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6-letter words containing a, g, c

  • claggy — stickily clinging, as mud
  • clangs — Plural form of clang.
  • clangy — Having a clanging sound.
  • coggan — (Frederick) Donald, 1909–2000, English clergyman: archbishop of Canterbury 1974–80.
  • cognac — Cognac is a type of brandy made in the south west of France.
  • congas — Plural form of conga.
  • cougan — a rowdy person, esp one who drinks large quantities of alcohol
  • cougar — A cougar is a wild member of the cat family. Cougars have brownish-grey fur and live in mountain regions of North and South America.
  • cowage — a tropical climbing leguminous plant, Stizolobium (or Mucuna) pruriens, whose bristly pods cause severe itching and stinging
  • craggy — A craggy cliff or mountain is steep and rocky.
  • creagh — a raid or foray
  • cs gas — CS gas is a gas which causes you to cry and makes breathing painful. It is sometimes used by the police to control a crowd which is rioting.
  • cubage — cubic content or volume
  • curagh — a coracle.
  • encage — Confine in or as in a cage.
  • facing — the front part of the head, from the forehead to the chin.
  • fc-pga — Flip Chip Pin Grid Array
  • gaelic — a Celtic language that includes the speech of ancient Ireland and the dialects that have developed from it, especially those usually known as Irish, Manx, and Scottish Gaelic. Gaelic constitutes the Goidelic subbranch of Celtic.
  • galcha — a member of an Iranian people inhabiting the Pamirs.
  • gallic — pertaining to the Gauls or Gaul.
  • garciaJerome John ("Jerry") 1942–95, U.S. rock guitarist, singer, and songwriter.
  • garcon — (usually in direct address) a waiter in a restaurant.
  • garlic — a hardy plant, Allium sativum, of the amaryllis family whose strongly, pungent bulb is used in cookery and medicine.
  • gascon — a native of Gascony, France, the inhabitants of which were reputedly very boastful.
  • gathic — an ancient Iranian language of the Indo-European family; the language in which the Gathas were written. Compare Avestan.
  • gauche — lacking social grace, sensitivity, or acuteness; awkward; crude; tactless: Their exquisite manners always make me feel gauche.
  • gaucho — a native cowboy of the South American pampas, usually of mixed Spanish and Indian ancestry.
  • gedact — a flutelike stopped metal diapason organ pipe
  • gelcap — a dose of medicine enclosed in a soluble case of gelatine
  • getcha — (colloquial) Contraction of
  • glaces — ice placed in a drink to cool it.
  • glacis — a gentle slope.
  • glance — to look quickly or briefly.
  • glauce — the second bride of Jason, murdered on her wedding day by Medea, whom Jason had deserted
  • glocal — of or relating to the interconnection of global and local issues, factors, etc.: a glocal conference on community development.
  • glucan — (carbohydrate) Any polysaccharide that is a polymer of glucose.
  • gocart — Alternative form of go-cart (framework for children learning to walk).
  • gotcha — I have got you (used to express satisfaction at having captured or defeated someone or uncovered their faults).
  • graced — elegance or beauty of form, manner, motion, or action: We watched her skate with effortless grace across the ice. Synonyms: attractiveness, charm, gracefulness, comeliness, ease, lissomeness, fluidity. Antonyms: stiffness, ugliness, awkwardness, clumsiness; klutziness.
  • gracesWilliam Russell, 1832–1904, U.S. financier and shipping magnate, born in Ireland: mayor of New York City 1880–88.
  • guache — Alternative spelling of gouache.
  • guaiac — Also called guaiacum gum, gum guaiac. a greenish-brown resin obtained from the guaiacum tree, especially from Guaiacum officinale, used in varnishes, as a food preservative, and in medicine in various tests for the presence of blood.
  • ichang — Wade-Giles. Yichang.
  • iguacu — a river in S Brazil, flowing W to the Paraná River on the Argentina-Paraguay-Brazil border: noted for its falls. 745 miles (1199 km) long.
  • incage — encage.
  • lacing — a netlike ornamental fabric made of threads by hand or machine.
  • legacy — legacy system
  • macing — (sometimes lowercase) to attack with Mace spray.
  • magick — Archaic. magic.
  • magics — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of magic.
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