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9-letter words that end in ell

  • acid cell — Electricity. a cell using an acid electrolyte.
  • aeroshell — a protective shield, containing a parachute, which slows a spacecraft during re-entry to the earth's atmosphere and landing
  • appenzell — a canton of NE Switzerland, divided in 1597 into the Protestant demicanton of Appenzell Outer Rhodes and the Catholic demicanton of Appenzell Inner Rhodes. Capitals: Herisau and Appenzell, respectively. Pop: 53 200 and Pop: 15 000 (2002 est) respectively. Areas: 243 sq km (94 sq miles) and 171 sq km (66 sq miles) respectively
  • ark shell — any marine bivalve of the family Arcidae, especially of the genus Arca, characterized by a heavy shell with a toothed hinge and a deep, boatlike inner surface.
  • astrofell — (in the works of Spenser) an unidentified plant, commonly believed to be akin to an aster
  • baby bell — one of the seven regional telephone companies formed after the breakup of the Bell system in 1983.
  • bandshell — a type of bandstand enclosed at the back
  • beta cell — B cell (def 2).
  • blackwell — Elizabeth1821-1910; 1st woman physician in the U.S., born in England
  • body cell — somatic cell.
  • bodyshell — the external shell of a motor vehicle
  • bombshell — A bombshell is a sudden piece of bad or unexpected news.
  • bone cell — a cell found in bone in any of its functional states; an osteoblast, osteoclast, or osteocyte.
  • bonnibell — a pretty girl
  • bracknell — a town in SE England, in Bracknell Forest unitary authority, Berkshire, designated a new town in 1949. Pop: 70 795 (2001)
  • bridewell — a house of correction; jail, esp for minor offences
  • brudenell — James Thomas, the 7th Earl of Cardigan
  • chartwell — a house near Westerham in Kent: home for 40 years of Sir Winston Churchill
  • clamshell — a dredging bucket that is hinged like the shell of a clam
  • cockerell — Sir Christopher Sydney. 1910–99, British engineer, who invented the hovercraft
  • cons cell — (programming)   /konz sel/ or /kons sel/ A Lisp pair object containing any two objects. In Lisp, "cons" (short for "construct") is the fundamental operation for building structures such as lists and other binary trees. The application of "cons" to objects H and T is written (cons H T) and returns a pair object known as a "cons", "cons cell" or dotted pair. Typically, a cons would be stored in memory as a two consecutive pointers. The two objects in a cons, and the functions to extract them, are called "car" and "cdr" after two 15-bit fields of the machine code instruction format of the IBM 7090 that hosted the original LISP implementation. These fields were called the "address" and "decrement" parts so "car" stood for "Contents of Address part of Register" and "cdr" for "Contents of Decrement part of Register". In the typical case where the cons holds one node of a list structure, the car is the head of the list (first element) and the cdr is the tail of the list (the rest). If the list had only one element then the tail would be an empty list, represented by the cdr containing the special value "nil". To aid in working with nested structures such as lists of lists, Lisp provides functions to access the car of the car ("caar"), the car of the cdr ("cadr"), the cdr of the car ("cdar") and the cdr of the cdr ("cddr").
  • damn wellthe damned, those condemned to suffer eternal punishment.
  • deathbell — Alternative form of death bell.
  • dratchell — a scruffy woman; a slut; a drab
  • dry spell — a prolonged period of dry weather.
  • dumb-bell — A dumb-bell is a short bar with weights on either side which people use for physical exercise to strengthen their arm and shoulder muscles.
  • dust well — a hollow in the surface of a glacier, formed by the melting action of dust or soil deposits.
  • ear shell — abalone.
  • ensorcell — Enchant; fascinate.
  • femtocell — A very small mobile phone base station that is connected to the phone network via the Internet, typically used in areas where the mobile signal is weak and considered to be smaller than a picocell.
  • from hell — You can use from hell after a noun when you are emphasizing that something or someone is extremely unpleasant or evil.
  • fuel cell — a device that produces a continuous electric current directly from the oxidation of a fuel, as that of hydrogen by oxygen.
  • gaitskell — Hugh Todd Naylor [ney-ler] /ˈneɪ lər/ (Show IPA), 1906–63, English economist and statesman: Labour party leader 1955–63.
  • germ cell — the sexual reproductive cell at any stage from the primordial cell to the mature gamete.
  • hair cell — an epithelial cell having hairlike processes, as that of the organ of Corti.
  • half-cell — a single electrode, generally a metal, immersed in a container filled with an electrolyte, and having a specific electrical potential for a given combination of electrode and electrolyte.
  • hand bell — a small handheld bell, especially as part of a tuned set having different notes or pitches and played by a group.
  • hard sell — aggressive sales
  • hard-sell — characterized by or promoted through a hard sell: hard-sell tactics.
  • hear tell — to be told (about); learn (of)
  • hela cell — a vigorous strain of laboratory-cultured cells descended from a human cervical cancer, used widely in research.
  • hindafell — Hindfell.
  • honeywell — (company)   A US company known for its mainframes and operating systems. The company's history is long and tortuous, with many mergers, acquisitions and name changes. A company formed on 1886-04-23 to make furnace regulators eventually merged in 1927 with another company formed in 1904 by a young plumbing and heating engineer named Mark Honeywell who was perfecting the heat generator. A 1955 joint venture with Raytheon Corp., called Datamatic Corporation, marked Honeywell's entry into the computer business. Their first computer was the D-1000. In 1960 Honeywell bought out Raytheon's interest and the name changed to Electronic Data Processing (EDP) then in 1963 it was officially renamed Honeywell Inc. In 1970 Honeywell merged its computer business with General Electric's to form Honeywell Information Systems. In 1986 a joint venture with the french company Bull and japanese NEC Corporation created Honeywell Bull. By 1991 Honeywell had withdrawn from the computer business, focussing more on aeropspace. See also: brain-damaged.
  • intercell — intercellular
  • jail cell — a small room in a jail where a prisoner is kept
  • kalispell — a city in NW Montana.
  • kerr cell — a transparent cell filled with a fluid, usually nitrobenzene, and containing two electrodes placed between two polarizing light filters, suitable for demonstrating the Kerr effect and often used as a high-speed camera shutter.
  • lampshell — Alternative form of lamp shell.
  • lightwell — (architecture) An open shaft that transmits light from above into a staircase or an inner room.
  • like hell — the place or state of punishment of the wicked after death; the abode of evil and condemned spirits; Gehenna or Tartarus.

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words ending in ELL. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that ends in ELL to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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