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7-letter words containing con

  • condors — Plural form of condor.
  • conduce — to lead or contribute (to a result)
  • conduct — When you conduct an activity or task, you organize it and carry it out.
  • conduit — A conduit is a small tunnel, pipe, or channel through which water or electrical wires go.
  • condyle — the rounded projection on the articulating end of a bone, such as the ball portion of a ball-and-socket joint
  • conecuh — a river in SE Alabama, known there as the (Conecuh) and NW Florida, flowing SW and S to Escambia Bay on the Gulf of Mexico. 231 miles (372 km) long.
  • confabs — Plural form of confab.
  • confect — to prepare by combining ingredients
  • confed. — Confederate
  • confers — to consult together; compare opinions; carry on a discussion or deliberation.
  • confess — If someone confesses to doing something wrong, they admit that they did it.
  • confest — admitted
  • confide — If you confide in someone, you tell them a secret.
  • confine — To confine something to a particular place or group means to prevent it from spreading beyond that place or group.
  • confirm — If something confirms what you believe, suspect, or fear, it shows that it is definitely true.
  • confits — Plural form of confit.
  • conflab — (informal) A discussion.
  • conflux — confluence
  • conform — If something conforms to something such as a law or someone's wishes, it is of the required type or quality.
  • confuse — If you confuse two things, you get them mixed up, so that you think one of them is the other one.
  • confute — to prove (a person or thing) wrong, invalid, or mistaken; disprove
  • congaed — Simple past tense and past participle of conga.
  • congeal — When a liquid congeals, it becomes very thick and sticky and almost solid.
  • congers — Plural form of conger.
  • congest — to crowd or become crowded to excess; overfill
  • congius — a unit of liquid measure equal to 1 Imperial gallon
  • congree — to agree
  • congrue — to agree
  • conical — A conical object is shaped like a cone.
  • conidia — (in fungi) an asexual spore formed by abstriction at the top of a hyphal branch.
  • conifer — Conifers are a group of trees and shrubs, for example pine trees and fir trees, that grow in cooler areas of the world. They have fruit called cones, and very thin leaves called needles which they do not normally lose in winter.
  • coniine — a colourless poisonous soluble liquid alkaloid found in hemlock; 2-propylpiperidine. Formula: C5H10NC3H7
  • conject — to conjecture
  • conjoin — If two or more things conjoin or if you conjoin them, they are united and joined together.
  • conjure — If you conjure something out of nothing, you make it appear as if by magic.
  • conjury — magic
  • conkers — a game in which a player swings a horse chestnut (conker), threaded onto a string, against that of another player to try to break it
  • conking — Present participle of conk.
  • conkout — a situation where a car, machine, computer, etc, ceases to work
  • conlang — A constructed language; a language that has been artificially constructed, such as Esperanto, Quenya or Klingon.
  • connate — existing in a person or thing from birth; congenital or innate
  • connect — If something or someone connects one thing to another, or if one thing connects to another, the two things are joined together.
  • connell — Desmond. 1926–2017, Irish cardinal; Archbishop of Dublin and primate of Ireland (1988–2004)
  • conners — Plural form of conner.
  • connery — Sir Sean, real name Thomas Connery. born 1929, Scottish film actor, who played James Bond in such films as Goldfinger (1964). His later films include The Name of the Rose (1986), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), and Finding Forrester (2000)
  • conning — to strike, hit, or rap (something or someone).
  • connive — If one person connives with another to do something, they secretly try to achieve something which will benefit both of them.
  • connors — Jimmy. born 1952, US tennis player: Wimbledon champion 1974 and 1982; US champion 1974, 1976, 1978, 1982, and 1983
  • connote — If a word or name connotes something, it makes you think of a particular idea or quality.
  • conquer — If one country or group of people conquers another, they take complete control of their land.
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