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9-letter words containing p, i, l

  • idioplasm — germ plasm.
  • iliopsoas — (anatomy) A compound muscle composed of the iliac and psoas muscles.
  • ill-kempt — unkempt.
  • ill-spent — misspent; wasted.
  • imp. gal. — imperial gallon
  • impacable — (obsolete) Not to be appeased or quieted.
  • impactful — having or manifesting a great impact or effect: After the senator's impactful speech, her bill passed.
  • impaneled — Simple past tense and past participle of impanel.
  • impartial — not partial or biased; fair; just: an impartial judge.
  • impearled — Simple past tense and past participle of impearl.
  • impedible — to retard in movement or progress by means of obstacles or hindrances; obstruct; hinder.
  • impellent — impelling: an impellent power; an impellent cause.
  • impelling — to drive or urge forward; press on; incite or constrain to action.
  • imperials — Plural form of imperial.
  • imperical — A mirror\u2013nearer merger misspelling of empirical.
  • imperiled — to put in peril or danger; endanger.
  • impiously — not pious or religious; lacking reverence for God, religious practices, etc.; irreligious; ungodly.
  • implanted — Simple past tense and past participle of implant.
  • implanter — Someone or something that implants.
  • implating — Present participle of implate.
  • impleaded — Simple past tense and past participle of implead.
  • impleader — a procedural method by which an original party to an action may bring in and make a claim against a third party in connection with the claim made against the original party.
  • implement — any article used in some activity, especially an instrument, tool, or utensil: agricultural implements.
  • impletion — An act of filling; the state of being full.
  • implexion — a complication or entanglement
  • impliable — (archaic) Not pliable; inflexible; unyielding.
  • implicant — (propositional calculus) The hypothesis of an implication.
  • implicate — to show to be also involved, usually in an incriminating manner: to be implicated in a crime.
  • implicity — implied, rather than expressly stated: implicit agreement.
  • impliedly — involved, indicated, or suggested without being directly or explicitly stated; tacitly understood: an implied rebuke; an implied compliment.
  • imploding — Present participle of implode.
  • imploring — to beg urgently or piteously, as for aid or mercy; beseech; entreat: They implored him to go.
  • implosion — the act of imploding; a bursting inward (opposed to explosion).
  • implosive — characterized by a partial vacuum behind the point of closure.
  • impluvium — a basin or tank within a compluvium.
  • impolitic — not politic, expedient, or judicious.
  • imposable — to lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc.: to impose taxes.
  • impotable — (rare) Not drinkable.
  • impulsing — Present participle of impulse.
  • impulsion — the act of impelling, driving onward, or pushing.
  • impulsive — actuated or swayed by emotional or involuntary impulses: an impulsive child.
  • impundulu — a mythical bird associated with witchcraft, frequently manifested as the secretary bird
  • impurpled — Simple past tense and past participle of impurple.
  • imputable — to attribute or ascribe: The children imputed magical powers to the old woman.
  • imputably — In an imputable manner; by imputation.
  • in places — If something has particular characteristics or features in places, it has them at several points within an area.
  • in plenty — If there are things in plenty, those things exist or happen in large amounts or numbers.
  • in public — of, relating to, or affecting a population or a community as a whole: public funds; a public nuisance.
  • incapable — not capable.
  • incapably — In an incapable manner.
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