10-letter words containing con
- connectors — Plural form of connector.
- connexions — Plural form of connexion.
- conniption — a fit of rage or tantrums
- connivance — Connivance is a willingness to allow or assist something to happen even though you know it is wrong.
- connivancy — connivance
- connivence — the act of conniving.
- connivency — connivance
- connotated — Simple past tense and past participle of connotate.
- connotates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of connotate.
- conoidical — conoidal
- conquerers — Plural form of conquerer.
- conqueress — a woman who conquers or is victorious
- conquering — to acquire by force of arms; win in war: to conquer a foreign land.
- conquerors — a person who conquers or vanquishes; victor.
- conrad iii — 1093–1152, king of Germany 1138–52; uncrowned emperor of the Holy Roman Empire: founder of the Hohenstaufen dynasty.
- conscience — Conscience is doing what you believe is right even though it might be unpopular, difficult, or dangerous.
- conscribed — Simple past tense and past participle of conscribe.
- conscripts — Plural form of conscript.
- consecrate — When a building, place, or object is consecrated, it is officially declared to be holy. When a person is consecrated, they are officially declared to be a bishop.
- consectary — a consequence or conclusion
- consension — agreement or concurrence in attitude, opinion, or thought
- consensual — A consensual approach, view, or decision is one that is based on general agreement among all the members of a group.
- consenters — Plural form of consenter.
- consenting — A consenting adult is a person who is considered to be old enough to make their own decisions about who they have sex with.
- consentual — involving or carried out by mutual consent: a consentual divorce.
- consequent — Consequent means happening as a direct result of an event or situation.
- conservant — having the quality of conserving or preserving
- conservate — (dated, transitive) To conserve.
- conserving — Present participle of conserve.
- considered — A considered opinion or act is the result of careful thought.
- considerer — One who considers.
- consignees — Plural form of consignee.
- consignify — to signify (something) when understood or interpreted in combination with something else
- consigning — Present participle of consign.
- consilient — showing consilience
- consimilar — similar; alike
- consistant — Misspelling of consistent.
- consistent — Someone who is consistent always behaves in the same way, has the same attitudes towards people or things, or achieves the same level of success in something.
- consisteth — Archaic third-person singular form of consist.
- consisting — to be made up or composed (usually followed by of): This cake consists mainly of sugar, flour, and butter.
- consistory — the court of a diocese (other than Canterbury) administering ecclesiastical law
- consociate — to enter into or bring into friendly association
- consolable — to alleviate or lessen the grief, sorrow, or disappointment of; give solace or comfort: Only his children could console him when his wife died.
- consolably — In an consolable manner.
- consolette — a small shelf or recess in a handy location, as in the armrest, dashboard, or door panel of a car, in a shower stall, etc., for holding small, frequently used items.
- consonance — agreement, harmony, or accord
- consonancy — consonance (sense 1)
- consonants — Phonetics. (in English articulation) a speech sound produced by occluding with or without releasing (p, b; t, d; k, g), diverting (m, n, ng), or obstructing (f, v; s, z, etc.) the flow of air from the lungs (opposed to vowel). (in a syllable) any sound other than the sound of greatest sonority in the syllable, as b, r, and g in brig (opposed to sonant). Compare vowel (def 1b). (in linguistic function) a concept empirically determined as a phonological element in structural contrast with vowel, as the b of be, the w of we, the y, s, and t of yeast, etc.
- consortest — Archaic second-person singular form of consort.
- consortial — a combination of financial institutions, capitalists, etc., for carrying into effect some financial operation requiring large resources of capital.