| 1. | consecrated. |
| 2. | conservative. |
| 3. | (in prescriptions) conserve; keep. Origin: < L conservā ![]() |
| 4. | consolidated. |
| 5. | consonant. |
| 6. | constable. |
| 7. | constitution. |
| 8. | constitutional. |
| 9. | construction. |
| 10. | consul. |
| 11. | consulting. |
| 1. | to learn; study; peruse or examine carefully. |
| 2. | to commit to memory. |

adjective, verb, conned, con⋅ning, noun Informal.| 1. | involving abuse of confidence: a con trick. |
| 2. | to swindle; trick: That crook conned me out of all my savings. |
| 3. | to persuade by deception, cajolery, etc. |
| 4. | a confidence game or swindle. |
| 5. | a lie, exaggeration, or glib self-serving talk: He had a dozen different cons for getting out of paying traffic tickets. |
con
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cons
/konz/ or /kons/ [LISP, "construct"] A Lisp function which takes an element H and a list T and returns a new list whose head is H and whose tail is T.
In Lisp, "cons" is the most fundamental operation for building structures. It actually takes any two objects and returns a "dotted-pair" or two-branched tree with one object hanging from each branch. Because the result of a cons is an object, it can be used to build binary trees of any shape and complexity.
[The Jargon File]