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7-letter words containing l, o, s

  • skoplje — a city in and the capital of Macedonia.
  • slavkov — Czech name of Austerlitz.
  • slaytonDonald Kent ("Deke") 1924–1993, U.S. astronaut.
  • slezsko — Czech name of Silesia.
  • sliotar — the ball used in hurling
  • slip-on — made without buttons, straps, zippers, etc., so as to be put on easily and quickly: a slip-on blouse; slip-on shoes.
  • slipout — an instance of slipping out
  • slobber — to let saliva or liquid run from the mouth; slaver; drivel.
  • slocken — to slake
  • slogged — to hit hard, as in boxing or cricket; slug.
  • slogger — to hit hard, as in boxing or cricket; slug.
  • sloping — to have or take an inclined or oblique direction or angle considered with reference to a vertical or horizontal plane; slant.
  • slopped — to spill or splash (liquid).
  • sloshed — drunk.
  • slotted — a narrow, elongated depression, groove, notch, slit, or aperture, especially a narrow opening for receiving or admitting something, as a coin or a letter.
  • slotter — a person or thing that slots.
  • slouchy — of or relating to a slouch or to a slouching manner, posture, etc.
  • sloughi — a smooth-haired hound originating in Morocco
  • sloughy — the outer layer of the skin of a snake, which is cast off periodically.
  • slovene — one of a Slavic people dwelling in Slovenia.
  • slow up — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
  • slow-mo — slow motion.
  • slow-up — a delay or retardation in progress or activity; slowdown.
  • slowest — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
  • slowish — somewhat slow
  • smalgol — SMall ALGOL. A subset of ALGOL 60.
  • smolder — to burn without flame; undergo slow or suppressed combustion.
  • snobol2 — A SNOBOL variant which existed only briefly. It featured built-in functions, but not programmer-defined ones.
  • snobol3 — SNOBOL with user-defined functions. Written in 1965. The SNOBOL 6.3 compiler for the PDP-6 and PDP-10 was written in SNOBOL.
  • snobol4 — (language)   A quite distinct descendant of SNOBOL, developed by Griswold et al in 1967. SNOBOL4 is declarative with dynamic scope. Patterns are first-class data objects that can be constructed by concatenation and alternation. Success and failure are used for flow control. Delayed (unevaluated) expressions can be used to implement recursion. It has a table data type. Strings generated at run time can be treated as programs and executed. See also vanilla.
  • snoozle — to nestle or cuddle while asleep
  • snorkel — Also called, British, snort. a device permitting a submarine to remain submerged for prolonged periods, consisting of tubes extended above the surface of the water to take in air for the diesel engine and for general ventilation and to discharge exhaust gases and foul air.
  • so long — this length
  • soberly — not intoxicated or drunk.
  • sociol. — sociology
  • sod all — Sod all means 'nothing at all'.
  • softlab — (company)   A software engineering company strong in the UK and Germany.
  • soilage — an act or instance of soiling.
  • soiling — to feed (confined cattle, horses, etc.) freshly cut green fodder for roughage.
  • soilure — a stain.
  • solanum — any tree, shrub, or herbaceous plant of the mainly tropical solanaceous genus Solanum: includes the potato, aubergine, and certain nightshades
  • solaris — (operating system)   Sun Microsystems, Inc.'s version of the Unix operating system. As well as the core operating system, Solaris inludes networking software, the Java Virtual Machine, the CDE/Desktop that includes an X11-based windowing environment and graphical user interface. Sun claim that Solaris is not just an operating system but an "operating environment". Solaris 1.x was a retroactive (marketing?) name for SunOS 4.1.x (where x>=1). Solaris 2.x (which is the first version most people call "Solaris") includes SunOS5.x, which is an SVR4-derived Unix, OpenWindows 3.x, and tooltalk.
  • solated — to change from a gel to a sol.
  • solatia — something given in compensation for inconvenience, loss, injury, or the like; recompense.
  • sold on — uncritically attached to or enthusiastic about
  • soldado — a soldier
  • soldier — a person who serves in an army; a person engaged in military service.
  • soleure — French name of Solothurn.
  • solfege — solfeggio.
  • solicit — to seek for (something) by entreaty, earnest or respectful request, formal application, etc.: He solicited aid from the minister.
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