7-letter words containing g, u, i, l
- lusting — intense sexual desire or appetite.
- mauling — a heavy hammer, as for driving stakes or wedges.
- mulling — to study or ruminate; ponder.
- nulling — Electronics. a point of minimum signal reception, as on a radio direction finder or other electronic meter.
- nurling — to make knurls or ridges on.
- pauling — Linus Carl [lahy-nuh s] /ˈlaɪ nəs/ (Show IPA), 1901–94, U.S. chemist: Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1954, Nobel Peace Prize 1962.
- pillbug — any of various small terrestrial isopods, especially of the genera Armadillidium and Oniscus, which can roll themselves up into a spherical shape.
- plagium — the crime of kidnapping a child
- plug in — capable of or designed for being connected to an electrical power source by plugging in or inserting: a plug-in hair dryer; a plug-in transistor.
- plug-in — capable of or designed for being connected to an electrical power source by plugging in or inserting: a plug-in hair dryer; a plug-in transistor.
- pluming — a feather.
- pulping — the soft, juicy, edible part of a fruit.
- pulsing — the regular throbbing of the arteries, caused by the successive contractions of the heart, especially as may be felt at an artery, as at the wrist.
- rougail — a combination of condiments and spices, as ginger, thyme, pimiento, and tomatoes, used especially in Creole cookery.
- sighful — mournful; sorrowful: a sighful ballad.
- singult — a sob
- sloughi — a smooth-haired hound originating in Morocco
- tilburg — a city in the S Netherlands.
- ugliest — very unattractive or unpleasant to look at; offensive to the sense of beauty; displeasing in appearance.
- unagile — quick and well-coordinated in movement; lithe: an agile leap.
- unsling — to remove (something) from being slung: to unsling a rifle from one's shoulder.
- upfling — to throw upwards
- uplight — a lamp, often a light bulb set in a cylinder or other container, placed on the floor so that a beam of light is directed upward.
- uplying — raised; at a higher level
- valuing — relative worth, merit, or importance: the value of a college education; the value of a queen in chess.
- virgule — a short oblique stroke (/) between two words indicating that whichever is appropriate may be chosen to complete the sense of the text in which they occur: The defendant and his/her attorney must appear in court.