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6-letter words containing d, i, e, l

  • levied — an imposing or collecting, as of a tax, by authority or force.
  • licked — Simple past tense and past participle of lick.
  • lidded — a removable or hinged cover for closing the opening, usually at the top, of a pot, jar, trunk, etc.; a movable cover.
  • lidice — a village in the W Czech Republic: suffered a ruthless reprisal by the Nazis in 1942 for the assassination of a high Nazi official.
  • lieder — a typically 19th-century German art song characterized by the setting of a poetic text in either strophic or through-composed style and the treatment of the piano and voice in equal artistic partnership: Schubert lieder.
  • lifted — to move or bring (something) upward from the ground or other support to a higher position; hoist.
  • ligged — Simple past tense and past participle of lig.
  • lilied — abounding in lilies.
  • lilted — rhythmic swing or cadence.
  • limbed — having a specified number or kind of limbs (often used in combination): a long-limbed dancer.
  • limdep — A linear programming language used by economists.
  • limned — to represent in drawing or painting.
  • limped — to walk with a labored, jerky movement, as when lame.
  • linden — a city in NE New Jersey, near Newark.
  • linked — (of a gene) exhibiting linkage.
  • linted — having or containing lint
  • lipped — of or relating to the lips or a lip: lip ointment.
  • lisped — a speech defect consisting in pronouncing s and z like or nearly like the th- sounds of thin and this, respectively.
  • listed — made of selvages or strips of cloth.
  • lithed — Simple past tense and past participle of lithe.
  • livedo — a reddish discoloured patch on the skin
  • loadie — loady.
  • maelid — a mythical apple nymph
  • mailed — of or relating to mail.
  • medial — situated in or pertaining to the middle; median; intermediate.
  • medillJoseph, 1823–99, U.S. journalist.
  • meloid — a beetle of the family Meloidae, comprising the blister beetles.
  • middle — equally distant from the extremes or outer limits; central: the middle point of a line; the middle singer in a trio.
  • midleg — the middle part of the leg.
  • milden — To make or become mild or milder.
  • milder — amiably gentle or temperate in feeling or behavior toward others.
  • mildew — Plant Pathology. a disease of plants, characterized by a cottony, usually whitish coating on the surface of affected parts, caused by any of various fungi.
  • milked — Simple past tense and past participle of milk.
  • milled — simple past tense and past participle of mill1 .
  • milted — Simple past tense and past participle of milt.
  • mindel — the second major Pleistocene glaciation of Alpine Europe
  • misled — to lead or guide wrongly; lead astray.
  • moiled — to work hard; drudge.
  • nailed — a slender, typically rod-shaped rigid piece of metal, usually in any of numerous standard lengths from a fraction of an inch to several inches and having one end pointed and the other enlarged and flattened, for hammering into or through wood, other building materials, etc., as used in building, in fastening, or in holding separate pieces together.
  • nilled — to be unwilling: will he, nill he.
  • oldies — a popular song, joke, movie, etc., that was in vogue at a time in the past.
  • peloid — mud used therapeutically.
  • piddle — to spend time in a wasteful, trifling, or ineffective way; dawdle (often followed by around): He wasted the day piddling around.
  • pilled — a small globular or rounded mass of medicinal substance, usually covered with a hard coating, that is to be swallowed whole.
  • pleiad — any of the Pleiades.
  • railed — a bar of wood or metal fixed horizontally for any of various purposes, as for a support, barrier, fence, or railing.
  • redial — Also, re-dial. to dial again.
  • regild — to gild again
  • relied — to depend confidently; put trust in (usually followed by on or upon): You can rely on her work.
  • rewild — to introduce (animals or plants) to their original habitat or to a habitat similar to their natural one: proposals to rewild elephants to the American plains.
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