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

  • impanelled — Simple past tense and past participle of impanel.
  • imparlance — an extension of time granted to one party in a lawsuit to plead or to settle the dispute amicably.
  • imperiling — Present participle of imperil.
  • impersonal — not personal; without reference or connection to a particular person: an impersonal remark.
  • impleading — to sue in a court of law.
  • implements — Plural form of implement.
  • imployment — Obsolete spelling of employment.
  • impotently — not potent; lacking power or ability.
  • impudently — of, relating to, or characterized by impertinence or effrontery: The student was kept late for impudent behavior.
  • impugnable — to challenge as false (another's statements, motives, etc.); cast doubt upon.
  • in plaster — If you have a leg or arm in plaster, you have a cover made of plaster of Paris around your leg or arm, in order to protect a broken bone and allow it to mend.
  • inceptisol — a soil so young that horizons have just begun to form: especially prevalent in tundra areas.
  • incomplete — not complete; lacking some part.
  • inculpable — not culpable; blameless; guiltless.
  • inculpated — Simple past tense and past participle of inculpate.
  • inculpates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inculpate.
  • indophenol — a quinonimine derivative that is the parent substance of the blue and green indophenol dyes.
  • inexpertly — not expert; unskilled.
  • inexpiable — not to be expiated; not allowing for expiation or atonement: an inexpiable crime.
  • inexpiably — In an inexpiable manner or degree; permitting no atonement.
  • inexplicit — not explicit or clear; not clearly stated.
  • inlet pipe — a pipe that allows a substance to enter a machine or device
  • inoperable — not operable or practicable.
  • inpossible — Obsolete spelling of impossible.
  • inspirable — capable of being inspired.
  • interglyph — a surface between two grooves, as on a triglyph.
  • interloped — Simple past tense and past participle of interlope.
  • interloper — a person who interferes or meddles in the affairs of others: He was an athiest who felt like an interloper in this religious gathering.
  • interlopes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of interlope.
  • interplant — to plant (a crop) among another crop, or to plant (land) with a variety of crops
  • interplays — Plural form of interplay.
  • interplead — to litigate with each other in order to determine which of two parties is the rightful claimant against a third party.
  • interpolar — connecting or being between poles: an interpolar flight.
  • interposal — (dated) interposure.
  • intraplate — (geology) Taking place within a single tectonic plate.
  • intrepidly — In an intrepid manner; fearlessly; daringly; resolutely.
  • jack plane — a plane for rough surfacing.
  • jade plant — a succulent shrub, Crassula argentea, of the stonecrop family, native to southern Africa, having fleshy, oval leaves, often grown as a houseplant.
  • jon postel — (person)   (Jonathan Bruce Postel, 1943 - 1998-10-16) /p*-stel'/ One of the Internet's founding fathers. Jon's name is prominent on many of the fundamental standards on which the Internet is built, such as UDP. He ran IANA for as long as anybody could remember, in fact for most of the time he *was* IANA. He wrote STD 1, STD 2 and several dozen other RFCs. His friend Vinton Cerf noted his passing in RFC 2468.
  • kenspeckle — conspicuous; easily seen or recognized.
  • keogh plan — a pension plan for an unincorporated business entity or self-employed person.
  • lagerphone — (Australia) A generally homemade percussion instrument consisting of crown cap beer bottle tops loosely nailed to a pole (often a broom handle) and a board mounted cross-ways on the pole (the head of the broom), and played by striking the pole on the ground or with a stick, by drawing the serrated stick across the pole, or by shaking the instrument. (From 1952.).
  • lagniappes — Plural form of lagniappe.
  • lampoonery — a sharp, often virulent satire directed against an individual or institution; a work of literature, art, or the like, ridiculing severely the character or behavior of a person, society, etc.
  • land power — a nation having an important and powerful army.
  • landlouper — A vagabond; a vagrant.
  • landscaped — Simple past tense and past participle of landscape.
  • landscaper — a gardener who does landscape gardening.
  • landscapes — Plural form of landscape.
  • lap dancer — a scantily dressed woman who dances erotically for individual members of the audience
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