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6-letter words containing l, s, a

  • salver — a tray, especially one used for serving food or beverages.
  • salvia — any plant of the genus Salvia, comprising the sages, having opposite leaves and whorled flowers.
  • salvor — a person who salvages or helps to salvage a ship, cargo, etc.
  • salyut — one of a series of Soviet earth-orbiting space stations, first launched in 1971.
  • sambal — a condiment or side dish of Indonesia, Malaysia, and southern India, made with any of various ingredients, as vegetables, fish, or coconut, usually seasoned with chili peppers and spices and served with rice and curries.
  • samedl — SQL Ada Module Description Language. Used to interface Ada application programs to SQL-based DBMSs. E-mail: Marc Graham <[email protected]>. ftp://ajpo.sei.cmu.edu/public/atip/samedl/.
  • samely — monotonous
  • samlet — a young salmon.
  • samlor — a three-wheeled motor vehicle in Thailand
  • sample — a small part of anything or one of a number, intended to show the quality, style, or nature of the whole; specimen.
  • samuel — a judge and prophet of Israel. I Sam. 1–3; 8–15.
  • sandal — sandalwood.
  • sanely — free from mental derangement; having a sound, healthy mind: a sane person.
  • sangli — a city in S Maharashtra, in SW India, on the Krishna River.
  • santal — sandalwood.
  • santol — a fruit from Southeast Asia
  • sapele — Also called aboudikro. the mahoganylike wood of any of several African trees of the genus Entandrophragma, used for making furniture.
  • sapful — full of sap
  • sapple — soap bubbles
  • sardel — a precious stone
  • saulie — a hired professional mourner at a funeral
  • saurel — any of several elongated marine fishes of the genus Trachurus, having bony plates along each side.
  • sawfly — any of numerous hymenopterous insects of the family Tenthredinidae, the female of which has a sawlike ovipositor for inserting the eggs in the tissues of a host plant.
  • sawlog — a log large enough to be suitable for sawing or making into lumber
  • saxaul — an Asian shrub with spongy bark and small leaves, Holoxylon Ammodendron
  • scalar — representable by position on a scale or line; having only magnitude: a scalar variable.
  • scaled — noting armor having imbricated metal plates sewn to a flexible backing.
  • scaler — a person or thing that scales.
  • scales — a succession or progression of steps or degrees; graduated series: the scale of taxation; the social scale.
  • scalia — Antonin [an-tuh-nin] /ˈæn tə nɪn/ (Show IPA), born 1936, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court since 1986.
  • scally — a rascal; rogue
  • scamel — a bird mentioned in Shakespeare's The Tempest
  • schlag — whipped cream, used especially as a topping for cake, coffee, etc.
  • scilla — modern name of Scylla.
  • sclaff — to scrape (the ground) with the head of the club just before impact with the ball.
  • sclate — slate
  • sclave — a slave
  • sclera — a dense, white, fibrous membrane that, with the cornea, forms the external covering of the eyeball.
  • scrawl — to write or draw in a sprawling, awkward manner: He scrawled his name hastily across the blackboard.
  • scutal — of or relating to a scute
  • scylla — Modern name Scilla. a rock in the Strait of Messina off the S coast of Italy.
  • sealab — any of several experimental U.S. Navy underwater habitats for aquanauts.
  • sealed — an embossed emblem, figure, symbol, word, letter, etc., used as attestation or evidence of authenticity.
  • sealer — a person or ship engaged in hunting seals.
  • searle — Ronald (William Fordham) [fawr-duh m,, fohr-] /ˈfɔr dəm,, ˈfoʊr-/ (Show IPA), 1920–2011, British cartoonist and artist.
  • selena — the Greek goddess of the moon. Compare Thyone.
  • selvas — a tropical rain forest, as that in the Amazon basin of South America.
  • sendal — a silk fabric in use during the Middle Ages.
  • senlac — a hill in SE England: believed by some historians to have been the site of the Battle of Hastings, 1066.
  • sepals — one of the individual leaves or parts of the calyx of a flower.
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