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7-letter words that end in le

  • salable — subject to or suitable for sale; readily sold: The books were sent back by the store in salable condition.
  • sanicle — any plant belonging to the genus Sanicula, of the parsley family, as S. marilandica, of America, used in medicine.
  • savable — to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning.
  • sayable — of the sort that can be said or spoken; utterable: He felt a great deal that was not sayable.
  • scabble — to shape or dress (stone) roughly.
  • scamble — a long bench used in a farm kitchen
  • scantle — a small or scant amount
  • scapple — to shape (stone, timber, etc) into a plane in a rough or unfinished manner
  • scheele — Karl Wilhelm [kahrl vil-helm] /kɑrl ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1742–86, Swedish chemist.
  • schiele — Egon [ey-gawn] /ˈeɪ gɔn/ (Show IPA), 1890–1918, Austrian expressionist painter.
  • scroyle — a wretch or a mean or unfortunate person
  • scruple — a moral or ethical consideration or standard that acts as a restraining force or inhibits certain actions.
  • scuddle — to scuttle
  • scuffle — to struggle or fight in a rough, confused manner.
  • scumble — to soften (the color or tone of a painted area) by overlaying parts with opaque or semiopaque color applied thinly and lightly with an almost dry brush.
  • scuttle — Nautical. a small hatch or port in the deck, side, or bottom of a vessel. a cover for this.
  • scytale — a tool used to transmit secret messages by way of wrapping a strip of leather around a cylinder and writing on it. The leather is then unwound and must be wrapped around a cylinder of the same size to read the message. Used by the Ancient Greeks, particularly the Spartans
  • seakale — European coastal plant
  • seattle — (Seatlh) c1790–1866, Suquamish leader: Seattle, Washington, named after him.
  • sectile — capable of being cut smoothly with a knife.
  • seeable — to perceive with the eyes; look at.
  • sensile — capable of feeling; sensitive; capable of perceiving; sentient
  • servile — slavishly submissive or obsequious; fawning: servile flatterers.
  • sessile — Botany. attached by the base, or without any distinct projecting support, as a leaf issuing directly from the stem.
  • seville — a port in SW Spain, on the Guadalquivir River: site of the Alcazar; cathedral.
  • sewable — capable of being fastened or enclosed by stitches
  • sextile — Astronomy. noting or pertaining to the aspect or position of two heavenly bodies when 60° distant from each other.
  • sexwale — Tokyo. full name Mosima Gabriel Sexwale. born 1953; South African political activist and businessman
  • shabble — a type of curved or crooked sword or sabre
  • shackle — a ring or other fastening, as of iron, for securing the wrist, ankle, etc.; fetter.
  • shamble — a shambling gait.
  • sheeple — people who tend to follow the majority in matters of opinion, taste, etc
  • shingle — small, waterworn stones or pebbles such as lie in loose sheets or beds on a beach.
  • shizzle — a form of slang popularized by US rap musicians in which the trailing syllables of certain words are replaced by the suffix -izzle
  • shoggle — to shake or joggle
  • shoogle — to shake, sway, or rock back and forth
  • shottle — a small drawer in a chest for keeping money and small or special things
  • shuffle — to walk without lifting the feet or with clumsy steps and a shambling gait.
  • shuttle — a device in a loom for passing or shooting the weft thread through the shed from one side of the web to the other, usually consisting of a boat-shaped piece of wood containing a bobbin on which the weft thread is wound.
  • sibylle — a female given name.
  • silicle — a short silique.
  • sithole — Ndabaningi (əndabaˈnɪŋɡɪ). 1920–2000, Zimbabwean clergyman and politician; leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union (1963–74). He was one of the negotiators of the internal settlement (1978) to pave the way for Black majority rule in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
  • sizable — of considerable size; fairly large: He inherited a sizable fortune.
  • skatole — a white, crystalline, watersoluble solid, C 9 H 9 N, having a strong, fecal odor: used chiefly as a fixative in the manufacture of perfume.
  • skiffle — knob (def 7).
  • skittleskittles, (used with a singular verb) ninepins in which a wooden ball or disk is used to knock down the pins.
  • smittle — (of a disease) infectious
  • smuggle — to import or export (goods) secretly, in violation of the law, especially without payment of legal duty.
  • snaffle — Also called snaffle bit. a bit, usually jointed in the middle and without a curb, with a large ring at each end to which a rein and cheek strap are attached.
  • sniffle — to sniff repeatedly, as from a head cold or in repressing tears: She sniffled woefully.
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