity of something such as a book or argument is its quality of being well explained and easy to understand.
  • clastic — (of sedimentary rock, etc) composed of fragments of pre-existing rock that have been transported some distance from their points of origin
  • clatter — If you say that people or things clatter somewhere, you mean that they move there noisily.
  • claucht — to seize by force
  • claught — a simple past tense of cleek.
  • clavate — shaped like a club with the thicker end uppermost
  • claytonJohn Middleton, 1796–1856, U.S. jurist and politician: senator 1829–36, 1845–49, 1853–56; secretary of state 1849–50.
  • cleated — a wedge-shaped block fastened to a surface to serve as a check or support: He nailed cleats into the sides of the bookcase to keep the supports from slipping.
  • climant — rampant, as a goat: a goat climant.
  • climate — The climate of a place is the general weather conditions that are typical of it.
  • clipart — large collection of simple drawings stored in a computer
  • cluebat — (computing slang) A bat (club) with which someone clueless is (figuratively or in one's imagination) struck.
  • coastal — Coastal is used to refer to things that are in the sea or on the land near a coast.
  • colbathJeremiah Jones, Wilson, Henry.
  • collat. — collateral
  • collate — When you collate pieces of information, you gather them all together and examine them.
  • comital — of or relating to a count or earl
  • coolant — Coolant is a liquid used to keep a machine or engine cool while it is operating.
  • cotidal — (of a line on a tidal chart) joining points at which high tide occurs simultaneously
  • cotland — the grounds that belonged to a cotter and which amounted to around 5 acres
  • cowtail — a coarse wool of poor quality.
  • crustal — of or relating to the earth's crust
  • crystal — A crystal is a small piece of a substance that has formed naturally into a regular symmetrical shape.
  • cubital — of or relating to the forearm
  • cultual — a particular system of religious worship, especially with reference to its rites and ceremonies.
  • curtail — If you curtail something, you reduce or limit it.
  • curtals — Plural form of curtal.
  • cutlass — A cutlass is a short sword that used to be used by sailors.
  • dactyli — an enlarged portion of the leg after the first joint in some insects, as the pollen-carrying segment in the hind leg of certain bees.
  • dactyls — Plural form of dactyl.
  • deltaic — pertaining to or like a delta.
  • dialect — A dialect is a form of a language that is spoken in a particular area.
  • ectypal — a reproduction; copy (opposed to prototype).
  • edictal — Of, pertaining to, or derived from edicts.
  • elastic — (of an object or material) able to resume its normal shape spontaneously after contraction, dilatation, or distortion.
  • eleatic — denoting or relating to a school of philosophy founded in Elea in Greece in the 6th century bc by Xenophanes, Parmenides, and Zeno. It held that one pure immutable Being is the only object of knowledge and that information obtained by the senses is illusory
  • electra — the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra. She persuaded her brother Orestes to avenge their father by killing his murderess Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus
  • ethical — Of or relating to moral principles or the branch of knowledge dealing with these.
  • exactly — Without discrepancy (used to emphasize the accuracy of a figure or description).
  • factful — something that actually exists; reality; truth: Your fears have no basis in fact.
  • factual — of or relating to facts; concerning facts: factual accuracy.
  • faculty — an ability, natural or acquired, for a particular kind of action: a faculty for making friends easily.
  • falcata — A sword in pre-Roman Iberia having a concave edge on the blade.
  • falcate — curved like a scythe or sickle; hooked; falciform.
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