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7-letter words containing t, e, l

  • littles — Small amounts.
  • littlie — a young child
  • lizbeth — a female given name, form of Elizabeth.
  • loathed — to feel disgust or intense aversion for; abhor: I loathe people who spread malicious gossip.
  • loather — unwilling; reluctant; disinclined; averse: to be loath to admit a mistake.
  • loathes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of loathe.
  • lobelet — a small lobe
  • lobster — any of various large, edible, marine, usually dull-green, stalk-eyed decapod crustaceans of the family Homaridae, especially of the genus Homarus, having large, asymmetrical pincers on the first pair of legs, one used for crushing and the other for cutting and tearing: the shell turns bright red when cooked.
  • located — to identify or discover the place or location of: to locate the bullet wound.
  • locater — a person who locates something.
  • locates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of locate.
  • lockets — Plural form of locket.
  • lockset — an assembly of parts making up a complete locking system, especially one used on a door, including knobs, plates, and a lock mechanism.
  • loftier — extending high in the air; of imposing height; towering: lofty mountains.
  • loggets — a game, formerly played in England, in which players throw pieces of wood at a stake.
  • loiters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of loiter.
  • loments — Plural form of loment.
  • longest — having considerable linear extent in space: a long distance; a long handle.
  • longeth — Archaic third-person singular form of long.
  • looketh — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of look.
  • loosest — Superlative form of loose.
  • looters — spoils or plunder taken by pillaging, as in war.
  • lorentz — Hendrik Antoon [hen-drik ahn-tohn] /ˈhɛn drɪk ˈɑn toʊn/ (Show IPA), 1853–1928, Dutch physicist: Nobel Prize 1902.
  • loretta — a female given name, form of Laura.
  • lorette — (dated) A woman of low morals, especially associated with the Notre-Dame-de-Lorette district of Paris.
  • lorient — a seaport in NW France, on the Bay of Biscay.
  • lose it — to come to be without (something in one's possession or care), through accident, theft, etc., so that there is little or no prospect of recovery: I'm sure I've merely misplaced my hat, not lost it.
  • lottery — a gambling game or method of raising money, as for some public charitable purpose, in which a large number of tickets are sold and a drawing is held for certain prizes.
  • lotuses — Plural form of lotus.
  • loudest — Superlative form of loud.
  • luddite — a member of any of various bands of workers in England (1811–16) organized to destroy manufacturing machinery, under the belief that its use diminished employment.
  • lunated — Lunate; crescent-shaped.
  • lunates — Plural form of lunate.
  • lunette — any of various objects or spaces of crescentlike or semicircular outline or section.
  • lunulet — (zoology) A small spot, shaped like a half-moon or crescent.
  • lusters — Plural form of luster.
  • lusteth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lust.
  • lustier — Comparative form of lusty.
  • lustred — Having a lustre.
  • lustres — Plural form of lustre.
  • luteous — (of yellow) having a light to medium greenish tinge.
  • lutetia — Paris2
  • luthern — a dormer window.
  • luthier — a maker of stringed instruments, as violins.
  • lutyensSir Edwin Landseer, 1869–1944, English architect.
  • luxated — Simple past tense and past participle of luxate.
  • lyautey — Louis Hubert Gonzalve [lwee y-ber gawn-zalv] /lwi üˈbɛr gɔ̃ˈzalv/ (Show IPA), 1854–1934, French marshal: resident general of Morocco 1912–16, 1917–25.
  • lyddite — a high explosive consisting chiefly of picric acid.
  • lydgateJohn, c1370–1451? English monk, poet, and translator.
  • lynchet — a terrace or ridge formed in prehistoric or medieval times by ploughing a hillside
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