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Various

"The Illustrated London Reading Book"

a._ to gain; to win; to reconcile
CONCI'SE, _a._ short; brief; not longer than is really needful
CONCO'CT, _v.a._ to devise
CO'NCORD, _s._ agreement between persons or things; peace; union; a
compact
CONCU'SSION, _s._ the state of being shaken
CONDE'NSE, _v.n._ to grow close and weighty
CONDI'TION, _s._ rank; property; state
CO'NDOR, _s._ a monstrous bird in America
CONDU'CT, _v.a._ lend; accompany; manage
CONE, _s._ a solid body, of which the base is circular, but which ends
in a point
CONFE'R, _v.a._ compare; give; bestow; contribute; conduce
CO'NFERENCE, _s._ formal discourse; an appointed meeting for discussing
some point by personal debate
CONFE'SS, _v.a._ acknowledge a crime; own; avow; grant
CONFI'NEMENT, _s._ imprisonment; restraint of liberty
CO'NFLUENCE, _s._ the joining together of rivers; a concourse; the act
of joining together
CONFORMA'TION, _s._ the form of things as relating to each other; the
act of producing suitableness or conformity to anything
CONFO'RMITY, _s._ similitude; consistency
CONGE'NER, _s._ a thing of the same kind or nature
CONGE'NIAL, _a._ partaking of the same genius
CONGLO'MERATE, _v.a._ to gather into a ball, like a ball of thread
CO'NICAL, _a.


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