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8-letter words containing ul

  • scentful — full of scent or odour; fragrant
  • schedule — a plan of procedure, usually written, for a proposed objective, especially with reference to the sequence of and time allotted for each item or operation necessary to its completion: The schedule allows three weeks for this stage.
  • schullerGunther, born 1925, U.S. composer, conductor, and music writer and educator.
  • scoopful — the amount that a scoop can hold.
  • scornful — full of scorn; derisive; contemptuous: He smiled in a scornful way.
  • scrofula — primary tuberculosis of the lymphatic glands, especially those of the neck.
  • sculking — to lie or keep in hiding, as for some evil reason: The thief skulked in the shadows.
  • scullery — a small room or section of a pantry in which food is cleaned, trimmed, and cut into cooking portions before being sent to the kitchen.
  • scullion — a kitchen servant who does menial work.
  • sculping — the act of cutting the skin and its adhering fat from the body of a seal.
  • sculpsit — he engraved, carved, or sculptured (it); she engraved, carved, or sculptured (it). Abbreviation: sc.
  • sculptor — artist who sculpts
  • sea gull — a play (1896) by Anton Chekhov.
  • sedulity — sedulous quality, application, or activity; diligence.
  • sedulous — diligent in application or attention; persevering; assiduous.
  • semibull — a bull or official document issued by the pope after his election but before his coronation
  • senseful — full of reasonable sense; sound; judicious.
  • serpulid — a marine polychaete worm of the family Serpulidae, which constructs and lives in a calcareous tube attached to stones or seaweed and has a crown of ciliated tentacles
  • setulose — having or covered with setulae.
  • shameful — causing shame: shameful behavior.
  • shelfful — an amount adequate to fill a shelf: They buy canned goods by the shelfful.
  • shellful — the amount held in a shell; the amount needed to fill a shell; a small amount
  • shoulder — the part of each side of the body in humans, at the top of the trunk, extending from each side of the base of the neck to the region where the arm articulates with the trunk.
  • shouldst — 2nd person singular past of shall.
  • siauliai — a city in N Lithuania, N of Kaunas.
  • silicula — a short broad siliqua, occurring in such cruciferous plants as honesty and shepherd's-purse
  • simpulum — an ancient dipper having the rim of the bowl at right angles to the handle.
  • simula i — (language)   SIMUlation LAnguage. An extension to ALGOL 60 for the Univac 1107 designed in 1962 by Kristen Nygaard and Ole-Johan Dahl and implemented in 1964. SIMULA I was designed for discrete simulation. It introduced the record class, leading the way to data abstraction and object-oriented programming languages like Smalltalk. It also featured coroutines. SIMULA's philosophy was the result of addressing the problems of describing complex systems for the purpose of simulating them. This philosophy proved to be applicable for describing complex systems generally (not just for simulation) and so SIMULA is a general-purpose object-oriented application programming language which also has very good discrete event simulation capability. Virtually all OOP products are derived in some manner from SIMULA. For a description of the evolution of SIMULA and therefore the fundamental concepts of OOP, see Dahl and Nygaard in ["History of Programming Languages". Ed. R. W. Wexelblat. Addison-Wesley, 1981].
  • simulant — simulating; feigning; imitating.
  • simulate — to create a simulation, likeness, or model of (a situation, system, or the like): to simulate crisis conditions.
  • simulium — a blood-sucking, tropical fly of the genus Simulium
  • sinfully — characterized by, guilty of, or full of sin; wicked: a sinful life.
  • singular — extraordinary; remarkable; exceptional: a singular success.
  • skillful — having or exercising skill: a skillful juggler.
  • skulking — to lie or keep in hiding, as for some evil reason: The thief skulked in the shadows.
  • skullcap — a small, brimless close-fitting cap, often made of silk or velvet, worn on the crown of the head, as for religious functions.
  • slothful — sluggardly; indolent; lazy.
  • smileful — full of smiles
  • smoulder — to burn without flame; undergo slow or suppressed combustion.
  • smouldry — smouldering
  • snootful — a sufficient amount of liquor to cause intoxication.
  • solihull — a borough in West Midlands, England, near Birmingham.
  • soothful — truthful
  • soulless — without a soul.
  • soulmate — a person with whom one has a strong affinity, shared values and tastes, and often a romantic bond: I married my soul mate; you don't get much luckier than that.
  • spadeful — the amount that can be dug out with or carried on a spade.
  • spansule — a modified-release capsule of a drug
  • spaulder — a pauldron, especially one for protecting only a shoulder.
  • specular — pertaining to or having the properties of a mirror.
  • speculum — a mirror or reflector, especially one of polished metal, as on a reflecting telescope.
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