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6-letter words containing ll

  • hellerJoseph, 1923–99, U.S. novelist.
  • hellesCape, a cape in European Turkey at the S end of Gallipoli Peninsula.
  • hellos — Plural form of hello.
  • hilled — Simple past tense and past participle of hill.
  • hillel — ("ha-Zaken") c60 b.c.–a.d. 9? Palestinian rabbi, president of the Sanhedrin and interpreter of Biblical law: first to formulate definitive hermeneutic principles.
  • hillerDame Wendy, 1912–2003, British actress.
  • hillisMargaret, 1921–1998, U.S. orchestral conductor.
  • holler — to cry aloud; shout; yell: Quit hollering into the phone.
  • holleyRobert William, 1922–1993, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1968.
  • holloa — Alternative form of hollo.
  • hollos — Plural form of hollo.
  • hollow — having a space or cavity inside; not solid; empty: a hollow sphere.
  • hulled — retaining the hull during threshing; having a persistent enclosing hull: hulled wheat.
  • huller — the husk, shell, or outer covering of a seed or fruit.
  • idylls — Plural form of idyll.
  • illest — Superlative form of ill.
  • illiac — Assembly language for the ILLIAC computer. Listed in CACM 2(5):16, (May 1959) p.16.
  • illiad — a wink
  • illich — Ivan. 1926–2002. US teacher and writer, born in Austria. His books include Deschooling Society (1971), Medical Nemesis (1975), and In the Mirror of the Past (1991)
  • illin' — Slang. foolish; crazy (used especially in the phrase be illin').
  • illipe — a tropical Asian tree of the family Sapotaceae
  • illite — any of a group of clay minerals, hydrous potassium aluminosilicates, characterized by a three-layer micalike structure and a gray, light green, or yellowish-brown color.
  • illude — to deceive or trick.
  • illume — to illuminate.
  • illuse — to treat badly, unjustly, cruelly, etc.
  • illust — Abbreviation of illustration.
  • in all — the whole of (used in referring to quantity, extent, or duration): all the cake; all the way; all year.
  • incall — A visit by a client to a prostitute.
  • infall — The falling of small objects or other matter onto or into a larger body.
  • infill — to fill in: The old stream beds have been infilled with sediment.
  • inroll — Obsolete form of enroll.
  • insullSamuel, 1859–1938, U.S. public utilities magnate, born in England.
  • inwall — to enclose with a wall.
  • jekyll — Gertrude. 1843–1932, British landscape gardener: noted for her simplicity of design and use of indigenous plants
  • jell-o — Jell-O is a transparent, usually coloured food that is eaten as a dessert. It is made from gelatine, fruit juice, and sugar.
  • jelled — to congeal; become jellylike in consistency.
  • jillet — a giddy or flirtatious girl or young woman.
  • joller — a person who enjoys himself or herself
  • jolley — One who jigs.
  • jollop — A strong liquor or medicine.
  • kallis — Jacques (Henry), born 1975, South African cricketer; an all-rounder, in 166 tests (1995–2013) he scored 13,289 runs and took 292 wickets
  • kapellWilliam, 1922–53, U.S. pianist.
  • keller — Gottfried [got-freed;; German gawt-freet] /ˈgɒt frid;; German ˈgɔt frit/ (Show IPA), 1819–90, Swiss novelist.
  • killas — Cornish clay slate
  • killed — Cause the death of (a person, animal, or other living thing).
  • killer — a person or thing that kills.
  • knells — Plural form of knell.
  • knolls — Plural form of knoll.
  • knolly — Having knolls; replete with knolls.
  • kpelle — a member of an indigenous people living mainly in Liberia.
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