collusion |
the act or process of colluding. [2 definitions] |
colo- |
colon or large intestine. |
cologne |
a fragrant liquid mixture of alcohol and scented oils, used to cool or perfume the skin; eau de Cologne. |
Colombia |
a South American country between Venezuela and the Pacific Ocean. |
Colombian |
of or pertaining to Colombia or its people, culture, or the like. [2 definitions] |
Colombo |
the seaport capital of Sri Lanka. |
colon1 |
a punctuation mark (:) indicating that what follows is a series, example, summation, elaboration, or the like. [2 definitions] |
colon2 |
in anatomy, the segment of the large intestine between the cecum and the rectum. |
colon3 |
the chief monetary unit of Costa Rica and El Salvador, equaling one hundred centimos in Costa Rica and one hundred centavos in El Salvador. |
colonel |
in the U.S. Army, Air Force, and Marines, a rank above lieutenant colonel and below brigadier general. |
colonial |
of or pertaining to a territory ruled by a distant country; of or pertaining to a colony or colonies. [5 definitions] |
colonialism |
the policy or practices of a nation extending or maintaining control over previously independent territories. |
colonic |
of, pertaining to, or affecting the colon. [2 definitions] |
colonist |
an inhabitant or member of a colony. [2 definitions] |
colonization |
the act or process of forming colonies. |
colonize |
to establish a settlement on (a distant territory) and begin to rule. [3 definitions] |
colonnade |
in architecture, a series of evenly spaced columns supporting an entablature or roof. |
colonoscopy |
examination of the colon with a flexible, fiber-optic instrument inserted into the rectum. |
colony |
a territory governed by a distant country, often occupied by numbers of citizens of that country. [2 definitions] |
colony collapse disorder |
an event in which all or most of the worker bees of a hive disappear, leaving in the hive the queen, the immature bees, and some adult bees to care for the immature bees, and the honey. |
colophon |
a publisher's emblem or trademark, which appears usu. on the title page of a book. |