6-letter words containing i, l, e, o
- lottie — a female given name, form of Charlotte.
- louise — an opera (1900) by Gustave Charpentier.
- lourie — Any of several species of the family Musophagidae.
- lovein — a usually organized public gathering of people, held as a demonstration of mutual love or in protest against inhumane policies.
- meloid — a beetle of the family Meloidae, comprising the blister beetles.
- mobile — capable of moving or being moved readily.
- moiled — to work hard; drudge.
- moiler — to work hard; drudge.
- molies — Plural form of moly.
- moline — (of a cross) having arms of equal length, split and curved back at the ends, used especially as the cadency mark of an eighth son: a cross moline.
- molise — a region of S central Italy, the second smallest of the regions: separated from Abruzzi e Molise in 1965. Capital: Campobasso. Pop: 321 047 (2003 est). Area: 4438 sq km (1731 sq miles)
- mollie — a female given name, form of Mary or Milicent.
- motile — Biology. moving or capable of moving spontaneously: motile cells; motile spores.
- neroli — An essential oil distilled from the flowers of the Seville orange, used in perfumery.
- nicole — a female given name: from Greek words meaning “victory” and “people.”.
- niello — a black metallic substance, consisting of silver, copper, lead, and sulfur, with which an incised design or ground is filled to produce an ornamental effect on metal.
- nilote — a member of any of several indigenous black peoples of the Sudan and eastern Africa.
- nobile — Umberto [oo m-ber-taw] /ʊmˈbɛr tɔ/ (Show IPA), 1885–1978, Italian aeronautical engineer and arctic explorer.
- nollie — (in skateboarding and snowboarding) a jump performed without the aid of a takeoff ramp, executed by pressing the foot down on the nose of the board.
- obelia — a colonial hydroid of the genus Obelia, common in temperate seas and appearing as a delicate, mosslike growth on rocks, pilings, etc.
- oblige — to require or constrain, as by law, command, conscience, or force of necessity.
- ocelli — a type of simple eye common to invertebrates, consisting of retinal cells, pigments, and nerve fibers.
- octile — (statistics) Any of the quantiles which divide an ordered sample population into eight equally numerous subsets.
- oilers — Plural form of oiler.
- oilery — The business or goods of a dealer in oils.
- oilier — Comparative form of oily.
- oillet — eyelet (def 5).
- oilmen — Plural form of oilman.
- oldies — a popular song, joke, movie, etc., that was in vogue at a time in the past.
- olefin — any member of the alkene series.
- oliver — one of the 12 paladins of Charlemagne. Compare Roland.
- olives — a female given name.
- olivet — a large floodlight having a single bulb.
- ollies — Plural form of ollie.
- online — located on major routes or rail lines: online industries.
- oolite — a limestone composed of minute rounded concretions resembling fish roe, in some places altered to ironstone by replacement with iron oxide.
- oriels — Plural form of oriel.
- oriole — any of several usually brightly colored, passerine birds of the family Oriolidae, of the Old World. Compare golden oriole.
- outlie — (rare, transitive) To tell more or better lies than.
- oxlike — the adult castrated male of the genus Bos, used chiefly as a draft animal.
- pelion — Mount, a mountain near the E coast of Greece, in Thessaly. 5252 feet (1600 meters).
- peloid — mud used therapeutically.
- pilose — covered with hair, especially soft hair; furry.
- pinole — a town in W California.
- piolet — an ice ax used in mountaineering.
- pleio- — pleo-
- poleis — an ancient Greek city-state.
- police — Also called police force. an organized civil force for maintaining order, preventing and detecting crime, and enforcing the laws.
- polite — showing good manners toward others, as in behavior, speech, etc.; courteous; civil: a polite reply.
- recoil — to draw back; start or shrink back, as in alarm, horror, or disgust.