5-letter words containing a, e, g
- grave — the grave accent.
- graze — to touch or rub something lightly, or so as to produce slight abrasion, in passing: to graze against a rough wall.
- great — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
- grefa — griefo.
- greta — a female given name, form of Margaret.
- guage — Misspelling of gauge.
- guare — John, born 1938, U.S. playwright.
- gudea — flourished c2250 b.c, Sumerian ruler.
- gynae — gynaecological
- hagen — a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, in W Germany.
- hague — Cape, a cape in NW France, in the English Channel near Cherbourg: the NW extremity of the Cotentin Peninsula.
- helga — a female given name: from a Germanic word meaning “holy.”.
- image — a physical likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or otherwise made visible.
- jager — any of several rapacious seabirds of the family Stercorariidae that pursue weaker birds to make them drop their prey.
- lagen — Usually, laggins. the staves at the bottom of a barrel, cask, or other hooped vessel.
- lager — a camp or encampment, especially within a protective circle of wagons.
- lange — Christian Louis [kris-tyahn loo-ee,, -is] /ˈkrɪs tyɑn ˈlu i,, -ɪs/ (Show IPA), 1869–1938, Norwegian historian: Nobel Peace Prize 1921.
- large — of more than average size, quantity, degree, etc.; exceeding that which is common to a kind or class; big; great: a large house; a large number; in large measure; to a large extent.
- legal — permitted by law; lawful: Such acts are not legal.
- madge — a female given name, form of Margaret.
- mange — any of various skin diseases caused by parasitic mites, affecting animals and sometimes humans and characterized by loss of hair and scabby eruptions.
- marge — a female given name, form of Margaret.
- mega- — prefix
- megan — a female given name.
- nugae — a number of unimportant matters or japes
- omega — the 24th and last letter of the Greek alphabet (Ω, ω).
- onega — Lake, a lake in the NW Russian Federation in Europe: second largest lake in Europe. 3764 sq. mi. (9750 sq. km).
- osage — a member of a North American Indian people formerly of western Missouri, now living in northern Oklahoma.
- paged — paging
- pager — beeper (def 3).
- paget — Sir James, 1814–99, English surgeon and pathologist.
- pagne — a garment worn by some African peoples, consisting of a rectangular strip of cloth fashioned into a loincloth or wrapped on the body so as to form a short skirt.
- paige — Leroy Robert ("Satchel") 1906–82, U.S. baseball player.
- parge — to coat or cover with plaster
- phage — bacteriophage.
- plage — a sandy bathing beach at a seashore resort.
- radge — (Geordie, Scottish) Violent or crazy.
- raged — angry fury; violent anger (sometimes used in combination): a speech full of rage; incidents of road rage.
- rager — a person or animal that rages
- rages — an ancient city of Media, on the site of present-day Tehran, Iran.
- range — the extent to which or the limits between which variation is possible: the range of steel prices; a wide range of styles.
- regal — of or relating to a king; royal: the regal power.
- regan — (in Shakespeare's King Lear) the younger of Lear's two faithless daughters. Compare Cordelia (def 1), Goneril.
- regma — a dry fruit consisting of three or more carpels that separate from the axis at maturity.
- renga — linked verse.
- retag — to tag again
- rugae — Usually, rugae. Biology, Anatomy. a wrinkle, fold, or ridge.
- sager — a profoundly wise person; a person famed for wisdom.
- sarge — sergeant.
- segal — George, 1924–2000, U.S. sculptor.