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7-letter words containing l, a, d

  • annelid — any worms of the phylum Annelida, in which the body is divided into segments both externally and internally. The group includes the earthworms, lugworm, ragworm, and leeches
  • any old — You use any old to emphasize that the quality or type of something is not important. If you say that a particular thing is not any old thing, you are emphasizing how special or famous it is.
  • appaled — Misspelling of appalled.
  • applaud — When a group of people applaud, they clap their hands in order to show approval, for example when they have enjoyed a play or concert.
  • applied — An applied subject of study has a practical use, rather than being concerned only with theory.
  • apsidal — of an apse or apsis
  • ardabil — city in NW Iran, near the Caspian Sea: pop. 311,000
  • ardebil — a town in NW Iran, near the Caspian Sea.
  • ardella — a female given name.
  • arm ltd — Advanced RISC Machines Ltd.
  • armload — An armload of something is the same as an armful of something.
  • arnauldAntoine, 1612–94, French Jansenist theologian and philosopher.
  • arundel — a town in S England, in West Sussex: 11th-century castle. Pop: 3297 (2001)
  • asdimpl — ASDO IMPlementation Language
  • ashland — a city in NE Kentucky, on the Ohio River.
  • attalid — any of a line of kings, usually named Attalus orEumenes, that ruled Pergamum, in Asia Minor, 282–133 b.c.
  • audible — A sound that is audible is loud enough to be heard.
  • audibly — capable of being heard; loud enough to be heard; actually heard.
  • availed — to be of use or value to; profit; advantage: All our efforts availed us little in trying to effect a change.
  • avulsed — Simple past tense and past participle of avulse.
  • awlbird — the green woodpecker
  • axelrod — Julius. 1912–2004, US neuropharmacologist, renowned for his work on catecholamines. Nobel prize for physiology or medicine (with von Euler and Bernard Katz) 1970
  • aylward — Gladys. 1903–70, English missionary in China
  • babbled — Simple past tense and past participle of babble.
  • bacolod — a town in the Philippines, on the NW coast of Negros Island. Pop: 468 000 (2005 est)
  • badland — Alternative form of badlands.
  • baffled — lacking in understanding
  • bagnold — Enid (Algerine). 1889–1981, British novelist and playwright; her works include the novel National Velvet (1935) and the play The Chalk Garden (1955)
  • balanda — (Australian Aboriginal, Arnhem Land) a white person, a European.
  • baldest — Superlative form of bald.
  • baldies — a bald person (sometimes used as a facetious term of address).
  • balding — Someone who is balding is beginning to lose the hair on the top of their head.
  • baldish — Somewhat bald; balding.
  • baldric — a wide silk sash or leather belt worn over the right shoulder to the left hip for carrying a sword, etc
  • baldwin — James Arthur. 1924–87, US Black writer, whose works include the novel Go Tell it on the Mountain (1954)
  • ballade — a verse form consisting of three stanzas and an envoy, all ending with the same line. The first three stanzas commonly have eight or ten lines each and the same rhyme scheme
  • ballads — Plural form of ballad.
  • ballard — J(ames) G(raham). 1930–2009, British novelist, born in China; his books include Crash (1973), The Unlimited Dream Company (1979), Empire of the Sun (1984), Cocaine Nights (1996), and Super-Cannes (2000)
  • bandlet — annulet (def 1).
  • bandrol — Alternative form of banderole.
  • bangled — a rigid, ring-shaped bracelet usually made without a clasp so as to slip over the hand, but sometimes having a hinged opening and a clasp.
  • battled — Simple past tense and past participle of battle.
  • baulked — to stop, as at an obstacle, and refuse to proceed or to do something specified (usually followed by at): He balked at making the speech.
  • bawdily — indecent; lewd; obscene: another of his bawdy stories.
  • beadily — (of a look) in an avaricious or penetrating manner.
  • beadles — Plural form of beadle.
  • bedlamp — a bedside light
  • bedlams — Plural form of bedlam.
  • bedload — (geology) Sediment that is carried along the bottom of a river or stream, rather than in the current.
  • bedrail — a rail or board along the side of a bed that connects the headboard with the footboard
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