6-letter words containing p, l
- fsplit — A tool to split up monolithic Fortran programs.
- ft-pdl — foot-poundal(s)
- gallop — to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed: They galloped off to meet their friends.
- gallup — George Horace, 1901–84, U.S. statistician.
- gaplog — General Amalgamated Programming with Logic. LOGPRO group, Linkoping Sweden. A restricted version of constraint logic programming, using S-unification but not restricted to a single domain.
- garply — /gar'plee/ A metasyntactic variable like foo, once popular among SAIL hackers.
- gelcap — a dose of medicine enclosed in a soluble case of gelatine
- gflops — gigaflops
- gilpey — a mischievous, frolicsome boy or girl
- gloopy — (informal) Having a glutinous, sloppy consistency; gloppy.
- gloppy — marked by or full of glop.
- glumps — a state of sulking
- glumpy — sullen
- glyphs — Plural form of glyph.
- gollop — to eat or drink (something) quickly or greedily
- gopala — Krishna as a cowherd.
- gospel — the teachings of Jesus and the apostles; the Christian revelation.
- guelph — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
- gulped — to gasp or choke, as when taking large drafts of a liquid.
- gulper — A deep-sea eel with very large jaws that open to give an enormous gape and with eyes near the tip of the snout.
- haplo- — single or simple
- helped — to give or provide what is necessary to accomplish a task or satisfy a need; contribute strength or means to; render assistance to; cooperate effectively with; aid; assist: He planned to help me with my work. Let me help you with those packages.
- helper — a person or thing that helps or gives assistance, support, etc.
- helply — (UK dialectal) Aiding; assisting; ready to help; helpful.
- hempel — Carl Gustav, 1905–1997, U.S. philosopher, born in Germany.
- hirple — (intransitive, Scotland, northern UK) to walk with a limp, to drag a limb, to walk lamely; to move with a gait somewhere between walking and crawling.
- holdup — a forcible stopping and robbing of a person.
- holpen — a past participle of help.
- hoopla — bustling excitement or activity; commotion; hullabaloo; to-do.
- hoples — a son of Ion.
- hopple — to hobble; tether.
- huipil — a richly embroidered cotton blouse worn by women in Mexico and Central America, often very wide and low-cut.
- hurple — (Scotland) An impediment similar to a limp.
- hyphal — Of or pertaining to hyphae.
- illipe — a tropical Asian tree of the family Sapotaceae
- impala — an African antelope, Aepyceros melampus, the male of which has ringed, lyre-shaped horns.
- impale — to fasten, stick, or fix upon a sharpened stake or the like.
- imparl — to confer with the opposing party in a lawsuit with a view to settling the dispute amicably, out of court.
- impels — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impel.
- imphal — a state in NE India between Assam and Burma. 8620 sq. mi. (22,326 sq. km). Capital: Imphal.
- implex — the point where muscles are attached to the integument of an arthropod
- imploy — Obsolete spelling of employ.
- inclip — to grasp or enclose.
- islisp — International Standard Lisp. An object-oriented Lisp intended as an international replacement for Common Lisp, EuLisp, Le-Lisp and Scheme. The standard's goals are object orientation, extensibility, efficiency, and suitability for non-academic use. The standard is defined in ISO WG 16, draft Dec 1992.
- jalapa — a state in E Mexico, on the Gulf of Mexico. 27,759 sq. mi. (71,895 sq. km). Capital: Jalapa.
- jalopy — an old, decrepit, or unpretentious automobile.
- jimply — slender; trim; delicate.
- jollop — A strong liquor or medicine.
- joplin — Scott, 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.