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9-letter words containing a, g, o

  • dog train — a sleigh drawn by a team of dogs
  • dog's age — quite a long time: I haven't seen you in a dog's age!
  • dog's-ear — dog-ear.
  • dog-cheap — very inexpensive.
  • dog-eared — having dog-ears: a dog-eared book.
  • dogaressa — the wife of a doge
  • doggerman — a sailor on a dogger
  • doggy bag — a small bag provided on request by a restaurant for a customer to carry home leftovers of a meal, ostensibly to feed a dog or other pet.
  • doghanged — hangdog.
  • dogmatics — the study of the arrangement and statement of religious doctrines, especially of the doctrines received in and taught by the Christian church.
  • dogmatise — to make dogmatic assertions; speak or write dogmatically.
  • dogmatism — dogmatic character; unfounded positiveness in matters of opinion; arrogant assertion of opinions as truths.
  • dogmatist — a person who asserts his or her opinions in an unduly positive or arrogant manner; a dogmatic person.
  • dogmatize — to make dogmatic assertions; speak or write dogmatically.
  • dogmatory — dogmatic
  • 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)
  • dong quai — an aromatic herb, Angelica sinensis, of the parsley family, native to China and Japan, used to treat menopausal symptoms, premenstrual syndrome, and menstrual irregularity.
  • douchebag — a small syringe having detachable nozzles for fluid injections, used chiefly for vaginal lavage and for enemas.
  • doughball — a small ball of bread dough, cooked in a stew, as an accompaniment to a meal, etc
  • 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 down — demoralize
  • drag into — To drag something or someone into an event or situation means to involve them in it when it is not necessary or not desirable.
  • drag shoe — a type of braking device on a vehicle
  • drag show — a performance by drag artists
  • draghound — a hound for use in following a hunting drag, specifically bred for speed and stamina rather than subtlety of sense of smell.
  • dragomans — Plural form of dragoman.
  • dragonets — Plural form of dragonet.
  • dragonfly — any of numerous stout-bodied, nonstinging insects of the order Odonata (suborder Anisoptera), the species of which prey on mosquitoes and other insects and are distinguished from the damselflies by having the wings outstretched rather than folded when at rest.
  • dragonish — Having the characteristics of a dragon.
  • dragonism — a strict and domineering manner
  • dragonize — to turn into a dragon
  • dragooned — Simple past tense and past participle of dragoon.
  • dragooner — (obsolete) A dragoon.
  • drop goal — In rugby, a drop goal is a goal that a player scores by dropping the ball and kicking it between the posts.
  • dungannon — a district of S Northern Ireland, in Co Tyrone. Pop: 48 695 (2003 est). Area: 783 sq km (302 sq miles)
  • dysgnosia — any intellectual impairment.
  • eagle owl — any of several large owls of the genus Bubo, having prominent tufts of feathers on each side of the head, especially B. bubo of Europe and Asia.
  • eaglewood — agalloch.
  • earth-god — a god of fertility and vegetation.
  • east goth — an Ostrogoth.
  • easygoing — going easily, as a horse.
  • echograph — a device that records oceanic depths by means of sonic waves.
  • 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
  • egomaniac — A person obsessed with their own (supposed) importance.
  • eidograph — a type of pantograph that was invented by the Scottish mathematician William Wallace in 1821 and which was more accurate than other pantographs
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