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8-letter words containing a, d, o, l, e

  • lodestar — a star that shows the way.
  • longhead — a dolichocephalic person.
  • loveland — a city in N Colorado.
  • melanoid — of or characterized by melanosis.
  • melodica — A wind instrument with a small keyboard controlling a row of reeds, and a mouthpiece at one end.
  • modalise — Alternative spelling of modalize.
  • moddable — (video games) That can be modded (modified by the end user).
  • modulate — to regulate by or adjust to a certain measure or proportion; soften; tone down.
  • moldable — a hollow form or matrix for giving a particular shape to something in a molten or plastic state.
  • moreland — Archaic form of moorland.
  • nodalize — to make something nodal or concentrated at a point
  • nonideal — (of a gas or solution) differing in behavior from that of an ideal gas or solution.
  • oberland — a mountain region in central Switzerland, mostly in S Bern canton.
  • obwalden — one of the two divisions of the canton of Unterwalden, in central Switzerland. 189 sq. mi. (490 sq. km). Capital: Sarnen.
  • oeillade — an amorous glance; ogle.
  • old face — a type style that originated in the 18th century, characterized by little contrast between thick and thin strokes
  • oldspeak — (sometimes initial capital letter) standard English, in contrast to English that is overly technical, politically correct, euphemistic, etc. Compare newspeak.
  • oleander — a poisonous shrub, Nerium oleander, of the dogbane family, native to southern Eurasia, having evergreen leaves and showy clusters of pink, red, or white flowers, and widely cultivated as an ornamental.
  • opalized — made into an opal
  • outlawed — a lawless person or habitual criminal, especially one who is a fugitive from the law.
  • overclad — wearing too many clothes
  • overglad — too glad
  • overlade — to overload (usually used in past participle overladen): a table overladen with rich food.
  • overlaid — simple past tense of overlie.
  • overland — by land; on terrain: to travel overland rather than by sea.
  • overlard — to cover with lard
  • overload — to load to excess; overburden: Don't overload the raft or it will sink.
  • oxidable — able to undergo oxidation
  • palinode — a poem in which the poet retracts something said in an earlier poem.
  • paludose — growing or living in marshes
  • petalody — a condition in flowers, in which certain organs, as the stamens in most double flowers, assume the appearance of or become metamorphosed into petals.
  • petaloid — having the form or appearance of a petal.
  • poleaxed — a medieval shafted weapon with blade combining ax, hammer, and apical spike, used for fighting on foot.
  • poleward — Also, polewards. toward a pole of the earth; toward the North or South Pole.
  • ponderal — relating to weight
  • reloaded — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • reloader — a person or thing that reloads something such as cargo or ammunition
  • remolade — rémoulade.
  • rochdale — a borough of Greater Manchester, in N England: site of one of the earliest cooperative societies 1844.
  • rondavel — a circular often thatched building with a conical roof
  • rosedale — a city in N Maryland, near Baltimore.
  • sea lord — (in Britain) either of the two serving naval officers (First and Second Sea Lords) who sit on the admiralty board of the Ministry of Defence
  • seal dog — an iron hook used for dragging seal carcasses over the ice.
  • sepalody — the changing of other flower parts, such as petals, into sepals
  • sepaloid — resembling a sepal.
  • shedload — a very large amount or number
  • sideload — to transfer software, data, etc., from one local system or device to another, typically from one's computer to a mobile device.
  • sleazoid — a sleazy person
  • sodalite — a mineral, sodium aluminum silicate, Na 4 Al 3 Si 3 O 1 2 Cl, occurring massive and in crystals, usually blue in color and found in certain alkali-rich igneous rocks.
  • solander — a case for maps, plates, etc., made to resemble a book and having the front cover and fore edge hinged.
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