| FILMILY | • filmily adv. In a filmy manner. • FILMY adv. thin, delicate. |
| LIMAILS | • LIMAIL n. the dust and filings of metal, also LEMEL. |
| LIMELIT | • limelit v. Simple past tense and past participle of limelight. • LIMELIGHT v. to light with limelight. |
| LIMINAL | • liminal adj. Of or pertaining to an entrance or threshold. • liminal adj. Of or pertaining to a beginning or first stage of a process. • LIMINAL adj. of or relating to a sensory threshold; barely perceptible. |
| MILFOIL | • milfoil n. Common yarrow, Achillea millefolium. • milfoil n. Any of several similar pungent Eurasian herbs, of the genus Achillea. • milfoil n. Any plants of the genus Myriophyllum; water milfoil. |
| MILKILY | • milkily adv. In the manner of milk. • MILKY adv. like milk. |
| MILLIER | • millier n. (Archaic, rare) Synonym of metric ton, 1000 kg. • MILLIER n. a unit of weight. |
| MILLIES | • millies n. Plural of millie. • MILLIE n. (Irish) a young working-class woman. |
| MILLIME | • millime n. A unit of currency equal to one thousandth of a Tunisian dinar. • millime n. (Historical) A unit of currency equal to one thousandth of an Egyptian pound. • MILLIME n. a monetary unit of Tunisia. |
| MILLINE | • milline n. A unit of advertising space or circulation equal to one agate line in a million copies of a publication. • MILLINE n. a unit of advertising space. |
| MILLING | • milling n. A grinding process using a mill. • milling n. The series of notches around the edge of a coin during minting so that it can be told if some of the… • milling n. A circular or random motion of a herd or a crowd. |
| MILLION | • million num. (Long and short scales) The cardinal number 1,000,000: 106; a thousand thousand. • million num. (Colloquial, hyperbolic) An unspecified very large number. • MILLION n. a thousand thousand. |
| MISBILL | • misbill v. To bill incorrectly. • MISBILL v. to bill wrongly. |
| SLIMILY | • slimily adv. In a slimy manner. • SLIMY adv. resembling slime. |
| WILLIAM | • William prop.n. A male given name from the Germanic languages popular since the Norman Conquest. • William prop.n. A surname. • WILLIAM n. as in sweet william, a flowering plant. |