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7-letter words containing s, p, i

  • isospin — isotopic spin.
  • isotope — any of two or more forms of a chemical element, having the same number of protons in the nucleus, or the same atomic number, but having different numbers of neutrons in the nucleus, or different atomic weights. There are 275 isotopes of the 81 stable elements, in addition to over 800 radioactive isotopes, and every element has known isotopic forms. Isotopes of a single element possess almost identical properties.
  • isotopy — the quality or condition of being isotopic; isotopic character.
  • isotype — a drawing, diagram, or other symbol that represents a specific quantity of or other fact about the thing depicted: Every isotype of a house on that chart represents a thousand new houses.
  • ispahan — Isfahan.
  • japlish — Japanese spoken or written with a large admixture of English words and expressions.
  • jimpest — Superlative form of jimp.
  • kapitsa — Pyotr L(eonidovich) [pyawtr lyi-uh-nyee-duh-vyich] /pyɔtr lyɪ ʌˈnyi də vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1894–1984, Russian physicist: Nobel Prize 1978.
  • kelpies — Plural form of kelpie.
  • kewpies — Plural form of kewpie.
  • kidnaps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of kidnap.
  • kinship — the state or fact of being of kin; family relationship.
  • kippers — Plural form of kipper.
  • kirpans — Plural form of kirpan.
  • klipdas — a rock hyrax, Procavia capensis
  • kopeisk — a city in the SW Russian Federation in Asia, near the Urals.
  • krypsis — the idea that Christ made secret use of his divine attributes
  • lappish — Lapp (def 2).
  • lapsing — Present participle of lapse.
  • le-lisp — Jerome Chailloux and Emmanuel St James, INRIA, France. A LISP dialect close to Common Lisp, lexically scoped, with a CLOS-like object system. Uses both packages and modules. "le-lisp: A Portable and Efficient Lisp System", J. Chailloux et al, Proc 1984 ACM Symp on Lisp and Functional Programming, ACM. Version v.16, available from ILOG, France.
  • legaspi — a seaport on SE Luzon, in the Philippines.
  • lepidus — Marcus Aemilius [ee-mil-ee-uh s] /iˈmɪl i əs/ (Show IPA), died 13 b.c, Roman politician: member of the second triumvirate.
  • lepsius — Karl Richard [kahrl rikh-ahrt] /kɑrl ˈrɪx ɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1810–84, German philologist and Egyptologist.
  • limpets — Plural form of limpet.
  • lineups — Plural form of lineup.
  • linkups — Plural form of linkup.
  • lipases — Plural form of lipase.
  • lipetsk — a city in the W Russian Federation, SSE of Moscow.
  • lipides — 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.
  • lipless — either of the two fleshy parts or folds forming the margins of the mouth and functioning in speech.
  • lipomas — Plural form of lipoma.
  • lisping — a speech defect consisting in pronouncing s and z like or nearly like the th- sounds of thin and this, respectively.
  • lispkit — (language)   A functional programming language designed by Peter Henderson with Lisp syntax. Designed for portability. The Lispkit implementation is an extension to Landin's SECD machine that supports lazy evaluation. See also Stack environment control dump machine.
  • lithops — living stones.
  • loglisp — A version of Prolog implemented by Robinson in Lisp which allows Prolog programs to call Lisp and vice versa.
  • logship — log chip.
  • ludship — a humorous or hurried form of 'lordship'
  • lumpish — resembling a lump.
  • lupines — Plural form of lupine.
  • maclisp — (language)   A dialect of Lisp developed at MIT AI Lab in 1966, known for its efficiency and programming facilities. MacLisp was later used by Project MAC, Mathlab and Macsyma. It ran on the PDP-10. It introduced the LEXPR (a function with variable arity), macros, arrays, and CATCH/THROW. MacLisp was one of two main branches of LISP (the other being Interlisp). In 1981 Common LISP was begun in an effort to combine the best features of both.
  • magpies — Plural form of magpie.
  • malpais — Southwestern U.S. an extensive area of rough, barren lava flows.
  • manship — The characteristic of being a man; maleness; masculinity; manliness; manhood.
  • mappist — (archaic) cartographer.
  • mapwise — from a mapping point of view
  • memphis — a group of international designers and architects, formed in the 1980s and based in Milan, whose work is characterized by the use of bold colors, geometric shapes, and unconventional, often playful, designs.
  • mendips — a range of limestone hills in SW England, in N Somerset: includes the Cheddar Gorge and numerous caves. Highest point: 325 m (1068 ft)
  • midship — in or belonging to the middle part of a ship.
  • midstep — During a step.
  • milksop — a weak or ineffectual person.
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