6-letter words containing g, l, s
- legals — permitted by law; lawful: Such acts are not legal.
- legist — an expert in law, especially ancient law.
- lesage — Alain René (alɛ̃ ʀəˈneɪ) ; ȧlan rənāˈ) 1668-1747; Fr. novelist & dramatist
- lieges — Plural form of liege.
- ligans — lagan.
- ligase — any of a class of enzymes that catalyze the joining of two molecules by formation of a covalent bond accompanied by the hydrolysis of ATP.
- ligers — Plural form of liger.
- lights — a light product, as a beer or cigarette.
- ligsam — Alternative form of ligan.
- lingos — Plural form of lingo.
- lisgar — Sir John Young, 1807–76, Canadian political leader: governor general 1869–72.
- lodges — Plural form of lodge.
- logans — Plural form of logan.
- logics — Plural form of logic.
- logins — Plural form of login.
- logons — Plural form of logon.
- long s — a lower-case s, printed ʃ, formerly used in handwriting and printing
- longes — Plural form of longe.
- longus — ?3rd century ad, Greek author of the prose romance Daphnis and Chloe
- losing — causing or suffering loss.
- loughs — Plural form of lough.
- lugers — a one- or two-person sled for coasting or racing down a chute, used especially in Europe.
- lugosi — Bela, 1884–1956, U.S. actor, born in Hungary: best known for his roles in horror films.
- lunges — Plural form of lunge.
- lungis — Plural form of lungi.
- lyings — Plural form of lying.
- lysing — Present participle of lyse.
- moguls — any of the Mongol conquerors of India who established an empire that lasted from 1526 to 1857, but held only nominal power after 1803. See also Great Mogul.
- mulgas — Plural form of mulga.
- nisgul — the smallest and weakest bird in a brood of chickens
- oglers — to look at amorously, flirtatiously, or impertinently.
- oilgas — a gaseous mixture of hydrocarbons used as a fuel, obtained by the destructive distillation of mineral oils
- s-lang — (language) A small but highly functional embedded interpreter. S-Lang was a stack-based postfix language resembling Forth and BC/DC with limited support for infix notation. Now it has a C-like infix syntax. Arrays, stings, integers, floating-point and autoloading are all suported. The editor JED embeds S-lang. S-Lang is available under the GNU Library General Public License. It runs on MS-DOS, Unix, and VMS. E-mail: John E. Davis <[email protected]>.
- sagely — a profoundly wise person; a person famed for wisdom.
- salugi — a gamelike prank in which a youth grabs something belonging to another and throws it to a third, preventing the owner from retrieving it as it is tossed back and forth.
- sangli — a city in S Maharashtra, in SW India, on the Krishna River.
- sawlog — a log large enough to be suitable for sawing or making into lumber
- schlag — whipped cream, used especially as a topping for cake, coffee, etc.
- seghol — a pronunciation mark in Hebrew which stands for a sound similar to the sound of e in the word ten
- shlong — the penis.
- sigloi — a silver coin of ancient Persia, the 20th part of a daric.
- siglos — a silver coin of ancient Persia, the 20th part of a daric.
- siglum — an abbreviation used by scribes writing in ancient and medieval Latin
- signal — anything that serves to indicate, warn, direct, command, or the like, as a light, a gesture, an act, etc.: a traffic signal; a signal to leave.
- silage — fodder preserved through fermentation in a silo; ensilage.
- single — only one in number; one only; unique; sole: a single example.
- singly — apart from others; separately.
- slaggy — of, relating to, or like slag.
- slangy — of, of the nature of, or containing slang: a slangy expression.
- sledge — a vehicle of various forms, mounted on runners and often drawn by draft animals, used for traveling or for conveying loads over snow, ice, rough ground, etc.