0%

8-letter words containing l, d, c

  • clodpoll — a stupid or foolish person; blockhead
  • clorinda — a female given name.
  • closeted — If you are closeted with someone, you are talking privately to them.
  • clotilda — ?475–?545 ad, wife of Clovis I of the Franks, whom she converted (496) to Christianity
  • cloudage — a mass of clouds
  • cloudier — full of or overcast by clouds: a cloudy sky.
  • cloudily — In a cloudy way.
  • clouding — a visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth's surface.
  • cloudlet — a small cloud
  • clovered — covered with clover
  • clubhand — congenital deformity of the hand
  • clubhead — the head of a golf club
  • clubland — A city's clubland is the area that contains all the best nightclubs.
  • clued-up — If you say that someone is clued-up on a particular subject, you are showing your approval of the fact that they have a great deal of detailed knowledge and information about it.
  • clupeids — Plural form of clupeid.
  • clupeoid — of, relating to, or belonging to the Isospondyli (or Clupeiformes), a large order of soft-finned fishes, including the herrings, salmon, and tarpon
  • clutched — to hatch (chickens).
  • cnidocil — a hairlike sensory process projecting from the surface of a cnidoblast, believed to trigger the discharge of the nematocyst.
  • coal hod — a small pail for carrying coal; a coal scuttle.
  • coaldust — fine particles of coal
  • coalshed — a shed in which coal is stored
  • coalyard — an enclosed or open area used for the storage of coal
  • coddling — Act in a sissifying way.
  • codeless — lacking a code
  • codicils — Plural form of codicil.
  • codlings — Plural form of codling.
  • codology — the art or practice of bluffing or deception
  • coholder — one of two or more people who hold a title, deed, record, etc, at the same time
  • colander — A colander is a container in the shape of a bowl with holes in it which you wash or drain food in.
  • cold cut — Usually, cold cuts. slices of unheated salami, bologna, ham, liverwurst, turkey, or other meats and sometimes cheeses.
  • cold one — a glass, can, or bottle of cold beer.
  • cold war — The Cold War was the period of hostility and tension between the Soviet bloc and the Western powers that followed the Second World War.
  • coldcock — to knock (a person) to the ground
  • coldness — having a relatively low temperature; having little or no warmth: cold water; a cold day.
  • coldslaw — coleslaw.
  • coldwork — The elimination of flaws and rough or sharp areas on the surface of blown or cast glass objects; usually achieved by some combination of grinding and polishing.
  • coleader — a fellow leader
  • coleseed — the seeds or plants of the cole
  • collaged — a technique of composing a work of art by pasting on a single surface various materials not normally associated with one another, as newspaper clippings, parts of photographs, theater tickets, and fragments of an envelope.
  • collards — A cabbage of a variety that does not develop a heart.
  • collared — the part of a shirt, coat, dress, blouse, etc., that encompasses the neckline of the garment and is sewn permanently to it, often so as to fold or roll over.
  • collated — to gather or arrange in their proper sequence (the pages of a report, the sheets of a book, the pages of several sets of copies, etc.).
  • colledge — Obsolete form of college.
  • colleted — a collar or enclosing band.
  • colletid — (zoology) Any member of the Colletidae.
  • collided — to strike one another or one against the other with a forceful impact; come into violent contact; crash: The two cars collided with an ear-splitting crash.
  • collider — a particle accelerator in which beams of particles are made to collide
  • collides — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of collide.
  • colloids — Plural form of colloid.
  • colluded — Simple past tense and past participle of collude.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?