9-letter words containing a, r, g, e, n
- grandsire — a grandfather.
- grandview — a town in W Missouri.
- granitite — a granite rich in biotite.
- granitize — to subject to granitization.
- granivore — Any animal that eats seeds as the main part of its diet.
- grantable — to bestow or confer, especially by a formal act: to grant a charter.
- granulate — to form into granules or grains.
- granulite — a metamorphic rock composed of granular minerals of uniform size, as quartz, feldspar, or pyroxene, and showing a definite banding.
- granulose — granular.
- granville — Earl of, Carteret, John.
- grapeline — grapnel.
- grapevine — a town in N Texas.
- grapiness — the quality of tasting like a grape
- gratinate — to gratiné.
- gratineed — to bake or broil (food) in au gratin style.
- grauncher — a person who crushes or destroys
- gravamens — Plural form of gravamen.
- graveling — small stones and pebbles, or a mixture of these with sand.
- graveness — serious or solemn; sober: a grave person; grave thoughts.
- gravesend — a seaport in NW Kent, in SE England, on the Thames River: incorporated into Gravesham 1974.
- gray pine — jack pine.
- graystone — (uncountable) A type of gray, volcanic rock, typically containing feldspar and iron.
- great-one — Wayne ("The Great One") born 1961, Canadian ice hockey player.
- greatness — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
- green bag — a bag or briefcase made of green cloth, formerly used by lawyers for carrying documents.
- green ban — a trade union ban on any development that might be considered harmful to the environment
- green bay — an arm of Lake Michigan, in NE Wisconsin. 120 miles (195 km) long.
- green sea — a solid mass of water breaking over the bow or bulwark of a ship.
- green tax — any tax imposed with the aim of regulating activity in a way that benefits the environment
- green tea — a tea that is steamed to prevent fermentation and then rolled and dried.
- greenaway — Kate (Catherine) 1846–1901, English painter and author and illustrator of children's books.
- greenback — a U.S. legal-tender note, printed in green on the back since the Civil War, originally issued against the credit of the country and not against gold or silver on deposit.
- greendale — a town in SE Wisconsin.
- greengage — any of several varieties of light-green plums, as Prunus insititia italica.
- greenhand — an inexperienced person, esp a sailor
- greenhead — a male mallard.
- greenland — a self-governing island belonging to Denmark, located NE of North America: the largest island in the world. About 844,000 sq. mi. (2,186,000 sq. km); about 700,000 sq. mi. (1,800,000 sq. km) icecapped. Capital: Godthåb.
- greenlawn — a town on NW Long Island, in SE New York.
- greenmail — the practice of buying a large block of a company's stock in order to force a rise in stock prices or an offer by the company to repurchase that block of stock at an inflated price to thwart a possible takeover bid.
- greensand — a sandstone containing much glauconite, which gives it a greenish hue.
- greenspan — Alan, born 1926, U.S. economist: chairman of the Federal Reserve Board 1987–2006.
- greenward — Towards an ecologically friendly situation.
- greenware — (ceramics, usually, uncountable) Pottery that has been shaped but not yet fired, especially while it is drying prior to being fireable.
- greenwash — Disinformation disseminated by an organization so as to present an environmentally responsible public image.
- greenways — Plural form of greenway.
- gregarian — (obsolete) gregarious; belonging to the herd or common sort.
- gregarine — a type of sporozoan parasite that inhabits the digestive and other cavities of various invertebrates and produces cysts filled with spores.
- gregorian — of or relating to any of the popes named Gregory, especially Gregory I or Gregory XIII.
- grenadian — one of the Windward Islands, in the E West Indies.
- grenadier — (in the British army) a member of the first regiment of household infantry (Grenadier Guards)