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13-letter words containing ppl

  • apple blossom — the blossom of an apple tree
  • apple fritter — a piece of apple covered in batter and deep fried
  • apple of peru — a plant, Nicandra physalodes, of the nightshade family, having large blue flowers.
  • apple orchard — an orchard planted with apple trees
  • apple-cheeked — having rosy cheeks; ruddy
  • apple-knocker — Northern U.S. a rustic.
  • apple-pie bed — a way of making a bed so as to prevent the person from entering it
  • applicability — applying or capable of being applied; relevant; suitable; appropriate: an applicable rule; a solution that is applicable to the problem.
  • applicational — Of or pertaining to an application.
  • applicatively — In an applicative manner.
  • boycott apple — (legal)   Some time before 1989, Apple Computer, Inc. started a lawsuit against Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft, claiming they had breeched Apple's copyright on the look and feel of the Macintosh user interface. In December 1989, Xerox failed to sue Apple Computer, claiming that the software for Apple's Lisa computer and Macintosh Finder, both copyrighted in 1987, were derived from two Xerox programs: Smalltalk, developed in the mid-1970s and Star, copyrighted in 1981. Apple wanted to stop people from writing any program that worked even vaguely like a Macintosh. If such look and feel lawsuits succeed they could put an end to free software that could substitute for commercial software. In the weeks after the suit was filed, Usenet reverberated with condemnation for Apple. GNU supporters Richard Stallman, John Gilmore and Paul Rubin decided to take action against Apple. Apple's reputation as a force for progress came from having made better computers; but The League for Programming Freedom believed that Apple wanted to make all non-Apple computers worse. They therefore campaigned to discourage people from using Apple products or working for Apple or any other company threatening similar obstructionist tactics (e.g. Lotus and Xerox). Because of this boycott the Free Software Foundation for a long time didn't support Macintosh Unix in their software. In 1995, the LPF and the FSF decided to end the boycott.
  • cripple creek — a village in central Colorado: gold-mining centre since 1891, once the richest in the world
  • custard apple — a West Indian tree, Annona reticulata: family Annonaceae
  • dessert apple — an eating apple; an apple that can be eaten raw
  • doppler laser — a technique for measuring the shift in frequency between the source and reflected radiation of a laser.
  • doppler radar — a radar tracking system that determines the velocity of a moving object by measuring the Doppler shift of the frequency of a radar signal reflected by the object.
  • doppler shift — (often lowercase) the shift in frequency (Doppler shift) of acoustic or electromagnetic radiation emitted by a source moving relative to an observer as perceived by the observer: the shift is to higher frequencies when the source approaches and to lower frequencies when it recedes.
  • excess supply — a situation in which the market supply of a commodity is greater than the market demand for it, thus causing its market price to fall
  • food supplies — food obtained for a household or for a country, an expedition, etc
  • grapple plant — a procumbent, thorny plant, Harpagophytum procumbens, of southern Africa.
  • grease nipple — a metal nipple designed to engage with a grease gun for injecting grease into a bearing, etc
  • job applicant — candidate for an advertised post
  • labour supply — the total number of hours that workers are willing and able to be paid wages to work for
  • mexican apple — a tropical American tree, Casimiroa edulis, of the rue family, having greenish, inconspicuous flowers and tomatolike fleshy fruit that is yellow on the inside and gray or yellowish-green on the outside.
  • nonapplicable — applying or capable of being applied; relevant; suitable; appropriate: an applicable rule; a solution that is applicable to the problem.
  • oak-apple day — (in Britain) May 29, the anniversary of the Restoration (1660), formerly commemorated by the wearing of oak apples or oak leaves, recalling the Boscobel oak in which Charles II hid after the battle of Worcester
  • reapplication — an act or the process of reapplying a substance
  • ripple effect — a spreading effect or series of consequences caused by a single action or event.
  • supplantation — to take the place of (another), as through force, scheming, strategy, or the like.
  • supplementary — Also, supplemental. of the nature of or forming a supplement; additional.
  • supplementing — something added to complete a thing, supply a deficiency, or reinforce or extend a whole.
  • the big apple — New York City
  • the-big-apple — New York City.
  • well supplied — to furnish or provide (a person, establishment, place, etc.) with what is lacking or requisite: to supply someone clothing; to supply a community with electricity.
  • well-supplied — to furnish or provide (a person, establishment, place, etc.) with what is lacking or requisite: to supply someone clothing; to supply a community with electricity.

On this page, we collect all 13-letter words with PPL. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 13-letter word that contains PPL to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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