7-letter words containing l, y, d
- acridly — In a harsh or corrosive manner.
- addedly — additionally
- adeptly — very skilled; proficient; expert: an adept juggler.
- adultly — in an adult manner
- adultry — Misspelling of adultery.
- alcayde — alcaide.
- aleyard — yard-of-ale.
- all-day — available throughout the day
- allayed — to put (fear, doubt, suspicion, anger, etc.) to rest; calm; quiet.
- alleyed — having an alley or alleys
- alloyed — a substance composed of two or more metals, or of a metal or metals with a nonmetal, intimately mixed, as by fusion or electrodeposition.
- almondy — containing or resembling almond
- already — You use already to show that something has happened, or that something had happened before the moment you are referring to. Speakers of British English use already with a verb in a perfect tense, putting it after 'have', 'has', or 'had', or at the end of a clause. Some speakers of American English use already with the simple past tense of the verb instead of a perfect tense.
- amygdal — an almond
- amyloid — a complex protein resembling starch, deposited in tissues in some degenerative diseases
- any old — You use any old to emphasize that the quality or type of something is not important. If you say that a particular thing is not any old thing, you are emphasizing how special or famous it is.
- audibly — capable of being heard; loud enough to be heard; actually heard.
- aylward — Gladys. 1903–70, English missionary in China
- bawdily — indecent; lewd; obscene: another of his bawdy stories.
- beadily — (of a look) in an avaricious or penetrating manner.
- belayed — Nautical. to fasten (a rope) by winding around a pin or short rod inserted in a holder so that both ends of the rod are clear.
- blandly — If you do something blandly, you do it in a calm and quiet way.
- blaydon — an industrial town in NE England, in Gateshead unitary authority, Tyne and Wear. Pop: 14 648 (2001)
- blindly — If you say that someone does something blindly, you mean that they do it without having enough information, or without thinking about it.
- bradley — A(ndrew) C(ecil). 1851–1935, English critic; author of Shakespearian Tragedy (1904)
- broadly — You can use broadly to indicate that something is generally true.
- buirdly — well-built; stocky
- byrlady — a mild oath
- cacodyl — an oily poisonous liquid with a strong garlic smell; tetramethyldiarsine. Formula: [(CH3)2As]2
- calydon — ancient city in S Aetolia, central Greece
- childly — childlike; childish
- codasyl — Conference On DAta SYstems Languages
- condyle — the rounded projection on the articulating end of a bone, such as the ball portion of a ball-and-socket joint
- cowedly — in a cowed or frightened manner
- crudely — in a raw or unprepared state; unrefined or natural: crude sugar.
- cycloid — resembling a circle
- d layer — the lowest area of the ionosphere, having increased ion density and existing only in the daytime: it begins at an altitude of about 70 km (c. 43 mi) and merges with the E layer
- dactyli — an enlarged portion of the leg after the first joint in some insects, as the pollen-carrying segment in the hind leg of certain bees.
- dactyls — Plural form of dactyl.
- daffily — In a daffy manner.
- dandily — In a dandy way.
- darnley — Lord. title of Henry Stuart (or Stewart). 1545–67, Scottish nobleman; second husband of Mary, Queen of Scots and father of James I of England. After murdering his wife's secretary, Rizzio (1566), he was himself assassinated (1567)
- datedly — in a dated or unfashionable manner
- day-glo — Day-Glo colours are shades of orange, pink, green, and yellow which are so bright that they seem to glow.
- day-old — having been in existence or alive for one day
- daygirl — a girl who attends a boarding school daily, but returns home each evening
- dayglow — the light given off by the atmosphere of the Earth as seen during daytime
- daylily — any lily of the genus Hemerocallis, having yellow, orange, or red flowers that commonly last only for a day.
- daylong — Daylong is used to describe an event or activity that lasts for the whole of one day.
- daysail — to go boating in a day sailer.
On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with L-Y-D. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in L-Y-D to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles