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6-letter words containing l

  • ashlar — a block of hewn stone with straight edges for use in building
  • ashler — Masonry. a squared building stone cut more or less true on all faces adjacent to those of other stones so as to permit very thin mortar joints. such stones collectively. masonry made of them.
  • ashley — Jack, Baron. 1922–2012, British Labour politician and campaigner for deaf and disabled people
  • aslake — to weaken or make (a thing) less intense
  • aslant — at a slant
  • aslaug — daughter of Brynhild and Sigurd, wife of Ragnar Lodbrok.
  • asleep — Someone who is asleep is sleeping.
  • aslope — sloping
  • aslosh — submerged or deluged with or as with water
  • assail — If someone assails you, they criticize you strongly.
  • assoil — to absolve; set free
  • astely — the lack of a central cylinder or stele
  • astral — Astral means relating to the stars.
  • aswell — Archaic spelling of as well.
  • aswirl — whirling
  • asylee — a person who is granted asylum
  • asylum — If a government gives a person from another country asylum, they allow them to stay, usually because they are unable to return home safely for political reasons.
  • at all — You use at all at the end of a clause to give emphasis in negative statements, conditional clauses, and questions.
  • at vol — atomic volume
  • atabal — a drum played by the Moorish people of N Africa
  • atelic — showing an action or happening as being unfinished
  • athlon — (hardware)   (K7) AMD's 7th generation x86 processor, released in June 1999. Athlon uses a Slot A motherboard and is not compatible with Slot 1 motherboards.
  • atlatl — a wooden implement used to throw a spear or similar weapon at a greater speed or distance as used by Native Americans
  • atokal — characterized by being non-sexual or creating offspring that are not sexual
  • atolls — Plural form of atoll.
  • atonal — Atonal music is music that is not written or played in any key or system of scales.
  • atrial — Architecture. Also called cavaedium. the main or central room of an ancient Roman house, open to the sky at the center and usually having a pool for the collection of rain water. a courtyard, flanked or surrounded by porticoes, in front of an early or medieval Christian church. a skylit central court in a contemporary building or house.
  • attila — ?406–453 ad, king of the Huns, who devastated much of the Roman Empire, invaded Gaul in 451 ad, but was defeated by the Romans and Visigoths at Châlons-sur-Marne
  • attlee — Clement Richard, 1st Earl Attlee. 1883–1967, British statesman; prime minister (1945–51); leader of the Labour party (1935–55). His government instituted the welfare state, with extensive nationalization
  • atweel — surely.
  • au vol — a cry used to encourage a hawk to fly.
  • audial — of or relating to sound and the sense of hearing
  • audile — a person who possesses a faculty for auditory imagery that is more distinct than his visual or other imagery
  • auklet — any of various small auks of the genera Aethia and Ptychoramphus
  • aulard — François Victor Alphonse [frahn-swa veek-tawr al-fawns] /frɑ̃ˈswa vikˈtɔr alˈfɔ̃s/ (Show IPA), 1849–1928, French historian.
  • aulder — old.
  • auntly — of or like an aunt
  • auriol — Vincent (vɛ̃sɑ̃). 1884–1966, French statesman; president of the Fourth Republic (1947–54)
  • avails — to be of use or value to; profit; advantage: All our efforts availed us little in trying to effect a change.
  • avalon — an island paradise in the western seas: in Arthurian legend it is where King Arthur was taken after he was mortally wounded
  • averil — a male given name.
  • avidly — showing great enthusiasm for or interest in: an avid moviegoer. Synonyms: enthusiastic, ardent, keen; devoted, dedicated; zealous, fanatic. Antonyms: indifferent, apathetic; reluctant.
  • aviles — a port in Asturias, NW Spain, on the Bay of Biscay.
  • avital — relating to a grandfather or ancestor
  • avlona — former name of Vlorë.
  • avowal — open acknowledgment or declaration
  • avulse — to remove or take away by force
  • aweful — Misspelling of awful.
  • awfull — Archaic form of awful.
  • awheel — on wheels
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