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4-letter words containing ll

  • loll — to recline or lean in a relaxed, lazy, or indolent manner; lounge: to loll on a sofa.
  • lull — to put to sleep or rest by soothing means: to lull a child by singing.
  • mall — Also called shopping mall. a large retail complex containing a variety of stores and often restaurants and other business establishments housed in a series of connected or adjacent buildings or in a single large building. Compare shopping center.
  • mell — to beat with a mallet; hammer.
  • mill — Arithmetic and Logic Unit
  • mlle — Mademoiselle
  • moll — a female given name.
  • mull — to study or ruminate; ponder.
  • nall — (obsolete, UK, dialect) An awl.
  • nellEleanor ("Nell") 1650–87, English actress: mistress of Charles II.
  • nill — to be unwilling: will he, nill he.
  • noll — (now UK regional) The head, especially the top of the head. (from 8th c.).
  • null — without value, effect, consequence, or significance.
  • olla — a pot, especially an earthen pot for holding water, cooking, etc.
  • pall — a cloth, often of velvet, for spreading over a coffin, bier, or tomb.
  • pell — the hide or skin of an animal
  • pill — a small globular or rounded mass of medicinal substance, usually covered with a hard coating, that is to be swallowed whole.
  • poll — polly.
  • pull — pull media
  • rill — any of certain long, narrow, straight or sinuous trenches or valleys observed on the surface of the moon.
  • roll — to move along a surface by revolving or turning over and over, as a ball or a wheel.
  • sell — to transfer (goods) to or render (services) for another in exchange for money; dispose of to a purchaser for a price: He sold the car to me for $1000.
  • sillMount, a mountain in E central California, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. 14,153 feet (4314 meters).
  • tall — having a relatively great height; of more than average stature: a tall woman; tall grass.
  • tell — to give an account or narrative of; narrate; relate (a story, tale, etc.): to tell the story of Lincoln's childhood.
  • till — up to the time of; until: to fight till death.
  • toll — the act of tolling a bell.
  • tull — Jethro (ˈdʒɛθrəʊ). 1674–1741, English agriculturalist, who invented the seed drill
  • vell — a salted calf's stomach, used in cheese making
  • vhll — Very-High-Level Language. A bondage-and-discipline language that the speaker happens to like; Prolog and Backus's FP are often called VHLLs.
  • vill — a territorial division under the feudal system; township.
  • wall — any of various permanent upright constructions having a length much greater than the thickness and presenting a continuous surface except where pierced by doors, windows, etc.: used for shelter, protection, or privacy, or to subdivide interior space, to support floors, roofs, or the like, to retain earth, to fence in an area, etc.
  • wbll — West Bend Little League
  • wcll — Western Collegiate Lacrosse League
  • well — in a good or satisfactory manner: Business is going well.
  • willWallace, 1875–1959, U.S. journalist and humorist.
  • wkll — Western Kansas Liberty League
  • wllb — West Little League Baseball
  • woll — Obsolete form of will.
  • wpll — West Point Little League
  • wull — West University Little League
  • wwll — West Windsor Little League
  • yall — Alternative form of y'all.
  • yell — to cry out or speak with a strong, loud, clear sound; shout: He always yells when he is angry.
  • yill — ale.
  • zill — One of a set of small finger cymbals used in belly dancing and similar performances.
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