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4-letter words that end in g

  • doug — a male given name, form of Douglas.
  • drag — drag and drop
  • dregdregs, the sediment of liquids; lees; grounds.
  • drug — the cosmic principle of disorder and falsehood.
  • dung — excrement, especially of animals; manure.
  • eoug — European ORACLE Users Group.
  • fang — one of the long, sharp, hollow or grooved teeth of a venomous snake by which poison is injected.
  • fing — (rare) Finger.
  • flag — flagstone (def 1).
  • fleg — a scare; a fright
  • flog — to beat with a whip, stick, etc., especially as punishment; whip; scourge.
  • fmcg — FMCGs are inexpensive products that people usually buy on a regular basis, such as supermarket foods or toiletries. FMCG is an abbreviation for 'fast-moving consumer goods'.
  • fong — Hiram L(eong) [lee-awng,, -ong] /liˈɔŋ,, -ˈɒŋ/ (Show IPA), 1907–2004, U.S. lawyer and senator from Hawaii 1959–77.
  • frag — to kill, wound, or assault (especially an unpopular or overzealous superior) with a fragmentation grenade.
  • frig — to copulate with.
  • frog — a triangular mass of elastic, horny substance in the middle of the sole of the foot of a horse or related animal.
  • frug — a dance deriving from the twist.
  • fung — (rare) Fungus.
  • gang — a group or band: A gang of boys gathered around the winning pitcher.
  • gcmg — (Knight or Dame) Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George
  • ging — A company; troop; a gang.
  • gleg — quick; keen.
  • glug — to make the sound of liquid pouring from a bottle.
  • gong — a large bronze disk, of Asian origin, having an upturned rim, that produces a vibrant, hollow tone when struck, usually with a stick or hammer that has a padded head.
  • goog — an egg.
  • gregGregory Alan ("Greg") born 1966, U.S. baseball pitcher.
  • grig — a cricket or grasshopper.
  • grog — a mixture of rum and water, often flavored with lemon, sugar, and spices and sometimes served hot.
  • gung — (obsolete) altform gonga: an outhouse.
  • haagDen [den] /dɛn/ (Show IPA) a Dutch name of The Hague.
  • haigDouglas, 1st Earl, 1861–1928, British field marshal: commander in chief of the British forces in France 1915–18.
  • hang — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • heng — A character (\ua727), combining an h and an eng, which stands for the hypothetical phoneme in English which includes both [h] and [\u014b] as its allophones.
  • hing — (IRC) Fortuitous typo for "hint", now in wide intentional use among players of initgame. Compare newsfroup, filk.
  • hoggJames ("the Ettrick Shepherd") 1770–1835, Scottish poet.
  • hong — (in China) a group of rooms or buildings forming a warehouse, factory, etc.
  • hung — simple past tense and past participle of hang.
  • ibfg — Internationaler Bund Freier Gewerkschaften (International Confederation of Free Trade Unions)
  • iepg — Internet Engineering and Planning Group
  • iesg — Internet Engineering Steering Group
  • ipng — Internet Protocol version 6
  • irsg — Internet Research Steering Group
  • jagg — Alt form jag sense a load of hay or wood.
  • jbig — Joint Bi-level Image Experts Group
  • jong — A Tibetan building which makes up a prefecture; typically a monastery or fortress.
  • jpeg — Joint Photographic Experts Group
  • jtag — Joint Test Action Group
  • judg — Obsolete form of judge.
  • jugg — Archaic spelling of jug.
  • jung — Carl Gustav [kahrl goo s-tahf] /kɑrl ˈgʊs tɑf/ (Show IPA), 1875–1961, Swiss psychiatrist and psychologist.
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