8-letter words containing t, o, r, i, l
- hotliner — a person who speaks to callers on a telephone hot line.
- idolater — Also, idolist [ahyd-l-ist] /ˈaɪd l ɪst/ (Show IPA). a worshiper of idols.
- idolator — Alternative spelling of idolater.
- idolatry — the religious worship of idols.
- immortal — not mortal; not liable or subject to death; undying: our immortal souls.
- inflator — to distend; swell or puff out; dilate: The king cobra inflates its hood.
- interpol — an official international agency that coordinates the police activities of more than 100 member nations: organized in 1923 with headquarters in Paris.
- isolator — to set or place apart; detach or separate so as to be alone.
- laborist — A physician who aids labor and delivery but does not provide prenatal care.
- laborite — a member of a political party promoting the interests of labor.
- leprotic — Of, or pertaining to leprosy.
- libatory — relating to libation
- liberato — ErrorTitleDiv {.
- libretto — the text or words of an opera or similar extended musical composition.
- link rot — (web) The process by which links on a web page became unusable as the pages they point to change location or are removed.
- listproc — A mailing list processor owned and developed by BITNET which runs under Unix. See also Listserv, Majordomo.
- literose — affectedly literary
- littoral — of or relating to the shore of a lake, sea, or ocean.
- loitered — to linger aimlessly or as if aimless in or about a place: to loiter around the bus terminal.
- loiterer — to linger aimlessly or as if aimless in or about a place: to loiter around the bus terminal.
- loquitur — (he or she) speaks (with the speaker’s name following, as a stage direction or to inform the reader).
- lordotic — Pathology. an abnormal forward curvature of the spine in the lumbar region, resulting in a swaybacked posture. Compare kyphosis, scoliosis.
- loricate — covered with a lorica.
- lorikeet — any of various small lories.
- lothario — (sometimes lowercase) a man who obsessively seduces and deceives women.
- lutropin — Luteinizing hormone.
- milkwort — any plant or shrub of the genus Polygala, formerly supposed to increase the secretion of milk.
- mirliton — kazoo.
- molarity — the number of moles of solute per liter of solution.
- moralist — a person who teaches or inculcates morality.
- morality — conformity to the rules of right conduct; moral or virtuous conduct.
- mortling — wool obtained from dead sheep.
- motelier — a person running or owning a motel or motel chain
- motorail — a rail service carrying cars and their drivers as well as ordinary passengers
- motorial — (biology) motor.
- moultrie — William, 1730–1805, U.S. general.
- nitrolic — of or noting a series of acids of the type RC(=NOH)NO 2 , whose salts form deep-red solutions.
- nitrosyl — nitroso.
- nitroxyl — the chemical compound HNO
- nostrils — either of the two external openings of the nose.
- notarial — of, relating to, or characteristic of a notary public.
- oestriol — a weak oestrogenic hormone secreted by the mammalian ovary: a synthetic form is used to treat oestrogen deficiency. Formula: C18H24O3
- oldtimer — An elderly person.
- oltipraz — 4-methyl-5-(2-pyrazinyl)-3-dithiolethione, a schistosomicide drug also used in tumour prevention.
- on trial — Law. the examination before a judicial tribunal of the facts put in issue in a cause, often including issues of law as well as those of fact. the determination of a person's guilt or innocence by due process of law.
- orbitale — Craniometry, Cephalometry. the lowermost point on the lower margin of the left orbit, located instrumentally on the skull or by palpation on the head.
- orbitals — Plural form of orbital.
- oriental — (usually initial capital letter) of, relating to, or characteristic of the Orient, or East; Eastern.
- orlistat — A drug designed to treat obesity.
- outliers — something that lies outside the main body or group that it is a part of, as a cow far from the rest of the herd, or a distant island belonging to a cluster of islands: The small factory was an outlier, and unproductive, so the corporation sold it off to private owners who were able to make it profitable.