7-letter words containing ll
- wallahs — Plural form of wallah.
- wallets — Plural form of wallet.
- walleye — Also called walleyed pike, jack salmon. a large game fish, Stizostedion vitreum, inhabiting the lakes and rivers of northeastern North America; pikeperch.
- wallies — Plural form of wally.
- walling — Present participle of wall.
- walloon — one of a people inhabiting chiefly the southern and southeastern parts of Belgium and adjacent regions in France.
- wallops — Plural form of wallop.
- wallows — Plural form of wallow.
- walsall — a city in West Midlands, in central England, near Birmingham.
- waxbill — any of several small Old World finches, especially of the genus Estrilda, that have white, pink, or red bills of waxy appearance and are often kept as cage birds.
- waybill — a list of goods sent by a common carrier, as a railroad, with shipping directions.
- well in — on good terms or favourably placed (with)
- welland — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada, on the Welland Ship Canal.
- wellest — Superlative form of well.
- wellesz — Egon [ey-gohn] /ˈeɪ goʊn/ (Show IPA), 1885–1974, Austrian musicologist and composer.
- wellies — Usually, wellies. Wellington boot.
- welling — a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur.
- wendell — a male given name.
- whyalla — a city in S Australia.
- will do — expressing agreement to do sth
- willard — Emma (Hart) 1787–1870, U.S. educator and poet.
- willers — Plural form of willer.
- willeth — Archaic third-person singular form of will.
- willets — Plural form of willet.
- willful — deliberate, voluntary, or intentional: The coroner ruled the death willful murder.
- william — ("the Sailor-King") 1765–1837, king of Great Britain and Ireland 1830–37 (brother of George IV).
- willies — a male given name, form of William.
- willing — disposed or consenting; inclined: willing to go along.
- willkie — Wendell Lewis, 1892–1944, U.S. executive, lawyer, and political leader.
- willows — any tree or shrub of the genus Salix, characterized by narrow, lance-shaped leaves and dense catkins bearing small flowers, many species having tough, pliable twigs or branches used for wickerwork, etc. Compare willow family.
- willowy — pliant; lithe.
- withall — Archaic spelling of withal.
- witwall — the greater spotted woodpecker, Dendrocopos major
- wofully — in a woeful manner, miserably
- wogball — (Australia, slang, derogatory, ethnic slur) soccer.
- woolled — (of animals) having wool
- woollen — any cloth of carded wool yarn of which the fibers vary in length: bulkier, looser, and less regular than worsted.
- woolley — Sir (Charles) Leonard, 1880–1960, English archaeologist and explorer.
- wrybill — Anarhynchus frontalis, a species of small bird in the plover family Charadriidae, unique in having a beak that is bent sideways, endemic to New Zealand.
- yellers — Plural form of yeller.
- yelling — Present participle of yell.
- yelloch — a loud yell
- yellows — a color like that of egg yolk, ripe lemons, etc.; the primary color between green and orange in the visible spectrum, an effect of light with a wavelength between 570 and 590 nm.
- yellowy — somewhat yellow; yellowish.
- you-all — a US, esp Southern, word for you, used esp when addressing more than one person
- z shell — (zsh) 1. sh with list processing and database enhancements. Version 2.1.o (before 1995-10-30). 2. A Unix command interpreter shell by Paul Falstad <[email protected]> some time before 1993-03-23. It is similar to, but not completely compatible with, ksh, with many additions to please csh users and some tcsh features. zsh supports editing of multi-line commands in a single buffer; variable editing; a command buffer stack; recursive globbing; manipulation of arrays; and spelling correction. zsh uses GNU autoconf so should compile and run on any modern version of UNIX, and many not-so-modern.
- zanella — An Italian wool or twill fabric.
- zillion — an extremely large, indeterminate number.
- zonally — In zones.
- zorilla — a weasellike African animal, Ictonyx striatus, resembling a skunk in coloration and habits.