6-letter words containing ang
- mangle — to smooth or press with a mangle.
- mangos — Plural form of mango.
- mganga — a witch doctor or medicine man
- musang — A small animal of Java (Paradoxirus fasciatus), allied to the civets. It swallows, but does not digest, large quantities of ripe coffee berries, thus serving to disseminate the coffee plant.
- orange — methyl orange.
- orangs — Plural form of orang.
- orangy — resembling or suggesting an orange, as in taste, appearance, or color: decorated with orangy-pink flowers.
- oxgang — an old measure of farmland
- padang — a seaport in W central Sumatra, in W Indonesia.
- pahang — a state in Malaysia, on the SE Malay Peninsula. 13,820 sq. mi. (35,794 sq. km). Capital: Kuantan.
- pangea — the hypothetical landmass that existed when all continents were joined, from about 300 to 200 million years ago.
- pangwe — Fang (def 1).
- parang — a large, heavy knife used as a tool or a weapon in Malaysia and Indonesia.
- penang — an island in SE Asia, off the W coast of the Malay Peninsula. 110 sq. mi. (285 sq. km).
- pinang — Penang.
- pohang — a port city in SE South Korea.
- poyang — a lake in E China, in Kiangsi province. 90 miles (145 km) long.
- quango — (especially in Great Britain) a semi-public advisory and administrative body supported by the government and having most of its members appointed by the government.
- ranged — working or grazing on a range: range horses; range animals like steer and sheep.
- ranger — forest ranger.
- rehang — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
- s-lang — (language) A small but highly functional embedded interpreter. S-Lang was a stack-based postfix language resembling Forth and BC/DC with limited support for infix notation. Now it has a C-like infix syntax. Arrays, stings, integers, floating-point and autoloading are all suported. The editor JED embeds S-lang. S-Lang is available under the GNU Library General Public License. It runs on MS-DOS, Unix, and VMS. E-mail: John E. Davis <[email protected]>.
- sangar — a breastwork of stone or sods
- sanger — Frederick, 1918–2013, English biochemist: Nobel Prize in chemistry 1958.
- sangha — a community of Buddhist monks.
- sangli — a city in S Maharashtra, in SW India, on the Krishna River.
- satang — a monetary unit and former coin of Thailand, the 100th part of a baht.
- semang — a member of a Negrito people of the Malay Peninsula.
- serang — Ceram.
- shango — a W African religious cult surviving in some parts of the Caribbean
- sikang — a former province in W China, now part of Sichuan.
- slangy — of, of the nature of, or containing slang: a slangy expression.
- sprang — a simple past tense of spring.
- tanged — a sharp ringing or twanging sound; clang.
- tanger — a seaport in N Morocco, on the W Strait of Gibraltar: capital of the former Tangier Zone.
- tangie — a water spirit of Orkney, appearing as a figure draped in seaweed, or as a seahorse
- tangka — tanga.
- tangle — to bring together into a mass of confusedly interlaced or intertwisted threads, strands, or other like parts; snarl.
- tangly — full of tangles; snarled
- tangor — temple orange.
- tangun — a small and sturdy pony native to Tibet and Bhutan
- tanguy — Yves [eev] /iv/ (Show IPA), 1900–55, French painter, in the U.S. after 1939.
- thrang — a throng; crowd
- twangy — having the sharp, vibrating tone of a plucked string.
- ubangi — French Oubangi. a river in W central Africa, forming part of the boundary between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic, flowing W and S into the Congo (Zaire) River. 700 miles (1125 km) long.
- unhang — to release from a hanging, or unstable, position
- upgang — a climb, ascent, or elevation
- uphang — to hang aloft
- wanged — Simple past tense and past participle of wang.
- wanger — (obsolete) A rest or cushion for the cheek; a pillow.