7-letter words containing low
- lie low — situated, placed, or occurring not far above the ground, floor, or base: a low shelf.
- low key — of reduced intensity; restrained; understated.
- low-cal — containing fewer calories than usual or standard: a low-cal diet.
- low-cut — Low-cut dresses and blouses do not cover the top part of a woman's chest.
- low-end — relatively cheap or inexpensive of its kind: We don't need an expensive car—a low-end model will do.
- low-fat — of or being a food or style of cooking that contains or uses very little butter, oil, or other fat, usually three grams of fat or less per serving.
- low-key — of reduced intensity; restrained; understated.
- low-res — low-resolution.
- low-tar — (of cigarettes or tobacco) containing less tar than usual or standard.
- lowball — Cards. a game of draw poker in which the player having the lowest-ranking hand wins the pot.
- lowborn — of humble birth.
- lowboys — Plural form of lowboy.
- lowbred — characterized by or characteristic of low or vulgar breeding; ill-bred; coarse.
- lowbrow — a person who is uninterested, uninvolved, or uneducated in intellectual activities or pursuits.
- lowbush — Being, or coming from, a bush of low stature (used in names of certain fruits, such as lowbush blueberry and lowbush cranberry).
- lowchen — a small dog of a breed with a long wavy coat, often having the hindquarters and tail clipped to resemble a lion
- lowdown — the real and unadorned facts; the true, secret, or inside information (usually preceded by the): We gave them the lowdown on the new housing project.
- lowered — to cause to descend; let or put down: to lower a flag.
- lowland — land that is low or level, in comparison with the adjacent country.
- lowlier — Comparative form of lowly.
- lowlife — a despicable person, especially a degenerate or immoral person.
- lowlily — in a lowly manner
- lowndes — William Thomas, 1798–1843, English bibliographer.
- lowness — situated, placed, or occurring not far above the ground, floor, or base: a low shelf.
- mallows — Plural form of mallow.
- marlowe — Christopher, 1564–93, English dramatist and poet.
- mellows — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mellow.
- midflow — A point in time during flow or fluency.
- mudflow — a flow of mixed earth debris containing a large amount of water.
- outflow — the act of flowing out: We need flood control to stem the river's outflow.
- outglow — (transitive) To glow brighter than.
- pillowy — pillowlike; soft; yielding: a pillowy carpet.
- plow up — to remove with a plow
- plowboy — a boy who leads or guides a team drawing a plow.
- plowing — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.
- plowman — a man who plows.
- plowter — to work or play in water or mud; dabble
- sallowy — full of sallows: a sallowy glade.
- shallow — of little depth; not deep: shallow water.
- slow up — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
- slow-mo — slow motion.
- slow-up — a delay or retardation in progress or activity; slowdown.
- slowest — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
- slowish — somewhat slow
- sunglow — a diffused, hazy light seen around the sun, caused by atmospheric dust.
- swallow — to take into the stomach by drawing through the throat and esophagus with a voluntary muscular action, as food, drink, or other substances.
- tallowy — resembling tallow in consistency, color, etc.; fatty: a tallowy mass of moistened powder; tallowy skin.
- thurlow — Edward, 1st Baron, 1731–1806, British statesman: Lord Chancellor 1778–92.
- unblown — (of a flower) still in the bud
- wallows — Plural form of wallow.