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6-letter words containing a, n, g

  • daring — People who are daring are willing to do or say things which are new or which might shock or anger other people.
  • dating — Dating agencies or services are for people who are trying to find a girlfriend or boyfriend.
  • datong — a city in N Shanxi province, in NE China.
  • dawing — Present participle of daw.
  • dazing — to stun or stupefy with a blow, shock, etc.: He was dazed by a blow on the head.
  • defang — to remove the fangs from (an animal or reptile)
  • django — Jean Baptiste [French zhahn ba-teest] /French ʒɑ̃ baˈtist/ (Show IPA), ("Django") 1910–53, Belgian gypsy jazz guitarist.
  • dogman — a person who directs the operation of a crane whilst riding on an object being lifted by it
  • dognap — to steal (a dog), especially for the purpose of selling it for profit.
  • donage — Misspelling of dunnage.
  • dragon — a mythical monster generally represented as a huge, winged reptile with crested head and enormous claws and teeth, and often spouting fire.
  • durgan — (dialectal) A dwarf.
  • ealing — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • earing — the part of a cereal plant, as corn, wheat, etc., that contains the flowers and hence the fruit, grains, or kernels.
  • easing — freedom from labor, pain, or physical annoyance; tranquil rest; comfort: to enjoy one's ease.
  • eatingeats, Informal. food.
  • encage — Confine in or as in a cage.
  • engage — Occupy, attract, or involve (someone's interest or attention).
  • engaol — (transitive, British, archaic) To imprison in a gaol.
  • engram — A hypothetical permanent change in the brain accounting for the existence of memory; a memory trace.
  • enigma — A person or thing that is mysterious, puzzling, or difficult to understand.
  • ennage — the total number of ens in a piece of matter to be set in type
  • enrage — Make very angry.
  • erlang — (communication) A dimensionless statistical measure of the volume of telecommunications traffic relative to the capacity of a single channel.
  • facing — the front part of the head, from the forehead to the chin.
  • fading — to lose brightness or vividness of color.
  • faking — Present participle of fake.
  • faming — widespread reputation, especially of a favorable character; renown; public eminence: to seek fame as an opera singer.
  • fanega — a unit of dry measure in Spanish-speaking countries, equal in Spain to 1.58 U.S. bushels (55.7 liters).
  • fanged — to seize; grab.
  • fanger — (Now chiefly dialectal) A receiver.
  • fangio — Juan Manuel [wahn man-wel;; Spanish hwahn mah-nwel] /ˈwɑn mænˈwɛl;; Spanish ˈʰwɑn mɑˈnwɛl/ (Show IPA), 1911–1995, Argentine racing-car driver.
  • fangle — (obsolete, or, dialectal) To fashion, manufacture, invent, or create.
  • faring — the price of conveyance or passage in a bus, train, airplane, or other vehicle.
  • fating — something that unavoidably befalls a person; fortune; lot: It is always his fate to be left behind.
  • faxing — Present participle of fax.
  • faying — Present participle of fay.
  • fazing — Present participle of faze.
  • flagon — a large bottle for wine, liquors, etc.
  • flange — a projecting rim, collar, or ring on a shaft, pipe, machine housing, etc., cast or formed to give additional strength, stiffness, or supporting area, or to provide a place for the attachment of other objects.
  • fogman — a person in charge of railway fog-signals
  • fungal — fungous.
  • fungia — Any member of the coral genus Fungia.
  • gabaon — Gibeon.
  • gabion — a cylinder of wickerwork filled with earth, used as a military defense.
  • gaboon — Also called gaboon mahogany. the soft, reddish-brown wood of an African tree, Aucoumea klaineana, used for making furniture.
  • gaging — a standard of measure or measurement.
  • gagman — a person who writes comic material for public performers.
  • gagmen — Plural form of gagman.
  • gaijin — an outsider; foreigner.
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