7-letter words that end in le
- crackle — If something crackles, it makes a rapid series of short, harsh noises.
- craddle — Misspelling of cradle.
- crankle — a bend or twist
- crapple — (obsolete) A claw.
- creeple — Obsolete form of cripple.
- cribble — a sieve
- crimple — to crumple, wrinkle, or curl
- cringle — an eye at the edge of a sail, usually formed from a thimble or grommet
- crinkle — If something crinkles or if you crinkle it, it becomes slightly creased or folded.
- cripple — A person with a physical disability or a serious permanent injury is sometimes referred to as a cripple.
- crizzle — To roughen on the surface.
- croodle — to coo
- cruddle — (obsolete) To curdle.
- crumble — If something crumbles, or if you crumble it, it breaks into a lot of small pieces.
- crumple — If you crumple something such as paper or cloth, or if it crumples, it is squashed and becomes full of untidy creases and folds.
- crunkle — (UK, obsolete, dialectal) To crumple.
- cubicle — A cubicle is a very small enclosed area, for example one where you can have a shower or change your clothes.
- cuittle — to wheedle; coax
- curable — If a disease or illness is curable, it can be cured.
- cuticle — Your cuticles are the skin at the base of each of your fingernails.
- dariole — a small cup-shaped mould used for making individual sweet or savoury dishes
- datable — Able to be dated to a particular time.
- daytale — the calculation of work or earnings on a daily basis
- debacle — A debacle is an event or attempt that is a complete failure.
- decuple — to increase by ten times
- delible — able to be deleted
- dentile — (zoology) A small tooth, like that of a saw.
- descale — to remove the hard deposit formed by chemicals in water from (a kettle, pipe, etc)
- diazole — any organic compound whose molecules contain a pentagonal ring of three carbon atoms and two nitrogen atoms, esp imidazole (1,3-diazole) or pyrazole (1,1–diazole)
- disable — make not work
- disiple — (language, DSP) A DSP language.
- distyle — having two columns.
- docible — Easily taught or managed; teachable.
- doghole — a squalid dwelling place
- dogpile — A mound of people, especially people who are fighting or celebrating.
- donable — available free from government surpluses: Needy people in the program were eligible for donable foods such as beans and peas.
- dowable — subject to the provision of a dower: dowable land.
- drabble — Margaret, born 1939, English novelist.
- draggle — to soil by dragging over damp ground or in mud.
- dribble — to fall or flow in drops or small quantities; trickle.
- drizzle — to rain gently and steadily in fine drops; sprinkle: It drizzled throughout the night.
- dropple — a trickle
- drumble — to be inactive or sluggish
- dryable — Which can be dried.
- ductile — (of a metal) able to be drawn out into a thin wire.
- ductule — a small duct.
- dupable — a person who is easily deceived or fooled; gull.
- durable — able to resist wear, decay, etc., well; lasting; enduring.
- duruflé — Maurice (mɔris). 1902–86, French composer and organist, best known for his Requiem (1947)
- dwindle — to become smaller and smaller; shrink; waste away: His vast fortune has dwindled away.