5-letter words containing ll
- scull — an oar mounted on a fulcrum at the stern of a small boat and moved from side to side to propel the boat forward.
- sella — Zillah.
- selle — a seat or saddle
- shall — used to make a suggestion
- shell — a hard outer covering of an animal, as the hard case of a mollusk, or either half of the case of a bivalve mollusk.
- shill — a person who poses as a customer in order to decoy others into participating, as at a gambling house, auction, confidence game, etc.
- shull — Clifford Glenwood, 1915–2001, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1994.
- sills — Mount, a mountain in E central California, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. 14,153 feet (4314 meters).
- silly — weak-minded or lacking good sense; stupid or foolish: a silly writer.
- skell — a homeless person who lives on the streets, sleeps in doorways or subways, etc.; derelict.
- skill — the ability, coming from one's knowledge, practice, aptitude, etc., to do something well: Carpentry was one of his many skills.
- skull — the bony framework of the head, enclosing the brain and supporting the face; the skeleton of the head.
- sllic — (language) An intermediate language developed at HP. An infinite-register version of the Precision Architecture instruction set?
- small — of limited size; of comparatively restricted dimensions; not big; little: a small box.
- smell — to perceive the odor or scent of through the nose by means of the olfactory nerves; inhale the odor of: I smell something burning.
- snell — Peter (George) born 1938, New Zealand distance runner.
- spall — a chip or splinter, as of stone or ore.
- spell — a continuous course or period of work or other activity: to take a spell at the wheel.
- spill — to cause or allow to run or fall from a container, especially accidentally or wastefully: to spill a bag of marbles; to spill milk.
- stall — a pretext, as a ruse, trick, or the like, used to delay or deceive.
- stell — a shelter for cattle or sheep built on moorland or hillsides
- still — remaining in place or at rest; motionless; stationary: to stand still.
- stull — a timber prop.
- sulla — (Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix) 138–78 b.c, Roman general and statesman: dictator 82–79.
- sully — to soil, stain, or tarnish.
- swell — to grow in bulk, as by the absorption of moisture or the processes of growth.
- swill — liquid or partly liquid food for animals, especially kitchen refuse given to swine; hogwash.
- szell — George, 1897–1970, U.S. pianist and conductor, born in Hungary.
- tally — an account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, or the like.
- telly — television.
- thill — either of the pair of shafts of a vehicle between which a draft animal is harnessed.
- tilly — Count Johan Tserclaes von [yoh-hahn tser-klahs fuh n] /ˈyoʊ hɑn tsɛrˈklɑs fən/ (Show IPA), 1559–1632, German general in the Thirty Years' War.
- tolly — candle (def 1).
- trill — to cause to flow in a thin stream.
- troll — to sing or utter in a full, rolling voice.
- trull — a prostitute; strumpet.
- tulle — a department in central France. 2273 sq. mi. (5885 sq. km). Capital: Tulle.
- tully — Marcus Tullius [tuhl-ee-uh s] /ˈtʌl i əs/ (Show IPA), ("Tully") 106–43 b.c, Roman statesman, orator, and writer.
- twill — a fabric constructed in twill weave.
- udall — Also called Uvedale. Nicholas, 1505–56, English translator and playwright, especially of comedy.
- valla — Lorenzo [law-ren-dzaw] /lɔˈrɛn dzɔ/ (Show IPA), 1407–57, Italian humanist and critic.
- villa — Francisco [frahn-sees-kaw] /frɑnˈsis kɔ/ (Show IPA), (Doroteo Arango"Pancho Villa") 1877–1923, Mexican general and revolutionist.
- villi — Anatomy, Zoology. one of the minute, wormlike processes on certain membranes, especially on the mucous membrane of the small intestine, where they serve in absorbing nutriment.
- walla — wallah.
- walls — Plural form of wall.
- wally — fine; splendid.
- we'll — We'll is the usual spoken form of 'we shall' or 'we will'.
- weill — Kurt [kurt;; German koo rt] /kɜrt;; German kʊərt/ (Show IPA), 1900–50, German composer, in the U.S. after 1935.
- wells — a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur.
- welly — wellie.