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5-letter words containing l, a, s

  • leams — Plural form of leam.
  • leans — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lean.
  • leaps — Plural form of leap.
  • learsEdward, 1812–88, English writer of humorous verse and landscape painter.
  • lease — a system for keeping the warp in position and under control by alternately crossing the warp yarn over and under the lease rods.
  • leash — a chain, strap, etc., for controlling or leading a dog or other animal; lead.
  • least — small in size; not big; not large; tiny: a little desk in the corner of the room.
  • leats — Plural form of leat.
  • lepas — (zoology) Any of the genus Lepas of pedunculated barnacles found attached to floating timber, bottoms of ships, etc.; a goose barnacle.
  • lesya — any of six possible colors given to the monad, or individual soul, by its karma and being lighter or darker according to the proportion of good or evil included in the karma.
  • lhasa — Also, Thibet. Also called Sitsang, Xizang. Official name Tibet Autonomous Region. an administrative division of China, N of the Himalayas: prior to 1950 a theocracy under the Dalai Lama; the highest country in the world, average elevation about 16,000 feet (4877 meters). 471,660 sq. mi. (1,221,599 sq. km). Capital: Lhasa.
  • liars — Plural form of liar.
  • liase — Misspelling of liaise.
  • litas — a former silver coin and monetary unit of Lithuania, equal to 100 centai.
  • loads — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • loafs — to idle away time: He figured the mall was as good a place as any for loafing.
  • loans — Plural form of loan.
  • lomas — city in E Argentina: suburb of Buenos Aires: pop. 573,000
  • lotas — (in India) a small container for water, usually of brass or copper and round in shape.
  • lotsa — Eye dialect of lots of.
  • luaus — Plural form of luau.
  • lucasGeorge, born 1944, U.S. film director.
  • lukasPaul, 1895–1971, U.S. actor, born in Hungary.
  • lyase — any of various enzymes, as decarboxylase, that catalyze reactions involving the formation of or addition to a double bond.
  • mails — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mail.
  • males — Plural form of male.
  • malis — Plural form of mali.
  • malls — Plural form of mall.
  • malts — Plural form of malt.
  • malus — (business) The return of performance-related compensation originally paid by an employer to an employee as a result of the discovery of a defect in the performance.
  • mauls — Plural form of maul.
  • meals — a coarse, unsifted powder ground from the edible seeds of any grain: wheat meal; cornmeal.
  • nails — Fasten to a surface or to something else with a nail or nails.
  • nalls — Plural form of nall.
  • nasal — of or relating to the nose: the nasal cavity.
  • nilas — Newly frozen sea ice in the form of smooth thin sheet less than 10 centimeters (4 inches) thick.
  • oldas — On-line Digital Analog Simulator. An interactive version of MIMIC, for IBM 360.
  • ollas — Plural form of olla.
  • opals — Plural form of opal.
  • orals — Plural form of oral.
  • oslav — Old (Church) Slavonic
  • ovals — Plural form of oval.
  • palas — an East Indian tree
  • pales — light-colored or lacking in color: a pale complexion; his pale face; a pale child. lacking the usual intensity of color due to fear, illness, stress, etc.: She looked pale and unwell when we visited her in the nursing home.
  • palls — a cloth, often of velvet, for spreading over a coffin, bier, or tomb.
  • palos — a seaport in SW Spain: starting point of Columbus's first voyage westward.
  • palsa — a mound of earth pushed up by or formed near the edge of a glacier, found in alpine and arctic areas.
  • palsy — any of a variety of atonal muscular conditions characterized by tremors of the body parts, as the hands, arms, or legs, or of the entire body.
  • plaas — a farm
  • plans — Programming Language for Allocation and Network Scheduling. A PL/I preprocessor, used for developing scheduling algorithms. "A User's Guide to the Programming Language for Allocation and Network Scheduling", H.R. Ramsey et al, TR SAI-77-068-DEN, Science Applications Inc (Jun 1977).
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