Carnivora
— Noun
– English
~ cats; lions; tigers; panthers; dogs; wolves; jackals; bears; raccoons; skunks; and members of the suborder Pinnipedia
carnivore
— Noun
– English
~ any animal that feeds on flesh; "Tyrannosaurus Rex was a large carnivore"; "insectivorous plants are considered carnivores"
carnivore
— Noun
– English
~ a terrestrial or aquatic flesh-eating mammal; "terrestrial carnivores have four or five clawed digits on each limb"
carnivorous bat
— Noun
– English
~ typically having large ears and feeding primarily on insects; worldwide in distribution
carnosaur
— Noun
– English
~ large carnivorous bipedal dinosaur having huge claws
Carnosaura
— Noun
– English
~ largest carnivorous land animals ever known
carnot
— Noun
– English
~ French physicist who founded thermodynamics (1796-1832)
carnotite
— Noun
– English
~ a yellow radioactive mineral; an ore of uranium and radium and vanadium
carob
— Noun
– English
~ powder from the ground seeds and pods of the carob tree; used as a chocolate substitute
carob
— Noun
– English
~ evergreen Mediterranean tree with edible pods; the biblical carob
carob bar
— Noun
– English
~ a bar of candy made with carob powder
carob bean
— Noun
– English
~ long pod containing small beans and sweetish edible pulp; used as animal feed and source of a chocolate substitute
carob
— Noun
– English
~ long pod containing small beans and sweetish edible pulp; used as animal feed and source of a chocolate substitute
caroche
— Noun
– English
~ a luxurious carriage suitable for nobility in the 16th and 17th century
carol
— Noun
– English
~ joyful religious song celebrating the birth of Christ
carol
— Noun
– English
~ a joyful song (usually celebrating the birth of Christ)