0%

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

  • onstage — on or onto the stage (opposed to offstage): The director shouted, “Onstage, everybody!”.
  • oranges — a member of a European princely family ruling in the United Kingdom from 1688 to 1694 and in the Netherlands since 1815.
  • outages — Plural form of outage.
  • passage — a slow, cadenced trot executed with great elevation of the feet and characterized by a moment of suspension before the feet strike the ground.
  • paysage — a landscape or representation of a landscape
  • pegasus — 1.   (networking, product)   A product to support Internet searches, electronic mail, and Usenet news. 2.   (project)   An open source project run by The Open Group which implements a Common Information Model (CIM) Object Manager.
  • pelasgi — the pre-Hellenic peoples who inhabited Greece and the islands and coasts of the Aegean Sea before the arrival of the Bronze Age Greeks
  • postage — the charge for the conveyance of a letter or other matter sent by mail, usually prepaid by means of a stamp or stamps.
  • presage — a presentiment or foreboding.
  • prisage — the right of the king to take a certain quantity of every cargo of wine imported.
  • ravages — to work havoc upon; damage or mar by ravages: a face ravaged by grief.
  • regards — to look upon or think of with a particular feeling: to regard a person with favor.
  • restage — a single step or degree in a process; a particular phase, period, position, etc., in a process, development, or series.
  • s gauge — a model railroad gauge of 7/8 inch (2.2 cm).
  • sackage — the act of sacking a place
  • saggier — sagging or tending to sag: a saggy roof.
  • salvage — the act of saving a ship or its cargo from perils of the seas.
  • sandage — Allan R(ex) 1926–2010, U.S. astronomer: codiscoverer of the first quasar 1961.
  • sangeet — (in India) a pre-wedding celebration
  • sargent — Sir (Harold) Malcolm (Watts) 1895–1967, English conductor.
  • sausage — minced pork, beef, or other meats, often combined, together with various added ingredients and seasonings, usually stuffed into a prepared intestine or other casing and often made in links.
  • savages — fierce, ferocious, or cruel; untamed: savage beasts.
  • scalage — an assessed percentage deduction, as in weight or price, granted in dealings with goods that are likely to shrink, leak, or otherwise vary in the amount or weight originally stated.
  • scavage — a toll charged of merchant strangers by mayors or towns on goods offered or sold in their districts
  • scutage — (in the feudal system) a payment exacted by a lord in lieu of military service due to him by the holder of a fee.
  • sea bag — a tubular canvas bag closed by a drawstring, used by a sailor for gear.
  • sea dog — a sailor, especially an old or experienced one.
  • sea god — a god of the sea
  • sea hog — a porpoise.
  • sea-dog — a sailor, especially an old or experienced one.
  • seaborg — Glenn T(heodor) 1912–1999, U.S. chemist: chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission 1961–71; Nobel prize 1951.
  • seagirt — surrounded by the sea.
  • seagull — a gull, especially any of the marine species.
  • sealing — a substance that seals; sealant
  • seaming — the line formed by sewing together pieces of cloth, leather, or the like.
  • searing — to burn or char the surface of: She seared the steak to seal in the juices.
  • seating — something designed to support a person in a sitting position, as a chair, bench, or pew; a place on or in which one sits.
  • seepage — the act or process of seeping; leakage.
  • segesta — Also, Segeste. an ancient Greek and Carthaginian city in NW Sicily: near present-day Alcamo.
  • segetal — (of weeds) growing amongst crops
  • segovia — Andrés [ahn-dres] /ɑnˈdrɛs/ (Show IPA), 1893–87, Spanish guitarist.
  • selenga — a river in N central Asia, flowing E and N through the NW Mongolian People's Republic through the Buryat Autonomous Republic in the SE Russian Federation to Lake Baikal. About 700 miles (1125 km) long.
  • selvage — the edge of woven fabric finished so as to prevent raveling, often in a narrow tape effect, different from the body of the fabric.
  • senegal — a republic in W Africa: independent member of the French Community; formerly part of French West Africa. 76,084 sq. mi. (197,057 sq. km). Capital: Dakar.
  • septage — the waste or sewage in a septic tank.
  • serfage — a person in a condition of servitude, required to render services to a lord, commonly attached to the lord's land and transferred with it from one owner to another.
  • seringa — any of several Brazilian trees of the genus Hevea, yielding rubber.
  • sevruga — a species of sturgeon, Acipenser stellatus, of the Caspian and Black seas.
  • shagged — Informal. weary; exhausted (usually followed by out): They were completely shagged out from the long trip.
  • shagger — a person who has sexual intercourse
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?