These are the meanings of the letters AILLT when you unscramble them.
- Alit ()
of Alight
- lati (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Lilt (n.)
A lively song or dance; a cheerful tune.
- Lilt (n.)
Animated, brisk motion; spirited rhythm; sprightliness.
- Lilt (v. i.)
To do anything with animation and quickness, as to skip, fly, or hop.
- Lilt (v. i.)
To sing cheerfully.
- Lilt (v. t.)
To utter with spirit, animation, or gayety; to sing with spirit and liveliness.
- Tail (a.)
Limited; abridged; reduced; curtailed; as, estate tail.
- Tail (n.)
A downy or feathery appendage to certain achenes. It is formed of the permanent elongated style.
- Tail (n.)
A portion of an incision, at its beginning or end, which does not go through the whole thickness of the skin, and is more painful than a complete incision; -- called also tailing.
- Tail (n.)
A rope spliced to the strap of a block, by which it may be lashed to anything.
- Tail (n.)
A train or company of attendants; a retinue.
- Tail (n.)
Any long, flexible terminal appendage; whatever resembles, in shape or position, the tail of an animal, as a catkin.
- Tail (n.)
Hence, the back, last, lower, or inferior part of anything, -- as opposed to the head, or the superior part.
- Tail (n.)
Limitation; abridgment.
- Tail (n.)
One of the strips at the end of a bandage formed by splitting the bandage one or more times.
- Tail (n.)
Same as Tailing, 4.
- Tail (n.)
See Tailing, n., 5.
- Tail (n.)
The bottom or lower portion of a member or part, as a slate or tile.
- Tail (n.)
The distal tendon of a muscle.
- Tail (n.)
The part of a note which runs perpendicularly upward or downward from the head; the stem.
- Tail (n.)
The side of a coin opposite to that which bears the head, effigy, or date; the reverse; -- rarely used except in the expression \"heads or tails,\" employed when a coin is thrown up for the purpose of deciding some point by its fall.
- Tail (n.)
The terminal, and usually flexible, posterior appendage of an animal.
- Tail (v. i.)
To hold by the end; -- said of a timber when it rests upon a wall or other support; -- with in or into.
- Tail (v. i.)
To swing with the stern in a certain direction; -- said of a vessel at anchor; as, this vessel tails down stream.
- Tail (v. t.)
To follow or hang to, like a tail; to be attached closely to, as that which can not be evaded.
- Tail (v. t.)
To pull or draw by the tail.
- Tali (pl. )
of Talus
- Tall (superl.)
Brave; bold; courageous.
- Tall (superl.)
Fine; splendid; excellent; also, extravagant; excessive.
- Tall (superl.)
High in stature; having a considerable, or an unusual, extension upward; long and comparatively slender; having the diameter or lateral extent small in proportion to the height; as, a tall person, tree, or mast.
- Till (conj.)
As far as; up to the place or degree that; especially, up to the time that; that is, to the time specified in the sentence or clause following; until.
- Till (n.)
A deposit of clay, sand, and gravel, without lamination, formed in a glacier valley by means of the waters derived from the melting glaciers; -- sometimes applied to alluvium of an upper river terrace, when not laminated, and appearing as if formed in the same manner.
- Till (n.)
A drawer.
- Till (n.)
A kind of coarse, obdurate land.
- Till (n.)
A money drawer in a shop or store.
- Till (n.)
A tray or drawer in a chest.
- Till (n.)
A vetch; a tare.
- Till (prep.)
To plow and prepare for seed, and to sow, dress, raise crops from, etc., to cultivate; as, to till the earth, a field, a farm.
- Till (prep.)
To prepare; to get.
- Till (v. i.)
To cultivate land.
- Till (v. t.)
To; unto; up to; as far as; until; -- now used only in respect to time, but formerly, also, of place, degree, etc., and still so used in Scotland and in parts of England and Ireland; as, I worked till four o'clock; I will wait till next week.