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7-letter words containing a, g, c, e

  • 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
  • decagon — a polygon having ten sides
  • discage — to release (an animal or bird) from a cage
  • dockage — a curtailment; deduction, as from wages.
  • dogface — an enlisted man in the U.S. Army, especially an infantryman in World War II.
  • ecotage — sabotage aimed at polluters or destroyers of the natural environment.
  • egg sac — a silken case or capsule containing eggs of a female spider.
  • elegiac — (especially of a work of art) having a mournful quality.
  • ellagic — (of an acid) derived from gallnuts
  • encaged — Simple past tense and past participle of encage.
  • engrace — to give grace to
  • galenic — of or relating to Galen, his principles, or his methods.
  • gallice — in French
  • galoche — Alternative spelling of galoshe.
  • gametic — a mature sexual reproductive cell, as a sperm or egg, that unites with another cell to form a new organism.
  • ganache — a whipped frosting or filling made with semisweet chocolate and cream, used for cakes, pastries, and candies.
  • geofact — a rock, bone, shell, or the like that has been modified by natural processes to appear to look like an artifact.
  • gertcha — get out of here!
  • glacier — an extended mass of ice formed from snow falling and accumulating over the years and moving very slowly, either descending from high mountains, as in valley glaciers, or moving outward from centers of accumulation, as in continental glaciers.
  • glanced — Simple past tense and past participle of glance.
  • glancer — One who glances.
  • glances — Plural form of glance.
  • gouache — a technique of painting with opaque watercolors prepared with gum.
  • gracile — gracefully slender.
  • grackle — any of several long-tailed American birds of the family Icteridae, especially of the genus Quiscalus, having usually iridescent black plumage.
  • graeco- — Greek
  • grecian — Greek (especially with reference to ancient Greece).
  • grimace — a facial expression, often ugly or contorted, that indicates disapproval, pain, etc.
  • gynecia — gynoecium.
  • ice age — (often initial capital letters) the glacial epoch, especially the Pleistocene Epoch.
  • ice bag — a waterproof bag to be filled with ice and applied to the head or another part of the body to be cooled.
  • incaged — encage.
  • jackleg — unskilled or untrained for one's work; amateur: a jackleg electrician.
  • legnica — a city in SW Poland: formerly in Germany.
  • 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.
  • package — a bundle of something, usually of small or medium size, that is packed and wrapped or boxed; parcel.
  • pelagic — of or relating to the open seas or oceans.
  • pigface — a creeping succulent plant of the genus Carpobrotus, having bright-coloured flowers and red fruits and often grown for ornament: family Aizoaceae
  • placage — a thin facing on a building.
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