7-letter words containing a, e, g
- congaed — Simple past tense and past participle of conga.
- congeal — When a liquid congeals, it becomes very thick and sticky and almost solid.
- cordage — the lines and rigging of a vessel
- corkage — a charge made at a restaurant for serving wine, etc, bought off the premises
- cornage — a type of rent fixed according to the number of horned cattle pastured
- corsage — A corsage is a very small bunch of flowers that is fastened to a woman's dress below the shoulder.
- cottage — A cottage is a small house, usually in the country.
- couhage — Obsolete form of cowage.
- coupage — The blending (or 'cutting') of wine.
- courage — Courage is the quality shown by someone who decides to do something difficult or dangerous, even though they may be afraid.
- cowhage — a tropical, leguminous vine (Mucuna pruriens) bearing pods covered with fine barbed hairs that easily penetrate animal or human skin, causing intense itching: some strains are grown for forage
- cragged — full of crags.
- cragger — a member of a carbon reduction action group
- craigie — Sir William A(lexander). 1867–1957, Scottish lexicographer; joint editor of the Oxford English Dictionary (1901–33), and of A Dictionary of American English on Historical Principles (1938–44)
- cranage — the use of a crane
- cuttage — the process of propagation by using a stem or other fragment taken from a growing plant
- daggers — Plural form of dagger.
- dalgite — (Western Australia) A rabbit-eared bandicoot; a bilby.
- damaged — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
- damager — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
- damages — money to be paid as compensation to a person for injury, loss, etc
- dangers — Plural form of danger.
- dangled — Simple past tense and past participle of dangle.
- dangler — to hang loosely, especially with a jerking or swaying motion: The rope dangled in the breeze.
- dangles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dangle.
- de vega — Lope [loh-pey,, -pee;; Spanish law-pe] /ˈloʊ peɪ,, -pi;; Spanish ˈlɔ pɛ/ (Show IPA), (Lope Félix de Vega Carpio) 1562–1635, Spanish dramatist and poet.
- deading — Present participle of dead.
- dealign — To put, or to become, out of alignment.
- dealing — selling or doing business in a particular commodity
- decagon — a polygon having ten sides
- degames — lemonwood.
- degauss — to neutralize the magnetic field of (a ship's hull) as a protection against magnetic mines, using equipment producing an opposing magnetic field
- deglaze — to dilute meat sediments in (a pan) in order to make a sauce or gravy
- degrade — Something that degrades someone causes people to have less respect for them.
- delgado — Cape, a cape at the NE extremity of Mozambique.
- demagog — a person, especially an orator or political leader, who gains power and popularity by arousing the emotions, passions, and prejudices of the people.
- deraign — to contest (a claim, suit, etc)
- derange — to disturb the order or arrangement of; throw into disorder; disarrange
- desugar — to rewrite (computer code) in a more refined and concise form; to remove all unnecessary syntactical elements from (computer code)
- dhegiha — a division of the Siouan language family, comprising the dialects spoken by the Omaha, Osage, Kansa, Ponca, and Quapaw.
- discage — to release (an animal or bird) from a cage
- dockage — a curtailment; deduction, as from wages.
- dog ape — baboon.
- dog-ear — (in a book) a corner of a page folded over like a dog's ear, as by careless use, or to mark a place.
- dogbane — any of several plants of the genus Apocynum, especially A. androsaemifolium, yielding an acrid milky juice and having an intensely bitter root.
- dogeate — office of doge
- dogface — an enlisted man in the U.S. Army, especially an infantryman in World War II.
- dogvane — a small vane that shows the direction of the wind, mounted in a position visible to a helmsman.
- donegal — a county in the N Republic of Ireland. 1865 sq. mi. (4830 sq. km). County seat: Lifford.
- dosages — the administration of medicine in doses.