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7-letter words containing a, t, l

  • cutlass — A cutlass is a short sword that used to be used by sailors.
  • dactyli — an enlarged portion of the leg after the first joint in some insects, as the pollen-carrying segment in the hind leg of certain bees.
  • dactyls — Plural form of dactyl.
  • dalgite — (Western Australia) A rabbit-eared bandicoot; a bilby.
  • daltons — Plural form of dalton.
  • dartles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dartle.
  • datable — Able to be dated to a particular time.
  • datedly — in a dated or unfashionable manner
  • datival — (in certain inflected languages, as Latin, Greek, and German) noting a case having as a distinctive function indication of the indirect object of a verb or the object of certain prepositions.
  • daytale — the calculation of work or earnings on a daily basis
  • dealate — (of ants and other insects) having lost their wings, esp by biting or rubbing them off after mating
  • deathly — If you say that someone is deathly pale or deathly still, you are emphasizing that they are very pale or still, like a dead person.
  • default — If a person, company, or country defaults on something that they have legally agreed to do, such as paying some money or doing a piece of work before a particular time, they fail to do it.
  • deflate — If you deflate someone or something, you take away their confidence or make them seem less important.
  • delated — Chiefly Scot. to inform against; denounce or accuse.
  • delater — Chiefly Scot. to inform against; denounce or accuse.
  • delator — An accuser; an informer.
  • delta-4 — Definition and Design of an open Dependable Distributed system architecture. An Esprit project investigating the achievement of dependability in open distributed systems, including real-time systems.
  • deltaic — pertaining to or like a delta.
  • deltase — A distributed processing environment concerned with fault-tolerant and process-control applications from the Esprit Delta-4 project.
  • dential — (anatomy) Of or pertaining to dentine.
  • desalts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of desalt.
  • details — an individual or minute part; an item or particular.
  • dextral — of, relating to, or located on the right side, esp of the body; right-hand
  • dialect — A dialect is a form of a language that is spoken in a particular area.
  • dialist — a person who makes (sun)dials
  • digital — of, relating to, or using numerical calculations.
  • dilated — Simple past tense and past participle of dilate.
  • dilater — One who, or that which, dilates, expands, or enlarges.
  • dilates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dilate.
  • dilator — Anatomy. a muscle that dilates some cavity of the body.
  • dtalgol — Decision Table ALGOL. An ALGOL superset from Victoria University, Wellington that added decision tables and runs on Burroughs Large System.
  • dualist — Of or supporting dualism.
  • duality — a dual state or quality.
  • eaglets — Plural form of eaglet.
  • earthly — of or relating to the earth, especially as opposed to heaven; worldly.
  • eastlin — having or coming from an easterly direction
  • eatable — edible.
  • eblaite — the Semitic language of the people of Ebla, believed to be closely related to Ugaritic, Phoenician, and Hebrew, but written in cuneiform characters borrowed from Sumerian: decoded from the Ebla Tablets. Compare Ebla.
  • ectypal — a reproduction; copy (opposed to prototype).
  • edental — Edentate.
  • edictal — Of, pertaining to, or derived from edicts.
  • egalite — equality.
  • egality — (obsolete) Equality. (14th-19th c.).
  • elamite — an inhabitant of the ancient kingdom of Elam
  • elastic — (of an object or material) able to resume its normal shape spontaneously after contraction, dilatation, or distortion.
  • elastin — An elastic, fibrous glycoprotein found in connective tissue.
  • elating — Present participle of elate.
  • elation — Great happiness and exhilaration.
  • elative — (grammar) In Semitic languages, the \u201cadjective of superiority.\u201d In some languages such as Arabic, the concepts of comparative and superlative degree of an adjective are merged into a single form, the 'elative'. How this form is understood or translated depends upon context and definiteness. In the absence of comparison, the elative conveys the notion of \u201cgreatest\u201d, \u201csupreme.\u201d.
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