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9-letter words containing l, d, o

  • cold tone — a bluish or greenish tinge in a black-and-white print.
  • cold type — typesetting done by a method other than the casting of molten type
  • cold wave — a sudden spell of low temperatures over a wide area, often following the passage of a cold front
  • cold work — the craft of shaping metal without heat
  • cold-brew — (of a drink such as tea or coffee) prepared by steeping in cold water
  • cold-call — a visit or telephone call to a prospective customer without an appointment or a previous introduction.
  • cold-cock — to strike so as to make unconscious
  • cold-draw — to draw (wire, tubing, etc.) without preheating the metal.
  • cold-pack — to place a cold pack on: to cold-pack a feverish patient.
  • cold-roll — to roll (metal) at a temperature below that at which recrystallization occurs.
  • cold-weld — to join (two metal surfaces) without heat by forcing them together so that the oxide films are broken and adhesion occurs
  • cold-work — to work (metal) at a temperature below that at which recrystallization occurs.
  • coldblood — any heavy draught-horse
  • coldhouse — an unheated greenhouse
  • coldsleep — A deep sleep during which the body is stored at very cold temperature, to preserve it; cryogenic sleep.
  • coldwater — a river in NW Mississippi, flowing S to the Tallahatchie River. 220 miles (354 km) long.
  • coleridge — Samuel Taylor. 1772–1834, English Romantic poet and critic, noted for poems such as The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798), Kubla Khan (1816), and Christabel (1816), and for his critical work Biographia Literaria (1817)
  • colicweed — any of several plants of the genera Dicentra or Corydalis, such as the squirrel corn and Dutchman's-breeches: family Fumariaceae
  • collapsed — Simple past tense and past participle of collapse.
  • collected — An author's collected works or letters are all their works or letters published in one book or in a set of books.
  • colletids — Plural form of colletid.
  • colliders — Plural form of collider.
  • colliding — Present participle of collide.
  • collodion — a colourless or yellow syrupy liquid that consists of a solution of pyroxylin in ether and alcohol: used in medicine and in the manufacture of photographic plates, lacquers, etc
  • colloidal — of, denoting, or having the character of a colloid
  • collonade — Alternative spelling of colonnade.
  • colluding — to act together through a secret understanding, especially with evil or harmful intent.
  • colocated — Simple past tense and past participle of colocate.
  • colombard — a white grape grown in France, California, and Australia, used for making wine
  • colonised — to establish a colony in; settle: England colonized Australia.
  • colonized — (of a territory) settled as a colony
  • colonnade — A colonnade is a row of evenly-spaced columns.
  • coloradan — of Colorado
  • colorized — A colorized film is an old black and white film which has had colour added to it using a special technique.
  • colubriad — a poem about a snake
  • comatulid — any of a group of crinoid echinoderms, including the feather stars, in which the adults are free-swimming
  • comedical — of, relating to, or of the nature of comedy.
  • comingled — Simple past tense and past participle of comingle.
  • compelled — to force or drive, especially to a course of action: His disregard of the rules compels us to dismiss him.
  • completed — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • complexed — composed of many interconnected parts; compound; composite: a complex highway system.
  • comradely — If you do something in a comradely way, you are being pleasant and friendly to other people.
  • concealed — to hide; withdraw or remove from observation; cover or keep from sight: He concealed the gun under his coat.
  • concluded — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
  • concluder — A person who, or thing which concludes (in any sense).
  • concludes — to bring to an end; finish; terminate: to conclude a speech with a quotation from the Bible.
  • concordal — of or relating to concord
  • condiddle — to steal
  • condignly — (especially of a punishment) appropriate.
  • condillac — Étienne Bonnot de (etjɛn bɔno də). 1715–80, French philosopher. He developed Locke's view that all knowledge derives from the senses in his Traité des sensations (1754)
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