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6-letter words containing l, i

  • bhilai — a city in S Madhya Pradesh, in central India.
  • bialik — Hayyim Nahman (ˈhaɪm ˈnɑxman) or Chaim Nachman. 1873–1934, Russian Jewish poet and writer. His long poems The Talmud Student (1894) and In the City of Slaughter (1903) established him as the major Hebrew poet of modern times
  • bibble — a pebble
  • bibful — secret information (esp in the phrase spill a bibful)
  • biddle — John. 1615–62, English theologian; founder of Unitarianism in England
  • bieldy — sheltered
  • biflex — bent or flexed in two places
  • bifold — foldable in two places
  • bigloo — (language)   A Scheme interpreter, compiler and run-time system by Manuel Serrano <[email protected]> which aims to deliver small, fast stand-alone applications. It supports modules and optimisation. Bigloo's features enable Scheme programs to be used where C or C++ might usually be required. The Bigloo compiler produces ANSI C which is compiled into stand-alone executables, JVM bytecode, or .NET bytecode. Hence Bigloo enables Scheme programs to interwork with C, Java and C# programs. Bigloo conforms to the IEEE Scheme standard with some extensions for regular expression handling. It runs on Sun, Sony News, SGI, Linux, HP-UX and is easy to port to any Unix system.
  • bikila — Abebe (əˈbeɪbeɪ). 1932–73, Ethiopian long-distance runner: winner of the Marathon at the Olympic Games in Rome (1960) and Tokyo (1964)
  • bilbao — a port in N Spain, on the Bay of Biscay: the largest city in the Basque Provinces: famous since medieval times for the production of iron and steel goods: modern buildings include the Guggenheim Art Museum (1997). Pop: 353 567 (2003 est)
  • bildad — a friend of Job. Job 2:11.
  • bilges — Nautical. either of the rounded areas that form the transition between the bottom and the sides on the exterior of a hull. Also, bilges. (in a hull with a double bottom) an enclosed area between frames at each side of the floors, where seepage collects. Also called bilge well. a well into which seepage drains to be pumped away. Also called bilge water. seepage accumulated in bilges.
  • bilhah — the mother of Dan and Naphtali. Gen. 30:1–8.
  • bilian — a type of ironwood from Borneo
  • bilith — a prehistoric structure consisting of a horizontal stone slab supported by an upright stone.
  • bilked — to defraud; cheat: He bilked the government of almost a million dollars.
  • billed — having a bill or beak, especially one of a specified kind, shape, color, etc. (usually used in combination): a yellow-billed magpie.
  • biller — the stem of a plant
  • billet — If members of the armed forces are billeted in a particular place, that place is provided for them to stay in for a period of time.
  • billie — a feminine and masculine name
  • billon — an alloy consisting of gold or silver and a base metal, usually copper, used esp for coinage
  • billow — When something made of cloth billows, it swells out and moves slowly in the wind.
  • biloxi — a member of a North American Indian people that lived in the lower Mississippi Valley
  • bindle — a small bundle of possessions carried by a homeless person
  • bingle — a minor crash or upset, as in a car or on a surfboard
  • birled — to pour (a drink) or pour a drink for.
  • birler — someone who participates in spinning or twirling
  • birsle — (of food) the roasted surface
  • bisley — a village in SE England, in Surrey: annual meetings of the National Rifle Association
  • bitblt — /bit'blit/ [BLT] 1. Any of a family of closely related algorithms for moving and copying rectangles of bits between main and display memory on a bit-mapped device, or between two areas of either main or display memory (the requirement to do the Right Thing in the case of overlapping source and destination rectangles is what makes BitBlt tricky). 2. blit, BLT.
  • bitola — city in S Macedonia: pop. 75,000
  • bitolj — a city in SW Macedonia: under Turkish rule from 1382 until 1913 when it was taken by the Serbs. Pop: 77 000 (2005 est)
  • blaine — James G(illespie)1830-93; U.S. statesman: secretary of state (1881, 1889-92)
  • blains — an inflammatory swelling or sore.
  • blaise — a male given name.
  • blewit — an edible pale-bluish mushroom, Tricholoma personatum.
  • blight — You can refer to something as a blight when it causes great difficulties, and damages or spoils other things.
  • blimey — You say blimey when you are surprised by something or feel strongly about it.
  • blinds — unable to see; lacking the sense of sight; sightless: a blind man.
  • blinks — a small temperate portulacaceous plant, Montia fontana with small white flowers
  • blinky — (of milk) sour.
  • blintz — a thin pancake folded over a filling usually of apple, cream cheese, or meat
  • blithe — You use blithe to indicate that something is done casually, without serious or careful thought.
  • blivet — something annoying, ridiculous, or useless.
  • blivit — something annoying, ridiculous, or useless.
  • blixen — Karen
  • blosim — Block-Diagram Simulator. A block-diagram simulator. "A Tool for Structured Functional Simulation", D.G. Messerschmitt, IEEE J on Selected Areas in Comm, SAC-2(1):137-147, 1984.
  • blowie — a blowfly
  • bluidy — bloody
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