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6-letter words containing i, l, d

  • haloid — Also, halogenoid [hal-uh-juh-noid, hey-luh-] /ˈhæl ə dʒəˌnɔɪd, ˈheɪ lə-/ (Show IPA). resembling or derived from a halogen.
  • hilled — Simple past tense and past participle of hill.
  • hilted — the handle of a sword or dagger.
  • ideals — a conception of something in its perfection.
  • idlers — Plural form of idler.
  • idlest — Superlative form of idle.
  • idling — not working or active; unemployed; doing nothing: idle workers.
  • idolum — An insubstantial image; a spectre or phantom.
  • idylls — Plural form of idyll.
  • ilford — a former borough in SE England, now part of Redbridge, Greater London.
  • illiad — a wink
  • illude — to deceive or trick.
  • indole — a colorless to yellowish solid, C 8 H 7 N, having a low melting point and a fecal odor, found in the oil of jasmine and clove and as a putrefaction product from animals' intestines: used in perfumery and as a reagent.
  • indult — a dispensation granted often temporarily by the pope, permitting a deviation from church law.
  • infold — enfold.
  • inheld — Simple past tense and past participle of inhold.
  • inhold — To contain, hold in.
  • inlaid — set into the surface of something: an inlaid design on a chest.
  • inland — pertaining to or situated in the interior part of a country or region: inland cities.
  • inlead — (transitive, mechanical, and, electrical) To lead into; conduct.
  • iridal — (rare) Pertaining to a rainbow.
  • island — a tract of land completely surrounded by water, and not large enough to be called a continent.
  • isolda — a female given name, form of Iseult.
  • isolde — German name of Iseult.
  • jailed — Simple past tense and past participle of jail.
  • jilted — to reject or cast aside (a lover or sweetheart), especially abruptly or unfeelingly.
  • jpldis — Jet Propulsion Laboratory Display Information System. Query system for UNIVAC 1108 [or PDP's?] written in Fortran, based on Tymshare's "Retrieve". Indirectly led to Vulcan which led to dBASE II. Jack Hatfield, George Masters, W. Van Snyder, Jeb Long et al, JPL.
  • keloid — an abnormal proliferation of scar tissue, as on the site of a surgical incision.
  • khalid — (Khalid ibn Abdul-Aziz al Saud) 1913–82, king of Saudi Arabia 1975–82 (son of ibn-Saud and brother of Faisal).
  • kiddle — A kind of fishweir resembling a wattle or fence.
  • kidlet — Lb colloquial child.
  • kidult — adultescent.
  • killed — Cause the death of (a person, animal, or other living thing).
  • kilned — Simple past tense and past participle of kiln.
  • kilted — wearing a kilt.
  • kindle — (of animals, especially rabbits) to bear (young); produce (offspring).
  • kindly — having, showing, or proceeding from a benevolent disposition or spirit; kindhearted: kindly people.
  • kudlik — an Inuit soapstone seal-oil lamp
  • labrid — any of numerous fishes of the family Labridae, including the wrasses, the tautog, and the cunner, and characterized chiefly by well-developed teeth and, often, brilliant colors.
  • laddie — a young lad; boy.
  • ladied — (obsolete) ladylike; not rough; gentle.
  • ladies — a woman who is refined, polite, and well-spoken: She may be poor and have little education, but she's a real lady.
  • lading — the act of lading.
  • ladino — Also called Judeo-Spanish, Judezmo. a Romance language of Sephardic Jews, based on Old Spanish and written in the Hebrew script.
  • laidly — very ugly or offensive
  • lairds — Plural form of laird.
  • laired — British Dialect. mud; mire.
  • laldie — great energy and enjoyment, or great force
  • lamoid — A member of the South American camelid family, a llama, alpaca, vicuna, or guanaco.
  • landis — Kenesaw Mountain [ken-uh-saw] /ˈkɛn əˌsɔ/ (Show IPA), 1866–1944, U.S. jurist: first commissioner of baseball 1920–44.
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