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

  • ningsia — a former province in NW China, now part of Inner Mongolia.
  • orgiast — One who celebrates orgies.
  • parsing — parser
  • passing — going by or past; elapsing: He was feeling better with each passing day.
  • pasting — a mixture of flour and water, often with starch or the like, used for causing paper or other material to adhere to something.
  • 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
  • phasing — any of the major appearances or aspects in which a thing of varying modes or conditions manifests itself to the eye or mind.
  • pigwash — slops used to feed pigs
  • prisage — the right of the king to take a certain quantity of every cargo of wine imported.
  • ragfish — a deep-sea fish of the family Icosteidae, inhabiting the North Pacific, having a very flexible body owing to its soft, highly cartilaginous skeleton.
  • raising — an increase in amount, as of wages: a raise in pay.
  • rasping — harsh; grating: a rasping voice.
  • ratings — figures based on statistical sampling indicating what proportion of the total listening and viewing audience tune in to a specific programme or network
  • ravings — If you describe what someone says or writes as their ravings, you mean that it makes no sense because they are mad or very ill.
  • rigsdag — the former parliament of Denmark, consisting of an upper house and a lower house: replaced in 1953 by the unicameral Folketing.
  • riksdag — the parliament of Sweden, consisting of an upper house and a lower house.
  • sabbing — the act of engaging in direct action to prevent a targeted activity, esp fox hunting
  • sacking — the plundering of a captured place; pillage: the sack of Troy.
  • sacring — the act or ritual of consecration, esp of the Eucharist or of a bishop
  • saggier — sagging or tending to sag: a saggy roof.
  • sagging — to sink or bend downward by weight or pressure, especially in the middle: The roof sags.
  • saginaw — a port in E Michigan, on the Saginaw River.
  • sagitta — a small constellation in the N hemisphere lying between Cygnus and Aquila and crossed by the Milky Way
  • sailing — an area of canvas or other fabric extended to the wind in such a way as to transmit the force of the wind to an assemblage of spars and rigging mounted firmly on a hull, raft, iceboat, etc., so as to drive it along.
  • saligot — the water chestnut, Trapa natans
  • salting — a crystalline compound, sodium chloride, NaCl, occurring as a mineral, a constituent of seawater, etc., and used for seasoning food, as a preservative, etc.
  • salving — a medicinal ointment for healing or relieving wounds and sores.
  • sanding — the more or less fine debris of rocks, consisting of small, loose grains, often of quartz.
  • sangria — an iced drink, typically made with red wine, sugar, fruit juice, soda water, and spices, and containing fruit slices.
  • sangui- — blood
  • sapling — a young tree.
  • sapping — Fortification. a deep, narrow trench constructed so as to form an approach to a besieged place or an enemy's position.
  • sarangi — (in India) a violinlike instrument used to accompany classical dancing.
  • sarking — a timber or felt cladding placed over the rafters of a roof before the tiles or slates are fixed in place
  • sassing — impudent or disrespectful back talk: Both parents refuse to take any sass from their kids.
  • savigny — Friedrich Karl von (ˈfridrɪç ˈkɑl fɔn). 1779–1861, German legal scholar, who pioneered the historical approach to jurisprudence, emphasizing custom and precedent
  • savings — tending or serving to save; rescuing; preserving.
  • sayings — something said, especially a proverb or apothegm.
  • scaglia — a type of reddish limestone found in Italy
  • scaling — a succession or progression of steps or degrees; graduated series: the scale of taxation; the social scale.
  • scaring — to fill, especially suddenly, with fear or terror; frighten; alarm.
  • seagirt — surrounded by the sea.
  • 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.
  • segovia — Andrés [ahn-dres] /ɑnˈdrɛs/ (Show IPA), 1893–87, Spanish guitarist.
  • seringa — any of several Brazilian trees of the genus Hevea, yielding rubber.
  • shading — the comparative darkness caused by the interception or screening of rays of light from an object, place, or area.
  • shaking — an act or instance of shaking, rocking, swaying, etc.
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