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5-letter words containing l, a, m

  • gloam — twilight; gloaming.
  • halma — a board game in which players attempt to transfer their pieces from their own to their opponents' bases
  • halms — stems or stalks collectively, as of grain or of peas, beans, or hops, especially as used for litter or thatching.
  • hamal — (in some Muslim countries) a porter.
  • haulm — stems or stalks collectively, as of grain or of peas, beans, or hops, especially as used for litter or thatching.
  • hemal — Also, hematal. of or relating to the blood or blood vessels.
  • islam — the religious faith of Muslims, based on the words and religious system founded by the prophet Muhammad and taught by the Koran, the basic principle of which is absolute submission to a unique and personal god, Allah.
  • jamal — a male given name: from an Arabic word meaning “beauty.”.
  • kalam — (sometimes lowercase) a school of philosophical theology originating in the 9th century a.d., asserting the existence of God as a prime mover and the freedom of the will.
  • kamal — A navigation device, known to the Arabs and Chinese of the ancient world, consisting of a wooden card and knotted string.
  • lakme — an opera (1883) by Léo Delibes.
  • lamarJoseph R. 1857–1916, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1911–16.
  • lamas — a priest or monk in Lamaism.
  • lambs — Plural form of lamb.
  • lamby — Resembling or characteristic of the meat of a lamb.
  • lamda — London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art
  • lamed — Slang. a person who is out of touch with modern fads or trends, especially one who is unsophisticated.
  • lamel — Alternative form of lamella.
  • lamen — Alternative form of ramen.
  • lameo — (slang) A lame person; someone who is worthless or a loser.
  • lamer — crippled or physically disabled, especially in the foot or leg so as to limp or walk with difficulty.
  • lames — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lame.
  • lamia — Classical Mythology. one of a class of fabulous monsters, commonly represented with the head and breast of a woman and the body of a serpent, said to allure youths and children in order to suck their blood.
  • lamin — (protein) Any of a class of fibrous proteins that provide structure, and regulate transcription in a cell nucleus.
  • lammy — a type of thick woollen jacket or duffel coat worn by sailors
  • lamps — Plural form of lamp.
  • lamus — a son of Hercules and Omphale.
  • lamut — Even.
  • larum — alarum.
  • latam — Latin America
  • leams — Plural form of leam.
  • lemanLake. Geneva, Lake of.
  • lemay — Curtis (Emerson) 1906–90, U.S. Air Force officer: chief of the Strategic Air Command 1948–61; Chief of Staff of the Air Force 1961–65.
  • lemma — a subsidiary proposition introduced in proving some other proposition; a helping theorem.
  • lempa — a river rising in NW El Salvador, flowing E and then S to the Pacific Ocean. About 200 miles (320 km) long.
  • liman — a muddy lagoon, marsh, or lake near the mouth of a river behind part of the delta and more or less protected from open water by a barrier or spit.
  • limax — a slug
  • limba — an African tree, Terminalia superba, having yellowish-brown wood.
  • limma — any of several musical intervals of small size, such as a semitone
  • limpa — a rye bread made using brown sugar or molasses
  • llama — a woolly-haired South American ruminant of the genus Lama, believed to be a domesticated variety of the guanaco: often used as a beast of burden.
  • loamy — a rich, friable soil containing a relatively equal mixture of sand and silt and a somewhat smaller proportion of clay.
  • lokma — A pastry made of fried dough soaked in sugar syrup or honey and cinnamon, typically shaped into a ring or ball. (used especially of the Turkish variant of this pastry).
  • lomas — city in E Argentina: suburb of Buenos Aires: pop. 573,000
  • lomaxJohn Avery, 1867–1948, and his son, Alan, born 1915, U.S. folklorists.
  • lyman — a male given name.
  • mabel — a female given name.
  • mable — a female given name.
  • macle — chiastolite.
  • madly — insanely or wildly: The old witch cackled madly.
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