7-letter words containing d, a, l, r
- labroid — any percoid fish of the family Labridae (wrasses)
- ladders — Plural form of ladder.
- laddery — like or with ladders
- ladrone — a thief.
- lagarde — Christine (Madeleine Odette). born 1956, French politician; managing director of the International Monetary Fund from 2011
- lagered — a camp or encampment, especially within a protective circle of wagons.
- laggard — a person or thing that lags; lingerer; loiterer.
- lairdly — belonging or relating to a laird or lairds
- landers — Plural form of lander.
- landler — an Austrian and southern German folk dance in moderately slow triple meter, antecedent to the waltz.
- laniard — Nautical. a short rope or wire rove through deadeyes to hold and tauten standing rigging.
- lanyard — Nautical. a short rope or wire rove through deadeyes to hold and tauten standing rigging.
- lardass — a person having unusually large buttocks.
- larders — Plural form of larder.
- lardies — Plural form of lardy.
- larding — the rendered fat of hogs, especially the internal fat of the abdomen.
- lardner — Ring(gold Wilmer) [ring-gohld wil-mer] /ˈrɪŋˌgoʊld ˈwɪl mər/ (Show IPA), 1885–1933, U.S. short-story writer and journalist.
- lardoon — a strip of fat used in larding, especially as drawn through the substance of meat, chicken, etc., with a kind of needle or pin.
- larwood — Harold. 1904–95, English cricketer. An outstanding fast bowler, he played 21 times for England between 1926 and 1933
- lasered — Simple past tense and past participle of laser.
- laterad — toward the side.
- launder — to wash (clothes, linens, etc.).
- laundry — articles of clothing, linens, etc., that have been or are to be washed.
- layered — a thickness of some material laid on or spread over a surface: a layer of soot on the window sill; two layers of paint.
- leaders — Plural form of leader.
- leander — a Greek youth, the lover of Hero, who swam the Hellespont every night to visit her until he was drowned in a storm.
- learned — having much knowledge; scholarly; erudite: learned professors.
- ledyard — a town in SE Connecticut.
- leeward — pertaining to, situated in, or moving toward the quarter toward which the wind blows (opposed to windward).
- leonard — Sugar Ray (Ray Charles Leonard) born 1956, U.S. boxer.
- leopard — a large, spotted Asian or African carnivore, Panthera pardus, of the cat family, usually tawny with black markings; the Old World panther: all leopard populations are threatened or endangered.
- leotard — a skintight, one-piece garment for the torso, having a high or low neck, long or short sleeves, and a lower portion resembling either briefs or tights, worn by acrobats, dancers, etc.
- leppard — Raymond. born 1927, British conductor and musicologist, in the US from 1977: noted esp for his revivals of early opera
- lipread — to understand spoken words by interpreting the movements of a speaker's lips without hearing the sounds made.
- lizards — Plural form of lizard.
- lizzard — Obsolete form of lizard.
- loaders — Plural form of loader.
- lollard — an English or Scottish follower of the religious teachings of John Wycliffe from the 14th to the 16th centuries.
- lombard — Carole (Jane Alice Peters) 1909?–42, U.S. film actress.
- lorinda — a feminine name
- lyndora — a female given name.
- lyrated — Alternative form of lyrate.
- mallard — a common, almost cosmopolitan, wild duck, Anas platyrhynchos, from which the domestic ducks are descended.
- malodor — an unpleasant or offensive odor; stench.
- mandrel — a shaft or bar the end of which is inserted into a workpiece to hold it during machining.
- mandril — a shaft or bar the end of which is inserted into a workpiece to hold it during machining.
- marbled — Having a streaked and patterned appearance like that of variegated marble.
- medlars — a small tree, Mespilus germanica, of the rose family, the fruit of which resembles a crab apple and is not edible until the early stages of decay.
- millard — a male given name.
- modular — of or relating to a module or a modulus.