| chancel |
the area near a church's altar where the clergy and choir are seated. |
| chancellery |
the office or position of chancellor. [3 definitions] |
| chancellor |
the head of state in Austria or the Federal Republic of Germany. [4 definitions] |
| chance-medley |
a sudden violent quarrel resulting in spontaneous homicide. |
| chancery |
in law, a court having jurisdiction over matters not covered by common law; court of equity. [4 definitions] |
| chancla |
(Spanish) a type of sandal; flip-flop. |
| chancre |
a hard ulcer or sore, esp. the first obvious lesion of syphilis. |
| chancroid |
an infectious, nonsyphilitic bacterial ulcer, usu. on or near the genitals; soft chancre. |
| chancy |
uncertain in outcome; risky. |
| chandelier |
a light fixture, often decorative, suspended from a ceiling and bearing multiple lights. |
| chandler |
a person who produces or sells candles. [2 definitions] |
| change |
to alter the content or form of. [17 definitions] |
| changeable |
capable of changing; likely to change; variable; inconstant; fickle. [2 definitions] |
| changeful |
having a tendency to change; inconstant. |
| changeless |
unchanging, invariable, or immutable; constant. |
| changeling |
a baby secretly substituted for another. |
| change of life |
menopause. |
| change one's mind |
to make a different decision from the one made before. |
| change one's tune |
to change one's ideas, attitudes, behavior, or the like. |
| changeover |
the process of conversion from one system or condition to another. |
| change ringing |
the art of ringing a harmoniously tuned set of bells or chimes in every possible sequence without repetition. |