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8-letter words containing a, g, d, e

  • outraged — Simple past tense and past participle of outrage.
  • overaged — Aged too much.
  • overglad — too glad
  • overgoad — to goad excessively
  • pagehood — the office of, or state of being, a page
  • paygrade — a level on a pay scale
  • pedagogy — the function or work of a teacher; teaching.
  • pedaling — a foot-operated lever used to control certain mechanisms, as automobiles, or to play or modify the sounds of certain musical instruments, as pianos, organs, or harps.
  • pegboard — a board having holes into which pegs are placed in specific patterns, used for playing or scoring certain games.
  • pig lead — lead molded in pigs.
  • pillaged — to strip ruthlessly of money or goods by open violence, as in war; plunder: The barbarians pillaged every conquered city.
  • pleading — the act of a person who pleads.
  • poundage — confinement within an enclosure or within certain limits.
  • pre-aged — (used with a plural verb) old people collectively (usually preceded by the): We must have improved medical care for the aged.
  • pregrade — a degree or step in a scale, as of rank, advancement, quality, value, or intensity: the best grade of paper.
  • prograde — to (cause to) advance towards the sea by progradation
  • radiguet — Raymond (rɛmɔ̃). 1903–23, French novelist; the author of The Devil in the Flesh (1923) and Count d'Orgel (1924)
  • raggedly — clothed in tattered garments: a ragged old man.
  • readingsRufus Daniel Isaacs, 1st Marquis of, 1860–1935, Lord Chief Justice of England 1913–21; viceroy of India 1921–26.
  • readying — completely prepared or in fit condition for immediate action or use: troops ready for battle; Dinner is ready.
  • red flag — communist symbol
  • red sage — a showy, rank-smelling shrub, Lantana camara, of tropical America, having yellow flowers that turn orange or red.
  • red-flag — to mark or draw attention to for a particular purpose: The department has red-flagged the most urgent repair work to be done.
  • redamage — to damage again
  • redargue — to prove wrong or invalid; disprove; refute.
  • redgrave — Sir Michael (Scudamore) [skuhd-uh-mawr,, -mohr,, skoo-duh-] /ˈskʌd əˌmɔr,, -ˌmoʊr,, ˈsku də-/ (Show IPA), 1908–85, English actor.
  • regarded — to look upon or think of with a particular feeling: to regard a person with favor.
  • regarder — someone who monitored woodlands and forest areas
  • reginald — a male given name: from an Old English word meaning “counsel and rule.”.
  • renegade — a person who deserts a party or cause for another.
  • renegado — a renegade.
  • rhagades — linear cracks or scars found in the skin at the angles of the nose and mouth which are one of the later signs of congenital syphilis
  • ridgeway — a road or track along a ridge, esp one of great antiquity
  • rig veda — one of the Vedas, a collection of 1028 hymns, dating from not later than the second millennium b.c.
  • rig-veda — one of the Vedas, a collection of 1028 hymns, dating from not later than the second millennium b.c.
  • sardegna — a large island in the Mediterranean, W of Italy: with small nearby islands it comprises a department of Italy. 9301 sq. mi. (24,090 sq. km).
  • savegard — safe conduct, protection
  • saw edge — the serrated edge of a saw
  • scragged — a lean or scrawny person or animal.
  • seal dog — an iron hook used for dragging seal carcasses over the ice.
  • seladang — the gaur.
  • sheading — any of the six subdivisions of the Isle of Man
  • signaled — anything that serves to indicate, warn, direct, command, or the like, as a light, a gesture, an act, etc.: a traffic signal; a signal to leave.
  • slugabed — a lazy person who stays in bed long after the usual time for arising.
  • spangled — Something that is spangled is covered with small shiny objects.
  • steading — the place of a person or thing as occupied by a successor or substitute: The nephew of the queen came in her stead.
  • subgrade — the prepared earth surface on which a pavement or the ballast of a railroad track is placed or upon which the foundation of a structure is built.
  • targeted — an object, usually marked with concentric circles, to be aimed at in shooting practice or contests.
  • teenaged — Teenaged people are aged between thirteen and nineteen.
  • the aged — old people
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