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7-letter words containing ll

  • allston — Washington. 1779–1843, US painter and author, regarded as the earliest US Romantic painter. His paintings include Elijah in the Desert (1818) and Moonlit Landscape (1819)
  • alluded — to refer casually or indirectly; make an allusion (usually followed by to): He often alluded to his poverty.
  • alludes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of allude.
  • allured — to attract or tempt by something flattering or desirable.
  • allurer — One who is alluring.
  • allures — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of allure.
  • alluvia — a deposit of sand, mud, etc., formed by flowing water.
  • allways — Misspelling of always.
  • allwork — Domestic or other work of all kinds.
  • allying — to unite formally, as by treaty, league, marriage, or the like (usually followed by with or to): Russia allied itself to France.
  • allylic — characteristic of or involving an allyl
  • ampulla — the dilated end part of certain ducts or canals, such as the end of a uterine tube
  • ancilla — a female servant or slave
  • and all — You use and all when you want to emphasize that what you are talking about includes the thing mentioned, especially when this is surprising or unusual.
  • angelle — It means angel/a messenger.
  • anthill — An anthill is a pile of earth formed by ants when they are making a nest.
  • apelles — 4th century bc, Greek painter of mythological subjects, none of whose work survives, his fame resting on the testimony of Pliny and other writers
  • appalls — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of appall.
  • arcella — a genus of freshwater, ameboid protozoa that secrete a hard, umbrellalike shell having a single opening through which the pseudopodia extend.
  • ardella — a female given name.
  • areally — from an areal point of view
  • arillus — an aril
  • armilla — a bracelet
  • artfull — Obsolete spelling of artful.
  • as hell — You can use as hell after adjectives or some adverbs to emphasize the adjective or adverb.
  • as well — You use as well when mentioning something which happens in the same way as something else already mentioned, or which should be considered at the same time as that thing.
  • ashfall — the ash that falls as a deposit from the eruption of a volcano
  • at will — If you can do something at will, you can do it when you want and as much as you want.
  • athrill — excited or thrilled
  • aurally — of or relating to the ear or to the sense of hearing.
  • avellan — of or relating to hazelnuts
  • awfully — in an unpleasant, bad, or reprehensible manner
  • axially — in the direction or line of the axis
  • axillae — Anatomy. the armpit.
  • axillar — one of the feathers growing from the axilla of a bird's wing
  • bacilli — bacillus
  • baillie — Dame Isobel. 1895–1983, British soprano
  • ball up — to muddle or bungle
  • ballade — a verse form consisting of three stanzas and an envoy, all ending with the same line. The first three stanzas commonly have eight or ten lines each and the same rhyme scheme
  • ballads — Plural form of ballad.
  • ballant — a ballad
  • ballard — J(ames) G(raham). 1930–2009, British novelist, born in China; his books include Crash (1973), The Unlimited Dream Company (1979), Empire of the Sun (1984), Cocaine Nights (1996), and Super-Cannes (2000)
  • ballast — Ballast is any substance that is used in ships or hot-air balloons to make them heavier and more stable. Ballast usually consists of water, sand, or iron.
  • ballata — a 14th-century Italian verse form composed of stanzas beginning and ending with a refrain, often set to music and accompanied by dancing.
  • ballboy — Alternative spelling of ball boy.
  • ballers — Plural form of baller.
  • ballets — Plural form of ballet.
  • ballett — an early 17th-century dancelike vocal composition similar to the madrigal in style.
  • balling — a spherical or approximately spherical body or shape; sphere: He rolled the piece of paper into a ball.
  • balliol — a college of Oxford University, founded before 1268.
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