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7-letter words containing t, u, p, l

  • belt up — If someone tells you to belt up, they are telling you in a very impolite way to stop talking.
  • capulet — the family name of Juliet in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
  • couplet — A couplet is two lines of poetry which come next to each other, especially two lines that rhyme with each other and are the same length.
  • culprit — When you are talking about a crime or something wrong that has been done, you can refer to the person who did it as the culprit.
  • duplets — Plural form of duplet.
  • eelpout — any fish of the family Zoarcidae, especially Zoarces viviparus, of Europe.
  • epaulet — An ornamental shoulder piece on an item of clothing, typically on the coat or jacket of a military uniform.
  • giltcup — a buttercup
  • gluepot — a double boiler in which glue is melted.
  • gnuplot — (tool)   A command-driven interactive graphing program. Gnuplot can plot two-dimensional functions and data points in many different styles (points, lines, error bars); and three-dimensional data points and surfaces in many different styles (contour plot, mesh). It supports complex arithmetic and user-defined functions and can label title, axes, and data points. It can output to several different graphics file formats and devices. Command line editing and history are supported and there is extensive on-line help. Gnuplot is copyrighted, but freely distributable. It was written by Thomas Williams, Colin Kelley, Russell Lang, Dave Kotz, John Campbell, Gershon Elber, Alexander Woo and many others. Despite its name, gnuplot is not related to the GNU project or the FSF in any but the most peripheral sense. It was designed completely independently and is not covered by the General Public License. However, the FSF has decided to distribute gnuplot as part of the GNU system, because it is useful, redistributable software. Gnuplot is available for: Unix (X11 and NEXTSTEP), VAX/VMS, OS/2, MS-DOS, Amiga, MS-Windows, OS-9/68k, Atari ST and Macintosh. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • lift up — raise
  • lip out — (of a ball) to reach the edge of the hole and spin away without dropping in
  • lump it — accept sth unpleasant
  • n-tuple — a set of n objects or quantities, where n is an integer, especially such a set arranged in a specified order (ordered n-tuple)
  • nuptial — of or relating to marriage or the marriage ceremony: the nuptial day; nuptial vows.
  • nuptual — Misspelling of nuptial.
  • octuple — eightfold; eight times as great.
  • octuply — in an octuple or eightfold manner
  • opulent — characterized by or exhibiting opulence: an opulent suite.
  • outleap — to leap ahead of or over.
  • outplan — a scheme or method of acting, doing, proceeding, making, etc., developed in advance: battle plans.
  • outplay — to play better than.
  • outplod — to exceed in plodding
  • outplot — to exceed in plotting
  • outpoll — to win more votes than
  • outpull — to exceed in ability to attract an audience, attention, etc.; outdraw: a film that is outpulling every other movie in town.
  • outyelp — to outdo in yelping
  • patulin — a toxic antibiotic, C 7 H 6 O 4 , derived from various fungi, as Penicillium patulum and Aspergillus clavatus.
  • paulist — a member of the “Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle,” a community of priests founded in New York in 1858.
  • piculet — any of numerous small, tropical woodpeckers, chiefly of the genus Picumnus, that lack stiffened shafts in the tail feathers.
  • pilatus — a mountain in central Switzerland, near Lucerne: a peak of the Alps; cable railway. 6998 feet (2130 meters).
  • pilinut — type of nut found in the Philippines
  • pithful — full of pith; pithy; succinct
  • pitiful — evoking or deserving pity: a pitiful fate.
  • plateau — a land area having a relatively level surface considerably raised above adjoining land on at least one side, and often cut by deep canyons.
  • plaudit — an enthusiastic expression of approval: Her portrayal of Juliet won the plaudits of the critics.
  • plautus — Titus Maccius [tahy-tuh s mak-see-uh s] /ˈtaɪ təs ˈmæk si əs/ (Show IPA), c254–c184 b.c, Roman dramatist.
  • plotful — characterized by or full of plots
  • plumate — resembling a feather, as a hair or bristle that bears smaller hairs.
  • plumcot — a hybrid tree produced by crossing the apricot and the plum.
  • plumist — a person who makes ornamental plumes
  • plummet — Also called plumb bob. a piece of lead or some other weight attached to a line, used for determining perpendicularity, for sounding, etc.; the bob of a plumb line.
  • plunket — Saint Oliver. 1629–81, Irish Roman Catholic churchman and martyr; wrongly executed as a supposed conspirator in the Popish Plot (1678). Feast day: July 11
  • pluteal — relating to a pluteus
  • pluteus — the free-swimming, bilaterally symmetrical larva of an echinoid or ophiuroid.
  • pollute — to make foul or unclean, especially with harmful chemical or waste products; dirty: to pollute the air with smoke.
  • potluck — food or a meal that happens to be available without special preparation or purchase: to take potluck with a friend.
  • poulter — a member of staff within e.g. a monastery or royal household, responsible for the supply of poultry
  • poultry — domesticated fowl collectively, especially those valued for their meat and eggs, as chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese, and guinea fowl.
  • poutful — tending to pout

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with T-U-P-L. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in T-U-P-L to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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