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7-letter words containing t, c

  • carlita — a female given name.
  • carlota — original name Marie Charlotte Amélie Augustine Victoire Clémentine Léopoldine. 1840–1927, wife of Maximilian; empress of Mexico (1864–67)
  • carlton — a town in N central England, in S Nottinghamshire. Pop: 48 493 (2001)
  • carnate — Invested with, or embodied in, flesh.
  • carnets — Plural form of carnet.
  • carotid — either one of the two principal arteries that supply blood to the head and neck
  • carotin — carotene.
  • carpets — Plural form of carpet.
  • carport — A carport is a shelter for cars which is attached to a house and consists of a flat roof supported on pillars.
  • carreta — a simple two-wheeled oxcart.
  • carrots — Plural form of carrot.
  • carroty — of a reddish or yellowish-orange colour
  • cartage — the process or cost of carting
  • cartels — Plural form of cartel.
  • carters — Plural form of carter.
  • cartful — the amount a cart can hold
  • cartier — Jacques (ʒɑk). 1491–1557, French navigator and explorer in Canada, who discovered the St Lawrence River (1535)
  • carting — a heavy two-wheeled vehicle, commonly without springs, drawn by mules, oxen, or the like, used for the conveyance of heavy goods.
  • cartman — (dated) A person who transports goods or people by horse and cart; a carman.
  • cartons — Plural form of carton.
  • cartoon — A cartoon is a humorous drawing or series of drawings in a newspaper or magazine.
  • cartway — a cart track
  • caseate — to undergo caseation
  • caserta — a town in S Italy, in Campania: centre of Garibaldi's campaigns for the unification of Italy (1860); Allied headquarters in World War II. Pop: 75 208 (2001)
  • casette — Dated form of cassette.
  • casitas — a small crude dwelling forming part of a shantytown inhabited by Mexican laborers in the southwestern U.S.
  • caskets — Plural form of casket.
  • cassata — an ice cream, originating in Italy, usually containing nuts and candied fruit
  • cassate — (obsolete) To render void or useless; to vacate or annul.
  • cassatt — Mary. 1845–1926, US impressionist painter, who lived in France
  • cassite — a member of an ancient people related to the Elamites, who ruled Babylonia from c1650 to c1100 b.c.
  • cast on — to form (the first row of stitches) in knitting and weaving
  • cast up — (of the sea) to cast ashore
  • castell — A human tower formed in festivals in Catalonia.
  • casters — Plural form of caster.
  • castest — Sociology. an endogamous and hereditary social group limited to persons of the same rank, occupation, economic position, etc., and having mores distinguishing it from other such groups. any rigid system of social distinctions.
  • casteth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cast.
  • castile — a former kingdom comprising most of modern Spain: originally part of León, it became an independent kingdom in the 10th century and united with Aragon (1469), the first step in the formation of the Spanish state
  • casting — A casting is an object or piece of machinery which has been made by pouring a liquid such as hot metal into a container, so that when it hardens it has the required shape.
  • castism — Alt form casteism.
  • castizo — (historical, under the caste system of colonial Latin America) The offspring of a European and a mestizo; someone of three quarters European and one quarter Amerindian ancestry.
  • castled — like a castle in construction; castellated
  • castles — Plural form of castle.
  • castner — Hamilton Young. 1858–98, US chemist, who devised the Castner process for extracting sodium from sodium hydroxide
  • castock — a kale or cabbage stalk
  • castoff — thrown away; discarded; abandoned
  • castors — Plural form of castor.
  • castory — the dye derived from beaver pelts
  • castral — of or relating to a camp, esp a military camp
  • castrum — (historical) Among the Ancient Romans, a building or plot of land used as a military defensive position.
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