We found 30 words by descrambling these letters PILLBUG

4 Letter Words Unscrambled From PILLBUG


3 Letter Words Unscrambled From PILLBUG


2 Letter Words Unscrambled From PILLBUG


More About The Unscrambled Letters in PILLBUG

Our word finder found 30 words from the 7 scrambled letters in B G I L L P U you searched for.

These valid words can be used in all popular word scramble games, including Scrabble, Words With Friends, and similar word games.

Furthermore, we grouped the unscrambled letters into the following categories:

What Can The Letters PILLBUG Mean ?

These are the meanings of the letters PILLBUG when you unscramble them.

  • Bill (n.)
    A beak, as of a bird, or sometimes of a turtle or other animal.
  • Bill (n.)
    A cutting instrument, with hook-shaped point, and fitted with a handle; -- used in pruning, etc.; a billhook. When short, called a hand bill, when long, a hedge bill.
  • Bill (n.)
    A declaration made in writing, stating some wrong the complainant has suffered from the defendant, or a fault committed by some person against a law.
  • Bill (n.)
    A form or draft of a law, presented to a legislature for enactment; a proposed or projected law.
  • Bill (n.)
    A paper, written or printed, and posted up or given away, to advertise something, as a lecture, a play, or the sale of goods; a placard; a poster; a handbill.
  • Bill (n.)
    A pickax, or mattock.
  • Bill (n.)
    A weapon of infantry, in the 14th and 15th centuries. A common form of bill consisted of a broad, heavy, double-edged, hook-shaped blade, having a short pike at the back and another at the top, and attached to the end of a long staff.
  • Bill (n.)
    A writing binding the signer or signers to pay a certain sum at a future day or on demand, with or without interest, as may be stated in the document.
  • Bill (n.)
    An account of goods sold, services rendered, or work done, with the price or charge; a statement of a creditor's claim, in gross or by items; as, a grocer's bill.
  • Bill (n.)
    Any paper, containing a statement of particulars; as, a bill of charges or expenditures; a weekly bill of mortality; a bill of fare, etc.
  • Bill (n.)
    One who wields a bill; a billman.
  • Bill (n.)
    The bell, or boom, of the bittern
  • Bill (n.)
    The extremity of the arm of an anchor; the point of or beyond the fluke.
  • Bill (v. i.)
    To join bills, as doves; to caress in fondness.
  • Bill (v. i.)
    To strike; to peck.
  • Bill (v. t.)
    To advertise by a bill or public notice.
  • Bill (v. t.)
    To charge or enter in a bill; as, to bill goods.
  • Bill (v. t.)
    To work upon ( as to dig, hoe, hack, or chop anything) with a bill.
  • blip (unknown)
    Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
  • Bull (a.)
    Of or pertaining to a bull; resembling a bull; male; large; fierce.
  • Bull (n.)
    A constellation of the zodiac between Aries and Gemini. It contains the Pleiades.
  • Bull (n.)
    One who operates in expectation of a rise in the price of stocks, or in order to effect such a rise. See 4th Bear, n., 5.
  • Bull (n.)
    One who, or that which, resembles a bull in character or action.
  • Bull (n.)
    Taurus, the second of the twelve signs of the zodiac.
  • Bull (n.)
    The male of any species of cattle (Bovidae); hence, the male of any large quadruped, as the elephant; also, the male of the whale.
  • Bull (v. i.)
    A grotesque blunder in language; an apparent congruity, but real incongruity, of ideas, contained in a form of expression; so called, perhaps, from the apparent incongruity between the dictatorial nature of the pope's bulls and his professions of humility.
  • Bull (v. i.)
    A letter, edict, or respect, of the pope, written in Gothic characters on rough parchment, sealed with a bulla, and dated \"a die Incarnationis,\" i. e., \"from the day of the Incarnation.\" See Apostolical brief, under Brief.
  • Bull (v. i.)
    A seal. See Bulla.
  • Bull (v. i.)
    To be in heat; to manifest sexual desire as cows do.
  • Bull (v. t.)
    To endeavor to raise the market price of; as, to bull railroad bonds; to bull stocks; to bull Lake Shore; to endeavor to raise prices in; as, to bull the market. See 1st Bull, n., 4.
  • Gill (n.)
    A leech.
  • Gill (n.)
    A measure of capacity, containing one fourth of a pint.
  • Gill (n.)
    A two-wheeled frame for transporting timber.
  • Gill (n.)
    A woody glen; a narrow valley containing a stream.
  • Gill (n.)
    A young woman; a sweetheart; a flirting or wanton girl.
  • Gill (n.)
    An organ for aquatic respiration; a branchia.
  • Gill (n.)
    Malt liquor medicated with ground ivy.
  • Gill (n.)
    One of the combs of closely ranged steel pins which divide the ribbons of flax fiber or wool into fewer parallel filaments.
  • Gill (n.)
    The flesh under or about the chin.
  • Gill (n.)
    The fleshy flap that hangs below the beak of a fowl; a wattle.
  • Gill (n.)
    The ground ivy (Nepeta Glechoma); -- called also gill over the ground, and other like names.
  • Gill (n.)
    The radiating, gill-shaped plates forming the under surface of a mushroom.
  • Glib (n.)
    A thick lock of hair, hanging over the eyes.
  • Glib (superl.)
    Smooth; slippery; as, ice is glib.
  • Glib (superl.)
    Speaking or spoken smoothly and with flippant rapidity; fluent; voluble; as, a glib tongue; a glib speech.
  • Glib (v. t.)
    To castrate; to geld; to emasculate.
  • Glib (v. t.)
    To make glib.
  • Gull (n.)
    A cheating or cheat; trick; fraud.
  • Gull (n.)
    One easily cheated; a dupe.
  • Gull (n.)
    One of many species of long-winged sea birds of the genus Larus and allied genera.
  • Gull (v. t.)
    To deceive; to cheat; to mislead; to trick; to defraud.
  • Gulp (n.)
    A disgorging.
  • Gulp (n.)
    The act of taking a large mouthful; a swallow, or as much as is awallowed at once.
  • Gulp (v. t.)
    To swallow eagerly, or in large draughts; to swallow up; to take down at one swallow.
  • iglu (unknown)
    Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
  • Pill (n.)
    A medicine in the form of a little ball, or small round mass, to be swallowed whole.
  • Pill (n.)
    Figuratively, something offensive or nauseous which must be accepted or endured.
  • Pill (n.)
    The peel or skin.
  • Pill (v. i.)
    To be peeled; to peel off in flakes.
  • Pill (v. t.)
    To deprive of hair; to make bald.
  • Pill (v. t.)
    To peel; to make by removing the skin.
  • Pill (v. t. & i.)
    To rob; to plunder; to pillage; to peel. See Peel, to plunder.
  • Plug (n.)
    A block of wood let into a wall, to afford a hold for nails.
  • Plug (n.)
    A flat oblong cake of pressed tobacco.
  • Plug (n.)
    A high, tapering silk hat.
  • Plug (n.)
    A worthless horse.
  • Plug (n.)
    Any piece of wood, metal, or other substance used to stop or fill a hole; a stopple.
  • Plug (v. t.)
    To stop with a plug; to make tight by stopping a hole.
  • puli (unknown)
    Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
  • Pull (n.)
    A contest; a struggle; as, a wrestling pull.
  • Pull (n.)
    A kind of stroke by which a leg ball is sent to the off side, or an off ball to the side.
  • Pull (n.)
    A knob, handle, or lever, etc., by which anything is pulled; as, a drawer pull; a bell pull.
  • Pull (n.)
    A pluck; loss or violence suffered.
  • Pull (n.)
    Something in one's favor in a comparison or a contest; an advantage; means of influencing; as, in weights the favorite had the pull.
  • Pull (n.)
    The act of drinking; as, to take a pull at the beer, or the mug.
  • Pull (n.)
    The act of pulling or drawing with force; an effort to move something by drawing toward one.
  • Pull (n.)
    The act of rowing; as, a pull on the river.
  • Pull (v. i.)
    To exert one's self in an act or motion of drawing or hauling; to tug; as, to pull at a rope.
  • Pull (v. t.)
    To draw apart; to tear; to rend.
  • Pull (v. t.)
    To draw, or attempt to draw, toward one; to draw forcibly.
  • Pull (v. t.)
    To gather with the hand, or by drawing toward one; to pluck; as, to pull fruit; to pull flax; to pull a finch.
  • Pull (v. t.)
    To hold back, and so prevent from winning; as, the favorite was pulled.
  • Pull (v. t.)
    To move or operate by the motion of drawing towards one; as, to pull a bell; to pull an oar.
  • Pull (v. t.)
    To strike the ball in a particular manner. See Pull, n., 8.
  • Pull (v. t.)
    To take or make, as a proof or impression; -- hand presses being worked by pulling a lever.

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unscramble pillbug