7-letter words that end in ge
- sackage — the act of sacking a place
- salvage — the act of saving a ship or its cargo from perils of the seas.
- sandage — Allan R(ex) 1926–2010, U.S. astronomer: codiscoverer of the first quasar 1961.
- sausage — minced pork, beef, or other meats, often combined, together with various added ingredients and seasonings, usually stuffed into a prepared intestine or other casing and often made in links.
- scalage — an assessed percentage deduction, as in weight or price, granted in dealings with goods that are likely to shrink, leak, or otherwise vary in the amount or weight originally stated.
- scavage — a toll charged of merchant strangers by mayors or towns on goods offered or sold in their districts
- scourge — a whip or lash, especially for the infliction of punishment or torture.
- scrooge — Ebenezer [eb-uh-nee-zer] /ˌɛb əˈni zər/ (Show IPA) a miserly curmudgeon in Dickens' Christmas Carol.
- scrouge — to crowd or press
- scutage — (in the feudal system) a payment exacted by a lord in lieu of military service due to him by the holder of a fee.
- seepage — the act or process of seeping; leakage.
- selvage — the edge of woven fabric finished so as to prevent raveling, often in a narrow tape effect, different from the body of the fabric.
- septage — the waste or sewage in a septic tank.
- serfage — a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferred with it from one owner to another.
- signage — graphic designs, as symbols, emblems, or words, used especially for identification or as a means of giving directions or warning.
- sinkage — the act, process, amount, or degree of sinking.
- smoodge — to curry favor; seek unwarranted recognition.
- soakage — the act of soaking.
- soilage — an act or instance of soiling.
- solfege — solfeggio.
- sondage — a deep trial trench for inspecting stratigraphy
- splodge — blot, splotch
- splurge — to indulge oneself in some luxury or pleasure, especially a costly one: They splurged on a trip to Europe.
- springe — a snare for catching small game.
- squidge — to squash or squeeze (something soft) or (of something soft) to become squashed
- storage — the act of storing; state or fact of being stored: All my furniture is in storage.
- stowage — an act or operation of stowing.
- strange — unusual, extraordinary, or curious; odd; queer: a strange remark to make.
- sullage — refuse or waste; sewage.
- sverige — Swedish name of Sweden.
- sylloge — a collection or summary
- syringe — a small device consisting of a glass, metal, or hard rubber tube, narrowed at its outlet, and fitted with either a piston or a rubber bulb for drawing in a quantity of fluid or for ejecting fluid in a stream, for cleaning wounds, injecting fluids into the body, etc.
- t hinge — cross-garnet.
- tallage — Medieval History. a tax paid by peasants to the lord of their manor.
- tankage — the capacity of a tank or tanks.
- tannage — the act or process of tanning leather.
- teenage — of, relating to, or characteristic of a teenager.
- tentage — tents collectively; equipment or supply of tents.
- thanage — the tenure by which lands were held by a thane.
- tillage — the operation, practice, or art of tilling land.
- tollage — toll; tax.
- tonnage — the capacity of a merchant vessel, expressed either in units of weight, as deadweight tons, or of volume, as gross tons.
- trucage — art forgery
- tuneage — (a piece of) recorded music that one likes
- tunnage — the capacity of a merchant vessel, expressed either in units of weight, as deadweight tons, or of volume, as gross tons.
- umbrage — offense; annoyance; displeasure: to feel umbrage at a social snub; to give umbrage to someone; to take umbrage at someone's rudeness.
- unhinge — to remove (a door or the like) from hinges.
- unitage — specification of the amount making up a unit in a system of measurement.
- unmerge — to cause to combine or coalesce; unite.
- unwedge — a piece of hard material with two principal faces meeting in a sharply acute angle, for raising, holding, or splitting objects by applying a pounding or driving force, as from a hammer. Compare machine (def 3b).