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7-letter words that end in p

  • outweep — to weep more or for a longer time than
  • outyelp — to outdo in yelping
  • overlap — to lap over (something else or each other); extend over and cover a part of; imbricate.
  • oversup — to eat or drink too much
  • overtip — to give too much money to (a waiter, etc) as a tip
  • overtop — to rise over or above the top of: a skyscraper that overtops all the other buildings.
  • pack up — a group of things wrapped or tied together for easy handling or carrying; a bundle, especially one to be carried on the back of an animal or a person: a mule pack; a hiker's pack.
  • paid-up — paid in full, as of the present or of a specified date: a paid-up membership.
  • pailisp — (language)   A parallel Lisp built on Scheme in 1986.
  • pair up — find a match for sb or sth
  • palmtop — a battery-powered computer small enough to fit in the palm of the hand.
  • palship — friendship
  • pandrop — a hard mint-flavoured sweet
  • parsnip — a plant, Pastinaca sativa, cultivated varieties of which have a large, whitish, edible root.
  • pass up — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • payslip — paper slip detailing wage payment
  • peg top — a child's spinning top, usually made of wood with a metal centre pin
  • peg-top — wide at the hips and narrowing to the ankle: peg-top trousers; peg-top skirts.
  • pent-up — confined; restrained; not vented or expressed; curbed: pent-up emotions; pent-up rage.
  • perk up — to become lively, cheerful, or vigorous, as after depression or sickness (usually followed by up): The patients all perked up when we played the piano for them.
  • phillip — a male given name.
  • pick up — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
  • pick-up — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
  • pile up — an assemblage of things laid or lying one upon the other: a pile of papers; a pile of bricks.
  • pile-up — an assemblage of things laid or lying one upon the other: a pile of papers; a pile of bricks.
  • pimp up — to make (someone or something, esp a car) more extravagantly decorated, as with flashy accessories, etc
  • pinesap — either of two parasitic or saprophytic plants of the genus Monotropa, especially the tawny or reddish M. hypopithys (false beechdrops) of eastern North America.
  • pipe up — a hollow cylinder of metal, wood, or other material, used for the conveyance of water, gas, steam, petroleum, etc.
  • piss-up — If a group of people have a piss-up, they drink a lot of alcohol.
  • pitprop — a support beam in a mine shaft
  • pkunzip — (tool, compression)   A program to unpack archives created by PKZIP, written by PKWARE, Inc. and released as shareware. Versions exist for MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows and Open VMS. PKUNZIP is no longer distributed, its functions having been incorporated into PKZIP.
  • play up — a dramatic composition or piece; drama.
  • plow up — to remove with a plow
  • pogonip — an ice fog that forms in the mountain valleys of the western U.S.
  • pony up — a small horse of any of several breeds, usually not higher at the shoulder than 14½ hands (58 in./146 cm).
  • pop-top — (of a can) having a top with a tab or ring that when pulled up or off exposes a precut hole or peels off the entire lid.
  • post up — display: a notice, etc.
  • potshop — a small tavern or public house
  • precoup — of or pertaining to the period before a coup
  • preship — a vessel, especially a large oceangoing one propelled by sails or engines.
  • prewrap — to enclose in something wound or folded about (often followed by up): She wrapped her head in a scarf.
  • procarp — (in red algae) a carpogonium with its associated cells.
  • prop up — support, steady
  • puff up — inflate, fill with air
  • pull up — the act of pulling or drawing.
  • pull-up — an exercise consisting of chinning oneself, as on a horizontal bar attached at each end to a doorpost.
  • pump up — an apparatus or machine for raising, driving, exhausting, or compressing fluids or gases by means of a piston, plunger, or set of rotating vanes.
  • push-up — an exercise in which a person, keeping a prone position with the hands palms down under the shoulders, the balls of the feet on the ground, and the back straight, pushes the body up and lets it down by an alternate straightening and bending of the arms.
  • rack up — ruin or destruction; wrack.
  • rake up — an agricultural implement with teeth or tines for gathering cut grass, hay, or the like or for smoothing the surface of the ground.
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