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7-letter words containing o, l

  • allover — over the whole surface
  • alloway — a village in Scotland, in South Ayrshire, S of Ayr: birthplace of Robert Burns
  • allowed — to let have; give as one's share; grant as one's right: to allow a person $100 for expenses.
  • alloxan — a reddish organic compound C4H2N2O4 produced by oxidation of uric acid
  • 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.
  • allport — Gordon W(illard) 1897–1967, U.S. psychologist and educator.
  • allston — Washington. 1779–1843, US painter and author, regarded as the earliest US Romantic painter. His paintings include Elijah in the Desert (1818) and Moonlit Landscape (1819)
  • allwork — Domestic or other work of all kinds.
  • almohad — a member of a Muslim dynasty ruling in Spain and northern Africa during the 12th and 13th centuries.
  • almonds — Plural form of almond.
  • almondy — containing or resembling almond
  • almoner — In Britain, an almoner is a social worker who works in a hospital.
  • almonry — the house of an almoner, usually the place where alms were given
  • alodial — free from the tenurial rights of a feudal overlord.
  • alodium — allodium
  • alonely — in a solitary, or lonely, manner
  • alongst — along
  • aloofly — at a distance, especially in feeling or interest; apart: They always stood aloof from their classmates.
  • alotted — Alternative form of allotted Simple past tense and past participle of allot.
  • alphorn — a wind instrument used in the Swiss Alps, consisting of a very long tube of wood or bark with a cornet-like mouthpiece
  • alsoone — as soon
  • altdorf — a town in central Switzerland, capital of Uri canton: setting of the William Tell legend. Pop: 8541 (2000)
  • althorn — a valved brass musical instrument belonging to the saxhorn or flügelhorn families
  • altmode — alt
  • altoist — a person who plays the alto saxophone
  • altoona — city in central Pa.: pop. 50,000
  • alveola — a small cavity, cell, or pit on the surface of an organ.
  • alveole — alveolus
  • alveoli — a little cavity, pit, or cell, as a cell of a honeycomb.
  • ammonal — an explosive made by mixing TNT, ammonium nitrate, and aluminium powder
  • amortal — pursuing a lifestyle that defies the process of ageing
  • ampelos — a satyr who was placed among the stars by Dionysus.
  • ampoule — An ampoule is a small container, usually made of glass, that contains a drug which will be injected into someone. The abbreviation amp is also used.
  • amyloid — a complex protein resembling starch, deposited in tissues in some degenerative diseases
  • amylose — the minor component (about 20 per cent) of starch, consisting of long unbranched chains of glucose units. It is soluble in water and gives an intense blue colour with iodine
  • analogs — (US) Plural form of analog.
  • analogy — If you make or draw an analogy between two things, you show that they are similar in some way.
  • anconal — the elbow.
  • angelou — Maya, real name Marguerite Johnson. 1928–2014, US Black novelist, poet, and dramatist. Her works include the autobiographical novel I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1970) and its sequels
  • angolan — Angolan means belonging or relating to Angola or its people.
  • anisole — a colourless pleasant-smelling liquid used as a solvent and vermicide and in perfume and flavouring. Formula: C6H5OCH3; relative density: 0.996; melting pt: –37.5°C; boiling pt: 155°C
  • annatol — a male given name.
  • anolyte — the section of an electrolyte that is around or attached to the anode
  • anomaly — If something is an anomaly, it is different from what is usual or expected.
  • anomoly — Misspelling of anomaly.
  • anormal — (obsolete) Not according to rule; abnormal.
  • anouilh — Jean (ʒɑ̃). 1910–87, French dramatist, noted for his reinterpretations of Greek myths: his works include Eurydice (1942), Antigone (1944), and Becket (1959)
  • antilog — antilogarithm
  • antlion — any of various neuropterous insects of the family Myrmeleontidae, which typically resemble dragonflies and are most common in tropical regions
  • 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.
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