Clatonia lanceolata
— Noun
– English
~ small slender plant having one pair of succulent leaves at the middle of the stem and a loose raceme of white or pink or rose bowl-shaped flowers and an edible corm
Cirsium lanceolatum
— Noun
– English
~ European thistle with rather large heads and prickly leaves; extensively naturalized as a weed in the United States
Cinchona lancifolia
— Noun
– English
~ Colombian tree; source of Cartagena bark (a cinchona bark)
crash land
— Verb
– English
~ make an emergency landing
common land
— Noun
– English
~ a pasture subject to common use
cloud-cuckoo-land
— Noun
– English
~ an imaginary place where you say people are when they seem optimistically out of touch with reality
cultivated land
— Noun
– English
~ arable land that is worked by plowing and sowing and raising crops
Crown land
— Noun
– English
~ land that belongs to the Crown
Coats Land
— Noun
– English
~ a region of western Antarctica along the southeastern shore of the Weddell Sea
crash landing
— Noun
– English
~ an emergency landing under circumstances where a normal landing is impossible (usually damaging the aircraft)
Caucasian language
— Noun
– English
~ a number of languages spoken in the Caucasus that are unrelated to languages spoken elsewhere
command language
— Noun
– English
~ a source language consisting of procedural operators that invoke functions to be executed
Chukchi language
— Noun
– English
~ an indigenous and isolated language of unknown origin spoken by the Chukchi that is pronounced differently by men and women
Caribbean language
— Noun
– English
~ the family of languages spoken by the Carib
Chadic language
— Noun
– English
~ a family of Afroasiatic tonal languages (mostly two tones) spoken in the regions west and south of Lake Chad in north central Africa
Celtic language
— Noun
– English
~ a branch of the Indo-European languages that (judging from inscriptions and place names) was spread widely over Europe in the pre-Christian era
Caddoan language
— Noun
– English
~ a family of North American Indian languages spoken widely in the Midwest by the Caddo