These are the meanings of the letters ILLPELE when you unscramble them.
- lipe (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Peel (n.)
A small tower, fort, or castle; a keep.
- Peel (n.)
A spadelike implement, variously used, as for removing loaves of bread from a baker's oven; also, a T-shaped implement used by printers and bookbinders for hanging wet sheets of paper on lines or poles to dry. Also, the blade of an oar.
- Peel (n.)
The skin or rind; as, the peel of an orange.
- Peel (v. i.)
To lose the skin, bark, or rind; to come off, as the skin, bark, or rind does; -- often used with an adverb; as, the bark peels easily or readily.
- Peel (v. t.)
To plunder; to pillage; to rob.
- Peel (v. t.)
To strip off the skin, bark, or rind of; to strip by drawing or tearing off the skin, bark, husks, etc.; to flay; to decorticate; as, to peel an orange.
- Peel (v. t.)
To strip or tear off; to remove by stripping, as the skin of an animal, the bark of a tree, etc.
- pele (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Pile (n.)
A covering of hair or fur.
- Pile (n.)
A funeral pile; a pyre.
- Pile (n.)
A hair; hence, the fiber of wool, cotton, and the like; also, the nap when thick or heavy, as of carpeting and velvet.
- Pile (n.)
A large building, or mass of buildings.
- Pile (n.)
A large stake, or piece of timber, pointed and driven into the earth, as at the bottom of a river, or in a harbor where the ground is soft, for the support of a building, a pier, or other superstructure, or to form a cofferdam, etc.
- Pile (n.)
A mass formed in layers; as, a pile of shot.
- Pile (n.)
A mass of things heaped together; a heap; as, a pile of stones; a pile of wood.
- Pile (n.)
A vertical series of alternate disks of two dissimilar metals, as copper and zinc, laid up with disks of cloth or paper moistened with acid water between them, for producing a current of electricity; -- commonly called Volta's pile, voltaic pile, or galvanic pile.
- Pile (n.)
One of the ordinaries or subordinaries having the form of a wedge, usually placed palewise, with the broadest end uppermost.
- Pile (n.)
Same as Fagot, n., 2.
- Pile (n.)
The head of an arrow or spear.
- Pile (n.)
The reverse of a coin. See Reverse.
- Pile (v. t.)
To cover with heaps; or in great abundance; to fill or overfill; to load.
- Pile (v. t.)
To drive piles into; to fill with piles; to strengthen with piles.
- Pile (v. t.)
To lay or throw into a pile or heap; to heap up; to collect into a mass; to accumulate; to amass; -- often with up; as, to pile up wood.
- 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.
- plie (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.