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6-letter words containing a, l, g, o

  • gollan — a yellow flower
  • gopala — Krishna as a cowherd.
  • gosala — died c484 b.c, Indian religious leader: founder of the Ajivaka sect.
  • goslar — a city in N central Germany, in Lower Saxony: imperial palace and other medieval buildings, silver mines. Pop: 43 727 (2003 est)
  • gravol — an antihistamine used in the prevention of nausea, esp in travel sickness; dimenhydrinate
  • halgol — (language)   A simple language from Hewlett-Packard for communicating with devices such as modems and X.25 PADs.
  • kalong — a large flying fox of Southeast Asia.
  • kgotla — Any of several types of public meetings in a Botswana village, especially involving a gathering of tribal elders; also the place where such a meeting is held.
  • ladogaLake, a lake in the NW Russian Federation in Europe, NE of St. Petersburg: largest lake in Europe. 7000 sq. mi. (18,000 sq. km).
  • lagoon — an area of shallow water separated from the sea by low sandy dunes. Compare laguna.
  • lanugo — a coat of delicate, downy hairs, especially that with which the human fetus or a newborn infant is covered.
  • laogai — the system of forced-labor camps, prisons, etc., in China.
  • lapdog — a small pet dog that can easily be held in the lap.
  • latigo — a leather strap on the saddletree of a Western saddle used to tighten and secure the cinch.
  • legato — In a smooth, flowing manner, without breaks between notes.
  • logans — Plural form of logan.
  • loggat — a small piece of wood
  • loggia — a gallery or arcade open to the air on at least one side.
  • logjam — an immovable pileup or tangle of logs, as in a river, causing a blockage.
  • loglan — (human language)   An artificial human language designed by James Cooke Brown in the late 1950s. Most artificial human languages devised in the 19th and 20th centuries (e.g. Esperanto) were designed to be easy to learn. Loglan, however, is unique in that its chief design goal was to avoid synactic ambiguity -- the kind that arises when trying to parse sentences like "The blind man picked up the hammer and saw". Loglan is thus the only human language unambiguously parseable by a formal grammar (assuming you count Loglan as a human language; its grammar is not at all like that of any natural human language). Most later development on Loglan continued under the name "Lojban". The Loglan Institute, Inc. is a non-profit research corporation. Loglan is unrelated to the programming languages Loglan'82 or Loglan-88. E-mail: [email protected] Telephone: +1 (619) 270 1691. Address: The Loglan Institute, Inc., 3009 Peters Way, San Diego, CA, 92117-4313 U.S.A.
  • logway — gangway (def 7).
  • longan — the small, one-seeded, greenish-brown fruit of a large evergreen tree, Euphoria longana, of the soapberry family, native to China and allied to the litchi.
  • loogan — (US slang, dated) A fool.
  • lovage — a European plant, Levisticum officinale, of the parsley family, having coarsely toothed compound leaves, cultivated in gardens.
  • loyang — Luoyang.
  • lugano — a town in S Switzerland, on Lake Lugano: a financial centre and tourist resort. Pop: 26 560 (2000)
  • ogival — Having the curved, pointed shape of an ogive.
  • oglala — a member of a North American Indian people belonging to the Teton branch of the Dakota Indians.
  • oilgas — a gaseous mixture of hydrocarbons used as a fuel, obtained by the destructive distillation of mineral oils
  • pagnol — Marcel [mar-sel] /marˈsɛl/ (Show IPA), 1895–1974, French playwright.
  • parlog — Clark & Gregory, Imperial College 1983. An AND-parallel Prolog, with guards and committed choice nondeterminism (don't care nondeterminism). Shallow backtracking only. Implementations: MacParlog and PC-Parlog from Parallel Logic Programming Ltd., Box 49 Twickenham TW2 5PH, UK. See also SPM.
  • rugola — arugula
  • sawlog — a log large enough to be suitable for sawing or making into lumber
  • slogan — a distinctive cry, phrase, or motto of any party, group, manufacturer, or person; catchword or catch phrase.
  • tablog — (language)   A programming language based on first order predicate logic with equality that combines relational programming and functional programming. It has functional notation and unification as its binding mechanism. TABLOG supports a more general subset of standard first order logic than Prolog. It employs the Manna-Waldinger 'deductive-tableau' proof system as an interpreter instead of resolution.
  • volage — changeable or fickle
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