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6-letter words containing cl

  • clears — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of clear.
  • clearyBeverly, born 1916, U.S. author.
  • cleats — Plural form of cleat.
  • cleave — To cleave something means to split or divide it into two separate parts, often violently.
  • cleché — voided so that only a narrow border is visible
  • cledge — (mining) The upper stratum of fuller's earth.
  • cleese — John (Marwood). born 1939, British comedy writer and actor, noted for the TV series Monty Python's Flying Circus (1969–74) and Fawlty Towers (1975, 1978). His films include A Fish Called Wanda (1988) and Fierce Creatures (1997)
  • cleeve — a cliff
  • clefts — Plural form of cleft.
  • clem's — a male given name, form of Clement.
  • clench — When you clench your fist or your fist clenches, you curl your fingers up tightly, usually because you are very angry.
  • cleoid — a claw-shaped dental instrument used to remove carious material from a cavity.
  • cleome — any herbaceous or shrubby plant of the mostly tropical capparidaceous genus Cleome, esp C. spinosa, cultivated for their clusters of white or purplish flowers with long stamens
  • cleped — to call; name (now chiefly in the past participle as ycleped or yclept).
  • clergy — The clergy are the official leaders of the religious activities of a particular group of believers.
  • cleric — A cleric is a member of the clergy.
  • clerid — a beetle that preys on other insects
  • clerks — Plural form of clerk.
  • clerky — Clerklike; clerkish.
  • cletus — Anacletus.
  • clever — Someone who is clever is intelligent and able to understand things easily or plan things well.
  • cleves — Per Teodor [par tey-aw-dawr] /pær ˈteɪ ɔˌdɔr/ (Show IPA), 1840–1905, Swedish chemist.
  • clevis — the U-shaped component of a shackle for attaching a drawbar to a plough or similar implement
  • clewed — Simple past tense and past participle of clew.
  • cliche — A cliché is an idea or phrase which has been used so much that it is no longer interesting or effective or no longer has much meaning.
  • clichy — an industrial suburb of NW Paris: residence of the Merovingian kings (7th century). Pop: 58 646 (2007)
  • clicks — Plural form of click.
  • client — A client of a professional person or organization is a person or company that receives a service from them in return for payment.
  • cliffs — Plural form of cliff.
  • cliffy — abounding in or formed by cliffs: a cliffy shoreline.
  • climax — The climax of something is the most exciting or important moment in it, usually near the end.
  • climbs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of climb.
  • climes — Plural form of clime.
  • clinal — Biology. the gradual change in certain characteristics exhibited by members of a series of adjacent populations of organisms of the same species.
  • clinch — If you clinch something you are trying to achieve, such as a business deal or victory in a contest, you succeed in obtaining it.
  • clines — Biology. the gradual change in certain characteristics exhibited by members of a series of adjacent populations of organisms of the same species.
  • clings — Plural form of cling.
  • clingy — If you describe someone as clingy, you mean that they become very attached to people and depend on them too much.
  • clinic — A clinic is a building where people go to receive medical advice or treatment.
  • clinid — any of the blennioid fishes of the family Clinidae, of tropical and subtropical seas.
  • clinks — Plural form of clink.
  • clino- — indicating a slope or inclination
  • clique — If you describe a group of people as a clique, you mean that they spend a lot of time together and seem unfriendly towards people who are not in the group.
  • cliquy — a small, exclusive group of people; coterie; set.
  • clisis — the act or process of becoming a clitic.
  • clitar — (uncommon, humorous, slang) The clitoris. only used in play the clitar.
  • clitch — Alternative form of clutch.
  • clites — Classical Mythology. the wife of Cyzicus, who hanged herself when her husband was mistakenly killed by the Argonauts.
  • clitic — (of a word) incapable of being stressed, usually pronounced as if part of the word that follows or precedes it: for example, in French, me, te, and le are clitic pronouns
  • cliver — (obsolete, or, dialectal) clever.
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