0%

9-letter words containing sl

  • dyslexics — Plural form of dyslexic.
  • egg slice — a spatula for removing omelettes, fried eggs, etc, from a pan
  • emulously — In an emulous manner; ambitiously or competitively.
  • endlessly — In an endless manner; continuously without limit.
  • enslavers — Plural form of enslaver.
  • enslaving — Present participle of enslave.
  • enviously — In an envious manner or to an envious degree.
  • esslingen — a town in SW Germany, on the River Neckar: Gothic church, medieval buildings: wines, light industry. Pop: 91 980 (2003 est)
  • expressly — Explicitly; clearly.
  • fair isle — an intricate multicoloured pattern knitted with Shetland wool into various garments, such as sweaters
  • fatuously — With smug stupidity or vacuous silliness; idiotically.
  • fibrously — In a fibrous manner.
  • focusless — Lacking focus.
  • footslogs — Plural form of footslog.
  • friesland — a province in the N Netherlands. 1431 sq. mi. (3705 sq. km). Capital: Leeuwarden.
  • furiously — full of fury, violent passion, or rage; extremely angry; enraged: He was furious about the accident.
  • gaslights — (British) Plural form of gaslight.
  • gill slit — branchial cleft.
  • gin sling — an iced drink made from gin and water, sweetened, and flavoured with lemon or lime juice
  • gippsland — a fertile region of SE Australia, in SE Victoria, extending east along the coast from Melbourne to the New South Wales border. Area: 35 200 sq km (13 600 sq miles)
  • glassless — Without glass.
  • glasslike — a hard, brittle, noncrystalline, more or less transparent substance produced by fusion, usually consisting of mutually dissolved silica and silicates that also contain soda and lime, as in the ordinary variety used for windows and bottles.
  • glossless — Lacking gloss (a shiny surface).
  • goslarite — hydrated zinc sulphate
  • grassland — an area, as a prairie, in which the natural vegetation consists largely of perennial grasses, characteristic of subhumid and semiarid climates.
  • grassless — Lacking grass.
  • grasslike — That has the characteristics of grass.
  • grisliest — Superlative form of grisly.
  • gütersloh — a town in NW Germany, in North Rhine-Westphalia. Pop: 95 928 (2003 est)
  • gutlessly — In a gutless way; with cowardice.
  • hairslide — A clip that is used to keep a woman's hair in position.
  • half-slip — a woman's skirtlike undergarment, usually of a straight or slightly flared shape and having a narrow elasticized waistband.
  • haplessly — In a hapless manner.
  • heat slug — (hardware, processor)   A metal plate that helps dissipate heat away from the silicon core of a processor to the packaging or heat-sink.
  • heinously — hateful; odious; abominable; totally reprehensible: a heinous offense.
  • hideously — horrible or frightful to the senses; repulsive; very ugly: a hideous monster.
  • homeslice — Alternative spelling of home slice (Someone from one's home town.).
  • hugeously — hugely
  • impiously — not pious or religious; lacking reverence for God, religious practices, etc.; irreligious; ungodly.
  • islamabadIslamic Republic of, a republic in S Asia, between India and Afghanistan: formerly part of British India; known as West Pakistan from 1947–71 to distinguish it from East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). 310,403 sq. mi. (803,881 sq. km). Capital: Islamabad.
  • islanders — Plural form of islander.
  • islington — a borough of N London, England.
  • islomania — an obsessional enthusiasm or partiality for islands
  • jealously — feeling resentment against someone because of that person's rivalry, success, or advantages (often followed by of): He was jealous of his rich brother.
  • joylessly — In a joyless manner.
  • ladislausSaint, c1040–95, king of Hungary 1077–95.
  • landsleit — fellow Jews; sometimes, specif., those from the same town or village in Europe as oneself
  • landslide — the downward falling or sliding of a mass of soil, detritus, or rock on or from a steep slope.
  • landslips — Plural form of landslip.
  • lawlessly — In a lawless manner. Without constraint by law or moral code.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?