7-letter words starting with lo
- lockets — Plural form of locket.
- lockful — an amount of water sufficient to fill a canal lock
- locking — Present participle of lock.
- lockjaw — tetanus in which the jaws become firmly locked together; trismus.
- lockman — (Scotland, archaic) A public executioner.
- locknut — a nut specially constructed to prevent its coming loose, usually having a means of providing extra friction between itself and the screw.
- lockout — the temporary closing of a business or the refusal by an employer to allow employees to come to work until they accept the employer's terms.
- lockram — a rough-textured linen cloth.
- lockset — an assembly of parts making up a complete locking system, especially one used on a door, including knobs, plates, and a lock mechanism.
- lockups — Plural form of lockup.
- lockyer — Sir Joseph Norman, 1836–1920, English astronomer and author.
- locoism — a disease chiefly of sheep, horses, and cattle, caused by the eating of locoweed and characterized by weakness, impaired vision, irregular behavior, and paralysis.
- locoman — a locomotive engine driver.
- locomen — Plural form of locoman.
- locrian — either of two districts in the central part of ancient Greece.
- locular — having one or more locules.
- loculed — having or containing locules
- locules — Plural form of locule.
- loculus — Biology. locule.
- locusta — the spikelet of grasses
- locusts — Plural form of locust.
- lodgers — Plural form of lodger.
- lodging — a small, makeshift or crude shelter or habitation, as of boughs, poles, skins, earth, or rough boards; cabin or hut.
- loesser — Frank (Henry) 1910–69, U.S. composer and lyricist, especially of musicals and film songs.
- loessic — relating to or consisting of loess
- loffler — Friedrich August Johannes [free-drikh ou-goo st yoh-hah-nuh s] /ˈfri drɪx ˈaʊ gʊst yoʊˈhɑ nəs/ (Show IPA), 1852–1915, German bacteriologist.
- loftier — extending high in the air; of imposing height; towering: lofty mountains.
- loftily — extending high in the air; of imposing height; towering: lofty mountains.
- lofting — a room, storage area, or the like within a sloping roof; attic; garret.
- log jam — an immovable pileup or tangle of logs, as in a river, causing a blockage.
- log off — log out
- log out — a portion or length of the trunk or of a large limb of a felled tree.
- log-log — the logarithm of a logarithm.
- logania — any of several plants or shrubs of the genus Logania, native chiefly to Australia, having small white or pink flowers.
- logbook — a book in which details of a trip made by a ship or aircraft are recorded; log.
- loggats — (in Britiain, formerly) a game played by throwing sticks at a stake
- loggers — Plural form of logger.
- loggets — a game, formerly played in England, in which players throw pieces of wood at a stake.
- loggias — Plural form of loggia.
- logging — a portion or length of the trunk or of a large limb of a felled tree.
- loggish — sluggish or cumbersome
- logical — according to or agreeing with the principles of logic: a logical inference.
- logined — the act of logging in to a database, mobile device, or computer, especially a multiuser computer or a remote or networked computer system.
- logjams — Plural form of logjam.
- logline — a synopsis of a script or screenplay
- loglisp — A version of Prolog implemented by Robinson in Lisp which allows Prolog programs to call Lisp and vice versa.
- logroll — to procure the passage of (a bill) by logrolling.
- logrono — a city in N Spain.
- logship — log chip.
- logwood — the heavy, brownish-red heartwood of a West Indian and Central American tree, Haematoxylon campechianum, of the legume family, used in dyeing.