0%

9-letter words containing i, n, l, s, t

  • stripling — a youth.
  • strolling — to walk leisurely as inclination directs; ramble; saunter; take a walk: to stroll along the beach.
  • stub nail — a short, thick nail.
  • stumbling — to strike the foot against something, as in walking or running, so as to stagger or fall; trip.
  • sublation — to deny or contradict; negate.
  • sulcation — having long, narrow grooves or channels, as plant stems, or being furrowed or cleft, as hoofs.
  • sulfation — Chemistry. a salt or ester of sulfuric acid.
  • suppliant — a person who supplicates; petitioner.
  • swingtail — denoting an aircraft with a rear portion that can be opened to assist in loading cargo
  • sylvanite — a mineral, gold silver telluride, (AuAg)Te 2 , silver-white with metallic luster, often occurring in crystals so arranged as to resemble written characters: an ore of gold.
  • sylvinite — an ore containing sylvine
  • syncytial — a multinucleate mass of cytoplasm that is not separated into cells.
  • syntality — behavioral characteristics of a group perceived as parallel to or inferable from the personality structure of an individual.
  • tail-spin — spin (def 23).
  • taintless — free from or without taint; pure; innocent.
  • talkiness — the quality or condition of being talky; wordiness
  • tanalised — having been treated with the trademarked timber preservative Tanalith
  • tantalise — to torment with, or as if with, the sight of something desired but out of reach; tease by arousing expectations that are repeatedly disappointed.
  • tantalism — a form of punishment similar to or as severe as that suffered by Tantalus
  • teasingly — to irritate or provoke with persistent petty distractions, trifling raillery, or other annoyance, often in sport.
  • tensility — of or relating to tension: tensile strain.
  • tensional — the act of stretching or straining.
  • testingly — the means by which the presence, quality, or genuineness of anything is determined; a means of trial.
  • tillotsonJohn, 1630–94, English clergyman: archbishop of Canterbury 1691–94.
  • tiny clos — A core part of Common Lisp Object System (CLOS) ported to Scheme and rebuilt using a MOP (Metaobject Protocol). This should be interesting to those who want to use MOPs without using a full Common Lisp or Dylan. The first release works with MIT Scheme 11.74.
  • tomlinsonHenry Major, 1873–1958, English journalist and novelist.
  • tonsillar — a prominent oval mass of lymphoid tissue on each side of the throat.
  • tonsorial — of or relating to a barber or barbering: the tonsorial shop.
  • torsional — the act of twisting.
  • trailsman — a person who follows a trail.
  • tramlines — streetcar track
  • triclosan — a drug used to treat skin infections
  • trillions — an exceptionally large but unspecified number
  • turnstile — a structure of four horizontally revolving arms pivoted atop a post and set in a gateway or opening in a fence to allow the controlled passage of people.
  • unhostile — not hostile
  • uninstall — to remove (a software program) from a computer or computer system.
  • unlasting — continuing or enduring a long time; permanent; durable: a lasting friendship.
  • unsaintly — lacking the quality or character of a saint
  • unsalient — projecting or pointing outward: a salient angle.
  • unsightly — distasteful or unpleasant to look at: an unsightly wound; unsightly disorder.
  • unsterile — free from living germs or microorganisms; aseptic: sterile surgical instruments.
  • unstifled — to quell, crush, or end by force: to stifle a revolt; to stifle free expression.
  • unstilled — not quieted or stilled; not calmed or appeased
  • unstylish — unfashionable; not stylish
  • utilising — to put to use; turn to profitable account: to utilize a stream to power a mill.
  • violinist — a person who plays the violin.
  • vitalness — the quality of being vital
  • volcanist — a person who studies volcanoes
  • voltinism — the number of annual broods of an insect
  • waistline — the circumference of the body at the waist: exercises to reduce the waistline.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?