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6-letter words containing e, l, a

  • applet — An applet is a computer program which is contained within a page on the World Wide Web, and which transfers itself to your computer and runs automatically while you are looking at that Web page.
  • appley — resembling or tasting like an apple
  • arabel — a female given name.
  • arable — Arable farming involves growing crops such as wheat and barley rather than keeping animals or growing fruit and vegetables. Arable land is land that is used for arable farming.
  • arbela — an ancient city in Assyria, near which the Battle of Arbela took place (331 bc), in which Alexander the Great defeated the Persians
  • areola — any small circular area, such as the pigmented ring around the human nipple or the inflamed area surrounding a pimple
  • areole — a space outlined on a surface, such as an area between veins on a leaf or on an insect's wing
  • argyle — made of knitted or woven material with a diamond-shaped pattern of two or more colours
  • ariled — (of seeds) having an aril
  • arleen — a female given name.
  • arlene — a feminine name: var. Arline, Arleen
  • armlet — a small arm, as of a lake, the sea, etc
  • artels — Plural form of artel.
  • ashler — Masonry. a squared building stone cut more or less true on all faces adjacent to those of other stones so as to permit very thin mortar joints. such stones collectively. masonry made of them.
  • ashley — Jack, Baron. 1922–2012, British Labour politician and campaigner for deaf and disabled people
  • aslake — to weaken or make (a thing) less intense
  • asleep — Someone who is asleep is sleeping.
  • aslope — sloping
  • astely — the lack of a central cylinder or stele
  • aswell — Archaic spelling of as well.
  • asylee — a person who is granted asylum
  • atelic — showing an action or happening as being unfinished
  • attlee — Clement Richard, 1st Earl Attlee. 1883–1967, British statesman; prime minister (1945–51); leader of the Labour party (1935–55). His government instituted the welfare state, with extensive nationalization
  • atweel — surely.
  • audile — a person who possesses a faculty for auditory imagery that is more distinct than his visual or other imagery
  • auklet — any of various small auks of the genera Aethia and Ptychoramphus
  • aulder — old.
  • averil — a male given name.
  • aviles — a port in Asturias, NW Spain, on the Bay of Biscay.
  • avulse — to remove or take away by force
  • aweful — Misspelling of awful.
  • awheel — on wheels
  • awhile — Awhile means for a short time. It is more commonly spelled 'a while', which is considered more correct, especially in British English.
  • awless — displaying no awe; unawed.
  • azalea — An azalea is a woody plant with shiny, dark-green leaves which produces many brightly-coloured flowers in the spring.
  • azazel — a desert demon to whom the scapegoat bearing the sins of Israel was sent out once a year on the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 16:1–28)
  • azoles — Plural form of azole.
  • azrael — (in Jewish and Islamic angelology) the angel who separates the soul from the body at death
  • azuela — Mariano [mah-ryah-naw] /mɑˈryɑ nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1873–1952, Mexican physician and novelist.
  • babble — If someone babbles, they talk in a confused or excited way.
  • badley — Misspelling of badly.
  • baetyl — a meteoric stone thought in antiquity to be of divine origin, and sometimes worshipped
  • baffle — If something baffles you, you cannot understand it or explain it.
  • bagels — Plural form of bagel.
  • bagleyWilliam Chandler, 1874–1946, U.S. educator and writer.
  • bailed — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • bailee — a person to whom the possession of goods is transferred under a bailment
  • bailer — to dip (water) out of a boat, as with a bucket.
  • bailey — the outermost wall or court of a castle
  • bailie — (in Scotland) a municipal magistrate
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