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6-letter words containing o, n, l

  • lonest — being alone; without company or accompaniment; solitary; unaccompanied: a lone traveler.
  • long s — a lower-case s, printed ʃ, formerly used in handwriting and printing
  • longan — the small, one-seeded, greenish-brown fruit of a large evergreen tree, Euphoria longana, of the soapberry family, native to China and allied to the litchi.
  • longed — a long rope used to guide a horse during training or exercise.
  • longer — having considerable linear extent in space: a long distance; a long handle.
  • longes — Plural form of longe.
  • longi- — long
  • longly — having considerable linear extent in space: a long distance; a long handle.
  • longus — ?3rd century ad, Greek author of the prose romance Daphnis and Chloe
  • longyi — a cloth used as a turban, scarf, sarong, etc., in India, Pakistan, and Burma.
  • lonnie — a male given name, form of Alonso.
  • loogan — (US slang, dated) A fool.
  • looing — a card game in which forfeits are paid into a pool.
  • looner — (informal) One who has a w balloon fetish.
  • looney — lunatic; insane.
  • loonie — Canadian Informal. a dollar coin.
  • loosen — to unfasten or undo, as a bond or fetter.
  • loping — to move or run with bounding steps, as a quadruped, or with a long, easy stride, as a person.
  • lorain — a port in N Ohio, on Lake Erie.
  • lorena — a female given name.
  • lorenz — Adolf [ey-dolf;; German ah-dawlf] /ˈeɪ dɒlf;; German ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1854–1946, Austrian orthopedic surgeon.
  • loring — a male given name.
  • losing — causing or suffering loss.
  • lotion — Pharmacology. a liquid, usually aqueous or sometimes alcoholic preparation containing insoluble material in the form of a suspension or emulsion, intended for external application without rubbing, in such skin conditions as itching, infection, allergy, pain, or the like.
  • louden — To become louder.
  • lounge — to pass time idly and indolently.
  • loungy — to pass time idly and indolently.
  • lovein — a usually organized public gathering of people, held as a demonstration of mutual love or in protest against inhumane policies.
  • loving — feeling or showing love; warmly affectionate; fond: loving glances.
  • lowing — to burn; blaze.
  • loyang — Luoyang.
  • lugano — a town in S Switzerland, on Lake Lugano: a financial centre and tourist resort. Pop: 26 560 (2000)
  • lupinoIda, 1918–95, U.S. actress and film director, born in England.
  • lycaon — a king of Arcadia said to have offered Zeus a plate of human flesh to learn whether the god was omniscient
  • lyndon — a male given name.
  • lynxos — A POSIX compliant real-time operating system from Lynx Real-Time Systems. It has a Unix-like interface to application programs.
  • lytton — Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-, 1st Baron Lytton of Knebworth [neb-wert] /ˈnɛb wərt/ (Show IPA), 1803–73, English novelist, dramatist, and politician.
  • maldon — a market town in SE England, in Essex; scene of a battle (991) between the East Saxons and the victorious Danes, celebrated in The Battle of Maldon, an Old English poem; notable for Maldon salt, used in cookery. Pop: 20 731 (2001)
  • mallonMary ("Typhoid Mary") 1869?–1938, U.S. cook, born in Ireland: known immune carrier of typhoid fever who infected many with the disease, institutionalized in 1914.
  • maloneEdmond, 1741–1812, Irish literary critic and Shakespearean scholar.
  • marlon — a male given name.
  • mellonAndrew William, 1855–1937, U.S. financier: Secretary of the Treasury 1921–32.
  • melons — the fruit of any of various plants of the gourd family, as the muskmelon or watermelon.
  • melton — a heavily fulled cloth, often of wool, tightly constructed and finished with a smooth face concealing the weave, used for overcoats, hunting jackets, etc.
  • merlon — (in a battlement) the solid part between two crenels.
  • milano — an industrial city in central Lombardy, in N Italy: cathedral.
  • miltonJohn, 1608–74, English poet.
  • molina — Luis [loo-ees] /luˈis/ (Show IPA), 1535–1600, Spanish Jesuit theologian.
  • moline — (of a cross) having arms of equal length, split and curved back at the ends, used especially as the cadency mark of an eighth son: a cross moline.
  • molnar — Ferenc [fe-rents] /ˈfɛ rɛnts/ (Show IPA), 1878–1952, Hungarian playwright, novelist, and short-story writer.
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