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8-letter words containing ul

  • patulent — patulous
  • patulous — open; gaping; expanded.
  • paul iii — (Alessandro Farnese) 1468–1549, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1534–49.
  • paul pry — an inquisitive, meddlesome person.
  • pauldron — a piece of plate armor for the shoulder and the uppermost part of the arm, often overlapping the adjacent parts of the chest and back.
  • paulette — a female given name: derived from Paul.
  • paulinusSaint, died a.d. 644, Roman missionary in England with Augustine: 1st archbishop of York 633–644.
  • pauseful — taking many pauses; full of pauses
  • peaceful — characterized by peace; free from war, strife, commotion, violence, or disorder: a peaceful reign; a peaceful demonstration.
  • peculate — to appropriate or embezzle (public money)
  • peculiar — strange; queer; odd: peculiar happenings.
  • peculium — property that a father or master allowed his child or slave to hold as his own
  • pendular — of or relating to a pendulum.
  • pendulum — a body so suspended from a fixed point as to move to and fro by the action of gravity and acquired momentum.
  • perraultCharles [chahrlz;; French sharl] /tʃɑrlz;; French ʃarl/ (Show IPA), 1628–1703, French poet, critic, and author of fairy tales.
  • petulant — sulky or irritable
  • piacular — expiatory; atoning; reparatory.
  • pit bull — American Staffordshire terrier.
  • plainful — sad and mournful
  • plantule — an embryonic plant in the act of germination
  • plateful — the amount that a plate will hold.
  • plumular — relating to the plumule of a plant
  • populace — the common people of a community, nation, etc., as distinguished from the higher classes.
  • populate — to inhabit; live in; be the inhabitants of.
  • populism — the political philosophy of the People's party.
  • populist — a member of the People's party.
  • populous — full of residents or inhabitants, as a region; heavily populated.
  • pouchful — the amount (of something) a pouch will hold
  • poulaine — a shoe or boot with an elongated pointed toe, fashionable in the 15th century.
  • poultice — a soft, moist mass of cloth, bread, meal, herbs, etc., applied hot as a medicament to the body.
  • powerful — physically strong, as a person: a large, powerful athlete.
  • prankful — full of pranks or mischief, tending to play pranks
  • preadult — of or relating to the period prior to adulthood: preadult strivings for independence.
  • premould — to mould in advance
  • premoult — occurring in the period before an animal moults
  • pressful — the quantity that a press can hold
  • prideful — a high or inordinate opinion of one's own dignity, importance, merit, or superiority, whether as cherished in the mind or as displayed in bearing, conduct, etc.
  • promulge — to promulgate.
  • proudful — proud; full of pride.
  • pulicene — flea-ridden
  • pulicide — a flea-killing substance
  • pulingly — in a complaining manner
  • pulitzerJoseph, 1847–1911, U.S. journalist and publisher, born in Hungary.
  • pull for — favour, support
  • pull off — the act of pulling or drawing.
  • pull out — to draw or haul toward oneself or itself, in a particular direction, or into a particular position: to pull a sled up a hill.
  • pull tab — a metal tab or ring that is pulled to uncover the precut opening in a can or other container.
  • pull-off — an act of pulling off: The inn is well worth a pull-off from the Interstate.
  • pullback — the act of pulling back, especially a retreat or a strategic withdrawal of troops; pullout.
  • pulldown — a mechanism that intermittently advances the film through the film gate of a camera or projector.
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