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7-letter words containing a, g, r, i

  • arriaga — Juan Crisóstomo [hwahn kree-saw-staw-maw] /ʰwɑn kriˈsɔ stɔ mɔ/ (Show IPA), 1806–26, Spanish composer.
  • arriage — an office or duty carried out by tenants for their feudal lord or superior
  • artigas — José Gervasio. 1764–1850, the national hero of Uruguay. He fought for Uruguayan independence from Argentina, but was driven into exile in 1820
  • aurigny — one of the Channel Islands, in the English Channel: separated from the French coast by a dangerous tidal channel (the Race of Alderney). Pop: 2294 (2001). Area: 8 sq km (3 sq miles)
  • awright — (slang, informal) Okay; indication of approval. Variant colloquial form of \"all right\". Sometimes \"awight\" or \"ah'ight\".
  • baggier — Comparative form of baggy.
  • barbing — a point or pointed part projecting backward from a main point, as of a fishhook or arrowhead.
  • barding — Armor. any of various pieces of defensive armor for a horse.
  • barfing — Present participle of barf.
  • bargain — Something that is a bargain is good value for money, usually because it has been sold at a lower price than normal.
  • barging — Present participle of barge.
  • barings — Plural form of baring.
  • barking — mad; crazy
  • barning — a building for storing hay, grain, etc., and often for housing livestock.
  • barring — You use barring to indicate that the person, thing, or event that you are mentioning is an exception to your statement.
  • batgirl — a girl who works at baseball games, carrying bats to players and moving other equipment
  • bearing — Someone's bearing is the way in which they move or stand.
  • blaring — to emit a loud, raucous sound: The trumpets blared as the procession got under way.
  • bracing — If you describe something, especially a place, climate, or activity as bracing, you mean that it makes you feel fresh and full of energy.
  • braking — the act or process of slowing or stopping a vehicle, wheel, shaft, etc, or for keeping it stationary, esp by means of friction
  • braving — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • braying — the loud, harsh cry of a donkey.
  • brigade — A brigade is one of the groups which an army is divided into.
  • brigand — A brigand is someone who attacks people and robs them, especially in mountains or forests.
  • brigham — a male given name.
  • carding — the process of preparing the fibres of cotton, wool, etc, for spinning
  • carking — distressful.
  • carling — a fore-and-aft beam in a vessel, used for supporting the deck, esp around a hatchway or other opening
  • carping — tending to make petty complaints; fault-finding
  • carting — a heavy two-wheeled vehicle, commonly without springs, drawn by mules, oxen, or the like, used for the conveyance of heavy goods.
  • carving — A carving is an object or a design that has been cut out of a material such as stone or wood.
  • cat rig — the rig of a catboat
  • catgirl — (chiefly, Japanese fiction) A female fictional character who has a cat's ears, tail or other feline characteristics on an otherwise humanoid body.
  • chagrin — Chagrin is a feeling of disappointment, upset, or annoyance, perhaps because of your own failure.
  • charing — Present participle of chare.
  • cigaret — a cylindrical roll of finely cut tobacco cured for smoking, considerably smaller than most cigars and usually wrapped in thin white paper.
  • 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)
  • craning — any large wading bird of the family Gruidae, characterized by long legs, bill, and neck and an elevated hind toe.
  • craping — to cover, clothe, or drape with crepe.
  • crating — a slatted wooden box or framework for packing, shopping, or storing fruit, furniture, glassware, crockery, etc.
  • craving — an intense desire or longing
  • crazing — to derange or impair the mind of; make insane: He was crazed by jealousy.
  • darings — Plural form of daring.
  • darling — You call someone darling if you love them or like them very much.
  • darning — a mending with interlaced stitches
  • darting — a small, slender missile that is pointed at one end and usually feathered at the other and is propelled by hand, as in the game of darts, or by a blowgun when used as a weapon.
  • daygirl — a girl who attends a boarding school daily, but returns home each evening
  • deraign — to contest (a claim, suit, etc)
  • diagram — A diagram is a simple drawing which consists mainly of lines and is used, for example, to explain how a machine works.
  • diagrid — a support structure used esp in the construction of large buildings, consisting of criss-crossing diagonal beams, whether of metal or other materials such as concrete
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