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6-letter words containing i, l

  • hilary — Hilarius, Saint.
  • hilite — Informal spelling of highlight.
  • hilled — Simple past tense and past participle of hill.
  • hillel — ("ha-Zaken") c60 b.c.–a.d. 9? Palestinian rabbi, president of the Sanhedrin and interpreter of Biblical law: first to formulate definitive hermeneutic principles.
  • hillerDame Wendy, 1912–2003, British actress.
  • hillisMargaret, 1921–1998, U.S. orchestral conductor.
  • hilted — the handle of a sword or dagger.
  • hilton — Conrad (Nicholson) 1887–1979, U.S. hotel owner and developer.
  • hirple — (intransitive, Scotland, northern UK) to walk with a limp, to drag a limb, to walk lamely; to move with a gait somewhere between walking and crawling.
  • hirsel — (Scotland, Northern English) The entire stock on a farm or stock under the charge of a shepherd.
  • hirsle — to wriggle or fidget while seated
  • hitler — Adolf [ad-olf,, ey-dolf;; German ah-dawlf] /ˈæd ɒlf,, ˈeɪ dɒlf;; German ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), (Adolf Schicklgruber"der Führer") 1889–1945, Nazi dictator of Germany, born in Austria: Chancellor 1933–45; dictator 1934–45.
  • hokily — In a hokey way.
  • holier — Comparative form of holy; more sacred.
  • holies — Plural form of holy Used almost exclusively in 'Holy of Holies'.
  • holily — in a pious, devout, or sacred manner.
  • holing — Present participle of hole.
  • holism — Philosophy. the theory that whole entities, as fundamental components of reality, have an existence other than as the mere sum of their parts. Compare organicism (def 1).
  • holist — Philosophy. the theory that whole entities, as fundamental components of reality, have an existence other than as the mere sum of their parts. Compare organicism (def 1).
  • holmia — the oxide of holmium
  • holmic — of or containing the element holmium.
  • homily — a sermon, usually on a Biblical topic and usually of a nondoctrinal nature.
  • hoolie — a hooligan
  • huipil — a richly embroidered cotton blouse worn by women in Mexico and Central America, often very wide and low-cut.
  • humlie — a hornless cow
  • hyalin — Also, hyalin, H04/H0454500 hahy-uh-lin, ˈhaɪ ə lɪn. Biochemistry. a horny substance found in hydatid cysts, closely resembling chitin. a structureless, transparent substance found in cartilage, the eye, etc., resulting from the pathological degeneration of tissue.
  • i-link — High Performance Serial Bus
  • icicle — a pendent, tapering mass of ice formed by the freezing of dripping water.
  • 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.
  • igloos — Plural form of igloo.
  • ijssel — a river in the central Netherlands, flowing N to the IJsselmeer: a branch of the Rhine River. 70 miles (110 km) long.
  • ilesha — a town in SW Nigeria.
  • ilford — a former borough in SE England, now part of Redbridge, Greater London.
  • ilheus — a seaport in E Brazil.
  • iligan — a city in the Philippines, a port on the N coast of Mindanao. Pop: 306 000 (2005 est)
  • ilkley — a town in N England, in Bradford unitary authority, West Yorkshire: nearby is Ilkley Moor (to the south). Pop: 13 472 (2001)
  • illest — Superlative form of ill.
  • illiac — Assembly language for the ILLIAC computer. Listed in CACM 2(5):16, (May 1959) p.16.
  • illiad — a wink
  • illich — Ivan. 1926–2002. US teacher and writer, born in Austria. His books include Deschooling Society (1971), Medical Nemesis (1975), and In the Mirror of the Past (1991)
  • illin' — Slang. foolish; crazy (used especially in the phrase be illin').
  • illipe — a tropical Asian tree of the family Sapotaceae
  • illite — any of a group of clay minerals, hydrous potassium aluminosilicates, characterized by a three-layer micalike structure and a gray, light green, or yellowish-brown color.
  • illude — to deceive or trick.
  • illume — to illuminate.
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