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9-letter words containing a, g, o, d, e

  • dog-eared — having dog-ears: a dog-eared book.
  • dogaressa — the wife of a doge
  • doggerman — a sailor on a dogger
  • doghanged — hangdog.
  • dogmatise — to make dogmatic assertions; speak or write dogmatically.
  • dogmatize — to make dogmatic assertions; speak or write dogmatically.
  • dognapped — Simple past tense and past participle of dognap.
  • dognapper — Agent noun of dognap; one who dognaps.
  • dolgellau — a market town and tourist centre in NW Wales, in Gwynedd. Pop: 2407 (2001)
  • douchebag — a small syringe having detachable nozzles for fluid injections, used chiefly for vaginal lavage and for enemas.
  • doughface — a Northerner who sympathized with the South during the controversies over new territories and slavery before the Civil War.
  • downgrade — a downward slope, especially of a road.
  • downrange — (of a missile, space launch, etc.) traveling in a specified direction away from the launch site and toward the target.
  • downstage — at or toward the front of the stage.
  • drag shoe — a type of braking device on a vehicle
  • dragonets — Plural form of dragonet.
  • dragonize — to turn into a dragon
  • dragooned — Simple past tense and past participle of dragoon.
  • dragooner — (obsolete) A dragoon.
  • eaglewood — agalloch.
  • earth-god — a god of fertility and vegetation.
  • ego ideal — an internal ideal of personal perfection that represents what one wants to be rather than what one ought to be and is derived from one's early relationship with one's parents
  • eidograph — a type of pantograph that was invented by the Scottish mathematician William Wallace in 1821 and which was more accurate than other pantographs
  • elongated — Unusually long in relation to its width.
  • embargoed — Simple past tense and past participle of embargo.
  • end organ — the expanded end of a peripheral motor or sensory nerve
  • endecagon — Alternative form of hendecagon.
  • endophagy — cannibalism within the same group or tribe
  • floodgate — Civil Engineering. a gate designed to regulate the flow of water.
  • gabionade — a row of gabions submerged in a waterway, stream, river, etc, to control the flow of water
  • gag order — a court order banning reporters, attorneys, and other parties involved in a case before a court of law from reporting on or publicly disclosing anything relating to the case.
  • gallopade — galop.
  • gambadoes — Gamashes; spatterdashes.
  • gambolled — to skip about, as in dancing or playing; frolic.
  • gameboard — A portable surface on which a game is played, and which is marked for play of that game.
  • garderobe — a wardrobe or its contents.
  • gargoyled — (of a building) Having gargoyles carved into it.
  • garrotted — to execute by the garrote.
  • gasconade — extravagant boasting; boastful talk.
  • gasholder — gasometer (def 2).
  • gatefolds — Plural form of gatefold.
  • gazehound — one of any of several breeds of hounds, as the Afghan, borzoi, greyhound, Saluki, or whippet, that hunts by sighting the game rather than by scent.
  • gear down — Machinery. a part, as a disk, wheel, or section of a shaft, having cut teeth of such form, size, and spacing that they mesh with teeth in another part to transmit or receive force and motion. an assembly of such parts. one of several possible arrangements of such parts in a mechanism, as an automobile transmission, for affording different relations of torque and speed between the driving and the driven machinery, or for permitting the driven machinery to run in either direction: first gear; reverse gear. a mechanism or group of parts performing one function or serving one purpose in a complex machine: steering gear.
  • genocidal — the deliberate and systematic extermination of a national, racial, political, or cultural group.
  • geraldton — a seaport in W Australia.
  • girandole — a rotating and radiating firework.
  • gladstone — William Ewart [yoo-ert] /ˈyu ərt/ (Show IPA), 1809–98, British statesman: prime minister four times between 1868 and 1894.
  • glamoured — Simple past tense and past participle of glamour.
  • go steady — firmly placed or fixed; stable in position or equilibrium: a steady ladder.
  • goatherds — Plural form of goatherd.
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