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6-letter words containing l, i

  • elliot — a masculine name
  • ellipt — (linguistics) To omit (from an utterance) by ellipsis.
  • elohim — a Hebrew word for God or gods
  • eloign — (obsolete, transitive) To remove (something) to a distance.
  • eloise — a feminine name: equiv. Fr. Héloïse
  • elshin — a cobbler's awl
  • eluvia — Plural form of eluvium.
  • elvira — a feminine name
  • elvish — Of or having to do with elves.
  • elyria — city in N Ohio, near Cleveland: pop. 56,000
  • elytis — Odysseus, real name Odysseus Alepoudelis. 1912–96, Greek poet, author of the long poems To Axion Esti (1959) and Maria Nefeli (1978): Nobel prize for literature 1979
  • emails — Plural form of email.
  • embail — to enclose in a circle
  • emblic — a deciduous tree, Phyllanthus emblica, found in eastern India and belonging to the family Euphorbiaceae, used for tanning
  • emboil — to enrage or be enraged
  • emboli — Plural form of embolus.
  • engild — (transitive) To gild; to make splendid.
  • enisle — Isolate on or as if on an island.
  • enlink — to link or connect closely
  • enlist — Enroll or be enrolled in the armed services.
  • enlive — (archaic) To enliven.
  • ensile — Put (grass or another crop) into a silo in order to preserve it as silage.
  • entail — A settlement of the inheritance of property over a number of generations so that it remains within a family or other group.
  • entoil — to trap in toils or snares; ensnare
  • eolian — Alternative spelling of aeolian.
  • eolith — A roughly chipped flint found in Tertiary strata, originally thought to be an early artifact but probably of natural origin.
  • epical — (literature) Any book containing 2 or more epics.
  • epilog — Alternative spelling of epilogue.
  • epulis — (medicine) A hard tumour developed from the gums.
  • equali — pieces for a group of instruments of the same kind
  • espial — The action of watching or catching sight of something or someone or the fact of being seen.
  • étoile — a star
  • euclid — (language)   (Named after the Greek geometer, fl ca 300 BC.) A Pascal descendant for development of verifiable system software. No goto, no side effects, no global assignments, no functional arguments, no nested procedures, no floats, no enumeration types. Pointers are treated as indices of special arrays called collections. To prevent aliasing, Euclid forbids any overlap in the list of actual parameters of a procedure. Each procedure gives an imports list, and the compiler determines the identifiers that are implicitly imported. Iterators. Ottawa Euclid is a variant.
  • eulisp — 1985-present. A Lisp dialect intended to be a common European standard, with influences from Common LISP, Le LISP, Scheme and T. First-class functions, classes and continuations, both static scope and dynamic scope, modules, support for parallelism. The class system (TELOS) incorporates ideas from CLOS, ObjVLisp and Oaklisp. See also Feel. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • eviler — Comparative form of evil.
  • evilly — In an evil manner.
  • exiled — Simple past tense and past participle of exile.
  • exiler — a person who, or thing which, exiles
  • exiles — Plural form of exile.
  • exilic — Of or pertaining to exile.
  • eyelid — Each of the upper and lower folds of skin that cover the eye when closed.
  • facial — of the face: facial expression.
  • facile — moving, acting, working, proceeding, etc., with ease, sometimes with superficiality: facile fingers; a facile mind.
  • failed — unsuccessful; failed: a totally fail policy.
  • failer — One who fails.
  • faille — a soft, transversely ribbed fabric of silk, rayon, or lightweight taffeta.
  • fainly — in a willing or eager manner
  • fairly — in a fair manner; justly or honestly; impartially.
  • faisal — 1935–58, king of Iraq 1939–58 (grandson of Faisal I).
  • falsie — either of a pair of shaped pads, made of rubber, fabric, or the like, for wearing inside a brassiere to give the breasts a larger or more shapely appearance.
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