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10-letter words containing n, e, o, l

  • long-range — considering or extending into the future: a long-range outlook; long-range plans.
  • longaevous — long-lived
  • longbeards — Plural form of longbeard.
  • longbenton — a town in N England, in North Tyneside unitary authority, Tyne and Wear. Pop: 34 878 (2001)
  • longed-for — A longed-for thing or event is one that someone wants very much.
  • longfellowHenry Wadsworth [wodz-werth] /ˈwɒdz wərθ/ (Show IPA), 1807–82, U.S. poet.
  • longhaired — Having long hair.
  • longheaded — Having unusual foresight or sagacity.
  • longhouses — Plural form of longhouse.
  • longitudes — Plural form of longitude.
  • longlisted — Simple past tense and past participle of longlist.
  • longmeadow — a town in S Massachusetts.
  • longprimer — in printing, a size of type intermediate between small pica and bourgeois
  • longs peak — a peak in N Colorado, in the Rocky Mountain National Park. 14,255 feet (4345 meters).
  • longsomely — lengthily, slowly, and tediously
  • longstreetJames, 1821–1904, Confederate general in the U.S. Civil War.
  • longtailed — Having a long tail (used in the names of various birds and animals).
  • longtitude — Misspelling of longitude.
  • longwinded — Alternative spelling of long-winded.
  • loose ends — a part or piece left hanging, unattached, or unused: Remind me to tack down that loose end on the stairway carpet.
  • looyenwork — a physical therapy intended to release muscle fibre adhesions
  • loratadine — An antihistamine drug used to treat allergies.
  • lordliness — The property of being lordly; the bearing or manner of a lord.
  • lorenzetti — Ambrogio [ahm-braw-jaw] /ɑmˈbrɔ dʒɔ/ (Show IPA), c1319–48, and his brother, Pietro [pye-traw] /ˈpyɛ trɔ/ (Show IPA) c1305–48, Italian painters.
  • lorgnettes — Plural form of lorgnette.
  • lose count — to fail to keep an accurate record of items, events, etc
  • loucheness — The quality of being louche, shifty or disreputable.
  • loundering — a beating
  • lounge bar — more elegant bar
  • lounge car — club car.
  • loungewear — articles of clothing suitable for wear during leisure time, especially in the home.
  • love scene — a play or film scene in which characters make love
  • love token — a gift that is symbolic of a love relationship
  • loveliness — charmingly or exquisitely beautiful: a lovely flower.
  • lovemaking — the act of courting or wooing.
  • lovingness — feeling or showing love; warmly affectionate; fond: loving glances.
  • low german — the West Germanic languages not included in the High German group, as English, Dutch, Flemish, or Plattdeutsch. Abbreviation: LG. Compare High German (def 1).
  • low season — The low season is the time of year when a place receives the fewest visitors, and fares and holiday accommodation are often cheaper.
  • low-income — of or relating to those with a relatively small income.
  • low-minded — having or showing a coarse or vulgar taste or interests.
  • low-necked — (of a dress or other garment) cut low so as to leave the neck and shoulders exposed; décolleté.
  • loweringly — In a lowering manner; with cloudiness or threatening gloom.
  • lucanthone — A particular drug used in chemotherapy.
  • ludendorff — Erich Friedrich Wilhelm von [ey-rikh free-drikh vil-helm fuh n] /ˈeɪ rɪx ˈfri drɪx ˈvɪl hɛlm fən/ (Show IPA), 1865–1937, German general.
  • lumen-hour — a unit of luminous energy, equal to that emitted in 1 hour by a light source emitting a luminous flux of 1 lumen. Abbreviation: lm-hr.
  • lunchboxes — Plural form of lunchbox.
  • lye hominy — whole or ground hulled corn from which the bran and germ have been removed by bleaching the whole kernels in a lye bath (lye hominy) or by crushing and sifting (pearl hominy)
  • lyme-hound — lyam-hound.
  • lymph node — any of the glandlike masses of tissue in the lymphatic vessels containing cells that become lymphocytes.
  • lymphokine — any lymphocyte product, as interferon, that is not an antibody but may participate in the immune response through its effect on the function of other cells, as destroying antigen-coated cells or stimulating macrophages.
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