0%

5-letter words containing l, p

  • i-apl — A version of APL. ftp://watserv1.waterloo.edu/languages/apl/.
  • ilisp — A somewhat LISP Machine-like interface to lisp listeners from Emacs. Version 5.0 Emacs interface by ? Ivan Vazquez <[email protected]>.
  • impel — to drive or urge forward; press on; incite or constrain to action.
  • imply — implies
  • islip — a town on the S shore of Long Island, in SE New York.
  • jalap — the dried tuberous root of any of several plants, especially Exogonium purga, of the morning glory family, or the light yellowish powder derived from it, used in medicine chiefly as a purgative.
  • julep — mint julep.
  • kalpa — a thousand cycles of Maha Yugas.
  • kelep — a stinging ant, Ectatomma tuberculatum, introduced into the U.S. from Guatemala, that preys on the boll weevil.
  • kelps — Plural form of kelp.
  • kelpy — kelpie1 .
  • l/cpl — lance corporal
  • l0pht — (security)   /loft/ An Internet security organisation that merged with @stake in January 2000.
  • l2cap — Logical Link Control and Adaptation Protocol
  • lamps — Plural form of lamp.
  • lapel — either of the two parts of a garment folded back on the chest, especially a continuation of a coat collar.
  • lapin — a rabbit.
  • lapis — (italics) Latin. stone (used in Latin names for minerals, gems, etc.)
  • lappa — African waist scarf.
  • lappy — (informal) A laptop computer.
  • lapse — an accidental or temporary decline or deviation from an expected or accepted condition or state; a temporary falling or slipping from a previous standard: a lapse of justice.
  • layup — the way or position in which a thing is laid or lies: the lay of the land.
  • leaps — Plural form of leap.
  • leapt — a simple past tense and past participle of leap.
  • lempa — a river rising in NW El Salvador, flowing E and then S to the Pacific Ocean. About 200 miles (320 km) long.
  • lepal — (botany, obsolete) A sterile transformed stamen.
  • lepas — (zoology) Any of the genus Lepas of pedunculated barnacles found attached to floating timber, bottoms of ships, etc.; a goose barnacle.
  • leper — a person who has leprosy.
  • lepid — (obsolete) pleasant; jocose.
  • leppy — an unbranded or motherless calf; maverick.
  • lepra — Leprosy Relief Association
  • lepta — an aluminum coin of modern Greece until the euro was adopted, the 100th part of a drachma.
  • lepto — leptospirosis.
  • lepus — a small constellation in the S hemisphere lying between Orion and Columba
  • letup — cessation; pause; relief.
  • li po — a.d. 701?–762, Chinese poet of the Tang dynasty.
  • limpa — a rye bread made using brown sugar or molasses
  • limps — Plural form of limp.
  • lipan — a member of a group of Apache Indians who lived in the U.S. east of the Rio Grande.
  • lipid — any of a group of organic compounds that are greasy to the touch, insoluble in water, and soluble in alcohol and ether: lipids comprise the fats and other esters with analogous properties and constitute, with proteins and carbohydrates, the chief structural components of living cells.
  • lipin — any compound lipid which contains nitrogen
  • lipo- — fat or fatty
  • lippe — a former state in NW Germany: now part of North Rhine-Westphalia.
  • lippi — Filippino [fil-uh-pee-noh;; Italian fee-leep-pee-naw] /ˌfɪl əˈpi noʊ;; Italian ˌfi lipˈpi nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1457–1504, and his father, Fra Filippo [frah fi-lip-oh;; Italian frah fee-leep-paw] /frɑ fɪˈlɪp oʊ;; Italian frɑ fiˈlip pɔ/ (Show IPA) or Fra Lippo [frah lip-oh;; Italian frah leep-paw] /frɑ ˈlɪp oʊ;; Italian frɑ ˈlip pɔ/ (Show IPA) 1406?–69, Italian painters.
  • lippy — having large or prominent lips.
  • lisps — Plural form of lisp.
  • loipe — a cross-country skiing track
  • loopn — (language, simulation)   A compiler, simulator, and associated source control for an object-oriented Petri net language developed by Charles Lakos <[email protected]> at the University of Tasmania. In LOOPN, a Petri net is an extension of a coloured timed Petri net. The extension means firstly that token types are classes. In other words, they consist of both data fields and functions, they can be declared by inheriting from other token types, and they can be used polymorphically. The object-oriented extensions also mean that module or subnet types are classes. LOOPN has been developed over a period of about five years at the University of Tasmania, where it has been used in teaching computer simulation and the modelling of network protocols.
  • loops — Lisp Object-Oriented Programming System
  • loopy — full of loops.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?