6-letter words containing l, e, x
- lexeme — a lexical unit in a language, as a word or base; vocabulary item.
- lexica — a wordbook or dictionary, especially of Greek, Latin, or Hebrew.
- li xue — Li Hsüeh.
- luxate — to put out of joint; dislocate: The accident luxated the left shoulder.
- lynxes — Plural form of lynx.
- ml-lex — A version of lex in SML/NJ which outputs a lexical analyser in SML/NJ.
- nextly — most nearly or closely
- oxlike — the adult castrated male of the genus Bos, used chiefly as a draft animal.
- oxymel — a medicinal syrupy mixture of vinegar, honey and water
- plexal — of or relating to a plexus.
- plexor — Medicine/Medical. a small hammer with a soft rubber head or the like, used in percussion for diagnostic purposes.
- plexus — a network, as of nerves or blood vessels.
- poleax — a medieval shafted weapon with blade combining ax, hammer, and apical spike, used for fighting on foot.
- pollex — the innermost digit of the forelimb; thumb.
- reflex — Physiology. noting or pertaining to an involuntary response to a stimulus, the nerve impulse from a receptor being transmitted inward to a nerve center that in turn transmits it outward to an effector.
- reflux — a flowing back; ebb.
- scolex — the anterior, headlike segment of a tapeworm, having suckers, hooks, or the like, for attachment.
- sexily — concerned predominantly or excessively with sex; risqué: a sexy novel.
- sexual — of, relating to, or for sex: sexual matters; sexual aids.
- silvex — a herbicide that eradicates weeds and woody plants
- suplex — a wrestling hold in which a wrestler grasps his opponent round the waist from behind and carries him backwards
- wraxle — to wrestle
- x-line — mean line.
- xenial — the influence or effect of pollen on a structure other than the embryo, as the seed or fruit.
- xylene — A volatile liquid hydrocarbon obtained by distilling wood, coal tar, or petroleum, and used in fuels and solvents, and in chemical synthesis.
- xylose — A sugar of the pentose class that occurs widely in plants, especially as a component of hemicelluloses.