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9-letter words containing lan

  • implanter — Someone or something that implants.
  • inbalance — Alternative spelling of imbalance.
  • ingerland — a jocular spelling of England, as pronounced in the chants of sports, esp football, supporters
  • inhalants — Plural form of inhalant.
  • inoculant — inoculum.
  • interclan — a group of families or households, as among the Scottish Highlanders, the heads of which claim descent from a common ancestor: the Mackenzie clan.
  • islanders — Plural form of islander.
  • jalandhar — a city in N Punjab, in NW India.
  • jet plane — an airplane moved by jet propulsion.
  • jubilance — showing great joy, satisfaction, or triumph; rejoicing; exultant: the cheers of the jubilant victors; the jubilant climax of his symphony.
  • jubilancy — (rare) Jubilation.
  • jutlander — a peninsula comprising the continental portion of Denmark: naval battle between the British and German fleets was fought west of this peninsula 1916. 11,441 sq. mi. (29,630 sq. km).
  • kalanchoe — any of several chiefly African and Asian succulent plants or shrubs belonging to the genus Kalanchoe, of the stonecrop family, having mostly opposite leaves and branching clusters of flowers.
  • lancaster — the English royal family that reigned 1399–1461, descended from John of Gaunt (Duke of Lancaster), and that included Henry IV, Henry V, and Henry VI. Compare York (def 1).
  • lancejack — a lance corporal
  • lancelets — Plural form of lancelet.
  • lanceolar — (botany) lanceolate.
  • lancewood — the tough, elastic wood of any of various trees, especially Oxandra lanceolata, of tropical America, used for carriage shafts, cabinetwork, etc.
  • lanciform — shaped like a lance: lanciform windows.
  • lancinate — to stab or pierce.
  • land bank — a banking association that engages in the financing of transactions in real property, especially in agricultural land.
  • land crab — any of several crabs, especially of the family Gecarcinidae, that live chiefly upon land, returning to the sea to breed.
  • land girl — a girl or woman who does farm work, esp in wartime
  • land grab — the seizing of land by a nation, state, or organization, especially illegally, underhandedly, or unfairly.
  • land lane — (in an ice floe) an opening that leads toward a shore.
  • land line — a circuit of wire or cable connecting two ground locations.
  • land mass — geography: area of land
  • land mine — an explosive charge concealed just under the surface of the ground or of a roadway, designed to be detonated by pressure, proximity of a vehicle or person, etc.
  • land rail — corn crake.
  • land rain — a steady, heavy rain.
  • land wind — land breeze.
  • land with — to give to, so as to put in difficulties; cause to be burdened with
  • land-mass — a part of the continental crust above sea level having a distinct identity, as a continent or large island.
  • land-poor — in need of ready money while owning much land.
  • land-wind — a wind that comes from the land
  • landaulet — an automobile having a convertible top for the back seat, with the front seat either roofed or open.
  • landboard — a narrow board, with wheels larger than those on a skateboard, usually ridden while standing
  • landdrost — the chief magistrate of a district
  • landfalls — Plural form of landfall.
  • landfills — Plural form of landfill.
  • landforce — a body of people trained for land warfare
  • landforms — a specific geomorphic feature on the surface of the earth, ranging from large-scale features such as plains, plateaus, and mountains to minor features such as hills, valleys, and alluvial fans.
  • landgrave — (in medieval Germany) a count having jurisdiction over a large territory.
  • landlines — Plural form of landline.
  • landloper — a wanderer, vagrant, or adventurer.
  • landlords — Plural form of landlord.
  • landmarks — Plural form of landmark.
  • landmines — Plural form of landmine.
  • landowner — an owner or proprietor of land.
  • landowska — Wanda [won-duh;; Polish vahn-dah] /ˈwɒn də;; Polish ˈvɑn dɑ/ (Show IPA), 1879–1959, Polish harpsichordist, in the U.S. after 1940.
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