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

  • slipped — to move, flow, pass, or go smoothly or easily; glide; slide: Water slips off a smooth surface.
  • snidely — derogatory in a nasty, insinuating manner: snide remarks about his boss.
  • soldier — a person who serves in an army; a person engaged in military service.
  • solider — having three dimensions (length, breadth, and thickness), as a geometrical body or figure.
  • soliped — solidungulate.
  • sondeli — an Indian musk shrew
  • speldin — a fish that has been split and dried
  • spindle — a rounded rod, usually of wood, tapering toward each end, used in hand-spinning to twist into thread the fibers drawn from the mass on the distaff, and on which the thread is wound as it is spun.
  • splined — a long, narrow, thin strip of wood, metal, etc.; slat.
  • spoiled — to damage severely or harm (something), especially with reference to its excellence, value, usefulness, etc.: The water stain spoiled the painting. Drought spoiled the corn crop.
  • stifled — to quell, crush, or end by force: to stifle a revolt; to stifle free expression.
  • stilled — remaining in place or at rest; motionless; stationary: to stand still.
  • stilted — stiffly dignified or formal, as speech or literary style; pompous.
  • sulfide — a compound of sulfur with a more electropositive element or, less often, a group.
  • sullied — to soil, stain, or tarnish.
  • swindle — to cheat (a person, business, etc.) out of money or other assets.
  • taliped — (of a foot) twisted or distorted out of shape or position.
  • tallied — an account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, or the like.
  • tebaldi — Renata [ruh-nah-tuh;; Italian re-nah-tah] /rəˈnɑ tə;; Italian rɛˈnɑ tɑ/ (Show IPA), 1922–2004, Italian soprano.
  • telidon — a Canadian interactive viewdata service
  • tendril — a threadlike, leafless organ of climbing plants, often growing in spiral form, which attaches itself to or twines round some other body, so as to support the plant.
  • tepidly — moderately warm; lukewarm: tepid water.
  • thirled — to pierce.
  • tickled — to touch or stroke lightly with the fingers, a feather, etc., so as to excite a tingling or itching sensation in; titillate.
  • tiddler — small child
  • tindale — William Tyndale
  • toluide — any of a class of chemical compounds having the general formula RCONHC6H4CH3, derived from the toluidines by the substitution of an acid radical for one of the amino H atoms
  • trailed — to drag or let drag along the ground or other surface; draw or drag along behind.
  • trifled — an article or thing of very little value.
  • trilled — to cause to flow in a thin stream.
  • trindle — British Dialect. a wheel, especially of a wheelbarrow.
  • tripled — threefold; consisting of three parts: a triple knot.
  • twiddle — to turn about or play with lightly or idly, especially with the fingers; twirl.
  • unfiled — not filed
  • unideal — a conception of something in its perfection.
  • unliked — not enjoyed or considered agreeable
  • unlined — paper: without ruled lines
  • unoiled — not covered or smeared with oil
  • upfield — away from the defending team's goal
  • uredial — uredinium.
  • vedalia — an Australian ladybird, Rodolia cardinalis, introduced elsewhere to control the scale insect Icerya purchasi, which is a pest of citrus fruits
  • weirdly — involving or suggesting the supernatural; unearthly or uncanny: a weird sound; weird lights.
  • welding — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • wergild — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • whirled — Simple past tense and past participle of whirl.
  • widdled — Simple past tense and past participle of widdle.
  • widdles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of widdle.
  • wieland — Christoph Martin [kris-tawf mahr-teen] /ˈkrɪs tɔf ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), 1733–1813, German poet, novelist, and critic.
  • wielded — to exercise (power, authority, influence, etc.), as in ruling or dominating.
  • wielder — to exercise (power, authority, influence, etc.), as in ruling or dominating.
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