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7-letter words containing l, e, s, m

  • realism — interest in or concern for the actual or real, as distinguished from the abstract, speculative, etc.
  • resmelt — to smelt again
  • rimless — glasses: without full frames
  • sampler — a person who samples.
  • scamble — a long bench used in a farm kitchen
  • schmelz — any of several types of ornamental glass
  • scumble — to soften (the color or tone of a painted area) by overlaying parts with opaque or semiopaque color applied thinly and lightly with an almost dry brush.
  • seculum — an age or period of time in astronomy or geology
  • selfdom — the realm of the self; selfhood.
  • selfism — an emphasis on self; a selfish concentration on one's own interests or a philosophy based on them
  • semilog — (of graphing) having one scale logarithmic and the other arithmetic or of uniform gradation.
  • seminal — pertaining to, containing, or consisting of semen.
  • serumal — the clear, pale-yellow liquid that separates from the clot in the coagulation of blood; blood serum.
  • shamble — a shambling gait.
  • similes — a figure of speech in which two unlike things are explicitly compared, as in “she is like a rose.”. Compare metaphor.
  • simpler — easy to understand, deal with, use, etc.: a simple matter; simple tools.
  • simplex — simple; consisting of or characterized by a single element.
  • skel-ml — A parallel variant of ML using skeletons being developed (April 1994) as part of Tore Bratvold's PhD in the Department of Computing and Electronic Engineering, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK. Programs are written in a subset of Standard ML, and parallelism is extracted from the use of certain higher-order functions. The SkelML compiler uses profiling information together with skeleton performance models to distinguish useful from non-useful parallelism. An important feature is the ability to perform transformations between skeletons to improve performance. Skeletons currently supported are map, filter, fold, pipe (implicitly extracted from function application) and various combinations of these. See also paraML. E-mail: Tore A Bratvold <[email protected]>.
  • skellum — a rascal.
  • slammed — a violent and noisy closing, dashing, or impact.
  • slammer — a person or thing that slams.
  • slimmer — a garment size meant for a thin person.
  • slumber — to sleep, especially lightly; doze; drowse.
  • slummer — Often, slums. a thickly populated, run-down, squalid part of a city, inhabited by poor people.
  • slumped — to drop or fall heavily; collapse: Suddenly she slumped to the floor.
  • smaller — of limited size; of comparatively restricted dimensions; not big; little: a small box.
  • smedley — a male given name.
  • smeller — a person who smells.
  • smelter — a person or thing that smelts.
  • smittle — (of a disease) infectious
  • smolder — to burn without flame; undergo slow or suppressed combustion.
  • smuggle — to import or export (goods) secretly, in violation of the law, especially without payment of legal duty.
  • stammel — a coarse woollen cloth in former use for undergarments, etc, and usually dyed red
  • stemlet — a little or young stem
  • stempel — a timber support or crossbar, often used as a step in mines
  • stemple — a timber support or crossbar, often used as a step in mines
  • stumble — to strike the foot against something, as in walking or running, so as to stagger or fall; trip.
  • stummel — the bowl of a (smoking) pipe
  • sublime — elevated or lofty in thought, language, etc.: Paradise Lost is sublime poetry.
  • sumless — uncountable, incalculable
  • wimbles — Plural form of wimble.
  • wimples — Plural form of wimple.
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