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5-letter words containing a, g, o

  • lagos — a seaport in SW Nigeria: former capital.
  • laoag — a seaport on NW Luzon, in the N Philippines.
  • largo — a largo movement.
  • loganJohn or James (Tah-gah-jute) c1725–80, leader of the Cayuga tribe.
  • logia — a plural of logion.
  • longa — the second longest note in medieval mensural notation.
  • magog — a people descended from Japheth. Gen. 10:2; Ezek. 38, 39. Compare Gog and Magog.
  • magot — Barbary ape.
  • mango — the oblong, sweet fruit of a tropical tree, Mangifera indica, of the cashew family, eaten ripe, or preserved or pickled.
  • margo — (anatomy) border, margin.
  • nalgo — National and Local Government Officers' Association
  • ngaio — An evergreen tree, Myoporum laetum, native to New Zealand.
  • ngoma — (in East Africa) a dance; a night of dancing and music.
  • nogai — a member of a people living in the Caucasus region.
  • nogay — Nogai.
  • obang — a Japanese gold coin, rectangular in shape, that is no longer in common usage and is only used as a ceremonial or special contribution
  • ofgas — Office of Gas Supply: merged with Offer in 1999 to form Ofgem
  • oflag — a World War II German internment camp for war prisoners of officer rank.
  • ogham — an alphabetical script used originally for inscriptions in an archaic form of Irish, from about the 5th to the 10th centuries.
  • omagh — a market town in Northern Ireland. Pop: 19 910 (2001)
  • omega — the 24th and last letter of the Greek alphabet (Ω, ω).
  • onegaLake, a lake in the NW Russian Federation in Europe: second largest lake in Europe. 3764 sq. mi. (9750 sq. km).
  • orang — orangutan.
  • organ — Also called pipe organ. a musical instrument consisting of one or more sets of pipes sounded by means of compressed air, played by means of one or more keyboards, and capable of producing a wide range of musical effects.
  • osage — a member of a North American Indian people formerly of western Missouri, now living in northern Oklahoma.
  • otago — a council region of New Zealand, formerly a province, founded by Scottish settlers in the south of South Island. The University of Otago (1869) in Dunedin is the oldest university in New Zealand. Chief town: Dunedin. Pop: 195 000 (2004 est)
  • pargo — a generic name for any sea bream or snapper fish
  • plago — A translator-interpreter for a PL/I subset. "PLAGO/360 User's Manual, Poly Inst Brooklyn.
  • ponga — a tall tree fern, Cyathea dealbata, of New Zealand, with large feathery leaves
  • rolag — a roll of wool made using card that is ready for spinning
  • sango — a Niger-Congo language of the Adamawa-Eastern branch, used as a lingua franca in the Central African Republic.
  • sargo — a silvery grunt, Anisotremus davidsonii, inhabiting waters off the coasts of California and Mexico, having blackish markings and yellowish fins.
  • sogat — Society of Graphical and Allied Trades
  • tango — a ballroom dance of Latin-American origin, danced by couples, and having many varied steps, figures, and poses.
  • togae — (in ancient Rome) the loose outer garment worn by citizens in public.
  • tonga — Tsonga.
  • vago- — vagus nerve
  • vo-ag — vocational-agricultural: the vo-ag curriculum.
  • volga — a river flowing from the Valdai Hills in the W Russian Federation E and then S to the Caspian Sea: the longest river in Europe. 2325 miles (3745 km).
  • wagon — any of various kinds of four-wheeled vehicles designed to be pulled or having its own motor and ranging from a child's toy to a commercial vehicle for the transport of heavy loads, delivery, etc.
  • wonga — (slang, British, chiefly London, New Zealand) money.
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