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5-letter words that end in l

  • haill — Obsolete spelling of hail.
  • halal — (of an animal or its meat) slaughtered or prepared in the manner prescribed by Islamic law.
  • hamal — (in some Muslim countries) a porter.
  • hatel — (obsolete) hateful; detestable.
  • havel — Václav [vahts-lahf] /ˈvɑts lɑf/ (Show IPA), 1936–2011, Czech writer and political leader: president of Czechoslovakia 1989–92; president of the Czech Republic 1993–2003.
  • hazel — a female given name.
  • he'll — he will
  • hegel — Georg Wilhelm Friedrich [gey-awrk vil-helm free-drikh] /ˈgeɪ ɔrk ˈvɪl hɛlm ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1770–1831, German philosopher.
  • hemal — Also, hematal. of or relating to the blood or blood vessels.
  • herzl — Theodor [tey-aw-dohr] /ˈteɪ ɔˌdoʊr/ (Show IPA), 1860–1904, Hungarian-born Austrian Jewish writer and journalist: founder of the political Zionist movement.
  • hexyl — containing a hexyl group.
  • hibol — (language)   A variant of DIBOL, used in Infotec computers. HIBOL was considered to be a very high level language and significantly easier to maintain than COBOL. It uses a single type of data object, called a flow, which is an indexed stream of data values. Computation is expressed as operations acting on flows.
  • hilal — Of or pertaining to a hilum.
  • horal — of or relating to an hour or hours; hourly.
  • hosel — the socket in the club head of an iron that receives the shaft.
  • hotel — a commercial establishment offering lodging to travelers and sometimes to permanent residents, and often having restaurants, meeting rooms, stores, etc., that are available to the general public.
  • hovel — a small, very humble dwelling house; a wretched hut.
  • howel — a channel cut along the inside edge of a barrel stave to receive the barrelhead.
  • hp-gl — Hewlett-Packard Graphics Language
  • hubelDavid, 1926–2013, U.S. neuroscientist, born in Canada: Nobel Prize 1981.
  • hugelBaron Friedrich von, 1852–1925, English theologian and writer.
  • i-apl — A version of APL. ftp://watserv1.waterloo.edu/languages/apl/.
  • ianal — (chat)   I Am Not A Lawyer (but my legal opinion is...).
  • ictal — (medicine) Of or pertaining to a sudden physiologic attack such as a seizure, stroke or headache.
  • ideal — a standard of perfection or excellence.
  • idyll — a poem or prose composition, usually describing pastoral scenes or events or any charmingly simple episode, appealing incident, or the like.
  • ileal — Anatomy. the third and lowest division of the small intestine, extending from the jejunum to the cecum.
  • impel — to drive or urge forward; press on; incite or constrain to action.
  • incel — (neologism) A person who is celibate against their wishes.
  • indel — (genetics) Either an insertion or deletion mutation in the genetic code.
  • indol — Alternative form of indole.
  • intel — Intel Corporation
  • iqbalMuhammad, 1873–1938, Pakistani poet.
  • irbil — a town in N Iraq: built on the site of ancient Arbela.
  • isetl — Interactive SETL by Gary Levin <[email protected]>. (Apr 1994)
  • it'll — it will
  • jabal — a son of Lamech, and the progenitor of nomadic shepherds. Gen. 4:20.
  • jacal — JAffer's Canonical ALgebra
  • jaccl — (tool)   An LR1 grammar parser generator written by Dave Jones at Megatest.
  • jahel — Jael.
  • jamal — a male given name: from an Arabic word meaning “beauty.”.
  • javel — (obsolete) A vagabond.
  • jcool — (language)   A version of the COOL C++ class library that uses real C++ templates.
  • jebel — (chiefly in Arabic-speaking countries) a mountain: often used as part of a placename to indicate that the place is situated on or near a mountain: the Djebel Druze of southern Syria.
  • jehol — a region and former province in NE China: incorporated into Manchukuo by the Japanese 1932–45. 74,297 sq. mi. (192,429 sq. km).
  • jewel — a female given name.
  • jheel — (India) A pond, marsh, lake or similar wetland area, usually with significant vegetation providing shelter and/or food to a variety of aquatic and semi-aquatic animal species.
  • joual — any of the nonstandard dialects of Canadian French, characterized by deviations from the standard phonology, morphology, syntax, and vocabulary, and often containing many borrowings from English.
  • jubal — son of Lamech and Adah: the progenitor of musicians and those who produce musical instruments. Gen. 4:21.
  • jugal — of or relating to the cheek or the cheekbone.
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