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8-letter words containing i, l, t, y

  • playlist — a list of the recordings to be played on the radio during a particular program or time period, often including their sequence, duration, etc.
  • playsuit — a sports costume for women and children, usually consisting of shorts and a shirt, worn as beachwear, for tennis, etc.
  • playtime — time for play or recreation.
  • polarity — Physics. the property or characteristic that produces unequal physical effects at different points in a body or system, as a magnet or storage battery. the positive or negative state in which a body reacts to a magnetic, electric, or other field.
  • politely — showing good manners toward others, as in behavior, speech, etc.; courteous; civil: a polite reply.
  • ponytail — an arrangement of the hair in a long lock drawn tightly against the back of the head and cinched so as to hang loosely.
  • poyntill — pointel.
  • prettily — pleasing or attractive to the eye, as by delicacy or gracefulness: a pretty face.
  • priestly — of or relating to a priest; sacerdotal: priestly vestments.
  • ptyalism — excessive secretion of saliva.
  • ptyalize — to induce the flow of saliva
  • pulpitry — the art of delivering sermons
  • pyelitis — inflammation of the pelvis or outlet of the kidney.
  • quaintly — having an old-fashioned attractiveness or charm; oddly picturesque: a quaint old house.
  • rallyist — a person who participates in automobile rallies.
  • regality — royalty, sovereignty, or kingship.
  • rhyolite — a fine-grained igneous rock rich in silica: the volcanic equivalent of granite.
  • ritually — an established or prescribed procedure for a religious or other rite.
  • rivality — rivalry
  • royalist — a supporter or adherent of a king or royal government, especially in times of rebellion or civil war.
  • rurality — rural character.
  • rusticly — in a rustic manner
  • salacity — lustful or lecherous.
  • salinity — of, containing, or resembling common table salt; salty or saltlike: a saline solution.
  • scantily — scant in amount, quantity, etc.; barely sufficient.
  • scolytid — any of various dark-coloured cylinder-shaped beetles, including the bark and ambrosia beetles
  • sedulity — sedulous quality, application, or activity; diligence.
  • senility — the state of being senile, especially the weakness or mental infirmity of old age.
  • silently — making no sound; quiet; still: a silent motor.
  • sisterly — of, like, or befitting a sister: sisterly affection.
  • sitology — the branch of medicine dealing with nutrition and dietetics.
  • skylight — an opening in a roof or ceiling, fitted with glass, for admitting daylight.
  • slightly — small in amount, degree, etc.: a slight increase; a slight odor.
  • slithery — to slide down or along a surface, especially unsteadily, from side to side, or with some friction or noise: The box slithered down the chute.
  • snootily — snobbish.
  • snottily — Vulgar. of or relating to snot.
  • sodality — fellowship; comradeship.
  • solicity — a request
  • solidity — the state, property, or quality of being solid.
  • solitary — alone; without companions; unattended: a solitary passer-by.
  • staysail — any sail set on a stay, as a triangular sail between two masts.
  • steadily — firmly placed or fixed; stable in position or equilibrium: a steady ladder.
  • stellify — to change or be changed into a star
  • stickily — in a sticky manner
  • stickley — Gustav [guhs-tahv,, goo s-tahf] /ˈgʌs tɑv,, ˈgʊs tɑf/ (Show IPA), 1858–1942, U.S. furniture designer, architect, and leader of the Arts and Craft Movement in America.
  • stievely — in a firm way
  • stilyaga — (formerly, in the Soviet Union) a person, usually young, who adopted the unconventional manner and dress of some Western youth groups, as rockers or punk-rock fans.
  • stingily — reluctant to give or spend; not generous; niggardly; penurious: He's a stingy old miser.
  • stolypin — Petr Arkadievich. 1863–1911, Russian conservative statesman: prime minister (1906–11). He instituted agrarian reforms but was ruthless in suppressing rebellion: assassinated
  • straitly — Often, straits. (used with a singular verb) a narrow passage of water connecting two large bodies of water.
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