6-letter words containing l, a, p
- caples — Plural form of caple.
- caplet — A caplet is an oval tablet of medicine.
- caplin — capelin.
- carpal — any bone of the wrist
- carpel — the female reproductive organ of flowering plants, consisting of an ovary, style (sometimes absent), and stigma. The carpels are separate or fused to form a single pistil
- chapel — A chapel is a part of a church which has its own altar and which is used for private prayer.
- chulpa — a type of prehistoric stone tower, found in Brazil and Peru, having living quarters over a burial chamber.
- clamps — Plural form of clamp.
- clasps — Plural form of clasp.
- copalm — the aromatic brown resin obtained from the sweet gum tree
- copula — A copula is the same as a linking verb.
- cupola — A cupola is a roof or part of a roof that is shaped like a dome.
- cupula — a dome-shaped structure, esp the sensory structure within the semicircular canals of the ear
- cuspal — relating to or having a cusp
- damply — In a damp manner.
- daplex — ["The Functional Data Model and the Data Language DAPLEX", D.W. Shipman, ACM Trans Database Sys, 6(1):140-173 (Mar 1981)].
- dapple — to mark or become marked with spots or patches of a different colour; mottle
- dewlap — a loose fold of skin hanging from beneath the throat in cattle, dogs, etc
- dialup — (computing) alternative spelling of dial-up.
- drupal — (botany) drupaceous.
- dunlap — William, 1766–1839, U.S. dramatist, theatrical producer, and historian.
- earlap — earflap.
- elapid — (zoology) Any of many species of snakes of the family Elapidae, including the cobras, mambas, and coral snakes.
- elapse — (of time ) pass or go by.
- empale — Obsolete form of impale.
- epaule — The shoulder of a bastion, or the place where its face and flank meet and form the angle, called the angle of the shoulder.
- epical — (literature) Any book containing 2 or more epics.
- espial — The action of watching or catching sight of something or someone or the fact of being seen.
- flappy — slack or loose, so as to flap readily.
- gallop — to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed: They galloped off to meet their friends.
- gallup — George Horace, 1901–84, U.S. statistician.
- gaplog — General Amalgamated Programming with Logic. LOGPRO group, Linkoping Sweden. A restricted version of constraint logic programming, using S-unification but not restricted to a single domain.
- garply — /gar'plee/ A metasyntactic variable like foo, once popular among SAIL hackers.
- gelcap — a dose of medicine enclosed in a soluble case of gelatine
- gopala — Krishna as a cowherd.
- haplo- — single or simple
- hoopla — bustling excitement or activity; commotion; hullabaloo; to-do.
- hyphal — Of or pertaining to hyphae.
- impala — an African antelope, Aepyceros melampus, the male of which has ringed, lyre-shaped horns.
- impale — to fasten, stick, or fix upon a sharpened stake or the like.
- imparl — to confer with the opposing party in a lawsuit with a view to settling the dispute amicably, out of court.
- imphal — a state in NE India between Assam and Burma. 8620 sq. mi. (22,326 sq. km). Capital: Imphal.
- jalapa — a state in E Mexico, on the Gulf of Mexico. 27,759 sq. mi. (71,895 sq. km). Capital: Jalapa.
- jalopy — an old, decrepit, or unpretentious automobile.
- kaliph — a spiritual leader of Islam, claiming succession from Muhammad.
- kalpak — calpac.
- kalpis — a form of the hydria.
- kapell — William, 1922–53, U.S. pianist.
- kapila — flourished early 6th century b.c, Hindu philosopher: reputed founder of the Sankhya system of Hindu philosophy.
- kaplan — Mordecai Menahem [mawr-di-kahy mey-nuh-hem,, muh-nah-hem] /ˈmɔr dɪˌkaɪ ˈmeɪ nəˌhɛm,, məˈnɑ hɛm/ (Show IPA), 1881–1983, U.S. religious leader and educator, born in Lithuania: founder of the Reconstructionist movement in Judaism.