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7-letter words that end in age

  • drivage — a horizontal or inclined heading or roadway in the process of construction.
  • dunnage — baggage or personal effects.
  • ecotage — sabotage aimed at polluters or destroyers of the natural environment.
  • étalage — a display
  • faldage — the right of a lord of the manor to the manure of his tenant's sheep
  • flamage — flame
  • flotage — an act of floating.
  • flowage — an act of flowing; flow.
  • foggage — fog2 .
  • foilage — Obsolete or nonstandard spelling of foliage.
  • foliage — the leaves of a plant, collectively; leafage.
  • footage — length or extent in feet: the footage of lumber.
  • fromage — cheese1 (defs 1, 2).
  • fullage — the litter or sweepings collected from the ground
  • garbage — discarded animal and vegetable matter, as from a kitchen; refuse.
  • guidage — guidance
  • gunnage — the number of guns carried by a warship
  • haulage — the act or labor of hauling.
  • haylage — silage of about 40 to 50 percent moisture made from forage stored in a silo.
  • headage — a payment to a farmer based on the number of animals kept
  • herbage — nonwoody vegetation.
  • hommage — A homage, especially something in an artwork which has been done in respectful imitation of another artist.
  • hostage — a person given or held as security for the fulfillment of certain conditions or terms, promises, etc., by another.
  • ice age — (often initial capital letters) the glacial epoch, especially the Pleistocene Epoch.
  • keelage — a toll on a merchant ship entering a port.
  • kippage — a state of anger or excitement
  • lairage — A place where cattle or sheep may be rested on the way to market or slaughter.
  • lappage — an overlapping of part or all of a piece of land claimed by one person on land claimed by another.
  • lastage — space for storing goods in ship
  • le sage — Alain René [a-lan ruh-ney] /aˈlɛ̃ rəˈneɪ/ (Show IPA), 1668–1747, French novelist and dramatist.
  • leafage — foliage.
  • leakage — an act of leaking; leak.
  • lineage — the number of printed lines, especially agate lines covered by a magazine article, newspaper advertisement, etc.
  • linkage — the act of linking; state or manner of being linked.
  • lochage — (historical) An officer who commanded a company in Ancient Greece.
  • lockage — the construction, use, or operation of locks, as in a canal or stream.
  • lollage — the practice of using the text messaging abbreviation LOL
  • lossage — (jargon)   /los'*j/ The result of a bug or malfunction. This is a mass or collective noun. "What a loss!" and "What lossage!" are nearly synonymous. The former is slightly more particular to the speaker's present circumstances; the latter implies a continuing lose of which the speaker is currently a victim. Thus (for example) a temporary hardware failure is a loss, but bugs in an important tool (like a compiler) are serious lossage.
  • luggage — suitcases, trunks, etc.; baggage.
  • massage — the act or art of treating the body by rubbing, kneading, patting, or the like, to stimulate circulation, increase suppleness, relieve tension, etc.
  • meltage — the amount melted or the result of melting.
  • message — a communication containing some information, news, advice, request, or the like, sent by messenger, telephone, email, or other means.
  • mileage — the aggregate number of miles traveled over in a given time.
  • millage — the tax rate, as for property, assessed in mills per dollar.
  • mintage — the act or process of minting.
  • mispage — page wrongly
  • montage — the technique of combining in a single composition pictorial elements from various sources, as parts of different photographs or fragments of printing, either to give the illusion that the elements belonged together originally or to allow each element to retain its separate identity as a means of adding interest or meaning to the composition. Compare collage (def 1).
  • moorage — a place for mooring.
  • mortage — Misspelling of mortgage.
  • moulage — the making of a mold, especially with plaster of Paris, of objects, footprints, tire tracks, etc., as for the purpose of identification.
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