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4-letter words containing a, g

  • gray — of a color between white and black; having a neutral hue.
  • graz — a province in SE Austria: formerly a duchy. 6327 sq. mi. (16,385 sq. km). Capital: Graz.
  • gtwa — Greater Toronto Workers Assembly
  • guac — guacamole.
  • guam — an island, belonging to the U.S., in the N Pacific, E of the Philippines: the largest of the Marianas group; U.S. naval station. 206 sq. mi. (535 sq. km). Capital: Agaña. Abbreviation: GU (for use with zip code).
  • guan — a large game bird of the curassow family, common in dense woodlands of Central and South America, somewhat resembling a turkey.
  • guar — a plant, Cyamopsis tetragonolobus, of the legume family, grown as a forage crop and for its seeds, which produce a gum (guar gum) used as a thickening agent and stabilizer in foods and pharmaceuticals and as sizing for paper and cloth.
  • guga — (Scotland) solan goose.
  • gula — Zoology. the upper part of the throat or gullet. the front or forward part of the neck.
  • guna — (in Sankhya and Vedantic philosophy) one of the three qualities of prakriti, or nature, which are passion (rajas) dullness or inertia (tamas) and goodness or purity (sattva)
  • gyan — Knowledge, especially spiritual or religious knowledge.
  • haagDen [den] /dɛn/ (Show IPA) a Dutch name of The Hague.
  • hags — Plural form of hag.
  • haigDouglas, 1st Earl, 1861–1928, British field marshal: commander in chief of the British forces in France 1915–18.
  • hang — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • iago — the villain in Shakespeare's Othello.
  • inga — (botany) Any of the genus Inga of small tropical trees and shrubs.
  • jaga — a guard; sentry
  • jagg — Alt form jag sense a load of hay or wood.
  • jags — a period of unrestrained indulgence in an activity; spree; binge: a crying jag; a talking jag.
  • jtag — Joint Test Action Group
  • juga — Plural form of jugum.
  • kage — (archaic) A chantry chapel enclosed with latticework or screenwork.
  • kago — (in Japan) a small basketwork palanquin strung from a pole each end of which rests on the shoulder of a bearer.
  • kagu — a raillike bird, Rhinochetus jubatus, of the island of New Caledonia, having a gray body, black-and-white wings, and a long, shaggy crest: an endangered species.
  • kang — (especially in northern Chinese houses) a masonry or earthen platform at one end of a room, heated in winter by fires underneath and spread with mats for sleeping.
  • knag — A short spur or stiff projection from the trunk or branch of a tree, such as the stunted dead branch of a fir.
  • lags — Plural form of lag.
  • langAndrew, 1844–1912, Scottish poet, prose writer, and scholar.
  • leag — Archaic spelling of league.
  • lpga — Ladies Professional Golf Association
  • mage — a magician.
  • magi — (sometimes lowercase) one of the Magi.
  • magr — Master of Agriculture
  • mags — Plural form of mag.
  • mang — Alternative form of man.
  • marg — margin
  • mcga — Multi-Color Graphics Array
  • mega — Extremely.
  • naga — a member of any of the disparate tribal peoples of Nagaland and bordering areas of Burma.
  • nage — An aromatic court bouillon or stock, used for cooking shellfish.
  • nags — A person who nags someone.
  • nagy — Imre [im-re] /ˈɪm rɛ/ (Show IPA), 1896–1958, Hungarian political leader: premier 1953–55, 1956.
  • nang — (Australia, slang) A metal bulb filled with nitrous oxide gas, inhaled for its disassociative effects, normally intended as a propellant for whipped cream.
  • ngai — clan or tribe: used before the names of certain Māori tribes
  • ogam — an alphabetical script used originally for inscriptions in an archaic form of Irish, from about the 5th to the 10th centuries.
  • ogma — a god of poetry and eloquence and the inventor of the ogham letters: one of the Tuatha De Danann.
  • olgaSaint, died a.d. 968? regent of Kiev until 955: saint of the Russian Orthodox Church.
  • pageThomas Nelson, 1853–1922, U.S. novelist and diplomat.
  • pang — a sudden feeling of mental or emotional distress or longing: a pang of remorse; a pang of desire.
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