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5-letter words containing li

  • liver — a person who lives in a manner specified: an extravagant liver.
  • lives — plural of life.
  • livid — having a discolored, bluish appearance caused by a bruise, congestion of blood vessels, strangulation, etc., as the face, flesh, hands, or nails.
  • livor — (pathology) Skin discoloration, as from a bruise, or occurring after death.
  • livre — a former money of account and group of coins of France, issued in coin form first in gold, then in silver, finally in copper, and discontinued in 1794.
  • liwan — iwan.
  • lizzy — a female given name, form of Elizabeth.
  • lolli — (language)   (Named after the "lollipop" operator "-o") An interpreter for logic programming based on linear logic, written by Josh Hodas <[email protected]>. Lolli can be viewed as a refinement of the Hereditary Harrop formulas of Lambda-Prolog. All the operators (though not the higher order unification) of Lambda-Prolog are supported, but with the addition of linear variations. Thus a Lolli program distinguishes between clauses which can be used as many, or as few, times as desired, and those that must be used exactly once. Lolli is implemented in SML/NJ.
  • malic — pertaining to or derived from apples.
  • malikAdam, 1917–84, Indonesian politician and diplomat.
  • malis — Plural form of mali.
  • melic — intended to be sung.
  • milia — a small white or yellowish nodule resembling a millet seed, produced in the skin by the retention of sebaceous secretion.
  • mlisp — 1. M-expression LISP. 2. Meta-LISP. D.C. Smith & H. Enea. LISP variant with ALGOL-like syntax. Not just a surface syntax, a full language. "MLISP", D.C. Smith, TR CS-179, CS Dept, Stanford (Oct 1970). Version: MLISP2. 3. A hybrid of M-expression LISP and Scheme. "M-LISP: Its Natural Semantics and Equational Logic", R. Muller, SIGPLAN Notices 26(9):234-242 (Sept 1991) (PEPM '91).
  • mlitt — Master of Letters
  • mooli — A white radish-like vegetable originating in Asia.
  • nelis — a variety of small, sweet winter pear with yellowish-green freckled skin which becomes golden as it ripens
  • obeli — a mark (− or ÷) used in ancient manuscripts to point out spurious, corrupt, doubtful, or superfluous words or passages.
  • obliq — A small, statically scoped untyped language by Luca Cardelli, 1993. Obliq is object-oriented, higher order, concurrent, and distributed. State is local to an address space, while computation can migrate over the network. The distributed computation mechanism is based on Modula-3 network objects.
  • oboli — a modern Greek unit of weight equal to 0.1 gram.
  • oculi — an eye.
  • ofili — Chris(topher). born 1968, British painter, noted esp for his brightly coloured collages using elephant dung: Turner Prize 1998
  • ohlin — Bertil [bur-til;; Swedish bair-til] /ˈbɜr tɪl;; Swedish ˈbɛər tɪl/ (Show IPA), 1899–1979, Swedish economist: Nobel prize 1977.
  • oligo — (biochemistry) An oligonucleotide.
  • olios — Plural form of olio.
  • olive — a female given name.
  • ollie — a male given name, form of Oliver.
  • oxlip — a Eurasian primrose, Primula elatior, having clusters of small yellow flowers on a long stem.
  • paoliPasquale di, 1725–1807, Corsican military leader, statesman, and patriot.
  • pauli — Wolfgang [woo lf-gang;; German vawlf-gahng] /ˈwʊlf gæŋ;; German ˈvɔlf gɑŋ/ (Show IPA), 1900–58, Austrian physicist in the U.S.: Nobel prize 1945.
  • pili- — hair
  • plica — Zoology, Anatomy. a fold or folding.
  • plied — British Dialect. to bend, fold, or mold.
  • plierpliers, (sometimes used with a singular verb) small pincers with long jaws, for bending wire, holding small objects, etc. (usually used with pair of).
  • plies — a movement in which the knees are bent while the back is held straight.
  • pling — (character)   exclamation mark.
  • plink — to shoot, as with a rifle, at targets selected at whim: to plink at coins tossed in the air.
  • pliny — ("the Elder"; Gaius Plinius Secundus) a.d. 23–79, Roman naturalist, encyclopedist, and writer.
  • plio- — greater in size, extent, degree, etc; more
  • plisp — 1. PostScript Lisp? A Common Lisp translator and programming environment in PostScript by John Peterson <[email protected]>. 2. Pattern LISP. 1990. A pattern-matching rewrite-rule language, optimised for describing syntax translation rules. (See LISP70).
  • plits — Programming Language In The Sky. A computational model for concurrency with communication via asynchronous message-passing.
  • polio — poliomyelitis.
  • polis — an ancient Greek city-state.
  • polit — political
  • qibli — In the direction of qibla.
  • qilin — Lb Chinese mythology A mythical Chinese hooved chimerical creature, said to appear in conjunction with the arrival of a sage.
  • qlisp — 1. SRI 1973. General problem solving, influenced by PLANNER. QA4 features merged with INTERLISP. 2. A parallel LISP.
  • relic — a surviving memorial of something past.
  • relig — religion
  • salic — of or relating to the Salian Franks.
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