6-letter words containing age
- keyage — Alternative form of quayage.
- laager — a camp or encampment, especially within a protective circle of wagons.
- lagena — an outpocketing of the saccule of birds, reptiles, and bony fishes corresponding to the cochlear duct of mammals.
- lagers — Plural form of lager.
- lamage — (slang, pejorative) Something lame, typically actions.
- lavage — a washing.
- lesage — Alain René (alɛ̃ ʀəˈneɪ) ; ȧlan rənāˈ) 1668-1747; Fr. novelist & dramatist
- linage — the number of printed lines, especially agate lines covered by a magazine article, newspaper advertisement, etc.
- lovage — a European plant, Levisticum officinale, of the parsley family, having coarsely toothed compound leaves, cultivated in gardens.
- manage — to bring about or succeed in accomplishing, sometimes despite difficulty or hardship: She managed to see the governor. How does she manage it on such a small income?
- meager — deficient in quantity or quality; lacking fullness or richness; scanty; inadequate: a meager salary; meager fare; a meager harvest.
- menage — a domestic establishment; household.
- metage — the official measurement of contents or weight.
- milage — the aggregate number of miles traveled over in a given time.
- mirage — an optical phenomenon, especially in the desert or at sea, by which the image of some object appears displaced above, below, or to one side of its true position as a result of spatial variations of the index of refraction of air.
- murage — a toll or tax for the repair or construction of the walls or fortifications of a town.
- nonage — the period of legal minority, or of an age below 21.
- oarage — (archaic) The act of using oars; rowing.
- of age — the length of time during which a being or thing has existed; length of life or existence to the time spoken of or referred to: trees of unknown age; His age is 20 years.
- ohmage — electric resistance expressed in ohms.
- onager — a wild ass, Equus hemionus, of southwestern Asia.
- outage — an interruption or failure in the supply of power, especially electricity.
- parage — lineage, family, or birth
- pavage — a tax towards paving streets, or the right to levy such a tax
- pelage — the hair, fur, wool, or other soft covering of a mammal.
- piaget — Jean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1896–1980, Swiss psychologist: studied cognitive development of children.
- pipage — conveyance, as of water, gas, or oil, by means of pipes.
- potage — soup, especially any thick soup made with cream.
- preage — the length of time during which a being or thing has existed; length of life or existence to the time spoken of or referred to: trees of unknown age; His age is 20 years.
- ramage — a descent group composed of individuals descended from one ancestor through any combination of male and female links.
- ravage — to work havoc upon; damage or mar by ravages: a face ravaged by grief.
- recage — a boxlike enclosure having wires, bars, or the like, for confining and displaying birds or animals.
- rivage — a bank, shore, or coast.
- sagely — a profoundly wise person; a person famed for wisdom.
- sagene — a fishing net
- sagest — a profoundly wise person; a person famed for wisdom.
- savage — fierce, ferocious, or cruel; untamed: savage beasts.
- sewage — the waste matter that passes through sewers.
- silage — fodder preserved through fermentation in a silo; ensilage.
- skagen — Skaw, The.
- socage — a tenure of land held by the tenant in performance of specified services or by payment of rent, and not requiring military service.
- sorage — the first year in hawk's life
- stage2 — A macro language.
- staged — adapted for or produced on the stage.
- stager — a person of experience in some profession, way of life, etc.
- stagey — of, relating to, or suggestive of the stage.
- swager — a tool for bending cold metal to a required shape.
- tirage — the withdrawing of wine from a barrel, as for testing or tasting.
- towage — the act of towing.
- triage — the process of sorting victims, as of a battle or disaster, to determine medical priority in order to increase the number of survivors.