6-letter words containing al
- pal up — to become friends (with)
- palace — the official residence of a king, queen, bishop, or other sovereign or exalted personage.
- palade — George Emil, 1912–2008, U.S. biologist, born in Romania: Nobel Prize in medicine 1974.
- palais — French. a palace, especially a French government or municipal building.
- palama — the webbing on a bird's feet
- palapa — a simple, thatched-roof dwelling, usually open on the sides.
- palate — Anatomy. the roof of the mouth, consisting of an anterior bony portion (hard palate) and a posterior muscular portion (soft palate) that separate the oral cavity from the nasal cavity.
- paleal — pertaining to the palea
- palely — light-colored or lacking in color: a pale complexion; his pale face; a pale child. lacking the usual intensity of color due to fear, illness, stress, etc.: She looked pale and unwell when we visited her in the nursing home.
- paleo- — the Old World
- palest — light-colored or lacking in color: a pale complexion; his pale face; a pale child. lacking the usual intensity of color due to fear, illness, stress, etc.: She looked pale and unwell when we visited her in the nursing home.
- palila — a stout Hawaiian honeycreeper, Loxioides bailleui, having a thick, stubby bill, yellow head and breast, and gray back: an endangered species.
- paling — a stake or picket, as of a fence.
- palish — somewhat pale.
- palkee — a palanquin
- pallah — an impala
- pallas — Also called Pallas Athena. Classical Mythology. Athena (def 1).
- palled — a cloth, often of velvet, for spreading over a coffin, bier, or tomb.
- pallet — a small, low, portable platform on which goods are placed for storage or moving, as in a warehouse or vehicle.
- pallia — a large, rectangular mantle worn by men in ancient Greece and Rome.
- pallid — pale; faint or deficient in color; wan: a pallid countenance.
- pallor — unusual or extreme paleness, as from fear, ill health, or death; wanness.
- palmar — of, relating to, or located in or on the palm of the hand or to the corresponding part of the forefoot of an animal.
- palmas — a seaport on NE Gran Canaria, in the central Canary Islands.
- palmed — having a palm or palms of a specified kind (often used in combination): a wide-palmed hand.
- palmer — Alice Elvira, 1855–1902, U.S. educator.
- palmie — a palmtop computer
- palolo — palolo worm.
- paloma — a female given name.
- palpal — of or related to a palpus.
- palpus — an appendage attached to an oral part and serving as an organ of sense in insects, crustaceans, etc.
- palter — to talk or act insincerely or deceitfully; lie or use trickery.
- paltry — ridiculously or insultingly small: a paltry sum.
- pandal — (in India) a temporary shed, especially one used for public meetings.
- parial — belonging to a pair
- pascal — a high-level programming language, a descendant of ALGOL, designed to facilitate structured programming.
- paucal — a grammatical number occurring in some languages for words in contexts where a few of their referents are described or referred to
- pealed — a loud, prolonged ringing of bells.
- pedalo — pedal boat
- penial — the male organ of copulation and, in mammals, of urinary excretion.
- pennal — a first-year student of a German Protestant university
- phalli — an image of the male reproductive organ, especially that carried in procession in ancient festivals of Dionysus, or Bacchus, symbolizing the generative power in nature.
- phiale — a shallow cup resembling a saucer, having a central boss and sometimes set upon a foot, used as a drinking vessel or to pour libations.
- phonal — a speech sound: There are three phonetically different “t” phones in an utterance of “titillate,” and two in an utterance of “tattletale.”.
- pineal — resembling a pine cone in shape.
- pinnal — Botany. one of the primary divisions of a pinnate leaf.
- plagal — (of a Gregorian mode) having the final in the middle of the compass. Compare authentic (def 6a).
- plexal — of or relating to a plexus.
- plural — consisting of, containing, or pertaining to more than one.
- podial — relating to a podium or foot