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9-letter words containing l, e, a, n, s

  • shoalness — (of water) the state of being shallow; shallowness
  • sibilance — hissing.
  • sickleman — a person reaping with a sickle
  • signalize — to make notable or conspicuous.
  • signalled — anything that serves to indicate, warn, direct, command, or the like, as a light, a gesture, an act, etc.: a traffic signal; a signal to leave.
  • signaller — anything that serves to indicate, warn, direct, command, or the like, as a light, a gesture, an act, etc.: a traffic signal; a signal to leave.
  • silkaline — a soft, thin cotton fabric with a smooth finish, for curtains, bedspreads, garment linings, etc.
  • simmental — one of a large breed of cattle, yellowish-brown to red and white, originally of Switzerland, used for milk and beef and as a draft animal.
  • sinhalese — of or relating to Sri Lanka, its native people, or their language.
  • sjaelland — Zealand.
  • slabstone — a paving stone in the form of a slab; flagstone
  • slackener — a person who, or something which, slackens
  • slackness — not tight, taut, firm, or tense; loose: a slack rope.
  • slamdance — to hurl oneself repeatedly into or through a crowd at a rock concert
  • slanderer — defamation; calumny: rumors full of slander.
  • slanguage — slang; a vocabulary of slang.
  • slantwise — aslant; obliquely.
  • slave ant — an ant taken as a larva or pupa by ants of another species and becoming a working member of the captor colony.
  • slaveling — a person in a condition of servility or slavery.
  • slavenska — Mia [mee-ah] /ˈmi ɑ/ (Show IPA), (Mia Corak) 1914?–2002, U.S. dancer and choreographer, born in Yugoslavia.
  • slavering — to let saliva run from the mouth; slobber; drool.
  • sloganeer — a person who creates and uses slogans frequently.
  • sloganize — to make a slogan of; express as a slogan: to sloganize one's opinions.
  • slovenian — of or from Slovenia
  • slow lane — On a motorway or freeway, the slow lane is the lane for vehicles which are moving more slowly than the other vehicles.
  • smallness — of limited size; of comparatively restricted dimensions; not big; little: a small box.
  • snake fly — any neuropterous insect of the family Raphidiidae, of western North America, having an elongated prothorax resembling a neck.
  • snake oil — any of various liquid concoctions of questionable medical value sold as an all-purpose curative, especially by traveling hucksters.
  • snakelike — any of numerous limbless, scaly, elongate reptiles of the suborder Serpentes, comprising venomous and nonvenomous species inhabiting tropical and temperate areas.
  • sniffable — capable of being sniffed
  • snowblade — one of a pair of short skis used without poles
  • snowflake — one of the small, feathery masses or flakes in which snow falls.
  • solutrean — Archaeology. of or designating an Upper Paleolithic European culture c18,000–16,000 b.c., characterized by the making of stone projectile points and low-relief stone sculptures.
  • spendable — available for spending.
  • spinulate — having a spine or spines
  • spleuchan — a small pouch, especially for carrying tobacco or money.
  • spy plane — an aircraft used to carry out surveillance of an enemy country or military formations from a high altitude
  • stableman — a person who works in a stable.
  • stag line — the men at a social gathering who are not accompanied by a date or dancing partner.
  • stainless — having no stain; spotless.
  • staleness — not fresh; vapid or flat, as beverages; dry or hardened, as bread.
  • steel pan — steel drum.
  • stelazine — a synthetic drug, C21H24F3N3S·2HCl, used as a tranquilizer in treating certain mental disorders
  • sterilant — a sterilizing agent.
  • stolonate — having stolons; developing from a stolon.
  • stonewall — to engage in stonewalling.
  • strangely — unusual, extraordinary, or curious; odd; queer: a strange remark to make.
  • strangled — A strangled voice or cry sounds unclear because the throat muscles of the person speaking or crying are tight.
  • strangler — to kill by squeezing the throat in order to compress the windpipe and prevent the intake of air, as with the hands or a tightly drawn cord.
  • strangles — distemper1 (def 1b).
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