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4-letter words that end in l

  • -'ll — -'ll is the usual spoken form of 'will'. It is added to the end of the pronoun which is the subject of the verb. For example, 'you will' can be shortened to 'you'll'.
  • -ful — You use -ful to form nouns that refer to the quantity of a substance that an object contains or can contain. For example, a handful of sand is the amount of sand that you can hold in your hand.
  • -ial — of; relating to; connected with
  • -oyl — (in chemistry) indicating an acyl group or radical
  • -rel — mainly disparaging indicating a person or thing viewed as diminutive, trivial, or worthless
  • aaal — American Academy of Arts and Letters
  • aadl — Axiomatic Architecture Description Language
  • abel — the second son of Adam and Eve, a shepherd, murdered by his brother Cain (Genesis 4:1–8)
  • acol — a popular British bidding system favouring light opening bids and a flexible approach
  • acyl — of, denoting, or containing the monovalent group of atoms RCO-, where R is an organic group
  • adsl — ADSL is a method of transmitting digital information at high speed over telephone lines. ADSL is an abbreviation for 'asynchronous digital subscriber line'.
  • aecl — Atomic Energy of Canada Limited
  • agal — (among Arabs) a cord wound around a kaffiyeh to hold it in place.
  • ahdl — Analog Hardware Design Language
  • ahpl — A Hardware Programming Language
  • akcl — Austin Kyoto Common Lisp
  • akil — a male given name: from an Arabic word meaning “one who uses reason.”.
  • alfl — (language)   A lazy function language. A weakly typed, lazy functional language developed by Paul Hudak <[email protected]> of Yale in 1983. Alfl is implemented as a Scheme preprocessor for the Orbit compiler, by transforming laziness into force-and-delay. See also ParAlfl.
  • amel — (obsolete) enamel.
  • amol — Active Management Of Labor
  • ampl — (language)   Along with mpl, the intrinsic parallel languages for MasPar's computers. AMPL and mpl are parallel variants of C. Ampl is actually now a gcc port.
  • amyl — of, consisting of, or containing any of eight isomeric forms of the monovalent group C5H11-
  • anal — Anal means relating to the anus of a person or animal.
  • anil — a leguminous West Indian shrub, Indigofera suffruticosa: a source of indigo
  • apal — Array Processor Assembly Language
  • apdl — Algorithmic Processor Description Language
  • aril — an appendage on certain seeds, such as those of the yew and nutmeg, developed from or near the funicle of the ovule and often brightly coloured and fleshy
  • aryl — of, consisting of, or containing an aromatic group
  • asdl — Abstract-Type and Scheme-Definition Language
  • aval — of, like, or relating to a grandparent
  • avel — (transitive, obsolete) To pull away.
  • awdl — a very long traditional Welsh poem following strict conventions
  • awol — If someone in the Armed Forces goes AWOL, they leave their post without the permission of a superior officer. AWOL is an abbreviation for 'absent without leave'.
  • axal — Archaic form of axial.
  • axel — a jump in which the skater takes off from the forward outside edge of one skate, makes one and a half, two and a half, or three and a half turns in the air, and lands on the backward outside edge of the other skate
  • axil — the angle between the upper surface of a branch or leafstalk and the stem from which it grows
  • baal — any of several ancient Semitic fertility gods
  • bael — a spiny Indian rutaceous tree, Aegle marmelos
  • bail — Bail is a sum of money that an arrested person or someone else puts forward as a guarantee that the arrested person will attend their trial in a law court. If the arrested person does not attend it, the money will be lost.
  • ball — A ball is a round object that is used in games such as tennis, baseball, football, basketball, and cricket.
  • baul — a member of a nonconformist Bengalese sect having gurus but no dogmas, rituals, religious institutions, or scriptures.
  • bawl — If you bawl, you shout in a very loud voice, for example because you are angry or you want people to hear you.
  • bcpl — (language)   (Basic CPL) A British systems language developed by Richards in 1969 and descended from CPL (Combined Programming Language). BCPL is low-level, typeless and block-structured, and provides only one-dimensional arrays. Case is not significant, but conventionally reserved words begin with a capital. Flow control constructs include: If-Then, Test-Then-Else, Unless-Do, While-Do, Until-Do, Repeat, Repeatwhile, Repeatuntil, For-to-By-Do, Loop, Break and Switchon-Into-Case-Default-Endcase. BCPL has conditional expressions, pointers, and manifest constants. It has both procedures: 'Let foo(bar) Be command' and functions: 'Let foo(bar) = expression'. 'Valof $(..Resultis..$)' causes a compound command to produce a value. Parameters are call-by-value. Program segments communicate via the global vector where system and user variables are stored in fixed numerical locations in a single array. The first BCPL compiler was written in AED. BCPL was used to implement the TRIPOS operating system, which was subsequently reincarnated as AmigaDOS. See OCODE, INTCODE. Oxford BCPL differed slightly: Test-Ifso-Ifnot, and section brackets in place of $( $). The original INTCODE interpreter for BCPL is available for Amiga, Unix, MS-DOS ftp://wuarchive.wustl.edu/systems/amiga/programming/languages/BCPL/. A BCPL compiler bootstrap kit with an INTCODE interpreter in C was written by Ken Yap <[email protected]>.
  • beal — a god of the ancient Celts, a personification of the sun.
  • begl — Back End Generator
  • bell — A bell is a device that makes a ringing sound and is used to give a signal or to attract people's attention.
  • bhil — a people inhabiting the hills of west central India.
  • bibl — Biblical
  • biel — a town in NW Switzerland, on Lake Biel. Pop: 48 655 (2000)
  • bill — A bill is a written statement of money that you owe for goods or services.

On this page, we collect all 4-letter words ending in letter L. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 4-letter word that ends in L to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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