5-letter words containing p, l
- cloop — the sound made when a cork is drawn from a bottle
- clops — Plural form of clop.
- clump — A clump of things such as trees or plants is a small group of them growing together.
- clype — to tell tales; be an informer
- compl — (language, operating system)
- copal — a hard aromatic resin, yellow, orange, or red in colour, obtained from various tropical trees and used in making varnishes and lacquers
- copel — Obsolete spelling of couple.
- cslip — Compressed SLIP
- culpa — an act of neglect
- cupel — a refractory pot in which gold or silver is refined
- delph — Delftware crockery.
- dphil — Doctor of Philosophy
- duple — having two parts; double; twofold.
- duply — a second or subsequent response
- elisp — 1. (language) A Lisp variant originally implemented for DEC-20s by Chuck Hedrick of Rutgers. 2. (language) A common abbreviation for Emacs Lisp. Use of this abbreviation is discouraged because "Elisp" is or was a trademark.
- elope — Run away secretly in order to get married, especially without parental consent.
- elops — any of several fishes of the genus Elops of the Elopidae family that are related to the tarpons
- elpee — an LP
- espol — Executive Systems Programming Oriented Language
- expel — Deprive (someone) of membership of or involvement in a school or other organization.
- exptl — experimental
- flaps — something flat and broad that is attached at one side only and hangs loosely or covers an opening: the flap of an envelope; the flap of a pocket.
- flarp — /flarp/ [Rutgers University] Yet another metasyntactic variable (see foo). Among those who use it, it is associated with a legend that any program not containing the word "flarp" somewhere will not work. The legend is discreetly silent on the reliability of programs which *do* contain the magic word.
- flimp — to steal from (a person) by the method of one partner hustling or pushing the victim while the other robs him or her
- flipe — (Scotland, dated, transitive) To turn inside out, or with the leg part back over the foot, as when putting on or taking off a stocking.
- flips — Plural form of flip.
- flipt — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of flip.
- flops — an act of flopping.
- flump — the act or sound of flumping.
- flype — a flap or fold
- galop — a lively round dance in duple time.
- glisp — Generalized LISP. D.C. Smith, Aug 1990. A coordinated set of high-level syntaxes for Common LISP. Contains Mlisp, Plisp and ordinary LISP, with an extensible framework for adding others. Written in Plisp.
- glomp — (slang, transitive) to embrace enthusiastically; to pounce on and hug, often from a running start.
- gloop — Any gooey, viscous substance.
- glope — (intransitive, dialectal) To gaze in alarm; be terrified; stare.
- glops — unappetizing food, especially of a semiliquid consistency.
- glump — (colloquial) To be sullen; to sulk.
- glyph — a pictograph or hieroglyph.
- golpe — a purple circle
- gospl — Graphics-Oriented Signal Processing Language. A graphical DSP language for simulation.
- gulps — Plural form of gulp.
- gulpy — Inclined to gulp.
- haply — perhaps; by chance.
- helpe — Obsolete spelling of help.
- helps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of help.
- helpt — Simple past tense and past participle of help.
- hiply — In a hip way.
- hlisp — "Monocopy and Associative Algorithms in an Extended Lisp", E. Goto, U Tokyo May 1974.
- hp-gl — Hewlett-Packard Graphics Language
- hplot — A graphical output facility for HBOOK.