6-letter words containing l, a, s
- discal — relating to or resembling a disc; disclike
- dismal — causing gloom or dejection; gloomy; dreary; cheerless; melancholy: dismal weather.
- distal — situated away from the point of origin or attachment, as of a limb or bone; terminal. Compare proximal.
- djilas — Milovan [mee-law-vahn] /ˈmi lɔ vɑn/ (Show IPA), 1911–1995, Yugoslavian political leader and author, born in Montenegro.
- dolmas — Plural form of dolma.
- dorsal — of, relating to, or situated at the back, or dorsum.
- dossal — Also, dorsal. an ornamental hanging placed at the back of an altar or at the sides of the chancel.
- doulas — Plural form of doula.
- dowlas — a coarse linen or cotton cloth.
- drawls — an act or utterance of a person who drawls.
- dystal — DYnamic STorage ALlocation. Adds lists, strings, sorting, statistics and matrix operations to Fortran. Sammet 1969, p.388. "DYSTAL: Dynamic Storage Allocation Language in FORTRAN", J.M. Sakoda, in Symbol Manipulation Languages and Techniques, D.G. Bobrow ed, N-H 1971, pp.302- 311.
- eagles — Plural form of eagle.
- earles — (Ulster) deposit (on a purchase, etc.).
- easels — Plural form of easel.
- easely — Obsolete form of easily.
- easily — in an easy manner; with ease; without trouble: The traffic moved along easily.
- easley — a town in NW South Carolina.
- eassel — in an easterly manner or direction
- eassil — easterly
- el sal — El Salvador
- elands — Plural form of eland.
- elapse — (of time ) pass or go by.
- elates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elate.
- elisha — a Hebrew prophet of the 9th century bc: successor of Elijah (II Kings 3–9)
- emails — Plural form of email.
- enseal — to seal up
- equals — The symbol =.
- espial — The action of watching or catching sight of something or someone or the fact of being seen.
- exalts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of exalt.
- fables — a short tale to teach a moral lesson, often with animals or inanimate objects as characters; apologue: the fable of the tortoise and the hare; Aesop's fables.
- faisal — 1935–58, king of Iraq 1939–58 (grandson of Faisal I).
- falser — Comparative form of false.
- falsie — either of a pair of shaped pads, made of rubber, fabric, or the like, for wearing inside a brassiere to give the breasts a larger or more shapely appearance.
- falsum — (logic) An arbitrary contradiction, denoted \u22a5.
- fasbol — ["FASBOL. A SNOBOL4 Compiler", P.J. Santos, Memo ERL-M134, UC Berkeley 1971].
- fastly — Securely.
- faulds — Plural form of fauld.
- faults — Plural form of fault.
- fellas — Plural form of fella.
- festal — pertaining to or befitting a feast, festival, holiday, or gala occasion.
- finals — pertaining to or coming at the end; last in place, order, or time: the final meeting of the year.
- fiscal — of or relating to the public treasury or revenues: fiscal policies.
- flacks — Plural form of flack.
- flails — Plural form of flail.
- flairs — Plural form of flair.
- flakes — Plural form of flake.
- flaks' — antiaircraft fire, especially as experienced by the crews of combat airplanes at which the fire is directed.
- flames — burning gas or vapor, as from wood or coal, that is undergoing combustion; a portion of ignited gas or vapor.
- flanks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flank.
- flares — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.