0%

7-letter words containing u, l, m

  • plumose — having feathers or plumes; feathered.
  • plumous — having plumes or feathers
  • plumpen — to make or become plump
  • plumper — a heavy or sudden fall.
  • plumula — a down feather
  • plumule — Botany. the bud of the ascending axis of a plant while still in the embryo.
  • primula — primrose (def 1).
  • pullman — plural Pullmans. a railroad sleeping car or parlor car.
  • pummelo — pomelo.
  • quilmes — a city in E Argentina, near Buenos Aires.
  • ramular — relating to a branch or branches
  • ramulus — a small branch or branchlet
  • relatum — one of the objects between which a relation is said to hold
  • remould — A remould is an old tyre which has been given a new surface or tread and can be used again.
  • replumb — to replace the plumbing of (a house, building, etc)
  • romulus — the founder of Rome, in 753 b.c., and its first king: a son of Mars and Rhea Silvia, he and his twin brother (Remus) were abandoned as babies, suckled by a she-wolf, and brought up by a shepherd; Remus was finally killed for mocking the fortifications of Rome, which Romulus had just founded.
  • roomful — an amount or number sufficient to fill a room.
  • rumbled — to make a deep, heavy, somewhat muffled, continuous sound, as thunder.
  • rumelia — a division of the former Turkish Empire, in the Balkan Peninsula: included Albania, Macedonia, and Thrace.
  • ruminal — (of an animal) ruminant
  • rummily — in a rummy manner
  • rumpled — Rumpled means creased or untidy.
  • schlump — a dull, colorless person.
  • scumble — to soften (the color or tone of a painted area) by overlaying parts with opaque or semiopaque color applied thinly and lightly with an almost dry brush.
  • seculum — an age or period of time in astronomy or geology
  • serumal — the clear, pale-yellow liquid that separates from the clot in the coagulation of blood; blood serum.
  • simular — a person or thing that simulates; pretender.
  • skellum — a rascal.
  • slumber — to sleep, especially lightly; doze; drowse.
  • slumgum — the impure material left after honey and wax are extracted from honeycomb
  • slumism — the prevalence or increase of urban slums and blighted areas.
  • slummer — Often, slums. a thickly populated, run-down, squalid part of a city, inhabited by poor people.
  • slumped — to drop or fall heavily; collapse: Suddenly she slumped to the floor.
  • smuggle — to import or export (goods) secretly, in violation of the law, especially without payment of legal duty.
  • solanum — any tree, shrub, or herbaceous plant of the mainly tropical solanaceous genus Solanum: includes the potato, aubergine, and certain nightshades
  • solidum — a part of a pedestal
  • stambul — the oldest part and principal Turkish residential section of Istanbul, south of the Golden Horn.
  • stimuli — something that incites to action or exertion or quickens action, feeling, thought, etc.: The approval of others is a potent stimulus.
  • stumble — to strike the foot against something, as in walking or running, so as to stagger or fall; trip.
  • stumbly — tending to stumble
  • stummel — the bowl of a (smoking) pipe
  • sublime — elevated or lofty in thought, language, etc.: Paradise Lost is sublime poetry.
  • sumless — uncountable, incalculable
  • sunlamp — a lamp that generates ultraviolet rays, used as a therapeutic device, for obtaining an artificial suntan, etc.
  • tamiflu — an oral antiviral drug that attacks the influenza virus and prevents it spreading inside the body
  • teemful — prolific, fruitful
  • thulium — a rare-earth metallic element found in the minerals euxenite, gadolinite, etc. Symbol: Tm; atomic weight: 168.934; atomic number: 69; specific gravity: 9.32.
  • topmaul — a heavy hammer with a steel or wooden head, used in shipbuilding.
  • tumbler — a person who performs leaps, somersaults, and other bodily feats.
  • tumbrel — one of the carts used during the French Revolution to convey victims to the guillotine.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?