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5-letter words that end in l

  • fc-al — Fibre Channel-Arbitrated Loop.
  • fecal — of, relating to, or being feces.
  • femal — effeminate
  • feral — causing death; fatal.
  • fetal — of, relating to, or having the character of a fetus.
  • fidel — a male given name.
  • fidil — Based on "maps", generalised arrays whose index sets ("domains") are arbitrary D-dimensional sets. Domains are first-class objects and may be constructed by union, intersection, etc.
  • final — pertaining to or coming at the end; last in place, order, or time: the final meeting of the year.
  • flail — an instrument for threshing grain, consisting of a staff or handle to one end of which is attached a freely swinging stick or bar.
  • focal — of or relating to a focus.
  • foirl — Fiber Optic InterRepeater Link
  • forel — a slipcase for a book.
  • forml — 1.   (language)   Formal Object Role Modeling Language. 2.   (event)   Forth Modification Lab.
  • fosil — Fredette's Operating System Interface Language
  • frail — having delicate health; not robust; weak: My grandfather is rather frail now.
  • frill — a trimming, as a strip of cloth or lace, gathered at one edge and left loose at the other; ruffle.
  • frimlRudolf, 1881–1972, U.S. composer and pianist, born in Austria-Hungary.
  • fugal — of or relating to a fugue, or composed in the style of a fugue.
  • fusil — a light flintlock musket.
  • g-cal — gram calorie(s)
  • gabel — (UK, legal, obsolete) A rent, service, tribute, custom, tax, impost, or duty; an excise.
  • gavel — feudal rent or tribute.
  • gayal — an ox, Bibos frontalis, of southeastern Asia and the Malay Archipelago, sometimes considered to be a domesticated breed of the gaur.
  • gazel — Archaic form of gazelle.
  • gemel — a twin; one of a pair
  • genal — the cheek or side region of the head.
  • ghoul — an evil demon, originally of Muslim legend, supposed to feed on human beings, and especially to rob graves, prey on corpses, etc.
  • ghusl — (Islam) A full-body wash taken by Muslims to restore the body to a state of purity.
  • ghyll — (Scotland/Northern England) A ravine.
  • gibel — a carp of Europe and N Asia
  • gimel — the third letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
  • glial — Of or pertaining to glia.
  • gnarl — a knotty protuberance on a tree; knot.
  • gnoll — A usually evil and dog-like humanoid creature found in various forms in fantasy literature and video games.
  • godelKurt [kurt] /kɜrt/ (Show IPA), 1906–78, U.S. mathematician and logician, born in Austria-Hungary.
  • gogol — Nikolai Vasilievich [nik-uh-lahy vuh-seel-yuh-vich;; Russian nyi-kuh-lahy vuh-syee-lyi-vyich] /ˈnɪk əˌlaɪ vəˈsil yə vɪtʃ;; Russian nyɪ kʌˈlaɪ vʌˈsyi lyɪ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1809–52, Russian novelist, short-story writer, and playwright.
  • gomel — a city in SE Byelorussia (Belarus), on a tributary of the Dnieper.
  • goral — a short-horned goat antelope, Naemorhedus goral, of the mountainous regions of southeastern Asia: an endangered species.
  • gospl — Graphics-Oriented Signal Processing Language. A graphical DSP language for simulation.
  • goyal — A ravine or other depression.
  • graal — ("Grail") General Recursive Applicative and Algorithmic Language. FP with polyadic combinators. "Graal: A Functional Programming System with Uncurryfied Combinators and its Reduction Machine", P. Bellot in ESOP 86, G. Goos ed, LNCS 213, Springer 1986.
  • grail — (usually initial capital letter). Also called Holy Grail. a cup or chalice that in medieval legend was associated with unusual powers, especially the regeneration of life and, later, Christian purity, and was much sought after by medieval knights: identified with the cup used at the Last Supper and given to Joseph of Arimathea.
  • grill — a grating or openwork barrier, as for a gate, usually of metal and often of decorative design.
  • growl — to utter a deep guttural sound of anger or hostility: The dog growled at the mail carrier.
  • gruel — a light, usually thin, cooked cereal made by boiling meal, especially oatmeal, in water or milk.
  • gugel — A type of hood with a liripipe (a trailing point), popularly worn in medieval Germany.
  • gwawl — the rival of Pwyll for the hand of Rhiannon.
  • gymel — the technique, found in some medieval English music, of singing voice parts in parallel thirds.
  • gyral — gyratory.
  • hadal — of or relating to the greatest ocean depths, below approximately 20,000 feet (6500 meters).
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