0%

9-letter words containing r, e, l, t

  • holderbat — a bracket that supports a pipe and fastens it to a wall or surface
  • hollister — a town in W California.
  • holstered — a sheathlike carrying case for a firearm, attached to a belt, shoulder sling, or saddle.
  • horotelic — of or relating to evolution at a rate standard for a given group of plants or animals.
  • horsetail — Also called scouring rush. any nonflowering plant of the genus Equisetum, having hollow, jointed stems.
  • hostelers — Plural form of hosteler.
  • hosteller — a person who operates a hostel.
  • hoteliers — Plural form of hotelier.
  • hourplate — the dial of a clock or watch
  • hydrolyte — a substance subjected to hydrolysis.
  • hypertalk — A verbose semicompiled language by Bill Atkinson and Dan Winkler, with loose syntax and high readability. HyperTalk uses HyperCard as an object management system, development environment and interface builder. Programs are organised into "stacks" of "cards", each of which may have "buttons" and "fields". All data storage is in zero-terminated strings in fields, local, or global variables; all data references are through "chunk expressions" of the form: 'last item of background field "Name List" of card ID 34217'. Flow of control is event-driven and uses message-passing among scripts that are attached to stack, background, card, field and button objects.
  • hypethral — (of a classical building) wholly or partly open to the sky.
  • idolaters — Plural form of idolater.
  • ill-treat — to treat badly; maltreat; abuse.
  • illiteral — Not literal.
  • implanter — Someone or something that implants.
  • in revolt — in the process or state of rebelling
  • inculture — (obsolete) Lack or neglect of cultivation or culture.
  • infertile — not fertile; unproductive; sterile; barren: infertile soil.
  • inflicter — One who inflicts.
  • inshelter — to put in a shelter
  • installer — to place in position or connect for service or use: to install a heating system; to install software on a computer.
  • instiller — One who instills.
  • integrals — Plural form of integral.
  • intercell — intercellular
  • interclan — a group of families or households, as among the Scottish Highlanders, the heads of which claim descent from a common ancestor: the Mackenzie clan.
  • interclub — a heavy stick, usually thicker at one end than at the other, suitable for use as a weapon; a cudgel.
  • interdeal — to negotiate or deal mutually
  • interfile — to combine two or more similarly arranged sets of items, as cards or documents, into a single file.
  • interflow — to flow into each other; intermingle.
  • interfold — to fold one within another; fold together.
  • interlace — progressive coding
  • interlaid — Simple past tense and past participle of interlay.
  • interlard — to diversify by adding or interjecting something unique, striking, or contrasting (usually followed by with): to interlard one's speech with oaths.
  • interleaf — an additional leaf, usually blank, inserted between or bound with the regular printed leaves of a book, as to separate chapters or provide room for a reader's notes.
  • interlend — (of a library) to lend books or other materials to other libraries
  • interline — to provide (a garment) with an interlining.
  • interlink — to link, one with another.
  • interlisp — (language)   A dialect of Lisp developed in 1967 by Bolt, Beranek and Newman (Cambridge, MA) as a descendant of BBN-Lisp. It emphasises user interfaces. It is currently[?] supported by Xerox PARC. Interlisp was one of two main branches of LISP (the other being MACLISP). In 1981 Common LISP was begun in an effort to combine the best features of both. Interlisp includes a Lisp programming environment. It is dynamically scoped. LAMBDA functions evaluate their arguments, NLAMBDA functions do not. Any function could be called with optional arguments. See also AM, CLISP, Interlisp-10, Interlisp-D.
  • interloan — a loan between one library and another
  • interlock — to fit into each other, as parts of machinery, so that all action is synchronized.
  • interloop — Between loops.
  • interlope — to intrude into some region or field of trade without a proper license.
  • interlude — an intervening episode, period, space, etc.
  • intermale — occurring between males
  • internals — situated or existing in the interior of something; interior.
  • interplay — reciprocal relationship, action, or influence: the interplay of plot and character.
  • interpled — having instituted interpleader proceedings
  • interrail — to travel through Europe using an international rail pass, which permits unlimited travel through most European countries via train
  • intertill — to cultivate between rows of (a crop)
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?