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5-letter words containing go

  • gorse — any spiny shrub of the genus Ulex, of the legume family, native to the Old World, especially U. europaeus, having rudimentary leaves and yellow flowers and growing in waste places and sandy soil.
  • gorsy — Where gorse grows.
  • gosha — (Ireland) hero, champion.
  • gosht — Mutton (or sometimes goat), normally as part of a Pakistani curry.
  • gosip — Government OSI Profile
  • gospl — Graphics-Oriented Signal Processing Language. A graphical DSP language for simulation.
  • gosseSir Edmund William, 1849–1928, English poet, biographer, and critic.
  • gotch — (Saskatchewan, and, Manitoba, slang) Men's underwear.
  • goter — Obsolete form of gutter.
  • gotha — a city in S Thuringia, in central Germany.
  • goths — Plural form of goth.
  • gotra — a Hindu clan tracing its paternal lineage from a common ancestor, usually a saint or sage.
  • gotta — Have got to (not acceptable in standard use).
  • gouda — a city in the W Netherlands, NE of Rotterdam.
  • goudyFrederic William, 1865–1947, U.S. designer of printing types.
  • gouge — a chisel having a partly cylindrical blade with the bevel on either the concave or the convex side.
  • gouldChester, 1900–85, U.S. cartoonist: creator of the comic strip “Dick Tracy.”.
  • gound — (UK dialectal) Mucus produced by the eyes during sleep.
  • goura — any of several species of large, crested ground pigeons found in New Guinea
  • gourd — the hard-shelled fruit of any of various plants, especially those of Lagenaria siceraria (white-flowered gourd or bottle gourd) whose dried shell is used for bowls and other utensils, and Cucurbita pepo (yellow-flowered gourd) used ornamentally. Compare gourd family.
  • gouts — Plural form of gout.
  • gouty — pertaining to or of the nature of gout.
  • govt. — government
  • gowan — any of various yellow or white field flowers, especially the English daisy.
  • gowds — gold.
  • gowerJohn, 1325?–1408, English poet.
  • gownd — Archaic spelling of gowned.
  • gowns — Plural form of gown.
  • goyal — A ravine or other depression.
  • goyenJan van [yahn vahn] /yɑn vɑn/ (Show IPA), 1596–1656, Dutch painter.
  • goyim — goy.
  • goyle — a ravine
  • grego — a short, hooded coat of thick, coarse fabric, originally worn in the eastern Mediterranean countries.
  • imago — Entomology. an adult insect.
  • ingot — a mass of metal cast in a convenient form for shaping, remelting, or refining.
  • jingo — a person who professes his or her patriotism loudly and excessively, favoring vigilant preparedness for war and an aggressive foreign policy; bellicose chauvinist.
  • kango — A Japanese word of Chinese origin, or a Japanese word coined along Chinese lines (a Sino-Japanese word).
  • kongo — a member of an indigenous people living in west-central Africa along the lower course of the Congo River.
  • lagos — a seaport in SW Nigeria: former capital.
  • largo — a largo movement.
  • leggo — (slang) Contraction of let go. To cease to hold. Generally used in the imperative.
  • legol — "Application of MP/3 to the Design and Implementation of LEGOL, A Legally Oriented Language", S.H. Mandil et al, Intl Symp Programming, Paris 1974.
  • legos — Plural form of lego.
  • lingo — the language and speech, especially the jargon, slang, or argot, of a particular field, group, or individual: gamblers' lingo.
  • logo- — indicating word or speech
  • logol — Strings are stored on cyclic lists or 'tapes', which are operated upon by finite automata. J. Mysior et al, "LOGOL, A String manipulation Language", in Symbol Manipulations Languages and Techniques, D.G. Bobrow ed, N-H 1968, pp.166-177.
  • logon — login.
  • logos — a high-level programming language widely used to teach children how to use computers.
  • lungo — An espresso drink made with more hot water than normal.
  • magog — a people descended from Japheth. Gen. 10:2; Ezek. 38, 39. Compare Gog and Magog.
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