6-letter words containing il
- smiles — to assume a facial expression indicating pleasure, favor, or amusement, but sometimes derision or scorn, characterized by an upturning of the corners of the mouth.
- smilet — a little smile
- smiley — a digital icon, a sequence of keyboard symbols, or a handwritten or printed equivalent, that serves to represent a facial expression, as :‐) for a smiling face or ;‐) for a winking face. Compare emoticon.
- snaily — resembling a snail
- soiled — to feed (confined cattle, horses, etc.) freshly cut green fodder for roughage.
- spiles — a peg or plug of wood, especially one used as a spigot.
- spilth — spillage (def 1).
- spoils — to damage severely or harm (something), especially with reference to its excellence, value, usefulness, etc.: The water stain spoiled the painting. Drought spoiled the corn crop.
- spoilt — a simple past tense and past participle of spoil.
- squail — to throw sticks (at) or hit with sticks
- squill — the bulb of the sea onion, Urginea maritima, of the lily family, cut into thin slices and dried, and used in medicine chiefly as an expectorant.
- stills — remaining in place or at rest; motionless; stationary: to stand still.
- stilly — quietly; silently.
- stilty — relating to or resembling stilts
- sutile — made by stitching
- swiler — (in Newfoundland) a seal hunter
- t-bill — a U.S. Treasury bill.
- tahsil — an administrative division of a zila in certain states in India
- tailed — coming from behind: a tail breeze.
- tailer — the limitation of an estate to a person and the person’s heirs or some particular class of such heirs.
- taille — French History. a tax that was levied by a king or seigneur on his subjects or on lands held under him and that became solely a royal tax in the 15th century from which the lords and later the clergy were exempt.
- tailor — a stroke of a bell indicating someone's death; knell.
- taxila — an archaeological site near Rawalpindi, Pakistan: ruins of three successive cities on the same site, dating from about the 7th century b.c. to about the 7th century a.d.; Buddhist center.
- tehsil — an administrative region of India
- thrill — to affect with a sudden wave of keen emotion or excitement, as to produce a tremor or tingling sensation through the body.
- tidily — neat, orderly, or trim, as in appearance or dress: a tidy room; a tidy person.
- tilden — Samuel Jones, 1814–86, U.S. statesman.
- tilery — a factory or kiln for making tiles.
- tiling — a thin slab or bent piece of baked clay, sometimes painted or glazed, used for various purposes, as to form one of the units of a roof covering, floor, or revetment.
- tilled — to labor, as by plowing or harrowing, upon (land) for the raising of crops; cultivate.
- tiller — a plant shoot that springs from the root or bottom of the original stalk.
- tilley — Vesta (ˈvɛstə), original name Matilda Alice Powles. 1864–1952, British music-hall entertainer, best known as a male impersonator
- tilsit — former name of Sovetsk.
- tilted — sloping or inclining at an angle
- tinily — to a tiny degree; minutely
- toiled — hard and continuous work; exhausting labor or effort.
- toiler — hard and continuous work; exhausting labor or effort.
- toilet — a bathroom fixture consisting of a bowl, usually with a detachable, hinged seat and lid, and a device for flushing with water, used for defecation and urination.
- tonsil — a prominent oval mass of lymphoid tissue on each side of the throat.
- trilby — a hat of soft felt with an indented crown.
- tuille — a tasset.
- twilit — lighted by or as by twilight: a twilit cathedral.
- twilly — a machine with a series of revolving spikes for opening and cleaning raw textile fibres
- uglily — very unattractive or unpleasant to look at; offensive to the sense of beauty; displeasing in appearance.
- uncoil — unfurl, unfold
- ungild — to remove gilding from
- unnail — to take out the nails from.
- unpile — to disentangle or remove from a piled condition: to unpile boxes.
- untile — to strip tiles from
- unveil — to remove a veil or other covering from; display; reveal: The woman unveiled herself.