6-letter words containing ll
- fulled — completely filled; containing all that can be held; filled to utmost capacity: a full cup.
- fuller — the highest or fullest state, condition, or degree: The moon is at the full.
- fullom — a die loaded at one corner either to favor a throw of 4, 5, or 6 (high fulham) or to favor a throw of 1, 2, or 3 (low fulham)
- g-bell — bell
- galled — to make sore by rubbing; chafe severely: The saddle galled the horse's back.
- gallet — spall (def 1).
- galley — a kitchen or an area with kitchen facilities in a ship, plane, or camper.
- gallia — Latin name of Gaul.
- gallic — pertaining to the Gauls or Gaul.
- gallo- — denoting Gaul or France
- gallon — a common unit of capacity in English-speaking countries, equal to four quarts, the U.S. standard gallon being equal to 231 cubic inches (3.7853 liters), and the British imperial gallon to 277.42 cubic inches (4.546 liters). Abbreviation: gal.
- gallop — to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed: They galloped off to meet their friends.
- gallow — (obsolete) to frighten.
- gallup — George Horace, 1901–84, U.S. statistician.
- gallus — bold; daring; reckless
- gaulle — Charles André Joseph Marie [chahrlz ahn-drey joh-zuh f muh-ree;; French sharl ahn-drey zhoh-zef ma-ree] /tʃɑrlz ˈɑn dreɪ ˈdʒoʊ zəf məˈri;; French ʃarl ɑ̃ˈdreɪ ʒoʊˈzɛf maˈri/ (Show IPA), 1890–1970, French general and statesman: president 1959–69.
- gelled — Physical Chemistry. a semirigid colloidal dispersion of a solid with a liquid or gas, as jelly, glue, etc.
- gesell — Arnold Lucius, 1880–1961, U.S. psychologist.
- gilled — a faller used in the combing process, generally for only the highest-quality fibers.
- giller — a person who guts fish
- gillet — a mare
- gilley — (humour) (Usenet) The unit of analogical bogosity. According to its originator, the standard for one gilley was "the act of bogotoficiously comparing the shutting down of 1000 machines for a day with the killing of one person". The milligilley has been found to suffice for most normal conversational exchanges.
- gillie — a low-cut, tongueless shoe with loops instead of eyelets for the laces, which cross the instep and are sometimes tied around the ankle.
- gollan — a yellow flower
- goller — a loud gurgling sound
- gollop — to eat or drink (something) quickly or greedily
- grille — cooked on a grill; broiled.
- grills — Plural form of grill.
- gullah — a member of a population of black Americans inhabiting the Sea Islands and the coastal regions of South Carolina, Georgia, and northeastern Florida.
- gulled — to deceive, trick, or cheat.
- guller — a deceiver
- gullet — the esophagus.
- gulley — gully1 (defs 1, 2).
- hallah — challah.
- hallal — halal
- hallam — Arthur Henry, 1811–35, English poet and essayist.
- hallan — a wall in a cottage that serves as a screen and keeps draughts coming in the door away from the fireplace
- hallel — a liturgical prayer consisting of all or part of Psalms 113–118, recited on Passover, Shavuoth, Sukkoth, Hanukkah, and Rosh Hodesh.
- haller — Albrecht von [German ahl-brekht fuh n] /German ˈɑl brɛxt fən/ (Show IPA), 1708–77, Swiss physiologist, botanist, and writer.
- halles — (formerly) the large, central, wholesale food market area of Paris, France.
- halley — Edmund or Edmond, 1656–1742, English astronomer.
- hallie — a female given name.
- halloa — A loud exclamation; a call to invite attention to something or to incite; a shout.
- halloo — Used to attract someone’s attention.
- hallos — Plural form of hallo.
- hallow — to make holy; sanctify; consecrate.
- hallux — the first or innermost digit of the foot of humans and other primates or of the hind foot of other mammals; great toe; big toe.
- hamill — Dorothy (Stuart) born 1956, U.S. figure skater.
- hellas — ancient Greek name of Greece.
- hellen — (in Greek legend) a Thessalian king and eponymous ancestor of the Hellenes