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8-letter words containing o, t, l, a

  • outblaze — to blaze more than or hotter than
  • outbleat — to bleat more than or louder than
  • outbrawl — to defeat in a brawl
  • outcalls — Plural form of outcall.
  • outcavil — to exceed in cavilling
  • outclass — to surpass in excellence or quality, especially by a wide margin; be superior: He far outclasses the other runners in the race.
  • outcrawl — to crawl further than or faster than
  • outfable — to exceed in creating fables
  • outfalls — Plural form of outfall.
  • outflank — to go or extend beyond the flank of (an opposing military unit); turn the flank of.
  • outflare — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.
  • outflash — a brief, sudden burst of bright light: a flash of lightning.
  • outfloat — to float longer than
  • outglare — (transitive) To surpass or outdo in glaring.
  • outgleam — to gleam more than
  • outhauls — Plural form of outhaul.
  • outlands — Exurbia: the country beyond the city.
  • outlasts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outlast.
  • outlaugh — (transitive) To ridicule or laugh someone out of a purpose, principle, etc.; laugh down; discourage or put out of countenance by laughing.
  • outlawed — a lawless person or habitual criminal, especially one who is a fugitive from the law.
  • outlawry — the act or process of outlawing.
  • outleaps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outleap.
  • outlearn — to exceed in learning
  • outplace — to provide outplacement for.
  • outrival — a person who is competing for the same object or goal as another, or who tries to equal or outdo another; competitor.
  • outvalue — Be of greater value than.
  • overlate — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • oversalt — to put too much salt in
  • overtalk — to communicate or exchange ideas, information, etc., by speaking: to talk about poetry.
  • oxysalts — any salt of an oxyacid.
  • pactolus — a small river in Asia Minor, in ancient Lydia: famous for the gold washed from its sands.
  • palmetto — any of various palms having fan-shaped leaves, as of the genera Sabal, Serenoa, and Thrinax.
  • palometa — a pompano, Trachinotus goodei, of tropical and temperate Atlantic seas, having long, tapering fins.
  • palpator — a type of beetle with long maxillary appendages
  • pantofle — a slipper.
  • pantonal — marked by or using pantonality.
  • pastoral — having the simplicity, charm, serenity, or other characteristics generally attributed to rural areas: pastoral scenery; the pastoral life.
  • pastorly — of or relating to a pastor
  • patronal — a person who is a customer, client, or paying guest, especially a regular one, of a store, hotel, or the like.
  • patronly — a person who is a customer, client, or paying guest, especially a regular one, of a store, hotel, or the like.
  • patulous — open; gaping; expanded.
  • pectoral — of, in, on, or pertaining to the chest or breast; thoracic.
  • pentanol — any of various colourless, odoriferous isomers of C5H11OH
  • petaflop — a measure of processing speed, consisting of 1015 floating-point operations a second
  • petalody — a condition in flowers, in which certain organs, as the stamens in most double flowers, assume the appearance of or become metamorphosed into petals.
  • petaloid — having the form or appearance of a petal.
  • petalous — having petals.
  • petiolar — of, relating to, or growing from a petiole.
  • petrosal — of, relating to, or situated near the dense part of the temporal bone that surrounds the inner ear
  • pilotage — the process of directing the movement of a ship or aircraft by visual or electronic observations of recognizable landmarks.
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