0%

7-letter words containing i, l, f

  • flawing — Present participle of flaw.
  • flaying — to strip off the skin or outer covering of.
  • fleapit — a shabby public place, especially a run-down motion-picture theater.
  • fleecie — a person who collects fleeces after shearing and prepares them for baling
  • fleein' — drunk
  • fleeing — Present participle of flee.
  • flemingSir Alexander, 1881–1955, Scottish bacteriologist and physician: discoverer of penicillin 1928; Nobel Prize in Medicine 1945.
  • flemish — of or relating to Flanders, its people, or their language.
  • flexile — flexible; pliant; tractable; adaptable.
  • flexing — to bend, as a part of the body: He flexed his arms to show off his muscles.
  • flexion — the act of bending.
  • flicked — a sudden light blow or tap, as with a whip or the finger: She gave the horse a flick with her riding crop.
  • flicker — to burn unsteadily; shine with a wavering light: The candle flickered in the wind and went out.
  • flights — Plural form of flight.
  • flighty — given to flights of fancy; capricious; frivolous.
  • flinder — a piece or fragment
  • flinger — a person or thing that flings.
  • flinted — a hard stone, a form of silica resembling chalcedony but more opaque, less pure, and less lustrous.
  • flip-up — having a movable part hinged so as to be capable of being flipped upward when necessary: a flip-up visor.
  • fliping — Present participle of flipe.
  • flipped — to toss or put in motion with a sudden impulse, as with a snap of a finger and thumb, especially so as to cause to turn over in the air: to flip a coin.
  • flipper — a broad, flat limb, as of a seal or whale, especially adapted for swimming.
  • flirted — Simple past tense and past participle of flirt.
  • flirter — to court triflingly or act amorously without serious intentions; play at love; coquet.
  • fliting — a dispute or wrangle; scolding.
  • flitted — to move lightly and swiftly; fly, dart, or skim along: bees flitting from flower to flower.
  • flitter — a fritter or pancake.
  • flivver — Older Slang. an automobile, especially one that is small, inexpensive, and old.
  • flokati — a thick, woolen rug with a shaggy pile, originally handwoven in Greece.
  • floosie — a gaudily dressed, usually immoral woman, especially a prostitute.
  • floozie — a gaudily dressed, usually immoral woman, especially a prostitute.
  • florida — a state in the SE United States between the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico. 58,560 sq. mi. (151,670 sq. km). Capital: Tallahassee. Abbreviation: FL (for use with zip code), Fla.
  • florins — Plural form of florin.
  • florist — a retailer of flowers, ornamental plants, etc.
  • floruit — he (or she) flourished: used to indicate the period during which a person flourished, especially when the exact birth and death dates are unknown. Abbreviation: fl., flor.
  • flossie — a female given name, form of Florence.
  • flowing — moving in or as in a stream: flowing water.
  • flueric — fluidics.
  • fluidal — (chiefly geology) Pertaining to a fluid, or to a flowing motion.
  • fluider — a substance, as a liquid or gas, that is capable of flowing and that changes its shape at a steady rate when acted upon by a force tending to change its shape.
  • fluidic — the technology dealing with the use of a flowing liquid or gas in various devices, especially controls, to perform functions usually performed by an electric current in electronic devices.
  • fluidly — a substance, as a liquid or gas, that is capable of flowing and that changes its shape at a steady rate when acted upon by a force tending to change its shape.
  • flukily — In a fluky way; with unexpected luck.
  • fluking — Present participle of fluke.
  • flulike — Resembling influenza.
  • fluming — a deep narrow defile containing a mountain stream or torrent.
  • flunkie — Alternative form of flunky.
  • fluoric — Chemistry. pertaining to or obtained from fluorine.
  • flutina — an early type of accordion, similar in internal construction to a concertina
  • fluting — a musical wind instrument consisting of a tube with a series of fingerholes or keys, in which the wind is directed against a sharp edge, either directly, as in the modern transverse flute, or through a flue, as in the recorder.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?