Constable ; Main Entry: : con·sta·ble ; Pronunciation: : \ˈkän(t)-stə-bəl, ˈkən(t)-\ ; Function: : noun ; Etymology: : Middle English conestable, from Anglo-French, from Late Latin comes stabuli, literally, officer of the stable ; Date: : 13th century 1: a high officer of a royal court or noble household especially in the Middle Ages2: the warden or governor of a royal castle or a fortified town3 a: a public officer usually of a town or township responsible for keeping the peace and for minor judicial duties bchiefly British : police officer; especially : one ranking below sergeant
connive contrive
Con Air
con as in 'He tried to con me out of my front-row seat.' sop
The antonym of separate that ends in 'n' is "join."
-Con (the word itself!) -Coniferous -Conspire -Conspiracy -Contact -Concierge -Congregation -Confident -Confidence -Confine -Confinement -Condensation -Conservative
The word most likely sought is from the French, concierge, an employee at a hotel or other lodging that sees to the needs of guests.The full English pronunciation ends in a J sound : con-see-AYRJ
conform congregate conjunction connect consent construct contend convenient
contact? Conjugal.
the plural for con is cons.
The Spanish word "con" translates to "with" in English.
A four letter word for con game is scam.
CON. Came from the word convict which was once you were convited and sent to prison you became a con. not because you were a con..lol