➠ Words with l
List contains 133543 Words that "l" contain.
- - Lamenting word
- - Lamentation word
- - Word with a sigh
- - Wistful word
- - Word for Yorick
- - Commiserator's word
- - Regretful word
- - Word of lament
- - Sorrowful word
- - Ruer's word
- - Word that's dramatically sighed
- - Word of resignation
- - Word wailed in woe
- - Word of pity
- - Word meaning "That's too bad"
- - Word for poor Yorick
- - Sigher's word
- - Worrier's word
- - Word after a loss
- - Sighing word
- - First word of "Greensleeves"
- - Worry word
- - Word of grief
- - Word of despair
- - Word from the weary
- - Word following a sigh
- - Troubled word
- - Rejected suitor's word, perhaps
- - Poor Yorick's word
- - Word to a skull, mayhaps?
- - Word sometimes said with a tear
- - Word of distress
- - Word of concern
- - Word from the woebegone
- - Word expressing pity
- - Woe word
- - Sympathetic word
- - Old-world word of woe
- - Dramatically sighed word
- - Worrywart's word
- - World-weary one's word
- - Word that may precede sad news
- - Word spoken with a sigh
- - Word spoken with a hand on one's forehead, maybe
- - Word spoken by Hamlet
- - Word said with a tear, maybe
- - Word said with a tear
- - Word said with a regretful sigh
- - Word said while wringing one's hands
- - Word said after a loss, perhaps
- - Word repeated in "Elegy in a Country Churchyard"
- - Word re poor Yorick
- - Word often sighed
- - Word often said with a sigh
- - Word of rue
- - Word of lament for "poor Yorick"
- - Word of discouragement
- - Word in reference to Yorick
- - Word in a Stein line
- - Word from the Latin for "weary"
- - Word from Old French for "wretched"
- - Word from Hamlet while holding a skull
- - Word from Hamlet
- - Word bespeaking woe
- - Word before poor Yorick
- - Word after a sigh
- - Word about Yorick
- - Wistful one's word
- - Unfortunately grabbed by dental assistant
- - "sadly, 'tis not to be"
- - Sorrowful exclamation echoed by a girl
- - "..., poor Yorick!": Shak.
- - ...., poor Yorick
- - Most of all when succeeding, unfortunately
- - 'That's most unfortunate'
- - Melancholy sigh
- - Unfortunately a final ended early
- - A girl's incomplete expression of regret
- - A girl is too short, sad to say
- - Sadly, a girl loses her last son
- - Regrettably, American girl's lost one son
- - '......, poor Yorick', quotation from Hamlet
- - "... the day!" (exclamation from "Twelfth Night")
- - "Such a pity" cry
- - "It wasn't to be"
- - Celebrations not beginning, sadly
- - Alack the day!
- - Lamentable remark
- - "welp ..."
- - old-fashioned "dammit"
- - Unfortunately raised in Faisalabad
- - hamlet's "oh no!"
- - Taking most of the salad back with a regretful expression
- - Cest la vie
- - Woeful cry from a girl snubbed
- - A young girl's in hearing, I'm sorry to say
- - start of a plaint
- - "it's a shame, but ..."
- - An expression of regret in the general assembly
- - A girl scratching back sadly
- - Griever's expression
- - a girl isn't finished, sadly
- - "Alackaday!"
- - Unfortunately! (arch)
- - formal "it be like that sometimes"
- - "Too bad for little old me"
- - "What terrible news!," in quaint language
- - Unfortunately raised in Crossalaght
- - Lead-in to some regrets
- - A young woman has had bottom pinched, sadly
- - "Such an unfortunate situation!"
- - unfortunately false name lacks one
- - by bad luck; used to express unhappiness, pity, or concern
- - Quaint expression of pity
- - Uneven railways removed, sadly
- - "...., i am not coop'd here for defence!": shak.
- - Hamlet's expression
- - Melodramatic cry of dismay
- - "Too bad for me, the old poet"
- - "... poor Romeo!": Shak.
- - "‘Tis a bummer"
- - "How unfortunate!" old-style
- - Melodramatic shout
- - Expression of lament
- - "That's really too bad"
- - Where a cobbler may be, missing Times unfortunately
- - woeful cry from a girl, we hear
- - "it was not to be" preceder
- - ...but what it cannot do?
- - "what a crying shame!"
- - Regrettably, a girl can only be heard
- - "Too bad for me," in 1729
- - Henry Howard's "..., so all things now do hold their peace"
- - Central Asian expression of sadness
- - "What a shame!", as Shakespeare would write it
- - Railways suffering regular cuts unfortunately
- - cry of sorrow, back in the day
- - "Woe is me!" exclamation
- - Unfortunately raised in Los Alamos
- - Quaint I have sad news …
- - Area final curtailed, sadly
- - woeful cry on stage
- - Dear me! (arch)
- - Quaint expression of regret
- - Oh man quaintly
- - 'It's too bad,' old-style
- - Liberal placed in sober group ultimately drinks, regrettably
- - "Woe to us!"
- - "That's a real shame"
- - some of the political assassinations, unfortunately
- - Quaint expression of disappointment
- - Exclamation after a sigh
- - "Sorry to say, but ..."
- - Assumed name lacks heart, unfortunately
- - " 'tis unfortunate"
- - sadly, to the bard
- - unfortunately needing a contribution from local associations
- - "How disappointing!"
- - "Oh, dear"(Used today)
- - End of a Stein line
- - Cry of sorrow
- - Sighed cry
- - Sad cry
- - Alack's partner
- - Cry for what might have been
- - "Sustineo ......," U.S.A.F. motto
- - Theatrical lament
- - Shakespearean "Bummer!"
- - Lackaday!
- - Expression of pity
- - Dignified "shucks!"
- - Opposite of "Hooray!"
- - Woeful sigh
- - Sound of sorrow
- - Lamenting cry
- - Lament for Yorick
- - Despondent comment
- - Start of a phrase of regret
- - Shakespeare's "Poor me!"
- - Resigned remark
- - Interjection of dejection
- - Exclamation of woe
- - Exclamation of regret
- - Alack partner
- - "...... and alack!" (old exclamation)
- - Sad comment
- - Poetic sigh
- - Hamlet's lament
- - Cry said with a sigh
- - "...., poor Yorick!": Hamlet
- - Woeful comment
- - Sighed interjection
- - Sighed comment
- - Sigh of resignation
- - Sigh of regret
- - Sigh of pity
- - Sigh for Yorick
- - Sad statement
- - Melodramatic remark
- - Melodramatic moan
- - Lament for "poor Yorick"
- - It's said pitifully
- - How Dumbledore would say "Sadly ..."
- - Hamlet lament
- - Forlorn cry
- - Expression of unhappiness
- - Expression of resignation
- - Dramatic wail
- - Cry of pity
- - Cry for "poor Yorick"
- - Cry after failing
- - "Twas not to be" preceder
- - "Oh, what a world!"
- - "For pity's sake!"
- - "Ah, those were the days"
- - "......, poor Yorick!" (line from "Hamlet")
- - Woeful interjection
- - Woe betide
- - Start of a sad tale
- - Sorrowful utterance
- - Sorrowful interjection
- - Sigh of woe
- - Sigh of sorrow
- - Sad exclamation
- - Sad disyllable
- - Sad commentary
- - Rueful utterance
- - Rueful sigh
- - Remark re Yorick
- - Reaction re Yorick
- - Prelude to bad news
- - Poet's plaint
- - Pitying cry
- - Pitiful exclamation
- - Old-style "Bummer!"
- - Lamenter's comment
- - Exclamation of grief
- - End of a well-known Stein line
- - Despairing utterance
- - Cry of the sorrowful
- - Cry from the heartbroken
- - "Woe be unto me!"
- - "Sad to say," to Shakespeare
- - "Poor me," long ago
- - "Pigeons on the grass ......": Stein
- - "Oh, what a terrible shame!"
- - "Oh, dear me!"
- - "I wish it weren't so"
- - "How regrettable!"
- - "Bummer!" to Shakespeare
- - "Bummer!" formally
- - "Bummer," more formally
- - "......, Time stays, we go": Dobson
- - "......, how love can trifle with itself!": Shak.
- - "......, 'tis true I have gone here and there": Shak.
- - 'Sad to tell, ...'
- - 'Ah, so sad'
- - "Curse the luck!"
- - Yukon's neighbor: Abbr.
- - Woeful utterance
- - Woeful response
- - Woe's me!
- - Wistful utterance
- - Wistful intro
- - Whoopee opposite?
- - Whittier plaint
- - What a Shakespeare character says instead of "Bummer!"
- - Well-a-day!
- - Wail of woe
- - Home to the international headquarters of the Interpol
- - Capital city of Rhone
- - French city known as the gastronomic capital of the world
- - City located where the Saône and Rhône meet
- - City where you'll find bouchon restaurants
- - Where the Rhône and Saône meet
- - River port, capital of the Rhône department
- - Rhone/Saône city
- - Large city of France: Fr.
- - City where the Saône joins the Rhône
- - City on the Rhône and Saône
- - City on the Rhône
- - City of south-central France
- - City near Beaujolais
- - City home to Interpol's headquarters
- - City at the confluence of the Saône and Rhône
- - Actress in "The Flim Flam Man"
- - City on the Saone
- - Where the Rhone meets the Saone
- - City near Saint-Étienne
- - French city on the Rhone River
- - Show up in Fontenoy-le-Ch?teau, a city in France
- - French silk city
- - City north of Marseille
- - Interpol city
- - Silk-producing city in France
- - Large city of France
- - -- King of Arms, title of the chief herald in Scotland
- - Tour métallique de Fourvière city
- - City on the RhГґne
- - Opéra Nouvel city
- - French city herald-in-chief
- - France's #3 city
- - City on the 40-Across
- - Interpol headquarters city
- - French city known for its cuisine
- - Largest city on the Rhone
- - City at the juncture of the Rhone and Saone rivers
- - French name for its city's herald
- - Where the Lumiere brothers invented the cinematograph
- - City near Grenoble
- - Large French city
- - Third-largest city in France
- - City at the confluence of the Rhône and Saône
- - Where the Lumières invented their movie camera
- - French city historically known for silk
- - City on the Rhne
- - City of central France
- - City on the Rhone and Saone
- - City northeast of St. Etienne
- - Rhône-Alpes city
- - City between Paris and Marseille
- - Where the Rhône meets the Saône
- - French city known for silk
- - Interpol's French headquarters city
- - Home of the international headquarters of Interpol
- - City about 200 miles from Marseille
- - Third-largest city of France
- - City divided into nine arrondissements
- - City near Saint-Exupéry International Airport
- - City south of Mâcon
- - French city once known for silk
- - Sight from the Rhône
- - Where Klaus Barbie headed the Gestapo
- - French city that co-hosted the 1990 World Chess Championship
- - Where the Rhone and the Saône meet
- - French city, to the French
- - City NW of Grenoble
- - Leading silk city of Europe
- - Where the Saône and Rhône meet
- - Fr. city, founded 43 B.C.
- - "The Night of the Iguana" actress Sue
- - Ville on the Rhone
- - Second largest city of France.
- - Rhone city
- - French cathedral city
- - City on the Rhône
- - French city
- - French city on the Rhone
- - City in France.
- - City of France
- - sue ..., actress who played the title role in 1962 film drama lolita
- - in which city are the headquarters of interpol?
- - William ........Mackenzie King
- - William ...... Phelps of Yale
- - She founded Mount Holyoke College
- - Saint-Exupéry's birthplace
- - Mount Holyoke founder Mary
- - Manitoba Premier Sterling
- - Holyoke founder Mary
- - Founder of Mount Holyoke College
- - Ben, Sue or Francis of films
- - Batesville, Ark.'s ...... College
- - Ampere's birthplace
- - 'Lolita' actress Sue
- - French home to Interpol
- - Interpol's French headquarters
- - Rhone metropolis
- - Site of France's annual Festival of Lights
- - Canadian George ........ ( First and only Olympic golf gold medalist )
- - Actress Sue
- - Home to French silk makers
- - Capital of Rhone
- - Second-largest metropolitan area in France
- - Capital of France's Rhone department
- - Interpol headquarters
- - Interpol home, locally
- - France's third most populous cité
- - Interpol command center site, locally
- - Lord ...... (overseer of Scottish heraldry)
- - "Lolita" star Sue
- - One of France's largest cities
- - Capital of Rhône department
- - Rhone's capital
- - Sue of "Lolita"
- - Certain ecumenical council site
- - Mary who founded Mount Holyoke College
- - Site of Interpol's headquarters
- - Ecumenical Council site
- - Rhône départment capital
- - French capital of gastronomy
- - "Lolita" actress
- - Mount Holyoke College founder
- - Actress Sue of "Lolita"
- - French silk center
- - Sue who played Lolita
- - Birthplace of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
- - Gastronomic capital of France
- - Center of French resistance in W.W. II
- - "Hell's Angels" star Ben
- - Scottish river