0%

10-letter words containing llo

  • hoi polloi — general public, common people
  • hollow leg — an ability or inclination to drink large quantities of alcoholic beverages, especially without evident drunkenness.
  • hollow out — make hollow, scoop out
  • hollow sea — an ocean wave formation in which the rise from troughs to crests is very steep.
  • hollowness — having a space or cavity inside; not solid; empty: a hollow sphere.
  • hollowware — silver dishes, as serving dishes, having some depth (distinguished from flatware).
  • illocality — Want of locality or place.
  • illocution — pertaining to a linguistic act performed by a speaker in producing an utterance, as suggesting, warning, promising, or requesting.
  • lie fallow — to remain uncultivated, unused, unproductive, etc. for a time
  • limoncello — A lemon-flavored Italian liqueur.
  • longfellowHenry Wadsworth [wodz-werth] /ˈwɒdz wərθ/ (Show IPA), 1807–82, U.S. poet.
  • mallowpuff — a white marshmallow on a biscuit base and covered with chocolate
  • mamoncillo — the genip, Melicoccus bijugatus.
  • mantellone — a purple mantle extending to the ankles, worn over the cassock by lesser prelates of the papal court.
  • manzanillo — a seaport in SE Cuba.
  • marvellous — superb; excellent; great: a marvelous show.
  • mcculloughDavid, born 1933, U.S. author and historian.
  • médaillons — a portion of food, especially meat or poultry, cut or served in a round or oval shape.
  • mellophone — a marching or military band brass instrument similar in appearance and range to the French horn but slightly smaller and simpler to play.
  • mellow out — soft, sweet, and full-flavored from ripeness, as fruit.
  • mellowness — soft, sweet, and full-flavored from ripeness, as fruit.
  • metalloids — Plural form of metalloid.
  • millocracy — rule or government by mill owners
  • montebello — a city in SW California, SE of Los Angeles.
  • monticello — the estate and residence of Thomas Jefferson, in central Virginia, near Charlottesville.
  • morbillous — of, relating to, or resembling measles
  • morgellons — a condition in which the sufferer experiences crawling, biting, and stinging sensations on the skin
  • nonallowed — Not allowed.
  • odd fellow — a member of a social and benevolent society that originated in England in the 18th century.
  • old fellow — old chap.
  • peccadillo — a very minor or slight sin or offense; a trifling fault.
  • phallocrat — a male who assumes authority over females due to his maleness
  • phalloidin — a peptide toxin, responsible for the toxicity of the death cap mushroom, Amanita phalloides
  • phelloderm — a layer of parenchyma produced inwardly by the cork cambium; an inner secondary cortex of the cork cambium.
  • phylloclad — cladophyll
  • phyllodium — phyllode.
  • phyllotaxy — the arrangement of leaves on a stem or axis.
  • phylloxera — any of several plant lice of the genus Phylloxera, especially P. vitifoliae (grape phylloxera) which attacks the leaves and roots of grapevines.
  • pillorying — a wooden framework erected on a post, with holes for securing the head and hands, formerly used to expose an offender to public derision.
  • pillowcase — a removable sacklike covering, usually of cotton, drawn over a pillow.
  • pirandello — Luigi [loo-ee-jee] /luˈi dʒi/ (Show IPA), 1867–1936, Italian dramatist, novelist, and poet: Nobel prize 1934.
  • pistillode — a sterile pistil, or one with a simple structure and reduced size and function
  • playfellow — a playmate.
  • ponticello — a bridge on a stringed instrument
  • portobello — portabella.
  • prairillon — a small prairie.
  • procellous — stormy, as the sea.
  • pyrogallol — a white, crystalline, water-soluble, poisonous, solid, phenolic compound, C 6 H 3 (OH) 3 , obtained by heating gallic acid and water: used chiefly as a developer in photography, as a mordant for wool, in dyeing, and in medicine in the treatment of certain skin conditions.
  • reallocate — to set apart for a particular purpose; assign or allot: to allocate funds for new projects.
  • ritornello — an orchestral interlude between arias, scenes, or acts in 17th-century opera.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?