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6-letter words containing p, l, i

  • jimply — slender; trim; delicate.
  • joplinScott, 1868–1917, U.S. ragtime pianist and composer.
  • jpldis — Jet Propulsion Laboratory Display Information System. Query system for UNIVAC 1108 [or PDP's?] written in Fortran, based on Tymshare's "Retrieve". Indirectly led to Vulcan which led to dBASE II. Jack Hatfield, George Masters, W. Van Snyder, Jeb Long et al, JPL.
  • kaliph — a spiritual leader of Islam, claiming succession from Muhammad.
  • kalpis — a form of the hydria.
  • kapila — flourished early 6th century b.c, Hindu philosopher: reputed founder of the Sankhya system of Hindu philosophy.
  • kelpie — Australian kelpie.
  • klippe — Numismatics. a square or lozenge-shaped coin.
  • laipse — to beat soundly
  • lapith — a member of a people in Thessaly who at the wedding of their king, Pirithoüs, fought the drunken centaurs
  • lappie — a rag or cloth
  • leipoa — mallee fowl.
  • leptin — a hormone that is thought to suppress appetite and speed up metabolism.
  • lie up — to be in a horizontal, recumbent, or prostrate position, as on a bed or the ground; recline. Antonyms: stand.
  • limdep — A linear programming language used by economists.
  • limped — to walk with a labored, jerky movement, as when lame.
  • limper — lacking stiffness or firmness, as of substance, fiber, structure, or bodily frame: a limp body.
  • limpet — any of various marine gastropods with a low conical shell open beneath, often browsing on rocks at the shoreline and adhering when disturbed.
  • limpid — clear, transparent, or pellucid, as water, crystal, or air: We could see to the very bottom of the limpid pond.
  • limply — lacking stiffness or firmness, as of substance, fiber, structure, or bodily frame: a limp body.
  • limpsy — flimsy; limp; weak; lazy; flaccid.
  • lineup — a particular order or disposition of persons or things as arranged or drawn up for action, inspection, etc.
  • linkup — a contact or linkage established, as between military units or two spacecraft.
  • lipase — any of a class of enzymes that break down fats, produced by the liver, pancreas, and other digestive organs or by certain plants.
  • lipids — any of a group of organic compounds that are greasy to the touch, insoluble in water, and soluble in alcohol and ether: lipids comprise the fats and other esters with analogous properties and constitute, with proteins and carbohydrates, the chief structural components of living cells.
  • lipoic — Of or pertaining to lipoic acid and its derivatives, the lipoates.
  • lipoid — Also, lipoidal. fatty; resembling fat.
  • lipoma — a benign tumor consisting of fat tissue.
  • lipped — of or relating to the lips or a lip: lip ointment.
  • lippen — to trust (a person).
  • lipper — a slightly rough or ripply surface on a body of water.
  • liptonSeymour, 1903–1986, U.S. sculptor.
  • lisp 1 — The original Lisp. Invented by John McCarthy et al at MIT in the late 50's. Followed by LISP 1.5.
  • lisp 2 — LISP 1.5 with an ALGOL 60-like surface syntax. Also optional type declarations, new data types including integer-indexed arrays and character strings, partial-word extraction/insertion operators and macros. A pattern-matching facility similar to COMIT was proposed. Implemented for the Q-32 computer.
  • lisp a — "LISP A: A LISP-like System for Incremental Computing", E.J. Sandewall, Proc SJCC 32 (1968).
  • lisp70 — A Lisp dialect descended from MLISP and MLISP2. Also known as PLISP and VEL. Useful for parsing. Only the pattern-matching system was published and fully implemented. According to Alan Kay, LISP70 had an influence on Smalltalk-72. "The LISP70 Pattern Matching System, Larry Tesler et al, IJCAI 73.
  • lisped — a speech defect consisting in pronouncing s and z like or nearly like the th- sounds of thin and this, respectively.
  • lisper — a speech defect consisting in pronouncing s and z like or nearly like the th- sounds of thin and this, respectively.
  • lit up — a simple past tense and past participle of light1 .
  • loping — to move or run with bounding steps, as a quadruped, or with a long, easy stride, as a person.
  • lupine — any of numerous plants belonging to the genus Lupinus, of the legume family, as L. albus (white lupine) of Europe, bearing edible seeds, or L. perennis, of the eastern U.S., having tall, dense clusters of blue, pink, or white flowers.
  • lupinoIda, 1918–95, U.S. actress and film director, born in England.
  • lupins — Plural form of lupin.
  • lupoid — suffering from lupus
  • magilp — Alternative form of megilp.
  • megilp — a jellylike vehicle used in oil paints and usually consisting of linseed oil mixed with mastic varnish.
  • milpas — Plural form of milpa.
  • mpl ii — [Burroughs VMS MPL II Language Reference Manual].
  • napoli — Italian name of Naples.
  • nepali — Also, Nepalese. an Indic language spoken in Nepal.
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