➠ Words that start with c

List contains 26069 Words that start with "c".

  • - Latin II teaser
  • - Roman leader who invaded Britain in 55BC and 54BC
  • - Spot Russian Emperor talking to Julius
  • - Title used by several rulers of Ancient Rome; "Kaiser" and "Czar" are descended from this word
  • - Autocrat knocking back drink in limousine?
  • - Roman leader might cause a scare
  • - Emperor we're told grants audience to a king
  • - ruler brings his own salad
  • - Old leader could be usurper, you say?
  • - "Julius ...," 1953 Oscar-winning adaptation of the eponymous Shakespeare play, starring Marlon Brando as Mark Antony
  • - Iulius qui Idibus Martiis interfectus est
  • - Sees a speaker such as Julius or Sid
  • - a scare for the emperor
  • - Wacky Races without a leader
  • - The title of Roman Emperors from Augustus onward
  • - scare resolved about a famous roman
  • - Creamy salad named after an Italian American chef
  • - race as ordered by a roman leader
  • - dressing with anchovies
  • - Marshal cares about a conqueror of Gaul
  • - Ancient Roman emperor
  • - Type of salad including cos lettuce and croutons
  • - Ruler who lends his name to a type of salad
  • - A Roman emperor
  • - former roman consul, julius –
  • - possibly cares about a roman emperor
  • - Salad with anchovies and croutons
  • - Hears and sees a Roman leader
  • - Ruler of China erodes another's borders
  • - Sid or salad
  • - Conqueror of Gaul gets a scare, perhaps
  • - A scare, perhaps, for an ancient Roman
  • - Type of salad which has lettuce and croutons
  • - Emperor's carriage crossing sea to the north
  • - rome's first triumvirate member
  • - Roman statesman - or a kind of salad
  • - State goes out with a dictator
  • - emperor and leaders of country are endlessly shuffling army responsibilities
  • - Kind of salad made with cos lettuce and croutons
  • - Guy who had a lot of Gaul?
  • - Lyricist for Gershwin's "Swanee"
  • - Comedian from Yonkers
  • - Victim of a Senate mutiny
  • - Tin Pan Alley's Irving
  • - Subject of the "salad days" line from "Antony and Cleopatra", appropriately
  • - Self-proclaimed conqueror
  • - Salad with croutons, cheese, and egg
  • - Salad name
  • - Roman general who crossed the Rubicon
  • - One of the lives in Plutarch's "Lives"
  • - Olive oil dressing
  • - Julius ...... (old Roman emperor)
  • - Husband of Cornelia
  • - He's murdered at the start of Act III
  • - He should have heeded Calpurnia
  • - He loved a queen
  • - He did not beware the Ides of March
  • - He crossed the Rubicon
  • - Haircut named after an emperor
  • - Gallic Wars hero
  • - Gallic Wars general
  • - Gallic Wars chronicler
  • - Funny Sid
  • - For whom the Julian calendar is named
  • - First Roman to be deified
  • - Figure in many busts
  • - Famed chef
  • - Edward G. Robinson's "Little ...."
  • - Coca's partner
  • - Coca's cohort
  • - Ciaran Hinds, on "Rome"
  • - Any temporal ruler
  • - "Swanee" lyrist
  • - "Swanee" lyricist
  • - "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" chimp
  • - "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" ape
  • - "Render therefore unto ...... . . . "
  • - "Gallic Wars" author
  • - "Et tu?" asker
  • - "Et tu, Brute?" utterer
  • - "Julius ...." (Shakespeare play)
  • - ...... salad (dish with romaine lettuce and croutons)
  • - ...... Rodney, Declaration signer
  • - ...... & Cleo (early name of Sonny & Cher)
  • - Ruler(Used today)
  • - Popular salad.
  • - Marlon Brando role.
  • - Famed cordon bleu
  • - "Your Show of Shows" star
  • - Roman general.
  • - Shakespeare title character
  • - Dictator
  • - Autocrat
  • - "Your Show of Shows" regular
  • - Old Roman emperor
  • - Scare a careless emperor
  • - "The fault ... is not in our stars" speaker
  • - Word in the etymology of "czar"
  • - Tyrant vulgarly said, 'Grab the woman!'
  • - Roman ruler
  • - Salad with romaine lettuce
  • - Roman emperor
  • - Emperor's vehicle letting in rising water
  • - Who famously declared 'The die is cast'
  • - Salad with croutons
  • - 'The die is cast' speaker
  • - Hail fellow?
  • - Julius ........
  • - He conquered ancient France
  • - Salad that traditionally has anchovies
  • - Senate victim
  • - Ides of March victim
  • - 14-Across speaker
  • - Scare a crazy emperor
  • - Romaine lettuce salad
  • - Emperor about right to hold tide back
  • - March victim
  • - Terrible scare grips a Roman leader
  • - Salad dish for Roman statesman
  • - Ancient Roman ruler
  • - Julius of old Rome
  • - Victim of Casca
  • - To whom "veni, vidi, vici" is attributed
  • - Type of 6-Down
  • - Emperor waves back when chauffeured?
  • - A dressing
  • - Former leader in the main returning aboard old chariot?
  • - "Veni, vidi, vici" speaker
  • - To whom Brutus got his point across
  • - With 49 Across, cryptography category including ROT13, which, when applied to this puzzle's circled squares, reveals a gallows-humor quote from 'Poor Richard's Almanack'
  • - Victim of Brutus
  • - Opens English strong ale in vehicle with saucy type
  • - Leader at the Battle of Alesia
  • - Roman dictator
  • - Salad option
  • - Shaw's ".... and Cleopatra"
  • - Roman ruler who said 'The die is cast'
  • - 'Et tu, Brute?' speaker
  • - Caught Russell reviewing race? It wasn't his wife, as she's above suspicion!
  • - '...... and Cleopatra' (Shaw play)
  • - Eponym of a type of romaine salad
  • - 3/15/44 BC victim
  • - Shakespearean subject
  • - AC/DC "Hail ......"
  • - Rubicon crosser
  • - Roman autocrat
  • - His ghost was invoked by Perry White
  • - "He thinks too much: such men are dangerous" speaker
  • - Brutus got his point across to him?
  • - Brutus betrayed him
  • - Augustus succeeded him
  • - Image on a denarius
  • - Augustus ......
  • - "Veni, vidi, vici" man
  • - "Cowards die many times before their deaths" speaker
  • - First Triumvirate member
  • - "All hail" guy
  • - "Julius ......" (Shakespeare tragedy)
  • - Hair metalers Little ......
  • - Speaker of the line "He thinks too much: such men are dangerous"
  • - Roman leader who met his fate on the Ides of March
  • - Calpurnia's husband
  • - Portrait on a denarius
  • - Husband of Pompeia
  • - Great-uncle of Augustus
  • - "Et tu" speaker
  • - 105-Down utterer
  • - Salad fit for a king?
  • - Writer of "Commentarii de Bello Gallico"
  • - Julius or Sid
  • - Emperor killed on the Ides of March
  • - Shaw title character
  • - His famous quote begins "Et tu"
  • - He asked, "Et tu, Brute?"
  • - Type of salad
  • - Emperor
  • - Salad variety
  • - Roman leader
  • - Salad choice
  • - Kind of salad
  • - Salad type
  • - Salad bar selection
  • - See 13-Across
  • - Ides of Mar. victim
  • - cheese from chile mostly player ordered
  • - welsh cheese
  • - Cheese from Wales, not southeastern Pennsylvania
  • - Worry female horse audibly in Welsh town
  • - rerouting race near pennsylvanian city briefly to reach a commuter town
  • - City of Normandy with a ferry link to Portsmouth
  • - Normandy ferry port
  • - french city near omaha beach
  • - In France, is able to get out East
  • - Is able to include England's capital, as a city
  • - French city near the English Channel (anagram of "cane")
  • - 1944 battle site, in Normandy
  • - Commune of Normandy
  • - Norman city
  • - Normandy battlefield
  • - Port on the Orne River.
  • - Canadian battlefield in WW2
  • - Port in Normandy
  • - Normandy battle locale
  • - French port on Orne River.
  • - French D-Day city
  • - City where William the Conqueror is buried
  • - City near St.-Lo
  • - City near LeHavre
  • - City in Calvados
  • - Calvados port
  • - A D-day city
  • - Normandy town
  • - D-Day city
  • - Battle of Normandy site
  • - 1944 Normandy battle site
  • - Battle site in Normandy
  • - Normandy commune
  • - Large urban area in Normandy, France
  • - Battle of Normandy city
  • - City near the English Channel
  • - French city that was an objective for recapture on D-Day
  • - Industrial city in NW France
  • - D-Day city in France
  • - Port of Normandy
  • - Battle of Normandy locale
  • - French city on the Orne
  • - City near Le Havre
  • - French city where William the Conqueror is buried
  • - City east of Saint-Lo
  • - City on the Orne
  • - City in northern France
  • - City retaken in July of 1944
  • - City largely destroyed in Operation Charnwood
  • - City in Normandy
  • - One checking accounts in French port?
  • - French city once held by William the Conqueror
  • - City SW of Le Havre
  • - City in northwest France
  • - "The Longest Day" city
  • - Normandy city where William the Conqueror is buried
  • - City east of St.-Lô
  • - French port liberated by the Allies in 1944
  • - Normandy campaign city
  • - French city mostly destroyed in 1944
  • - WWII battle site in France
  • - French city near the English Channel
  • - Normandy city known for its tripe stew
  • - Normandy port
  • - French city retaken during the Normandy campaign
  • - Port on the Orne
  • - D-Day city target
  • - City retaken by the Allies in July 1944
  • - Key Battle of Normandy locale
  • - Town largely destroyed by the Battle of Normandy
  • - City largely destroyed by the Normandy campaign
  • - City of Normandy
  • - City southwest of Le Havre
  • - City of northern France
  • - French city largely destroyed during the Normandy campaign
  • - City of northwest France
  • - City near Omaha Beach
  • - City in northwestern France
  • - City retaken July 9, 1944
  • - French city heavily hit in 1944
  • - Orne city
  • - City retaken by the Allies, July 9, 1944
  • - City WNW of Paris
  • - Normandy city
  • - French city
  • - City near Paris
  • - French port
  • - City in France.
  • - City of France
  • - Port city in Normandy
  • - home to the musée de normandie
  • - The French capital of Calvados
  • - longtime san francisco columnist herb
  • - WW2 Battlefield
  • - Site of William the Conqueror's tomb
  • - Calvados capital
  • - St.-Lô neighbor
  • - Neighbor of St.-Lô
  • - A D-day target
  • - WW2battlefield
  • - Site of the tomb of William the Conqueror
  • - Site of Abbaye aux Hommes
  • - French town that was the site of an important D-Day battle...or the biblical brother of Aebel
  • - Capitol of Calvados
  • - British target on D-day
  • - A D-daybattlefield
  • - 1944 battle site
  • - Battleground of 1944
  • - French WWII battle site
  • - Canadian forces battle-field
  • - A D-day battlefield
  • - D Day battle ground
  • - Pulitzer-winning San Francisco columnist Herb
  • - D Day battle site
  • - Columnist Herb who coined the word 'beatnik'
  • - William the Conqueror's burial place
  • - D-Day locale
  • - Pulitzer-winning columnist Herb
  • - W.W. II battle town
  • - Source of William the Conqueror's Tower of London stone
  • - Town near the English Channel
  • - Town near Le Havre
  • - Where William the Conqueror is buried
  • - "It's News to Me" columnist Herb
  • - Setting of William the Conqueror's castle
  • - Columnist who wrote "Don't Call It Frisco," 1953
  • - Columnist who wrote "Baghdad by the Bay"
  • - Columnist Herb
  • - Longtime columnist who coined the term "beatnik"
  • - Pulitzer-winning San Francisco columnist
  • - Town near St.-Lô
  • - Town near St.-L
  • - Capital of Calvados
  • - Capital of the French department Calvados
  • - D-Day site
  • - Newspaper columnist Herb
  • - Herb with a column
  • - Calvados's capital
  • - Locale of William the Conqueror's tomb
  • - "One Man's San Francisco" author
  • - Journalist Herb
  • - Late San Francisco columnist Herb
  • - Burial place of William the Conqueror
  • - French seaport.
  • - See 37-Down
  • - France's favorite TV show?
  • - Recent: Comb. form
  • - In Welsh-based spelling, a North Wales town whose walls and castle are part of a Unesco world heritage site
  • - triangular moated castle on the coast south of dumfries
  • - Serve food for a banquet
  • - Columnist Herb and others
  • - One of the seven hills of Rome.
  • - Regina ...... (hymn to the Virgin Mary)
  • - ... Dressel, American swimmer who set new world records in swimming at the Tokyo Olympics 2020
  • - ...... Sculptoris, southern constellation
  • - Name on the cover of "History of Woman Suffrage"
  • - Designer of the old Met
  • - seneca falls convention organizer elizabeth ...... stanton
  • - Lindsay's character in 'Mean Girls'
  • - Astronaut Coleman
  • - Suffragist Elizabeth ...... Stanton
  • - Women's rights pioneer Elizabeth ...... Stanton
  • - Tony winner Huffman
  • - Elizabeth .... Stanton
  • - Women's rights advocate Elizabeth ...... Stanton
  • - Children's illustrator Harrison ......
  • - 19th-century women's rights advocate Elizabeth ...... Stanton
cae
  • - Quebec... Flight simulators co. in Saint-laurent
  • - Illa quae oculis privata est
  • - Heroin from the US with Ecstasy in pouches
  • - Colon neighbor: Var.
  • - Site of the appendix
  • - limbless amphibian
  • - Rakes; womanizers
  • - Rakes' cousins
  • - No gentlemen
  • - You can't trust them
  • - Scroundrels
  • - Nasty men
  • - Kin to blackguards and knaves
  • - Unfeeling people
  • - Churlish chaps
  • - London louts
  • - Ill-mannered ones
  • - Varlets
  • - Rakehells
  • - Uncouth males
  • - Thersitical ones
  • - Chaps who chicane
  • - Antitheses of gentlemen
  • - Scurrilous fellows
  • - Nasty fellows
  • - Untrustworthy types
  • - Dastards
  • - Roues
  • - Boors
  • - Louts
  • - Bounders
  • - Contemptible ones
  • - Bums
  • - Rotter
  • - No-goodniks
  • - Scamps
  • - Crumbs
  • - Rascals
  • - Rogues
  • - Scoundrels
  • - Kiss-and-tell guys
  • - medical staff wrongly accused around second of july
  • - Mussolini, consumed by movement, is not finished with the messenger's staff
  • - Hermes's staff
  • - Doctor's insignia
  • - Reptilian symbol of commerce
  • - Heralds' wands
  • - Medical emblems
  • - Decrepit, in Dijon