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7-letter words containing pl

  • cripple — A person with a physical disability or a serious permanent injury is sometimes referred to as a cripple.
  • crisply — (especially of food) hard but easily breakable; brittle: crisp toast.
  • crumple — If you crumple something such as paper or cloth, or if it crumples, it is squashed and becomes full of untidy creases and folds.
  • crumply — easily crumpled
  • cupless — Without a cup.
  • cuplike — Resembling a cup.
  • dappled — You use dappled to describe something that has dark or light patches on it, or that is made up of patches of light and shade.
  • dapples — Plural form of dapple.
  • decuple — to increase by ten times
  • deplane — to disembark from an aeroplane
  • deplete — To deplete a stock or amount of something means to reduce it.
  • deplore — If you say that you deplore something, you think it is very wrong or immoral.
  • deploys — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of deploy.
  • deplume — to deprive of feathers; pluck
  • dimpled — a small, natural hollow area or crease, permanent or transient, in some soft part of the human body, especially one formed in the cheek in smiling.
  • dimples — Plural form of dimple.
  • diploic — of or relating to diploë
  • diploid — double; twofold.
  • diploma — a document given by an educational institution conferring a degree on a person or certifying that the person has satisfactorily completed a course of study.
  • diplont — the diploid individual in a life cycle that has a diploid and a haploid phase.
  • disiple — (language, DSP)   A DSP language.
  • display — to show or exhibit; make visible: to display a sign.
  • dopplerChristian Johann, 1803–53, Austrian physicist: discovered the Doppler effect.
  • droplet — a little drop.
  • dropple — a trickle
  • dupleix — Joseph François [zhoh-zef frahn-swa] /ʒoʊˈzɛf frɑ̃ˈswa/ (Show IPA), Marquis, 1697–1763, French colonial governor of India 1724–54.
  • duplets — Plural form of duplet.
  • earplug — a plug of soft, pliable material inserted into the opening of the outer ear, especially to keep out water or noise.
  • emplace — To assign a position to something, or to locate something at a particular place.
  • emplane — Alternative form of enplane.
  • emplore — Obsolete form of implore.
  • employe — Alternative spelling of employee.
  • employs — Give work to (someone) and pay them for it.
  • emplume — to adorn with a plume
  • endplay — A way of playing the last few tricks that forces an opponent to make a disadvantageous lead.
  • enplane — Go or put on board an aircraft.
  • euploid — Of or pertaining to euploidy.
  • example — A thing characteristic of its kind or illustrating a general rule.
  • exciple — a layer of cells enclosing the apothecium of most lichens
  • exempla — Irregular plural form of exemplum.
  • explain — Make (an idea, situation, or problem) clear to someone by describing it in more detail or revealing relevant facts or ideas.
  • explant — Transfer (living cells, tissues, or organs) from animals or plants to a nutrient medium.
  • explode — Burst or shatter violently and noisily as a result of rapid combustion, decomposition, excessive internal pressure, or other process, typically scattering fragments widely.
  • exploit — Make full use of and derive benefit from (a resource).
  • explore — Travel in or through (an unfamiliar country or area) in order to learn about or familiarize oneself with it.
  • fipples — Plural form of fipple.
  • fopling — a vain, affected person
  • frumple — a wrinkle or crease
  • funplex — a large amusement or entertainment centre
  • gnuplot — (tool)   A command-driven interactive graphing program. Gnuplot can plot two-dimensional functions and data points in many different styles (points, lines, error bars); and three-dimensional data points and surfaces in many different styles (contour plot, mesh). It supports complex arithmetic and user-defined functions and can label title, axes, and data points. It can output to several different graphics file formats and devices. Command line editing and history are supported and there is extensive on-line help. Gnuplot is copyrighted, but freely distributable. It was written by Thomas Williams, Colin Kelley, Russell Lang, Dave Kotz, John Campbell, Gershon Elber, Alexander Woo and many others. Despite its name, gnuplot is not related to the GNU project or the FSF in any but the most peripheral sense. It was designed completely independently and is not covered by the General Public License. However, the FSF has decided to distribute gnuplot as part of the GNU system, because it is useful, redistributable software. Gnuplot is available for: Unix (X11 and NEXTSTEP), VAX/VMS, OS/2, MS-DOS, Amiga, MS-Windows, OS-9/68k, Atari ST and Macintosh. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
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