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7-letter words containing le

  • cleaved — Cleft or cloven.
  • cleaver — A cleaver is a knife with a large square blade, used for chopping meat or vegetables.
  • cleaves — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cleave.
  • cleffer — (informal) songwriter.
  • clefted — Having a cleft; cloven.
  • cleland — John. 1709–89, British writer, best known for his bawdy novel Fanny Hill (1748–49)
  • clemens — Samuel Langhorne (ˈlæŋˌhɔːn)
  • clement — Clement weather is pleasantly mild and dry.
  • clemmed — Simple past tense and past participle of clem.
  • clerics — Plural form of cleric.
  • clerisy — learned or educated people collectively
  • clerked — Simple past tense and past participle of clerk.
  • clerkly — of or like a clerk
  • cleruch — a settler in a cleruchy
  • clew up — to furl (a square sail) by gathering its clews up to the yard by means of clew lines
  • coalers — Plural form of coaler.
  • cobbled — A cobbled street has a surface made of cobblestones.
  • cobbler — A cobbler is a person whose job is to make or mend shoes.
  • cobbles — coal in small rounded lumps
  • coblenz — Koblenz
  • cochlea — The cochlea is the spiral-shaped part of the inner ear.
  • cockled — Simple past tense and past participle of cockle.
  • cockler — a person employed to gather cockles from the seashore
  • cockles — a weed, as the darnel Lolium temulentum, or rye grass, L. perenne.
  • coctile — made by exposing to heat
  • codable — capable of being coded
  • coddled — Simple past tense and past participle of coddle.
  • coddler — to treat tenderly; nurse or tend indulgently; pamper: to coddle children when they're sick.
  • coddles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of coddle.
  • codille — (in the game of ombre) a term indicating that the game is won
  • coffles — Plural form of coffle.
  • coleman — Ornette (ɔːˈnɛt). (1930–2015), US avant-garde jazz alto saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist
  • colenso — John William. 1814–83, British churchman; Anglican bishop of Natal from 1853: charged with heresy for questioning the accuracy of the Pentateuch
  • colette — full name Sidonie Gabrielle Claudine Colette. 1873–1954, French novelist; her works include Chéri (1920), Gigi (1944), and the series of Claudine books
  • collect — If you collect a number of things, you bring them together from several places or from several people.
  • colleen — an Irish girl
  • college — A college is an institution where students study after they have left school.
  • comales — a griddle made from sandstone or earthenware.
  • compile — When you compile something such as a report, book, or programme, you produce it by collecting and putting together many pieces of information.
  • complex — Something that is complex has many different parts, and is therefore often difficult to understand.
  • condole — to express sympathy with someone in grief, pain, etc
  • condyle — the rounded projection on the articulating end of a bone, such as the ball portion of a ball-and-socket joint
  • console — If you console someone who is unhappy about something, you try to make them feel more cheerful.
  • coolers — Plural form of cooler.
  • coolest — moderately cold; neither warm nor cold: a rather cool evening.
  • coppled — (obsolete) Rising to a point; conical; copped.
  • coracle — In former times, a coracle was a simple round rowing boat made of woven sticks covered with animal skins.
  • corcule — (botany, obsolete) The heart of the seed; the embryo or germ.
  • cordele — a city in SW Georgia.
  • corslet — corselet (def 2).
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