| cockamamie |
(slang) ridiculous; pointless; valueless. |
| cock-and-bull story |
an improbable, absurd, or unlikely story. |
| cockateel |
a small parrot with a gray body and a prominent, sometimes yellow crest, often kept as a pet. |
| cockatoo |
any of various crested, mostly white parrots of Australia and other parts of the South Pacific. |
| cockboat |
a small rowboat, esp. a ship's tender. |
| cockchafer |
any of several large European scarab beetles that are esp. destructive of forest trees. |
| cockcrow |
the time when roosters begin to crow; dawn or daybreak. |
| cocked hat |
a man's hat with a wide brim turned up in two or three flaps toward a pointed crown. |
| cockerel |
a young domestic rooster. |
| cocker spaniel |
a small spaniel characterized by a compact body, short legs, a soft wavy coat, and long drooping ears. |
| cockeye |
an eye that crosses or squints, usu. involuntarily as the result of a muscular disorder. |
| cockeyed |
cross-eyed or having one squinting eye. [2 definitions] |
| cockfight |
a fight, often to the death, between two roosters bred for fighting and often equipped with metal spurs. |
| cockhorse |
a rocking horse or hobby-horse. |
| cockle |
any of a number of round or heart-shaped, often edible, mollusks with two hinged shells. [5 definitions] |
| cocklebur |
a coarse composite plant with rough, prickly burs, usu. considered a weed. [2 definitions] |
| cockleshell |
the ribbed shell of a cockle or related mollusk. |
| cockles of one's heart |
one's most sincere and deeply held feelings. |
| cockney |
(often cap.) someone who was raised in London's East End. [3 definitions] |
| cockneyism |
an idiom, expression, pronunciation, or quality that is characteristic of cockneys. |
| cock of the walk |
one who dominates a group, esp. in an arrogant or overbearing manner. |