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5-letter words containing e, o, l

  • doles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dole.
  • dowel — a piece of wood driven into a hole drilled in a masonry wall to receive nails, as for fastening woodwork.
  • dowle — Feathery or woolly down; filament of a feather.
  • doyle — Sir Arthur Conan [kaw-nuh n,, koh-] /ˈkɔ nən,, ˈkoʊ-/ (Show IPA), 1859–1930, British physician, novelist, and detective-story writer.
  • drole — a scoundrel
  • ebola — Also called Ebola fever, Ebola hemorrhagic fever, Ebola virus disease. a usually fatal disease, a type of hemorrhagic fever, caused by the Ebola virus and marked by high fever, severe gastrointestinal distress, and bleeding.
  • ecol. — ecological
  • ecole — school1 .
  • elbow — The joint between the forearm and the upper arm.
  • eldon — Earl of, title of John Scott. 1751–1838, British statesman and jurist; Lord Chancellor (1801–06, 1807–27): an inflexible opponent of parliamentary reform, Catholic emancipation, and the abolition of slavery
  • elgon — Mountextinct volcano on the Kenyan-Ugandan border: 14,178 ft (4,321 m): crater, 5 mi (8 km) wide
  • eliot — George, real name Mary Ann Evans. 1819–80, English novelist, noted for her analysis of provincial Victorian society. Her best-known novels include Adam Bede (1859), The Mill on the Floss (1860), Silas Marner (1861), and Middlemarch (1872)
  • elogy — Praise; eulogy.
  • elope — Run away secretly in order to get married, especially without parental consent.
  • elops — any of several fishes of the genus Elops of the Elopidae family that are related to the tarpons
  • elton — Ben(jamin) (Charles). born 1959, British comedian, scriptwriter, playwright, and novelist; his work includes the Blackadder series for television (1987–89), the play Gasping (1990), the novel High Society (2002), and the lyrics to the musical We Will Rock You (2002)
  • elyot — Sir Thomas. ?1490–1546, English scholar and diplomat; author of The Boke named the Governour (1531), a treatise in English on education
  • enols — Plural form of enol.
  • enrol — (British) alternative spelling of enroll.
  • eolic — Aeolic
  • eqlog — Equality, types and generic modules for logic programming. A language using Horn clauses. J.A. Goguen, J. Meseguer.
  • errol — a masculine name
  • espol — Executive Systems Programming Oriented Language
  • eusol — an antiseptic solution of chlorinated lime and boric acid
  • extol — Praise enthusiastically.
  • felon — an acute and painful inflammation of the deeper tissues of a finger or toe, usually near the nail: a form of whitlow.
  • flexo — short for flexography, flexographic or flexographically
  • floes — Also called ice floe. a sheet of floating ice, chiefly on the surface of the sea, smaller than an ice field.
  • flote — a flotilla; a fleet
  • fogle — (obsolete) A pocket handkerchief.
  • foley — of or relating to motion-picture sound effects produced manually: a Foley artist.
  • folie — madness; insanity.
  • forel — a slipcase for a book.
  • foule — type of woollen cloth
  • fowle — Obsolete spelling of fowl.
  • geol. — geologic(al)
  • globe — the planet Earth (usually preceded by the).
  • glode — (archaic) Simple past tense and past participle of glide.
  • glome — (anatomy) One of the two prominences at the posterior extremity of the frog of a horse's foot.
  • glope — (intransitive, dialectal) To gaze in alarm; be terrified; stare.
  • glore — (archaic) to glare.
  • glove — a covering for the hand made with a separate sheath for each finger and for the thumb.
  • gloze — to explain away; extenuate; gloss over (usually followed by over).
  • godelKurt [kurt] /kɜrt/ (Show IPA), 1906–78, U.S. mathematician and logician, born in Austria-Hungary.
  • golde — Archaic spelling of gold.
  • golem — Jewish Folklore. a figure artificially constructed in the form of a human being and endowed with life.
  • golpe — a purple circle
  • gomel — a city in SE Byelorussia (Belarus), on a tributary of the Dnieper.
  • goole — an inland port in NE England, in the East Riding of Yorkshire at the confluence of the Ouse and Don Rivers, 75 km (47 miles) from the North Sea. Pop: 18 741 (2001)
  • goyle — a ravine
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