| ACCRUED | • accrued v. Simple past tense and past participle of accrue. • accrued adj. Having increased through accrual; having risen over time or due to financial transactions. • ACCRUE v. to accumulate, also ACCREW. |
| ACCUSED | • accused v. Simple past tense and past participle of accuse. • accused n. (Law) The person charged with an offense; the defendant in a criminal case. • accused adj. Having been accused; being the target of accusations. |
| CADUACS | • CADUAC n. (obsolete) an incidental payment; a windfall. |
| CADUCEI | • caducei n. Plural of caduceus. • CADUCEUS n. (Latin) a Greek or Roman herald's wand; specifically the wand carried by the messenger-god Hermes or Mercury, usually represented with two serpents twined round it. |
| CARDECU | • cardecu n. (Historical) A silver French coin worth a quarter of an écu. • CARDECU n. (French) an old French coin, also CARDECUE. |
| CHUCKED | • chucked v. Simple past tense and past participle of chuck. • CHUCK v. to throw. |
| CLUCKED | • clucked v. Simple past tense and past participle of cluck. • CLUCK v. to make the sound of a hen. |
| CONDUCE | • conduce v. (Intransitive, formal) To contribute or lead to a specific result. • CONDUCE v. to contribute to a result. |
| CONDUCT | • conduct n. The act or method of controlling or directing. • conduct n. Skillful guidance or management. • conduct n. Behaviour; the manner of behaving. |
| COUCHED | • couched v. Simple past tense and past participle of couch. • couched adj. (Heraldry) Couché. • COUCH v. to put into words. |
| CUCKOLD | • cuckold n. A man married to an unfaithful wife, especially when he is unaware or unaccepting of the fact. • cuckold n. (Fetishism) A man who is attracted to or aroused by the sexual infidelity of a partner. • cuckold n. A West Indian plectognath fish, Rhinesomus triqueter. |
| CULICID | • culicid n. (Zoology) Any mosquito in the family Culicidae. • CULICID n. a mosquito, also CULEX, CULICINE. |
| OCCLUDE | • occlude v. (Transitive) To obstruct, cover, or otherwise block (An opening, a portion of an image, etc.). • occlude v. (Transitive) To absorb, as a gas by a metal. • OCCLUDE v. to stop up. |
| SUCCADE | • succade n. Candied citrus peel (or, less commonly, other preserves). • succade n. (Obsolete) A sweetmeat. • SUCCADE n. a candied fruit, a sweetmeat, also SUCKET. |
| SUCCEED | • succeed v. (Transitive) To follow something in sequence or time. • succeed v. (Transitive) To replace or supplant someone in order vis-à-vis an office, position, or title. • succeed v. (Intransitive) To come after or follow; to be subsequent or consequent; (often with to). |