Conveyance: transportation
Example: [public conveyance]
Conviction: strongly held belief
Example: [a lifelong conviction]
Convivial: festive, sociable, drinking, fond of eating, and people
Example: [a convivial atmosphere]
Conviviality: pleasantness, friendliness, hospitality, warmth, cordiality
Example: [There are continual jests about the contrast between this Ulsterman’s austerity and the conviviality of Colonel Clancy]
Convocation: gathering
Example: [a university convocation]
Convoke: summon, convene, to call together
Example: [convocation ceremony]
Convoluted: complicated, twisted, involved
Example: [a very convoluted route]
Convolve: coil up, twist, revolve together, roll together, entwine
Example: [varied and convolving forms]
Convoy: accompany, a group of motor vehicles or ships traveling together, escort
Example: [When the convoy of heavy-duty trucks went past our house, the doors and windows rattled]
Convulse: To cause spasms.
Convulsion: shaking, fit, seizure
Example: [I had a vague belief that he was suffering from a fit, or some form of convulsion]
Copious: plentiful abundant
Example: [they drank copious amounts of wine]
Coquette: woman who flirts
Example: [because she did not reply to his proposal for marriage, he called her a coquette]
Cordial: friendly
Example: [a cordial smile]
Cordon: chain bond
Example: [a police cordon around the building]
Cormorant: rapacious bird greedy
Cornice: a decorative border around the walls of a room close to the ceiling
English Dictionary Cum Vocabulary Word List for GMAT, SAT, GRE, GATE, TOEFL, IELTS, TOEIC, CAT, LSAT, ACT, SSC, BANK PO& Other exams
Corollary: consequence
Example: [deaths are the inevitable corollary of a war]
Coronet: ornamental headband, small crown, top of a horse’s hoof
Example: [Dorothy was presented with a pretty coronet and made a Princess of Oz, and Tiktok received two bracelets set with eight rows of very clear and sparkling emeralds]
Corporate: Belonging to a corporation.
Corporeal: bodily, fleshly, tangible, physical, material
Example: [Whether it be personal or political, mental or corporeal, intellectual or spiritual, I am for its immediate abolition. singular]
Corps: force, group, specialized army unit, team, organized group of people
Example: [the U.S. Marine Corps]
Corpulent: fat
Example: [a corpulent gentleman]
Correlate: To put in some relation of connection or correspondence.
Correlation: association mutual relationship
Example: [There’s a high correlation between smoking and lung cancer]
Corrigible: capable of improvement, correctable, capable of correction, improvable, punishable
Example: [corrigible shortcomings/defects/mistakes]
Corroborate: verify to confirm
Example: [Recent research seems to corroborate his theory]
Corroboration: Confirmation.
Corrode: To ruin or destroy
Example: [Steel tends to corrode faster in a salty atmosphere]
Corrosion: Gradual decay by crumbling or surface disintegration.
Corrosive: causing gradual decay
Example: [a highly corrosive acid]
Corrugate: to wrinkle or draw into folds
Example: [corrugated box]
Corrugated: wavy, uneven, ribbed
Example: [Mast-heads and funnel-tops of ships peep above the ranges of corrugated iron roofs]
Corruptible: Open to bribery.
English Dictionary Cum Vocabulary Word List for GMAT, SAT, GRE, GATE, TOEFL, IELTS, TOEIC, CAT, LSAT, ACT, SSC, BANK PO& Other exams
Corsair: pirate ship
Cortege: procession
Example: [the funeral cortege]
Coruscate: sparkle
Example: [his wit coruscates and startles all his listeners]
Cosmetic: related to the art of beautifying
Example: [cosmetic surgery]
Cosmic: related to the universe
Example: [cosmic rays]
Cosmogony: astrophysics, study of the origin and structure of the universe
Example: [Cosmogony deals with the origin of universe]
Cosmology: The general science of the universe.
Cosmopolitan: sophisticated, worldly, free from local prejudices
Example: [Mumbai is a cosmopolitan city]
Coterie: group of people with a common interest or purpose small group
Example: [a coterie of writers]
Countenance: to favor, facial expression, support
Example: [He was of noble countenance]
Counterbalance: counterweight, balance, act against, equalizer, compensate
Example: [In places our combined efforts could but just counterbalance the strength of the current]
Countercharge: a charge made by someone against their accuser, a retaliatory accusation
Example: [The defendant’s answer makes a countercharge of contributory negligence on the part of Mr. Ryan]
Counter-Claim: A cross-demand alleged by a defendant in his favor against the plaintiff.
Counterfeit: Made to resemble something else.
Countermand: to annual, overrule, cancel
Example: [the general countermanded the orders issued in his absence]
Counterpart: a person or thing which has the same purpose
Example: [the prime minister is to meet his counterpart during the visit]
English Dictionary Cum Vocabulary Word List for GMAT, SAT, GRE, GATE, TOEFL, IELTS, TOEIC, CAT, LSAT, ACT, SSC, BANK PO& Other exams