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8-letter words containing l, a, m, n

  • landsmal — Nynorsk.
  • landsman — Also, landman. a person who lives or works on land.
  • langmuirIrving, 1881–1957, U.S. chemist: Nobel Prize 1932.
  • laomedon — a king of Troy and the father of Priam, for whom the walls of Troy were built by Apollo and Poseidon.
  • latinism — a mode of expression derived from or imitative of Latin.
  • laudanum — a tincture of opium.
  • lavement — A washing or bathing.
  • laywoman — a woman who is not a member of the clergy.
  • laywomen — a woman who is not a member of the clergy.
  • leadsman — a sailor who sounds with a lead line.
  • leadsmen — Plural form of leadsman.
  • leaseman — a person who leases land and obtains the rights to its use, especially oil-drilling rights.
  • lemonade — a beverage consisting of lemon juice, sweetener, and water, sometimes carbonated.
  • liegeman — a vassal; subject.
  • ligament — Anatomy, Zoology. a band of tissue, usually white and fibrous, serving to connect bones, hold organs in place, etc.
  • limacine — pertaining to or resembling a slug; sluglike.
  • limation — The act of filing or polishing.
  • liminary — (obsolete) introductory or preparatory.
  • limnaeid — any snail of the family Limnaeidae
  • linament — (surgery) lint, especially when made into a tent for insertion into wounds or ulcers.
  • linesman — Sports. an official, as in tennis and soccer, who assists the referee. Football. an official who marks the distances gained and lost in the progress of play and otherwise assists the referee and field judge. Ice Hockey. either of two officials who assist the referee by watching for icing, offside, and substitution violations and fouls and by conducting face-offs.
  • linksman — a person who plays golf; golfer.
  • lippmann — Gabriel [ga-bree-el] /ga briˈɛl/ (Show IPA), 1845–1921, French physicist: Nobel Prize 1908.
  • lodesman — a person who steers a ship
  • loftsman — a person who prepares molds and patterns.
  • long arm — a long pole fitted with any of various devices, as a hook or clamp, for performing tasks otherwise out of reach.
  • luhrmann — Baz (Mark Anthony). born 1962, Australian film director and screenwriter; his films include Strictly Ballroom (1992), Romeo and Juliet (1996), Moulin Rouge (2001), Australia (2008), and The Great Gatsby (2013)
  • luminant — That illuminates; luminous.
  • luminary — a celestial body, as the sun or moon.
  • luminate — (obsolete) To illuminate.
  • mableton — a town in NW Georgia.
  • machinal — Of, or pertaining to machines.
  • maclaren — Ian [ee-uh n,, ahy-uh n] /ˈi ən,, ˈaɪ ən/ (Show IPA), Watson, John.
  • madaline — A structure of many ADALINE units.
  • madelene — a female given name, form of Magdalene.
  • madeline — a female given name, form of Magdalene.
  • magdalenthe, Mary Magdalene.
  • magelang — a city on central Java, in Indonesia.
  • magellanFerdinand, c1480–1521, Portuguese navigator: discoverer of the Straits of Magellan 1520 and the Philippines 1521.
  • magnolia — a city in SW Arkansas.
  • maidenly — pertaining to, characteristic of, or befitting a maiden: a maidenly blush.
  • mail van — a small or medium-sized road vehicle that is used to transport letters, packages, etc
  • mailings — Plural form of mailing.
  • mainland — the largest of the Shetland Islands. About 200 sq. mi. (520 sq. km).
  • mainline — to inject a narcotic, especially heroin, directly into a vein.
  • mainsail — the lowermost sail on a mainmast.
  • maitlandFrederic William, 1850–1906, English jurist and legal historian.
  • malarian — (dated) Relating to malaria; malarial.
  • malawian — Formerly Nyasaland. a republic in SE Africa, on the W and S shores of Lake Malawi: formerly a British protectorate and part of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland; gained independence July 6, 1964; a member of the Commonwealth of Nations. 49,177 sq. mi. (127,368 sq. km). Capital: Lilongwe.
  • malegaon — a city in NW Maharashtra state in W India.
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