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7-letter words containing i, l, a

  • glaikit — foolish; giddy; flighty.
  • glaires — to coat with glair.
  • glairin — an organic deposit found in some mineral waters
  • glaives — Plural form of glaive.
  • glaring — shining with or reflecting a harshly bright or brilliant light.
  • glassie — glassy (def 4).
  • glazier — a person who fits windows or the like with glass or panes of glass.
  • glazily — in a glazy manner
  • glazing — a smooth, glossy surface or coating.
  • gliadin — a prolamin derived from the gluten of grain, as wheat or rye, used chiefly as a nutrient in high-protein diets.
  • gliomas — Plural form of glioma.
  • gloriam — for glory.
  • glucina — (obsolete, chemistry) beryllium oxide.
  • gmelina — a deciduous tree, Gmelina arborea, native to Southeast Asia,whose timber is important in the tropics.
  • go bail — to act as surety
  • goalies — Plural form of goalie.
  • goliard — one of a class of wandering scholar-poets in Germany, France, and England, chiefly in the 12th and 13th centuries, noted as the authors of satirical Latin verse written in celebration of conviviality, sensual pleasures, etc.
  • goliath — the giant warrior of the Philistines whom David killed with a stone from a sling. I Sam. 17:48–51.
  • golilla — a collar of lawn or linen, slightly rolled under at the edge and starched to stand out from the neckline, worn in Spain in the 17th century.
  • gorilla — the largest of the anthropoid apes, Gorilla gorilla, terrestrial and vegetarian, of western equatorial Africa and the Kivu highlands, comprising the subspecies G. g. gorilla (western lowland gorilla) G. g. graueri (eastern lowland gorilla) and G. g. beringei (mountain gorilla) now rare.
  • gracile — gracefully slender.
  • grawlix — A spiral-shaped graphic used to indicate swearing in comic strips.
  • gremial — a cloth placed on the lap of the bishop, as during the celebration of Mass or when he confers orders.
  • gwalior — a former state in central India, now part of Madhya Pradesh.
  • haglike — Resembling a hag or some aspect of one; hideous, cronelike.
  • hailing — to pour down on as or like hail: The plane hailed leaflets on the city.
  • halesia — (botany) Any of the genus Halesia of American shrubs with white flowers.
  • halfwit — a person who is feeble-minded.
  • halibut — either of two large flatfishes, Hippoglossus hippoglossus, of the North Atlantic, or H. stenolepis, of the North Pacific, used for food.
  • halicot — haricot2 .
  • halides — Plural form of halide.
  • halidom — a holy place, as a church or sanctuary.
  • haliers — Plural form of halier.
  • halifax — a peninsula and province in SE Canada: once a part of the French province of Acadia. 21,068 sq. mi. (54,565 sq. km). Capital: Halifax.
  • halimot — the court held by a lord
  • halitus — breath; exhalation; vapor.
  • hallali — a signal played on the bugle
  • halling — a vigorous, athletic, Norwegian folk dance.
  • hallion — a disreputable or useless lout
  • haloing — Also called nimbus. a geometric shape, usually in the form of a disk, circle, ring, or rayed structure, traditionally representing a radiant light around or above the head of a divine or sacred personage, an ancient or medieval monarch, etc.
  • haloumi — a salty cheese originating in Cyprus and made from sheep’s or goat’s milk: often grilled or fried because it melts very slowly.
  • halting — Archaic. lame; limping.
  • halving — Present participle of halve.
  • hamelin — city in NW Germany, in the state of Lower Saxony: pop. 56,000
  • hammily — In a hammy manner.
  • hanbali — one of the four schools of Islamic law, founded by Ahmad ibn Hanbal.
  • handily — skillfully; dexterously; expertly: to manage a boat handily.
  • haploid — single; simple.
  • happily — in a happy manner; with pleasure.
  • hardily — in a hardy manner: The plants thrived hardily.
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