7-letter words that end in ell
- outsell — to exceed in volume of sales; sell more than: He outsells all our other salespeople.
- outtell — to outdo in telling; surpass in effect: so ridiculous as to outtell any comment.
- outwell — (archaic, intransitive) To well outward; to issue forth.
- outyell — to yell louder or longer than
- parnell — Charles Stewart, 1846–91, Irish political leader.
- pennell — Joseph, 1860–1926, U.S. etcher, illustrator, and writer.
- presell — to sell in advance, as before manufacture or construction: to presell a planned house.
- pretell — to predict
- purcell — Edward Mills [milz] /mɪlz/ (Show IPA), 1912–97, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1952.
- rendell — Ruth (Barbara), Baroness. 1930–2015, British crime writer: author of detective novels, such as Wolf to the Slaughter (1967), and psychological thrillers, such as The Lake of Darkness (1980) and (under the name Barbara Vine) A Fatal Inversion (1987) and The Chimney Sweeper's Boy (1998)
- respell — to spell again or anew.
- roswell — a city in SE New Mexico.
- russell — Bertrand (Arthur William), 3rd Earl, 1872–1970, English philosopher, mathematician, and author: Nobel Prize in literature 1950.
- schnell — a German word meaning quick
- sitwell — Dame Edith, 1887–1964, English poet and critic.
- slidell — a town in SE Louisiana.
- subcell — a cell within a larger cell
- tarbell — Ida Minerva, 1857–1944, U.S. author.
- terrell — a city in NE Texas.
- tickell — Thomas, 1686–1740, English poet and translator.
- unshell — to remove or liberate from or as from a shell.
- unspell — to break (a spell)
- up-sell — to attempt to sell a customer (additional or more expensive goods or services)
- upswell — to swell up or cause to swell up
- wendell — a male given name.
- z shell — (zsh) 1. sh with list processing and database enhancements. Version 2.1.o (before 1995-10-30). 2. A Unix command interpreter shell by Paul Falstad <[email protected]> some time before 1993-03-23. It is similar to, but not completely compatible with, ksh, with many additions to please csh users and some tcsh features. zsh supports editing of multi-line commands in a single buffer; variable editing; a command buffer stack; recursive globbing; manipulation of arrays; and spelling correction. zsh uses GNU autoconf so should compile and run on any modern version of UNIX, and many not-so-modern.