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7-letter words starting with pl

  • plinker — a person who shoots a handgun recreationally
  • pliskie — a practical joke
  • plodded — to walk heavily or move laboriously; trudge: to plod under the weight of a burden.
  • plodder — to walk heavily or move laboriously; trudge: to plod under the weight of a burden.
  • ploesti — a city in S Romania: center of a rich oil-producing region.
  • plonker — idiot, foolish person
  • plopped — to make a sound like that of something falling or dropping into water: A frog plopped into the pond.
  • plosion — the forced release of the occlusive phase of a plosive, whether voiceless or voiced, either audible due to frication or inaudible due to a contiguous following consonant. Also called explosion. Compare implosion (def 2).
  • plosive — (of a stop consonant or occlusive) characterized by release in a plosion; explosive.
  • plotful — characterized by or full of plots
  • plotted — a secret plan or scheme to accomplish some purpose, especially a hostile, unlawful, or evil purpose: a plot to overthrow the government.
  • plotter — a person or thing that plots.
  • plottie — a hot, spiced drink
  • plotzed — drunk; intoxicated.
  • plovdiv — a city in S Bulgaria, on the Maritsa River.
  • plovery — characterized by or having many plovers
  • plow up — to remove with a plow
  • plowboy — a boy who leads or guides a team drawing a plow.
  • plowing — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.
  • plowman — a man who plows.
  • plowter — to work or play in water or mud; dabble
  • ploying — a maneuver or stratagem, as in conversation, to gain the advantage.
  • plucked — to pull off or out from the place of growth, as fruit, flowers, feathers, etc.: to pluck feathers from a chicken.
  • plucker — to pull off or out from the place of growth, as fruit, flowers, feathers, etc.: to pluck feathers from a chicken.
  • plug in — capable of or designed for being connected to an electrical power source by plugging in or inserting: a plug-in hair dryer; a plug-in transistor.
  • plug-in — capable of or designed for being connected to an electrical power source by plugging in or inserting: a plug-in hair dryer; a plug-in transistor.
  • plugged — If something is plugged or plugged up, it is completely blocked so that nothing can get through it.
  • plugger — a person or thing that plugs.
  • plugola — payment or favor given to people in media or motion pictures for favorable mention or display of a particular product or brand name.
  • plumage — the entire feathery covering of a bird.
  • plumate — resembling a feather, as a hair or bristle that bears smaller hairs.
  • plumbed — a small mass of lead or other heavy material, as that suspended by a line and used to measure the depth of water or to ascertain a vertical line. Compare plumb line.
  • plumber — a small mass of lead or other heavy material, as that suspended by a line and used to measure the depth of water or to ascertain a vertical line. Compare plumb line.
  • plumbic — containing lead, especially in the tetravalent state.
  • plumbum — lead2 (def 1).
  • plumcot — a hybrid tree produced by crossing the apricot and the plum.
  • plumery — a collection of plumes
  • pluming — a feather.
  • plumist — a person who makes ornamental plumes
  • plummer — the drupaceous fruit of any of several trees belonging to the genus Prunus, of the rose family, having an oblong stone.
  • plummet — Also called plumb bob. a piece of lead or some other weight attached to a line, used for determining perpendicularity, for sounding, etc.; the bob of a plumb line.
  • plumose — having feathers or plumes; feathered.
  • plumous — having plumes or feathers
  • plumpen — to make or become plump
  • plumper — a heavy or sudden fall.
  • plumula — a down feather
  • plumule — Botany. the bud of the ascending axis of a plant while still in the embryo.
  • plunder — to rob of goods or valuables by open force, as in war, hostile raids, brigandage, etc.: to plunder a town.
  • plunged — to cast or thrust forcibly or suddenly into something, as a liquid, a penetrable substance, a place, etc.; immerse; submerge: to plunge a dagger into one's heart.
  • plunger — Machinery. a pistonlike reciprocating part moving within the cylinder of a pump or hydraulic device.
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