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7-letter words that end in l

  • bristol — seaport in Avon, SW England: county district pop. 376,000
  • bromoil — an offset reproduction produced by the bromoil process.
  • brothel — A brothel is a building where men can go to pay to have sex with prostitutes.
  • bruegel — Jan (jɑn ) ; yän) 1568-1625; Fl. painter: son of Pieter
  • burghal — (in Scotland) an incorporated town having its own charter and some degree of political independence from the surrounding area.
  • burrell — Paul. born 1958, British butler and confidant to Diana, Princess of Wales. After her death he was charged with but (2003) acquitted of stealing from her estate. His book, A Royal Duty (2003), revealed intimate details of her life
  • burrhel — a wild sheep, Pseudois nahoor, of Tibet and adjacent mountainous regions, having goatlike horns that curve backward.
  • busgirl — a waiter's assistant
  • bussell — Darcey (Andrea). born 1969, British ballet dancer, principal ballerina with the Royal Ballet (1989–2006)
  • butanol — a colourless substance existing in four isomeric forms. The three liquid isomers are used as solvents for resins, lacquers, etc, and in the manufacture of organic compounds. Formula: C4H9OH
  • butyral — a type of resin
  • butyryl — a radical of butyric acid
  • c shell — (operating system)   (csh) The Unix command-line interpreter shell and script language by William Joy, originating from Berkeley Unix. Presumably, csh's C-like syntax was intended to endear it to programmers but sadly it lacks some sh features which are useful for writing shell scripts so you need to know two different syntaxes for every shell construct. A plethora of different shells followed csh, e.g. tcsh, ksh, bash, rc, but sh and csh are the only ones which are provided with most versions of Unix.
  • cacodyl — an oily poisonous liquid with a strong garlic smell; tetramethyldiarsine. Formula: [(CH3)2As]2
  • cageful — an amount which fills a cage to capacity
  • calomel — a colourless tasteless powder consisting chiefly of mercurous chloride, used medicinally, esp as a cathartic. Formula: Hg2Cl2
  • cambial — a layer of delicate meristematic tissue between the inner bark or phloem and the wood or xylem, which produces new phloem on the outside and new xylem on the inside in stems, roots, etc., originating all secondary growth in plants and forming the annual rings of wood.
  • cambrel — gambrel.
  • cameral — of or relating to a judicial or legislative chamber
  • camphol — borneol
  • cancell — Obsolete spelling of cancel.
  • capital — Capital is a large sum of money which you use to start a business, or which you invest in order to make more money.
  • capitol — A capitol is a government building in which a state legislature meets.
  • caporal — a strong coarse dark tobacco
  • caracal — a lynxlike feline mammal, Lynx caracal, inhabiting deserts of N Africa and S Asia, having long legs, a smooth coat of reddish fur, and black-tufted ears
  • caracol — caracole.
  • caracul — the black loosely curled fur obtained from the skins of newly born lambs of the karakul sheep
  • caramel — A caramel is a chewy sweet food made from sugar, butter, and milk.
  • caraval — Obsolete spelling of caravel.
  • caravel — a two- or three-masted sailing ship, esp one with a broad beam, high poop deck, and lateen rig that was used by the Spanish and Portuguese in the 15th and 16th centuries
  • cardial — (rare) Relating to the heart.
  • careful — If you are careful, you give serious attention to what you are doing, in order to avoid harm, damage, or mistakes. If you are careful to do something, you make sure that you do it.
  • carinal — resembling or relating to a carina
  • caromel — to convert or be converted into caramel
  • carpool — A carpool is an arrangement where a group of people take turns driving each other to work, or driving each other's children to school. A carpool also refers to the people traveling together in a car.
  • carrell — Also called cubicle, stall. a small recess or enclosed area in a library stack, designed for individual study or reading.
  • carroll — Lewis. real name the Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. 1832–98, English writer; an Oxford mathematics don who wrote Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1872) and the nonsense poem The Hunting of the Snark (1876)
  • cartful — the amount a cart can hold
  • castell — A human tower formed in festivals in Catalonia.
  • castral — of or relating to a camp, esp a military camp
  • catcall — Catcalls are loud noises that people make to show that they disapprove of something they are watching or listening to.
  • catfall — the line used in a cat
  • catgirl — (chiefly, Japanese fiction) A female fictional character who has a cat's ears, tail or other feline characteristics on an otherwise humanoid body.
  • catmill — An apparatus with several beams protruding from a central rotating pole, used to train fighting dogs by having them chase a cat or other small animal in circles.
  • cattail — any of a genus (Typha) of the cattail family with reedlike leaves and long, brown, fuzzy, cylindrical flower spikes; esp., either of two species (T. latifolia and T. angustifolia) whose long, flat leaves are used in making baskets and matting
  • cattell — James McKeen [muh-keen] /məˈkin/ (Show IPA), 1860–1944, U.S. psychologist, educator, and editor.
  • cc:mail — (tool, product)   Commercial electronic mail software by Lotus Corporation for Microsoft Windows.
  • censual — an official enumeration of the population, with details as to age, sex, occupation, etc.
  • central — Something that is central is in the middle of a place or area.
  • ceramal — cermet
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