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7-letter words containing cra

  • crapped — (in craps) a losing throw, in which the total on the two dice is 2, 3, or 12.
  • crapper — a toilet
  • crappie — either of two North American freshwater percoid food and game fishes, Pomoxis nigromaculatus (black crappie) or P. annularis (white crappie): family Centrarchidae (sunfishes, etc)
  • crapple — (obsolete) A claw.
  • craptex — /krap'tekh/ (University of York, England) Term of abuse used to describe TeX and LaTeX when they don't work (when used by TeXhackers), or all the time (by everyone else). The non-TeX enthusiasts generally dislike it because it is more verbose than other formatters (e.g. troff) and because (particularly if the standard Computer Modern fonts are used) it generates vast output files. See religious issues.
  • crapula — Sickness or indisposition caused by excessive eating or drinking.
  • crashaw — Richard. 1613–49, English religious poet, noted esp for the Steps to the Temple (1646)
  • crashed — to make a loud, clattering noise, as of something dashed to pieces.
  • crasher — to make a loud, clattering noise, as of something dashed to pieces.
  • crashes — Plural form of crash.
  • crasser — Comparative form of crass.
  • crassly — without refinement, delicacy, or sensitivity; gross; obtuse; stupid: crass commercialism; a crass misrepresentation of the facts.
  • crassus — Marcus Licinius (ˈmɑːkəs lɪˈsɪnɪəs). ?115–53 bc, Roman general; member of the first triumvirate with Caesar and Pompey
  • craters — Plural form of crater.
  • crathur — (Ireland, obsolete) creature.
  • crating — a slatted wooden box or framework for packing, shopping, or storing fruit, furniture, glassware, crockery, etc.
  • cratons — Plural form of craton.
  • craturs — Plural form of cratur.
  • craunch — crunch
  • cravats — Plural form of cravat.
  • cravens — Plural form of craven.
  • craving — an intense desire or longing
  • crawdad — crayfish
  • crawled — Simple past tense and past participle of crawl.
  • crawler — A crawler is a computer program that visits websites and collects information when you do an Internet search.
  • crawley — a town in S England, in NE West Sussex: designated a new town in 1956. Pop: 100 547 (2001)
  • crayola — /kray-oh'l*/ A super-minicomputer or super-microcomputer that provides some reasonable percentage of supercomputer performance for an unreasonably low price. A crayola might also be a killer micro.
  • crayons — Plural form of crayon.
  • crazier — mentally deranged; demented; insane.
  • crazies — mentally deranged; demented; insane.
  • crazily — If something moves crazily, it moves in a way or in a direction that you do not expect.
  • crazing — to derange or impair the mind of; make insane: He was crazed by jealousy.
  • educrat — An education administrator.
  • encraty — the control of one's desires and actions
  • eucrasy — (medicine, archaic) A mixture of qualities that constitutes health or soundness.
  • isocrat — a government in which all individuals have equal political power.
  • le crac — former name of Kerak.
  • macrame — an elaborately patterned lacelike webbing made of hand-knotted cord, yarn, or the like, and used for wall decorations, hanging baskets, garments, accessories, etc.
  • picrate — a salt or ester of picric acid.
  • recrate — to pack into a crate again
  • scraggy — lean or thin; scrawny.
  • scraich — to scream or screech
  • scranch — to crunch
  • scranny — scrawny or lean
  • scraper — a person or thing that scrapes.
  • scrapie — a usually fatal brain disease of sheep, characterized by twitching of the neck and head, grinding of the teeth, and scraping of itching portions of skin against fixed objects with a subsequent loss of wool: thought to be caused by an infectious prion.
  • scrappy — fond of fighting, arguing, or competing.
  • scratch — to break, mar, or mark the surface of by rubbing, scraping, or tearing with something sharp or rough: to scratch one's hand on a nail.
  • scrauch — to squawk loudly
  • scrawly — written or drawn awkwardly or carelessly.
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