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7-letter words containing ll

  • mollify — to soften in feeling or temper, as a person; pacify; appease.
  • mollusc — any invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically having a calcareous shell of one, two, or more pieces that wholly or partly enclose the soft, unsegmented body, including the chitons, snails, bivalves, squids, and octopuses.
  • mollusk — any invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, typically having a calcareous shell of one, two, or more pieces that wholly or partly enclose the soft, unsegmented body, including the chitons, snails, bivalves, squids, and octopuses.
  • moollah — Archaic form of mullah.
  • moorill — a disease found in cattle grazing on the moors
  • morally — in a moral manner.
  • morelle — any of several nightshades, especially the black nightshade.
  • morello — a variety of sour cherry having dark-colored skin and juice.
  • morrell — a tall eucalyptus, Eucalyptus longicornis, of SW Australia, having pointed buds
  • mortall — Obsolete spelling of mortal.
  • moselle — German Mosel [moh-zuh l] /ˈmoʊ zəl/ (Show IPA). a river in W central Europe, flowing from the Vosges Mountains in NE France into the Rhine at Coblenz in W Germany. 320 miles (515 km) long.
  • mouille — palatal or palatalized, especially referring to sounds spelled ll and ñ in Spanish, gl and gn in Italian, etc.
  • mozilla — (web, open source)   The open source web browser, designed for standards-compliance, performance, and portability, whose development is coordinated by the Mozilla Foundation. The Mozilla project started in March 1998 when Netscape Communications Corporation released the source code of Netscape Communicator. The now abandoned version based on that code is referred to as "Mozilla Classic". Since then, much has been rewritten, including the layout engine, the networking library, and the front-end. Mozilla 1.0 was finally released on 2002-06-05. Much of the code was used to build Firefox. Although a lot of Mozilla code is under the original Netscape Public License, some parts of the code are under the Mozilla Public License or dual MPL/GPL. "Mozilla" was the original project code name for Netscape Navigator and, according to some of the documentation, the correct pronunciation of "Netscape".
  • mudsill — the lowest sill of a structure, usually placed in or on the ground.
  • muellerPaul, 1899–1965, Swiss chemist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1948.
  • mukalla — a seaport in SE Yemen, on the Gulf of Aden.
  • mullahs — Plural form of mullah.
  • mullein — any of various plants belonging to the genus Verbascum, of the figwort family, native to the Old World, especially V. thapsus, a tall plant with woolly leaves and a dense spike of yellow flowers.
  • mullens — Plural form of mullen.
  • mullets — Plural form of mullet.
  • mulling — to study or ruminate; ponder.
  • mullion — a vertical member, as of stone or wood, between the lights of a window, the panels in wainscoting, or the like.
  • mullite — a rare clay mineral, aluminum silicate, Al 6 Si 2 O 1 3 , produced artificially during various melting and firing processes: used as a refractory.
  • mullock — (in Australasia) refuse or rubbish, as rock or earth, from a mine; muck.
  • munhall — a city in W Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh.
  • murillo — Bartolomé Esteban [bahr-taw-law-me es-te-vahn] /ˌbɑr tɔ lɔˈmɛ ɛsˈtɛ vɑn/ (Show IPA), 1617–82, Spanish painter.
  • mycella — a blue-veined Danish cream cheese, less strongly flavoured than Danish blue
  • n-shell — the fourth shell of electrons surrounding the nucleus of an atom and containing, when filled, 32 electrons having principal quantum number 4.
  • nacelle — the enclosed part of an airplane, dirigible, etc., in which the engine is housed or in which cargo or passengers are carried.
  • nasally — in a nasal manner.
  • navally — In a naval manner; with relation to a navy.
  • nellies — inferior or cheap wine.
  • nellore — a city in Andhra Pradesh state, SE India, on the Pennar River near the Coromandel Coast.
  • netball — Tennis. a ball, on a return shot, that hits the top of the net and drops on the other side of the court, thus remaining in play.
  • neuilly — a suburb of Paris, in N France: treaty of peace (1919) between the Allies and Bulgaria. 66,095.
  • nevilleRichard, Warwick, Earl of.
  • nicolleCharles [sharl] /ʃarl/ (Show IPA), 1866–1936, French physician: Nobel prize 1928.
  • nigella — any of several annual herbs of the genus Nigella, having dissected leaves and showy blue or white flowers.
  • nilling — Present participle of nill.
  • no ball — an unfairly bowled ball.
  • no-ball — an unfairly bowled ball.
  • no-bill — to fail to indict (a person): The grand jury no-billed the two officers in the slaying.
  • no-till — the planting of crops by direct seeding without plowing, using herbicides as necessary to control weeds.
  • novella — a tale or short story of the type contained in the Decameron of Boccaccio.
  • novelle — a tale or short story of the type contained in the Decameron of Boccaccio.
  • novello — Ivor, real name Ivor Novello Davies. 1893–1951, Welsh actor, composer, songwriter, and dramatist
  • novelly — In a novel manner.
  • nucelli — Plural form of nucellus.
  • nullahs — Plural form of nullah.
  • nullary — (programming)   A description of an operator or function which takes no arguments, e.g. a function that returns the current time. "Nullary" is part of the unary, binary, ternary sequence, and is more common than its synonym niladic.
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